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Now You Know
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Weather ·

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,Partly cloudy northeast
clearing elsewhere and cold
with frost or freezing tern- ·
peratQr~s tonight lows In ihe ·
upper 20s and low ~ . MosUy
sunny and warmer Tuesday, .
highs mid ~ to mid 60s.·

Ears•of corn have an even
nllinber of rows of kernels.

Devoted To 'IJaelnterall Of'fhe Meigs-Mason Area_
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-:....: -···.,_

VOL XXIV NO. 13

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, MAY 3, li71

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PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

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Thousands Arrested by Police with
Support by Army Troops, Marines

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THEN. WHAT D'Y.A
ME.AN .BY 'LET,'MlLO

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· ST:~TJO~
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Parents and Teachers made the presentation as the three
presidents, Mrs. William Swisher, Bradbury, Mrs. Larry
Spencer, Middlepor~ and Mrs. Gene Mitch, Pomeroy, left to
rlgh~ looked on.

TAKE: YOO'?

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ROBERT MORRIS, principal of the l!radbury, -Pomeroy
and Middleport 'Elementary Schools, was presented a life
membership in PTA by the units in the three schools. Mrs.
IUcbard Vaupu, pneident of Meigs CoWJty CoWJcil of

Tactics
Are Hit

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DR. ROBERT E. LUCAS, center; anclnnati School superintendeni, spoke on the topic
"PTA Puts It All Together" at the District 16;·ohio PTA spfing c,pnference Saturday at the
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Pomeroy Elementary School. Bringing greetiitgs to the 90 PTA leader&amp;and educators were
Robert Bowen, left, superintendent ofthe Mei,gs County Schools, and George Har.g~~ves, Meigs
Local School District superintendent
,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - U. S.
Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill.,
said Sunday the demonstrations
in Washington are not aimed at
endinl! the war in Indochina but
. _:.'to,end our fqrm of gpv~r~ment
and overthrow its democratic
institutions. "
Percy said well-intentioned
persons opposed to the war
should be aware "that some of
the leadership of the May Day
actions against our federal
government have openly
declared their revolutionary
aims .... " ·
."Their tactics are aimed at
violence through confronta~on,
crisis and massive civil illegal
disorders ," Percy said in
remarks at Port Columbus
Airport here enroute back to the
Capital after attending a three·
day conference at Kenyon
College in Gambier.
"Government by mob action ,
acceding to forces that are
attempting to bring down or

.

'f0U .\AKE ' T8~ "'}OSf OF y.J~T .Yqu HAVf
-TO. B,ALf&gt;,NCE: WHAJ' '(OU ~A\JE TtdE Lfi\'S:T·C

WJ-{AT tx:lWE FIAVET~e

LEAST ct:? .r

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'N\AY,BET!-/15 JOST:ISf.l'T,A,GOOC&gt;
-·~EAr&lt; 'FOR: REVOLUliON .f

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Won't Come Easy

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH Ohio Congress of Parents and
"Unreall~tlc" was
Dr. Teachers, Saturday at the
William H. Cooper's appraisal Pomeroy Elementary School.
of a p1evalent public impression The other speaker was Dr.
that the federally funded Right Robert E. Lucas, superinto Read program holds some tendent of the Princeton City
magical formula for teaching School District · of Cincinnati.
· children -to read .
Dr. Cooper, a member of the In speaking to the apOhio Right to Read Commission proximately 90 District 16 PTA
and chairman of the 10.County leaders, Ohio PTA officials, and
Southeast District, was one of school administra!ors and
two featured speakers at the te~chers, Dr. Cooper admitted
District 16 spring conference, , that 'he is not overly optimj~tic

about the prospects of Right to
R d lth h
Is th
ea a oug he fee
ere
are some areas where improvement will be noteq.
, umvers1
· ·ty professor
The Oh10
expressed the feeling that

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A teenage driver suffered

.H·e·p..uu
L'H.. can.s
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Wet Road
Go to Polls Blamed

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injuries

§:~;~;;~~~?~ FChanges
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Clini
or

N.W . for several blocks in the
George town area which has
become 4 hippie hangout in
recent years.
Six helicopter loads of battlegarbed Marines were landed at

Dffver Hun ··

~:~~~~~sor~~~i~~tsto R~~~ · · · · ·~· · · · ...· · · · · ~· · · · · · · · · · · · · m• · · · ~~~~=:

children wiii not become
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competent readers for their age
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.. •' level or grade.
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The purpose of the program,
be declared, Is to "help every
child realize his right to read in
Two changes of the schedule
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I accordance with his ability." in connection with the hearing
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The variabilility and dif- and vision 'Clinics which get
ferences
in children need \Obe underway this week were
By United Press lnternaUonal
recognized, the speaker reported today .
Dust Levels Report Praised
stressed, and the goal of
WASHINGTON - REP.. KEN HECHLER, D-W. Va., a education is to help each child A clinic scheduled originally
frequent critic of the U.S. Bureau of Mines, praised•a report' on realize his individl\31 capacity. for Friday at the Trinity Church
coal dust levels released today by the federal agency's director, , Dr. Cooper, who has ,orked basement from 10 a.m. to 2p.m .
extensively with exceptional, will be held instead of Wed·
. Dr. Elburt Osborn.
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Osborn's report' indicated that after sampling dust In 2,305 disadvantaged and gifted nesday during the same hours.
underground mining secuo'ns, federal dust limits set under the children, ·spoke of learning Another clinic scheduled
1969 federal mine health and safety act are '!clearly attainable ability as beil\g chiefly Wednesday at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will be
with present technology." The director said the bureau found 75 "inherenUy determined".
He referred to extensive held instead on Friday duririg
pet cent of tl!e mjne sections had dust levelS I&gt;,elow t~ 3.0
studies which have shown that the designated hours.
mlligram per cubic meter llm!t, and 45 per cent. were already 80 per cent of all children fall
below the 2.0 llliligtam level which becomes toe official limit by into this genetic development , The clinics are . under the
the end of next year.
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category, while only 20 per cent direction of the Meigs County
show
learning ability Influence Healui Dept. and are for four
M~Govem may
a Rider
attributable to environment, and five-year-old children of all
COLUMBUS-U.S. SEN. GEORGES. M~oven), D.S.D., lack of experience, ·or some Meigs county. They are free,
said he may try to attach hill proposal for the wlthdraw81 Of all u. other situation of d\S&amp;dvanlage: ·and designed to help correct
s.troope from Southeast Asia by thl! end of 1971 to a bill extending "This latter area - the ~·per vision and hearing problems
(Continu¢ on page 5)
before children enll!r school.
(Continued on Page 8) •

[ News ...in Briefs \

the Washington Monument
grounds, ready for action if
needed.
.,·
Tear gas fumes hung over the
bridges across the Potomac,
above some of the city's famed
monuments and permeated the
streets and grassy flowered
park areas.
Garbage cans, trash, ~ ban,
doned cars and other obstacles
littered some main arteries.
Firm police action including
tear gas and mass arrests ,
dealt effectively with several
major confrontations with
protesters at key traffic.aush
points. Splinter groups at other
places were quickly dispersed.
Police and city authorities
claimed victory in frustrating
the antiwar forces' vow to force
a shutdown of the government
"war machine."
·By 8 a.m ., officials already .
apparenUy were confident ot
successive coping with the
disruptions.
"
Authorities acknowledged
there were some momentary
disruptions. Traffic \vas
brought to a · standstill from
time to time on the four main·
bridges from Virginia, and at
vital traffic hubs, but managed
to Inch ahead afll!r short delays .
. Pollee used a heavy
. barrage of tear gas to drive ofi
the bridge a group of several
liundrel:f demonstrators led by
,
• Benlamln Spock, the famous
THESE CLOWN end men will carry out the ·-~ 'Be a
baby doctor and well-known
Clown" theme of tbe minstrel show to be staged at 7:30 p.m.
war dissenter ,
Fri~y and Saturday at the SauSbury Elementary School.
Spock and his followers
Direction of the presentation is by John Lisle, faculty
succeeded in choking off trafflr
member. From left to right are Chuck Kennedy, Randy
on the span which bears the
Marsh~ll. Bobby Seelig and Kelly Hawk:
heaviest commuter load for
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More
prolonged
con~
fron ~ations occurred in the
(Continued on Page 8)

apparently for a roundup of
protesters. All were equipped
with gas masks and some were
wearing them.
Other troops holding rifles
were stationed on M Street

only minor injuries in an accident investigated. Sunday by
the Gallipolis Post State Highway Patrol at 5:30p.m. on Rt.
325, seven tenths of a mile west
of Rt. 124.
Officers said Glenn T. Crisp,
19, Rt.l, Langsville, lost control
of his car, ran off the right side
of the highway and over an
embankment. Crisp was not
immediately treated. There
was severe damage to his car.
Pometoy ~nd Middleport
No citation was issued.
Republicans
will go to the polls
The first of two Gallia County
Tuesday to select candidates to
run for village posts in ttie•fall.
Neither town has a Democrat
:h:_:.: ::t
primary.
Pomeroy voters will settle
Circleville, lost control of his
Burley Remzn der car,whichwentofftheleftside only one race. They will name
Wayne H. Chase, chairman of !he roadway into a ditch. two council candidates among
of the Meigs County ASC Minor damage resulted and no three running for two seats. The
three are Mrs. Bertha Canaday
committee, has reminded citation was issued.
.
burley tobacco growers of the
Damage was moderate m a and James Mees, both running
importance of voting in the two-car collision at 5:30 p.m. for their first time, and
burley'- tobacco referendum SUnday on Rt. 35, one and three Franklin Rizer, presently
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tenths miles west of Rt. 160. The serving on council.
00 Tuesday, May 4. The
patrol said a car driven by Boyd
Midtlleport has several
gymnasium at the Rutland
schoo 1has been des1goated as J. Ramsey, 57, Pt. Pleasant, Republican races. Newcpmer
struck a car turning left Kim Neal, a teach in the Meigs
the polling place ln this operated byPromollaSmith, 37, School District at Harrisonville
county from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Rt. 2, Bidwell. There was
moderate damage to both

Improved Reading.:::::: :,::::::;.·.
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WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Mili·
tant antiwar demonstrators
failed today in their effort to
shut down the government by
jamming the city 's Monday
morning traffic rush. Police,
backed by Army troops and
Marines , defeated them with
barrages of tear gas and
arrests running into the thousands.
Washington's
government
workers found their commuting
routine hindered but not paralyzed as hundreds of protesters
undertook hit-and..-un tactics on
main bridges leading into the
capital and at several key
bottleneck points.
By 9 a.m. EDT when rush
traffic normally ends, an
estimated 2,000 or more demonslriltors were under arrest and
traffic movement was reported
virtually normal.
Most workers had reached
their offices and any major
resistance was dispelled.
Many of the disorganized
protesters moved toward the
Georgetown sector of the city
where many of them had taken
refuge Sunday when police
evicted them from their "Peace
City" at West Potomac Park.
A convoy of 50 to 60 jeeps
bearing military police went to
the area at mid-morning,

or

Fair Wednesday with a
chance of showers Thursday
and Friday. Highs mostly in
the 60s, Lows in the 00s
Wednesday night and In the
40s Thursday 'and Friday
nights. .
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The Middleport Fire Dept.
was ca IIed twice Saturday to
fight a brush fire on the hill
b'ehlnd Gravel Hill ~metery at
CQI!shire. The first cQU was
received at 12 ,04 p.m. and the
second c~ll at 9:28p.m.

PT. PLEASANT - Ralnslickened streets were blamed
in a two&lt;ar wreck Sunday at
8:08 a,m. in a curve at the Intersection of Kanauga and
Viand Sts. here .
City police said L. Cooke, 24,
Ravenswood, driving a vehicle
north owned by Walter Grueser,
Pomeroy, skidded into a car
driven by Charles E. White, 60,
of 1111 Plea sant St., Pt.
Pleasant.
Property damages were
estimated at $625. There were
no injuries or citations.

elementary, seeking his first
polltieal office, Is opposing John
Zerkle, long time Middleport
councllman, making his first
bid for mayor.
There are two candidates for
the clerk-treasurer's post in
Middleport. Mrs. Patricia
Kennedy Groves, also a
newcomer to the political scene,
is opposing veteran clerktreasurer Gene Grate.
Two council candidates will
be selected from five
Republicans running in Middleport. The five are Jacob
WRECK IN MEIGS
Turner; Donald E. Kelly, Csrl
POMEROY - Damages were
H. Platter, Fred Hoffman and heavy in a single-car accident'
William (Bucky) Walters.
Sunday at 1:30 a.m. on SR 143,
five tenths of a mile northeast of
the Rt. 7 bypass.
.·
Meigs Sherfff Robert' C.
Hartenbach 's Dept. said Robert
Bruce Reid, 18, Pataskala,
traveling southeast on 143, lost
control of his auto in a curve. it
went off the highway, landing
•
on its top in a creek.
,
at Flatwoods in Meigs County, There were no injuries. No
he was the son of the lal\l citation was issued.
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Charles and Ida Rad{ord.
Survivin g are his wife ,
Emma ; two daughters, Mrs.
Mary Jasman , Chesapeake,
Va., and Mrs. Frances Stewart,
Middleport; two sons. Olarles
Radford Ill . and ·Richard
Radford, both of Pomeroy;
three sisters , Mrs. Helene The Rev. Bill Perrin asked
Sayre, Minersville ; · Mrs. today fot representatives from
Marga;et ~ill , Po~e~~ fnd the whole of Meigs County at1 ; a tend a Project Freedom ·
Mrs. Ata organ, a
brother, Massar Radford of meeting at 7:30 this evebing it
G
· t
eorg1a
, wo gran dch'ld
I ren, Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
The purpose of the meetlnjj Ia
and several nieces and
to
make final plans for a ho._
nephews.
to house canvass of the county
Funeral services will be held during the week of May 10 to
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the secure signatures to be aent to
Ewing Funeral Home with the Hanoi. The signatures on
Rev , W. H. Perrin officiating. petitions will ask for ~
Burial will be . In the Chester humane treatment Of American
Cemetery . Masqnic sfrvices prisoners 'of war in Vietnam.
will be contluc!~ at t)le funeral ' 'It Is huperative that we IIIVt
home at 7i 30 p.m: Tuesday. I'CPI'esenlation from all Jllfla ilt
t'riends may ~all at the funerJil ,the l'uqnty"_atlonll!ht's .,.-••
:
home any time. ,_ .
tl)e ~~~;v. Mr.~ tald.
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Charles Radford Jr. of

Pomeroy Dies SundJJy

Charles Radford, Jr ., 57 ,
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy, .
owner and operator of the
Pickens Hardware inMason, W.
Va ., died Sunday evening at the
Holzer Medical Center .
Known in county fair circles
as "Mr. Meigs County Fair,"
Mr . Radford served on the
board and as an official of the
Meigs County fair the past 30
years. He had held all board·
offices and was aetive in
staging the annual fair.
.
Mr. Radford was a member'
and a past master of Shade
MARRIAGE LICENSES
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, a
. Gary Edward Spencer, 18, member of Ohio Valley ComAlbany, Rt. 2, and Kathryn mandery No. 24, Knights
Lovina Lowther, 16, Rt. 3; Templar , Bosworth Council 46,
Gregory Nelson Wood , 20, Ro~al and Select Masters, and
Rutland, Rt. J, and Cheryl J..ee Po!fleroy Chapter 80, Royal
Powell, 1~, Racine.
Arch Masons.
· ·
: tle .was a director of the ({en
LOCAL TEMPS '·.
" Amsbary Chapter of the .Izaak
·The lemWature in downtown Walton League of America. Mr.
l'on)erO}I at . 11 a.m, Monday Radford purchased . and ·took
'llllder cloudy skies was 48 over the operation of Pickens
degrees. .
Hardware in March, !9t&gt;3. !lorn

Canvass to

Be.Planned·

�-,3- The DIIUy Sentinel Mlddleport-Pomero) 0

2- The Datly Senhnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 May 3 1971
UOAL NOTICE
ORO NANCE NO

4 6

Today'•
AlnuuuJC

AN
ORDINANCE
TO
PROVIDE
FOR
THE
ISSUANCE OF BONDS OF By United Press International
THE
V ~LAGE
OF
POMEROY OHIO FOR THE Today IS Monday May 3 the
PURPOSE
DF
CON
STRUCT NG SEWER M 123rd day of 1971 w1th 242 to
PROVEMENTS
AND follow
DECLAR NG
AN The moon s belween ts f rs
EMERGENCY
quarter and full phase
The n orn ng stars are
Mercury Venus Mars and
Jup ter
The even ng slar IS Saturn
On th1s day n hiStory
In 1919 U S alfj)lane passen
ger serviCe started when
Robert Hewitt flew Mrs J A
Hoagland and MISS Ethel
Hodges from New York City to
Atlant c C ty N J
In 1933 Mrs Nellis Tayloe
Ross was sowrn n as the f rst
woman d rector of the U S
M nt

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

DR. LAWflENCE E. LAMB

1

In Well Individuals

Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK 0 BRIAN

AGA KHAN HEIRS HIS HOPE'!
NEW YORK - The Aga Khan and wife
Prm~ Salima expect the1r secood child
(f1rst sa garl) and the Aga wants a son to be m
line as the next Aga
Z&amp; Zsa s daughter
Francesca Hiltons ol&lt;ay after her long s1ege
followmg leg IDJunes m a car crash
Bill
Holden s film was becalmed by Bill s malaria
ptcked up m River Kwa1 days Remember
when a $200 su1t was considered the lavish end•
The top price now at Kmze s (TraditiOnally
NY smostexpenslve) ls$750 (less but not much
Without vest)
Shah of Iran s cousm just
bought one dozen
Christine Jorgensen s
straw.Jlattmg thiS summer Ill a one-man show
Famed N Y M1am1 underworld figure
Farve! (a Meyer I,ansky ally) diSappeared
four weeks ago and his pals suspect A H1t
Mayor Lindsay at one of the playoff games m
Madison Square Garden had to be cautioned by
his top a1de to cut QUI working on the muruc pal
pamc papers m hiS lap lest the crowd suspect
he s really not the sports-buff he pretends
Still-active actress Ethel Griffles 93 nothmg to
35 do for two weeks took the Queen Elizabeth 2 both
ways between London and N Y last week
Sarah Miles told Merv Griffm she and
husband Robert Bolt (author of Man and All
Seljllons
Ryans Daughter ) aren t liked m
England and ne1ther Is director David Lean
but he s not liked anywhere
Sarah s opm ons
are frank funny 1mtating perceptive such as
her deCISion on George C Scott Pompous
Perry Como s off to London any flight for a
TV-6pec181 Toquer1es as to why Perry lSD ton
TV regularly the s1mple answer His mcome
from a few Las Vegas Lake Tahoe weeks plus
recordings plus an occasional TV speCial pushes
his annual mcome over a llllllion
He II do at
least one network spec a! next season w th Flip

CON

Wilson and DoriS Day
Marvelous Melba Moore has added ex
penence pOISe ana a lovely natliral d1gmly
smce her early - Purlie triumph you can t
p-actice or buy 1t 11 s just got to be there sm
cerely Its a daughter for the Bob (Columbia
Pix) Per•llas
Kirk Kerkori3D who made big
mov1e tycoon news a season ago IS due for more
headlines
Omar Sharif plainly takes hiS
bndge-playmg fame senously He has
challenged BritiSh champ professional Jeremy
F1mt to a match for stakes at a pound sterling a
.pomt he could lose $30 000 a n ght
Sterling Hayden shaved off his blond beard
for h1s Godfather role some Maf13 castmg a true WASP-type
AI Pacmo of 'The God
father film troupe wore a bandaruill around his
forehead at the Ubrary spot to cover a ban
dage dey got him awready•
The Iron Butterfly rock band IS melting
Duke Ellmgton s pretty young gal at the
Urucorn was young enough to be his daughter
and was -Mercedes relaxing w1th pop from her
No No Nanette terplllg
Dick smothers
and estranged w1fe Lmda are second
honeymoonmg m Hawaii
XaVIer Cugat lost
almost 50 pounds since his strike a year ago now
calms his Spanish nerves pamting- and peddles
his daubs for up to $6 000 marvelous fiScal
therapy Pro basketball referee Richie Powers
and wife blew the whistle
CBS IS talent-=utmg for someone to play
Don Rickles mfe on hiS TV ser1es probably
lookmg for a Mark VII tank Collegiate Scbool
(that s where John.John Kennedy goes) gave 1ts
retirmg headmaster Carl A Andrews a chic solong g•ft An East Afncan safan
Mel
Shavelson s hilanous How to Make a Jewish
Mov1e book brought a rave-notice letter from
John Ford probably the finest director m U ..S
!1Im hiStory lets op1ne DaVId Leans the fmest
m British celluiOidla

r---------------------------1 WIN AT BRIDGE

!Helen Help Us !Openmg Four
I

By Helen Bottel

II Card MaJors

THE ODD COUPLE FEMALE STYLE
NORTH

N THE ..MATTER OF
sCOUNT
ETT u S
EM ENT OF
Ac
PROBATe COURT
MEAccoun
GS COUNTY
OH 0 of he
s and vouchers
o ow ng named f due a es
ha11e been t ed n the P oba e
cou Me gs coun y Oh 0 for
app ova and se emen
CASE NO 20 4 3 F s and
F na Accoun of Roy R e h
m ena Execu
o of he Es a e
o
V g n a R e hm e
Oeceased
CASE NO 9 984 Second and
F na Account o Ca le Wea s
Guard an of the pe son and
e~c~~~;t:n m~e s~n Shee s an
CASE NO 20 299 F s and
F na Accoun o Ooro hV M
S evens Adm n s a x of he
Es a e of Lou s E Stevens
Deceased
CASE NO 20 378 F s and
F na Accoun of Ml dred Lee
Adm n s ratr x of the Es a e of
va M Donohue Deceased

Dear Helen
My fr1end a young 60 lost her husband two months ago She
IS lonely and unsettled My husband and I had her as a house guesl
for a whUe but she wanted to move mto an apartment wh1ch was
fine - except that another friend a very dommeermg spmster
has QeCided she should not be alone
Thill seco11d woman w II soon retire from an execut ve
position Her mcome will drop therefore she s look ng for cheap
rent She has never been a housekeeper or a cook 1s the type to
leaVe a trail of cigarette ashe&amp; clothes coffee cups and cocktail
glasses behmd her In other words she IS sloppy whereas my
\VIdowed friend IS meticulous a great cook and a real
homemaker You can guess who will do most of the work while
be1ng bossed to dIStractlon AIso she II assume the greater
financial burden as she IS well.()ff
Now you t thmk the w1dow could see thiS comb nation won t
work but she Is easily swayed She sees the sp1nster as
salvation -someone who Will take over for she was always
very dependent on her husband And she has thiS self-effacmg
hero worsh1p of career women so she s ripe for browheatmg
Once moved m MISS Bossy wont be eradicated w1thout more
gumption than Mrs Softy has
How can we hold the deciSion off untU our friend learns to
stand alone• - CONCERNED
Dear Con
Why not suggest a long cruiSe or a European tour' Several
months on her own should convmce your fr1end that she ISR t
1um..,.
'--' t 0 bossysplllS..,rs
•- therest ofh er !ife - H
Dear

Helen

CA SEAccoun
NO 19of R
05 chard
Th cd
MY17 year-oJddaug hte r 1ies then accuses me of spymg on
Annua
Ma n Gua dan of he pe son her Howcouldispywhenshehasherroomsoboobytrappedthat
and esta e o w
am F
Reeves an ncompe en Pe I m almost afraid to walk m the door• I never know what might
son
JUmpoutatmefroma drawer or g"ooffw1th a bang when I open a
Un ess excep ons are
bo,x (if I ever d1d that IS)
he e o sa d accounts w
be
She ru ns with a rowdY crowd of g1rIs Who have been sen t
fo hea ng befo e sad cou on
he 2nd day of June 197 a homeaftercurfewmanytimes Shesavesherlunchmoneytobuy
wh ch me sa d accounts w I be be
cons dered and coni nued from
eronweeken ds- 1 ve heard herpIanson thete1ephone
day to day unt f na y d sposed She was picked up by the pollee for posseSSion of alcoholic
of
Any pe son n e es ed may beverages and of course she cried and denied so got off w1th a
f e w lien except ons o sa d warnmg but I know she armks to excess I ve tried to keep thiS
accoun s or o matte s per
a n ng o he execu on o he from her father I ve covered up for her but now I m SICk ms1de
uSI no ess han I ve days for she won t confide m me calls me dirty names and if I try to
p o o he date se for hear ng
F H o a en help her gets hystencal then won t speakfor days
PROBATE
Th e Ia st suaw
'- was when a hgh
ME GS COUNTYJUDGE
OH 0
1 way man Jk now as ked me
15 3 tc 1 How s your daughter she must be sliff and sore• He was
- r - - - - - - - - - - shocked to learn I knew nothmg of the acCident Seems she and
he ebv au ho zed and d ec ed another gltl had rolled a piCkup truck mto a ravme and the road
do n;~c e 1 ~ ~e ~":.,~ ~A~~ so 00 f CI'CW pulled them out She told me she was babys ttmg
Me gs county Oh o aceo d ng
Is thiSallmy faultforover-protectingand lymgfor he1? I was
0
s::' on 9 Th s 0 d nonce s marrted - QUite disastrously -very young and had my farruly
he eby dec ared to be an before I was 18 My husband and I have separated several tunes
e,;"\~enm ~~d·:·~ : ;,~,~~sa~~ are now together but not happy !feel alone and helpless I want to
o he pub c hea h safely and be a well loved mother of a GOOD daughter but I ve turned mto
we fa e o sa d V aoe and to
he u he eason the m what she calls a nosey Witch With no control Is there any
med a e ssuanceandsa eof he h•""? _ BEWILDERED AND HURT
bonds he en au hor zed s nvt"'=
necessa y o p ov de funds o
P S Please print thiS She reads yourwlumn every day

B dH

e e ou s and ng
no es
whe e o e h s o d nance sha

De

be n u fo ce and effect om
5
~~~sag~med a e Y aile
Cha es Lega
Mavo
Passed Ap
23 97
AI es Jane wa on
•
26
5 3
o 3c

JfyourdaughterreadsHHUeveryday thenmaybesheUsee
th1srequest DearDaugblerofBandH Send me YOUR verSion
tngelher With a stamped envelope addressed I&lt;J BOTH of you
When I hear each Side (It m1ght be good w get your fathers
viewpoint here too) I can at least make an educated guess aoout
what s wrong and how to right 11
Meanwhile Mrs B and H Make an appomtment w th your
FamilySetvlceAgency-for the whole fam1ly -H

ar

an

In 1968 the Umted States and
Th1s Is the f rst time the
North VIetnam agreed to start
Postal
Service has ever stuck
the Pans peace talks They
Its
neck
out
continue
-Postmaster General Wm
A thought for the day British
novehsl Edward Lytton said
The easiest person to deceiVe
s one s own self

ton M Blount announcmg

pla1' for text day delivery of a11 mad w1tlt111 600
mdes

J

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What s d,teot' Noth ng
but educ.Jt on and • step~
wsom~th ng better.
- Wendell Phillips

* * * :l

Pressure Healthy
By Lawrence Lamb M ll
Dear Dr Lamb
Please
explam why one should be
more concerned over h gh
d~astol c pressure I under
stand that people whose
d astol c pressure s some
what lower than .normal
have a greater expectat on
ol I fe
Dear Reader - As your
quest on 1mp! es there are
two blood pressure read ngs
that the doctor takes durmg
cxamlnatwn The h ghest of
the two read ngs represents
the peak level of pressure n
the arter es durmg the c r
culation The peak riSe n
pressure occurs each bme
the heart beat ejects blood
mto the artenes ThiS IS
called the systolic pressure
The lowest reading repre
sents the lowest level of pres
sure m the major arter es
dur ng each heart cycle and
s called the d asto c pres
sure
!
The two readmgs g ve the
range of pressure throughout
each heart beat n the arter
es Persistent elevatwn of
the d astohc pressure or
low J reading s more often
an md cat on of h gh blood
pressure disease Th s can
be caused by changes n the
artenes m the body and even
from a prob)em m the c1r
culat on through the k dneys
Th s s why more attent on
some! mes s g ven to the
d1astol c low read ng than
the systohc (h gh) read ng
Elevation of e ther or both
read ngs however IS asso
c ated w th an ncreased de
pos t of fat part cles m the
artenes throughout the body
and a s1gn fiCant ncrease n
the nsk of heart attacks or
strokes It s true that a per
son who has relat vely low
blood pressure or low va ues
for both the top and lower
readmg has a better prob
ab1l ty for a long I fe w thout
heart or vascular disease
There are a few d seases
I ke tuberculosis that some
limes cause low blood pres
sure but the VjiSt maJOrity
of ndiVIduals wHo appear to
be well and, have low blood
pressure are really fortu
nate
Dear Dr Lamb - What
causes low blood pressure
and what k nd of food could

Open ng lead

be eaten to Improve th s con
d ton
Dear Reader- Most often
low blood pressure Is normal
In fact nd v duals with low
blood pressure tend to I vc
longer than nd v duals w th
normal or h gh blood pres
su e prov ded the low blood
pressure s not caused by
some ser ous d sease Of
cuurse low blood pressure
c~n be ser ous f l occurs
w1th shock or hemorrhage
Among d seases that can
cause low blood pressure are
tuberculos s def c1ency of
the adrenal gland anem a
and somet mes heart failure
S nee low blood pressure IS
usually a normal fmdmg
treatment •s not nd1eated
and there are no spec al
foods one should e~t to cor
rect the cond t on

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•
By United Press International
Leading Batters
National league
G AB R H Pet
Garr A
23 95 7 38 400
Mays SF
22 76 17 28 368
Mlln All
23 94 9 34 362
Staub Mont 17 64 2 23 359
Sf gil P
22 82 16 29 3.54
A ou Hou
16 48 6 17 354
Bonds SF
21 88 22 31 352
To re S L 26 100 15 35 350
Mntnz Ph I 18 63 14 22 349
Brock St L 24 95 20 33 347
American League
G AB R H Pet
01 va M nn 22 92 19 36 391
Murcer NZ 21 78 11 28 359
Schaa KC 24 78 16 27 346
Yaz Bos
22 76 22 26 342
K lbrw Mlnn 24 91 9 31 341
Nrthrp eet 22 85 7 29 34
Jhhsn Ba
21 83 12 28 337
Unser Wash 21 57 6 19 333
McCraw Wash
19 45 13 5 333
Rotas KC
24 94 14 31 3JII

5

AS MAYOR I WOULD LIKE TO SEE:

4 A cleaner Middleport

~

Home Runs

MIDDLEPORT

3 Better c1t11en city government com
muntcatlon lall aspects)

I

I

Nat1on1l League Aaron AU
and Stargell Pitt 11 Bench
c n 9 Cepeda All and Bonds
SF 1
American teague 01 va
M nn 7 Powell Batt 6 Hor o
Del Wh te NY and B~ndo Oak

REPUBLICAN

2 A concerned c1ty government that w111
attack Middleport s problems before they
grow out of proportion Ex The landfill

I '~• I

~jiiaziZ':::::_.;...__")J

ii I
0

F nance your new car with

1 Street repa1rs 12 months a year and not Iust
one month llefore an elechon

By United Press International
M1ch1gan State pitchers held
arch-r1val Michigan at bay m
a two-game series this weekend
to move mto the lead m the
B1g Ten baseball standmgs
Spartan batters walloped two
homers m the senes opener
Fr1day to pace the offense
wh1le lefthander Rob Clancy
held the Wolverines to five h1ts
for a 7 2 VIctory Spartan hurl
er Larry Ike gave up only two
hits and no runs m Saturdays
game while catcher Ron Prwtt
batted In one run With a tr1ple
and then scored hunself on a
Wild pitch for 2.() WJn
Minnesota moved Into the
second place spot after sweep
mg doubleheaders agamst Oh o
State and Jnd1ana the two
schools whtch shared top
honors With Michigan State go
mg mto the weekend
The Gophers had to f1ght for
the first game agamst the
Buckeyes and scored the wm
nmg run on a wild p1tch to
take 11 5-4 They broke the sec
ond game open With e1ght runs
m the fifth to wm 12-3
Minnesota shut out lnd1ana s
Hoosiers in Saturdays two
game meet 9-0 and 4-0 and

~SIONIY

iiv'i;,t; OA I 2.59
OA)399

N£WSPAP(R lNTlRPRIS( ASSN

KIM NEAL

•

By FRED DOWN
hun halfway to h1s 1970 season League batters are looking for a
UPI $ports Writer
total has a smgle explanatiOn p1tch he doesn t throw any
Steve Carlton of the St Lows fo• his-&lt;"eturn to stardom
more
Cardinals whose five wins have
Steve says nval Natmnal
They were h1ttmg my
slider says the 6-4 210-p()und
Carlton who had a 1().19 record
m 1970 after a 17 I season In
1969 I started to !QSe and then
I lost confidence m everythmg
ncludmg my fast ball
Carlton s fast ball IS h•s bread
By United
lpternat onal
American League
National league
East
and butter p1tch as he proved
EA!IIf
W L Pel GB when he had a 217 earned run
W L Pet GB Boston
4 8 636
New York
13 8 619
3 9 591 1 average m 1969 Steve was
Bait mo e
Pittsburgh
4 10 583
Wash ngton 12 2 500 3 known then as an old fashiOned
Montrea
9 7 563 1 ,
wYork
10 11 476 3 ' p1tcher one w1th a fast ball a
St Lou s
14 11 560 1
10 12 455 :
oI
Ch cago
10 13 438 4
8 5 348 2 curve and a changeup - but the
vela'nd
Ph ladelph a 7 14 333 6
St Lows bram trust told him he
West
West
W L Pet GB needed another p tch Steve
W L Pet GB Oak and
18 0 643 , added the slider to h1s eqwp
San Francisco 9 6 760
Cal forn a
14
560 2
Atlanta
2 1 522 6 Kansas C ty 12 2 500 4
ment - and was sorry for 11
Los Ange es
3 13 500 6 , Ch cago
10 3 435 s h
Carlton scored hts f1fth v c
Houston
12 3 480 7 M nnesota
10 14 4 7 6
tory m SIX dec1s1ons th1s season
C nc nnat
9 3 409 8 M leaukee
9 13 409 6
Sunday when he p1tched the
~n Dleao
5 18 217 13
Sunday s Resulls
Card nals to a 1-0 VIctory over
Sunday s Results
P ttsburgh 5 San D ego
the Montreal Expos Carl
New York 2 M w st
Ch cago 7 Ph lade! ph a 1
ton y1elded n ne h1ts and
New yo k 5 Mllw 4 2nd
St Lou s 1 Montreal 0
Ch
cago
3
Wash
ngton
1
Atlanta 4 Los Angeles 0
had a runner on base m every
Ba t more 5 Kansas C ty 3
San Fran 4 Cln 3 13 nns
nnmg unt1l the mnth when he
Boston 1 Mlnn 0 lsi
N Y 6 Houston 5 10 nns
ret1red
the Expos in order
Boston 9 M nn 8 2nd
Ca
fo
n
a
4
Detro
3
Today s Probable Pitchers
I threw mostly fast balls and
Ch caao 1Holtzman o 3} at Oakland 8 C eve 5 s
no sliders sa1d Carlton I
C eve 7 Oak 3 2nd 10 nns
N~w York 1Gentry 2 3} n ght
threw a few changeups to
TodaY s Probable Potchers
St Lou s IZachary 0-0) a
No
games
scheduled
Ph lade Iph a I Le sch 1 1
certam hitters but basiCally I m
Tuesdays Games
n aht
back to be ng an old fashioned
N Y a M nnesota nlte
Only games scheduled
pitcher
Wash ngton at M lw n e
Tuesday s Ga~s
Boston
at
Ch
n
te
The Card nals scored the only
Ch cago at N Y n e
Oakland at Det n le
S Lou s al Ph Ia n te
run of the game off Carl Morton
KC at C eve tw I le
Houston al Mtl nlte
n the th1rd mnmg when Lou
Cal lorn a a Bal n te
C nc nnatl at Los A nl e
Saturdays Results
Brock s ngled advanced to
P ttsburgh a SF n e
Kansas C ly 5 Ba 1 2
Saturday s Results
th~rd on two mf eld outs and
M lw 1 New York 0
P tlsbvrgm 5 SO 4 11 nns
tall ed when shortstop Bobby
M nneso a 7 Boston
Chcago 7 Ph a 4
Ceveland 2 Oakland
Wme booted a grounder by Joe
Atlanta 7 Los Angeles 5
Ch cago 5 Wash ng on 3
C nc nnatl 3 SF 2
Torre Morton an 18 game
Ca lorn a 9 Detro I
Mtl 2 St L 2 7 n ra n

Spartans Take
Lead In Big 10

HOUSE 0.

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Oswald Some ex p e r t s
never open four card maJor
su ts Others go out of the1r
way to open them Most ex
perts are n between these
extremes They don t open
four-card maJors often but
they w II open one when the
alternate b d has mamfest
defects
J m We follow th s prac
t ce m our own b ddmg and
n our teachmg so that n
JACOBY MODERN we occa
, onally open four card ma
)Or su Is
Oswald The essence of
our teachmg s that partner
should never be afra1d to
ra1se one of our maJor su t
o pe n n g s w1th Just three
trumps When we open a
spade the odds are at least
20-1 that we hold at least
f ve spades When we open
a heart the odds are at
least 5-l that we hold at
least f ve hearts
J1m South open s one
heal t because he s afraid
that 1f he opens one dm
mond the heart su t will be
lost And 1t probably would
have been As 11 IS North
raiSes to two hearts after the
spade overcall and eventu
ally takes h1s partner to the
heart game
0 s w a I d Four oppos1te
three lsn t the most des r
able trump holding but 1t
works out all nght today
Assum ng that West cashes
two spades and sh1fts to a
d1amond South must plav
one round of clubs before
touchmg trumps After that
he can draw trumps and
score 10 t rIc k s The 42
trump break Will not bother
hm

~ A ThToodanght

20 MEDITEHANEAN
VANITY

Oak woodgan cobntf w h o d
b o ha dwort Wotrprori 8120

3

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SAil

20 PROVINCIAL
VANITY
Wk

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&amp;sa•
POMEROY CEMENT

,,Age ... Wo. p ool

8 o20. 3

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·~ 00.

TP.e Department Store
of Building Since 1915

Runs BoHed In
Nallonol Leaoue Stargell
Pill 28 Aaron All 23 Mays
SF 9 Cepeda Atl and Colbert
soAmer
18
can Luguo K lebrew
M nn 23 Powell Ball Yas
trzemskl Bos and Northrup
Del 20 Sando Oak 18
Pitching
Not onal Ltague Cor ton
Sf L 5 1 Upshaw All 52
Dierker Hou 4 o Stner NY 4
1 Jenkins Ch 4 2
Amerluri Leagul Blue Oak
6 1 Palme• Ball and Sieber!
8os 4 o McNal y Ball and
Fisher ea 4 1 Lol &lt;h,,_ Del
Perry Mlnn and Hunter vok 4

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

gamed a 6-2 conference record
Ind1ana already had suffered
a resoundmg defeat Fnday
when Iowa batters walloped
two home runs to spark the r
team to two v1ctor1es m the
tw n bill 6-2 and 5-3 Iowa bat
tered Oh10 State on Saturday m
another twm bUI 7-3 and 6-0
flbn01s was tied w1th Iowa
for !hard place m the standmgs
as a result of beatmg Wlscon
sm 3-2 and 5-2 Fnday and
then defeat ng Northwestern m
a two-game ser es Saturday 7
3 and 14-2
Purdue spht a doubleheader
With W1sconam Saturday the
BOilermakers taking the mght
cap ~ after losing the opener
11-5
Purdue beat Northwester the
low man on the B g Ten totem
pole Saturday m a doublehead
er 4-2 and 12-2

---·--tt

..

·,.r::----,~---·,~-"~--~- -w~~..
·-----~"--"-~-·....

Carlton In Fifth Win

nn•n•••••n

~

I

lay 3 1971

1

wmner m 1970 suffered his
fourth loss agamst two v1c
tones
The Pittsburgh P1tate~
defeated the San Diego PadrE$
5-I the Atlanta Braves beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1 the
Ch cago Cubs routed \he
Ph1ladelph a Phlllies 71 the
San FranciSCO G1ants downed
the Cincmnat1 Reds 4-3 m 13
mmngs and the New York Mets
scor~d a 6-5 10- nn ng trmmph
over the Houston Astros m other
Nat onal League games
In the Amencan League 11
was New York over Milwaukee
2 1 and 5 4 ChiCago 3
Washmgton I Boston over
Mmnesota I 0 and 9 8
Baltunore 5 and Cleveland 7
Oakland 3 m 10 mnmgs m the
mghtcap
Gene Clmes s ngled m the tie
breaking run and Rich Hebner
had a run-6cormg tnple m a
four run seventh lnmng wh1ch
enabled Dock Ell s to WJn h1s
th rd game for the Pirates
Dave Gmsll the Pirates ace
late nmng rei ever of 1970
shutout the Padres m the last
two mn ngs to earn h1s f1fth save
of the season Steve Arlm
suffered h s fourth straight
setback
Ron Reed on the diS8bied hst
a year ago pitched a flve-lutter
for h s th rd v1ctory of the
Braves who swept the1r three
game senes w1th the Dodgers
Orland Cepeda hit a two run
homer and Hank Aaron h1t h1s
603rd career homer

ABA Finals
Underway

sse Is

the Sports Desk
by Chet TannehUI

]C Champ

ThiS IS the season when the h1gh scbools coachmg lratemity
begm thlnl&lt;mg hard about what name they'll be prmtlng on their
swealsharts next year The summer h1atus corrung up appears to
be offermg an unusual number of opportun111es for "\mners to
replace losers
I!
For lets face 11 all school boards are under pressure - and
why shouldn t they be • - to have wmners m our b1g sports
football and basketball This rule.()( thumb doesn t apply to North
Gallta Htgh where basketball coach Paul Aikman s club fm shed
With a fine 16-4 record and still IS destined to have a new coach
next November
In Metgs County Bruce Wallace already has been signed to
coach the Tornadoes m football next fall replacing the veteran
Bob Ashley who has resigned as a teacher and a coach at
Southern At Eastern a coach will be hired to take over for Larry
R1tch1e At Me1gs Charley Chancey 1s back for football and Coach
Carl Wolfe returns as a teacher and head basketball coach

Bob saunders Quaker State Bickers were Dan D Antoni 39
Serv ce Center captured the pomts Greg McDev1tt 27 pomts
F~r s t Annual Gall pol s Area and Randy Noll 25 pomts QSSC
Jaycee Inv tat onal Basketball led at halftime 74-$
Tournament Saturday n ght
R o ATD edged Falls City
down ng B ckers B ~ we ll 152-148 n an overtune to take
Mill ng 160-149
the consolatwn honors Ron
Tony Bass f ashy guard led Lambert and Roger Bentley
the w nners w th 37 pomts pa ced he wmners w1th 38and 32
Other h gh scorers were Blame po nts respectively Darrell
Henry w1th 34 po nts AI Mart n Ball and Doug Hart added 27
29 po nts Bob Mabry 22 pomts po nts each and Ron Wyckoff
and D ck Fowler added 20 pun ped n 20 po nts
po nts
Bob I.e th led the losers With
OU s Ken Kowall captured 39 pomts Sam Pulley had 36
KYGER CREEK WHERE John Sang has toiled With scor ng honors for the mght Calv n Carm1chael 34 po nts
basketball three years w II have a new coach m that sport There w1th a 45 pont effor t n a losmg and Roger Foster canned 21
are strong reports that Buddy Moore Middleport s blUe bomber cause Other lop s o ers for po nts
of a few years ago has his application on file at Kyger Creek
There are equally strong reports that h1s action has st rred
Galbpobs where Moore s reported m Grade A standing as an
ass slant m football under Johnny Ecker and as freshman
Ind v dual t oph es to the team trophieS to the top three
basketball coach
champ onsh1p and runnerup clubs n lhe s ngle ebmmat10n
team s n the f rst annual e ght team tournament
IN THE BIG DADDY League the SEOAL the football Gall polls Area Jaycees In
Named to the All Star
coachmg lmeup Will be a duplicate of 1970 w1th one posSible ex dependent Bas ketball Tour Tournament Team were Mike
ception
nament were awarded to Johnson Ashland 011 Paul
Over the weekend certam sources - shall we say sl ghtly Quake State Serv ce Center D lion Dave s Place Marvm
unpeachable - said John Congar and h1s enlire staff at Wellston and B dwell M ll ng by M1ke Ha e Wellston Eagles Sam
w Ures1gn shortly Furthermore th s could result m the Rockets Allen follow ng Saturday mght s Pulley Falls C1ty Ron lam
fme Jumor quarterback Danny Settles movmg to Jackson Th s champ1nnsh p game on the bert R o Grande ATD 8Bob
DeCathy Huntmgton and Dan
would do plenty for the Ironmen wbo then could shift great Wash ngton Hardwood
The Ja ycees a so presented D An on B dwell Millmg
sophomore runner thrower KennY Valentme to flanker And
The top md1v dual scorer s
what a revoltm development that would be for Jackson s op
trophy went to Tony Bass of
poSition on the gr1daron next autumn
Quaker State Bass scored 67 In
As for what IS hapaenmg at Wellston who knows• There s
NHL Playoff Stand ngs
one of the tourney games
been fnction there up and down the school s hierarchy several
By
Un
ted
Press
Internal
onal
Quaker States Blaine Henry
years surpassed m this area only by the pyrotechmcs we see
ISem
I nalsl
former
Marshall Umvers1ty
ns ng almost weekly across the OhiO River m Mason County
I Best of Seven]
great was named the tour
Elsewhere Logan which IS replacmg Ken lnsam m basket
W L Pet GA nament s Most Valuable
4
3
21
4
ball most hkely now won t persuade Mark Wybe to leave the x Ch cago
3 4 14 2 Player
New
York
Columbus area But don t count Wyhe out of the picture Wyl e
W L GF GA
JUSt possibly m ght favor the 1dea of corrung home
x Monea
4 2 27
9
M nnesota
2 4 19 27

All-Star Team Is Announced

Pro Standings

x c enched se es

Red Sox Take Two ..l'D ...om
;tl•
fa
1'1 znneso ' 1-0 and 9-8
I

'

Sundav s Results
Ch cago 4 New Yo k 2
Tuesdays Game
Mon ea a Ch cago

Issei s approachmg super star
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)Internal ona I League Standings
The Utah Stars host the status and t won t be long
By Un ted Press International
Kentucky Colonels tomght n before he s '" the same class
W L Pel GB
Sy acuse
0 4 74the open ng game of the Best of as Mel Dan els and our Zelmo
Cha
lesion
9 6 600
'
Seven ser es for the Amer can Beaty
Ray Culp s gett ng straight
The Onoles got a two run Lou s e
8 6 571 2
Sharman th nks Issei IS the The boston Red Sox were a homer and a route go ng R chmond
Basketball Assoc1at on cham
8 6 571 2
6 8 429 4
ma n rason for the Colonels I ttle worr ed about their ace performance from Mike Cuellar W nn peg
p10nsh1p playoff
To
edo
6 9 400 4 '
Both teams take on the crushmg defeat of V1rg ma m r ghthander after he was as they defeated Kansas City T dewa er
6 0 375 5
Yovr
Cmderella role as they each SIX games for the Eastern bombed for 21 runs m 13 but st II dropped a half game Rochester
4 8 333 5
Sunday s Results
f1mshed the regular season D v son crown
nn ngs m h1s last three starts farther back of the Red Sox
Cha
eston
11 Toledo 8
The Stars hope to stop the 6-9 but a lip from p1tchmg coach Cuellar who picked up his
second n their respective
R chmond 4 Rocheste J (lsi 7
Kentucky rook1e center WJth Harvey Hadd1x straightened second v ctory of the season
diV SIOns
nn ngs}
Kentucky topped the regular B1g Z (Beaty) the former Culp out and he responded stroked h1s homer 350 feet Rocheste 3 R chmond 2 {2nd
season Eastern DIVISIOn ABA NBA great who has led Utah m Sunday w1th a two hit 1-0 down the nght f eld lme With 7 nn ngsl
T dewa e J Syracuse 2 (lsi 7
champiOn V1rg n a Sqmres scormg and reboundmg whitewash of the Mmnesota Brooks Rob nson aboard to gJve nn ngs}
wh le Utah captured the West throughout the regular season Twms as the Red Sox swept a Baltunore a 3-0 lead In the Syracuse 9 T dewa er 3 {2nd 7
nn ngsl
by narrowly edgmg the Ind1ana and playoffs
doubleheader Boston tal11ed for fourth
W
peg 4 Lou sv I e 3 (1st 8
Beaty IS JO ned up front by two runs m the nmth to take Rick Retchard! s 41 !!-foot nnnnngs)
Pacers m seven games
Stars )head coach Bill Shar W1ll1e WISe and Red Robbms the mghtcao 9-ll
homer camed t.ie White Sox I? Lou sv lie 2 Wnn peg 3 (2nd
does It take to Insure
wh
le
Merv
Jackson
aod
Glen
man said I hope we don t
In other Amencan League victory over the Senators after 7 nn ngs
your farm
Undefl
suffer a mental let down Combs will handle the playmak games Sunday Baltimore the score had been deadlocked
one plan - lust one.t
agamst Kentucky after that ng With the1r speed and ball edged Kansas City 5-3 Chicago 11 going mto the mnth mnlng
policy
one
low
control tactics
Indiana senes
topped Wash ngton 3-1 New Jay Johnstone also homered for HUTTER SWAPS JOBS
premium ~yment
COLUMBUS Oh10 (UPI)Kentucky backs up Issei w1th York swept a twm bill from the Ch1sox to put them out m
Durmg the regular season
one place to ~Y
the Stars held a 4-2 edge over forwards Cmcy Powell and Jun Milwaukee 2-1 and 5-4 Cahfor front HI In the th1rd Wllb&lt;ll' Dave Hutter Sunday resigned
the Colonels WJnn ng all three Ligon while Dame! Camer and ma mpped Detro1t 4-3 and Wood picked up h1s f~rst v1ctory as baseball coach and assistant
games n Salt Lake wh1le Josmg Lows Dampter form one of the Oakland spht a twm-blll w1th as a starter In three years for football coach at Cap tal
Un vers1ty to accept a sunllar
two of three at Freedom Hall m top backcourt comb nations m Cleveland as the Athletics won Chicago
ABA basketball
Pb..,_ m :11u
Lowsville
the opener 8-5 before droppmg Mel Stottlemyer s three-hitter posttion at Brockport (N Y )
State
College
114
Court
St
Sham an IS hopmg the
the mghtcap 7-3 m 10 nnmgs stopped the Brewers m the
homecourt advantage m the
After ton ght s game both fn Nat onal League action opener for the Yankees and
seven game senes will g ve the squads take a rest on Tuesday Pittsburgh beat San d ego 5-1 Danny Cater broke a 4-4 tie m
champ onsh1p to the Stars
before resummg the basketball Atlanta downed Los Angeles 4 the seventh mnlng of the second
CINCINNATI (UPI)
The
We II need every break we wars agam m Salt Lake City 1 Ch cago wh1pped Philadel game with a double off the
C ncmnati Reds left today for can get to stop Kentucky and
ph a 7 1 San Francisco mpped glove of center f1elder Dave
Los Angeles where they w1ll Dan Issei Sharman added Wednesday n ght
Cmcmnat1 4-3 m 13 mnmgs May that scored Jake Gibbs
open a three-game ser1es With
New York edged Houston 6-5 m Jack Aker allowed just one hit
the Dodgers Tuesday
IOmmngs and St Lo111s blanked m retief for the Yanks to piCk
The west coast sWJng w II be
Montreall-0
up the v1ctory Ill the mghtcap
the f1tst of the season for the
Culp seeking to diSCover Jerry Moses p1cked an
Reds who dropped a 4-3 dec•
what had gone wrong m hiS opportune t me to snap a 2-for
s1on to the San Francisco Gtants
p1tch ng mot on had a video Jll slump by belting a two-run
when Willie McCovey socked a
tape machme !1Im his pitching homer m the second mnlng that
for 10 days but th~ project helped the Angels pasl the
13th mmng home run Sunday
m the finale of a three-game
Drawmgs for the 1971 Class actiOn In the finals the top proved fru tless Then Haddix Tigers Sandy Alomar singled
ser1es at Cine nnall s Riverfront AA Sectwnal Baseball Tour bracket teams w II be the home watched Culp working m the home Ken Berry With the
Stadium
nament for 24 area teams were teams the lower bracket teams Fenway Park playpen Thursday wlnnmg run In the seventh
The homer commg off Tony held at RID Grande s Paul R the v s1tors
mght under the bleachers after Cahforn a s ace reliever Edd1e
Clonmger was the second of the Lyne Center Sunday afternoon
CENTRAL SECTIONAL
the Red Sox had been ramed out F1sher picked up his fourth
125 E MAIN
game for McCovey
992 2171
Coach
J m Osborne s
(May G)
and noticed the flaw
vtctory m f1ve de•c•s•ons wh1le
The G1ant f1rst baseman tag Gallipolis Blue Devds drew Portsmouth West bye
POMEROY
0
You re sWJngmg your hips Bill Zepp drew h s first loss for
ged Gary Nolan for a f1rst mn Wellson s Golden Rockets m Wellston at Gall polls
too much Hadd1x told Culp Detro t
mg homer With W1ihe Mays f rst round actwn m the Central Minford bye
S nee the v1deo tape machme
aboard After the Reds t1ed the
1
Vmton County at Northwest
always shot straJ.ght at hiirl 1t
~
~
~
~~
~
score by bunchmg three h1ts for Se~~":ame WJII be played on
NORTHEASTSECTIONAL couldn t catch Culps motion
YOU ARE INVITED TO OUR
'
two runs In the second mn ng Gallipolis d amond oq Thurs
(May 7)
from the Side
-f
the G1ants went ahead 3-2 In day beg nmng at 4 P m The Nelsonville York bye
Evidently Haddix dtagnosls
the e1ghth when Mays smgled GoldeltRockets were ongmally New r.exmgton at Federal was correct and after Culp
home Bobby Bonds
scheduled to play here Thurs Hocking
blanked the Twms m the
/
A walk to Lee May Bern1e day m a non league game Warren Local bye
opener George Thomas dellv
Carbo s Single and Tomm~ That contest w11i not be made up Alexander at Belpre
efed a key nmth mnmg pmch
Helms sacrifice fly ted the at a later date accordmg to NORTHWEST SECTIONAL h1t that won the nightcap
score at 3-all In the mnth and Coach Osborne
(May G)
I rate th1s as one of the best
sent the game nto extra mnlngs
Weather permltllng Mam•Trace bye
gamesiveeverpllched Culp
We had more chances than sem1fmal action w1ll be held on Hillsboro at Shendan
sa1d happily after the wm I ve
you can shake st ck at to wm Ml y 11 and the finals WJII he Breenfteld bye
been working on my motion In . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
that game said a disappomt conducted on May 14
Ross SW at Waverly
front of a mirror In my apart II
OPEN I
ed Sparky Anderson
The four flnatists w II ad
SOUTHERN SECTIONAL
~=~';~~:we discovered what ~~I
9 TIL 9 :
'!'lie Reds best chance came
vance to the Class AA District
(May 6)
~
m the lith mmng when Helms
Tournament to be held at Evans Rock H II bye
In sweepmg the doublehead
1
WEEKDAYS '
d off w1th a smgle and took
F1eld m Rio Grande
Ironton at Coal Grove
er the Red Sox opened up a I
I
second on a w1ld pitch by G18nt
Here s the sectional palrmgs Wheelersburg bye
one game lead over Baltimore
1
Tll5
I
relief p1tcher Jerry Johnson
However Helms was stranded
fSo•u•t•b•P•ot•n•t•at•Ch-es•a•peioa•k•e-•'•n•t•he-Am-er•c•a•n•Le•a•g•u•e•E•a•st..
after gettmg no further than
be vis1tmg teams m sem•final
SCHULT FLEETWOOD. ELCONA • REGENT
third
The Reds will send rtghthand
PIEDMONT· SYLVAN
er Jun McGlothm agamst the
HARNESSCHAMPION$HIP
~f
Wh h T Ch
Dodgers 1n Tuesday night s
Over 40 Homes rom
IC
o
oose
12' • 14' • 24' • WIDE
(
UPI)- The
No Reasonable Down Payment Refused
opener Wayne Simpson and JJill NEW YORK
Second World Drlvmg Cham
MeiTJtt will p1tch the other two
p10nship of harness racing
games m that ordl!r
sponsored by the Harness
ed
The Re&lt;ls then will move down
of Amenca gets
..
to San Diego for a series w•th Tracks
underway tonight at Roosevelt
the Padres and retlirn home on
FOR COUNCILMAN OF MIDDLEPORT VIUAGE
May 13 after movmg up to San raceway w•th eight 9f the top
.dnvers n the world takmg
FranciscO for a three-game ser
3 2
1
_ ,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _P_d_P•o•I•Ad_v_ _....1
__
__
j
part
1es w1th the Giants
1

HOW MtiY
POLICIS
z

Reds Head

Davis· War1tr lnL

West After
4-3 Defeat

Convenient
NOTE LOANS
on JUst your

Announce Pairings
For AA Tourneys

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VOTE FOR

DON KELlY
II
IN THE MAY 4 £LECJ'ION

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~~AMPLE !!_!!,!~S,e.•!!!!!.\!!!!~!'!0!!.'~ ~·!'~------ ----.J~

MILLER HOMES

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t

�-,3- The DIIUy Sentinel Mlddleport-Pomero) 0

2- The Datly Senhnel Middleport Pomeroy 0 May 3 1971
UOAL NOTICE
ORO NANCE NO

4 6

Today'•
AlnuuuJC

AN
ORDINANCE
TO
PROVIDE
FOR
THE
ISSUANCE OF BONDS OF By United Press International
THE
V ~LAGE
OF
POMEROY OHIO FOR THE Today IS Monday May 3 the
PURPOSE
DF
CON
STRUCT NG SEWER M 123rd day of 1971 w1th 242 to
PROVEMENTS
AND follow
DECLAR NG
AN The moon s belween ts f rs
EMERGENCY
quarter and full phase
The n orn ng stars are
Mercury Venus Mars and
Jup ter
The even ng slar IS Saturn
On th1s day n hiStory
In 1919 U S alfj)lane passen
ger serviCe started when
Robert Hewitt flew Mrs J A
Hoagland and MISS Ethel
Hodges from New York City to
Atlant c C ty N J
In 1933 Mrs Nellis Tayloe
Ross was sowrn n as the f rst
woman d rector of the U S
M nt

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

DR. LAWflENCE E. LAMB

1

In Well Individuals

Voice along Broadway !
BY JACK 0 BRIAN

AGA KHAN HEIRS HIS HOPE'!
NEW YORK - The Aga Khan and wife
Prm~ Salima expect the1r secood child
(f1rst sa garl) and the Aga wants a son to be m
line as the next Aga
Z&amp; Zsa s daughter
Francesca Hiltons ol&lt;ay after her long s1ege
followmg leg IDJunes m a car crash
Bill
Holden s film was becalmed by Bill s malaria
ptcked up m River Kwa1 days Remember
when a $200 su1t was considered the lavish end•
The top price now at Kmze s (TraditiOnally
NY smostexpenslve) ls$750 (less but not much
Without vest)
Shah of Iran s cousm just
bought one dozen
Christine Jorgensen s
straw.Jlattmg thiS summer Ill a one-man show
Famed N Y M1am1 underworld figure
Farve! (a Meyer I,ansky ally) diSappeared
four weeks ago and his pals suspect A H1t
Mayor Lindsay at one of the playoff games m
Madison Square Garden had to be cautioned by
his top a1de to cut QUI working on the muruc pal
pamc papers m hiS lap lest the crowd suspect
he s really not the sports-buff he pretends
Still-active actress Ethel Griffles 93 nothmg to
35 do for two weeks took the Queen Elizabeth 2 both
ways between London and N Y last week
Sarah Miles told Merv Griffm she and
husband Robert Bolt (author of Man and All
Seljllons
Ryans Daughter ) aren t liked m
England and ne1ther Is director David Lean
but he s not liked anywhere
Sarah s opm ons
are frank funny 1mtating perceptive such as
her deCISion on George C Scott Pompous
Perry Como s off to London any flight for a
TV-6pec181 Toquer1es as to why Perry lSD ton
TV regularly the s1mple answer His mcome
from a few Las Vegas Lake Tahoe weeks plus
recordings plus an occasional TV speCial pushes
his annual mcome over a llllllion
He II do at
least one network spec a! next season w th Flip

CON

Wilson and DoriS Day
Marvelous Melba Moore has added ex
penence pOISe ana a lovely natliral d1gmly
smce her early - Purlie triumph you can t
p-actice or buy 1t 11 s just got to be there sm
cerely Its a daughter for the Bob (Columbia
Pix) Per•llas
Kirk Kerkori3D who made big
mov1e tycoon news a season ago IS due for more
headlines
Omar Sharif plainly takes hiS
bndge-playmg fame senously He has
challenged BritiSh champ professional Jeremy
F1mt to a match for stakes at a pound sterling a
.pomt he could lose $30 000 a n ght
Sterling Hayden shaved off his blond beard
for h1s Godfather role some Maf13 castmg a true WASP-type
AI Pacmo of 'The God
father film troupe wore a bandaruill around his
forehead at the Ubrary spot to cover a ban
dage dey got him awready•
The Iron Butterfly rock band IS melting
Duke Ellmgton s pretty young gal at the
Urucorn was young enough to be his daughter
and was -Mercedes relaxing w1th pop from her
No No Nanette terplllg
Dick smothers
and estranged w1fe Lmda are second
honeymoonmg m Hawaii
XaVIer Cugat lost
almost 50 pounds since his strike a year ago now
calms his Spanish nerves pamting- and peddles
his daubs for up to $6 000 marvelous fiScal
therapy Pro basketball referee Richie Powers
and wife blew the whistle
CBS IS talent-=utmg for someone to play
Don Rickles mfe on hiS TV ser1es probably
lookmg for a Mark VII tank Collegiate Scbool
(that s where John.John Kennedy goes) gave 1ts
retirmg headmaster Carl A Andrews a chic solong g•ft An East Afncan safan
Mel
Shavelson s hilanous How to Make a Jewish
Mov1e book brought a rave-notice letter from
John Ford probably the finest director m U ..S
!1Im hiStory lets op1ne DaVId Leans the fmest
m British celluiOidla

r---------------------------1 WIN AT BRIDGE

!Helen Help Us !Openmg Four
I

By Helen Bottel

II Card MaJors

THE ODD COUPLE FEMALE STYLE
NORTH

N THE ..MATTER OF
sCOUNT
ETT u S
EM ENT OF
Ac
PROBATe COURT
MEAccoun
GS COUNTY
OH 0 of he
s and vouchers
o ow ng named f due a es
ha11e been t ed n the P oba e
cou Me gs coun y Oh 0 for
app ova and se emen
CASE NO 20 4 3 F s and
F na Accoun of Roy R e h
m ena Execu
o of he Es a e
o
V g n a R e hm e
Oeceased
CASE NO 9 984 Second and
F na Account o Ca le Wea s
Guard an of the pe son and
e~c~~~;t:n m~e s~n Shee s an
CASE NO 20 299 F s and
F na Accoun o Ooro hV M
S evens Adm n s a x of he
Es a e of Lou s E Stevens
Deceased
CASE NO 20 378 F s and
F na Accoun of Ml dred Lee
Adm n s ratr x of the Es a e of
va M Donohue Deceased

Dear Helen
My fr1end a young 60 lost her husband two months ago She
IS lonely and unsettled My husband and I had her as a house guesl
for a whUe but she wanted to move mto an apartment wh1ch was
fine - except that another friend a very dommeermg spmster
has QeCided she should not be alone
Thill seco11d woman w II soon retire from an execut ve
position Her mcome will drop therefore she s look ng for cheap
rent She has never been a housekeeper or a cook 1s the type to
leaVe a trail of cigarette ashe&amp; clothes coffee cups and cocktail
glasses behmd her In other words she IS sloppy whereas my
\VIdowed friend IS meticulous a great cook and a real
homemaker You can guess who will do most of the work while
be1ng bossed to dIStractlon AIso she II assume the greater
financial burden as she IS well.()ff
Now you t thmk the w1dow could see thiS comb nation won t
work but she Is easily swayed She sees the sp1nster as
salvation -someone who Will take over for she was always
very dependent on her husband And she has thiS self-effacmg
hero worsh1p of career women so she s ripe for browheatmg
Once moved m MISS Bossy wont be eradicated w1thout more
gumption than Mrs Softy has
How can we hold the deciSion off untU our friend learns to
stand alone• - CONCERNED
Dear Con
Why not suggest a long cruiSe or a European tour' Several
months on her own should convmce your fr1end that she ISR t
1um..,.
'--' t 0 bossysplllS..,rs
•- therest ofh er !ife - H
Dear

Helen

CA SEAccoun
NO 19of R
05 chard
Th cd
MY17 year-oJddaug hte r 1ies then accuses me of spymg on
Annua
Ma n Gua dan of he pe son her Howcouldispywhenshehasherroomsoboobytrappedthat
and esta e o w
am F
Reeves an ncompe en Pe I m almost afraid to walk m the door• I never know what might
son
JUmpoutatmefroma drawer or g"ooffw1th a bang when I open a
Un ess excep ons are
bo,x (if I ever d1d that IS)
he e o sa d accounts w
be
She ru ns with a rowdY crowd of g1rIs Who have been sen t
fo hea ng befo e sad cou on
he 2nd day of June 197 a homeaftercurfewmanytimes Shesavesherlunchmoneytobuy
wh ch me sa d accounts w I be be
cons dered and coni nued from
eronweeken ds- 1 ve heard herpIanson thete1ephone
day to day unt f na y d sposed She was picked up by the pollee for posseSSion of alcoholic
of
Any pe son n e es ed may beverages and of course she cried and denied so got off w1th a
f e w lien except ons o sa d warnmg but I know she armks to excess I ve tried to keep thiS
accoun s or o matte s per
a n ng o he execu on o he from her father I ve covered up for her but now I m SICk ms1de
uSI no ess han I ve days for she won t confide m me calls me dirty names and if I try to
p o o he date se for hear ng
F H o a en help her gets hystencal then won t speakfor days
PROBATE
Th e Ia st suaw
'- was when a hgh
ME GS COUNTYJUDGE
OH 0
1 way man Jk now as ked me
15 3 tc 1 How s your daughter she must be sliff and sore• He was
- r - - - - - - - - - - shocked to learn I knew nothmg of the acCident Seems she and
he ebv au ho zed and d ec ed another gltl had rolled a piCkup truck mto a ravme and the road
do n;~c e 1 ~ ~e ~":.,~ ~A~~ so 00 f CI'CW pulled them out She told me she was babys ttmg
Me gs county Oh o aceo d ng
Is thiSallmy faultforover-protectingand lymgfor he1? I was
0
s::' on 9 Th s 0 d nonce s marrted - QUite disastrously -very young and had my farruly
he eby dec ared to be an before I was 18 My husband and I have separated several tunes
e,;"\~enm ~~d·:·~ : ;,~,~~sa~~ are now together but not happy !feel alone and helpless I want to
o he pub c hea h safely and be a well loved mother of a GOOD daughter but I ve turned mto
we fa e o sa d V aoe and to
he u he eason the m what she calls a nosey Witch With no control Is there any
med a e ssuanceandsa eof he h•""? _ BEWILDERED AND HURT
bonds he en au hor zed s nvt"'=
necessa y o p ov de funds o
P S Please print thiS She reads yourwlumn every day

B dH

e e ou s and ng
no es
whe e o e h s o d nance sha

De

be n u fo ce and effect om
5
~~~sag~med a e Y aile
Cha es Lega
Mavo
Passed Ap
23 97
AI es Jane wa on
•
26
5 3
o 3c

JfyourdaughterreadsHHUeveryday thenmaybesheUsee
th1srequest DearDaugblerofBandH Send me YOUR verSion
tngelher With a stamped envelope addressed I&lt;J BOTH of you
When I hear each Side (It m1ght be good w get your fathers
viewpoint here too) I can at least make an educated guess aoout
what s wrong and how to right 11
Meanwhile Mrs B and H Make an appomtment w th your
FamilySetvlceAgency-for the whole fam1ly -H

ar

an

In 1968 the Umted States and
Th1s Is the f rst time the
North VIetnam agreed to start
Postal
Service has ever stuck
the Pans peace talks They
Its
neck
out
continue
-Postmaster General Wm
A thought for the day British
novehsl Edward Lytton said
The easiest person to deceiVe
s one s own self

ton M Blount announcmg

pla1' for text day delivery of a11 mad w1tlt111 600
mdes

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- Wendell Phillips

* * * :l

Pressure Healthy
By Lawrence Lamb M ll
Dear Dr Lamb
Please
explam why one should be
more concerned over h gh
d~astol c pressure I under
stand that people whose
d astol c pressure s some
what lower than .normal
have a greater expectat on
ol I fe
Dear Reader - As your
quest on 1mp! es there are
two blood pressure read ngs
that the doctor takes durmg
cxamlnatwn The h ghest of
the two read ngs represents
the peak level of pressure n
the arter es durmg the c r
culation The peak riSe n
pressure occurs each bme
the heart beat ejects blood
mto the artenes ThiS IS
called the systolic pressure
The lowest reading repre
sents the lowest level of pres
sure m the major arter es
dur ng each heart cycle and
s called the d asto c pres
sure
!
The two readmgs g ve the
range of pressure throughout
each heart beat n the arter
es Persistent elevatwn of
the d astohc pressure or
low J reading s more often
an md cat on of h gh blood
pressure disease Th s can
be caused by changes n the
artenes m the body and even
from a prob)em m the c1r
culat on through the k dneys
Th s s why more attent on
some! mes s g ven to the
d1astol c low read ng than
the systohc (h gh) read ng
Elevation of e ther or both
read ngs however IS asso
c ated w th an ncreased de
pos t of fat part cles m the
artenes throughout the body
and a s1gn fiCant ncrease n
the nsk of heart attacks or
strokes It s true that a per
son who has relat vely low
blood pressure or low va ues
for both the top and lower
readmg has a better prob
ab1l ty for a long I fe w thout
heart or vascular disease
There are a few d seases
I ke tuberculosis that some
limes cause low blood pres
sure but the VjiSt maJOrity
of ndiVIduals wHo appear to
be well and, have low blood
pressure are really fortu
nate
Dear Dr Lamb - What
causes low blood pressure
and what k nd of food could

Open ng lead

be eaten to Improve th s con
d ton
Dear Reader- Most often
low blood pressure Is normal
In fact nd v duals with low
blood pressure tend to I vc
longer than nd v duals w th
normal or h gh blood pres
su e prov ded the low blood
pressure s not caused by
some ser ous d sease Of
cuurse low blood pressure
c~n be ser ous f l occurs
w1th shock or hemorrhage
Among d seases that can
cause low blood pressure are
tuberculos s def c1ency of
the adrenal gland anem a
and somet mes heart failure
S nee low blood pressure IS
usually a normal fmdmg
treatment •s not nd1eated
and there are no spec al
foods one should e~t to cor
rect the cond t on

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•
By United Press International
Leading Batters
National league
G AB R H Pet
Garr A
23 95 7 38 400
Mays SF
22 76 17 28 368
Mlln All
23 94 9 34 362
Staub Mont 17 64 2 23 359
Sf gil P
22 82 16 29 3.54
A ou Hou
16 48 6 17 354
Bonds SF
21 88 22 31 352
To re S L 26 100 15 35 350
Mntnz Ph I 18 63 14 22 349
Brock St L 24 95 20 33 347
American League
G AB R H Pet
01 va M nn 22 92 19 36 391
Murcer NZ 21 78 11 28 359
Schaa KC 24 78 16 27 346
Yaz Bos
22 76 22 26 342
K lbrw Mlnn 24 91 9 31 341
Nrthrp eet 22 85 7 29 34
Jhhsn Ba
21 83 12 28 337
Unser Wash 21 57 6 19 333
McCraw Wash
19 45 13 5 333
Rotas KC
24 94 14 31 3JII

5

AS MAYOR I WOULD LIKE TO SEE:

4 A cleaner Middleport

~

Home Runs

MIDDLEPORT

3 Better c1t11en city government com
muntcatlon lall aspects)

I

I

Nat1on1l League Aaron AU
and Stargell Pitt 11 Bench
c n 9 Cepeda All and Bonds
SF 1
American teague 01 va
M nn 7 Powell Batt 6 Hor o
Del Wh te NY and B~ndo Oak

REPUBLICAN

2 A concerned c1ty government that w111
attack Middleport s problems before they
grow out of proportion Ex The landfill

I '~• I

~jiiaziZ':::::_.;...__")J

ii I
0

F nance your new car with

1 Street repa1rs 12 months a year and not Iust
one month llefore an elechon

By United Press International
M1ch1gan State pitchers held
arch-r1val Michigan at bay m
a two-game series this weekend
to move mto the lead m the
B1g Ten baseball standmgs
Spartan batters walloped two
homers m the senes opener
Fr1day to pace the offense
wh1le lefthander Rob Clancy
held the Wolverines to five h1ts
for a 7 2 VIctory Spartan hurl
er Larry Ike gave up only two
hits and no runs m Saturdays
game while catcher Ron Prwtt
batted In one run With a tr1ple
and then scored hunself on a
Wild pitch for 2.() WJn
Minnesota moved Into the
second place spot after sweep
mg doubleheaders agamst Oh o
State and Jnd1ana the two
schools whtch shared top
honors With Michigan State go
mg mto the weekend
The Gophers had to f1ght for
the first game agamst the
Buckeyes and scored the wm
nmg run on a wild p1tch to
take 11 5-4 They broke the sec
ond game open With e1ght runs
m the fifth to wm 12-3
Minnesota shut out lnd1ana s
Hoosiers in Saturdays two
game meet 9-0 and 4-0 and

~SIONIY

iiv'i;,t; OA I 2.59
OA)399

N£WSPAP(R lNTlRPRIS( ASSN

KIM NEAL

•

By FRED DOWN
hun halfway to h1s 1970 season League batters are looking for a
UPI $ports Writer
total has a smgle explanatiOn p1tch he doesn t throw any
Steve Carlton of the St Lows fo• his-&lt;"eturn to stardom
more
Cardinals whose five wins have
Steve says nval Natmnal
They were h1ttmg my
slider says the 6-4 210-p()und
Carlton who had a 1().19 record
m 1970 after a 17 I season In
1969 I started to !QSe and then
I lost confidence m everythmg
ncludmg my fast ball
Carlton s fast ball IS h•s bread
By United
lpternat onal
American League
National league
East
and butter p1tch as he proved
EA!IIf
W L Pel GB when he had a 217 earned run
W L Pet GB Boston
4 8 636
New York
13 8 619
3 9 591 1 average m 1969 Steve was
Bait mo e
Pittsburgh
4 10 583
Wash ngton 12 2 500 3 known then as an old fashiOned
Montrea
9 7 563 1 ,
wYork
10 11 476 3 ' p1tcher one w1th a fast ball a
St Lou s
14 11 560 1
10 12 455 :
oI
Ch cago
10 13 438 4
8 5 348 2 curve and a changeup - but the
vela'nd
Ph ladelph a 7 14 333 6
St Lows bram trust told him he
West
West
W L Pet GB needed another p tch Steve
W L Pet GB Oak and
18 0 643 , added the slider to h1s eqwp
San Francisco 9 6 760
Cal forn a
14
560 2
Atlanta
2 1 522 6 Kansas C ty 12 2 500 4
ment - and was sorry for 11
Los Ange es
3 13 500 6 , Ch cago
10 3 435 s h
Carlton scored hts f1fth v c
Houston
12 3 480 7 M nnesota
10 14 4 7 6
tory m SIX dec1s1ons th1s season
C nc nnat
9 3 409 8 M leaukee
9 13 409 6
Sunday when he p1tched the
~n Dleao
5 18 217 13
Sunday s Resulls
Card nals to a 1-0 VIctory over
Sunday s Results
P ttsburgh 5 San D ego
the Montreal Expos Carl
New York 2 M w st
Ch cago 7 Ph lade! ph a 1
ton y1elded n ne h1ts and
New yo k 5 Mllw 4 2nd
St Lou s 1 Montreal 0
Ch
cago
3
Wash
ngton
1
Atlanta 4 Los Angeles 0
had a runner on base m every
Ba t more 5 Kansas C ty 3
San Fran 4 Cln 3 13 nns
nnmg unt1l the mnth when he
Boston 1 Mlnn 0 lsi
N Y 6 Houston 5 10 nns
ret1red
the Expos in order
Boston 9 M nn 8 2nd
Ca
fo
n
a
4
Detro
3
Today s Probable Pitchers
I threw mostly fast balls and
Ch caao 1Holtzman o 3} at Oakland 8 C eve 5 s
no sliders sa1d Carlton I
C eve 7 Oak 3 2nd 10 nns
N~w York 1Gentry 2 3} n ght
threw a few changeups to
TodaY s Probable Potchers
St Lou s IZachary 0-0) a
No
games
scheduled
Ph lade Iph a I Le sch 1 1
certam hitters but basiCally I m
Tuesdays Games
n aht
back to be ng an old fashioned
N Y a M nnesota nlte
Only games scheduled
pitcher
Wash ngton at M lw n e
Tuesday s Ga~s
Boston
at
Ch
n
te
The Card nals scored the only
Ch cago at N Y n e
Oakland at Det n le
S Lou s al Ph Ia n te
run of the game off Carl Morton
KC at C eve tw I le
Houston al Mtl nlte
n the th1rd mnmg when Lou
Cal lorn a a Bal n te
C nc nnatl at Los A nl e
Saturdays Results
Brock s ngled advanced to
P ttsburgh a SF n e
Kansas C ly 5 Ba 1 2
Saturday s Results
th~rd on two mf eld outs and
M lw 1 New York 0
P tlsbvrgm 5 SO 4 11 nns
tall ed when shortstop Bobby
M nneso a 7 Boston
Chcago 7 Ph a 4
Ceveland 2 Oakland
Wme booted a grounder by Joe
Atlanta 7 Los Angeles 5
Ch cago 5 Wash ng on 3
C nc nnatl 3 SF 2
Torre Morton an 18 game
Ca lorn a 9 Detro I
Mtl 2 St L 2 7 n ra n

Spartans Take
Lead In Big 10

HOUSE 0.

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
Oswald Some ex p e r t s
never open four card maJor
su ts Others go out of the1r
way to open them Most ex
perts are n between these
extremes They don t open
four-card maJors often but
they w II open one when the
alternate b d has mamfest
defects
J m We follow th s prac
t ce m our own b ddmg and
n our teachmg so that n
JACOBY MODERN we occa
, onally open four card ma
)Or su Is
Oswald The essence of
our teachmg s that partner
should never be afra1d to
ra1se one of our maJor su t
o pe n n g s w1th Just three
trumps When we open a
spade the odds are at least
20-1 that we hold at least
f ve spades When we open
a heart the odds are at
least 5-l that we hold at
least f ve hearts
J1m South open s one
heal t because he s afraid
that 1f he opens one dm
mond the heart su t will be
lost And 1t probably would
have been As 11 IS North
raiSes to two hearts after the
spade overcall and eventu
ally takes h1s partner to the
heart game
0 s w a I d Four oppos1te
three lsn t the most des r
able trump holding but 1t
works out all nght today
Assum ng that West cashes
two spades and sh1fts to a
d1amond South must plav
one round of clubs before
touchmg trumps After that
he can draw trumps and
score 10 t rIc k s The 42
trump break Will not bother
hm

~ A ThToodanght

20 MEDITEHANEAN
VANITY

Oak woodgan cobntf w h o d
b o ha dwort Wotrprori 8120

3

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SAil

20 PROVINCIAL
VANITY
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POMEROY CEMENT

,,Age ... Wo. p ool

8 o20. 3

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·~ 00.

TP.e Department Store
of Building Since 1915

Runs BoHed In
Nallonol Leaoue Stargell
Pill 28 Aaron All 23 Mays
SF 9 Cepeda Atl and Colbert
soAmer
18
can Luguo K lebrew
M nn 23 Powell Ball Yas
trzemskl Bos and Northrup
Del 20 Sando Oak 18
Pitching
Not onal Ltague Cor ton
Sf L 5 1 Upshaw All 52
Dierker Hou 4 o Stner NY 4
1 Jenkins Ch 4 2
Amerluri Leagul Blue Oak
6 1 Palme• Ball and Sieber!
8os 4 o McNal y Ball and
Fisher ea 4 1 Lol &lt;h,,_ Del
Perry Mlnn and Hunter vok 4

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

gamed a 6-2 conference record
Ind1ana already had suffered
a resoundmg defeat Fnday
when Iowa batters walloped
two home runs to spark the r
team to two v1ctor1es m the
tw n bill 6-2 and 5-3 Iowa bat
tered Oh10 State on Saturday m
another twm bUI 7-3 and 6-0
flbn01s was tied w1th Iowa
for !hard place m the standmgs
as a result of beatmg Wlscon
sm 3-2 and 5-2 Fnday and
then defeat ng Northwestern m
a two-game ser es Saturday 7
3 and 14-2
Purdue spht a doubleheader
With W1sconam Saturday the
BOilermakers taking the mght
cap ~ after losing the opener
11-5
Purdue beat Northwester the
low man on the B g Ten totem
pole Saturday m a doublehead
er 4-2 and 12-2

---·--tt

..

·,.r::----,~---·,~-"~--~- -w~~..
·-----~"--"-~-·....

Carlton In Fifth Win

nn•n•••••n

~

I

lay 3 1971

1

wmner m 1970 suffered his
fourth loss agamst two v1c
tones
The Pittsburgh P1tate~
defeated the San Diego PadrE$
5-I the Atlanta Braves beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1 the
Ch cago Cubs routed \he
Ph1ladelph a Phlllies 71 the
San FranciSCO G1ants downed
the Cincmnat1 Reds 4-3 m 13
mmngs and the New York Mets
scor~d a 6-5 10- nn ng trmmph
over the Houston Astros m other
Nat onal League games
In the Amencan League 11
was New York over Milwaukee
2 1 and 5 4 ChiCago 3
Washmgton I Boston over
Mmnesota I 0 and 9 8
Baltunore 5 and Cleveland 7
Oakland 3 m 10 mnmgs m the
mghtcap
Gene Clmes s ngled m the tie
breaking run and Rich Hebner
had a run-6cormg tnple m a
four run seventh lnmng wh1ch
enabled Dock Ell s to WJn h1s
th rd game for the Pirates
Dave Gmsll the Pirates ace
late nmng rei ever of 1970
shutout the Padres m the last
two mn ngs to earn h1s f1fth save
of the season Steve Arlm
suffered h s fourth straight
setback
Ron Reed on the diS8bied hst
a year ago pitched a flve-lutter
for h s th rd v1ctory of the
Braves who swept the1r three
game senes w1th the Dodgers
Orland Cepeda hit a two run
homer and Hank Aaron h1t h1s
603rd career homer

ABA Finals
Underway

sse Is

the Sports Desk
by Chet TannehUI

]C Champ

ThiS IS the season when the h1gh scbools coachmg lratemity
begm thlnl&lt;mg hard about what name they'll be prmtlng on their
swealsharts next year The summer h1atus corrung up appears to
be offermg an unusual number of opportun111es for "\mners to
replace losers
I!
For lets face 11 all school boards are under pressure - and
why shouldn t they be • - to have wmners m our b1g sports
football and basketball This rule.()( thumb doesn t apply to North
Gallta Htgh where basketball coach Paul Aikman s club fm shed
With a fine 16-4 record and still IS destined to have a new coach
next November
In Metgs County Bruce Wallace already has been signed to
coach the Tornadoes m football next fall replacing the veteran
Bob Ashley who has resigned as a teacher and a coach at
Southern At Eastern a coach will be hired to take over for Larry
R1tch1e At Me1gs Charley Chancey 1s back for football and Coach
Carl Wolfe returns as a teacher and head basketball coach

Bob saunders Quaker State Bickers were Dan D Antoni 39
Serv ce Center captured the pomts Greg McDev1tt 27 pomts
F~r s t Annual Gall pol s Area and Randy Noll 25 pomts QSSC
Jaycee Inv tat onal Basketball led at halftime 74-$
Tournament Saturday n ght
R o ATD edged Falls City
down ng B ckers B ~ we ll 152-148 n an overtune to take
Mill ng 160-149
the consolatwn honors Ron
Tony Bass f ashy guard led Lambert and Roger Bentley
the w nners w th 37 pomts pa ced he wmners w1th 38and 32
Other h gh scorers were Blame po nts respectively Darrell
Henry w1th 34 po nts AI Mart n Ball and Doug Hart added 27
29 po nts Bob Mabry 22 pomts po nts each and Ron Wyckoff
and D ck Fowler added 20 pun ped n 20 po nts
po nts
Bob I.e th led the losers With
OU s Ken Kowall captured 39 pomts Sam Pulley had 36
KYGER CREEK WHERE John Sang has toiled With scor ng honors for the mght Calv n Carm1chael 34 po nts
basketball three years w II have a new coach m that sport There w1th a 45 pont effor t n a losmg and Roger Foster canned 21
are strong reports that Buddy Moore Middleport s blUe bomber cause Other lop s o ers for po nts
of a few years ago has his application on file at Kyger Creek
There are equally strong reports that h1s action has st rred
Galbpobs where Moore s reported m Grade A standing as an
ass slant m football under Johnny Ecker and as freshman
Ind v dual t oph es to the team trophieS to the top three
basketball coach
champ onsh1p and runnerup clubs n lhe s ngle ebmmat10n
team s n the f rst annual e ght team tournament
IN THE BIG DADDY League the SEOAL the football Gall polls Area Jaycees In
Named to the All Star
coachmg lmeup Will be a duplicate of 1970 w1th one posSible ex dependent Bas ketball Tour Tournament Team were Mike
ception
nament were awarded to Johnson Ashland 011 Paul
Over the weekend certam sources - shall we say sl ghtly Quake State Serv ce Center D lion Dave s Place Marvm
unpeachable - said John Congar and h1s enlire staff at Wellston and B dwell M ll ng by M1ke Ha e Wellston Eagles Sam
w Ures1gn shortly Furthermore th s could result m the Rockets Allen follow ng Saturday mght s Pulley Falls C1ty Ron lam
fme Jumor quarterback Danny Settles movmg to Jackson Th s champ1nnsh p game on the bert R o Grande ATD 8Bob
DeCathy Huntmgton and Dan
would do plenty for the Ironmen wbo then could shift great Wash ngton Hardwood
The Ja ycees a so presented D An on B dwell Millmg
sophomore runner thrower KennY Valentme to flanker And
The top md1v dual scorer s
what a revoltm development that would be for Jackson s op
trophy went to Tony Bass of
poSition on the gr1daron next autumn
Quaker State Bass scored 67 In
As for what IS hapaenmg at Wellston who knows• There s
NHL Playoff Stand ngs
one of the tourney games
been fnction there up and down the school s hierarchy several
By
Un
ted
Press
Internal
onal
Quaker States Blaine Henry
years surpassed m this area only by the pyrotechmcs we see
ISem
I nalsl
former
Marshall Umvers1ty
ns ng almost weekly across the OhiO River m Mason County
I Best of Seven]
great was named the tour
Elsewhere Logan which IS replacmg Ken lnsam m basket
W L Pet GA nament s Most Valuable
4
3
21
4
ball most hkely now won t persuade Mark Wybe to leave the x Ch cago
3 4 14 2 Player
New
York
Columbus area But don t count Wyhe out of the picture Wyl e
W L GF GA
JUSt possibly m ght favor the 1dea of corrung home
x Monea
4 2 27
9
M nnesota
2 4 19 27

All-Star Team Is Announced

Pro Standings

x c enched se es

Red Sox Take Two ..l'D ...om
;tl•
fa
1'1 znneso ' 1-0 and 9-8
I

'

Sundav s Results
Ch cago 4 New Yo k 2
Tuesdays Game
Mon ea a Ch cago

Issei s approachmg super star
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)Internal ona I League Standings
The Utah Stars host the status and t won t be long
By Un ted Press International
Kentucky Colonels tomght n before he s '" the same class
W L Pel GB
Sy acuse
0 4 74the open ng game of the Best of as Mel Dan els and our Zelmo
Cha
lesion
9 6 600
'
Seven ser es for the Amer can Beaty
Ray Culp s gett ng straight
The Onoles got a two run Lou s e
8 6 571 2
Sharman th nks Issei IS the The boston Red Sox were a homer and a route go ng R chmond
Basketball Assoc1at on cham
8 6 571 2
6 8 429 4
ma n rason for the Colonels I ttle worr ed about their ace performance from Mike Cuellar W nn peg
p10nsh1p playoff
To
edo
6 9 400 4 '
Both teams take on the crushmg defeat of V1rg ma m r ghthander after he was as they defeated Kansas City T dewa er
6 0 375 5
Yovr
Cmderella role as they each SIX games for the Eastern bombed for 21 runs m 13 but st II dropped a half game Rochester
4 8 333 5
Sunday s Results
f1mshed the regular season D v son crown
nn ngs m h1s last three starts farther back of the Red Sox
Cha
eston
11 Toledo 8
The Stars hope to stop the 6-9 but a lip from p1tchmg coach Cuellar who picked up his
second n their respective
R chmond 4 Rocheste J (lsi 7
Kentucky rook1e center WJth Harvey Hadd1x straightened second v ctory of the season
diV SIOns
nn ngs}
Kentucky topped the regular B1g Z (Beaty) the former Culp out and he responded stroked h1s homer 350 feet Rocheste 3 R chmond 2 {2nd
season Eastern DIVISIOn ABA NBA great who has led Utah m Sunday w1th a two hit 1-0 down the nght f eld lme With 7 nn ngsl
T dewa e J Syracuse 2 (lsi 7
champiOn V1rg n a Sqmres scormg and reboundmg whitewash of the Mmnesota Brooks Rob nson aboard to gJve nn ngs}
wh le Utah captured the West throughout the regular season Twms as the Red Sox swept a Baltunore a 3-0 lead In the Syracuse 9 T dewa er 3 {2nd 7
nn ngsl
by narrowly edgmg the Ind1ana and playoffs
doubleheader Boston tal11ed for fourth
W
peg 4 Lou sv I e 3 (1st 8
Beaty IS JO ned up front by two runs m the nmth to take Rick Retchard! s 41 !!-foot nnnnngs)
Pacers m seven games
Stars )head coach Bill Shar W1ll1e WISe and Red Robbms the mghtcao 9-ll
homer camed t.ie White Sox I? Lou sv lie 2 Wnn peg 3 (2nd
does It take to Insure
wh
le
Merv
Jackson
aod
Glen
man said I hope we don t
In other Amencan League victory over the Senators after 7 nn ngs
your farm
Undefl
suffer a mental let down Combs will handle the playmak games Sunday Baltimore the score had been deadlocked
one plan - lust one.t
agamst Kentucky after that ng With the1r speed and ball edged Kansas City 5-3 Chicago 11 going mto the mnth mnlng
policy
one
low
control tactics
Indiana senes
topped Wash ngton 3-1 New Jay Johnstone also homered for HUTTER SWAPS JOBS
premium ~yment
COLUMBUS Oh10 (UPI)Kentucky backs up Issei w1th York swept a twm bill from the Ch1sox to put them out m
Durmg the regular season
one place to ~Y
the Stars held a 4-2 edge over forwards Cmcy Powell and Jun Milwaukee 2-1 and 5-4 Cahfor front HI In the th1rd Wllb&lt;ll' Dave Hutter Sunday resigned
the Colonels WJnn ng all three Ligon while Dame! Camer and ma mpped Detro1t 4-3 and Wood picked up h1s f~rst v1ctory as baseball coach and assistant
games n Salt Lake wh1le Josmg Lows Dampter form one of the Oakland spht a twm-blll w1th as a starter In three years for football coach at Cap tal
Un vers1ty to accept a sunllar
two of three at Freedom Hall m top backcourt comb nations m Cleveland as the Athletics won Chicago
ABA basketball
Pb..,_ m :11u
Lowsville
the opener 8-5 before droppmg Mel Stottlemyer s three-hitter posttion at Brockport (N Y )
State
College
114
Court
St
Sham an IS hopmg the
the mghtcap 7-3 m 10 nnmgs stopped the Brewers m the
homecourt advantage m the
After ton ght s game both fn Nat onal League action opener for the Yankees and
seven game senes will g ve the squads take a rest on Tuesday Pittsburgh beat San d ego 5-1 Danny Cater broke a 4-4 tie m
champ onsh1p to the Stars
before resummg the basketball Atlanta downed Los Angeles 4 the seventh mnlng of the second
CINCINNATI (UPI)
The
We II need every break we wars agam m Salt Lake City 1 Ch cago wh1pped Philadel game with a double off the
C ncmnati Reds left today for can get to stop Kentucky and
ph a 7 1 San Francisco mpped glove of center f1elder Dave
Los Angeles where they w1ll Dan Issei Sharman added Wednesday n ght
Cmcmnat1 4-3 m 13 mnmgs May that scored Jake Gibbs
open a three-game ser1es With
New York edged Houston 6-5 m Jack Aker allowed just one hit
the Dodgers Tuesday
IOmmngs and St Lo111s blanked m retief for the Yanks to piCk
The west coast sWJng w II be
Montreall-0
up the v1ctory Ill the mghtcap
the f1tst of the season for the
Culp seeking to diSCover Jerry Moses p1cked an
Reds who dropped a 4-3 dec•
what had gone wrong m hiS opportune t me to snap a 2-for
s1on to the San Francisco Gtants
p1tch ng mot on had a video Jll slump by belting a two-run
when Willie McCovey socked a
tape machme !1Im his pitching homer m the second mnlng that
for 10 days but th~ project helped the Angels pasl the
13th mmng home run Sunday
m the finale of a three-game
Drawmgs for the 1971 Class actiOn In the finals the top proved fru tless Then Haddix Tigers Sandy Alomar singled
ser1es at Cine nnall s Riverfront AA Sectwnal Baseball Tour bracket teams w II be the home watched Culp working m the home Ken Berry With the
Stadium
nament for 24 area teams were teams the lower bracket teams Fenway Park playpen Thursday wlnnmg run In the seventh
The homer commg off Tony held at RID Grande s Paul R the v s1tors
mght under the bleachers after Cahforn a s ace reliever Edd1e
Clonmger was the second of the Lyne Center Sunday afternoon
CENTRAL SECTIONAL
the Red Sox had been ramed out F1sher picked up his fourth
125 E MAIN
game for McCovey
992 2171
Coach
J m Osborne s
(May G)
and noticed the flaw
vtctory m f1ve de•c•s•ons wh1le
The G1ant f1rst baseman tag Gallipolis Blue Devds drew Portsmouth West bye
POMEROY
0
You re sWJngmg your hips Bill Zepp drew h s first loss for
ged Gary Nolan for a f1rst mn Wellson s Golden Rockets m Wellston at Gall polls
too much Hadd1x told Culp Detro t
mg homer With W1ihe Mays f rst round actwn m the Central Minford bye
S nee the v1deo tape machme
aboard After the Reds t1ed the
1
Vmton County at Northwest
always shot straJ.ght at hiirl 1t
~
~
~
~~
~
score by bunchmg three h1ts for Se~~":ame WJII be played on
NORTHEASTSECTIONAL couldn t catch Culps motion
YOU ARE INVITED TO OUR
'
two runs In the second mn ng Gallipolis d amond oq Thurs
(May 7)
from the Side
-f
the G1ants went ahead 3-2 In day beg nmng at 4 P m The Nelsonville York bye
Evidently Haddix dtagnosls
the e1ghth when Mays smgled GoldeltRockets were ongmally New r.exmgton at Federal was correct and after Culp
home Bobby Bonds
scheduled to play here Thurs Hocking
blanked the Twms m the
/
A walk to Lee May Bern1e day m a non league game Warren Local bye
opener George Thomas dellv
Carbo s Single and Tomm~ That contest w11i not be made up Alexander at Belpre
efed a key nmth mnmg pmch
Helms sacrifice fly ted the at a later date accordmg to NORTHWEST SECTIONAL h1t that won the nightcap
score at 3-all In the mnth and Coach Osborne
(May G)
I rate th1s as one of the best
sent the game nto extra mnlngs
Weather permltllng Mam•Trace bye
gamesiveeverpllched Culp
We had more chances than sem1fmal action w1ll be held on Hillsboro at Shendan
sa1d happily after the wm I ve
you can shake st ck at to wm Ml y 11 and the finals WJII he Breenfteld bye
been working on my motion In . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
that game said a disappomt conducted on May 14
Ross SW at Waverly
front of a mirror In my apart II
OPEN I
ed Sparky Anderson
The four flnatists w II ad
SOUTHERN SECTIONAL
~=~';~~:we discovered what ~~I
9 TIL 9 :
'!'lie Reds best chance came
vance to the Class AA District
(May 6)
~
m the lith mmng when Helms
Tournament to be held at Evans Rock H II bye
In sweepmg the doublehead
1
WEEKDAYS '
d off w1th a smgle and took
F1eld m Rio Grande
Ironton at Coal Grove
er the Red Sox opened up a I
I
second on a w1ld pitch by G18nt
Here s the sectional palrmgs Wheelersburg bye
one game lead over Baltimore
1
Tll5
I
relief p1tcher Jerry Johnson
However Helms was stranded
fSo•u•t•b•P•ot•n•t•at•Ch-es•a•peioa•k•e-•'•n•t•he-Am-er•c•a•n•Le•a•g•u•e•E•a•st..
after gettmg no further than
be vis1tmg teams m sem•final
SCHULT FLEETWOOD. ELCONA • REGENT
third
The Reds will send rtghthand
PIEDMONT· SYLVAN
er Jun McGlothm agamst the
HARNESSCHAMPION$HIP
~f
Wh h T Ch
Dodgers 1n Tuesday night s
Over 40 Homes rom
IC
o
oose
12' • 14' • 24' • WIDE
(
UPI)- The
No Reasonable Down Payment Refused
opener Wayne Simpson and JJill NEW YORK
Second World Drlvmg Cham
MeiTJtt will p1tch the other two
p10nship of harness racing
games m that ordl!r
sponsored by the Harness
ed
The Re&lt;ls then will move down
of Amenca gets
..
to San Diego for a series w•th Tracks
underway tonight at Roosevelt
the Padres and retlirn home on
FOR COUNCILMAN OF MIDDLEPORT VIUAGE
May 13 after movmg up to San raceway w•th eight 9f the top
.dnvers n the world takmg
FranciscO for a three-game ser
3 2
1
_ ,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _P_d_P•o•I•Ad_v_ _....1
__
__
j
part
1es w1th the Giants
1

HOW MtiY
POLICIS
z

Reds Head

Davis· War1tr lnL

West After
4-3 Defeat

Convenient
NOTE LOANS
on JUst your

Announce Pairings
For AA Tourneys

r --- - - - - 1

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1

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- -

A1 AY '

II

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Thru
It
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1

~~c~!~~;~s~:o: ~;:~~~

VOTE FOR

DON KELlY
II
IN THE MAY 4 £LECJ'ION

t

f
FREE':i"v-STAMPS_:-;;;f.ii;;;h-;s-;;;;;;,-;;;h'Mob-;'I;'Hc;;;;,=;;i.,~N";:&amp;.,1 f
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.

~~AMPLE !!_!!,!~S,e.•!!!!!.\!!!!~!'!0!!.'~ ~·!'~------ ----.J~

MILLER HOMES

~~~ ~~~~':.

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I

4-The 0.111 Sentinel, Middlepqrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 3, 1971

-

'

iadtw l.ttte!'ll Gl Oj I I , Ia llllld lull, 1ft .
• • .. .''ftle :dltar ftl • • tile rfalit le ......... JeUtn. Alllelten liiUI be lllpe4, wta a luJJ lddNI, alllnqti• llltWa IU:flle .-.I ...,. req ell,

C

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'
'

The Facts, Straightened Out

L

Dear 'Mr. EGitor:
·
wen, w~U, S®~ebody's toes got stepped on, didn't they? But 1
oold suggest tbiltMr. See get another script writer because this
one didn't do too good. Seems as though ·the facts are "slightly
twlated," so let ua see tf we can't get them straightened out to
some degree - College or otherwise!
. ·You made reference to the "Street Deparbnent" wbrking on
Fr!)Rt Street alluding that the "Public Officials" had found some
money they didn't know they had. Your script writer doesn't seem
to know the difference from a "Street Deparbnent" and a bona
fide "Contractor." If you had read the Daily Sentinel on March 26
)'ou would have found the "legal Advertisement" lor bids for
~urfacing street In the Village, It just so happens that Front
Street was included in the specified streets and I hardly feel the
conlractor would'aend his crew to work on a street that wasn't
·lnciUded in the bid-nor could we include any streets after the bid
was accepted aa it would not have been fair to the other bidders. I
QUnk you can get the picture from this statement, whether you or
our jjroup want to believe it or not. Ever) though the "20 .years of
dynasty has existed" as you say, the council members do have
integrity and know what they can do and can't do.
In reference to the Permissive Automobile Tax - this is the
first ~ that I have beard of a re-count. I always thought you
hsd to pay for each wa~d for recounts at the Board of Elections. I
know Ihaven'tpaldoutany funds for recounts nor has the County
Auditor Settlements shown any such deductions. Where did you
pick up this little bit of Information? Of course you spoke of a
Democratic type of Government last summer, dated ·July 20,
when you were requested to come to Council and offer your help in
trying to solve the street problems, which stated: QUOTE : (In
part) First and foremost we believe in a democrative form of
govenunent which says that the majority and consent of the
people must prevail. We do not live in a dictatorship, we live in a
democracy." Fine and dandy- but I can't understand why the
majority 'of the people elected these councilmen to represent
thtm. If they didn't want them to represent them they should
hsve elected some one else.
I beg your pardon when you said the voters "sank" the boat.!

have enough faith' in the people of Middleport io rally to a
situation that is so vital to each citizen. I don't think you have
enough following to "sink the boat." Ityou do, the "Law Abiding
Citizens" of the vlllage better head for the hills because no
government can exist on untruths or mis-construed facts. And
believe me, your facts surely don't come up to the record as they
exist.
· So you thin!! I have "arrived" by being Clerk-Treasurer of the
Vlllage of Middleport.!'don't think in terms of "arriving" but in
terms ofwhstl can do for the people of Mlddlepqrt in holding this
office. As far as the remunerative value of the Job goes, 1 would
serloualy doubt If lt would average 10 cents per hour for the time
that I put on it. I guesa the fact that 1 take a little pride in what I
want to do for Middlepqrt doesn't exist in your theory. Well, as
you say, the voters will decide this question Tuesday and which
ever way It goes I only hope that you will accept it. I lmow I can,
....._,.., I h.,. a_,.,..,,.~ ~ef... t before ~I J'm "9t too big that I -

Linescores

Lottery Proposal ~·· Hearings
COLUMBU$ (UPI) - Both
houaes of the Ohio General As..
sembly are to have coounlttees
hOlding first public tlearings
this week on a proposal to set up
a state lottery to raise money
for educatioo. .
,
To make it legal in Ohio would
require changing the state·
constitution by an amendment
as gambling, except for race
track wagering, is illegal now
by law,
The state also would have to
set up a commission to run
lottery operations.
Also to get first airing this
week iS the $505 million tax

'

pa,ckage dwnped into the legislators' laps last week through
an' initiative petition proced!"'e.
The bin was dtafted by the
Tax Reform Action Committee,
which is a group including the
Ohio AFL and the United Auto
Workers of Ohio.
'
The committee secured petilions have signatures of 100,000
Ohio voters to start the tax
package toward enactment.
Should legislators balk at approving it, the committee could
collect
another
100,000
signatures to put the proposal
on the November ballot.
Goiug To Subcommittee

The House Ways and Means . tee for welfare, education and subject to certain limitations.
Committee iS to receive testi- state agencies have fmished the Only Colwnbus institutions now
mony from labor Qll oie tax testimony phase and will work may be used, but the measure

package . this week, and then this week on amendments to the
assign it to a subcommittee.
administration bills.
Meanwhile, the Senate Fina~]
ce
Committee also will hold ad]
The same committee also will
hOld h~ings this week on the vance hearings on the budget.
governor's $9.1 billion budget The House hopes to have a
program, with opponents Boor v~te on the budget pack·
age late this month.
scheduled to testify.
The House Health, Education
and Welfare Committee also
May Shift De'posits
will be taking testimony on the
The Senate is to vote Tuesday
budget, whUe a subcommittee on a measure authorizing th~
works on revision of the gover- state Board of Depqsits to put
nor's school proposals.
active deposits of slate funds in
The House Finance commit- banks outside of Colwnbus,

Chan'ces Better Says Se-nator
-,

By RICK VANSANT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)' 1PresidentNixon consulting the
Joint Chiefs of Staff on the Viet. nam War is like consulting General CUllter on how to fight
indians," according to U.S. Sen.
George S. McGovern, the only
announced presidential candidate.
McGovern predicted his
amendment to pull all U.S.
troops out of Southeast Asia by
the end of 1971 would pass the
Senate this year . The proposal
was turned down 55-39 in the
Senate last fall .
"If the amendment is defeated again I'll begin a filibuster
to try to talk down further fi·
nancial funding of the war," he
told a crowd of about 4,000
Ohio State University students
here Sunday night.
But McGovern said he was
oplimistichisamendmentwould
pass because of three reasons:
"Disappoinlment in the Vietnamization program, a recent Gal·
lup poll showing 73 per cent
support of the amendment by
the public, and Hanoi's hstatement it wou1d negotiate t e release of prisoners once America
pulled out."
McGovern said he could not
predict the margin the amend·
men! would pass by.
"I'm outraged at President

l

Nixon's Umetable which seems
to be geared toward the 1972
election rather than toward the
reality of Indochina," he said.
"I also believe we ought to
withdraw most American troops
from western Europe."
"I'm puzzled and disturbed
about the routing of anti-war
demonstrators in Washington
D.C. today (Sunday)," McGoverri said. "In effect, the government has revoked the permit it
had given the demonstrators.
"However, I'm opposed to
some of the tactics that were
proposedinthisdemonstrationblocking buildings and tying up
traffic," he said. "I liked the
tactics used by the veterans
last week."
Bomber Criticized
McGovern said he was preparing a report showing the
proposed B·l bomber is a
"waste of taxpayers' money."
"We have an adequate mili·
tary deterrent without building
an expensive new bomber," the
former World War 11 bomber
pilot added. "This bomber can
only trigger greater anxiety
among the American public."
Asked at a news conference
before the speech about wiretapping, McGovern said he had
no evidence his telephone had
ever been bugged, "but I have
a letter from a friend warning

On the F.arm .L'v ront
, ·"

.

~lii\Mepi·T.t ag· ;lri,"'.J~i'~lnembe~ ' t l": ,. ,. ' ,.. . . ' l1\Te
l l ' •••
Ul

..

·

. ,

' Agen
' c' Expeet ed
y'

You state that all meetings should be held in the City Hall.
Wthaellth thisDa ts suhrteSaly neingws Tim~
me. I rememin
issber ~theral ~llaesrs agdo
t e Y11g
v s
e was __ ue m e VI ge an
By BERNARD BRENNER
council voted to re-convene at the American legion Hall for the
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
meeting with the problem to air their views. Other than that, I Agriculture Seeretary Clifford
wouldn't have any idea what you are referring to. Sure, council M. Hardin Is quietly planning to
conunittees clin meet but they don't have to meet at City Hall. set up a new rural development
Nothing lB official until it ls brought to the Boor for acceptance or coordinating agency In his
njectlon.
department _but what 11 will

do remains uncertain.
The new unit,_an Agriculture
Department a1de satd, wtll
probably be called a "rural
development service." It w~uld
be set up to handle relations
with states under President
Nixon's controversial proposal
for a rural development
revenue-sharing program, and
also to coordinate action under
a number of development
programs which would remain
in federal hands.
Hardin recently told Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn.,
he is "just about to recommend" creation of the new
agency - a successor to a
somewhat similar unit set
under the Johnson administration but abolished in
1970.
Another official, however,
said the No. I job of the agency
Hardin proposes to set up would
be administration of the
proposed rural development
revenue-sharing 'program. This
program, however, faces an
uncertain future on capitol hill
where many farm bloc
lawmakers have been voicing
reservations about its key

me tO be very careful."
Explaining his presidential
ambitions to the students, MeGovern said it had been a dif·
ficult decision.
"Several months ago 1 decid·
ed I could not stand in the back
of the Senate and wring my
hands about the fact that this
great country of ours is going
to hell," he said.
McGovern said he may try to
attach his withdrawal amend·
ment to the draft extension bill.
_"That way," he said, "I could
at least be assured of a vote
on it by June 30, the day the
present draft law expires."
"I also intend to offer four
amendments to the draft bill,
maybe some of them tongue-in·
cheek," he added. "But these
will be offered:
- "No one under 30 can be
drafted.

Colonels
Romp 12• 3
By United Pres~ lntern~tional
Ca~lton Ftsk ts no frtend of
Wmmpeg ptkher Balor Mo?re.
The Lomsvtlle catcher htt a
\w(}-run .ho~er off Moore m the
second mnmg Sunday and followed
bl t 0Ifthatth wtlh
w· a· three-run
th
as .
e . mmpeg sou •
paw m the
to leadover
the
Colonels
to athtrd
12-3 v1'ctory
the Goldeyes in the second
game of a dou bl ehea der ·
John Curtis gave up only
three hits in raising his record
2-1. The homers were Fisk's
first and second of the year.
Winnipeg won the opener 4-3,
behind the brilliant relief pikh·
ing of Bob Reynolds. Reynolds
entered the game in the first
after the Colonels had scored
twice and allowed Louisvllle

would permit other banks to
hold state money If they process
state money warrants.
Other Senate committees will
hold hearings on changing Ohio
divorce laws to a "no fault"
system, prohibiting giving
away of colored Easter chicks,
licensing psychologists,
restructuring the state Board of
Education, setting up a
chiropraclice examining board
prohibiting schools from
destroying used books.
House committees also will
hear bills on increasing retire:
men! benefits for school system
employes creating state
agencies to deal with pqllution
and environmental matters,
prohibiting ticket scalping,
banning liquor agency kick·
backs to political parties,
allowingliquorsalesatthestate
fairgrollnds at times other than
during a State Fair and compensating _crime victims.
'

ann

(1st ,.mel
·
Cleveland 200 120 1100'-' S 9 3
Oaklnd
510 200 oox- 8 9 2
McDowell, Pasc.ual (1). Col bert (4) , Auslln (6), Machemehl
(8) and Suarez; Hunter, Locker
(B) and Duncan. WP-Hunter (42). LP-McDowell (1 -4). HRsPinson (lsi), Jackson (41h).
(2nd game, 10 inns)
Cleve
000 000 210 4--'-. 7 14 0
Oak
000 002 010 0'-- 3 7 1
Lamb, McDowell (7) and
Suarez,

Fosse (7),

Dobson,

Lindblad (51. Locker 17),
Gardner (8) Klimkowskl (9)
and Tenace. WP-McDowell (I ·
4). LP-Kiimkowskl (2-11. HRsFoster (2nd!. Netlles (4th),
Mincher (lsll. Ford (2nd) .
Baltimore 010 211 000- 5 7 0
Kan City 000 201 00&lt;&gt;-'- 3 12 2
Cuellar 12-0l and Hendri&lt;ks;
Wright, Rooker (5), Fllzmorrls
(6), Burgmeler (7) and Kirkpatrick . LP-Wrlght (0-1). HR·
Cuellar I lsi).
Cliicago 001 000 002- 3 6 1
Washngln 000 010 000- 1 6
Wood. Romo (9) and Herrmann; Cox, Knowles (9) and
Casanova. WP-Wood (1 -1). LPKnowles (2-2) . HRs-Johnslone
(lrdL Reichardt. (3rd).
Detroit
Calli

011 001 ooo-- 3 11 0
020 001 lOx- 4 8 0

- "No one can be sent into
combatwithoutadeclarationof
~ 011;~;, Zeffee~~~; Sc~~~~~~
17
war approved by two-thirds of
Fisher (6)-, Allen (8) and
Congress.
1/l'lses, 51ephenson (8) . WP-"In any combat operation
~~~~~Mos~~ 1 /3rd~;H~~~n l~i~l :
the _Joint _Chief of Staff would •--"!""-~ ~~~~~~~~-=~-~
have to devote some lime to
front~ine duty.
1
1
- "Noprivatecorporationcan
OPTOMETRIST
make a profit in the production
of arms."
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
Ddaims Isolationism
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
"My policy is not isolation- !::P:O:M=E~R:O:Y::.
ism," McGovern said. "It is a
new internationalism, one that
respects others."
"If I become president I will
avoid future Vietnams by tak·
ing requests for military assistance to the United Nations," he
said.
,
Answering a question at the
Sale will continue thru May 8. We will be open
news conference about "lack
9 a .m. to 9 p.m., Friday, Saturday and Monof excitement" in his campaign,
d
the history Ph.D., said: "I think
ay ·
I
this business of charisma and
Polyester Double Knits, 60 to 64"
image-making has been carried
1 Table Summer Weights, Reg. 2.89
I
too far."
I
"Once in awhile someone who I
· · --- · --- NOW 1. 98 yd. I
is pretty thin can be marketed, I 1 Table Reg. 3.98 • · • • NOW 2.98 yd. I
but I think the voters are get- I 1 Tab I e 1sf Qua I it y I Reg' 4. 98
I
ting tired of this," he said. "I 1 3. 98 yd.
1
don 't think the excitement of a 1
bl
·
1
campaign affects the average
100 Pet· Aery Iic Dou e Kntts
I
voter. I never found Nixon that I Reg • 2. 98 · · · · · · · · NOW 2.29 yd.
exctting."
I 72" Cotton Knits, average SOc ydJSc lb. I
Prodded by newsmen to name I
I
a possible vice-presidential can- I
fREE PAIR lADIES' HOSE
I
didate, McGovern only said I
,
I
there were "a lol of good men I
WITH EACH PURCHASE
I
available."
I
I
"My vice-presidential candi· I· ~-~----------1111!1!---• ' ' 1·
date probably would be just the
Dotted sw·ISS, 45" UAIUII
.1~_;, &amp;' WIUIII
~'"'" 00
eoc
-· I
opposite of Agnew," he added. I
I
McGovern was the overni~ht I
guest of Ohio Gov. John J . 1 · Penn Press Cotlun$, assorted-- --79' yd.
1.
Gjlligan.
1
1
"Gov. Gilligan is extremely 1
Sail Cloth, 45" permanent press.-.981 yd.
1
significant because Ohio is the
second largest state with a I Children's Light Weight
I
Democratic governor," McGov· I Jackets, values to 8.00 • . . . • 88c ea.
ern said. "Naturally I'd like to I Ladies' Hand M!lde P\lrses • • • 1.98 ea. I
have Gov-. Gilligan's support
Bedspreads, plaid, sprmgy &amp; cherry 2.98 ea. I
d I'll tr t0
. h' b I I New.
Rugs • . Low, Low Prices I
an
Y convtnq! tm, u 1
1
1 don't expect any inunediate
statementofsupportfromhim." I
I
McGovern's 45-minutespeech I
I
was interrupted by applause 16 I
(A Ml LL OUTLET)
1
times, and he received a stand- 1
ing ovation when he finished. I
STATE ROUTE 7
I
Earlier Sunday he addressed
ADDISON, OHIO
I
about 2,500 students at Bowling
Greim State Universit ,
(Formerly French's Mkt .)

...

O
D
N, W, COMPTON,

Big Storewide

s

Jll'

1

I

The Cotton G"10

KIM NEAL

·Republican

FOR MAYOR

MIDDLEPORT

ANOIHER GOOD ILlY FROM
BAKER'S

.

.

- -·

2-HOUR .
CLEANING

(UpOn Request)

ROBINSON'S

•1111

'

l

I

Pennacote Drum · ·
3 Temp. Selectiln
Lon&amp;.Life Heatilll EJeinent

·•158

'BAKER. Midtlpclt,
FURrtllUi£ 0!

..

:::::::::::::::::::r::

You ask tf Mayor Fisher was available at all times during the
day. Yes, I can answer that and _say thst he wasn't, thus my
only one run. the rest of the
stating thatlfeltthat they should be atall tbnes. However, as the
C8COfe8
":ay, alth~ugh ~e Colonels out-,
htl Winmpeg 4-3. Lynn Merecord shows, Mr. Fisher is not running now so I hardly feel that By untied Press International
Glothlen
lost a three-lutter. .
Is any Issue now.
,
Nallonal League
Charleston moved to ~tthin
You referred to lee Smith and Kenneth McElhinny, Mr. S~n Diego 001 000 ooo-- 1 7 2
Plllsbgh
010
000
40x5
10
0
1'h games . of Internaho~al
McElhinny was right bere In Mlddl eport and could be reached at
Arlin, Kelley (7) and Barton;
League-leadmg
Syracuse wtth
any time. Mr. Smith did work out of the village but was available Ellis, Giusti (8) and San9ulllen.
an 11-8 vtctory over Toledo.
at ll moment's notice by telephone whenever needed. But 1 was WP-EIIIs 13-3). LP-Arlin(0-4).
Charleston
pounded out 12 htts
Y
just wondering how the good taxpayers would feel if they were Montreal ooo ooo ooo-- o 9 2
in gaining a half on the Chiefs. , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
sending their chUdren to school and their instructor was on the~ · St. Louis 001 000 oox- 1 8 2
Syracuse split a doubleheadtelephone half of the time trying to solve problems that arise
Morton (2-4) and Bateman,
•
1
Boccabella (8); Carllon (5-1)
er with Tidewater, the Tides
needing inunedtate attention. I hardly feel the School Ad· and Simmons.
winning the opener, 3-2, on a
ministration would be a party to this, do you?
five-hitter
by Jim Bibby. Syra·
'
The "Sewage hassle" is past' history
and I can only say Los Angeles000 001 ooo-- 1 5 0
cuse won the second game 9-3
"thank heaven" you weren't on your toes because the town would Atlanta 000 210 Olx- 4 7 0
as Joe Verbanic and Tom FronSulton (0-3) and Sims ; Reed
, I once heard a speech that could be used for any occasion be it
have been bankrupt long ago with a $500 per day fine. Sorry you
dorf combined on a five-hitter
(3-2)
and
Didier.
HRs·Cepeda
political, social, or whatever . Mr. Grate's letter concerning my four
missed thst one!
and George Pena hit a pair of
(7MhL Wills (lsi), H. ,Aaron
statements
seems to present this same turn-around . ·
(lllh).
Why didn't I quote the right expenditures and receipts for the
homers.
Mr. Grate, while obviously being opposed to me, has taken each
dump operation last year? Well, just for your information I
Richmond and Rochester also
Phlla
100 000 ooo-- 1 6 1
statement and systematically proved it to be corr.ect. This, of
happened to quote approximate figures then so now I give It to you Chicago 200 030 20x- 7 7 0
divided a twin bill as Richmond
Bunnlng,
Reynolds
(51.
Chamcourse, supports my contentions. However, after proving each
in dollars and cents: Dump Rkelpts $6,640.70 and Expenditures
won the opener, 4-3, with veterpion·
(7) and McCarver; Hands
statement,
he then throws In some derogatory remark concerning
$5,106.95. Net $1,533.75. I will stand on oath to these fitures. 1 just (3-3) and Breeden. LP-Bunning
an Bob Duliba getting the win
in relief. Rochester edged the
my age or political experiences or a&lt;;tivltles. Reading his letter as, Is,
don't know what you had in reference when you made this (1 -4). HR-Sanlo (4th).
Braves 3-2 in the second game
statement but belleve me it better be good because you might
shows his incoherent destructive criticism but omits the attempts to
(10 innings!
on an eight-hitter by John
make me appear incompetent and all you have left is agreement,
have \0 eat some of these word~ before it is all over.
N.Y.
000 004 001 1- 1 16 1 provision~.
Montague.
010 100 003 0'-- 5 13 o
·supported with his own facts.
You made reference oo lny having two jobs. Well, since when Hous
hss th!JI beco-re a crime? If I so choose to do a little "community Sadeckl
EXAMPLES:
Koosman,
rIse II(9)a and
(7), • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
(9). FTaylor
service" I don't think I have put myself in jeopardy, Have you Grote; Wilson, Ray (6), GladStatement l. "I don't think it would take a very bright
tried any lately with the exception of criticism and con- ding (8), Lemasler (9), Culver
(
10)
,
and
Hiatt,
Edwards.
WPperson to realize you can't resurface streets in freezing
demnalion?
·
Taylor 11·0) . LP·Culver (2-4).
weather."
r
•
Yes, times are changing, and I do find It hsrd to change with HR-Cedeno (lsi).
r~ n~'EEM
Answe~ 1. I have worked it;~ the engineering department of
them, but we have had "money" for a long tbne and that Is what
American League
SPl~""
(151)
game)
the Ohto Department of Highways, but I don't need that
makes the village "tick.''
Minnesota 000 000 ooo-- o 2 1
experience to qualify thls statement. I have never said
Now, just for information, whether you like It or not, lll\lght Boslon
001 000 oox·- ·1. 6 o
resur.face. I said repair. Other responsible highway
Blyleven (2-4) and Ratliff ;
psss aloog a little bit of infol'IIUition that you haven't wantect to
Cui~
(3-1)
and
Josephson.
departments
repair hazardous spot.s in any weather. Why
Iring to light. In the yesr of 1970 I requested council to authorize (2nd g•me) _
ElfCT~IC
does Middleport have to wait for the' weather to break?
me ljllnvest surplus monies that are obligated but can't be spent ;~innesola 010 101 401- a 12 3
'
200 000 412- 9 13 1
lnunedlately. By so doing, I was able to add $2,500 to the treasury Boston
DRYER
Corbin (3), Williams
Statement 2. Middleport cannot have a part time Mayor.
of the village for general operating. This year we have aiready (5),Barber,
Hall (7), Perranoskl (7)
(shortened)
'
received $625 more. And lp that last three years .I have Increased and Mltlerwald; Sieber1, Lee
-- ---- ~
(7) Bolin (7), Lyle (8), Tatum
Answer 2. I believe that there is only one candidate In this
the Bond Escrow accounl by $4,811.42 to be paid on the Bonded )9)
and Pavlellch. WP-Tatum
ele'ctlon that is not working and would be able to fulfill MT.
Indebtedness when it~ eligible. That makes a total of $7,936.42 to 0 -2). LP-Perranoskl (0-3). HRGrate's requirement. This Is the Democratic candidate,
date which the village would not have had otherwise. I rather Smllh (41h).
. ___. and I can only assume that Middleport's Republican Clerk
believe that I hsve paid my way, so to speak, plua tbe Community (tst game)
Treasurer will support this person in the November
Service that I hsve given. But, I guess your script writer forgot Milw
000 000 001- I 3 0
election.
However, by November, Mr. Gerard will
N.Y.
000 200 OOx- 2 4 o
that too!
Patlln,
Sanders
(81
and
probably be employed as a teacher so there will [?e no one
The rest of your comments are of a personal nature and 1 Rodriguez, Roof (B); S1o111efor Mr. Grate to vote for.
.
don't propoae ij) get down in the gutter and thrash around with myre (2-0)
Gibbs. LP'
Patlln (3-3).
(2nd),
them.
Statement 3. Middleport needs a seasoned individual.
But your P.S. really sends me. I had always thOught the
Answe~ 3. Some of our seasoned individuals have caused
"minority group" was trying to move Clty Hail up the river but
the
problems we ha've now and moving them from one
now I He that It Is going to 348 Grant St. I couldn't be happier!
office to another is not the solution.
Now n won't have to ''waite Vllla11e Money" lor the !upkeep of
'
Olf Ifill beeaUJe you csn't leg8l1y Spend mooey on private
Of course this could go on and on but words are plentiful In
II'CIPII'IY·
,
Middleport, action Is th~ scarce commodity_. For Middleport, growth
Mflll'lbitl came to think oflt-1141 the Minority Group been
Is belng ·bullt·flve miles away TODAY. We can't waste anotller. two
I ,
~ flit 10111e d the VIllage money that is due ua ~ All ·we
years. Let's have Change! Let's grow up! Let's clean 'up! We don't
111ft 1t1 do II uk Mr. S.. He
to ..ve better recor\ls than I
need the city's money or another shift of ~ity workers. We need two
dellllllllawn'IIYIIIIIIIlh!niiiCitJHaU.
'
or three thousand people WORK I N~for the samelhing: .'
Yllll'l f« a ~ve Mlddllport
MIDDLEPORT
Gene Grate, Clerk·Tressurer.
'
Vlllage of Middleport
-Pd. Pol. Adv.

Un

a

,,

'-

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: 0., May ·a, 1971

in· ·Right to Read Brogram
'

'

'

'
(Continged from Page 1)
Grade 4; . Dwayne Qualls,
ctnt - is· where we have to
Pomeroy, Grade 5.
cancentrate," said Dr. eooJ,er.
'
Juniot'Hlgh
He spoke of the work of Right
Painting: Marsha Klme~,
to Read task forces currently
Riverview, Grade 8.
gathering information · on
: Poe try and Essays
methods to be used in the
Judged by Mrs. C. E.
program. An army of volun·
Blakeslee, teacher at " Meigs
teers to do ol)e-tooone tutoring,
High School, were the poetry
professional Workers, nonand essay district entltes. The
profes$io1U!l adults, and ad·
winners were as fo¥ows: '
vanced children doing the
Primary (kindergarten
teaching, are the methOds w.Ut
through third . grade, grade): ·
the most support, \he speaker
Debbie Smith, Middleport·,
said.
Grade 3, first; LOri Roush,
While reading lB vitally im·
Middleport, Grade I, second;
portant, he said tliat it tends to ,Barbara Thomas, Middleport,
be exaggerated, while lt is
third, Grade 2.
Elementary (fourth, fifth and
really only one of several
sixth grade, poetry) : Sandy
medias of conununication.
Garnes, Salem Center, first;
He concluded with the thought
Paige Smith,
Pomeroy
that while t!Jel't appears oo he
'
.
Elementary, Grade 5, second;
not a great deal we can do
CULTURAL ART JUDGING - Miss Mary K. Leonard and J:{obert D. Borchard, both
and
Michael
Lewis,
because of inherent factors, we
associate professors of Art Education at Ohio University, selected the District 16 art entries
Chesapeake, Grade 4, third.
nej!d to do what·we can oo help
which will be displayed at the Ohio PTA conference in the fall .
Junior High, poetry: Mary
that small percentage whose
Barringer, Riverview in Meigs
reading ability has been af.
'
Pomeroy PTA units presented the Pomeroy unit.
County, first. ·
Churches, gave the invocation.
fected by environment.
Morris
with
a
life
membership
The
flag salute was given by
The
Rev.
Robert
R.
card,
Music
DR, ROBERT E. LUCAS
pastor of the Pomeroy and Cub Scout Dens I and 4 of Pack
Junior High: Craig Reed, in the PTA.
Using the conference theme,
RIGHT TO READ- Dr. William Cooper of Ohio University, a member of the Ohio Right to
Given
recognition
and
Chester
United Methodist 249, Pomeroy.
Riverview Elementary, first.
"PTA Puts It All Together", as
Read CommiSJliOn and chairman of the IO.COunty Southeast District, discussed facets of the
presented certificates by Mrs.
Essays
his topic, Dr. Lucas, promine~t
Right oo Read program, what can be expected and what caru10t be expected, in his address .at
llllllllllllllllllllllllltiiiHIIIIUIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiliiiiDiiliiiiliiiAIIIIIIInftlnniiiiiiHIIII.
Primary: Mark Williams, Lohse were Mrs. Judith A.
lecturer for educational, civic
the District 16, Ohio PTA conference. Pictured with Dr. Cooper are Mrs. leo Crew, general
Pomeroy Elementary, Grade 3, Spencer, Middleport; Mrs.
and social groups throughOut
conference chairman, and Mrs. Harold Lohse, District 16 president.
Uncoln Dearth, McArthur,
first.
Ohio, charged the PTA leaders
Mrs.
Earl Thoma, Pomeroy,
Elementary: Patricia
with the responsiblllty of
'
closing the conununication gap principal, Bradbury, Mid- Athens, Grade 5; James Bradbury, Grade 5; Kim Autherson, Grade 6, Syracuse, and Mrs. Vaughan, Middleport, i
bei)Veen the school and the dleport,
and
Pomeroy Thomas, Middlepqrt, Grade 4. Grueser, Syracuse, Grade 6, first; Opal Dyer, Salem Center, for completing· a study course §
!!I
community.
Elementary Schools; George Crayon: Sharon Snyder ,' and Lori Faulk, Pomery, Grade second; and Anna McKinney, on the PTA manual.
Mrs. Lohse also presented a
Pomeroy, Grade 4, third.
Dr. Lucas, speaking at the Hargraves, superintendent, Chesapeake, Grade 4; Kevin 6.
Sculpturing: Ronnie Eblin, Junior High: Karen Reed, certificates to Mr. Howard -~
morning session, described Meigs Local School District, King, Middleport, Grade 4;
Rhonda
Coe,
West
Elementary,
Birchfield of Rutland and Mrs. 1!1
llradbury,
Grade 5; Brei Riverview, first.
PTA as hard ' work, requiring and Robert Bowen, superin·
Harrison, Washington Special Education, Kathy June Epple of Chester, in
courage,, confidence, en- tendent Meigs County Schools. Athens, Grade 5.
Collage:
Ricky
Taylor,
Elementary, Gallipolis, Grade Campbell, Pomeroy, first.
recognition of 100 per cent at-~­
thusiasm, and a sense of purMorris served as· moderator
tendance of new officers at the
Middleport,
Grade
4;
Becky
6;
Mary
Colwell,
Salem
Center,
Ufe
Membership
pqse. He spoke of the PTA role for a panel discussion on the
Mrs. Vaughan president of conference.
of leadership in the community topic "PTA Is". On the psnel Lawhorn, Chesapeake, Grade Grade 4.
4;
Alexandra
Pejonich,
East
Prints:
Margaret
Adams,
the
Meigs County Council of Recognized for 100 per cent
and the need for PTA leaders to were Dr. Lucas, Mrs. Schwab,
get "tuned in" so they can "turn Mrs. Vaughan, and Mrs. Hans Elementary, Athens, Grade 4. Morrison Elementary, Grade 5; Parents and Teachers and for teacher membership were the i
Charcoal: Kelly Hayman, Gary Young, Chesapeake, the Bradbury, Middleport and units of Rutland, Syracuse,
on" others and get a job done. Eydel, Ohio PTA Cultural Arts
Chester, Salem Center, Athens ~
"If you believe ill It, then do chairman, and Mrs. Emelyne
East Elementary, Middleport,
something about it, and if you E. Reed, Ohio PTA com·
Bradbury and Salisbury. The 5
don't believe in it, then get out" munications chairman. McArthur unit was welcomed
was his advice.
During the afternoon session
into District 16 by Mrs. Lohse .
"Patricipants and not the panel members conducted
Mrs. Clarence Norton, =
spectators, that's what is conferences for administrators,
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs. cakes centered with yellow Mrs. Evelyn Clark, Mrs. Kaye registrar, reported represen- ~
needed," commented Dr. faculty members, PTA officers Frances Reibei of Pomeroy rosebuds, assorted cookies and Kennedy, Mrs. Stella Kloos, tatives from five of the seven 5
Lucas. He spoke of the lack of and chairmen.
entertained Wednesday night nuts were served. Mrs. W. H. Mrs. Elizabeth Wells, Mrs. COljnties in the district, with 17 iij
real and open communication
with a shower honoring Miss Perrin presided at the punch Betty Reibel, Mrs. Edna Reibel. units represented.
~­
between parents, teachers and
Cultural Ar1s Judging
Donna Reibel, bride-elect of bowl.
Others presenting gifts were Cultural arts awards were
Will' make Middleport a good Mayor.
administrators, and of the
Miss Mary K. Leonard and James Shato of Gallipolis.
Games were played with Mrs . Helim - Maag, Mrs. made by Mrs . Leo Crew,
resulting lack of support on Robert D. Borchard, 'both
The shower was held in the prizes going to Mrs. Carr!Jl Lucretia Smith, Mrs. Mildred general conference chairman, ~
issures including tax needs.
associate professors of Art Pomeroy Trinity Church social Meinhart, Mrs. Neva Seyfried, . Arnold, Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, Mrs. who also introduced the spring
Vote May 4, 1971.
He cited Ohio as the pqorest Education at Ohio University; room . The mantel decorations Mrs. Fritz Buck, Mrs. Howard Patty Hysell, Mrs. Edith conference chairmen. The ftims ill
state in the United States, ac- judged art works exhibited at featured white satin with a Wells, and Mrs. Genevieve Lanning, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. "Who Says You Can't" and
cording oo ability to pay, in the conference. These were ftrst yellow netting overlay, Meinhart.
-Pd. P9l. Adv.,
Marguerite Meyer, Mrs, Freda "Mr Main Motion" were shown
support of education, paying place winners according to
'·u·1·1u
:'t'tu'"" "
less lbcal taxea on.real estate grade ·level in schools llf 'lhe" m\l'ia~~~.e. ,)f.~ite ,lig_~,\~. an~. ,Gues_ts were those named .and . Fauber, Mrs. Myrtle q,!!fsl, duru;g thecoffe.: hour hosted by· 1'11·1·1'1il'ultw
'
daffodils, and a centerptece of a Mrs. Kathryn Brown, Mrs. Miss 'Sybil · Ebersbach, Miss ..
ii
____
__
than anywhere else.
' district. ·
bride doll, gift to Miss Reibel. Georgia Williamson, Mrs. Eva Thelma Grueser, Mrs. Edith
Oiiecting his comments. to tbe
Placing first, second and The gift table featured a white Dessauer,
Mrs.
Ethel Kautz, Mrs. Marie Dailey, Mrs.
PTA leaders, he charged them third, , respectively in the wedding . bell centerpiece and Williamson, Faith and Beth Elsie Heines, Mrs. Edith
CaiiNo.m
Char.terNo. 8441
National Bank Region No.4
with the responsibility of various caieg'orles were the the
refreshments
table Perrin, Mrs. Kathryn Russell, Heines, Mrs. Martha Rose, Mrs.
REPORT (!F CONDmON, CONSOLIDATING
providing the leadership which following students:
decorations included a basket of Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mrs. Elizabeth Sarah Dawson, Miss Mary
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE
will dtaw the community inoo a
Special Education: Painting shasta daisies and a blue urn- Shato, Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, Virginia Reibel, Mrs. Evelyn
position of interest in educ'atlon. .,.. Denise Qualls, Pomeroy brella flanked by yellow taper~. Mrs . Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Gilmore, Mrs. Kathy Erwin and
Human r~tlons, drug and Elementary; Tommy Klein, A large wedding bell hung Althea Strong, Miss Fae Reibel, daughter, Amy_
alcohol problems, an~ teacher Pomeroy Elementary; Collage above the table.
Mrs. Lillie Houck., Mrs. Rose ·
conOicts are areas wHere PTA - Patty Edwards, Pomeroy
Sherbet punch with a floating Ginther, Diane Strong, Mrs. .-------~---,
can contribute by serving as the Elementary.
yellow rose, miniature cup- Ruth Massar, Mrs. Clara Karr,
HOSPITAL NEWS
neutral ground for discussion
Primary:
(kindergarten
\
and problem solving, the throogh third grade) Painting
of
Middleport
In lite State of Oblo, at the close of business on April 20, 1971
Holzer Medical Center, First
sepaker said.
-Douglas Angelo, Chesapeake
published in response to call made by Comptroller of tbe Currency, under Title
Av~. and Cedar St. General
In his talk, which was marked West Elementary, Grade 3;
1%, United Stales Code, Section 161.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
with humor, Dr. Lucas urged Elizabeth Scott, Morrison
ASS&amp;I'S
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
the PTA meml!ers to accept Elementary, Athens, Grade 1;
Cash and due from banks • • • • - •• - - •• - • - - - - - • $ 630,310.13
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
th~ir responsibility to close the Christina Spencer, Middleport,
MONDAY
DeMolay, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Pediatrics Ward.
U.S. Treasury securities • • • • • • •• • ••••• · • - · - 1,803,468.75
gap belween the school and Grade 1.
POMEROY GARDEN Club, Middleport Masonic Temple,
Births
Obligations of, States and pqlltical subdivisions • •• • • •
1,128;168.53
community. He concluded with Crayons: Jinuny Ranshotton, Monday,! p.m. at home of Mrs. election of officers. Council Mr. and Mrs. James D.
Other securities - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• 12,000.00
the comment that those who Chesapeake, Grade 1; Todd Gux Guinther . Miss Lydia meeting at 7.
Hutchinson, Oak Hill, a son;
Federal
funds
sold
and
secnrities
purchased
know the schools best are Morrison, Pomeroy Elemen- Ebersbach, assisting hostess. ELECTION OF officers when Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burke,
under agreements to resell - • . - . •
• • 800,000.00
generally supporting them.
tary, (frade 3; Dick Herman,
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Meigs County Pleasure Riders Syracuse, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
- • • • 4,441,664.04
Loans····-········---·-Mrs. Harold LohSe, District 16 Middleport, Grade 3.
, p.m. Monday, installation of. 4-H Club meets Monday, 8 p.m., David E. Weddington, Oak Hill,
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
director, presided at the con· Collage: Amy Hart, East fleers by Mrs. Harold Lohse, A. R. Knight home in Pomeroy. a son; Mr. and Mrs. Roland E.
other assets representing bsnk premises • • •
• - - - 60,888.116
ference which opened with a Elementary, Athens, Grade 2; district PTA .director. Piano RACINE CHAPTER 134, King, New Haven, a daughter;
.
Real
estate
owned
other
than
bank
premises
•
•
.
•
• . • • 12,308.7'0
welcome from Mrs. Richard Scott Mannon, Chesapeake, recital and recognition of OES, regular meeting and in- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Bush,
Vaughan, Middleport, Ohio Grade 2; Steven Kinzek, grandparents.
Other assets • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • · • 1,819.54
spection, Monday, 8 p.m., at Wellston, a daughter; Mr. and
PTA publications chairman, Pomeroy Elementary, Grade 3.
TOTAL ASSETS - • • • - • - • • · • •
• " .
$8,890,6411.55
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of temple. All members urged to Mrs. John N. Wanko, Gallipqlis,
and greetings from Mrs. Avery
LJABO..ITIES
Elementary t-5-6 Grades
attend. ·
a son; Mr . an d Mrs. p auI S.
Schwab, vice president· Painting: Suzy Samuels,
J Demand depqsits of individuals, partnerships,
PROJECT FREEDOM Jasovsky,Galllpolls,a son; and
and corporations • • • • • • •4 • • • • _ • •
director, Deparbnent of Health, Bradbury, Gralle 6; Marlen~
- • • $1,580,821.09
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Mr. and Mrs. Loren E. Beaver,
' Ohio PTA; Robert Morris. Bush, West E;lementary,
Time
and
savings
deposita
of
individuals,
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. All Gallipolis, a· daughter.
partnerships, and corporations • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5,511,897.47
groups urged to attend to
Discharged
Dept»lltS of United States Government • • • • • - • • • • 34,865.34
complete plans for house to l&gt;fi's. Larry J. Barrett and
DepMita of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • • - - - 732,384.81
house canvass May I0-16, to son, Mrs. Jack A. Bates and
Deposits of commercial banks - • • • • • • • • • • • • 5,000.00
, ,
secure signatures asking better daughter, Mrs.
Maggie
Certified and officers' checks, etc, • - • • • • • ·• • • • • • 17,953.54
May Fellowship Day spon- treatment for prisoners of war. Brunton, Homer Carman, Ed F.
sored by Church Women United Imperative to complete plans at Caudill, Christine Lynn
TOTAL DEPOSITS .' • • • - • - • • $7,1!d2,922.25
of - Meigs County will be ob- this meeting.
Chapman, Mrs. Ernest C.
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • • • $2,161,502.-15
served Friday at Trinity · . RIVERVIEW PTA Monday Clark, Mrs . John E. Davis and
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • • • . $5,721,420.10
Church. ·
evening, May 3 at 7:30 at the daughter, Ronald A. FiSher,
Other liabilities • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • . • 159,340.77
"Enlarge the Place of Yout Riverview Elementary School. Mrs. Francis L. Gavin, Mrs'.'
TOTAL UABILITIES • • • • • • • • - • • - • • • $8,042,263.02
Tent" is the theme of the Instrwnental students of Mr. Forest Lamar Halterman and
, RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
m~ting which '!Ill begin witli a Wooters' will present program. daughter, Mrs. Ronald !{.
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans .
10:30 sack luncjl. Women of the New officers will be installed. Hester and daughter, Usa G.
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) •. : • - •••••• ' .. •• $58,094.53
host church will provide the MIDDLEP9RT Garden Club, James, Mrs. Ollie Jayjohn,
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • • • • $58,094.53
dessert and coffee.
7:30 p. m. Monday, Colunibus Morlan K. Kiser, Mrs. Bernice
CAPfi'AL ACCOUNTS
New officers for a three year and Southern Ohio Electric Co. Lane, Mrs. Oris F. Lyons, Mrs.
Equity capital-total • • • • • • • • - • • •
• • • • $790,291.00
A weekly feature of Meigs
term
wi~ . be elected and on the
TH!!:ODORUS
COUNCIL,
·lebertA.
Martin,
Mrs.
Frances
County Garden Club members.
Common Stock-total par vslue • • • •. - - • • • • 100,000.00
nominating COIIUlllttee are Mrs. Daughters of America, 7:30 L. McComas, Charles R. Me·
No. shares authorized 2,000
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Clara Monday night at the IOOF halL Nickle, Mrs. Harold L. Queen
No. shares outstanding 2,000
Thomas, Mrs. J. Edward Important business to be and son, Mrs. Randy ltandolph
Surplus • ; • • • • · • • • • • • ; • • • • • • • • • • 300,000.00
Foster, and Mrs. Allen Hamp- transacted.
and daughter, •Mrs. Keith · E.
I
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • • • •
• 390,291.00
ton.
TUESDAY
'\ ,
Snyder, Burnace F, Stout, Sr.,
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - •
$700,291.00
Mrs. Ben Neutzling has an- - REGULAR MEETING , lester M. Thompson, Mrs .
TOTAL UABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
~ounced a .~hea~ ~or all Middleport Lodge 3G3, F&amp;AM, Nolan D. Th~ton, Bobl;ly L.
'
'
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • • • • '
$8,890,648.55
~ Tent-caterpinars are one of the most common and serioua those parhctpahn~ tn the' 7 ,30 p.m. Tuesday at temple. Tucker, Mrs. Juanita J. Ward,
MEMORMIDA '
pests to trees. They particularly attack apple, plesch, plum, and · program. In the group for a 1
'
and Mrs. Stella E. Wilcox.
Average
of
total
deposits
for
the
15 calendar
wild cherry, and occasionally beech, oak, birch, and willow. playlet are Mrs. Arnold
days ending with call date . · ••••• ,••••• ·' • •
$7,898,534.66
Unlessconlrolled they can, in a short tbne, completely defoliate a Richards, Mrs. Richard DIVen,
'
Mrs. Karl Grueser, Mrs. Harry '
Average of ootalloans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date : • · • ~ • • • - - • • • • - • $4,426,048.97
treeTheywiJtletin the egg stage In shiny, dark brown egg masses Davis, Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mrs .
,
which are. Visible on' the bsre branches, and 'l'liich may be Jean Hall, Mrs. Homer Holter,
ed
· thod f control
,
and Mrs. Don Holter,
I, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice-President, of the above-named bank
remov as a .:~h od th
~g caterpillars begm making, Others on the pro~ram·
do hereby declare that this r_eport of condition is ltue and correct to the best of
The eggs
• an e yo
' r~uested to atten!l the 2 p m
my knowledge and belief.
their webbe~ nests In the forks of trees at about the time t~t the Wedn sda ian ing
t\illi
$35.00 Down·
lt\ROLD E. HUBBARD
apple leaves beglp to unfold. They become full grown Within ~ Trll\i~ J!ch "are ~:. ~

.

Vote May 4th
REPUBLICAN CANDIQATE

1

JOHN
ZERKLE

=
=

Bride-Elect Honored

I

FOR MAYOR
MIDDLEPORT

I

···---------..,jiiiiii_

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Fellowship Day
PI anned, Fn'd ay

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CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

1

Green Thumb

Notes . ...

Tent-caterpillars

.

3 ROOMS
. NEW
FURNITURE

i

month; then each spins a cocoon Qn the tree trunk fro~ ,Which tl
wQ,1 emerge as a llght brown moth.
.
For control, trees may be ,IP!'ayed WltiJ an arsenate of lead,
1'-'~toftftygaUonsofwater. Thenestmaybedestroyedby
dlppillg aawab lnl!la can~ UAd crank-case oU, and then poking
It, ~~~~ the web. Tlda lhould be done In the evening,- for the
catllrpllllrsfeedduring theday,IIIKiretum to the,nejlt al night. r-.

'319.95 .

Balan~e

On

Seyfr\ed, Mrs. R!ibert .Warner,
ConveAient
Mrs. Edith Sisson, , Mrs . ·
Tet:ms.
Campbell Harper, Mrs. David
Entsminger, Mrs, William
MASON
Grueser, Mrs. Hampton, Mrs.
Welsh, Mts. Karl Owen, Mrs. J.
M. Th~nton, Mrs. l'~ul Smal\

'

~.·

FURNITURf ··

'

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of con· '
dition and ·declare· that it has' been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge. and belief is true and correct.' '
,
·
·
1.
• James F. Arnold
·
R..W..y DIIWIIID&amp;-- ·Dlrectm
Paul S. Smart
'

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4-The 0.111 Sentinel, Middlepqrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 3, 1971

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iadtw l.ttte!'ll Gl Oj I I , Ia llllld lull, 1ft .
• • .. .''ftle :dltar ftl • • tile rfalit le ......... JeUtn. Alllelten liiUI be lllpe4, wta a luJJ lddNI, alllnqti• llltWa IU:flle .-.I ...,. req ell,

C

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The Facts, Straightened Out

L

Dear 'Mr. EGitor:
·
wen, w~U, S®~ebody's toes got stepped on, didn't they? But 1
oold suggest tbiltMr. See get another script writer because this
one didn't do too good. Seems as though ·the facts are "slightly
twlated," so let ua see tf we can't get them straightened out to
some degree - College or otherwise!
. ·You made reference to the "Street Deparbnent" wbrking on
Fr!)Rt Street alluding that the "Public Officials" had found some
money they didn't know they had. Your script writer doesn't seem
to know the difference from a "Street Deparbnent" and a bona
fide "Contractor." If you had read the Daily Sentinel on March 26
)'ou would have found the "legal Advertisement" lor bids for
~urfacing street In the Village, It just so happens that Front
Street was included in the specified streets and I hardly feel the
conlractor would'aend his crew to work on a street that wasn't
·lnciUded in the bid-nor could we include any streets after the bid
was accepted aa it would not have been fair to the other bidders. I
QUnk you can get the picture from this statement, whether you or
our jjroup want to believe it or not. Ever) though the "20 .years of
dynasty has existed" as you say, the council members do have
integrity and know what they can do and can't do.
In reference to the Permissive Automobile Tax - this is the
first ~ that I have beard of a re-count. I always thought you
hsd to pay for each wa~d for recounts at the Board of Elections. I
know Ihaven'tpaldoutany funds for recounts nor has the County
Auditor Settlements shown any such deductions. Where did you
pick up this little bit of Information? Of course you spoke of a
Democratic type of Government last summer, dated ·July 20,
when you were requested to come to Council and offer your help in
trying to solve the street problems, which stated: QUOTE : (In
part) First and foremost we believe in a democrative form of
govenunent which says that the majority and consent of the
people must prevail. We do not live in a dictatorship, we live in a
democracy." Fine and dandy- but I can't understand why the
majority 'of the people elected these councilmen to represent
thtm. If they didn't want them to represent them they should
hsve elected some one else.
I beg your pardon when you said the voters "sank" the boat.!

have enough faith' in the people of Middleport io rally to a
situation that is so vital to each citizen. I don't think you have
enough following to "sink the boat." Ityou do, the "Law Abiding
Citizens" of the vlllage better head for the hills because no
government can exist on untruths or mis-construed facts. And
believe me, your facts surely don't come up to the record as they
exist.
· So you thin!! I have "arrived" by being Clerk-Treasurer of the
Vlllage of Middleport.!'don't think in terms of "arriving" but in
terms ofwhstl can do for the people of Mlddlepqrt in holding this
office. As far as the remunerative value of the Job goes, 1 would
serloualy doubt If lt would average 10 cents per hour for the time
that I put on it. I guesa the fact that 1 take a little pride in what I
want to do for Middlepqrt doesn't exist in your theory. Well, as
you say, the voters will decide this question Tuesday and which
ever way It goes I only hope that you will accept it. I lmow I can,
....._,.., I h.,. a_,.,..,,.~ ~ef... t before ~I J'm "9t too big that I -

Linescores

Lottery Proposal ~·· Hearings
COLUMBU$ (UPI) - Both
houaes of the Ohio General As..
sembly are to have coounlttees
hOlding first public tlearings
this week on a proposal to set up
a state lottery to raise money
for educatioo. .
,
To make it legal in Ohio would
require changing the state·
constitution by an amendment
as gambling, except for race
track wagering, is illegal now
by law,
The state also would have to
set up a commission to run
lottery operations.
Also to get first airing this
week iS the $505 million tax

'

pa,ckage dwnped into the legislators' laps last week through
an' initiative petition proced!"'e.
The bin was dtafted by the
Tax Reform Action Committee,
which is a group including the
Ohio AFL and the United Auto
Workers of Ohio.
'
The committee secured petilions have signatures of 100,000
Ohio voters to start the tax
package toward enactment.
Should legislators balk at approving it, the committee could
collect
another
100,000
signatures to put the proposal
on the November ballot.
Goiug To Subcommittee

The House Ways and Means . tee for welfare, education and subject to certain limitations.
Committee iS to receive testi- state agencies have fmished the Only Colwnbus institutions now
mony from labor Qll oie tax testimony phase and will work may be used, but the measure

package . this week, and then this week on amendments to the
assign it to a subcommittee.
administration bills.
Meanwhile, the Senate Fina~]
ce
Committee also will hold ad]
The same committee also will
hOld h~ings this week on the vance hearings on the budget.
governor's $9.1 billion budget The House hopes to have a
program, with opponents Boor v~te on the budget pack·
age late this month.
scheduled to testify.
The House Health, Education
and Welfare Committee also
May Shift De'posits
will be taking testimony on the
The Senate is to vote Tuesday
budget, whUe a subcommittee on a measure authorizing th~
works on revision of the gover- state Board of Depqsits to put
nor's school proposals.
active deposits of slate funds in
The House Finance commit- banks outside of Colwnbus,

Chan'ces Better Says Se-nator
-,

By RICK VANSANT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)' 1PresidentNixon consulting the
Joint Chiefs of Staff on the Viet. nam War is like consulting General CUllter on how to fight
indians," according to U.S. Sen.
George S. McGovern, the only
announced presidential candidate.
McGovern predicted his
amendment to pull all U.S.
troops out of Southeast Asia by
the end of 1971 would pass the
Senate this year . The proposal
was turned down 55-39 in the
Senate last fall .
"If the amendment is defeated again I'll begin a filibuster
to try to talk down further fi·
nancial funding of the war," he
told a crowd of about 4,000
Ohio State University students
here Sunday night.
But McGovern said he was
oplimistichisamendmentwould
pass because of three reasons:
"Disappoinlment in the Vietnamization program, a recent Gal·
lup poll showing 73 per cent
support of the amendment by
the public, and Hanoi's hstatement it wou1d negotiate t e release of prisoners once America
pulled out."
McGovern said he could not
predict the margin the amend·
men! would pass by.
"I'm outraged at President

l

Nixon's Umetable which seems
to be geared toward the 1972
election rather than toward the
reality of Indochina," he said.
"I also believe we ought to
withdraw most American troops
from western Europe."
"I'm puzzled and disturbed
about the routing of anti-war
demonstrators in Washington
D.C. today (Sunday)," McGoverri said. "In effect, the government has revoked the permit it
had given the demonstrators.
"However, I'm opposed to
some of the tactics that were
proposedinthisdemonstrationblocking buildings and tying up
traffic," he said. "I liked the
tactics used by the veterans
last week."
Bomber Criticized
McGovern said he was preparing a report showing the
proposed B·l bomber is a
"waste of taxpayers' money."
"We have an adequate mili·
tary deterrent without building
an expensive new bomber," the
former World War 11 bomber
pilot added. "This bomber can
only trigger greater anxiety
among the American public."
Asked at a news conference
before the speech about wiretapping, McGovern said he had
no evidence his telephone had
ever been bugged, "but I have
a letter from a friend warning

On the F.arm .L'v ront
, ·"

.

~lii\Mepi·T.t ag· ;lri,"'.J~i'~lnembe~ ' t l": ,. ,. ' ,.. . . ' l1\Te
l l ' •••
Ul

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' Agen
' c' Expeet ed
y'

You state that all meetings should be held in the City Hall.
Wthaellth thisDa ts suhrteSaly neingws Tim~
me. I rememin
issber ~theral ~llaesrs agdo
t e Y11g
v s
e was __ ue m e VI ge an
By BERNARD BRENNER
council voted to re-convene at the American legion Hall for the
WASHINGTON (UP!) _
meeting with the problem to air their views. Other than that, I Agriculture Seeretary Clifford
wouldn't have any idea what you are referring to. Sure, council M. Hardin Is quietly planning to
conunittees clin meet but they don't have to meet at City Hall. set up a new rural development
Nothing lB official until it ls brought to the Boor for acceptance or coordinating agency In his
njectlon.
department _but what 11 will

do remains uncertain.
The new unit,_an Agriculture
Department a1de satd, wtll
probably be called a "rural
development service." It w~uld
be set up to handle relations
with states under President
Nixon's controversial proposal
for a rural development
revenue-sharing program, and
also to coordinate action under
a number of development
programs which would remain
in federal hands.
Hardin recently told Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn.,
he is "just about to recommend" creation of the new
agency - a successor to a
somewhat similar unit set
under the Johnson administration but abolished in
1970.
Another official, however,
said the No. I job of the agency
Hardin proposes to set up would
be administration of the
proposed rural development
revenue-sharing 'program. This
program, however, faces an
uncertain future on capitol hill
where many farm bloc
lawmakers have been voicing
reservations about its key

me tO be very careful."
Explaining his presidential
ambitions to the students, MeGovern said it had been a dif·
ficult decision.
"Several months ago 1 decid·
ed I could not stand in the back
of the Senate and wring my
hands about the fact that this
great country of ours is going
to hell," he said.
McGovern said he may try to
attach his withdrawal amend·
ment to the draft extension bill.
_"That way," he said, "I could
at least be assured of a vote
on it by June 30, the day the
present draft law expires."
"I also intend to offer four
amendments to the draft bill,
maybe some of them tongue-in·
cheek," he added. "But these
will be offered:
- "No one under 30 can be
drafted.

Colonels
Romp 12• 3
By United Pres~ lntern~tional
Ca~lton Ftsk ts no frtend of
Wmmpeg ptkher Balor Mo?re.
The Lomsvtlle catcher htt a
\w(}-run .ho~er off Moore m the
second mnmg Sunday and followed
bl t 0Ifthatth wtlh
w· a· three-run
th
as .
e . mmpeg sou •
paw m the
to leadover
the
Colonels
to athtrd
12-3 v1'ctory
the Goldeyes in the second
game of a dou bl ehea der ·
John Curtis gave up only
three hits in raising his record
2-1. The homers were Fisk's
first and second of the year.
Winnipeg won the opener 4-3,
behind the brilliant relief pikh·
ing of Bob Reynolds. Reynolds
entered the game in the first
after the Colonels had scored
twice and allowed Louisvllle

would permit other banks to
hold state money If they process
state money warrants.
Other Senate committees will
hold hearings on changing Ohio
divorce laws to a "no fault"
system, prohibiting giving
away of colored Easter chicks,
licensing psychologists,
restructuring the state Board of
Education, setting up a
chiropraclice examining board
prohibiting schools from
destroying used books.
House committees also will
hear bills on increasing retire:
men! benefits for school system
employes creating state
agencies to deal with pqllution
and environmental matters,
prohibiting ticket scalping,
banning liquor agency kick·
backs to political parties,
allowingliquorsalesatthestate
fairgrollnds at times other than
during a State Fair and compensating _crime victims.
'

ann

(1st ,.mel
·
Cleveland 200 120 1100'-' S 9 3
Oaklnd
510 200 oox- 8 9 2
McDowell, Pasc.ual (1). Col bert (4) , Auslln (6), Machemehl
(8) and Suarez; Hunter, Locker
(B) and Duncan. WP-Hunter (42). LP-McDowell (1 -4). HRsPinson (lsi), Jackson (41h).
(2nd game, 10 inns)
Cleve
000 000 210 4--'-. 7 14 0
Oak
000 002 010 0'-- 3 7 1
Lamb, McDowell (7) and
Suarez,

Fosse (7),

Dobson,

Lindblad (51. Locker 17),
Gardner (8) Klimkowskl (9)
and Tenace. WP-McDowell (I ·
4). LP-Kiimkowskl (2-11. HRsFoster (2nd!. Netlles (4th),
Mincher (lsll. Ford (2nd) .
Baltimore 010 211 000- 5 7 0
Kan City 000 201 00&lt;&gt;-'- 3 12 2
Cuellar 12-0l and Hendri&lt;ks;
Wright, Rooker (5), Fllzmorrls
(6), Burgmeler (7) and Kirkpatrick . LP-Wrlght (0-1). HR·
Cuellar I lsi).
Cliicago 001 000 002- 3 6 1
Washngln 000 010 000- 1 6
Wood. Romo (9) and Herrmann; Cox, Knowles (9) and
Casanova. WP-Wood (1 -1). LPKnowles (2-2) . HRs-Johnslone
(lrdL Reichardt. (3rd).
Detroit
Calli

011 001 ooo-- 3 11 0
020 001 lOx- 4 8 0

- "No one can be sent into
combatwithoutadeclarationof
~ 011;~;, Zeffee~~~; Sc~~~~~~
17
war approved by two-thirds of
Fisher (6)-, Allen (8) and
Congress.
1/l'lses, 51ephenson (8) . WP-"In any combat operation
~~~~~Mos~~ 1 /3rd~;H~~~n l~i~l :
the _Joint _Chief of Staff would •--"!""-~ ~~~~~~~~-=~-~
have to devote some lime to
front~ine duty.
1
1
- "Noprivatecorporationcan
OPTOMETRIST
make a profit in the production
of arms."
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
Ddaims Isolationism
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,
"My policy is not isolation- !::P:O:M=E~R:O:Y::.
ism," McGovern said. "It is a
new internationalism, one that
respects others."
"If I become president I will
avoid future Vietnams by tak·
ing requests for military assistance to the United Nations," he
said.
,
Answering a question at the
Sale will continue thru May 8. We will be open
news conference about "lack
9 a .m. to 9 p.m., Friday, Saturday and Monof excitement" in his campaign,
d
the history Ph.D., said: "I think
ay ·
I
this business of charisma and
Polyester Double Knits, 60 to 64"
image-making has been carried
1 Table Summer Weights, Reg. 2.89
I
too far."
I
"Once in awhile someone who I
· · --- · --- NOW 1. 98 yd. I
is pretty thin can be marketed, I 1 Table Reg. 3.98 • · • • NOW 2.98 yd. I
but I think the voters are get- I 1 Tab I e 1sf Qua I it y I Reg' 4. 98
I
ting tired of this," he said. "I 1 3. 98 yd.
1
don 't think the excitement of a 1
bl
·
1
campaign affects the average
100 Pet· Aery Iic Dou e Kntts
I
voter. I never found Nixon that I Reg • 2. 98 · · · · · · · · NOW 2.29 yd.
exctting."
I 72" Cotton Knits, average SOc ydJSc lb. I
Prodded by newsmen to name I
I
a possible vice-presidential can- I
fREE PAIR lADIES' HOSE
I
didate, McGovern only said I
,
I
there were "a lol of good men I
WITH EACH PURCHASE
I
available."
I
I
"My vice-presidential candi· I· ~-~----------1111!1!---• ' ' 1·
date probably would be just the
Dotted sw·ISS, 45" UAIUII
.1~_;, &amp;' WIUIII
~'"'" 00
eoc
-· I
opposite of Agnew," he added. I
I
McGovern was the overni~ht I
guest of Ohio Gov. John J . 1 · Penn Press Cotlun$, assorted-- --79' yd.
1.
Gjlligan.
1
1
"Gov. Gilligan is extremely 1
Sail Cloth, 45" permanent press.-.981 yd.
1
significant because Ohio is the
second largest state with a I Children's Light Weight
I
Democratic governor," McGov· I Jackets, values to 8.00 • . . . • 88c ea.
ern said. "Naturally I'd like to I Ladies' Hand M!lde P\lrses • • • 1.98 ea. I
have Gov-. Gilligan's support
Bedspreads, plaid, sprmgy &amp; cherry 2.98 ea. I
d I'll tr t0
. h' b I I New.
Rugs • . Low, Low Prices I
an
Y convtnq! tm, u 1
1
1 don't expect any inunediate
statementofsupportfromhim." I
I
McGovern's 45-minutespeech I
I
was interrupted by applause 16 I
(A Ml LL OUTLET)
1
times, and he received a stand- 1
ing ovation when he finished. I
STATE ROUTE 7
I
Earlier Sunday he addressed
ADDISON, OHIO
I
about 2,500 students at Bowling
Greim State Universit ,
(Formerly French's Mkt .)

...

O
D
N, W, COMPTON,

Big Storewide

s

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The Cotton G"10

KIM NEAL

·Republican

FOR MAYOR

MIDDLEPORT

ANOIHER GOOD ILlY FROM
BAKER'S

.

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- -·

2-HOUR .
CLEANING

(UpOn Request)

ROBINSON'S

•1111

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I

Pennacote Drum · ·
3 Temp. Selectiln
Lon&amp;.Life Heatilll EJeinent

·•158

'BAKER. Midtlpclt,
FURrtllUi£ 0!

..

:::::::::::::::::::r::

You ask tf Mayor Fisher was available at all times during the
day. Yes, I can answer that and _say thst he wasn't, thus my
only one run. the rest of the
stating thatlfeltthat they should be atall tbnes. However, as the
C8COfe8
":ay, alth~ugh ~e Colonels out-,
htl Winmpeg 4-3. Lynn Merecord shows, Mr. Fisher is not running now so I hardly feel that By untied Press International
Glothlen
lost a three-lutter. .
Is any Issue now.
,
Nallonal League
Charleston moved to ~tthin
You referred to lee Smith and Kenneth McElhinny, Mr. S~n Diego 001 000 ooo-- 1 7 2
Plllsbgh
010
000
40x5
10
0
1'h games . of Internaho~al
McElhinny was right bere In Mlddl eport and could be reached at
Arlin, Kelley (7) and Barton;
League-leadmg
Syracuse wtth
any time. Mr. Smith did work out of the village but was available Ellis, Giusti (8) and San9ulllen.
an 11-8 vtctory over Toledo.
at ll moment's notice by telephone whenever needed. But 1 was WP-EIIIs 13-3). LP-Arlin(0-4).
Charleston
pounded out 12 htts
Y
just wondering how the good taxpayers would feel if they were Montreal ooo ooo ooo-- o 9 2
in gaining a half on the Chiefs. , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
sending their chUdren to school and their instructor was on the~ · St. Louis 001 000 oox- 1 8 2
Syracuse split a doubleheadtelephone half of the time trying to solve problems that arise
Morton (2-4) and Bateman,
•
1
Boccabella (8); Carllon (5-1)
er with Tidewater, the Tides
needing inunedtate attention. I hardly feel the School Ad· and Simmons.
winning the opener, 3-2, on a
ministration would be a party to this, do you?
five-hitter
by Jim Bibby. Syra·
'
The "Sewage hassle" is past' history
and I can only say Los Angeles000 001 ooo-- 1 5 0
cuse won the second game 9-3
"thank heaven" you weren't on your toes because the town would Atlanta 000 210 Olx- 4 7 0
as Joe Verbanic and Tom FronSulton (0-3) and Sims ; Reed
, I once heard a speech that could be used for any occasion be it
have been bankrupt long ago with a $500 per day fine. Sorry you
dorf combined on a five-hitter
(3-2)
and
Didier.
HRs·Cepeda
political, social, or whatever . Mr. Grate's letter concerning my four
missed thst one!
and George Pena hit a pair of
(7MhL Wills (lsi), H. ,Aaron
statements
seems to present this same turn-around . ·
(lllh).
Why didn't I quote the right expenditures and receipts for the
homers.
Mr. Grate, while obviously being opposed to me, has taken each
dump operation last year? Well, just for your information I
Richmond and Rochester also
Phlla
100 000 ooo-- 1 6 1
statement and systematically proved it to be corr.ect. This, of
happened to quote approximate figures then so now I give It to you Chicago 200 030 20x- 7 7 0
divided a twin bill as Richmond
Bunnlng,
Reynolds
(51.
Chamcourse, supports my contentions. However, after proving each
in dollars and cents: Dump Rkelpts $6,640.70 and Expenditures
won the opener, 4-3, with veterpion·
(7) and McCarver; Hands
statement,
he then throws In some derogatory remark concerning
$5,106.95. Net $1,533.75. I will stand on oath to these fitures. 1 just (3-3) and Breeden. LP-Bunning
an Bob Duliba getting the win
in relief. Rochester edged the
my age or political experiences or a&lt;;tivltles. Reading his letter as, Is,
don't know what you had in reference when you made this (1 -4). HR-Sanlo (4th).
Braves 3-2 in the second game
statement but belleve me it better be good because you might
shows his incoherent destructive criticism but omits the attempts to
(10 innings!
on an eight-hitter by John
make me appear incompetent and all you have left is agreement,
have \0 eat some of these word~ before it is all over.
N.Y.
000 004 001 1- 1 16 1 provision~.
Montague.
010 100 003 0'-- 5 13 o
·supported with his own facts.
You made reference oo lny having two jobs. Well, since when Hous
hss th!JI beco-re a crime? If I so choose to do a little "community Sadeckl
EXAMPLES:
Koosman,
rIse II(9)a and
(7), • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
(9). FTaylor
service" I don't think I have put myself in jeopardy, Have you Grote; Wilson, Ray (6), GladStatement l. "I don't think it would take a very bright
tried any lately with the exception of criticism and con- ding (8), Lemasler (9), Culver
(
10)
,
and
Hiatt,
Edwards.
WPperson to realize you can't resurface streets in freezing
demnalion?
·
Taylor 11·0) . LP·Culver (2-4).
weather."
r
•
Yes, times are changing, and I do find It hsrd to change with HR-Cedeno (lsi).
r~ n~'EEM
Answe~ 1. I have worked it;~ the engineering department of
them, but we have had "money" for a long tbne and that Is what
American League
SPl~""
(151)
game)
the Ohto Department of Highways, but I don't need that
makes the village "tick.''
Minnesota 000 000 ooo-- o 2 1
experience to qualify thls statement. I have never said
Now, just for information, whether you like It or not, lll\lght Boslon
001 000 oox·- ·1. 6 o
resur.face. I said repair. Other responsible highway
Blyleven (2-4) and Ratliff ;
psss aloog a little bit of infol'IIUition that you haven't wantect to
Cui~
(3-1)
and
Josephson.
departments
repair hazardous spot.s in any weather. Why
Iring to light. In the yesr of 1970 I requested council to authorize (2nd g•me) _
ElfCT~IC
does Middleport have to wait for the' weather to break?
me ljllnvest surplus monies that are obligated but can't be spent ;~innesola 010 101 401- a 12 3
'
200 000 412- 9 13 1
lnunedlately. By so doing, I was able to add $2,500 to the treasury Boston
DRYER
Corbin (3), Williams
Statement 2. Middleport cannot have a part time Mayor.
of the village for general operating. This year we have aiready (5),Barber,
Hall (7), Perranoskl (7)
(shortened)
'
received $625 more. And lp that last three years .I have Increased and Mltlerwald; Sieber1, Lee
-- ---- ~
(7) Bolin (7), Lyle (8), Tatum
Answer 2. I believe that there is only one candidate In this
the Bond Escrow accounl by $4,811.42 to be paid on the Bonded )9)
and Pavlellch. WP-Tatum
ele'ctlon that is not working and would be able to fulfill MT.
Indebtedness when it~ eligible. That makes a total of $7,936.42 to 0 -2). LP-Perranoskl (0-3). HRGrate's requirement. This Is the Democratic candidate,
date which the village would not have had otherwise. I rather Smllh (41h).
. ___. and I can only assume that Middleport's Republican Clerk
believe that I hsve paid my way, so to speak, plua tbe Community (tst game)
Treasurer will support this person in the November
Service that I hsve given. But, I guess your script writer forgot Milw
000 000 001- I 3 0
election.
However, by November, Mr. Gerard will
N.Y.
000 200 OOx- 2 4 o
that too!
Patlln,
Sanders
(81
and
probably be employed as a teacher so there will [?e no one
The rest of your comments are of a personal nature and 1 Rodriguez, Roof (B); S1o111efor Mr. Grate to vote for.
.
don't propoae ij) get down in the gutter and thrash around with myre (2-0)
Gibbs. LP'
Patlln (3-3).
(2nd),
them.
Statement 3. Middleport needs a seasoned individual.
But your P.S. really sends me. I had always thOught the
Answe~ 3. Some of our seasoned individuals have caused
"minority group" was trying to move Clty Hail up the river but
the
problems we ha've now and moving them from one
now I He that It Is going to 348 Grant St. I couldn't be happier!
office to another is not the solution.
Now n won't have to ''waite Vllla11e Money" lor the !upkeep of
'
Olf Ifill beeaUJe you csn't leg8l1y Spend mooey on private
Of course this could go on and on but words are plentiful In
II'CIPII'IY·
,
Middleport, action Is th~ scarce commodity_. For Middleport, growth
Mflll'lbitl came to think oflt-1141 the Minority Group been
Is belng ·bullt·flve miles away TODAY. We can't waste anotller. two
I ,
~ flit 10111e d the VIllage money that is due ua ~ All ·we
years. Let's have Change! Let's grow up! Let's clean 'up! We don't
111ft 1t1 do II uk Mr. S.. He
to ..ve better recor\ls than I
need the city's money or another shift of ~ity workers. We need two
dellllllllawn'IIYIIIIIIIlh!niiiCitJHaU.
'
or three thousand people WORK I N~for the samelhing: .'
Yllll'l f« a ~ve Mlddllport
MIDDLEPORT
Gene Grate, Clerk·Tressurer.
'
Vlllage of Middleport
-Pd. Pol. Adv.

Un

a

,,

'-

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: 0., May ·a, 1971

in· ·Right to Read Brogram
'

'

'

'
(Continged from Page 1)
Grade 4; . Dwayne Qualls,
ctnt - is· where we have to
Pomeroy, Grade 5.
cancentrate," said Dr. eooJ,er.
'
Juniot'Hlgh
He spoke of the work of Right
Painting: Marsha Klme~,
to Read task forces currently
Riverview, Grade 8.
gathering information · on
: Poe try and Essays
methods to be used in the
Judged by Mrs. C. E.
program. An army of volun·
Blakeslee, teacher at " Meigs
teers to do ol)e-tooone tutoring,
High School, were the poetry
professional Workers, nonand essay district entltes. The
profes$io1U!l adults, and ad·
winners were as fo¥ows: '
vanced children doing the
Primary (kindergarten
teaching, are the methOds w.Ut
through third . grade, grade): ·
the most support, \he speaker
Debbie Smith, Middleport·,
said.
Grade 3, first; LOri Roush,
While reading lB vitally im·
Middleport, Grade I, second;
portant, he said tliat it tends to ,Barbara Thomas, Middleport,
be exaggerated, while lt is
third, Grade 2.
Elementary (fourth, fifth and
really only one of several
sixth grade, poetry) : Sandy
medias of conununication.
Garnes, Salem Center, first;
He concluded with the thought
Paige Smith,
Pomeroy
that while t!Jel't appears oo he
'
.
Elementary, Grade 5, second;
not a great deal we can do
CULTURAL ART JUDGING - Miss Mary K. Leonard and J:{obert D. Borchard, both
and
Michael
Lewis,
because of inherent factors, we
associate professors of Art Education at Ohio University, selected the District 16 art entries
Chesapeake, Grade 4, third.
nej!d to do what·we can oo help
which will be displayed at the Ohio PTA conference in the fall .
Junior High, poetry: Mary
that small percentage whose
Barringer, Riverview in Meigs
reading ability has been af.
'
Pomeroy PTA units presented the Pomeroy unit.
County, first. ·
Churches, gave the invocation.
fected by environment.
Morris
with
a
life
membership
The
flag salute was given by
The
Rev.
Robert
R.
card,
Music
DR, ROBERT E. LUCAS
pastor of the Pomeroy and Cub Scout Dens I and 4 of Pack
Junior High: Craig Reed, in the PTA.
Using the conference theme,
RIGHT TO READ- Dr. William Cooper of Ohio University, a member of the Ohio Right to
Given
recognition
and
Chester
United Methodist 249, Pomeroy.
Riverview Elementary, first.
"PTA Puts It All Together", as
Read CommiSJliOn and chairman of the IO.COunty Southeast District, discussed facets of the
presented certificates by Mrs.
Essays
his topic, Dr. Lucas, promine~t
Right oo Read program, what can be expected and what caru10t be expected, in his address .at
llllllllllllllllllllllllltiiiHIIIIUIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiliiiiDiiliiiiliiiAIIIIIIInftlnniiiiiiHIIII.
Primary: Mark Williams, Lohse were Mrs. Judith A.
lecturer for educational, civic
the District 16, Ohio PTA conference. Pictured with Dr. Cooper are Mrs. leo Crew, general
Pomeroy Elementary, Grade 3, Spencer, Middleport; Mrs.
and social groups throughOut
conference chairman, and Mrs. Harold Lohse, District 16 president.
Uncoln Dearth, McArthur,
first.
Ohio, charged the PTA leaders
Mrs.
Earl Thoma, Pomeroy,
Elementary: Patricia
with the responsiblllty of
'
closing the conununication gap principal, Bradbury, Mid- Athens, Grade 5; James Bradbury, Grade 5; Kim Autherson, Grade 6, Syracuse, and Mrs. Vaughan, Middleport, i
bei)Veen the school and the dleport,
and
Pomeroy Thomas, Middlepqrt, Grade 4. Grueser, Syracuse, Grade 6, first; Opal Dyer, Salem Center, for completing· a study course §
!!I
community.
Elementary Schools; George Crayon: Sharon Snyder ,' and Lori Faulk, Pomery, Grade second; and Anna McKinney, on the PTA manual.
Mrs. Lohse also presented a
Pomeroy, Grade 4, third.
Dr. Lucas, speaking at the Hargraves, superintendent, Chesapeake, Grade 4; Kevin 6.
Sculpturing: Ronnie Eblin, Junior High: Karen Reed, certificates to Mr. Howard -~
morning session, described Meigs Local School District, King, Middleport, Grade 4;
Rhonda
Coe,
West
Elementary,
Birchfield of Rutland and Mrs. 1!1
llradbury,
Grade 5; Brei Riverview, first.
PTA as hard ' work, requiring and Robert Bowen, superin·
Harrison, Washington Special Education, Kathy June Epple of Chester, in
courage,, confidence, en- tendent Meigs County Schools. Athens, Grade 5.
Collage:
Ricky
Taylor,
Elementary, Gallipolis, Grade Campbell, Pomeroy, first.
recognition of 100 per cent at-~­
thusiasm, and a sense of purMorris served as· moderator
tendance of new officers at the
Middleport,
Grade
4;
Becky
6;
Mary
Colwell,
Salem
Center,
Ufe
Membership
pqse. He spoke of the PTA role for a panel discussion on the
Mrs. Vaughan president of conference.
of leadership in the community topic "PTA Is". On the psnel Lawhorn, Chesapeake, Grade Grade 4.
4;
Alexandra
Pejonich,
East
Prints:
Margaret
Adams,
the
Meigs County Council of Recognized for 100 per cent
and the need for PTA leaders to were Dr. Lucas, Mrs. Schwab,
get "tuned in" so they can "turn Mrs. Vaughan, and Mrs. Hans Elementary, Athens, Grade 4. Morrison Elementary, Grade 5; Parents and Teachers and for teacher membership were the i
Charcoal: Kelly Hayman, Gary Young, Chesapeake, the Bradbury, Middleport and units of Rutland, Syracuse,
on" others and get a job done. Eydel, Ohio PTA Cultural Arts
Chester, Salem Center, Athens ~
"If you believe ill It, then do chairman, and Mrs. Emelyne
East Elementary, Middleport,
something about it, and if you E. Reed, Ohio PTA com·
Bradbury and Salisbury. The 5
don't believe in it, then get out" munications chairman. McArthur unit was welcomed
was his advice.
During the afternoon session
into District 16 by Mrs. Lohse .
"Patricipants and not the panel members conducted
Mrs. Clarence Norton, =
spectators, that's what is conferences for administrators,
Mrs. Ben Neutzling and Mrs. cakes centered with yellow Mrs. Evelyn Clark, Mrs. Kaye registrar, reported represen- ~
needed," commented Dr. faculty members, PTA officers Frances Reibei of Pomeroy rosebuds, assorted cookies and Kennedy, Mrs. Stella Kloos, tatives from five of the seven 5
Lucas. He spoke of the lack of and chairmen.
entertained Wednesday night nuts were served. Mrs. W. H. Mrs. Elizabeth Wells, Mrs. COljnties in the district, with 17 iij
real and open communication
with a shower honoring Miss Perrin presided at the punch Betty Reibel, Mrs. Edna Reibel. units represented.
~­
between parents, teachers and
Cultural Ar1s Judging
Donna Reibel, bride-elect of bowl.
Others presenting gifts were Cultural arts awards were
Will' make Middleport a good Mayor.
administrators, and of the
Miss Mary K. Leonard and James Shato of Gallipolis.
Games were played with Mrs . Helim - Maag, Mrs. made by Mrs . Leo Crew,
resulting lack of support on Robert D. Borchard, 'both
The shower was held in the prizes going to Mrs. Carr!Jl Lucretia Smith, Mrs. Mildred general conference chairman, ~
issures including tax needs.
associate professors of Art Pomeroy Trinity Church social Meinhart, Mrs. Neva Seyfried, . Arnold, Mrs. Mabel Wolfe, Mrs. who also introduced the spring
Vote May 4, 1971.
He cited Ohio as the pqorest Education at Ohio University; room . The mantel decorations Mrs. Fritz Buck, Mrs. Howard Patty Hysell, Mrs. Edith conference chairmen. The ftims ill
state in the United States, ac- judged art works exhibited at featured white satin with a Wells, and Mrs. Genevieve Lanning, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. "Who Says You Can't" and
cording oo ability to pay, in the conference. These were ftrst yellow netting overlay, Meinhart.
-Pd. P9l. Adv.,
Marguerite Meyer, Mrs, Freda "Mr Main Motion" were shown
support of education, paying place winners according to
'·u·1·1u
:'t'tu'"" "
less lbcal taxea on.real estate grade ·level in schools llf 'lhe" m\l'ia~~~.e. ,)f.~ite ,lig_~,\~. an~. ,Gues_ts were those named .and . Fauber, Mrs. Myrtle q,!!fsl, duru;g thecoffe.: hour hosted by· 1'11·1·1'1il'ultw
'
daffodils, and a centerptece of a Mrs. Kathryn Brown, Mrs. Miss 'Sybil · Ebersbach, Miss ..
ii
____
__
than anywhere else.
' district. ·
bride doll, gift to Miss Reibel. Georgia Williamson, Mrs. Eva Thelma Grueser, Mrs. Edith
Oiiecting his comments. to tbe
Placing first, second and The gift table featured a white Dessauer,
Mrs.
Ethel Kautz, Mrs. Marie Dailey, Mrs.
PTA leaders, he charged them third, , respectively in the wedding . bell centerpiece and Williamson, Faith and Beth Elsie Heines, Mrs. Edith
CaiiNo.m
Char.terNo. 8441
National Bank Region No.4
with the responsibility of various caieg'orles were the the
refreshments
table Perrin, Mrs. Kathryn Russell, Heines, Mrs. Martha Rose, Mrs.
REPORT (!F CONDmON, CONSOLIDATING
providing the leadership which following students:
decorations included a basket of Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mrs. Elizabeth Sarah Dawson, Miss Mary
DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF TilE
will dtaw the community inoo a
Special Education: Painting shasta daisies and a blue urn- Shato, Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, Virginia Reibel, Mrs. Evelyn
position of interest in educ'atlon. .,.. Denise Qualls, Pomeroy brella flanked by yellow taper~. Mrs . Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Gilmore, Mrs. Kathy Erwin and
Human r~tlons, drug and Elementary; Tommy Klein, A large wedding bell hung Althea Strong, Miss Fae Reibel, daughter, Amy_
alcohol problems, an~ teacher Pomeroy Elementary; Collage above the table.
Mrs. Lillie Houck., Mrs. Rose ·
conOicts are areas wHere PTA - Patty Edwards, Pomeroy
Sherbet punch with a floating Ginther, Diane Strong, Mrs. .-------~---,
can contribute by serving as the Elementary.
yellow rose, miniature cup- Ruth Massar, Mrs. Clara Karr,
HOSPITAL NEWS
neutral ground for discussion
Primary:
(kindergarten
\
and problem solving, the throogh third grade) Painting
of
Middleport
In lite State of Oblo, at the close of business on April 20, 1971
Holzer Medical Center, First
sepaker said.
-Douglas Angelo, Chesapeake
published in response to call made by Comptroller of tbe Currency, under Title
Av~. and Cedar St. General
In his talk, which was marked West Elementary, Grade 3;
1%, United Stales Code, Section 161.
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
with humor, Dr. Lucas urged Elizabeth Scott, Morrison
ASS&amp;I'S
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
the PTA meml!ers to accept Elementary, Athens, Grade 1;
Cash and due from banks • • • • - •• - - •• - • - - - - - • $ 630,310.13
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
th~ir responsibility to close the Christina Spencer, Middleport,
MONDAY
DeMolay, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Pediatrics Ward.
U.S. Treasury securities • • • • • • •• • ••••• · • - · - 1,803,468.75
gap belween the school and Grade 1.
POMEROY GARDEN Club, Middleport Masonic Temple,
Births
Obligations of, States and pqlltical subdivisions • •• • • •
1,128;168.53
community. He concluded with Crayons: Jinuny Ranshotton, Monday,! p.m. at home of Mrs. election of officers. Council Mr. and Mrs. James D.
Other securities - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• 12,000.00
the comment that those who Chesapeake, Grade 1; Todd Gux Guinther . Miss Lydia meeting at 7.
Hutchinson, Oak Hill, a son;
Federal
funds
sold
and
secnrities
purchased
know the schools best are Morrison, Pomeroy Elemen- Ebersbach, assisting hostess. ELECTION OF officers when Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burke,
under agreements to resell - • . - . •
• • 800,000.00
generally supporting them.
tary, (frade 3; Dick Herman,
SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Meigs County Pleasure Riders Syracuse, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
- • • • 4,441,664.04
Loans····-········---·-Mrs. Harold LohSe, District 16 Middleport, Grade 3.
, p.m. Monday, installation of. 4-H Club meets Monday, 8 p.m., David E. Weddington, Oak Hill,
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
director, presided at the con· Collage: Amy Hart, East fleers by Mrs. Harold Lohse, A. R. Knight home in Pomeroy. a son; Mr. and Mrs. Roland E.
other assets representing bsnk premises • • •
• - - - 60,888.116
ference which opened with a Elementary, Athens, Grade 2; district PTA .director. Piano RACINE CHAPTER 134, King, New Haven, a daughter;
.
Real
estate
owned
other
than
bank
premises
•
•
.
•
• . • • 12,308.7'0
welcome from Mrs. Richard Scott Mannon, Chesapeake, recital and recognition of OES, regular meeting and in- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Bush,
Vaughan, Middleport, Ohio Grade 2; Steven Kinzek, grandparents.
Other assets • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • · • 1,819.54
spection, Monday, 8 p.m., at Wellston, a daughter; Mr. and
PTA publications chairman, Pomeroy Elementary, Grade 3.
TOTAL ASSETS - • • • - • - • • · • •
• " .
$8,890,6411.55
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order of temple. All members urged to Mrs. John N. Wanko, Gallipqlis,
and greetings from Mrs. Avery
LJABO..ITIES
Elementary t-5-6 Grades
attend. ·
a son; Mr . an d Mrs. p auI S.
Schwab, vice president· Painting: Suzy Samuels,
J Demand depqsits of individuals, partnerships,
PROJECT FREEDOM Jasovsky,Galllpolls,a son; and
and corporations • • • • • • •4 • • • • _ • •
director, Deparbnent of Health, Bradbury, Gralle 6; Marlen~
- • • $1,580,821.09
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Mr. and Mrs. Loren E. Beaver,
' Ohio PTA; Robert Morris. Bush, West E;lementary,
Time
and
savings
deposita
of
individuals,
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. All Gallipolis, a· daughter.
partnerships, and corporations • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5,511,897.47
groups urged to attend to
Discharged
Dept»lltS of United States Government • • • • • - • • • • 34,865.34
complete plans for house to l&gt;fi's. Larry J. Barrett and
DepMita of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • • - - - 732,384.81
house canvass May I0-16, to son, Mrs. Jack A. Bates and
Deposits of commercial banks - • • • • • • • • • • • • 5,000.00
, ,
secure signatures asking better daughter, Mrs.
Maggie
Certified and officers' checks, etc, • - • • • • • ·• • • • • • 17,953.54
May Fellowship Day spon- treatment for prisoners of war. Brunton, Homer Carman, Ed F.
sored by Church Women United Imperative to complete plans at Caudill, Christine Lynn
TOTAL DEPOSITS .' • • • - • - • • $7,1!d2,922.25
of - Meigs County will be ob- this meeting.
Chapman, Mrs. Ernest C.
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • • • $2,161,502.-15
served Friday at Trinity · . RIVERVIEW PTA Monday Clark, Mrs . John E. Davis and
(b) Total time and savings deposits • • • • • . $5,721,420.10
Church. ·
evening, May 3 at 7:30 at the daughter, Ronald A. FiSher,
Other liabilities • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • . • 159,340.77
"Enlarge the Place of Yout Riverview Elementary School. Mrs. Francis L. Gavin, Mrs'.'
TOTAL UABILITIES • • • • • • • • - • • - • • • $8,042,263.02
Tent" is the theme of the Instrwnental students of Mr. Forest Lamar Halterman and
, RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
m~ting which '!Ill begin witli a Wooters' will present program. daughter, Mrs. Ronald !{.
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans .
10:30 sack luncjl. Women of the New officers will be installed. Hester and daughter, Usa G.
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) •. : • - •••••• ' .. •• $58,094.53
host church will provide the MIDDLEP9RT Garden Club, James, Mrs. Ollie Jayjohn,
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • • • • $58,094.53
dessert and coffee.
7:30 p. m. Monday, Colunibus Morlan K. Kiser, Mrs. Bernice
CAPfi'AL ACCOUNTS
New officers for a three year and Southern Ohio Electric Co. Lane, Mrs. Oris F. Lyons, Mrs.
Equity capital-total • • • • • • • • - • • •
• • • • $790,291.00
A weekly feature of Meigs
term
wi~ . be elected and on the
TH!!:ODORUS
COUNCIL,
·lebertA.
Martin,
Mrs.
Frances
County Garden Club members.
Common Stock-total par vslue • • • •. - - • • • • 100,000.00
nominating COIIUlllttee are Mrs. Daughters of America, 7:30 L. McComas, Charles R. Me·
No. shares authorized 2,000
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Clara Monday night at the IOOF halL Nickle, Mrs. Harold L. Queen
No. shares outstanding 2,000
Thomas, Mrs. J. Edward Important business to be and son, Mrs. Randy ltandolph
Surplus • ; • • • • · • • • • • • ; • • • • • • • • • • 300,000.00
Foster, and Mrs. Allen Hamp- transacted.
and daughter, •Mrs. Keith · E.
I
Undivided profits • • • • • • • • • • • •
• 390,291.00
ton.
TUESDAY
'\ ,
Snyder, Burnace F, Stout, Sr.,
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - •
$700,291.00
Mrs. Ben Neutzling has an- - REGULAR MEETING , lester M. Thompson, Mrs .
TOTAL UABILITIES, RESERVES, AND
~ounced a .~hea~ ~or all Middleport Lodge 3G3, F&amp;AM, Nolan D. Th~ton, Bobl;ly L.
'
'
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • • • • • '
$8,890,648.55
~ Tent-caterpinars are one of the most common and serioua those parhctpahn~ tn the' 7 ,30 p.m. Tuesday at temple. Tucker, Mrs. Juanita J. Ward,
MEMORMIDA '
pests to trees. They particularly attack apple, plesch, plum, and · program. In the group for a 1
'
and Mrs. Stella E. Wilcox.
Average
of
total
deposits
for
the
15 calendar
wild cherry, and occasionally beech, oak, birch, and willow. playlet are Mrs. Arnold
days ending with call date . · ••••• ,••••• ·' • •
$7,898,534.66
Unlessconlrolled they can, in a short tbne, completely defoliate a Richards, Mrs. Richard DIVen,
'
Mrs. Karl Grueser, Mrs. Harry '
Average of ootalloans for the 15 calendar
days ending with call date : • · • ~ • • • - - • • • • - • $4,426,048.97
treeTheywiJtletin the egg stage In shiny, dark brown egg masses Davis, Mrs. Mattie Circle, Mrs .
,
which are. Visible on' the bsre branches, and 'l'liich may be Jean Hall, Mrs. Homer Holter,
ed
· thod f control
,
and Mrs. Don Holter,
I, Harold E. Hubbard, Executive Vice-President, of the above-named bank
remov as a .:~h od th
~g caterpillars begm making, Others on the pro~ram·
do hereby declare that this r_eport of condition is ltue and correct to the best of
The eggs
• an e yo
' r~uested to atten!l the 2 p m
my knowledge and belief.
their webbe~ nests In the forks of trees at about the time t~t the Wedn sda ian ing
t\illi
$35.00 Down·
lt\ROLD E. HUBBARD
apple leaves beglp to unfold. They become full grown Within ~ Trll\i~ J!ch "are ~:. ~

.

Vote May 4th
REPUBLICAN CANDIQATE

1

JOHN
ZERKLE

=
=

Bride-Elect Honored

I

FOR MAYOR
MIDDLEPORT

I

···---------..,jiiiiii_

.

'

I

Fellowship Day
PI anned, Fn'd ay

j '

(

' ·,

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

1

Green Thumb

Notes . ...

Tent-caterpillars

.

3 ROOMS
. NEW
FURNITURE

i

month; then each spins a cocoon Qn the tree trunk fro~ ,Which tl
wQ,1 emerge as a llght brown moth.
.
For control, trees may be ,IP!'ayed WltiJ an arsenate of lead,
1'-'~toftftygaUonsofwater. Thenestmaybedestroyedby
dlppillg aawab lnl!la can~ UAd crank-case oU, and then poking
It, ~~~~ the web. Tlda lhould be done In the evening,- for the
catllrpllllrsfeedduring theday,IIIKiretum to the,nejlt al night. r-.

'319.95 .

Balan~e

On

Seyfr\ed, Mrs. R!ibert .Warner,
ConveAient
Mrs. Edith Sisson, , Mrs . ·
Tet:ms.
Campbell Harper, Mrs. David
Entsminger, Mrs, William
MASON
Grueser, Mrs. Hampton, Mrs.
Welsh, Mts. Karl Owen, Mrs. J.
M. Th~nton, Mrs. l'~ul Smal\

'

~.·

FURNITURf ··

'

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of con· '
dition and ·declare· that it has' been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge. and belief is true and correct.' '
,
·
·
1.
• James F. Arnold
·
R..W..y DIIWIIID&amp;-- ·Dlrectm
Paul S. Smart
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Henry
Oterrington
is
Dead
News .•. in Briefs
the draft.
'"That way, I could at least be assured·of a vote on ltby June
30, lhe day the pre$ent draft law expires," McGovern said In
remarks at Ohio State University Sunday night, (Early
account of McGovern on Pg. 4.) "

Sadat Fires Red Collaborator

Atty. Henry W. Chertlngton,
85, "Mr. Republican of Gallla
County," c!ied at 9 p.m.,_S!Jnday
in the Holzer Medical Center on
·First Ave. He bad. been in

Harrisonville
Society News

•.

I

Sch. lJ:

Disrupters

Four Ordered

Market Report

To Pay Fines

'

Alfred
Social Notes

."'Congoleumil

:MEIGS THfATRE.
'

Tot~lgbl&amp; Tutldllr

Only '2~
per 1q. yd. '

INGILS.
fURNITURE
. Mr~:=T
l'tl,

Tilt Allltns County

MOvE

S.vlntll LMn Co.

ITtcllnlc.olorl

Pomeroy, Olllo\

Paula PreMiss
.

~IK.,dSI.

~
' --·~- fj
"'..!~

Elliot Gould
.

LODGE TO~
Chester todge 323, Daughten
of Amerlc•, ~?!ill meet 'fueldl1
at I p.m. 'lbe good ollbe fll'der
committee will bold a 11lenh

"President Nixon said he would not be · "Nolhlng is more Important thar) ~n end
influenced by demonstrations," Gregory wthe war in Indochina," ~m said, "His
said. " But President Nixon wjll hear tlie (Nixon's)·response lias been to sponsor an
chairman of llie board of General Motors invasion of :Laos and to continue the·
knoeklng at his door;"
.
slaughter.
He said a student boycott o! the city of
Kent would lllrn it into a "ghost town.' 1
''Aura Of Repression"
A person In the audience Interrupted the
"We find that the administration has
speech once to ask: "Csn't you say just created an aura of repression so pervasive
one good thing about America today?"
that not only young people, but also our
Gregory replied, "That's like if I came congressional leaders, feel that their
to you with a brain tumor and you told me privacy is being invaded, their telephone
how how good my teeth and eyes were." conversations monitored and their daily
Ahern, speaking to au audience of only activities recorded," he said. ,
800, said he worries that "what happened
Polley To Delude
here and at Jackson State can happen
The administration, he charged, "has
again" since the President has failed to espoused a policy of doublespeak intended
heed the commission's conclusions about to delude the American public."
campus unrest.
The killing of the students a year ago
l 'I

PERFECT
SLEEPER"
mattress and
box spring set

Mostly clear and not as cold
tonight. Lows in the upper 30s ·
and low 40s. Increasing
cloudiness and warmer Wednesday . with a chance ' of
showers, spreading eastward ;
over the state.

Rioters
Fizzle

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Register Now During Our Spring FumHure Sale. • .

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Register now in our Third Floor Furniture Department for the

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KROEHLER LIVING ROOM SUITE

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No purchase necessary - You need not be present to win .

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ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF LAWN BOY MOWERS JUST
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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

SUNDAY, MAY 9th
REGISTER
in the Furniture Depart-

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lhe Kroehler Living Room

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nof be present lo
win.

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With simple lace
pointod col lar. S - M·~ l7.

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!Your mother ,opprcciotb:; facts like th is.) .

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In colors to sel her all aglow.

Shop W..,S 9:30 to 5 P.M. - OPeri
.

EliiiFILDS

Fridaf and.Saturdaf 9:30 fD 9 P.M.
~ 1

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Rt. 33

Mayor Charles Legar
disclosed Monday night to
Pomeroy council that the town
is responsible for moving a
walermainalongU. S. 33ivhere
the interchange and approaches
to it will be constructed at Rock
Springs according to the state
department of highways.
. Legar said the Meigs Water
Company had been informed by
.,
the state department of highways of the arrangement.
IN BUNCHES- A set of twins and a set of triplets, children of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
However, when the town purHayman, Long Bottom Route 1, Increased the~schoot · census of Chester Elemerltary School
chased
the ·water company
Monday, On tile first row are Tammy 1111d Denny, twlna, and triplets, frOI!l the left, are Perry ,
several years ago, the buyer
Terri and Kerry. The family has moved here from Mesa, Ariz. Mr. Hayman is formerly from
was not aware · of the
Meigs County. The twins are third graders and the triplets; believed-to be the only ones living in
agreement.
Meigs County, are fourth graders.
According to Legar, the state
estimates a cost of approximately $24,000 to relay the
line which runs from Ute bottom
of the tim at Salisbury school to
·
·
the Jack Robson proper{y,
Legar and Wllllam Baronlck of
In observance of National song of Life and If With All posed of Will, Richard Dean the board of public affairs will
Music Week, May 2-9, the Meigs Your Hearts from Elijah by Carol Hargraves and AnJU: • survey the area to see if the line
Chorale, directed by Mrs. Duane Will, tenor, accompanied Fultz wiU sin~ If 1 Loved You. ~=~so::!bl~~:ted at a more
Christine Guthrie, , and a by Glenna Sprague, will round The chorale w1ll be featured on 01 .
B th
d
1
10 .
00 e
clarinetchoir.wlU be presented out the first part of the vocal What the World Needs Now,
pr~sen e
In concert at 2:30 p.m. Sunday program. Will won a superior We've Ol)ly Just Begun, Where blueprmts of a, 60 unit htgh rise
at the Meigs High School 'rating for this selection at the Do 1 Begin?" and Jean from ap~rtment bulldmg for senior.
auditorium.
District XV solo and ensemble The Prime of Miss Brodie.
citizens he hopes to construct at
The chorale wiD present, A contest held Feb. 27 at Ohio
The ·boys' chorus will sing acostof$3.5mllllon. The sevenChoral Prayer from . the VI University.
Battle of Jericho.and Soldiers of story struclllre has FHA apCentury Gregorian; Choral Lewis Shields, assistant bsnd the Captain. The chorale will do
Salutation, God Made Our director, will direct the clarinet School Days from Goodbye, Mr.
Hands, High Upon the Moun- choir through Schumann Suite, Chips : and Gee, I'm Looking
lain, 0 Sacred Head, Now Cortege from Petit Suite and Forward to the Future. The
Wounded, and The Heavens Are Play Ground. Making up Ute American Scene will be the
Telling from The Creation choir are Annie Ohlinger, Jo finale along with the Meigs
during the opening segment. Ellen Diehl, Lynne Baker, High Alma Mater, Maroon and
The national anthem by the · Marla Neutzling, Sherrie Gold.
chorale and the audience wil1 Turner, Stella Neutzllng, Irene
Members of the chorale are
open _the program,
Barnes, Rosemary Rice, Mllisa Iris Aris, Brenda Barton, Karla
The girls' chorus singing A Rizer, Debbie Harbrecht Ellen Beal, Opal Berry, Jan Bel:!lng,
Joyful AUeluia . and A Little Rice, Marge Riggs and 'Becky MaryBradbury,Mary Bricklea,
·
Houdashelt.
i ·
Cathy Bunce, Suzy Card, Jennie
( - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , The chorale quartet com. . (Continued on page 10)

c0 n cert Coming Stlllday

proval, according to Boothe. Pomeroy Chamber of ComThe elevator-type building merce for permission to block
would be located between Third off the upper parking Jot during
and Fourth Sts. facing But- the three-day event, June 111-19·
ternut Ave. in Pomeroy.
20.
Legar and council members
Mees noted the area would be
agreed they would give aU used for exhibitors to display
assistance possible to Boothe. · products such as boata and
Jim Mees, parade chairman mobile homes. Councll apof the Big Bend Regatta, asked proved the request.
council on behalf of the
Council also authorized Chief

I

IN POMIROY

of Pollee Jed Webster to send
Wayne Payne, meterman, to
meter maintenance school In
Pittsburgh two days.
Webster said between six and
seven meters on the parking Jot .
were damaged over th.e
weekend. Several parts were
found In the river, Webster said:
The mayor disclosed pollee
(Continued on page 10)

Canvass Assigned
.

'

Assignments for a partial
house-to-house canvass to be
conducted across Meigs County
next week were made by the
~oject Freedom group lri a
meeting at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy Monday night.
Purpose of the canvassing is
to secure. signatures of
residents on petitions to be sent
to Han~!' requesting me=~
humane
treatment
for
American · prisoners , of war
there. All canvassing will be
done next week in observance of
Prisoner of War - Missing In
Action Week as proclaimed by
Gov. John Gllllgan . .

Assigned as chairman In next
week's campaign were . Joe
Struble, Pomeroy area;' Youth
Fellowship of the Rutland
MethodiSt Church', llll!land
area; Mildred Karr and Jim
Roach, Middleport atea; YoiJth
Fellowship of the Roc;k Springs
Methodist Church, Rock
Springs area; Paul Kloes,
Mlnersvllle area; Mrs. Eugene
Johnston, Langsvlllearea; Mrs.
Bernice Garnes, Dexter; Mrs.
Mjlry Arney, Ewlngton; and the
Rilv. John Curry, Danvllle area·.
Area a of the county not
represented Monday night were
Syracuse, Racine, Cheater,
.

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PARIS (UPI )- Members Of
the U.S. table tennis team who
recently visited Communitt
China arrived Monday to play
a serl~s of matche.! against .a · •
French learn,
RARE rosrtiMING- Here's aaampJI~~g o l - rltheUIIIIIUIII Cllllumlngfeatured in the
At a news conference, U.S.
"Be a-Clown" minstrel of the Salisbury Elementary School at 7:32 p;m. Friday and Salurday.
team captain Jack How~
The graup Includes Bruce Brlcklea aa a flsll; Steve ()hllnger and David Kennedy, as the mule,
said the Chinese bad IIJide ·•
and Brian King as the pig. The "animals" are from a production number to "Swingln' on a
distinction between the Amet'i·
Star."
can people and the U.~ goveriJ..
ment,
,
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_: 1
"The overtures' we recelvQd
were cleariy for the people ;(
the United States," said HO\Y- :
ard.
, ~
He said he was surprised bY.
the founding Croaker of the . years of age and from Meigs wishing to participate in the Hoover is cGoChalrman.
the effect their tour bad lA. ·
Ohio Society for the Promotion County.
·
Flea Mart are asked to contact Bill Grueser, president, noted America.
of Bu11 Frogs (OSPBF), a Jack Kerr, owner of WMPO, Kerr at P. 0. Box 71, Mid· that a baton contest, under the "It was only upon our relw"n
possibly startling new kind of suggested:
dleport.
direction of Mrs. Judy Riggs, to the United States that we
bull frog bred to 'challenge for · - Queens from the three high Mrs . Ohlinger and Mrs. will be held at Meigs Jilnior knew our tour was big nen.
the national jumping cham- schools in the county could be Werry will attend the next High School in Middleport The Impression it made wu, ill
pioriships.
.
· · candida_tes and ride on the meeting of the chitmber to give beginning Saturday morning. the overwhelrnlng number at
Beyond veiled hints of such a Queen · float in the Friday the group's decision on whether Grueser said local residents cases, favorable,
,
development, Crow would say evenin~ _parade.
·the sorority will participate in who own outboard motor ~ts
"But there were ex,ceptiOII!I,
bo ts
· 'ted tn and one of our team, JollD
nothing more than that a 'Frog - Candidates' pictures could the queen contest.
or
run-a u are 1nv1
, Tannehill, of whom the - ·
Jnstitoot is near completion be pl~ced In the former
bale Warner disclosed that participate .In the boat races.
...-,
here utilizing a fenced-in, man- Pomeroy Junior High School Frog Jump entry forms are Grueser noted that dropping the reported, wrongly, that hi,
made pond and running water, building lind patrons would vote ready. The jwnps will be at the hydroplane boats would be an wanted to stay and live II
The new facility is the first of Its their choice for queen.
Meigs Football Stadium in improvement since the boats Chinll, was received polson 1.:
kino, Crow was certain.
- That the Ohio Eta Phi could Pomeroy beginning at 5 p.m . did make quite a Jot of noise and letters," said Howard.
I .,
He said Tannehill, 19, MlddlltMrs. Terry Ohlinger and Mrs. conduct the queen contest as Crow said bicycle and tricycle were annoying to the public.
Tom Werry, of the Ohio Eta Phi well as take charge of the Flea races, a fat lady race and a frog AIIIoc~l buslnesamen wishing ,port, Ohio, merely wenled k
Chapter of the Beta Sigma Phi, ·Mart; he said interest in the flea on Ia bicycle race will liven up to place an ad in the Regatta . return to China and live In I
discussed ways of ch001lng a mart . is growing, AP- the frog show .
program are asked to contact commune lor \WO weeb Ill&amp;\
Grueser,
The noon luncheon cover hqw It
Regatta Queen. II was decided proximately 135 spaces will be . Earl Ingells is In charge of the
that girls participating In the available for those wishing to Frog Ball and Jim Mees is nlee Ung was held at Bowers • Th4l first .rnatell
t·
Queen contest must be 18 to 21 partlripate In it. Those persons parade chairman and Wendall " Drive-In Resta!ll'lll!l.
France wu lO bit planclloilliJ.

Regatta Attractions Revised

Crowning of a regatta queen,
the . traditional frog jump, the
second annual Frog Ball, a new
. "fiea mart'' and a revamped
boat racing program will
a Ba. J~e
feature the annual Big Bend
p,ove,.,y trlears
wI
"8'
Regatta June 111-19-20.
· wASHINGTON·...:. THE SENATE Hunger COmmittee was told
Members of the Pomeroy
Mooday that Indian school children in Oklahoma are dunned in Chamber of Commerce,
frmt of1Uteir claasmates for money to pay for their federally sponsoring group, decided
subsldizt!d school lunches.
Monday to take some of the
, Children elsewhere, according to the testimony, are denied noise out of the re'gatta by
repll't card! or refused promotion until their lunch bills are paid. substituting pleasure boat races
Those charges came from Barbara Bode, program director ofthe . in which more hometown
nonprofit, privately' supported Children's Found&amp;tion, which famiUes may participate for
mooltors the federal program. ·
noisy hydroplane races which In
former regattas have. been
UPI Wins Pulmer Award
staged by the Midwfs t OutNEW YORit-AtlNITEiil'lur.ss lnlerllational series on the board Racine Assn.
Ufe ol a revolutlmary and the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal and · .A]so new are p)ans to crown a
.regatta queen, a fiea mart, and
(Continued 01) page 10)
according to Atty. Fred Crow,

.

Tuppers Plains, Letart, Long
Bottom al)d .Reedsvllle: Persons
are needed ~esperately to
cha~n these areas. Persons
wil1lng to belp are. u1ced 14
contact the Rev. Blll .Perrin or
Mrs. Ben Neutzling ln Pomeroy
at once.
Canvassers may pick up the
petition forms at 1!Je Trinity
Church. When the fonns have
been signed, they are to be
returned to the church where
they wlll be compiled and sent
to Columbus.
It was reported Monday night
that of tile 71 church
congregations contacted In tha
county, approximately eight
have responded with gifts or·
financial asslstance and signed:
petition forms. Hope was ex•
pressed that other con,
gregatlona will assist In the
project aimed toward humanetreatment and eventual releaae:
of American servicemen held
prisoners In jungle can\ps ·of
North Vielnam.
·:

Team in
Paris for
TI Play

WASHINGTON(UPI)- Mllk which began April I.
prices
at the . farm level this
In operating the revised
Ray Becomes a Loser
year probably will average 4 to suppqrt program, officials have
PETROS, TENN.- JAMES EARL RAY, with 98 years of 5 per ~nt over 1970, and gross reducM price props for .butter
prison leisure on his hands, couldn't WJiit a few more weeks on a income for dairy farmers by two cents a pound but have
surefire escape plan. His Impatience put him back among the probably will go up at least 5per hiked cheese and nonfat dry
losers Mmday. The slayer of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, tried to cent, Agriculture Department milk prices enough to produce
nee the Brushy Mountain State PJU~on, but was caught In the economists said today.
· an overaU price increase for
prison yar~ about 20 minutes after he broke out of his cell.
The predicted jump in gross ·dairy products.
His catefuUy-planned escape route was to be through a huge income was attributed to a The department did not
concrete steal)l tunnel that runs about 100yards outside the prison continuing
increase
in discuss how much, If any, of the
walla. Bu~ the 400-degree beat In the tunnel drove Ray back and he production coupled with a boost Increased
. ' income would be
was captured while trying to find some other route of escape. Ray in government price support for erased by higher prices of what
apparently had been working on the escape for months, with his milk In the marketing year . farmers buy.
cellma le, a Iller named Roy Morelock_.
WASHINGTON - ·rwo KEY CRITICS of the Nixon Ad·
ministration say they have lost hope for a Soviet-American
agr~ment to limit nuclear weapons. Sen. Stuart Symington, [)..
Mo., said the administration was "planning deliberately .not to
have any anns control agreement at all" at the Strategic Arms
Umltation Talks \SALT·). Sen. J. Wllllam Fulbright, D-Ark:, said
In an Interview he was so discouraged by the Vienna talks that he
no longer reads news accounts about them.

for a trousseau night dress, o rea lly gorgeous one.

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) ' -A
threatened second efforti by
antiwar demonstrators to tie up
Washington's morning rush
hour tralfic fizzled out today.
Several thousand police and
troops guarded key traffic
points but hardly any protesters
showed up.
No major attempt was made
to duplicate Monday's massive
effort to snarl traffic and the
city's thousands of government
workers were at their desks
without difficulty by 9 o'clock.
In contrast to Monday when
7,000 .demonstrators were arrested, pollee made only a
handful of arrests this morning.
The police and federal troops
were positioned along major
streets, bridges and at traffic
circles at dawn arfd piacidly
walchlng traffic now by at its '
normal place.
However, the May Day tribe
leaders say a mass march to
lite Justice Department woul~
take place later. The building
on Pennsylvania Avenue which
also holl!eS the FBI was ringed
by pollee well In advance.
Failure of a large«ale effort
to tie up Washington traffic
Monday apprently discouraged
the militant participants from
pursuing the strategy today.
In the Monday confrontation,
they were outmaneuvered by
police, tear gassed and maced,
and most were arrested.
Among them were Rennie
Davis, one of the convicted
Chicago Seven; Yippie leader
Abby Hoffman and Dr. Benjamin Spock, noted baby doctor
and antiwar advocate.
The leaders of the protest
had declared they Intended to
make the city's nwnerous
traffic circles thelf targets for
disruption today.
(Continued on page 10)

No Hope, Apparently, at SALT

May 9rh is Ihe right time

TEN CENTS .

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ater Main .

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TUESDAY. MAY 4. 1971

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Weather

Devoted To The Intereall Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL XXIV NO. 14

•

during anti-war disorders thllt followed thli ,_•:'
invasioo of J.a.os by Anierlean f.orces •iii &lt;·
"se~less, needless and stupid," he Sllid," ;'
, "When did we start lo value human life, -:• ,
• so cheaply?" he, asketl. "When dld ~ , .
begin to deny the humanity of olheri;:'. /
determining the death of hwnan beings 111 1
. the basis of akl color or ideo!Dgy or uri,; •'
J&gt;9Pular behavior?"
·
:·
Some classes have been spanely a.. . •
tended although none has been cance~ . f
for· the program except for noon tOclax: '.
Workshops ~eduled as part rl the fruj &gt;".
days also bllve drawn few and -universitY _
officials said many students apparentlY ' ,
left the campus befilre the start of lhii .
anniversary observance, many of wboni ·
were thought to bllve joined anti-wli,F
demonstrators in Washington.
'

More li)..gallon hats are exported from Wyoming than are
worn there by residents.

Jusl a Oip through fhe suds

OES TO MEET
. Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
of Eastern Stars will meet
Tuesday' at 7:30 p.m. at the .
masonic temple.

throughout. The campus rumor 'control
center said it senses a kind o(
"sophistication" on the campus.
"Maybe we are all a little more
mature," a. staff member noted. "Maybe
nothing can panic us any more." .
·
Abem And Gregory
Diminishing
numbers of students
Jnl(ochina.
Plastic cones and cards with Monday listened to speeches by comedian
the · letters A, B, C and D were and civil rights activist Dick Gregory and
positioned at lhe four sites at 10 p.m. James F. Ahern, former member of the
Monday following a brief program by 2,000 )'resident's Commission on Campus
students and faculty that included a Unrest.
Gregory urged about 5,500 students In a
prayer and folk songs.
Then the quiet students moved to their two~hour 'ijleech to organize economic
posts and the vigil began in the near boycotts as a means to persuade President
Nixon to end the Indochina War. Ahern,
freezing weaUter.
fo,·mer
police chief of New Haven, Conn.,
The four days of observance of the anniversary of the student deaths be• an scolded the President for not listening to
Saturday and have been peaceful the commission's recommendations.

Yale President Kingman Brewster was
to speak toc!aY and the Kent State victory
. bell was to be rung once fot each kjlled
~tudent, again for ~ch of the two ~tudents
shot and killed by police at Jackson
State (Miss.) College last year and once
more In memory of the soldiers who died in

Now You Know

Atld remember, they never need pressing.

MayJ-4
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ELBERFELDS FOR MOTHER'S DAY GIFTS

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Mei&amp;s Co. Branch

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Teachers Wiu'l
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Rogers Sees West Bank

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KENT, Ohio (UP!)- Silent Kent Stale
University studt~~la holding small gas
lanterns began .late Monday a 28-hour
watch over the spots where four died a
year ago today when Ohio · Natlolllil
~- . Guardsmen. opened fire With their rifles.
As the vigil began, between 1,500 and
2,000 students, none ~g above a
whisper, marched four abreast from the
Commons, off the campus, made a loop
down Main St. and returned. .
·
"There was no noise," a newsman said.
"It was eerie."
The vigil was to continue throughout
today and tonight, ending at midnight,
with at least Qne student marking each of
the four sites on a grassy hillside and
paved area, while rilen\otial services at
noon capped a four~y observance of last
year's tragedy.

•

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failin~ health since Sept. 4, 1969.-i the local Masonic bodle~, Elks
The promiment attorney ·Lodge, Knights of Pyth1as, an
practiced law In Gallla Co..J111ty ardent golf~r and hunte:r·- ~:O:T- II­
more than 60 years, and for was a charter member
more than 50 years, was a organizer of the Gallipolis Golf
leader in many community Club of which he . setved as
affairs.
pr~sident.
. •,
Atty . Cherrington, who Funeral services will be held
resided at 639 Second Ave., was 2 p.m., Wednesday at the
a member of the American Bar Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Association, Ohio State Bar Home with Father A. H.
Association and Gallia County MacKenzie officiating. Burial
Bar Association. He graduated will be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
from Gallia Academy High Friends may call at the
School, attended Marietta funeral home between 7-9 p.m.,
College, and studied law under Tuesday. In lieu of flowers, the
the late Atty. Hollis C. Johnson, family requests contributions to
Gallipolis, and Judge Hunter, the Holzer Hospital Foundation
Colwnbus. He passed the bar landscaping fund.
and began practice in Gallipolis Pallbearers will be Arthur
in 1908.
Darnbrough,
Alva
G.
HeisaformerGalliaCounty Sho e maker , . Lawrence
prosecuting attorney (1914), Bastiani", R. D. While, RobertL.
common pleas judge 1920, city Evans, and Dr. Charles E.
solicitor ' and waa the oldesUHolzer, Jr.
surviving membe.r of the i .Honorary pallbearers will be
Gallipolis City Charter Com- liilembera of th~ local bar
mission . He was considered :association.
"the boss" of Republican ·.
'
politics in Gallla County'
He waa president of the board
of trustees of the . Holzer
Hospital Foundation and
BSOR
president of the Commercial
and Savings Bank.
· .
Ally. Cherrington was botn :
00 SSiteS
March 12, 1886, In Galllpolis, son
of the late Samuel Maxon and PT. PLEASANT - A special
Rowena Putnam Cooke meeting of the Mason County
Cherrington.
' · Education Assn. has been called
He married Vivian Ayres on for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
April 7, 1911. She preceded hirri . Point Pleasant Junior High
in death on June 15, 1959.
School by the County Education
Two children survive, Atty. Association Executive ComWilliam P. Cherrington, mittee.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Harmon Kenneth Long, executive
(Henrietta) O'Brien, Syracuse, -director of Professional and
Ohio; three grandchildren, Governmental Relations of the
Suzanne Moulton , Henrietta West Virginia Education Assn.;'
Evans and Lisbeth CIJerrington. will discuss areas of concern
Two great-grandchildren abo'ut the WVEA's role in the '
survive, Thomas S. Moulton, school situation in Mason
Jr., and William C. Evans.
COunty.
One brother survives, Edwin , All members are urged to
Nash Cherrington, Easton, Md. attend and to bring a young
One brother, William P .. _teacher wllo may not be a
Cherrington, preceded him in ·inemher of the organization.
death.
Mason County School Service
He was a member of St. Personnel Assn. members are
Peter's ·Episcopal Church, all invited.

CADI.O - · PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT bas summarily
Mr. Guy Bolin was taken by
fired Vice President Ali Sabry, once considered the most likely the emergency :rescue squad to
successor to the late President Gamal Abdel, Nasser. The Veterans Memorial Hospital
semiofficial Middle East News Agency reported the dismissal - Thursday. It was ieared he was
' Sunday in a oneiJilragraph announcement that said "~sident bordering on a stroke.
Anwar Sadat has issued a decree dismissing Vice President Ali
Mrs. Weltha Clark was taken
Sabry from his post."
'
to·an Athens hospital last week
No reason was given for the unexpected firing, which came by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark,
just hours before Secretary of State WUllam P. Rogers waa due to She is reported suffering from
arrlv_e in Cairo on his tour of Middle East capitals to promp1e_an heart ailment and nerves.
Arab-Israeli peace settlem-ent. Sabry was known for his\ close
Mrs. John ·Meeks (Thelma
connections with the Soviet Union.
French) and daughter ,
·
Florence, called on her aunt,
Tam Won't Form Government
Ava Gilkey, Saturday. Mrs.
PHNOM PENH - AN ATTEMFI' to form a new Cambodian Willard Faudre, local , al~o
government collapsed today when the Nljtl~l Asaembly called on Mrs. Gilkey, ~ lllr­
President, Gen. In Tam, refused to become prerruer, Outgomg day·
Prmie Minister Lon Nol offered a compromise Solution that would
Miss Kathy Gilkey of Albany
visited her grandmothers, Mrs,
permit himself to stay In offlee, but delegate authority.
Lincoln Russell and Ava Gilkey,
The formula proposed tO settle the 15-day-old crisis was this : Friday.
Lon Nol would remain ·as premier but delegate power to Gen .
Pallbearers for Mrs. Wilson's
Sisowath Sirik Matak, his deputy dremler. Sirik Malak has been funeral were Russell Mason,
running lhe government since LOlli Nol 3uffered a stroke Feb. 8. Bob Alkire, Mike Epple, Dana
1
Welsh, Lester Howell and Dale
Williams.
Mrs. Howard Hull Jr. is
.
reported in a serious condition
·
• 1
at her home in Waldo.
AMMAN (UPI)-Secretary of followed by another car carry- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goodwin
State William P. Rogers took a ing Crown Prince Hassan and spent Sunday evening with Mr.
helicopter tour of Jordan today, U. S. Undersecretary 'of State and Mrs. M. A. Epp1e.
including a close look at some for Near Eastern Affairs Joseph Mrs. Susie Heitger is helping
Israeli-held territory.
J. Sisco, they toured a number care for Mrs. Clarence EastRogers' trip Included a look of areas that had been cleared man who is recovering slowly.
at the West Bank of the Jordan of guerrillas.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Payne
and the Syrian Golan HeightsToday's helicopter trip grew have the foundation laid for a
both held by Israel since the out of a conversation between new home.
1967 war. It fpllowed an Rogers and Hussein at an
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Foil Jr.
unescorted tour with King official dinner Sunday night. and family of Columbus spent
Husaein Sunday night through The secretary of state said he the weekend with Minnie Foil.
parts . of Amman that only would like to see more of the Mr. and Mrs. Otis McGrath
weeks ago were strongholds of country, so Hussein arranged and s9n of Albany visited the
Palestlnlan guerrillas.
Earl McGratha Friday evening.
the helicopter tour.
Driving In the king's auto and Rogers, In official talks today Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
before departing for Cairo on were Sunday supper guests of
the next leg of his trip, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
reassured HUSsein ihe United Jewell of ilownington.
States wants an overall settle·
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Welsh
ment In the Middle East and visited over the weekend with
(Continued from Page 1)
not just the reopening of the Mr. and Mrs. Theo Hinds of
Georgetown sector. Tear gas Suez Canal.
Newark.
was used and bottles and bricks
' new from the ranks of longhaired street people. Commuters in several places were
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
painfully afflicted by the gas.
Saturday,
May 1, 1971
The Pentagon announced lhat
SALESREPORT of
it !\ad committed 4,000 federal
F,our
defendants
were
fined
ObloValleyUvestockCo.
The women's Society of
troops to what it described as
and
another
forfeited
his
bond
HOGS
-175
to
220
lbs.
15.85
to
Christian
Service held its
"Task Force Potomac," and of
10,000 brought in for possible In Pomeroy Mayor Charles 16; 220 to 250 lbs. 15.50 to 15.85; regular meeting at the llome of .
Leger's court Saturday night. Light 14.25 Down; Fat Sows 12 Osie Follrod on Tuesday
use in the disorders.
Fined
were· Charles to 13.50; Boars 11 to 12.20; -Pigs evening, April 20, with an atThey were under the comtendance of 12 members and
mand of Lt. Gen. John H. Hay Meadows, 20, Mason, $100 and 4 to 12.50. Shoats 12 to 19.
costa,
plus
three
days
In
jail,
for
CATTLE- Steers 27 to 31.50; two visitors. The meeting, in
Jr., normally commander of the
driving
while
Intoxicated,
$50
Heifers
18 to 25; Baby Beef29'to charge of Nellie Parker,
18th Airborne Corps at Ft.
·Bragg, N. C. A Marine con- for resisting arrest, $SO for 35; Fat Cows ·l8 to 20.60; Can- president, opened with the
tingent was dispatched to the larceny, and $15 f&lt;lr littering th" ners 16 .to 23.40; Bulls 22 to hymn, "Jesus Is All the World .
to Me." Prayer was by June ·
Justice Department where highway; Larry Ray Graham, 26.50; Milk Cows 175 to 285.
VEAL
CALVES
-No
tops;
·Stearns.
.
Attorney General John N. no address, $10 and costs, in·
Mitchell kept a close watch on toxicatlon, and $SO for larceny; Seconds 36 to 37.85; Medium 30 Roll call was given and eleven
Harry Allan Swartz, 55, to 32.50; ·com. &amp; Hvs. 28 to 30; sick and shut-in calls reported.
the turbulent events.
New evaluation report blanks
There were other pollee- Coolville·, and Gary Lee Culls 28 Down.
Michael,
23,
Minersville,
$5
and
BABY
CALVES
20
to
53.
have
been received and will be
protester clashes at DuPont
filled out at the May meeting.
Circle, another Washington costs each, failure to yield right
SCIOTO
LIVESTOCK
of
way.
The nominating committee
hippie haven, and at Mount
May
1,1971
Benny
Stafford,
34,
New
consisting
of Nina Robinson,
Vernon Square. Both are feeder
Hogs,
200.230,
16.25;
No.
1,
chairma'n; Isola Taylor and
points bringing drivers in from Haven, forfeited his fl8.70 bond
posted
for
speeding,
16.50;
$240,
16;
240-250,
15.50;
Florenqe Spencer, reported the
the Maryland suburbs.
260-280, 14.75; 280-300, 13.50. following names for new ofSows. 13.10.14; boars, 13.70.14; ficers: President, Nellie
stock hogs, 10-14.10; pigs' BH, Parker; Vice President, June
5.25-11.25.
NOVELLA"
Stearns; secretary, Helen
Cattle,
choice
steers,
33-34.10;
RUMMAGE SALE SET
Woode; treasurer, Nina
The Enterprise United good, 29.9().32; Holstein, 27.50- Robinson; secretary of
Metllodlst Youth Fellowship 30.40; choice heifers, 30.90- missions , Eleanor Boyles;
will sponsor a rup1m~ge sale on 32.10; good, 26.80-28.50; good secretary of literature and
Friday and Saturday from 9 a. cows, 22.75-24.25; utility, 19- publications, Thelma Henm. to 4 p. m. at the Smith 21.50; canner and cutter, 18 derson ; secretary of mem·
building, East Second St., down ; bulls, 21.35-27.85; heavy bership and cultivation, Osie
Pomeroy. After 11 a. m. on feeder steers, 26.85-33.35; Mae Follrod ; secretary oi
Saturday Bag Day will be lleld heifers, 25-27.25; stock calves spiritual life, Alma Swartz;
with customers receiving all ·steers, 30.50-35.
nominating committee, IsOla
Veal calves, choice, 50-52; Taylor, chairman; Floren~e .
they can get in a paper bag_for
50 cents .. Anyone having good, 40; medium, 35; baby Spencer and Grace SwarJz. '
donations for the sale can have calves BH, 32-62.
Eleanor Boyles gave a
them picked up by calling Mrs. Ewes and lambs BH, 22-25. missions report on Missionary
William Airson, 992-3317, or
Yotith Convention In Illinois, the ·
Mrs.
Marjorie
Bo\ven
at
992VeleriDs Memorial Hospital largest in history, and youth
\
5441.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - work In India.
'
The
program,
A
.World
Minnie Johnson, Athens;
Wllli81JI ·Barrett, LangsvUie; Without Work- Reality In the
John Weatherby, Middleport. RoUgh, was led by Helen Woode
SATURDAY DISCHARGES with all members and guesta.
- Eleanor Enloldsen, Addie taking part. Plays, The Case of;
Barton, Rev. Audry Miller, the Welfare Fraud, How Far~
YOU SAVE
Edwin Cross, Avanell Bass, Should the Church Go, and
Perfect for smKrt dinini·Uvina:
Unemployment Among the
Steven Burson.
DOES MAKE A·
rooms, active kitchen·family
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Young was given and the son~
rooms or busy entries and hall·
i
Billy Jones, Racine: Betty Open My Eyes That I May See '•
waya. Novell&amp; ... a hand some
I
reproduction of a wood and teX•
Pooler, Middleport; Ralph and the closing prayer by Isola ·
1
We
·pay
you
to
save
tured tile p~ rqu et Uoor.
Roush, New Haven; Sandra Taylor~
the
pay
is
goodl
.
(and
Herdman; Middleport; Frank The president has received a
No vella is a Vinyl Cuah ionrtor
product created especia lly !or
Lane, Reedsville; F. 0. Boyd, new shipment of gelatin. The
do·it-yours elfers. Simply cut 1t
Racine; Leonard Lunsford, hostess, asSisted by her
t o size and lay it ~ o wn.
daughter, Kathy, and several
Pomeroy.
Like all Vinyl Cushion fl ora by
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - others, served a delicious lunch.
•·Congoleum, Nove lla has a 9linyl ,
Tony Hutton, Melissa Riggs, The next meeting will be held
. Vlnyllinish. It needs no waxinK.
Arthur Sylvester, Helen Bar- May 1&amp; at 8 p. m. at the home of
~nd r ealats fl pills and scuffs.
tels, Granville Wamsley, Btuy Helen Woode with Eleanor
RATI.
Come iii and see Novella todayl
Boyles as program leader.
Jones.
·

,·•r !

Lantern Lit Watch Kept over Places o Death

.a.,.: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 3, 1971

(Continued
from Page 1)
I

•

1

-w.

I ,

••b

·,

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