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                  <text>12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 3, 1972

Busing Plan Found Inadequate News •• . • in Briefs

Plan Proposed to
.Grade Hospitals
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Hospital Association
(OHA J has unveiled a twopronged program to help cut
health care costs in Ohio.Dona ld
R. ·Newkirk ,
president of .the OHA, told a
news · conference Wednesday
his
organizatio n
has
established a special committee to develop criteria for
comparing the efficiency of
hospitals.
At the sa me time, Newkirk
said , the OHA will work with
other health care providers,
state government, health . insurance companies and, the
public to reduce health care
costs.

• ·

have never combined their
efforts.
"This will be the first time
maybe in the country that we
will all pull things together into
one funnel ," Newkirk said,
He said the OHA committee
will promote the increased use
of shared facilities and services to reduce duplication and
permit more ellicient use of
new
equipm ent
and
technology.
The committee's study· of
hospital efficiency "could be
the first step toward a form of
vol un ta ry accreditation of
hospitals for the achievement
of cost goals," Newkirk said.
Inflation was responsible lor
56 per cen t of the increased
health care costs from 1966-70,
and population growth was
responsible lor the other 44 per
cent, the OHA said.

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - A in the suit, had taken a position
school desegregation plan .for . " !()tally at odds with all
Austin, Tex., which President previous cases in which the
Nixon said he di:lliked beCause Department of Justice lws
it involved busing, was appeared."
rejecred by the 5th U.S.Circuil
The court said the plan was
Court of Appeals Wednesday scrapped beeauae it excluded
beCause the busing did nol go whites from busing and dfd ·
far enough,
nothing to relieve segregation
The court also said the of blacks and MexicanJustice Department, which Americans.
backed the Auslin School
The Austin School Board 's
Board · and .opposed the plan was to close 'two black
Depar tment of Health, schools and bus their 2,200
Education and Welfare (HEW) . studel}.ts, mosUy blacks and

PARIS (UPI)- The Viet
Cong spelled out today for the
first time their reasons for
rejecting President Nixon's
May 8 peace plan. They said
his proposals were "incomplete, unreasonable and
unrealistic. " ·
.The chief Viet Cong negotiator, Madame Nguyen Thi Binh,
departed from her usual
practice of denouncing U.S.
proposals without elaborating

5 Detendants

Fined by Court .

MEIGS THEATRE

Bremer

r

Kennit's • • • FRIDAY ANDSATURDAY

...

Ju.stice deparbnent means,"

the court said. "The concept of
'incidents of discrimination' is
an inscrutable new concept
totally at oddS with all previous
cases in Which the Department
of Justice has .appeared ."

the

:hess title. Spasslcy apent
day Wednesday in his eighth floor
suite at the Saga Hotel playing bridge with Gennan Arbiter
Lothar Sclunld, Danish grandmaster ·Bent Larsen and
international master Jens Enevoldsen, aides said.

DaJilsh

WASJIING'tON -FOR '111E.SEOOND TIME in 10 days, the
Senate has voted to cut off all funds for U. S. milltacy operationa
in Southeast AsiiJ. The latest antiwar legialatlon was approved 49
to 47 Wednesday night in the form of an amendml!llt to a $20.6
billion military procurement bill.
.
. The anna bill was approved 92 to 5 and sent to a conference
· committee wbere It Will be reconciled with a HIJIIBeilasaed bill. ·
Altholllih tbe antiwar amendment 'was expected to die in con. ference, Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass., said it e~pressed
growing sentiment to uae congresslon!ll spending power to force
an end to the war.

__________________

questions had been separated
in President Nixon's latest
peace plan in order to simplify
the paness of negotiation.
"But as far as tbe South
Vietnam t:roblem i:l concerned,
the military and political
problems are inseparable : to
the contrary they are two interrelated aspects of a single
problem," she said.
''U.S. intervention and aggression in South Vietnam
manifest themselves in both
the military and political
spheres. Therefore, in order to
solve the South Vietnam
problem, these two aspects can
only be settled
simultaneously," Sbe said.
Madame Binh said if the Viet
Cong were to agree to a ceasefire, they would lose their only
meana of exercising pressure
on what the Communists
consider a dictatorial puppet

government in Saigon installed
by the United States.
"In other wordS, the U.S. still
would malnlaln Its neocolonialist domination in South Vietnam: Is that not a way to
legalize tbe U.S. (political)
intervention and aggression?"
she asked .
Madame Binh said that if !he
United States really wanted to
simplify tbe problem, It should
"put a complete end to its
intervention and aggression in
both the milltary and political

spheres .''
In addition to puling out its
lroops, she said, Washington
should "stop supporting the
ruling group it has set up ... "
Xuan Thuy, the chief
negotiator lor North VietnamO
repeared Hanoi's charges that
the United States deliberately
is bombing dikes in North Vietnam.

Marines Stopped
SAIGON (UP! ) - Two
thousand South Vietnamese
marines opened a drive today
to clean out Quang Tri City and
clear the way for an attack on
the walled Citadel in the center
of town .
But the marines ran into an
immediate storm of artillery,
mortar and grenade lire from
1,000 well-entrenched North
Vietnamese Army (NV A)
troops, UPI reporter Ted
Kurrus said.

"We're going to take the
Citadel," Capt. M. R. Wells of
St. Louis, aU. S. Adviser, told
Kurrus. 4 'There's no question
in any body's mind we'll do it In
the next few days."
Nearly 100 miles to the south,
CommWJist gunners hit the
large u: S. air base at Da Nang
with 44 rockets today, killing
one American and WOWlding 14
others. It was the second
rocket attack on an American
base this week.

REVIVAL SET
HEMLOCK GROVE - There
will be a revival at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church
beginning Sunday through
Friday, 8 p. m. nightly, the
speaker David Stauffer with
Roger Watson as song leader
and special . music each
evening, The public is invired.

Muskie

(Continued from page I)
cbange his mind and accept.
McGovern also may have
under coflSideration other candidates that have not surfaced.
McGovern Meets Delegation
McGovern met with a ·
delegation of black leaders
Wednesday, and 4fterward, his
PRQPOSAL REJECTED
campaign manager, Gary
SACRAMENTO, Calif. Hart, said "a dozen names"
(UP!) - A state Senate were mentioned for the vice
committee has rejected a presidency.
proposal to cut taxes paid by
The group was headed by
Wlmarrled Californians to' the Delegate Walter E. FaWJtroy
same level as married of !he District of Columbia, and
workers.
included Corella Scott King,
Georgia legislator Julian Bond,
INCREASE APPROVED
California assemblyman WUlie
CINCINNATI (UP!) - City
Brown, Mayor Richard G.
Council Wednesday night Hatcber; of Gary, Ind., and
approved a Cincinnati Gas &amp; Rev , Ralph D. Abernathy, head
Electric Co. rate increase that of the Southern Christian
will bring in $227,682 more
Leadership Conference.
revenue per year, The $7 .I
Humphrey and McGovern
million rate hike will increase discussed the vice presidency
electric bills an average of 26 twice Tuesday and possibly one
cents a month. Gas bills will go other time. Humphrey was
up 15 cents a, month in the reported torn between duty to
summer and $1.20 a month in
his party and unhappy mem&lt;&gt;the winter.
ries of his days as Lyndon B.
Johnson's vice president.
Acboice of either Humphrey
PLEASANT VALLEY
or
Muslde would run the risk of
DISCHARGES:
Paul
alienating SO!Jie McGovern folStowers, Point Pleasant; John
lowers who are bitter at the
Stewart, New Haven; Valerie attempt by Humphrey and
Santonia, Point Pleasant; Lena Muakle to deny their candidate
Crookham, Leoo, and Richard the nomination at the Miami
Woodyard, Point Pleasant.
Beach convention.
Birds need more air than
any other vertebrate.

MARRIAGE UCENSE
Fred Bumgarner, 22,
AU of an oyster is eaten Franklin Furnace, Ohio, and
Debra Louise Rifle , 20,
except the shell.
Coolville.

Elberfelds August .Furniture Sale
On The Third Floor
August is a wonderful time to save on Furniture ·Appliances .
Furniture Accessories ·Mattresses and Springs during our
Annual August Furniture Sale.
Go to Elherfelds 3rd Floor. See the fine quality furniture on
display and see how you can save during this big August Sale.

..__..~~·-----

M~~:~TY!~!~UST

__

·-

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

.

-----·---

MEN'S DRESS PANTS

1/

/2
--------------·--::----1/.

/2

Y2

MEN'S WALK SHORTS

SPORT SHIRTS
1f2 PRICE

SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS

lh PRICE

.MEN'S TANK TOPS
I -

-

-., -

Y3

,_._.._.

MEN'S BATHING SUITS

'2

BOYS' WALK SHORTS

--·--

LADIES' BLOUSES

-- --

Y2

'3

New York Clothing House
KERM'S KORNER

POMEROY

'

Q-What is the world's
largest flag?
A- The Old Glory displayed by Hudson's Depart·
ment Store' in Detroit . It is
104 by 235 feet.

SAIGON (UPI)-The South
Vietnamese reported victories
today just north of Quang Tri
and at An Loc where a fourmonth government effort to
open Highway 13 from Saigon
to the district capital 60 nllles
to the north appeared near
success.
The U.S. cnmmand reporred
.230 strikes against North

Vietnam on Thursday but none
closer than 31 miles sooth of
the Hanoi-Haiphong area because of bad weather. · Most
strikes hit bridges, oil tanks
and other facilities just north of
· the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Both Quang Tri, just bei()W
the DMZ, and An Loc were of
particular importance to Salgon. Quang Tri was the first

districtcapital captured by the
Communists in their March 30
offensive and An. Loc was to
have been the second, but the
government held on there.
South Vieinam has not been
entirely able to lilt the siege of
An Loc or open Highway 13, but
a spokesman said today the
current push 10 miles below An
Loc drove the last of the North

Vietnamese 9th Divi:lion off the
road. However, there were still
a lot of CommWlists off to the
sides of the road.
The An Loc fighting centered
around the Tau 0 River bridge
nine miles south of An Loc and
at a Communist-held, American-built bunker a mile farther
south. Fighting was fierce and
at such close quarters the

Now You Know

•

extinct Cornish.

progress as 20 yards in 24
hours. But on Thursday they
finally captured it,
The lighting around Quang
Tri was being carried out by
South Vietnamese marines

who moved in earlier this
week . Their victory came 41'.!
miles north of Quang Tri where
the marines said they killed 49
North Vietnamese in a !~hour

artillery fire from big Russian
guns up to 17 miles away.
Thirty-two miles sooth of
Quang Tri City live rounds of
Communist rocket fire struck
the old imperial capital of Hue,
killing three government soldiers . Five miles southwest of
Hue, A4 Sky hawk jets from the
carrier USS Hancock struck a
series of CommWJist bunkers.

Weather

enttne

Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1972

NO. 78

battle that ended at noon. They
reported their own losses as
two men killed and eight
wounded.
In Quang Tri City itself the
fighting also was fierce . UP!
reporter Ted Kurrus said th_e
marines there had encountered
a whole complex of new North
Vietnamese bunkers-and
more of the intensely accurate

•

at y

The Brythonic tongues are a
family of Celtic languages that
include Breton, Welsh and the

VOL XXIV

South Vietnamese were nnahle
to call in air and artillery
strikes and the Communists
were rooted out in hand-tohand combat.
The South Vietnamese
assault began Wednesday and
three tanks were blown up in
the initial lighting. Other
lroops zigzagged toward the
bunker , ·making as little

PHONE 992-2156

Chance of a few thundershowers extreme so uth .
Clear and cool tonight. Lows in
the 5()s, Saturday sunny and
pleasant. Highs in the mid 70s
to around 80 ex treme south
portion.

TEN CENTS

FoodCostsGo Up Again

--

- -- ....-. -

'

...- __

..,1 -

'

-"'~"'~ '-&amp;.";_

ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHT Meigs High School Band
members were stepping high as they headed for the marching field for an hour and a hall practice Wedn~ay af-

ternoon at Rio Grande College Camp Crescendo Band Camp.
See Pictures on Page 5 by Katie Crow.

---------------------------------------------------------EHS .&amp;HJsters'

Sentinel Carriers Contest
Want to send a boy or girl to
the fabulous new Kings
Island?
Subscribers to The Daily
Sentinel have that opportunity
In a new carrier service contest
being conducted by the newspaper. All the subscriber has to
do is fill out the form below and
mall it to The Daily Sentinel, P.
0 . Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, to help a carrier pile up

points to win one of the free
trips to the new amusement
ce nter.
Subscribers are a·sked to
check the appropriate box on
the accompanying form per·lalning to their car rier's
personality, promptness and
neatness. So that carriers with
smaller routes will have an
equal chance of competing
with carriers having larger

routes, the results of the voting
will be tabulated on a pro-rated
basis. In case of ties drawings
will be held. The Sentinel will
have two winners in both
Pomeroy and Middleport, one
for a carr!et tn the Ractne Syracuse area and one for a
carrier in the Mason County
area.
Fill out the form and mail it
today!

Booth Planned
At County Fair

.Plans for a fond booth a\ the
Meigs County Fair will be
completed Monday by the
Eastern Athletic Boosters in a
meeting at 8 p.m.
Those who plan to assist with
the 'annual project are to
contact the following persons
.._.__
.__
-.J.QIIII SEN'fiiiEJI o,&amp;RRmR '1'0 D'lltM ISL.\IID OOliTES~ · in their area, Kathryn Mora
IIM-4117 and Pat Thomas at ~
lim• or carr.1••
3888, both of the Chester area;
Eva Walker at 992-6916
Good c=:I F'A1P CJ
Poreonal1tJ I Exoollont 0
PoOP c::J
Pomeroy area; Helen Blake at
3'18-6389
and Lucille Atherton at
l'l'omptnoao 1 Exaellent c:::::7 Good C J l'a1r z::::::7
PooP c::J
~9 Reedsville area; Mary
Exoollont £:::::1 Good c::J Pa1l' L::J
Poop z:::J
Bell Duvall at 667-3477 and
!loatneau
VIrginia Kirkhart at 667-3704
Tuppers Plains area.
AnJ o~bor oommont11
Those willing to help with the
project are to indicate the &lt;!BY
and hours they will be
avallable. Work at the booth
will run from Tuesday through
I
Your lame and Address
S.turday, Aug. 15 to Aug. 20.
.... ..
Pies will also be needed and
may be left at the booth during
~m:~.:.•••••.... fair week.
Skin tests are required and
may be gotten Monday,
Tuesday or Wednesday from
8:30 to II a.m. at the Meig:~
County Health Department.
By United Pre11 International
NASHVn.LE, TENN. - REPUBLICAN SEN. H()Ward
Courses in junior and BENEF11'8 INCREASED
Baker and Democratic Congressman Ray Blantoo won
senior life saving will begin
WASHINGTON
(UPI).pominations in Thursday's Tennessee primary and will hattie for
Monday at the Middleport Educational benefits lor
Baker's Senate seat in Nwember. The primary returns were
Pool.
Vietnam veterans would be
hardly tabulared when Baker tried hanging a liberal tag on
Classes will he taught from nearly doubled Wlder a bill
Blanton, generally regarded as a conservative .
9 a.m. to 11 a.m. for a two passed 89-0 Thursday by the
"I would rather run with my President (Nixon) than his," said
week period and the fee will Senate.
Baker Thursday night.
be $8 which Includes the cost
The measure would increase
But Blanton, a three-term congressman who gave up a safe
of the book. Also to be of- G1 benefits for single students
seat to try and lead Tennessee's tattered Democratic Party back
fered during the same two- from $175 a month to $250.
inje the light, waso't buying that. He stressed that he woold not
week period will be an adull Married veterans going to
lie his campaign to George McGovern's presidential bid. "I don 't swimming
course. This will college or taking vocational
ride oo anybody's coattails," snapped Blanton 25 minutes later
be held from 11:30 a.m. to studies would receive $297,
from his own headquarters. "I'll run my ()Wfl campaign - and
12:30 p.m. and the fee will be while a married veteran· with
I'm certaonly no rubber stamp for Nixon ."
$6.
one child would get $339, plus
$21 for each additional depenWASHING'J,'ON -'-THE SENATE HAS RATIFIED the treaty
dent.
banning ABM proliferation WI Sen. J. William Fulbright is
dismayed over a White Hoose attempt to attacb ''reservations"
PICTURES WANTED
LOCAL TEMPS
on its own companion accord to stunt growth of ICBM forces.
LETART FALlS - Both
The ten'lperature in downFulbright, D-Ark., swnmoned hls Senate Foreign Relations
Letart
Falls ball teams will
Committee into a closed meet~ today to map counter strategy town Pomeroy at II a.m. meet at the school at 6 p.m.
and pasa the intercontinental missile agreement in much the Friday was 70 degrees, with Tuesday in uniform for piclight rain falling .
(Continued on page 12)
tures.

____

~~

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Wholesale food prices took
another big jwnp upward in
July while the nation's WJemployment rate held steady at
5.5 per cent, the government
reported today.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said farm product prices
increased 3.2 per cent in July,
the largest monthly increase in
17 months, putting the level at
12.9 per cent above a year ago.
It was the largest 12-rnonth
increase in more than six
years.
Wholesale prices lor meal,
eggs, fruits and vegetables all
climbed sharply .
A 15.1 per cent jump in live
poultry prices paced the over.
all 2.2 per cent increase in the
price index for farm products
and processed foods and feeds.
:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Saturday through Tuesday :
Fair and cool Sunday.
High upper 70s and lower
80s. Lows upper 50s to lower
60s. Warmer Monday and
Tuesday with a chance of
showers. Highs in the 80s.
Lows In the 60s.

Egg prices went up 11.2 per
cent, prices of lres.h and dried
fruits and vegetables increased
6.7 per cent and livestock went
up 4.1 per cent.
Prices of processed meats,

poultry and fish increased 3.3
per cent, while dairy product
prices went up 2.1 per cent at
wholesale.
The sharp jump in food
prices pushed the over-all

wholesale price index up 0.8
per cent in July, the largest
advance since a 0.9 per cent
increase in February. This left
wholesale prices 4.5 per cent
(Continued on page 12)

Senior Citizens Will Turn
Out Big for Meigs' Fair
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH opening of the Fair is a
Not only are Meigs County requirement , Mrs . Thomas
se nior citizens being offered a points out, since only those
reduced admission price to the se nior citizens wearing a badge
109lh Annua l Meigs County will be admi tted lor the
Fair on Senior Citizens Day, reduced price. The badges will
Aug. 17, but once they are be mailed but residents must
there, they will be entertained, con tact the Middleport ollice,
served refreshments, and have telephone 992-7400 , Mrs.
an opportunity to view han- Margaret Amberger , Chester,
dicrafts and hobbies of their 985-3540, or Mrs. Leafy
friends and ne ighbors.
Chasteen, Wilkesville, 669-4777
Mrs. Elea nor Thomas, by Aug. II .
director of the Meigs County
Registration leaflets have
Council on Aging, said Thurs- been placed at numerous
day already nearly 400 churches around the COWlty
residents over 60 have and stamped, addressed cards
registered to rece ive the lor use by the senior citizens
badges whi ch will ge t them have been placed in business
admitted to the Rock Springs houses, post offices , and banks.
Fairgrounds for half price.
The locations listed by Mrs.
Registration prior to the Thomas 'llilef~ \he l:llrtls...a~;e'

available are as follows:
Dutton's Drugs, Village ·
Pharmacy, Citizens National
Bank, M. and R. Bargainland,
A. and P ., Rall's Ben Franklin,
Middleport Department Store,
Mark V a'nd the Post Office in
Middleport.
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co., Pomeroy National Bank,
Nelson's Drug Store, Swisher
and Lohse, Elberfelds, Ben
Franklin Store, Stiffler 's,
Kroger's, and the Post Office in
Pomeroy.
The cards are also available
at the post o!lices, or In cases
where there are no post oflices,
the stores at Rutland, Dexter,
Hemlock Grove, Reedsville,
Long Bottom, Portland,
· (Continued on page 12)

liliif:r:~:m~:~~:~:~:~:~:r~:~:~{::::{:~:~~I:~:?~:~~:;~~:t;{:::::::t:~:~:@:;:mt:~:m;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;~Jttttt::ir::~'~'~'~';'~'f~tttr;:;:~;~@:::~:~:~:~:~;~:;::~t;:;:?:m:~:;:~:~:::;:~;~::;~:;;;:;t:;:r~:;:;:m:?:;:;:;i}~

I! ! Mrs. Grzmm· Ends Teachzng Career

;.;.;o);

w

-

MRS. CHLORUS GRIMM has resigned after teaching 32
years in the Southern Local School District, 28in the Letart
Falls Elementary. School.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
LETART FALLS - A
familiar face will be mi:lsing at
the .Letart Falls Elemenlary
School when classes for the
J9n.73 school year begin Aug.
28.
Mi:lsing from her post as a
long-time teacher in the school
- 28 years - will be Mrs.
Chlorus Grimm, a resident of
the Letart Falls Community,
Widely known in Meigs
County, Mrs. Grimm has at
times during her long career at
the Letart Falls School served
as principal. She has taken an
active role in helping with the
presentation of musical
programs in the school and has
encouraged an art program .
Mrs. Grimm played an active
part in the formation of the Big
Bend
Minstrel
Association almost 20 years ago
and served as interlocutress of
the shows at one lime.
Mrs. Grimm stresses that
llhe Is ''resigning" and not
''retiring, " as she plans a busy
!lie, even though she is giving
up leaching. She recenUy was
electro president of the new
Bend 0 ' the River Garden

Club, is lreasurer of Racine
Chapter Order of Eastern Star,
is a member of the Letart Fallll
United Methodist Churcb and
i:l active with the Women's
Society of Chri:ltlan Service of
that church.
Altogether, Mrs . Grimm,
who re ceived her training at
Rio Grande College and Ohio
University, has taught for 32
years in the Southern Local
Schools with the lion's share of
28 years being spent in her
home community.
Mrs. Grimm has resigned to
give herself more time to
!ravel with her husband, Bert,
a former professional baseball
player. Mr. Grimm has retired
also. The couple will visit old
friends in different parts of the
United States - friends made
by Mr, Grimm wben he played
professional ball for 20 years.
Mr. and Mrs. Grimm also
intend to spend more time w.th
their sons and their famllles.
Their sona are Bob, who Is
manager-editor of "Ohio
Schools" in Columbus and
Russell, superintendent of
highway construction in St.
Clairsville, Ohio.

ISSUE FAVORED
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Athletic Boosters went
on record recenUy in full
support of the new bond issue
tAl be vored on Aug. 15.
The 2.7 mills ili lor additional
classrooms and a music room
tAl be added to the present high
school building. Enrollment at
Eastern High School has increased 25 pet. since its
opening .

Names of Kindergarten Pupils Needed

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROYAlso a big sale at Elberfelds Warehouse of·Lawn and
Pore~ Furniture ~ Rugs • Carpet by the Yard • Oval Rugs •
Unoleum • Rug Padding

By George Hargrave., Supt.
Mdg1 Locl1 Scbool Dlllrlct
Kindergarten Is important to youngsters. Tests
wer the years have shoWn beyond doubt that cblldren

Speaking of Schools - No. 244
with kindergarten training have a better charw;e for a
good itart in scbool.
A new state law requires lhat we provide transportation both ways for kindergarten chlldren who
.live more than !wo miles from the achoo\. We realize ·
that many pupilll hive nol attended kindergarten in
the past because of tranaporlltlon problems. This
new law should belp ellmlnate this difficulty. Kin-

dergarten remains optional however.
We need to !mow the names and addresses of
possible kindergarten-age chlldren Intending to attend clrwes who have not registered. We are particularly concerned about those who.live outalde the
boundaries of Rutland, Middleport and Pomeroy.
Please cal1992-2153lf you have • cblld who will be
five by Sept. 30 and whO!JI you have not yet regi:ltered
for kindergarten.
, There are two ways that we can · go on this
transportation: One is that we can !lave tbe kindergartenen ride tbe regular routed bus in tbe
morning and afternoon and come two full days one
- k and three full daY. on the alternate week. Ml!ny
dlltrlcta will be doing this.

•

Or, we may stay with a hall-&lt;lay eacb day, if we
can work out transportation so 81! to minimize long ·

runs with only a few chlldren.
We aeed lbe lnfonnatioo that bu been requested
above In order to comlete our flnll plans. They wlll
not tnily be complete 1mtll we aee bow many show ap
on Aupst !8.
ANOTHER NEW LAW that becomes effective
Sept. 26 ellmlnates the requirement of smallpox
inoculation for public scbool pupils.
YOU ARE INVITED t.o attend the August 14
meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education. The
regular monthly meeting will start at 7:30 p, m. in the
SUperintendent's Office and move to the auditorium
(Continued on page 4)

.~!

:::;.;.:.

-

Pool Comses
Begin Monday

MEN'S CASUAL JEANS
........

An Loc, Quang Tri

South Claims Victories

-

5
'1

1 BOYS' VEST AND PANTS SUIT

---~___._.....,._._.,..,.____._.._.._...

perpetuated segregation of
Mexican-American students
wilhin the schO&lt;!I systein."
The appellate court rejecred
the Jqstice Department's
contention that there were only
"incidents of discrimination"
in certain Atistin schools.
"One is not sure what !he

VC Reasons Spelled 0 ut

on her reasons.
together," Newkirk said,
In an apparent reference to
last week's call by the U.S.
noting interes ted parties
have worked separately in
delegation that the Comthe past to lower costs but
munists reply directly to
America's offers and stop
avoiding negotiations ,
Madame Binh said: "You
MASON DRIVE-IN Auto Goes Off
asked us to · respond to
'•' 1 o\ 1 1 W \o ,,
Mt. Union Road
f, ( 1P !(1'111 NHillll~
President Nixon's May 8
rroposals.
"
The Meigs County Sheriff's
TONIGHT AND FRIDAY
She then launched into a
Dept. investigated a single car
AUGUST 3-4
detailed statement which said
accident Wednesday at 8:18 p.
that "because of its inm. on MoWJt Union Road in
DDuble Feature Program
£
complete, unreasonable and
Scipio Township'
" THE REIVERS"
unrealistic character, those
ITechnicolor)
Judith N. Anderson, 23,
Steve McQueen
proposals are not acceptable."
Miami Springs , Fla., was
Sha ron Farre ll
The frail~ooking Viet Cong
traveling north wh en her car
- Plusbargainer
quoted
the
hit
a
rock,
went
off
the
road
on
" A MAN
American
negotiator
as
saying
Five
defendants
were
fined
the right and over an emCALLED HORSE"
(Tech nicolor)
bankment . There were no and lour others forfeited bonds the military and political
Richard Harr is
in Pomeroy Mayor William
injuries or arrest.
Dame Judith Anderson
Baronick's court Wednesday
IG PJ
night.
Fined were Robert Ward, 24,
CONFIRMED DATE
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Middleport, $15 and costs,
COLUMBUS
I UP! I - Ohio
ADMITTED
Marge
failing to have an operator', Democratic party officials
Reu ter , Pomeroy; Monte
license, $25 lor resisting arrest, confirmed Wedoesday that
Wolfe , Minersville; Pauline
and $10 lor failing to have his Sen. George McGovern will
Darst, Middleport, and James
TONIGHT, AUGUST 3
vehicle under control; Keith deliver the keynote address
Shoults,
Racine .
NOT OPEN
French, 21, Belpre, squealing at this fall's slate party
DISCHARGED - Diana
tires; Donald Lovett, Racine, convention in Cleveland.
Neal and Richard Young.
intoxication, Walter Teeter,
FRIDAYTHRU
It will be lhe 41rst time
TUESDAY
New Haven, intoxication, and since Adlai Stevenson adAUGUST 4-B
Andy Laudermilt, Pomeroy, dressed the Ohio convention
WALT DISNEY 'S
RE UNION SUNDAY
destruction of property, each in 1956 that the party's
BEDNOBS&amp; BROOM
The descendants of Thomas $10 and costs.
presidential nominee speaks
STICKS
and Mary Shirley Durst will
Forfeiting bonds were Gene at the state gathering.
ITechnicolor)
hold their annual family Bass, Pomeroy, $50, assault
Angela Lansbur y
David Tomlinson
reunion Sunday at the large and battery ; Ronald Circle, T/,
Disney Cartoon:
sheller at Keraland near New Haven, $25, squealing
Symphony Hour
Ravenswood, W. Va. A basket tires; Joseph Hughes , 39,
Admission: Adul ts, Sl.50;
dinner
will be held at 12:30 p. Delaware, $15, running a red
(Continued from page I)
Children, 75c
All
relatives
and
friends
are
light,
and
John
Murphy,
18,
m.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
The detaila were contained in
invited .
Pomeroy, $23.70, speeding.
Bremer's diary, read Into the
Prince Georges County Court
record by defense attorney
Benjamin Upsitz.
Bremer wrote : "From the
beginning of this plan, I
planned to get him (President
Nixon) at the airport. "
Twodays later still uncertain
of what to do he wrote that he
considered
going
to
Washington to find the
President and try again. "You
can't kill Nixie boy if you ain't
cl()Se to him," he wrote.
Security, tight since the
beginning of the trial Monday,
tightened even further today in
the wake of an anonymous
telephone threat that ''we're
gonna get Bremer" was received at the Prince George's
County Courthouse Wednesday
night. Bremer described
traveling from Milwaukee
across Lake Michigan by ferry
and entering Canada at a point
ONLY$
not far from Delrolt with two
REGULAR $16 .98
,
_... ....
guns hidden in his automobile.
He made elaborate preparations to avoid being found with
6 IN LOT
ONLY
the guns by washing his car,
~--~ -·-~~~~~~~---------------~~~;:- trying to destroy any smell of
gunpowder.
·
ONLY$
He wrote that he was bitterly
I LOT- ........__,
VALUES
TO
$9.98
disappointed that the Canadian
....
.... --..
..,
,__.._...__..__,--~~-------'
border guards made only a
cursory check. "I Instantly lost
REG. S5.98 to S8.98, NOW $2 .49 to $4.49
PRICE
respect for the great bad
__........--,.......
............... ,.,_.....,.,_...
border inspection," he wrote.
"I thought what an - -1
was, I could have had eiJoogh
ALL HIGHER PRICED FROM STOCK
PRICE
guns to start a revolution in
Canada."
Bremer wrote that he drove
ODD LOT- SIZES ARE BROKEN
PRICE
to Ottawa and could not at first
find the airport at whicb Nixon
MEN'S
ODD LOT MEN'S
was to land. But in driving
around the Otlawa civilian
airport he came upon Uplands
Air Force Base and was able to
determine that Nixon would be
Sport Coats. Reg. $55.00 to $70.00
landing there.
Now
$27
.so
to
$35.00
~ EG. $4.98 to $8.98
The day of Nixon's arrival he
dressed in hi:l conservative
Suits Regular 570.00 to $95.00
NOW $2 .49 to $4.49
business suit and wore a "vote
Now $35.00 to $47 .so
American " button, carrying
his gun in his pocket. "I felt
OFF
added confidence with a suit,
BEAUTIFUL SELECTION OF COLORS
short hair and shaved,"
..___...,
Bremer wrote in his diary.
ONLY
But Canadian officials
VALUES TO $8.98
refused to all()W him Into
Uplands and when he took up a
position along the molcircade
PRICE route the Prealdent sped by
REG. $3.98 to $5.98, NOW $1.99 to $2.99
,.....,___.._..
like a "dark allhouette." "He
went by before I knew It,"
ONLY
Bremer wrote.
VALUES TO $12 .98
" We simply have to get

'Wme Chicanos, to m.ostly white
ochools. This, the court said,
"is to impose the burdens of
desegregation , including
busing, on only one group, the
blacks.."
The czyurt also said, "We hold
that the Austin School District
has, in its choice of school site
loca.tions, construction and
renovation of schools, drawing
of attendance zones, student
assignment at\d transfer
policies, and faculty and staff
assignments , ca used and

(Contin!ied frO!II page I)

.

.

TIIESE FNE GOLFERS were on tbe ''llrlnlllne" atlbe Rock SpriDp ~
Thursday evening where they were laking part in the IDIIIBl "Hole-In.One" r:c~~lat
sponsored by tbe Pomeroy - Middleport Uona Oub. From tile left an .)(thn Smllb, Bill
Nelson, Bob Sawyer, Don l'earch and Mu Folmer. The cmlell, with dally and nekb
prizes to be awarded at the flnl.sh of the event, Ls conducted daiiJ i to t p.m. 111rw&amp;h·
Saturday.

�. ...

•

•

. It .

~

...-

~

.. *• ..

• ..

'

..

&gt;

.,
3- The J?allY Sentinfl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972
~a' c&amp; su.mnoc=o ·.:.u no %.$iW(:r; :::ow ~·· · i.oa$:;:

2- The Daily Sentinfl, Mlddleport·l'llmeroy, 0., Aug. 4, 1972

Roundup Time "

EDIJORIALS

"'

' I

I'
I

l

'

NORTH

A special dispatch to the New York Ttmes warns that
" m the next three weeks . mtlllons ol mosquttoes-mo re
than double the normal amount- wtll be hat ched m New
Jersey's marshes and wellands
"
The normal amount of mosq ut toes ev1denlly, ts hal fmtllions

Movies Go Ape, Now
Those who say the movtes are gotn g to the dogs at e
wrong
The movtes used to be gomg to the dogs when Lasste
and Rin Tm Tin and Shasta were around
But if you wtll take a look at cu1 re nt films bemg show n
around the country, you wtll see th at m tact mov1es todav
are going to the fro gs. the rattlesnakes th e 1ats and the
apes
You can't stop progress

-- Us.

By Helen Bottel

• •

An ''Other Woman" ID Name Only

Dear Helen:

.QI098
• 16 2

"'1043
WEST

EAST

.104
•Kss
.QJ1083
"'KQS
SOUTH

.76532

•1

.K94

"'8762
!D)

.KQ9 ,

.AJ432
•

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.AJ9
Both vulnerable

w..t North East South
Pass

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

I•
4•

Openmg lead- • Q

«·,~~m-:o:-m:·:·&gt;:·:':'.~·:··,,,,,

.. ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,"',,,,,,,:&gt;;:o::,'X:'iX:!ii~'&lt;~'"'!$~&lt;:~,~~,'*-~. .. .,.,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
FRENCH HAVE AWORD -EXPENSIVE
CHERBOURG (KFS ) - Nothtng like
gettmg off on the wrong foot · when we landed at
Cherbourg at 5 p.m., we looked forward to a trtp
by car Utrough the French countryside to PartS,
and so we 'd arranged to have car and drtver
meet us at the QE2 dockSide He was there,
Gaston Daldosst by name; he spoke a mediUmaccented English complete wtth an easy
command of the New York vernacular whtch
mdicated posittvely he'd spent some time m The
States ; he had. Ten years m Yonkers, where
he 'd been m the constructton busmess ; but hiS
wtfe, a dedtcated Francophile, !malty stamped
her ltttle foot, and off they fled to Paris.
It wasn't Gatson's wrong foot we got off on.
It was the car , and not tts condttion nor tts
comfort It sunply was the ktck in Ute bank
account that this live-hour trip cost whtch
lowered our fiScal sptrtts on that expenSive day.
The real reason for Ute mordinate cost to us of
such a dnve from Cherbourg to PartS was the
mtlieu we 've Jotned over the almost.Jfl years
we've covered show busmess. We'd never tak~
such all!Dousme-&lt;irive before mFrance; simply
had taken Ute hoat-train from Cherbourg or
LeHavre at a comparatively modest ltcket
pnce But after enJoying the superb drive , the
fascmatmg scenery, Ute hiStorical trip through
Normandy meadows, where our Allied lads had
landed and successfully mvaded m WWII,
havtng Gaston pomt out stghts and sites of Utat
vtolent march from the sea to ltberate Pans, the
ultimate shock of learnmg the next day what
Utat drtve had cost was the shocker : $250!
Again, evtdence that PartS IS the most
expeiiSlve city m Ute world. Our own fault
completely. Our closest friends m Pans are
Amertcans m show business These Amertcan
expatrtates, up to thetr penctls in charge accounts which are balanced by expense accounts
mostly from big film ftrntS, take luxury and
exorbitant charges lor granted; after all, tt's
part of Uteir lives, Ute perquiSite, the "perks" as
tlley're called; or m politics, "lulus," mearung
expenses "In lieu of" supposedly expected costs
or domg busmess. We swallowed hard on that
$250 bill ; billhe bullet and relaxed. Mter aU, the
PartS branch or the U S. Film colopy has accepted exorbitance lor decades. Oh, well.
Our Amertean ftlm colony JS like show

........."

I

busmess chques anywbere: they cluster. For
lunch, tl always is Fouquet's oo the Champs..
Elysees, sunply because all the big film firms
are w1Uttn walking diStance. The second floor at
Fouquet's is Tbe Place. Film talk is as much a
part of the place and mood as the food. Our
friend, Dav1d Lewis, for 50 years with MGM,
ftnJShed up as head of Its European and Middle
East operations, considered his predicament In
retirement (he's well tnto his 7119) and decided
he was too young for pasture. With Charles
Lachman, co-founder of Revlon with Charles
Revson, rehred in 1965a centlmillionaire (that's
more than 100 million) and decided also ht was
too young to vegetate So Dave and Otarles
started Two Worlds Films and proceeded to
turn out hit after hit: "My Night AI Maud's,''
"More," and half a dozen others followed
profttably; so Dave and Charlie can afford
Fouquet's
We met there a pair of brothers who run the
estimable Gaumont Film group. They
recounted the attempts to keep French films
clean . they own a vast nwnber of cinemas and
),nstSt on hi@ter. stands~ of ceUuloid tidiQ!Iu
1han most. Their Influence is sq gn,t• the
number of their own theatres"" vut, that they
do keep movtes clean; or else they don't get a
Gaumont hookmg. One new executive made a
speech to theatre owners m Paris, recounting
the upcorrung "product" as II is called, with
many a sly mnuendo as to the heavily erotic
content of a great number of said films. The
Gaumont ~wners iooked knowingly at each
uu•••, •oo wnen 11 came time lo sign for said
untidy ''product," skipped the entire output of
the firm That was Indeed disastrous and proof
that dirt in films is IDIStakenly cash-connected
when the Gaumonts shut out the offending
studio, tt suddenly discovered there are dollars
m decency.
Great expanses of nudity, fornication ,
homosexual acts and obscene dialogue suddenly
were able to be chopped from said filclat. It was
a triumph for family films. Naturally, or unnaturally, there are other theatre owners in
France lacking the education decency or the
Gaumont cham; but the GaiDIIOnt declBion had
a deep effect on other exhibitors because
Gaumont not ooly is the biggest chain but the
most profitable; and as Gaumont goes, so follow
the lesser chains and independents. Mary
Poppms promptly breathed easier

"Other Women" aren't always villams. Sometimes Utey're
just very looely houseWives whose husbands pay them no al·
tention and they're looking for a little meanmg lo thetr lives And
find none - even m the Other Man
Take me: I ale alone, shopped alone, watched TV alone, and
finally got a job because I couldn't stand the constant waittng lor
an almoellnvlslble husband who wasn't there- even when he
was In the room with me.
AI work, I mel a man who acted as if I counted. He tells me
be'scrazy about me, but he can't leave his wife and chtldren His
wife knows about his affairs and doesn't mind, so long as they
stay married. He's honest with me: says he doesn ·~ expect this to
be ''undying love" but, for now, I'm Ute btggest thing in hiS life,
so why don't we go to bed?
!love him so much I think of him night and day - but I won't
give ln. Having been discarded by one man (the husband who
ignores me), I can 'l face another disappointment. Bestdes, I've
got &amp;a'llpies.
So here I am, Ute ''Other Woman" m name only, married m
name only, and hopelessly in love with a man who just wants a
fling. If I quit my job to avoid him, l'U go back to - nothing. If I
stay on, l'U be hurt, one way or another. Is there any hope for an
- HONORABLE O.W.
DearO.W.
Why not try honest appratSal? Face it, you were ripe to ''fall
hopelessly in love" with the first man who noticed you were still a
woman. Be grateful for his frankness He's saved you a lot bigger
hurt by admitting he only wants a little romance on the stde
Next: look at your marrlage. ls there any hope here• If not, By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. My husband and I would like
to know tf 11 would be safe
don't stay with a lost cause. Find another job, preferably in a
Dear Dr. Lamb-! would r
t
different location, make new friends, and get on wiUt life. (And grea tl y apprectate tl 1f you 1or ust o stop
D0 usmg thcon-k
would answer my questwns
racep tves
you
m
don't settle for crwnbs!) - H.
I s t op p c d · menstruatmg there would be any chance
abruptly when 1 was 42 of my gettmg pregnant
Dear Helen:
yea rs old and 1 am now 47 agam' That's the last lhmg
I felt for "Ungrateful," who wasn't thrtlled when her _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w_e_w_o_ui_d_w_a_n_t_b_e_c_a_us_e_o_u_r
husband brought home two tickets to a live ball game
Not only do I suffer from weekend TV sports but I put up with
them other evenings too. And that'snot all. My retired husband is
.ddlcted to IDIIP operas, westerns and old movies. And nothing
mual dlaturb him!
When I go grocery shopping, I blow the horn for him to help
meunloadlhecar, then unload it myself, as I'd have to walt for a
~ercial.
·
Once I was llflln8 ashes out of the fireplace, and the cardbaird bol ca1J8hl fire. ID panic, I called to my husband to help,
but be just aald, "Wait till this inning is over!"
0
Afta' 40yearsofwaitlngfor the joy of retirement, 1 fmd ram
a -TV WIDOW, AND UNGRATEFUL, TOO

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fertility Questions After Menopause

-

Dear TV:
C&amp;n'tyoumanage a TV breakdown, then p!Bn a trip until it's
!IJ:ed? Sometimes retired people gel locked Into the lube because
they've forgotten there is anything better to do. -H.

Dear Helen:
Our illndlady refused to fix up our place. She lives up above
1111 and occuionally has wild parties. During the last one, about
half the ceiling plaster feU down on our bed.
Finally, in desperation, we bought supplles and repatred
leab, broken tiles, the ceWng, and did a lot of painting.
. Then -lhe raised lbe rent. Says she can get a lot more for
the apartment now it looka so much better. What can we do?
We'd rather not move as we can't afford higher rent, and best des
IIIII II near our kids' scltool.-HELP
DMr Help:
Write ber a letter of protest, itemizing the amount you have
~pent on repairs - and lll!lld a copy to the Rent Control Board.
(lt'lll.lled under Internal ~venue Service.) -H.

4

.AJ8

I, Voice along Br'Way 1
News You Just Itch for

llftiDGI

Wins Too
Soon, So

'

Yes, the Corvoir
Started Something
A two-yeat studv by the Depa1 tment of Transp~1tat 10n s
Highway Safe tv Admmtstt alton has g1ve n thl' Co1vau a
clean b11! of health. cnlhng the compact cao no more tm
stable than other a u tom o b t I e s of the sanw vea1 aud
wetght.
Ralph Nader, who first pomted the fin ge1 at the Cot··
vair's alleged t·eadmess to roll ovet (spec tfically, the 1960·
63 models) , has branded the tepott ·a shoddy. mtetna llv
contradtctory whttewash "
Be that as tt may, tt ts mteres ttng to spec ulate on how
different a lot of things mtght be toda y had the oiTtcoal
study been avatlable five 01 stx years ago
11 was the Corvatr controversy , tt w11l be 1emembeted.
that launched Nader on hts career as the natton 's leadmg
consumer advocate. Smce then , he and the hosts he has
insptred have crusaded fot better safet y and betlet pt od
ucts in everythmg from gas ptpehnes to dams m Ca Itforma to phosphates 111 detergents The H1ghwav Safety
Admtmstration ttself ts a crealton of thts pet•tod
Not only the consumer movement but aroused public
concern over ecology, envtronment, pollutton and popula·
tton and diSenchantment wtth btg cm porattons hav e come
into thetr own m JUSt the past few years
Would none of tt have happened had tt not been for the
Corvair? Would that car sttll be m productton and would
we still be drtving around m cars wtthout seatbelts. col·
lapStble steermg wheels. padded dashes and asso1 ted
warnmg buzzers and pollutiOn equtpment With more to
come? Would we sl11l be merrtly filhng the sk1es w1th
smoke and the waterwa ys wtth filth '
Not likely All of these thmgs-safety, pollution, the
whole "quahty of hfe" btl- were tdeas whose t1m es wet·e
beginmng to come long before Nadel and the.Corvaor
Yet that controversy over a little car prov1ded a focal
point for public conce .1 whtch raptdl v expanded •o e'll·
brace all these other ISsues
It was, as the hiStonans say, a watershed event fr om
which much, both good and bad has flowed

WIN AT

~ tmlrHU,~
" If you can't sleep, Ralph, try thinking of the
Republican conrentionl"

family IS grown up and mar·
ned
Dear Reader- Every woman, particularly Ill your age
group, should have a regular
exammation by her doctor
One reason is for the early
detecbon of cancer of the
cervix, which can be cured
tf found soon enough. Another is for examination of her
breasts During such an ex·
ammaUon, a doctor can do
a test which tells him what
the nature or the cells are
that ltne the vagina. This
helps m identifying whether
the woman has sufflctent female hormone or not and
therefore is an index of the
function of her ovaries.
I don't like to tell any
woman that she can't get
pregnant unless she has had
an examination and a series
of st~dies. It's always pos·
stble. However, I must add
that it is most unlikely that a
woman who has gone
through the change of life
and has not menstruated for
two years would gel pregnant. Some women who are
not menstruatln~ have not
actually gone through the
change of I1fe. This 1s one
reason an examination by
the doctor Is mdicated.
Dear Dr . ..,. Lamb - My
mother Is 50 years old and
she is going to the hospital
for some tests . A CBC, SMA,
and EKG. Please tell me
wha\ these are.
Dear Reader - A CBC
means a' complete blood

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Lots of people play brtdge
for relaxation but the ones
who play good bridge don't
relax when actually playmg
thetr cards.
It ts just a cinch for South
to relax and win the first diamond trtck with the ace. The
contract looks ironclad so
why think' If he makes that
play he ts likely to wind up
cursmg the gods or chance
He enters dummy wtth
Jack of spades and loses a
trump fmesse. West leads a
second dtamond and East is
on lead wtth the king. Now
tl East shoots back a club
South wtll play low West
wtll take the queen ; get out
wtth a card in any other swt
and watt for the setting trtck
wtth the club kmg
Bad luck indeed Three
cards out of three wrong but
unnecessary South loses
nothing by ducking the ftrst
dtamond The suit IS contmued South wins , enters
dummy wtlh that same jack
or spades and loses that
same trump finesse West
has no way to get hts partner on lead
South wins the ret urn,
manages to ruff dummy's
last dtamond . draws two
more rounds of trumps ,
cashes the spades , leads a
club , !messes hts mne and
shows West hts hand
West has to lead away
!tom htS remainmg club
honor or gtve South a ruff
and discard Simple, once
South stayed awake at trick

The

West
I.

b1ddmg has been:
North
Eoot South
2.

Pus

2.

?
Pus 3•
Pass
You, South, hold
.8743
.AKIU •112

•z

What do you do now'?
A-Btd lour dabs. lblo is a
ohght overbid, but II you pus
you may well be missinJ a
ram e.

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of h1ddmg two diamonds, you Simply raised your

partner to three clubs He

con~

tmued to four dubs. What do
you do now?
Answer tomorro\\

Q-Why ts there total
tence on the moon?

SJ·

A-There ts not enough
atmosphere to carry sound.
Q-Wh1Ch pres1&lt;lent kept

the same Cabinet through·
out h1s admmtstratlon?
A- Frankltn Pierce
count, which includes count·
lng the number of red blood
ceUs and looking at their
characterillics, counting the
number of white blood ceUs
and separating them into the
various types of white blood
cells plus looking at thell'
characteristics on a slide. In
most laboratories it also In·
eludes measuring the hemoglobin for iron in the blood
to be certain that there is no
anemia.
The SMA is a term for an
automated method of measuring the different chemical
elements in the blood, like
the blood sugar. With· one
smaU sample of the patient's
blood, the analyzer accom·
pUshes many tests which
used to be done laboriously
by hand by laboratory tech·
nlcians. II essentially pro·
vides information concern·
mg chemical balance and
chemical content of the body.
An EKG refers to an elec·
trocardlogram, and Is properly caUed an ECG. The older term EKG arises from
the the fact that much of
the early electrocardiographic study was done by German speaking people and the
word for heart in German is
Kardio, as oppoaed to the
English cardlo. It is of
course a measurement or the
electrical activity of the
heart to detect heart disease.
INIWSP.PII INTIIPllll .USN.)

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Television Log
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4
7 JO - To Tell The Truth 6, Dragnet! ; Adam 12 3, I Dream or
Jeannie 4; Mr Rogers 20. Governor and J. J 10.
8 00 - Washington Week In Preview 20, Brady Bunch 6, 13,
O'Hara U S Treasury 8; Book Boot 33. Partners 3, 4.
Basebill 15
8.30 - Partridge Famllr 6, t3, Movie "Search" 3. Movie " A
Mbn Could Get ~I lied' 4. Between Words 20, 33.
9 00 - Room 222 6, 13, Movie "Something Evil" 8; Movte
" Seven Thieves" 10.
·
9 30 - 0dd Couple6, t3 ; Devout Young 20, 33
10 00 - Love American Style 13 , News 20, Doln' tt 33; Olympians '72 6
to 30 - Dr Simon Locke3, Dr. In The House4 ; Rollin ' on R1ver
15, PGA Tournament Preview 6, 13. Washington Week In
Review 33
11 :00 - NewsJ, 4. 6, 8, tO, 13, 15
1t :30 - Johnnr Carson 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6 , Movie 8; Movie
"The Son o Dr. Jekyll " 10: Movie " Ocean's, 13
1·00 - Roller Derby 4; Movie "The Mask of btljon" 10
t 30 - News 13
2:00 - News 4
SATURDAY AUGUST 5
6:00 - Fa1lh tor Today 10
6. JO - TV Classroom 8. Christopher Closeup 10
7 00 - Neighbors t3 . Communique 6. Farm Front 4, Deeth
Valley Days 8 , Societies In Transition 10. John's Almanac 3
7 15 - Woman's Point ot VIew 13
7 30 - Gilligan's Is 4, Man from C.OS I 10; Gospel6, Blastoff
t3; Monkees 8; Farmbook 3
8 00- Dr Doollttle3, 4, 15. Jerry Lewis 13; Bugs Bun11y 8, 10,
Fun tor Everyone 6
8 15 - Matters of Life 6
8 30 - Deputy Dog 3, 4, 15, Road Runner 6, 13, Scooby Doo 8,
Bugs Bunny 10.
9 00 - Woody Woodpecker 3, 4, 15, Funky Phantom 6. 13.
Harlem Globetrotters 8, 10
9 30 - Pink Panther3, 4, 15, Jackson Flve6, 13, Help Hair Bear
Bunch 8, 10
10 00 - Jetsons 3, 4, t5 : Bewitched 6, 13; Pebbles and Bamm
Bamm 8, 10.
10 30 - Barrier Reel 3, 4, 15, Llddsvllle 6, lJ ;cArchie's TV
Funnies 8, 10
11 00 - Sabrina 8, 10, Curiosity Shop6, NBC Chttdren's Theatre
3. 4, 15.
1t: 30 - Josle &amp; Pussycats 8. 10.
12 00- Mr Wizard 3, 4, 15 , Jonny Quest t3, Batman 8, Monkees
10.
12 30 - Bugaloos 3, 15, You Are There 8, 10, Roller Derby 4
Lancelol Link 4, 13; Miniature Golf 6
1:00 - CBS Children's Film Fesllval8, 10. Kartoon Karnlval 3
American Bandstand 6, 13, Western Theater 15
1.30- Banana Splits 3, Johnny Bench 4
2 00 - Roller Derby 6 , Job Show tO, Kentucky Afield 13 ,
Baseball3, 4, Canadian Pro FootballS, To Be Announced 15.
2 15 - BasebaiiJ, 4, 15, OUr National Parks10, You! 13
3 00 - Untamed World6. Movie "Saddle Tramp" 10
3;.30- Lee Trevino 6, Celebr ity Bowling 13
4 00 - Wide World of Sports 6, 13
4 30 - Gospel Music 8, Movie " Teahouse ot the August Moon"
10
5 00 - Wresttlnq 8, Midwestern Hayride 4, Sports Challenge 3,
Roller Derby 15
5 30 - Bill Andersoo 3, Golf Tournament 6, t3
6 00 - News, Weather, Sports3, 4, 8, 10
6 30 - NBC News3. CBS News B. 10 : NewS4
7 00 - This Is Your Life 3, Hee Haw 8, Lawrence Welk 13, 4,
Death Valley Days 10
7 30 - Nashville Music 3, Green Acres 10
8 00 - AIIIn The Family 8, 10, Movie "Cast a Giant Shadow" 3,
15; Movie "Fireball500" 6, 13 , Movie "Thunder In The Sun"
4

a 30 -

Mbry Tyler Moore 8, to
9 00 - Dick Van Dyke 8, 10.

9 JO- Movle "The Night Welker" 4, Arni~B , 10
tO OO - KenBerry6,13;Misslon lmposstbte8,tO

11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, ~, 6, 13

11 IS - News 6. 13
11 30 - Movie "The Curse ot the Werowolt" 3, Movie
0

Manhandled 11 ; Movie "The Mole

Peopl~",

Mov ie "Killers

of Klllmanlaro" 8, Mo vie "Something Evil" 10, Mov ie
"Invisible Agent" 13
t2 30 - Movte "The Invisible Mbn's Revenge" t3
1 00 - Mov1e " Oark Intruder" 3. Movie "Three Hours to Kil t"
tO
1 30- Movie " The Invisible Woman" 13
1 t5 - Movie "Conspiracy" 4
2 30- "The Arizonian." 4. News 13
4 00 - Movie "The Last Outpost" 4.

pi 1:

j

:*· ·····m·~:::::~:;;;~::s~:?R~l''

·· · .... ··

ITube
Talk
1
BP.ulCbtre
~~~:;

ya

rae

:::!
~

How about a law that would require all astronauts to be
the age of 18?
I think I'd vote for it
Why•
WeU, there's increasing evidence that space travel Isn't as
safe as it was cracked up to be - with the gravltaUonal forces,
llmlted diets, confining restrictloM of the space capeule, etc ,
taking their toU on Ute physiology and psychology of the over-30
gang at llolL!ton.
Allin aU, it's becoming clear that a mlddle~ed man wasn 't
meant to go wheeling off to practice chip shots on the surface of
the moon.
But- after considering the county fair scene now upon IIII I am firmly convinced that a band of teenagers could survive the
ravages or outa' space to perfection.
At the Gallla CoiDlty Junior Fair just concluding ... at the
Mason County Fair starting up next week ... at the Meigs Fair
just down Ute pike, I'd recommend thai you look at the wUd,
screaming rides along the midway, and then look at who's doing
the riding.
Some of these rides look appalllngly dangeroua, spinning and
whipp~ and gyrating the puaengen almolt as bad u any
spaceaaft could ever do. And there tbey are -the teeny-boppers
and their llhaggy boyfrienda, the little tylles at the fil'lt1JI'ade
level, the Utile League crowd. They're taking their lives in their
hands,llappearstome,and-in the words of the old spy movies
-"loving lt."
&lt;Mce in a wltlle, you spot a mother or father along the midways at the fairs, getting one one of the rides. They're green,
lhoroughly llhaken, and totally unfit for further navigation.
(Uaually, they went along to "protect" a tiny tot from one of the
rides - and the kid pops out of the capsule calmly Ucklng his
lollipop, whUe Daddy hesda for the neareat cltDDp of bushes to
loae hla dinner.)
So why not 1111e ~e fairs as a proving ground (we're doing
hlghllgbts of all three on cable TV, which mesna our crewa are
arollld the grotmda a lot, and wUI conflnn what I'm saying), and
recruit the next beteh or utronauta from the nine-tCHJineteen
~a~der

set•

They'd thrive on space food, being used to peanut butter,
pizzas and pop, with digestive tracts of pw-eat steel. They'd love
the crowded space, since 11101t teenagen' rooma are 110 cluttered
they Uve in about a three-by.flve compartment during their
pubescent yean, anybow.
And the UtUer ooes could collect dirt, rocb, and other Jn.
tereatlng thing a far laster than adults, having had more practice.
The only argument against : h would inevitably spawn a terrible
late, late llhow, "I Was a Teenage Astronaut."
ON 'niE WEEKEND 'IV DIAL: Saturd8y - WLWC.TV
offers a treat in two prime-time movlea, ''Thunder in the Sun,"
and ''Night Walkers." They foUow up with their u.aua1 quadrup~
feature, with the Jut llhow lltarling at 4 a.m., and there are at
leut fifteen other lllclat on this evening.
Sports aboiDld, or coune, willt the regular Canadian pro
football lcbedule atarting, u SubtchiWID meets Ottawa, 2
p.m., WC!f&amp;.TV ... The Red Sol and ~lei and Plratei-Eipos
bueball s - are on, both at 2:15. (If you hate IIJOI'tl, WBN~
TVhu a couple of afllll'lloon movlee to 111e, "Saddle Tramp" and
"Teahouse ol the Aupst Moon.")
Sunday: Bemtldette DevUn, lhe rebellritth CathoUc leader,
Ia guelt of Wl1lJaln F. Buckley Jr. on "Firing Line," 1 p.m.,
WOUJI.TV ... Reriinl of the llrilllb.fllmed American clullc
"!Mt of the Molilcana," an on the lime . .tlatt at' I ... BobbY
!IIerman, teenlge Idol, II a &amp;uetJt liar on "Here
the
Brldetl," 81 7 on WTYN·TV ... And the 11nai1 o1 the PGA golf
cluttlc come a1ttnt on Wlfl'N·TV It I ... The Plratea and Ezpoe
110 at It qaln at 1:30, WTAJI.TV.
Monday: ¥ike DoaaJu 1111 oo!mnnle Ann Landen as a
guest, t:JO a.m., WTYN-TV. MmdaJ nllale: ,...,..,.

c-

streae:" • p.m.,
WBNS.TV.
)

I Sport Parade

'.

~

Perso:nnel
Problems
Plague
Dallas
lf
ii1

By MILTON RICHMAN
i:i:
~
UP! Sports Editor
··
New York (UPI)- The HaU of Fame should he ]tunptng
Monday.
. lfy?u'veever seen hun pttch, then you know he belongs m, and
if you ve ever been In hiS company then you also know Utere are
few more genumely entertairung men mall baseball than Vernon
Gomez .
'!'hat's his square name but nobody ever caUed htm that when
he pttched for the Yankees Some called hpn Lefty, some called
him Goofy Everyone called him hghtnmg fast .
Lefty Gomez, 62 now and something of a household word when
he ptlched for the Yankees from 193Q Utrough 1942, actually was
ahead of his ltme .
Back then, he did what everyone else ts trying to do today.
He made basebaU fun.
That doesn't mean he was a clown.
Pitchtng against some of the toughest hitters who ever bved,
guys like Jmunie Foxx, AI Simmons, Hank Greenberg, Charlie
Gehrmger, yes, even Ted Wtlllams, the skmpy lefthander from
Rodeo, Calif., stttched togeUter a .649 won4ost jiercentage wtth
189 victories ag8lllst 102 de!eats, and no clown ever dtd Utat.
6-0 World Series Record
Gomez had an even better World Sertes' record. II was 6-0 No
clown ever did that, etther
But there were some thtngs he did that were .. well .
somewhat irregular.
Uke the game in whtch the Tigers had a man on ftrst and Hank
Greenberg btl a bouncer right back at him
Frank Crosetti, Ute Yankees' shortstop, glided over toward
second to take Ute throw, but Gomez fooled everyone m the
ballpark by throwing mstead to second baseman Tony Lazzen,
standing 10 feet away from Ute bag.
Naturally, both runners were safe
"WhatinheU 's the matter wtUt you•" Lazzert wanted to know
when he came to Ute mound to return the haU to Gomez.
"Take it easy, Tony," he trted molltfymg hiS second baseman
"I've been reading in all the papers how smart you are.! wanted
to see for myself.':
Another time Gomez was pttching agrunst the Gtants tn the
Polo Grounds during the 1936 World Sertes
In a Tight Spot
He was in a tight spot when a plane flewover Ute ballpark. Wtth
everyone wrutmg for him to pttch, Gomez simply stood there on
the mound, craning hts neck and walchmg the plane overhead
"For crym' out loud'" one of the Yankees satd to him back m
the dugout at the end of the mnmg. "Are you crazy or
something"''
"Not at aU," satd Gomez, cool and unruffled "What was so
wrong about watchmg the plane' I knew! was safe I had the ball
in my hand (Mel) Ott couldn't hit tt while I was holding II, could

;)

X

·.

he?"

By United Press International
The Cowboys, rruffed at
Duane Thomas' personal behavtor, unloaded the moody
runnmg back to the San Otego
Chargers a couple or days ago,
but now they're havmg problems wtth defens1ve end Tody
Smtih
Smith, brother of Ute Bathmore Colts' all-pro end Bubba
Smtih, walked out or the
Cowboys ' trammg camp Thurs·
day and headed for his hotne m
Los Angeles ll'he 6-foot-5, 245-

pound second year mon from
Southern Cahforma gave no
explanation toteam ofltctals for
hts dtSappearance
Coach Tom Landry was
surpnsed by Smtih's behavtor
but stressed that the btg
defenstve end would he fmed an
undtsclosed amoun l for each
day he is absent from camp
"Sm1th IS vttally Important to
the future ol Utts club," a team
spokesman said "Thts year he
would have helped us, or wlll1f
he comes back "

The Cowboys wtll fly to
Pallas today for an ex htbttton
game Saturday agatnst the
Houston Otlers at Texas Stadtum tn Irvmg, Tex
A btg schedule of exhtbttion
actiVIty ts on tap for thiS
weekend,begmmng'tomgh~wtth
three games Cleveland ts at
Los Angeles, St Loms at
Buffalo and Washmgton goes
agamst Baltimore at Tampa,
Fla , m tomght's acttvity
On Saturday a!ternoon tt wtll
be Kansas Ctty vs Chtcago at

South Bend, Ind , and Saturday
mghl ftnds Cmcmnatt at Green
Bay, Mtami at Detrmt, New
England at Oakland, Atlanta at
San Dtcgo, the New York Jets
vs San FranciSco at Jacksonvtlle and the New York Gtants
at Ptttsburgh
The Cleveland-Los Angeles
game tomght IS expected to
draw 65,000, and the Rams are
anxtous to get a look at young
John Walton at quarterback
W1lh Roman Gabnel stt ll
stdelmed w1 th a collapsed lung,

Browns-Rams Clash Tonight
~

LOS ANGELES (UP!) When
the
Cleveland
Browns open thetr exht·
bition season here tontght
agamst the Los Angeles Rams,
they wtll be up against one of
pro football's few black quarterbacks
Veteran Ram quarterbacks
Roman Gabrtel and Jerry
Rhome are stdehned from tn·
junes and black stgnal-caller
Johr Walton is expected to see
extens1ve duty

Walton has been successful m
pro football's mmor leagues,
and ts trymg for the fourth sea·
son to slick wtth the Rams. Hts
showmg tomght ts tmportant to
hts chances
Watchmg Walton closely wtll
be Browns specialty teams
1

coach Alva Tabor, who says he
was the ftrst block player stgned to quarterback a pro team
Tabor stgned wtth the New
York Yanks of the All-Amencan Conference m 1949 but nev-

cr got m a game
er "
Thecoachsa1d there probably
"I don't know why I dtdn 't
0
play that year t II he said The w1ll be more black pro quartereas1est answer was to say I backs m the future, but added
dtdn 't because I was black, but tl may take awhtle because
that was never satd to me or black football players have been
tnttmtdated about the poSIIton
pom ted out
' Many black athletes never
"I felt I had the respect of
my teammates and that the really asp1red to bemg a pro
coaches felt I had ablltty," Ta- quarterback because they felt
bor satd "Now that I'm m the doors were closed to thern,"
coachmg, I look back and con- Tabor satd "They had to face
std er myself luckter than most reahty, make a ltvmg and try
black quarterbacks . At least I to be a success at other pomade 1t to the pros as a pass- !)Jtions"
Browns Head Coach Ntck
Skonch sa td he expects to see
more pro black signal-callers

Experienced Squad Back

For Southern Grid Season
BY KEITH WISECUP
Whtle powerful Eastern and
Metgs were tearmg through
opponents and drawmg most of
Ute headlmes last year, the
Southern Local Tornadoes
were sort or overlooked, unJustly.
Under Coach Bruce Wallace,
Southern was 3-6 wtth a squad
of
mostly
freshmen ,

mcludmg aii..SV AC halfbacks
Mtke Nease and Ntck !hie, plus
a starter last year, Jay Htll
Southern
has
two
sophomores and a JUntor
hungry for the quarterback
JOb, all of whom sa w actiOn last
year The lOth graders are
Mttch Nease and Buddy Ervm
and the juntor ts Vern Ord.
Graduattng from Southern's
squad was all-SVAC Net!
Baker, who was one of the
lmest defenstve players m the
leag ue , honorable menlton
selecltons Charles Yost and
J1m Smtih and varstty
regulars, Terry Varney, and

Btll Cornell
Of Metgs County's three h1gh
school gnd squads, Southern
lost the least by gradualton and
may JUSt move mto a
challengmg posttton m the
SV AC thiS year

Walton and Jerry ]:\home w1ll
sph t the quarterbackmg chores
Johnny Umtas, begmmng hts
17th yea r m pro football, wtll
start at quarterback for the
Colts agamst the Redskms
WashmgtonCoachGeorg~Allen

must make a chmce between
Sonny Jurgensen or Btll Ktlmer
as hts startmg quarterback
TheCardmals wtll besporttng
a new look offense wtth former
Vtktng Gary Cuozzo at quarterback m Utetr game wtth
Buffalo Other new faces m the
startmg backfield of the Cardtnals wtll be Donny Anderson and
Leon Burns at runmng back

and Walker Gtllette at wtde
recetver The Bills w11l start
Denms Shaw at quarterback
but wtll be wtthbut the servtces
of thetr No 1 draft chotec,
delens1ve end Walt Patulski,
who ts nursmg an InJured knee.
In two maJor traimng camp
developments Thursday, hoebacker Ttm Rossovtch stgned a
contract wtth the Chargers and
rookte runmng back Bobby
Moore agreed to terms wtth Ute
Cardinals Rossovtch was recently acqwred by the Chargers
!rom the Phtladeiphta Eagles
wht le Moore was the Cardmals
No I draft chmce thtS year

Pomeroy's Peewee Stars
Bump Middleport 9 to 2
The Pomeroy Peewee All·
Stars bumped the Mtddleporl
AJI.Stars 9-2 at Mtddleport
Tuesday rught in an ···AU-Star
Battle " between the twtn
towns
Chns McKinney and Steve
Ohlmger combmed to lurut
Mtddleport to JUSt two hits as
they fanned 12 and walked
seven J eff Wayland and Brttt
Dodson combmed to fan 12 and

walk 10 lor Middleport.
Top hitter for Pomeroy was
Ohhnger wtth a single and
home run whtle Rtch
Etsenhower smacked a grand
slam home run, Harvey
Whitlatch cracked a :our·
bagger , and J. R. Wamsley got
a smgle All three of Pomeroy's
home runs cleared the fence
Wayland and Dodson each
smgled for Mtddleport.

'm the next few years "

"I've seen many more m htgh
schools and colleges, and once
there are more playmg tn maJor conferences Utey wtll advance up Ute ladder to the
pros," Skonch sa1d
Asked tf the belief that wht te
players would not respond to
the leadershtp of a black quar·
terback had caused the sttuatton, Skonchsa1d "perhaps that

LOSING OUT

was a reason."

· But a lot of that resiStance
Gomez gol the nickname "Goofy" from Frank "Buck" O'Netll,
has been broken down m rea late newspaperman who covered the Yankees for Ute old New
cent years," Skortch sa td. " I
For several seasons before see tl as no problem The mam
95 in Box
York Journa!American.
"I never felt badly about being called Goofy," says Gomez "I
1971 Southern was known as an thm g now 1s black quarterbacks
automattc wm lor the op- wtll have to prove themselves
remember how it all came about. We were on thiS tram going to
95
position Last year Southern hke anyone else "
Washmgton, D.C., and Albert Einstetn also was on the tram. sophomores , and JUniOrs
in Box
Buck O'Neill asked me 'Do you know who he IS?' I satd yes, he seasoned w1th a few semors
was m every game, gavmg !Is
Int ernational League
mvented the theory of relattvity. O'NeiU asked me if I ever inWallace's successor thts
opposttton man y a nxt ous
Stand1ngs
95
moments, but shll losmg stx
vented anything. ! said yes, I had invented a revolving gold fish year ts Btll Jewell, an asstslant
Umted Press International
in Box
times
bowl which would enable gold ftsh to live longer by savtng thetr at Southern the last two years
W L Pet GB
61 46 570
strength The bowl would go around, Ute people could see a lot Jewell mhert ts an expenenced
Thmgs could be dtfferent m lOUISV Ill e
Charleston
58 47 552 2
more much eaSJer that way and theftSh wouldn't have to swim so and well-drtlled backfteld,
1972
57 52 523 5
Tidewa ter
much. O'Neill said I was goofy "
Toledo
56 52 519 Slf2
Rochest er
56 53 514 6
Far from Goofy
Sy ra cuse
52 58 473 lOlJ~
With Cord
.,.._,.,, I.Afty. Gomc·Y.far from-that.
· ·' .
R ichmond ·· SO 58 463 ll 1h
'
Htllves In F e , calif., 20miles north of San Franoisco now
Pe nm sula
42 66 389 l9 1h
Thursday'sResulls
··
wilh his wife, 3lll!e, ddes Youth League work wlth 't;ids m that •
Charl eston 2 Rochester I (51f&gt;
are11 and stlllls a familiar figure around major and minor league
mnmgs, ra 1n)
clubs in a sales and promotion capaclly for Wtlson Sportmg
PHONE 992-2238
RICh mond 5 lOUISVI lle l (7
mnmgs, ra1n)
Goods Company.
Pen1nsula 3 Toledo 2
202 N. 2nd AVE.
His memories of old Yankee teammates remain vivid.
Syracuse 4 Tidewater 2
- Babe Ruth: "One of the greateSt guys I ever met He had so
much lime for kids The color he had can't be descrtbed. I don 't
In other Naltonal League gam htS 12th vtctory
think there'll ever be another like hun in my time .. "
BY JOE CARNICELLI
- LDu Gehrig: "A different type personality than the Babe
games, Los Angeles blanked
Dave Roberts smgled m Jerry
UP! Sports Writer
Completely different I considered it an honor lo be on the same
Maybe next time Btll Hands San Franctsco, 3-0, Ptttsburgh Morales wtth the dectding run
team as him ... "
wtll keep his hands to himself edged St. Lows, 2-1, In 10 m San Otego's fourth slratght
-.Joe McCarthy : "A truly remarkable manager He would've
Hands ptlched a one-httter mmngs, San Otego downed vtctory over the Braves Nate
been a success many business he went Into ... "
Thursday mght as the Chtcago Atlanta, 6-5, m 11 mmngs and Colbert drove in two runs wtth
-.Joe DiMaggio: "I could never say eno1J8h about Joe. A Cubs beat Ute Montreal Expos, Phtladelphta beat New York, 4- hts 31st homer and Curt
comes
a
wonderful roonunate He ran down plenty of my mistakes . "
Blefary also homered for tttie
3-Q, m Ute second game or a 1
in American League actton, Padres
Lefty Gomez says he has one regret, that the late Johnny doubleheader and the lone httMurphy, who saved so many games for him, won't be on hand at a sevenUt-tnmng smgle by Ken Boston whtpped New York, 7-2,
The Phtls scored twtce m Ute
Cooperstown, N.Y., Monday
Stngleton-came when Hands Mmnesota bombed Texas, 9·1, Stxth mmng on a bases-loaded
Some Qulbblen Talk
deflected the ball away from Cleveland edged Baltimore, 4-3, walk and a sacrtftce fly to
BAKED-ON
SOLID
Since Gomez was voted into the Hall of Fame by the special shortstop Paul Popovtch
Chtcago stopped Califorma, 4-2, defeat Ute Mets Barry Lersch
Committee on Veterans, who also voted In Wllliam Harridge and
ENAMEL
WHITE
"That's Ute closest that 1"11 and Mtlwaukee upended De- and rookie Mac Scarce comRoss Youngs, both dead, some quibblers can say Lefty isn't going ever get to a no-httter," Hands trot!, 6-3, in the only games bmed for a stx-httler
in the !root door the way Sandy Koufax, Yogt Berra and Early satd "And tt should have been scheduled
, Wynn are, but rather the side door.
Tommy John allowed only
a no-httter because I had no
GUARANTEED
The quibblers are all wet.
three
htts m gammg hts ftrst
business trying to stop that
NOT TO
John McGraw, Connie Mack, Casey Stengel, Rube Waddell, hard grounder It was a reflex NL shutout as the Dodgers beat
CHIP-FLAKE
• Edd Roush, Miller Huggins, Waite Hoy! and Sam Crawford got In action on my part to try and the Gtants. John, now 9-5, held
Ute same way, being named by the Veterans' Committee Instead stop Ute ball. I should have let San Franctso hitless for f1ve
OR
,• of by the sportswrllers In the regular f'{ection, and there's no it go It bounced orr my glove tnnings before Dave Rader led
PEEL
question they belong
\.__}
"Popovich was right behmd off the stxlh with a smgle.
So does Lefty Gomez.
Check your dnv er's license
me and he says he could have Wtllle DaviS stngled in one run
If tf expires fh 1s year you
.,. "Regardless of how I got in , I'm Uckled to death," he says. "I easily got the ball and made 11 and scored anoUter and Manny
STAYS UP
must
renew 1t BEFORE your
think II 's wonderful.! wish I rould tell you how happy this makes into a double play l"m not Ute Mota smgled home the Uttrd to
borlhda
y'
me, bull don't have the words."
type to pitch a no-httter though back John.
ALWAYS
This reminder courtesy of
The fact is there never was anything really goofy about Lefty tomght I knew I had a real
Vtc Davahllo's smgle scored
WORLD'S LARGEST
Gene Alley with the wtnning
Gomez.
chance at one."
MOTORISTS'
Chicago scored a run in Ute run in the lOth inmng and
ORGANIZATION
ftrst on singles by Joe Pepttone boosted the Pirates over St.
Subu rb A-Port's clean structural li nes Will
and Jim Htckman and two Louis Consecutive two-out SID·
enhance the beauty of yo1..r home-and set
walks and added two more m gles by Alley, Mill May and
you apart as a "particular home owner'
A GREAT IDEA FOR
the sixth on singles by Davaltllo helped Steve Blass
call us and let our representative show you
OVER70YEARSI
.,
Pepitone , Hickman and Ron
14,000,000 AAA members are
how httle 11 costs to enjoy wonderful out
Santo and a passed ball to earn OILERS RELEASED
American League
"' By United Press International
enjoying
trovel
more
with
dogr hvmg.
KERRVIlLE, Tex. (UPI )- AAA Tour Books. Trlptlks
East
a spht. Montreal won the
Natlonll La•gue
w. I. pet. g.b. opener, 2-1, when pinch-hitter Center Dave Urie, G.foot-5, 256- and Instant Reservations.
East
w I pet. g b. Detroit
55 43 .56t
pound second-year man from are protected by Personal
Deubl• 'V''I2'- Widt
Pittsburgh
61 37 622
Baltimore
53 45 541 2 Ron Woods singled home pinch1
~II Porme d Ponti
New York
53 « 546 712 New York
49 47 510 5 runner Carl Morton, who lost Colorado and offenstve guard Travel Accident Insurance,
, Chicago
53 48 525 91f2 Boston
49 48 505 51h the second game, wiUt Ute tie- Randy Logan, a &amp;-fool-3, 245- Emergency Road Serv1ce,
15,000 Ball Bond , and are
St Louis
48 49 495 t21f&gt; Cleveland
45 53 459 10
breaking run in the last of lite pound rookie from Flortda welcomed at 850 Offices In
Montreal
« 52 458 t6
Milwaukee
40 58 408 15
Stale, were released Thursday the Un1led States and
13th.
Philadelphia 37 62 374 24'/,
West
by the Houston Otlers ·
West
w. I. pet. g.b .
Canada
Roll formtd
w. 1. pet. g.b. Oakland
61 38 616
CoM:•ol•d G111tll!'
" Cincinnati
58 38 604
Chicago
55 43 .561 5112
UNIFORMS WANTED
Why
you?
Houston
55 45 550 5 Mlnnesolo
49 46 516 10
Th I Daliu
Sent'11'11I
Members of Racine's LilUe
Los Angeles 51 47 520 s
Kansas City 46 51 .474 14
"J
League
and Pee Wee learns are
Atlanta
46 54 .460 14
California
44 55 4« 17
DEVOTED TO TH!
Stop by the Auto Club at JJ
San Francisco 45 56 446 151f&gt; Texas
40 59 404 21
INTEREST OF
to turn in their uniforms
Court Street, Golllpohs, 0 . or
San Diego
40 59 404 19lf&gt;
Thursday's Resulls
MEIGS·MASON AREA
Monday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. phone "2·2590 or 446-0699.
Tlwrsday's Results
Boston 7 New York 2
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
luc.
Ed
at
the home of Larry Wolfe.
T
t
Ml nneso I0 9 exas
Philadelphia 4 New York 1
ROaERT HOEFLICH,
Mont 2 Chi 1, 1St, 13 Inns
Cleve 4 Baltimore 3
Clly ldllor
Chicago 3 Montreal 0, 2nd
Ch!cago 4 Calllorn la 2
Pubhshtd dooly excopl
Pitts 2 St. Louis 1, 10 Inns
Milwaukee 6 Detroit 3
Soturdoy by Tnt Ohio Volley
They Did It Again!
San Diego 6 Alia 5, t1 Inns
(Only gamesscheduled)
Publishing Com oany , 111
Los Ang 3 San Francisco 0
Court 51. Pomeroy, Ohio ,
led)
A5769 Business Off•ct Phont
(Onl ygomes sc hedu
Today's Problblt Pitchers
992 2156, Ed otoroal Phone 992.
Today's Problblt Pitchers
!All Times EDTl
2157
•
(All TIIMS EDTI
Oakland (Odom 9-31 at
Second cioss ooslogepold at
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, 0.
Pittsburgh (Walker 4·51 11 Mlnneoota !Bfyleven 9-14) , 8 30 Pomeroy , Ohio
'•
PRESENTS
Immediate del/11el'l and lnafa/laf/on I
Monlrooi!Moore2-5),8p.m.
Not ional odvartlstng
• Chicago (Jenkins 14-9) at p.mCalllornl• 'Ryan 12.9) at repruentotove Bottlnettl
Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star
· .,
York •McAndrew 6 3) 8
""'~ '
G1tlagher. Inc. 12 E111 •2nct
" ;:~
'
· '
Kansas City IDal Canton S-4), St , Ntw York City, Now York
•· ·
phi 'R
ld o 8) 8·30 P m
Subscripllon roles Do
LYN CAMPBELL
Phlladel a ' eyno s ·
· Texas · (Stanhouse 1-21 at livered b'l carr ier where
,. at St. Louts &lt;Durham 0-J), 9 Chicago (Bahnsen 13- 101 , 9 p.m avollobte 50 cents per wHk,
Also Starring The Popular
p.m
01
II
'Lollch
t
..
•t
BvMotor
Aouttwhtrte:lrr.er
GEO• HALL
)
6
I
Hauston (Reuss 7·81 at San
e ro
'
u
service not evolloble: One
Cleveland l'fldrow 8-9), 7:30 montn IllS By mall In Ohio
FfanclscotBarrol-3), 11 p.m.
• San Diego IArlin 8-tJI at Los . P mNew York 'Peterson 11 _11 , at and w va , One yoor S14 DO '
One Week OnlyAng1tes(SingerHl. 11f.m.
• •'p
") • 30 Six months $725 Thrtt
nd -,. - "
"The Department Store of Building Since 1915"
Atlanta (Stone J.
and Mtlwau.ee ' arsons s., , B·
montho u so Subscription
Opening Mo ay, ..ug, t
• Mcl.,aln 2·11 at Cincinnati p. ~ltlmore (Dobson 12-10) at ~:~ct~n':,cludu .Sundoy, Timu
$1.00 Cover Charge Sot. Night, Aug. 12
2
!Grimsley
ll!::i~u::I~R:::!l):;R:uoliJ;::il:~I=IJ::!IJ;!IIJ;::il:~~::oJ;;:~~:u::i~ • •. .
5:30
p.m. 9·4 and Hall .C.l), • Boston (Pattin tt-10), 7,30 p m.
•u

2 c~. 18" ________ _! 52
4 c~. 18" --------~ 67
4 c~.

20"--------!71

19" Lawn Boy Electric

Hands ,Spoils His Own
No-Hitter At Montreal

$8995 , ~ -Bo~ #
H&amp;R. FIRESTGN:E

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"BUILT-IN" with

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• PATIO COVER •

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YOU CAN'T BEAT THIS

-THE KINGS ARMS NilE Q.UB

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'POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.

t.....--------!

•••••••••••••IIII!..•••••IIJI!l••lll•-

�. ...

•

•

. It .

~

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~

.. *• ..

• ..

'

..

&gt;

.,
3- The J?allY Sentinfl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972
~a' c&amp; su.mnoc=o ·.:.u no %.$iW(:r; :::ow ~·· · i.oa$:;:

2- The Daily Sentinfl, Mlddleport·l'llmeroy, 0., Aug. 4, 1972

Roundup Time "

EDIJORIALS

"'

' I

I'
I

l

'

NORTH

A special dispatch to the New York Ttmes warns that
" m the next three weeks . mtlllons ol mosquttoes-mo re
than double the normal amount- wtll be hat ched m New
Jersey's marshes and wellands
"
The normal amount of mosq ut toes ev1denlly, ts hal fmtllions

Movies Go Ape, Now
Those who say the movtes are gotn g to the dogs at e
wrong
The movtes used to be gomg to the dogs when Lasste
and Rin Tm Tin and Shasta were around
But if you wtll take a look at cu1 re nt films bemg show n
around the country, you wtll see th at m tact mov1es todav
are going to the fro gs. the rattlesnakes th e 1ats and the
apes
You can't stop progress

-- Us.

By Helen Bottel

• •

An ''Other Woman" ID Name Only

Dear Helen:

.QI098
• 16 2

"'1043
WEST

EAST

.104
•Kss
.QJ1083
"'KQS
SOUTH

.76532

•1

.K94

"'8762
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•

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Both vulnerable

w..t North East South
Pass

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

I•
4•

Openmg lead- • Q

«·,~~m-:o:-m:·:·&gt;:·:':'.~·:··,,,,,

.. ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,"',,,,,,,:&gt;;:o::,'X:'iX:!ii~'&lt;~'"'!$~&lt;:~,~~,'*-~. .. .,.,

BY JACK O'BRIAN
FRENCH HAVE AWORD -EXPENSIVE
CHERBOURG (KFS ) - Nothtng like
gettmg off on the wrong foot · when we landed at
Cherbourg at 5 p.m., we looked forward to a trtp
by car Utrough the French countryside to PartS,
and so we 'd arranged to have car and drtver
meet us at the QE2 dockSide He was there,
Gaston Daldosst by name; he spoke a mediUmaccented English complete wtth an easy
command of the New York vernacular whtch
mdicated posittvely he'd spent some time m The
States ; he had. Ten years m Yonkers, where
he 'd been m the constructton busmess ; but hiS
wtfe, a dedtcated Francophile, !malty stamped
her ltttle foot, and off they fled to Paris.
It wasn't Gatson's wrong foot we got off on.
It was the car , and not tts condttion nor tts
comfort It sunply was the ktck in Ute bank
account that this live-hour trip cost whtch
lowered our fiScal sptrtts on that expenSive day.
The real reason for Ute mordinate cost to us of
such a dnve from Cherbourg to PartS was the
mtlieu we 've Jotned over the almost.Jfl years
we've covered show busmess. We'd never tak~
such all!Dousme-&lt;irive before mFrance; simply
had taken Ute hoat-train from Cherbourg or
LeHavre at a comparatively modest ltcket
pnce But after enJoying the superb drive , the
fascmatmg scenery, Ute hiStorical trip through
Normandy meadows, where our Allied lads had
landed and successfully mvaded m WWII,
havtng Gaston pomt out stghts and sites of Utat
vtolent march from the sea to ltberate Pans, the
ultimate shock of learnmg the next day what
Utat drtve had cost was the shocker : $250!
Again, evtdence that PartS IS the most
expeiiSlve city m Ute world. Our own fault
completely. Our closest friends m Pans are
Amertcans m show business These Amertcan
expatrtates, up to thetr penctls in charge accounts which are balanced by expense accounts
mostly from big film ftrntS, take luxury and
exorbitant charges lor granted; after all, tt's
part of Uteir lives, Ute perquiSite, the "perks" as
tlley're called; or m politics, "lulus," mearung
expenses "In lieu of" supposedly expected costs
or domg busmess. We swallowed hard on that
$250 bill ; billhe bullet and relaxed. Mter aU, the
PartS branch or the U S. Film colopy has accepted exorbitance lor decades. Oh, well.
Our Amertean ftlm colony JS like show

........."

I

busmess chques anywbere: they cluster. For
lunch, tl always is Fouquet's oo the Champs..
Elysees, sunply because all the big film firms
are w1Uttn walking diStance. The second floor at
Fouquet's is Tbe Place. Film talk is as much a
part of the place and mood as the food. Our
friend, Dav1d Lewis, for 50 years with MGM,
ftnJShed up as head of Its European and Middle
East operations, considered his predicament In
retirement (he's well tnto his 7119) and decided
he was too young for pasture. With Charles
Lachman, co-founder of Revlon with Charles
Revson, rehred in 1965a centlmillionaire (that's
more than 100 million) and decided also ht was
too young to vegetate So Dave and Otarles
started Two Worlds Films and proceeded to
turn out hit after hit: "My Night AI Maud's,''
"More," and half a dozen others followed
profttably; so Dave and Charlie can afford
Fouquet's
We met there a pair of brothers who run the
estimable Gaumont Film group. They
recounted the attempts to keep French films
clean . they own a vast nwnber of cinemas and
),nstSt on hi@ter. stands~ of ceUuloid tidiQ!Iu
1han most. Their Influence is sq gn,t• the
number of their own theatres"" vut, that they
do keep movtes clean; or else they don't get a
Gaumont hookmg. One new executive made a
speech to theatre owners m Paris, recounting
the upcorrung "product" as II is called, with
many a sly mnuendo as to the heavily erotic
content of a great number of said films. The
Gaumont ~wners iooked knowingly at each
uu•••, •oo wnen 11 came time lo sign for said
untidy ''product," skipped the entire output of
the firm That was Indeed disastrous and proof
that dirt in films is IDIStakenly cash-connected
when the Gaumonts shut out the offending
studio, tt suddenly discovered there are dollars
m decency.
Great expanses of nudity, fornication ,
homosexual acts and obscene dialogue suddenly
were able to be chopped from said filclat. It was
a triumph for family films. Naturally, or unnaturally, there are other theatre owners in
France lacking the education decency or the
Gaumont cham; but the GaiDIIOnt declBion had
a deep effect on other exhibitors because
Gaumont not ooly is the biggest chain but the
most profitable; and as Gaumont goes, so follow
the lesser chains and independents. Mary
Poppms promptly breathed easier

"Other Women" aren't always villams. Sometimes Utey're
just very looely houseWives whose husbands pay them no al·
tention and they're looking for a little meanmg lo thetr lives And
find none - even m the Other Man
Take me: I ale alone, shopped alone, watched TV alone, and
finally got a job because I couldn't stand the constant waittng lor
an almoellnvlslble husband who wasn't there- even when he
was In the room with me.
AI work, I mel a man who acted as if I counted. He tells me
be'scrazy about me, but he can't leave his wife and chtldren His
wife knows about his affairs and doesn't mind, so long as they
stay married. He's honest with me: says he doesn ·~ expect this to
be ''undying love" but, for now, I'm Ute btggest thing in hiS life,
so why don't we go to bed?
!love him so much I think of him night and day - but I won't
give ln. Having been discarded by one man (the husband who
ignores me), I can 'l face another disappointment. Bestdes, I've
got &amp;a'llpies.
So here I am, Ute ''Other Woman" m name only, married m
name only, and hopelessly in love with a man who just wants a
fling. If I quit my job to avoid him, l'U go back to - nothing. If I
stay on, l'U be hurt, one way or another. Is there any hope for an
- HONORABLE O.W.
DearO.W.
Why not try honest appratSal? Face it, you were ripe to ''fall
hopelessly in love" with the first man who noticed you were still a
woman. Be grateful for his frankness He's saved you a lot bigger
hurt by admitting he only wants a little romance on the stde
Next: look at your marrlage. ls there any hope here• If not, By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. My husband and I would like
to know tf 11 would be safe
don't stay with a lost cause. Find another job, preferably in a
Dear Dr. Lamb-! would r
t
different location, make new friends, and get on wiUt life. (And grea tl y apprectate tl 1f you 1or ust o stop
D0 usmg thcon-k
would answer my questwns
racep tves
you
m
don't settle for crwnbs!) - H.
I s t op p c d · menstruatmg there would be any chance
abruptly when 1 was 42 of my gettmg pregnant
Dear Helen:
yea rs old and 1 am now 47 agam' That's the last lhmg
I felt for "Ungrateful," who wasn't thrtlled when her _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w_e_w_o_ui_d_w_a_n_t_b_e_c_a_us_e_o_u_r
husband brought home two tickets to a live ball game
Not only do I suffer from weekend TV sports but I put up with
them other evenings too. And that'snot all. My retired husband is
.ddlcted to IDIIP operas, westerns and old movies. And nothing
mual dlaturb him!
When I go grocery shopping, I blow the horn for him to help
meunloadlhecar, then unload it myself, as I'd have to walt for a
~ercial.
·
Once I was llflln8 ashes out of the fireplace, and the cardbaird bol ca1J8hl fire. ID panic, I called to my husband to help,
but be just aald, "Wait till this inning is over!"
0
Afta' 40yearsofwaitlngfor the joy of retirement, 1 fmd ram
a -TV WIDOW, AND UNGRATEFUL, TOO

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Fertility Questions After Menopause

-

Dear TV:
C&amp;n'tyoumanage a TV breakdown, then p!Bn a trip until it's
!IJ:ed? Sometimes retired people gel locked Into the lube because
they've forgotten there is anything better to do. -H.

Dear Helen:
Our illndlady refused to fix up our place. She lives up above
1111 and occuionally has wild parties. During the last one, about
half the ceiling plaster feU down on our bed.
Finally, in desperation, we bought supplles and repatred
leab, broken tiles, the ceWng, and did a lot of painting.
. Then -lhe raised lbe rent. Says she can get a lot more for
the apartment now it looka so much better. What can we do?
We'd rather not move as we can't afford higher rent, and best des
IIIII II near our kids' scltool.-HELP
DMr Help:
Write ber a letter of protest, itemizing the amount you have
~pent on repairs - and lll!lld a copy to the Rent Control Board.
(lt'lll.lled under Internal ~venue Service.) -H.

4

.AJ8

I, Voice along Br'Way 1
News You Just Itch for

llftiDGI

Wins Too
Soon, So

'

Yes, the Corvoir
Started Something
A two-yeat studv by the Depa1 tment of Transp~1tat 10n s
Highway Safe tv Admmtstt alton has g1ve n thl' Co1vau a
clean b11! of health. cnlhng the compact cao no more tm
stable than other a u tom o b t I e s of the sanw vea1 aud
wetght.
Ralph Nader, who first pomted the fin ge1 at the Cot··
vair's alleged t·eadmess to roll ovet (spec tfically, the 1960·
63 models) , has branded the tepott ·a shoddy. mtetna llv
contradtctory whttewash "
Be that as tt may, tt ts mteres ttng to spec ulate on how
different a lot of things mtght be toda y had the oiTtcoal
study been avatlable five 01 stx years ago
11 was the Corvatr controversy , tt w11l be 1emembeted.
that launched Nader on hts career as the natton 's leadmg
consumer advocate. Smce then , he and the hosts he has
insptred have crusaded fot better safet y and betlet pt od
ucts in everythmg from gas ptpehnes to dams m Ca Itforma to phosphates 111 detergents The H1ghwav Safety
Admtmstration ttself ts a crealton of thts pet•tod
Not only the consumer movement but aroused public
concern over ecology, envtronment, pollutton and popula·
tton and diSenchantment wtth btg cm porattons hav e come
into thetr own m JUSt the past few years
Would none of tt have happened had tt not been for the
Corvair? Would that car sttll be m productton and would
we still be drtving around m cars wtthout seatbelts. col·
lapStble steermg wheels. padded dashes and asso1 ted
warnmg buzzers and pollutiOn equtpment With more to
come? Would we sl11l be merrtly filhng the sk1es w1th
smoke and the waterwa ys wtth filth '
Not likely All of these thmgs-safety, pollution, the
whole "quahty of hfe" btl- were tdeas whose t1m es wet·e
beginmng to come long before Nadel and the.Corvaor
Yet that controversy over a little car prov1ded a focal
point for public conce .1 whtch raptdl v expanded •o e'll·
brace all these other ISsues
It was, as the hiStonans say, a watershed event fr om
which much, both good and bad has flowed

WIN AT

~ tmlrHU,~
" If you can't sleep, Ralph, try thinking of the
Republican conrentionl"

family IS grown up and mar·
ned
Dear Reader- Every woman, particularly Ill your age
group, should have a regular
exammation by her doctor
One reason is for the early
detecbon of cancer of the
cervix, which can be cured
tf found soon enough. Another is for examination of her
breasts During such an ex·
ammaUon, a doctor can do
a test which tells him what
the nature or the cells are
that ltne the vagina. This
helps m identifying whether
the woman has sufflctent female hormone or not and
therefore is an index of the
function of her ovaries.
I don't like to tell any
woman that she can't get
pregnant unless she has had
an examination and a series
of st~dies. It's always pos·
stble. However, I must add
that it is most unlikely that a
woman who has gone
through the change of life
and has not menstruated for
two years would gel pregnant. Some women who are
not menstruatln~ have not
actually gone through the
change of I1fe. This 1s one
reason an examination by
the doctor Is mdicated.
Dear Dr . ..,. Lamb - My
mother Is 50 years old and
she is going to the hospital
for some tests . A CBC, SMA,
and EKG. Please tell me
wha\ these are.
Dear Reader - A CBC
means a' complete blood

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Lots of people play brtdge
for relaxation but the ones
who play good bridge don't
relax when actually playmg
thetr cards.
It ts just a cinch for South
to relax and win the first diamond trtck with the ace. The
contract looks ironclad so
why think' If he makes that
play he ts likely to wind up
cursmg the gods or chance
He enters dummy wtth
Jack of spades and loses a
trump fmesse. West leads a
second dtamond and East is
on lead wtth the king. Now
tl East shoots back a club
South wtll play low West
wtll take the queen ; get out
wtth a card in any other swt
and watt for the setting trtck
wtth the club kmg
Bad luck indeed Three
cards out of three wrong but
unnecessary South loses
nothing by ducking the ftrst
dtamond The suit IS contmued South wins , enters
dummy wtlh that same jack
or spades and loses that
same trump finesse West
has no way to get hts partner on lead
South wins the ret urn,
manages to ruff dummy's
last dtamond . draws two
more rounds of trumps ,
cashes the spades , leads a
club , !messes hts mne and
shows West hts hand
West has to lead away
!tom htS remainmg club
honor or gtve South a ruff
and discard Simple, once
South stayed awake at trick

The

West
I.

b1ddmg has been:
North
Eoot South
2.

Pus

2.

?
Pus 3•
Pass
You, South, hold
.8743
.AKIU •112

•z

What do you do now'?
A-Btd lour dabs. lblo is a
ohght overbid, but II you pus
you may well be missinJ a
ram e.

TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of h1ddmg two diamonds, you Simply raised your

partner to three clubs He

con~

tmued to four dubs. What do
you do now?
Answer tomorro\\

Q-Why ts there total
tence on the moon?

SJ·

A-There ts not enough
atmosphere to carry sound.
Q-Wh1Ch pres1&lt;lent kept

the same Cabinet through·
out h1s admmtstratlon?
A- Frankltn Pierce
count, which includes count·
lng the number of red blood
ceUs and looking at their
characterillics, counting the
number of white blood ceUs
and separating them into the
various types of white blood
cells plus looking at thell'
characteristics on a slide. In
most laboratories it also In·
eludes measuring the hemoglobin for iron in the blood
to be certain that there is no
anemia.
The SMA is a term for an
automated method of measuring the different chemical
elements in the blood, like
the blood sugar. With· one
smaU sample of the patient's
blood, the analyzer accom·
pUshes many tests which
used to be done laboriously
by hand by laboratory tech·
nlcians. II essentially pro·
vides information concern·
mg chemical balance and
chemical content of the body.
An EKG refers to an elec·
trocardlogram, and Is properly caUed an ECG. The older term EKG arises from
the the fact that much of
the early electrocardiographic study was done by German speaking people and the
word for heart in German is
Kardio, as oppoaed to the
English cardlo. It is of
course a measurement or the
electrical activity of the
heart to detect heart disease.
INIWSP.PII INTIIPllll .USN.)

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Television Log
FRIDAY, AUGUST 4
7 JO - To Tell The Truth 6, Dragnet! ; Adam 12 3, I Dream or
Jeannie 4; Mr Rogers 20. Governor and J. J 10.
8 00 - Washington Week In Preview 20, Brady Bunch 6, 13,
O'Hara U S Treasury 8; Book Boot 33. Partners 3, 4.
Basebill 15
8.30 - Partridge Famllr 6, t3, Movie "Search" 3. Movie " A
Mbn Could Get ~I lied' 4. Between Words 20, 33.
9 00 - Room 222 6, 13, Movie "Something Evil" 8; Movte
" Seven Thieves" 10.
·
9 30 - 0dd Couple6, t3 ; Devout Young 20, 33
10 00 - Love American Style 13 , News 20, Doln' tt 33; Olympians '72 6
to 30 - Dr Simon Locke3, Dr. In The House4 ; Rollin ' on R1ver
15, PGA Tournament Preview 6, 13. Washington Week In
Review 33
11 :00 - NewsJ, 4. 6, 8, tO, 13, 15
1t :30 - Johnnr Carson 3, 4, 15, Dick Cavett 6 , Movie 8; Movie
"The Son o Dr. Jekyll " 10: Movie " Ocean's, 13
1·00 - Roller Derby 4; Movie "The Mask of btljon" 10
t 30 - News 13
2:00 - News 4
SATURDAY AUGUST 5
6:00 - Fa1lh tor Today 10
6. JO - TV Classroom 8. Christopher Closeup 10
7 00 - Neighbors t3 . Communique 6. Farm Front 4, Deeth
Valley Days 8 , Societies In Transition 10. John's Almanac 3
7 15 - Woman's Point ot VIew 13
7 30 - Gilligan's Is 4, Man from C.OS I 10; Gospel6, Blastoff
t3; Monkees 8; Farmbook 3
8 00- Dr Doollttle3, 4, 15. Jerry Lewis 13; Bugs Bun11y 8, 10,
Fun tor Everyone 6
8 15 - Matters of Life 6
8 30 - Deputy Dog 3, 4, 15, Road Runner 6, 13, Scooby Doo 8,
Bugs Bunny 10.
9 00 - Woody Woodpecker 3, 4, 15, Funky Phantom 6. 13.
Harlem Globetrotters 8, 10
9 30 - Pink Panther3, 4, 15, Jackson Flve6, 13, Help Hair Bear
Bunch 8, 10
10 00 - Jetsons 3, 4, t5 : Bewitched 6, 13; Pebbles and Bamm
Bamm 8, 10.
10 30 - Barrier Reel 3, 4, 15, Llddsvllle 6, lJ ;cArchie's TV
Funnies 8, 10
11 00 - Sabrina 8, 10, Curiosity Shop6, NBC Chttdren's Theatre
3. 4, 15.
1t: 30 - Josle &amp; Pussycats 8. 10.
12 00- Mr Wizard 3, 4, 15 , Jonny Quest t3, Batman 8, Monkees
10.
12 30 - Bugaloos 3, 15, You Are There 8, 10, Roller Derby 4
Lancelol Link 4, 13; Miniature Golf 6
1:00 - CBS Children's Film Fesllval8, 10. Kartoon Karnlval 3
American Bandstand 6, 13, Western Theater 15
1.30- Banana Splits 3, Johnny Bench 4
2 00 - Roller Derby 6 , Job Show tO, Kentucky Afield 13 ,
Baseball3, 4, Canadian Pro FootballS, To Be Announced 15.
2 15 - BasebaiiJ, 4, 15, OUr National Parks10, You! 13
3 00 - Untamed World6. Movie "Saddle Tramp" 10
3;.30- Lee Trevino 6, Celebr ity Bowling 13
4 00 - Wide World of Sports 6, 13
4 30 - Gospel Music 8, Movie " Teahouse ot the August Moon"
10
5 00 - Wresttlnq 8, Midwestern Hayride 4, Sports Challenge 3,
Roller Derby 15
5 30 - Bill Andersoo 3, Golf Tournament 6, t3
6 00 - News, Weather, Sports3, 4, 8, 10
6 30 - NBC News3. CBS News B. 10 : NewS4
7 00 - This Is Your Life 3, Hee Haw 8, Lawrence Welk 13, 4,
Death Valley Days 10
7 30 - Nashville Music 3, Green Acres 10
8 00 - AIIIn The Family 8, 10, Movie "Cast a Giant Shadow" 3,
15; Movie "Fireball500" 6, 13 , Movie "Thunder In The Sun"
4

a 30 -

Mbry Tyler Moore 8, to
9 00 - Dick Van Dyke 8, 10.

9 JO- Movle "The Night Welker" 4, Arni~B , 10
tO OO - KenBerry6,13;Misslon lmposstbte8,tO

11 00 - News, Weather, Sports 3, ~, 6, 13

11 IS - News 6. 13
11 30 - Movie "The Curse ot the Werowolt" 3, Movie
0

Manhandled 11 ; Movie "The Mole

Peopl~",

Mov ie "Killers

of Klllmanlaro" 8, Mo vie "Something Evil" 10, Mov ie
"Invisible Agent" 13
t2 30 - Movte "The Invisible Mbn's Revenge" t3
1 00 - Mov1e " Oark Intruder" 3. Movie "Three Hours to Kil t"
tO
1 30- Movie " The Invisible Woman" 13
1 t5 - Movie "Conspiracy" 4
2 30- "The Arizonian." 4. News 13
4 00 - Movie "The Last Outpost" 4.

pi 1:

j

:*· ·····m·~:::::~:;;;~::s~:?R~l''

·· · .... ··

ITube
Talk
1
BP.ulCbtre
~~~:;

ya

rae

:::!
~

How about a law that would require all astronauts to be
the age of 18?
I think I'd vote for it
Why•
WeU, there's increasing evidence that space travel Isn't as
safe as it was cracked up to be - with the gravltaUonal forces,
llmlted diets, confining restrictloM of the space capeule, etc ,
taking their toU on Ute physiology and psychology of the over-30
gang at llolL!ton.
Allin aU, it's becoming clear that a mlddle~ed man wasn 't
meant to go wheeling off to practice chip shots on the surface of
the moon.
But- after considering the county fair scene now upon IIII I am firmly convinced that a band of teenagers could survive the
ravages or outa' space to perfection.
At the Gallla CoiDlty Junior Fair just concluding ... at the
Mason County Fair starting up next week ... at the Meigs Fair
just down Ute pike, I'd recommend thai you look at the wUd,
screaming rides along the midway, and then look at who's doing
the riding.
Some of these rides look appalllngly dangeroua, spinning and
whipp~ and gyrating the puaengen almolt as bad u any
spaceaaft could ever do. And there tbey are -the teeny-boppers
and their llhaggy boyfrienda, the little tylles at the fil'lt1JI'ade
level, the Utile League crowd. They're taking their lives in their
hands,llappearstome,and-in the words of the old spy movies
-"loving lt."
&lt;Mce in a wltlle, you spot a mother or father along the midways at the fairs, getting one one of the rides. They're green,
lhoroughly llhaken, and totally unfit for further navigation.
(Uaually, they went along to "protect" a tiny tot from one of the
rides - and the kid pops out of the capsule calmly Ucklng his
lollipop, whUe Daddy hesda for the neareat cltDDp of bushes to
loae hla dinner.)
So why not 1111e ~e fairs as a proving ground (we're doing
hlghllgbts of all three on cable TV, which mesna our crewa are
arollld the grotmda a lot, and wUI conflnn what I'm saying), and
recruit the next beteh or utronauta from the nine-tCHJineteen
~a~der

set•

They'd thrive on space food, being used to peanut butter,
pizzas and pop, with digestive tracts of pw-eat steel. They'd love
the crowded space, since 11101t teenagen' rooma are 110 cluttered
they Uve in about a three-by.flve compartment during their
pubescent yean, anybow.
And the UtUer ooes could collect dirt, rocb, and other Jn.
tereatlng thing a far laster than adults, having had more practice.
The only argument against : h would inevitably spawn a terrible
late, late llhow, "I Was a Teenage Astronaut."
ON 'niE WEEKEND 'IV DIAL: Saturd8y - WLWC.TV
offers a treat in two prime-time movlea, ''Thunder in the Sun,"
and ''Night Walkers." They foUow up with their u.aua1 quadrup~
feature, with the Jut llhow lltarling at 4 a.m., and there are at
leut fifteen other lllclat on this evening.
Sports aboiDld, or coune, willt the regular Canadian pro
football lcbedule atarting, u SubtchiWID meets Ottawa, 2
p.m., WC!f&amp;.TV ... The Red Sol and ~lei and Plratei-Eipos
bueball s - are on, both at 2:15. (If you hate IIJOI'tl, WBN~
TVhu a couple of afllll'lloon movlee to 111e, "Saddle Tramp" and
"Teahouse ol the Aupst Moon.")
Sunday: Bemtldette DevUn, lhe rebellritth CathoUc leader,
Ia guelt of Wl1lJaln F. Buckley Jr. on "Firing Line," 1 p.m.,
WOUJI.TV ... Reriinl of the llrilllb.fllmed American clullc
"!Mt of the Molilcana," an on the lime . .tlatt at' I ... BobbY
!IIerman, teenlge Idol, II a &amp;uetJt liar on "Here
the
Brldetl," 81 7 on WTYN·TV ... And the 11nai1 o1 the PGA golf
cluttlc come a1ttnt on Wlfl'N·TV It I ... The Plratea and Ezpoe
110 at It qaln at 1:30, WTAJI.TV.
Monday: ¥ike DoaaJu 1111 oo!mnnle Ann Landen as a
guest, t:JO a.m., WTYN-TV. MmdaJ nllale: ,...,..,.

c-

streae:" • p.m.,
WBNS.TV.
)

I Sport Parade

'.

~

Perso:nnel
Problems
Plague
Dallas
lf
ii1

By MILTON RICHMAN
i:i:
~
UP! Sports Editor
··
New York (UPI)- The HaU of Fame should he ]tunptng
Monday.
. lfy?u'veever seen hun pttch, then you know he belongs m, and
if you ve ever been In hiS company then you also know Utere are
few more genumely entertairung men mall baseball than Vernon
Gomez .
'!'hat's his square name but nobody ever caUed htm that when
he pttched for the Yankees Some called hpn Lefty, some called
him Goofy Everyone called him hghtnmg fast .
Lefty Gomez, 62 now and something of a household word when
he ptlched for the Yankees from 193Q Utrough 1942, actually was
ahead of his ltme .
Back then, he did what everyone else ts trying to do today.
He made basebaU fun.
That doesn't mean he was a clown.
Pitchtng against some of the toughest hitters who ever bved,
guys like Jmunie Foxx, AI Simmons, Hank Greenberg, Charlie
Gehrmger, yes, even Ted Wtlllams, the skmpy lefthander from
Rodeo, Calif., stttched togeUter a .649 won4ost jiercentage wtth
189 victories ag8lllst 102 de!eats, and no clown ever dtd Utat.
6-0 World Series Record
Gomez had an even better World Sertes' record. II was 6-0 No
clown ever did that, etther
But there were some thtngs he did that were .. well .
somewhat irregular.
Uke the game in whtch the Tigers had a man on ftrst and Hank
Greenberg btl a bouncer right back at him
Frank Crosetti, Ute Yankees' shortstop, glided over toward
second to take Ute throw, but Gomez fooled everyone m the
ballpark by throwing mstead to second baseman Tony Lazzen,
standing 10 feet away from Ute bag.
Naturally, both runners were safe
"WhatinheU 's the matter wtUt you•" Lazzert wanted to know
when he came to Ute mound to return the haU to Gomez.
"Take it easy, Tony," he trted molltfymg hiS second baseman
"I've been reading in all the papers how smart you are.! wanted
to see for myself.':
Another time Gomez was pttching agrunst the Gtants tn the
Polo Grounds during the 1936 World Sertes
In a Tight Spot
He was in a tight spot when a plane flewover Ute ballpark. Wtth
everyone wrutmg for him to pttch, Gomez simply stood there on
the mound, craning hts neck and walchmg the plane overhead
"For crym' out loud'" one of the Yankees satd to him back m
the dugout at the end of the mnmg. "Are you crazy or
something"''
"Not at aU," satd Gomez, cool and unruffled "What was so
wrong about watchmg the plane' I knew! was safe I had the ball
in my hand (Mel) Ott couldn't hit tt while I was holding II, could

;)

X

·.

he?"

By United Press International
The Cowboys, rruffed at
Duane Thomas' personal behavtor, unloaded the moody
runnmg back to the San Otego
Chargers a couple or days ago,
but now they're havmg problems wtth defens1ve end Tody
Smtih
Smith, brother of Ute Bathmore Colts' all-pro end Bubba
Smtih, walked out or the
Cowboys ' trammg camp Thurs·
day and headed for his hotne m
Los Angeles ll'he 6-foot-5, 245-

pound second year mon from
Southern Cahforma gave no
explanation toteam ofltctals for
hts dtSappearance
Coach Tom Landry was
surpnsed by Smtih's behavtor
but stressed that the btg
defenstve end would he fmed an
undtsclosed amoun l for each
day he is absent from camp
"Sm1th IS vttally Important to
the future ol Utts club," a team
spokesman said "Thts year he
would have helped us, or wlll1f
he comes back "

The Cowboys wtll fly to
Pallas today for an ex htbttton
game Saturday agatnst the
Houston Otlers at Texas Stadtum tn Irvmg, Tex
A btg schedule of exhtbttion
actiVIty ts on tap for thiS
weekend,begmmng'tomgh~wtth
three games Cleveland ts at
Los Angeles, St Loms at
Buffalo and Washmgton goes
agamst Baltimore at Tampa,
Fla , m tomght's acttvity
On Saturday a!ternoon tt wtll
be Kansas Ctty vs Chtcago at

South Bend, Ind , and Saturday
mghl ftnds Cmcmnatt at Green
Bay, Mtami at Detrmt, New
England at Oakland, Atlanta at
San Dtcgo, the New York Jets
vs San FranciSco at Jacksonvtlle and the New York Gtants
at Ptttsburgh
The Cleveland-Los Angeles
game tomght IS expected to
draw 65,000, and the Rams are
anxtous to get a look at young
John Walton at quarterback
W1lh Roman Gabnel stt ll
stdelmed w1 th a collapsed lung,

Browns-Rams Clash Tonight
~

LOS ANGELES (UP!) When
the
Cleveland
Browns open thetr exht·
bition season here tontght
agamst the Los Angeles Rams,
they wtll be up against one of
pro football's few black quarterbacks
Veteran Ram quarterbacks
Roman Gabrtel and Jerry
Rhome are stdehned from tn·
junes and black stgnal-caller
Johr Walton is expected to see
extens1ve duty

Walton has been successful m
pro football's mmor leagues,
and ts trymg for the fourth sea·
son to slick wtth the Rams. Hts
showmg tomght ts tmportant to
hts chances
Watchmg Walton closely wtll
be Browns specialty teams
1

coach Alva Tabor, who says he
was the ftrst block player stgned to quarterback a pro team
Tabor stgned wtth the New
York Yanks of the All-Amencan Conference m 1949 but nev-

cr got m a game
er "
Thecoachsa1d there probably
"I don't know why I dtdn 't
0
play that year t II he said The w1ll be more black pro quartereas1est answer was to say I backs m the future, but added
dtdn 't because I was black, but tl may take awhtle because
that was never satd to me or black football players have been
tnttmtdated about the poSIIton
pom ted out
' Many black athletes never
"I felt I had the respect of
my teammates and that the really asp1red to bemg a pro
coaches felt I had ablltty," Ta- quarterback because they felt
bor satd "Now that I'm m the doors were closed to thern,"
coachmg, I look back and con- Tabor satd "They had to face
std er myself luckter than most reahty, make a ltvmg and try
black quarterbacks . At least I to be a success at other pomade 1t to the pros as a pass- !)Jtions"
Browns Head Coach Ntck
Skonch sa td he expects to see
more pro black signal-callers

Experienced Squad Back

For Southern Grid Season
BY KEITH WISECUP
Whtle powerful Eastern and
Metgs were tearmg through
opponents and drawmg most of
Ute headlmes last year, the
Southern Local Tornadoes
were sort or overlooked, unJustly.
Under Coach Bruce Wallace,
Southern was 3-6 wtth a squad
of
mostly
freshmen ,

mcludmg aii..SV AC halfbacks
Mtke Nease and Ntck !hie, plus
a starter last year, Jay Htll
Southern
has
two
sophomores and a JUntor
hungry for the quarterback
JOb, all of whom sa w actiOn last
year The lOth graders are
Mttch Nease and Buddy Ervm
and the juntor ts Vern Ord.
Graduattng from Southern's
squad was all-SVAC Net!
Baker, who was one of the
lmest defenstve players m the
leag ue , honorable menlton
selecltons Charles Yost and
J1m Smtih and varstty
regulars, Terry Varney, and

Btll Cornell
Of Metgs County's three h1gh
school gnd squads, Southern
lost the least by gradualton and
may JUSt move mto a
challengmg posttton m the
SV AC thiS year

Walton and Jerry ]:\home w1ll
sph t the quarterbackmg chores
Johnny Umtas, begmmng hts
17th yea r m pro football, wtll
start at quarterback for the
Colts agamst the Redskms
WashmgtonCoachGeorg~Allen

must make a chmce between
Sonny Jurgensen or Btll Ktlmer
as hts startmg quarterback
TheCardmals wtll besporttng
a new look offense wtth former
Vtktng Gary Cuozzo at quarterback m Utetr game wtth
Buffalo Other new faces m the
startmg backfield of the Cardtnals wtll be Donny Anderson and
Leon Burns at runmng back

and Walker Gtllette at wtde
recetver The Bills w11l start
Denms Shaw at quarterback
but wtll be wtthbut the servtces
of thetr No 1 draft chotec,
delens1ve end Walt Patulski,
who ts nursmg an InJured knee.
In two maJor traimng camp
developments Thursday, hoebacker Ttm Rossovtch stgned a
contract wtth the Chargers and
rookte runmng back Bobby
Moore agreed to terms wtth Ute
Cardinals Rossovtch was recently acqwred by the Chargers
!rom the Phtladeiphta Eagles
wht le Moore was the Cardmals
No I draft chmce thtS year

Pomeroy's Peewee Stars
Bump Middleport 9 to 2
The Pomeroy Peewee All·
Stars bumped the Mtddleporl
AJI.Stars 9-2 at Mtddleport
Tuesday rught in an ···AU-Star
Battle " between the twtn
towns
Chns McKinney and Steve
Ohlmger combmed to lurut
Mtddleport to JUSt two hits as
they fanned 12 and walked
seven J eff Wayland and Brttt
Dodson combmed to fan 12 and

walk 10 lor Middleport.
Top hitter for Pomeroy was
Ohhnger wtth a single and
home run whtle Rtch
Etsenhower smacked a grand
slam home run, Harvey
Whitlatch cracked a :our·
bagger , and J. R. Wamsley got
a smgle All three of Pomeroy's
home runs cleared the fence
Wayland and Dodson each
smgled for Mtddleport.

'm the next few years "

"I've seen many more m htgh
schools and colleges, and once
there are more playmg tn maJor conferences Utey wtll advance up Ute ladder to the
pros," Skonch sa1d
Asked tf the belief that wht te
players would not respond to
the leadershtp of a black quar·
terback had caused the sttuatton, Skonchsa1d "perhaps that

LOSING OUT

was a reason."

· But a lot of that resiStance
Gomez gol the nickname "Goofy" from Frank "Buck" O'Netll,
has been broken down m rea late newspaperman who covered the Yankees for Ute old New
cent years," Skortch sa td. " I
For several seasons before see tl as no problem The mam
95 in Box
York Journa!American.
"I never felt badly about being called Goofy," says Gomez "I
1971 Southern was known as an thm g now 1s black quarterbacks
automattc wm lor the op- wtll have to prove themselves
remember how it all came about. We were on thiS tram going to
95
position Last year Southern hke anyone else "
Washmgton, D.C., and Albert Einstetn also was on the tram. sophomores , and JUniOrs
in Box
Buck O'Neill asked me 'Do you know who he IS?' I satd yes, he seasoned w1th a few semors
was m every game, gavmg !Is
Int ernational League
mvented the theory of relattvity. O'NeiU asked me if I ever inWallace's successor thts
opposttton man y a nxt ous
Stand1ngs
95
moments, but shll losmg stx
vented anything. ! said yes, I had invented a revolving gold fish year ts Btll Jewell, an asstslant
Umted Press International
in Box
times
bowl which would enable gold ftsh to live longer by savtng thetr at Southern the last two years
W L Pet GB
61 46 570
strength The bowl would go around, Ute people could see a lot Jewell mhert ts an expenenced
Thmgs could be dtfferent m lOUISV Ill e
Charleston
58 47 552 2
more much eaSJer that way and theftSh wouldn't have to swim so and well-drtlled backfteld,
1972
57 52 523 5
Tidewa ter
much. O'Neill said I was goofy "
Toledo
56 52 519 Slf2
Rochest er
56 53 514 6
Far from Goofy
Sy ra cuse
52 58 473 lOlJ~
With Cord
.,.._,.,, I.Afty. Gomc·Y.far from-that.
· ·' .
R ichmond ·· SO 58 463 ll 1h
'
Htllves In F e , calif., 20miles north of San Franoisco now
Pe nm sula
42 66 389 l9 1h
Thursday'sResulls
··
wilh his wife, 3lll!e, ddes Youth League work wlth 't;ids m that •
Charl eston 2 Rochester I (51f&gt;
are11 and stlllls a familiar figure around major and minor league
mnmgs, ra 1n)
clubs in a sales and promotion capaclly for Wtlson Sportmg
PHONE 992-2238
RICh mond 5 lOUISVI lle l (7
mnmgs, ra1n)
Goods Company.
Pen1nsula 3 Toledo 2
202 N. 2nd AVE.
His memories of old Yankee teammates remain vivid.
Syracuse 4 Tidewater 2
- Babe Ruth: "One of the greateSt guys I ever met He had so
much lime for kids The color he had can't be descrtbed. I don 't
In other Naltonal League gam htS 12th vtctory
think there'll ever be another like hun in my time .. "
BY JOE CARNICELLI
- LDu Gehrig: "A different type personality than the Babe
games, Los Angeles blanked
Dave Roberts smgled m Jerry
UP! Sports Writer
Completely different I considered it an honor lo be on the same
Maybe next time Btll Hands San Franctsco, 3-0, Ptttsburgh Morales wtth the dectding run
team as him ... "
wtll keep his hands to himself edged St. Lows, 2-1, In 10 m San Otego's fourth slratght
-.Joe McCarthy : "A truly remarkable manager He would've
Hands ptlched a one-httter mmngs, San Otego downed vtctory over the Braves Nate
been a success many business he went Into ... "
Thursday mght as the Chtcago Atlanta, 6-5, m 11 mmngs and Colbert drove in two runs wtth
-.Joe DiMaggio: "I could never say eno1J8h about Joe. A Cubs beat Ute Montreal Expos, Phtladelphta beat New York, 4- hts 31st homer and Curt
comes
a
wonderful roonunate He ran down plenty of my mistakes . "
Blefary also homered for tttie
3-Q, m Ute second game or a 1
in American League actton, Padres
Lefty Gomez says he has one regret, that the late Johnny doubleheader and the lone httMurphy, who saved so many games for him, won't be on hand at a sevenUt-tnmng smgle by Ken Boston whtpped New York, 7-2,
The Phtls scored twtce m Ute
Cooperstown, N.Y., Monday
Stngleton-came when Hands Mmnesota bombed Texas, 9·1, Stxth mmng on a bases-loaded
Some Qulbblen Talk
deflected the ball away from Cleveland edged Baltimore, 4-3, walk and a sacrtftce fly to
BAKED-ON
SOLID
Since Gomez was voted into the Hall of Fame by the special shortstop Paul Popovtch
Chtcago stopped Califorma, 4-2, defeat Ute Mets Barry Lersch
Committee on Veterans, who also voted In Wllliam Harridge and
ENAMEL
WHITE
"That's Ute closest that 1"11 and Mtlwaukee upended De- and rookie Mac Scarce comRoss Youngs, both dead, some quibblers can say Lefty isn't going ever get to a no-httter," Hands trot!, 6-3, in the only games bmed for a stx-httler
in the !root door the way Sandy Koufax, Yogt Berra and Early satd "And tt should have been scheduled
, Wynn are, but rather the side door.
Tommy John allowed only
a no-httter because I had no
GUARANTEED
The quibblers are all wet.
three
htts m gammg hts ftrst
business trying to stop that
NOT TO
John McGraw, Connie Mack, Casey Stengel, Rube Waddell, hard grounder It was a reflex NL shutout as the Dodgers beat
CHIP-FLAKE
• Edd Roush, Miller Huggins, Waite Hoy! and Sam Crawford got In action on my part to try and the Gtants. John, now 9-5, held
Ute same way, being named by the Veterans' Committee Instead stop Ute ball. I should have let San Franctso hitless for f1ve
OR
,• of by the sportswrllers In the regular f'{ection, and there's no it go It bounced orr my glove tnnings before Dave Rader led
PEEL
question they belong
\.__}
"Popovich was right behmd off the stxlh with a smgle.
So does Lefty Gomez.
Check your dnv er's license
me and he says he could have Wtllle DaviS stngled in one run
If tf expires fh 1s year you
.,. "Regardless of how I got in , I'm Uckled to death," he says. "I easily got the ball and made 11 and scored anoUter and Manny
STAYS UP
must
renew 1t BEFORE your
think II 's wonderful.! wish I rould tell you how happy this makes into a double play l"m not Ute Mota smgled home the Uttrd to
borlhda
y'
me, bull don't have the words."
type to pitch a no-httter though back John.
ALWAYS
This reminder courtesy of
The fact is there never was anything really goofy about Lefty tomght I knew I had a real
Vtc Davahllo's smgle scored
WORLD'S LARGEST
Gene Alley with the wtnning
Gomez.
chance at one."
MOTORISTS'
Chicago scored a run in Ute run in the lOth inmng and
ORGANIZATION
ftrst on singles by Joe Pepttone boosted the Pirates over St.
Subu rb A-Port's clean structural li nes Will
and Jim Htckman and two Louis Consecutive two-out SID·
enhance the beauty of yo1..r home-and set
walks and added two more m gles by Alley, Mill May and
you apart as a "particular home owner'
A GREAT IDEA FOR
the sixth on singles by Davaltllo helped Steve Blass
call us and let our representative show you
OVER70YEARSI
.,
Pepitone , Hickman and Ron
14,000,000 AAA members are
how httle 11 costs to enjoy wonderful out
Santo and a passed ball to earn OILERS RELEASED
American League
"' By United Press International
enjoying
trovel
more
with
dogr hvmg.
KERRVIlLE, Tex. (UPI )- AAA Tour Books. Trlptlks
East
a spht. Montreal won the
Natlonll La•gue
w. I. pet. g.b. opener, 2-1, when pinch-hitter Center Dave Urie, G.foot-5, 256- and Instant Reservations.
East
w I pet. g b. Detroit
55 43 .56t
pound second-year man from are protected by Personal
Deubl• 'V''I2'- Widt
Pittsburgh
61 37 622
Baltimore
53 45 541 2 Ron Woods singled home pinch1
~II Porme d Ponti
New York
53 « 546 712 New York
49 47 510 5 runner Carl Morton, who lost Colorado and offenstve guard Travel Accident Insurance,
, Chicago
53 48 525 91f2 Boston
49 48 505 51h the second game, wiUt Ute tie- Randy Logan, a &amp;-fool-3, 245- Emergency Road Serv1ce,
15,000 Ball Bond , and are
St Louis
48 49 495 t21f&gt; Cleveland
45 53 459 10
breaking run in the last of lite pound rookie from Flortda welcomed at 850 Offices In
Montreal
« 52 458 t6
Milwaukee
40 58 408 15
Stale, were released Thursday the Un1led States and
13th.
Philadelphia 37 62 374 24'/,
West
by the Houston Otlers ·
West
w. I. pet. g.b .
Canada
Roll formtd
w. 1. pet. g.b. Oakland
61 38 616
CoM:•ol•d G111tll!'
" Cincinnati
58 38 604
Chicago
55 43 .561 5112
UNIFORMS WANTED
Why
you?
Houston
55 45 550 5 Mlnnesolo
49 46 516 10
Th I Daliu
Sent'11'11I
Members of Racine's LilUe
Los Angeles 51 47 520 s
Kansas City 46 51 .474 14
"J
League
and Pee Wee learns are
Atlanta
46 54 .460 14
California
44 55 4« 17
DEVOTED TO TH!
Stop by the Auto Club at JJ
San Francisco 45 56 446 151f&gt; Texas
40 59 404 21
INTEREST OF
to turn in their uniforms
Court Street, Golllpohs, 0 . or
San Diego
40 59 404 19lf&gt;
Thursday's Resulls
MEIGS·MASON AREA
Monday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. phone "2·2590 or 446-0699.
Tlwrsday's Results
Boston 7 New York 2
CHESTER L TANNEHILL,
luc.
Ed
at
the home of Larry Wolfe.
T
t
Ml nneso I0 9 exas
Philadelphia 4 New York 1
ROaERT HOEFLICH,
Mont 2 Chi 1, 1St, 13 Inns
Cleve 4 Baltimore 3
Clly ldllor
Chicago 3 Montreal 0, 2nd
Ch!cago 4 Calllorn la 2
Pubhshtd dooly excopl
Pitts 2 St. Louis 1, 10 Inns
Milwaukee 6 Detroit 3
Soturdoy by Tnt Ohio Volley
They Did It Again!
San Diego 6 Alia 5, t1 Inns
(Only gamesscheduled)
Publishing Com oany , 111
Los Ang 3 San Francisco 0
Court 51. Pomeroy, Ohio ,
led)
A5769 Business Off•ct Phont
(Onl ygomes sc hedu
Today's Problblt Pitchers
992 2156, Ed otoroal Phone 992.
Today's Problblt Pitchers
!All Times EDTl
2157
•
(All TIIMS EDTI
Oakland (Odom 9-31 at
Second cioss ooslogepold at
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, 0.
Pittsburgh (Walker 4·51 11 Mlnneoota !Bfyleven 9-14) , 8 30 Pomeroy , Ohio
'•
PRESENTS
Immediate del/11el'l and lnafa/laf/on I
Monlrooi!Moore2-5),8p.m.
Not ional odvartlstng
• Chicago (Jenkins 14-9) at p.mCalllornl• 'Ryan 12.9) at repruentotove Bottlnettl
Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star
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York •McAndrew 6 3) 8
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Subscripllon roles Do
LYN CAMPBELL
Phlladel a ' eyno s ·
· Texas · (Stanhouse 1-21 at livered b'l carr ier where
,. at St. Louts &lt;Durham 0-J), 9 Chicago (Bahnsen 13- 101 , 9 p.m avollobte 50 cents per wHk,
Also Starring The Popular
p.m
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Aouttwhtrte:lrr.er
GEO• HALL
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u
service not evolloble: One
Cleveland l'fldrow 8-9), 7:30 montn IllS By mall In Ohio
FfanclscotBarrol-3), 11 p.m.
• San Diego IArlin 8-tJI at Los . P mNew York 'Peterson 11 _11 , at and w va , One yoor S14 DO '
One Week OnlyAng1tes(SingerHl. 11f.m.
• •'p
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nd -,. - "
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Atlanta (Stone J.
and Mtlwau.ee ' arsons s., , B·
montho u so Subscription
Opening Mo ay, ..ug, t
• Mcl.,aln 2·11 at Cincinnati p. ~ltlmore (Dobson 12-10) at ~:~ct~n':,cludu .Sundoy, Timu
$1.00 Cover Charge Sot. Night, Aug. 12
2
!Grimsley
ll!::i~u::I~R:::!l):;R:uoliJ;::il:~I=IJ::!IJ;!IIJ;::il:~~::oJ;;:~~:u::i~ • •. .
5:30
p.m. 9·4 and Hall .C.l), • Boston (Pattin tt-10), 7,30 p m.
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�.

4- The IlaiJy Sentinel, MidcQeport-Pomeroy, o., Aug. 4,1972

Linescores
League Nesults
By United Press International

I

f

Nationallfagu~

By FRED McMANE
and Minnesota routed Texas, 9UPI Sports Writer
1.
From the Milwaukee Brew.Pittsburgh edged St. Louis, 2ers' point of view the Detroit 1, in 10 jnnings, San Diego
Tigers' pitching stall is great ·nipped Atlanta, IN, in 11
for "batting practice." ,
innings, Philadelphia beat New
The Brewers, one of base- York, 4-1, Los Angeles blanked
·ball's lightest fiitting teams, San Francisco, 3-0, and Mon- ·
skipped batting practice for the treal downed Chicago, 2-1, in 13
second straight ,day Thursday innings then lost, . 3-0, ,Jo
night but continued to batter National League action.
the Tigers' pitchers as they
Chris Chambliss collected
collected ·u hits and beat three hits, including a pair of
Detroit, 6-3, for the third doubles, as the Indians beat the
consecutive night.
Orioles for the fifth time in
· Over the last three nights the seven games since the All-Star
Brewers have resembled a break. Tom Hilgendorf and Phil
veritable powerhouse, rapping Hennigan combined for a sevenout 45 hits and scoring 28 runs hitter in besting Mike CUellar.
while preventing the Tigers • Brooks Robinson had a homer
from gaining on the Baltimore for tbe Orioles.
Orioles in the American League
Carlton Fisk tied a record for
East.
·
Boston catchers with his 17th
Ellie Rodriguez and John homer ' and the Red Sox
Briggs did most of the damage collected 15 hits to defeat the
to the Tigers Thursday night. Yankees. Rico Petrocelli paced
Rodriguez had a two-run double the Red Sox' attack with four
in the second inning and Briggs hits as Lynn McGlothen coasted
cracked his 15th homer in the to his fifth victory.
sixth as the Brewers beat the . Luis Alvarado's 2-run triple
Tigers for the eighth time in 12 in the eighth inning sparked the
games. Milwaukee's George White Sox to victory and
Scott also had three hits for the enabled Wilbur Wood to win his
second straight game.
17th game. Ken Berry and Jack
The Tigers continue to lead Hiatt accounted for the Angels'
the AL East,.by two games but runs with homers.
for the second successive night
Jim Perry pitched a threethey failed to gain ground on hitter and Bobby Darwin and
the Orioles, who lost to Rich Reese knocked in five
Cleveland, 4-3.
runs between them in the
In other AL games, Boston Twins' triumph over Texas.
defeated New York, 7-2, Chica- Darwin and Rod Carew each
go turned back California, 4-2, hadthreehitsforMinnesola.

Allin·Thirsk
Share Lead.
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
U.S. Open at Pebble Beach,
BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (UPI) Calif., in June, so he went to
-Names like Brian "Buddy" the guy everybody turns to for
Allin and Stan Thirsk nearly golfing advice - ht:friiatiman.
always surface in a major golf
"Since tben;'• Allin said of his
championship. After the first consultation with Jim Judd of
round of the Professional Escondido, Calif., "I've been in
Golfers' Association champion- contentionalmosteveryweek."
ship, it's both of them.
Judd is an ex-municipal course
Altin emerged at midday pro who was Allin's first golf
Thursday wilh a 34-34-08 while tea,cher.
Thirsk waited until dusk at the
Palmer has been accused of
Oakland Hills Country Club psyching himself out of the
co- ll!l(Qre finishing a PGA but he was off to his best
dramatic 36-32 for his share of start in eight years in his quest
th~ 'lead in the 54th annual for the only major title he's
tournament.
never won. His 69 put him in a
"This is as big a surprise to one-undergroupwhichincluded
me as it is to everyone else," 1969 PGA winner Ray Floyd,
said Thirsk, 44, a club pro from Jerry Heard, Larry Gilbert and
Kansas City Country Club in Jim Jamieson.
Shawnee Mission, Kan .
Sam Snead, 60, was in a six" They're the greatest", player bunch at par. He's won
Thirsk said of the )ikes of three PGA titles but 'the last
Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, was in 1951.
Gary Player and Lee Trevino,
Gary Player led the eight
whose scores he beat. '.'Every- pros at one-over 71 while
body knows that. But once in a Nicklaus struggled in with a 72
while somebody gets hot..."
, ./!long with 13 others and
Goes to Mailman
· Trevino played a "dumb" 73.
Allin, 27, of Santa Barbara,
"I'm not griping or complainCalif., wasn't belting the ball ing," Palmer said of his best
overly well when before the PGA start since he hung a pair
of 68s and two 69s together to
tie for second in 1964. "But I've
just got to stop doing that.
FOR
Once . or twice you can
BACK TO understand taking three
\SCHOOL (putts), but not four times like
U1at.,
BOOK SATCHELS
Trevino said he had the
PENCIL CASES
wrong club in his hands four
times during his round.
Other School Supplies
"I flaked out," he said. "I
knew I had the wrong club in
my hands but I wouldn 'I
change. I think I got away with
a dumb round."

MIDDLEPORT

BOOK STORE

DO YOU NEED ANYTHING
FOR YOUR STABLES?
IF WE OON1 HAVE IT - WE WILL
TRY HARDER!
CAITLE HALTERS - HORSE &amp;
PONY HALTERS - WHIPS LEADS - STOCK CANES BLANKETS - FORTEX TUBS &amp;
BUCKETS - GALVANIZED TUBS
&amp; BUCKETS - SHAMPOOS FLY SPRAYS &amp; REPELLENTS BRUSHES - CURRY COMBS GROOMING SUPPLIES VETERINARY SUPPLIES.

MODERN SUPPLY
J99WESTMAIN STREET 992-216A POMEROY. OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS
STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
LAWNS - GARDENS
'.

. CLAS$ SCHEDUlES fur hltlt achool studellta Ill'!!
being mailed as soon as they can be written. Students
should follow tbe directions given if tbere is a reason
(.Continued from page 1)
to request a change.
About 120 band members are attending the band
in the junior high in Middleport about 8 oc'clock. Of
course, all board meetings a.·e onen tQ the p~bllc, but caiJlp at Rio Grande College this week. The Meigs
this one carries a special invitation. Come and tell us · Band will compete with several others on Saturday
what's on your mind. We want to know. We will look morning in presenting a half-time show.
forward to seeing yo~. ·
SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS soon will be
Just in case you may have forgotten, let me available. There will be seven ~ome games this year,
remind you that school begins, with a full day, on against Reemelin, Belpre; Wellston, Jackson,
Monday, August 28. All teachers and principals will Athens, Gallipolis and Point Pleasant. Our three
have meetings on.,Friday, August ~. in the morning away games are with Logan, Ironton and Waverly.
WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE the start of a Meigs
in Middleport and in the afternoon in their assigned
High Alumni Association. Is there any start on this
buildings.
,

SpeJJking pf Schools

Major

.

•

•

'

,.

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972

Brewers Continue
.Tiger Feast, 6-3
'

'

Phlla
001 002 OlD- A 8 0
New York
000 000 lOD- 1 6 0
Lersch, Scarce (8) and
Bateman, Ryan (6); Gentry,
Rauch (6), Sadeckl (8) and
Dyer. WP- Lersch (2-4) . LPGenlry 15-8). HR- Doyle (lstl .
110 innings)
Pi!tsbrgh 010 000 000 1- 2 6 1
St. Louis 000 010 000 o- 1 8 0
Blass, . Hernandez (10) and
Sangulllen; Wise 110-12) and
Simmons. WP- Biass (12-5) .
(11 innings)
S.D.
300 001 010 01--;- 6 u 1
Alia
011 001 020 oo- 5 9 0
Grell. Corklns 16), Ross 1111
and Blefary; Reed. Upshaw (9)
and Williams. WP-Corkins (3-5).
LP- Upshaw ll-5) . HRs-Colbert (31st(, Blefary (2nd),
Breazeale (2nd !.

Fischer, Spassky Agree to Adjourn

REYKJAVIK (UPI)-Bobby played his opening move, did
Fischer, alter waiting 21 Spassky push the curtains
San Fran
000 000 ooo- 0 3 2 minutes and double-checking aside and walk in slowly to
LosAng
10010001&gt;- 3 51
I ..
Reber er McMahon (81 and that no te eVISlon cameras play.
Rader; ~oh~ (9-S, and Yeager. . were filming him, shielded the
Grandmasters praised both
LP- Reberger 12-11 .
writing pad with his hand and players for the game.
scribbled his 41st move in the
"The best-fought and most
II st game, 13 inns I
Chi
000 000 100 000 o- 1 6 0 battle with world chess cham- exciting battle to date," OlafMil ' 100 000 000 000 1- 2 8 1 pion Boris Spassky.
sson said.
Reuschel , Aker (10), Hamil Larsen agreed ·" it was
ton (13) and Martin ; McAnally, Then the Russian champion
Marshall 171 and McCarver. and the 29-year-old American worthy of a world chamWP- Marshall 19-3). LP- Aker challenger agreed to adjourn pionship playoff and a pleasant
14-31 .
the game until today.
surprise after Spassky's
(2nd game)
.
Chicago
100 002 ooo- 3 9 0 Fiscber had two rooks and earlier mistakes."
Montreal
000 000 ooo- o 1 0 three pawns to Spassky's one
Hands 19-71 and Hundley ; rook, a bishop and four pawns
Morton. Slrohmayer (6) and
Humphrey, Boccabella (9 ). LP when the game adjourned
- Morton (5-10).
Thursday. A game can be
adjourned
either after live
(Only games scheduled)
hours or 40 moves.
American league
New York 001 100 ooo- 2 8 1 The lOth game in the $250,000
Boston
021 001 30x- 7 15 2 match will be resumed at 10:30
Klimkowski, R o Ian d lSI. a.m. EDT, 2% hours earlier
Gardner 161 and Munson;
McGiolhen (5-31 and Fisk. LP- than normal out of courtesy to .
Kiimkowski (0-2). HR- Fisk the American who observes his
(17th(.
Sabbath for 24 hours starting at
sunset
on Friday . Fischer's
Minnesota 000 240 21Q- 9 11 0
TUPPERS PLAINS
Texas . ooo 000 001- I 3 I written move will be opened at Marcia and Teresa Carr,
Perry 110-9) and Borgmann ; the start aod then Spassky will
daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Bosman, Lawson (5), Gogolewski ( 7) and Fahey. LP- Bosman play.
Charles D. Carr of Tuppers
(4-8).
Having spotted Spassky a Plains, have returned from
two-game lead, Fischer won
Baltimore 010 002 ooo- 3 7 0 four and drew three to lake a Da~ton where they took part in
the Miss Ohio Teenager
Cleveland ooo 220 OOx- 4 8 1
Cuellar ( 10-91 and Elchebar- 5.5 to 3.5 point lead with Pageant.
ren ; Hilgendorf, Hennigan (8) another seven points needed to
There were 296 girls in the
and Fosse. WP- Hilgendorl (2- win the world title .
event, the largest or any state
0) . HR- Roblnson (6thl.
Grandmasters who watcbed this year. Contestants were
Ca lifornia 000 010 OlD- 2 8 2 the game on closed-circuit divided into two groups with 50
Chicago
000 200 02x- 4 6 1 television in the corridors and
girls selected from 126 entries
Messersm ith (2-5) and Torborg, Hiatt 181: Wood (17-lll cafetaria outside the dark hall in Group I and 60 from I70
and Herrmann. HRs- Berry diflered only over Fischer's
entries in Group 2 to lak•J part
(5th). Hiatt (lstl .
chances of winning. ·
in the finals Saturday evening.
Mi lw
023 001 ooo- 6 11 1 Denmark's Bent Larsen, ratEach girl was interviewed by
Delroi I
100 100 OlD- 3 8 0 ed among the top live in the a panel of lour judges on
Colborn (A-2 ) and E. Rodri -' world, said "the game is
Friday and the preliminary for
guez : Holdsworth, Fryman (3),
Seelbach (5). Hiller (8) and hopelessly lost for Spassky." Saturday night's finals was
Freehan. LP- Holdsworlh I0-1 ). Iceland's 'Fridrik Olafsson held on Saturday morning and
HR- Briggs 1151h l.
disagreed.
afternoon when the girls
Spassky walked outside the modeled in formals . Interviews
!Only games scheduled)
ball before the game began and counted 50 per cent and formal
Major league leaders
tossed his umbrella into tbe air competition 50 per ~nt.
By United Press International and pointed to tbe far~way
•
leading Batters
Both ·Marcia and Teresa
mountains. Only after Fischer, were selected to vie lor the tiUe
National Le01.gue
g. ab r. h. pet. arri'ving seven minutes late,
Cdeno, Hou 86 346 71 122 .353 had settled into tbe chair and on Saturday evening. The
Dvlllo, Pit 75 227 38 so .352
winner was from Toledo. Mrs.
Wilms, Chi '1'1 392 62 133 .339
Carr accompanied
her
Mota . LA 76 245 39 82 .335
daughters
and
was
a
Garr.Atl 91 369 58 120 .325
Snguiln, Pll
chaperone.
92 353 40 114 .323
Alou,SI.L 89 345 41111 .322
Brock . SI.L 97 415 52 133 .320
Bckner. LA 67 231 26 74 .320
Lee, SD
68 251 35 79 .315

Carr Sisters

Competed in

Teen Pageant

Experts Join

Horseshoe
Events

American League

g. ab

Rudi.Oak 95
Pnlela. KC 95
Shblm,KC 82
Berry, Cal 70
Fisk, Bos 79
Allen, Chi 98
Carew. Min 81&gt;
Oils, KC 91
Krkpirk,KC

387
366
278
247
271
334
321
343

r. h. pel.
66 122 .315

52 115 .314
37 87 .313
31 77 .312
51 84 .310
65 103 .308
36 98 .305
47 103 .300

234 32 69 .295
May, Chi 96 341 61 100 .293
Home Runs
National League : Colbert, SD
72

31;

Bench , Cin 24 ; Williams,

Chi, May. Hou and Stargell,
Pitt 22.
American league: Allen, Chi
n Jackson, Oak 21; Cash, Del
' 0. Killebrew, Mlnn and Ep&lt;; fCIIl ,

Oak 18.

Runs Baffed In
Nalionol Laague: Colbert, SD
8A ; Bench, Cin and Stargell,
Pill 76 ; Williams, Chl71 ; May,
Hou 68.
American League: Allen, Chi
77; Jackson, Oak 61 ; Scoll, Mil
and Murcer, NY 59 ; Mayberry,

KC 56.

Pitching
National League: Carlton.
Phil 16-6; Jenkins, Chi 14-9;
Nolan, Cln 13-3; Blass, Pill 12-

yet? If 110, would you let me llllow. Tllole Wbo w.ld
be interested in such 111 organlution should crop me
a note and we'll see If we can belp get It moving. We
would like to help. . ..
.
.
.
NEWS &amp; NOTES - Our teaching lltaff should
soon be complete- With 140 staff· members, we are
never altogether certain until the first day of 8Citool
- We are still receiving letters with suggestions,
complaints, etc.'- We encourage you to send more. '
_; They are helpful. - Remember the ·achool insurance offered this year will be in effect as of tbe
datetheprerniumisreceivedin School.- The August
physical fitness program is drawing about five dozen
participants.

GREENVILLE,Ohio(UPI )Horseshoeexperts in Classes B,
C and D today join the 36 in
Class A in competition at the
1972 World Horseshoe Tournament.
Perfect 6-0 scores Thursday
in the opening of men's Class A
action were posted by Kurt
Day of Franklort, Ind., the defending champion; ElmerHohl,
Wellesley, Ont., the top qualifier; Dan Kuchcinski, Bryant,
Ind., two-time world titiist; and
Mark Seibold, Huntington, Ind.
Each will pitch 35 games to
decide the 1972 winner.
At a Thursday business meeting, it was decided to hold the
1974 world tournament at
Keene, N.H.
New officers elected were
John Rademacher, Plant City,
Fla., 2nd vice president; Earl
Winston, Lamonte, Mo., third
vice president; Dorothy Pinch,
Sharon, Pa., lourth vice president, and W. Ray Williams,
Eureka, Cali!., secretary-treasurer: Williams ·succeeds Bob
Pence, who held the post 14
years. The president and first
vice president were not up for
grabs this year.

Cycle Driver
Hurt, Otarged

The driver of a motorcycle
was arrested on a charge of
reckless operation following an
accident Thursday at I :30 p.m.
on township road 119 in
Chester.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. said Charles Rodney
Poole, 18, Davisville, Rt. I,
operating a motorcycle
eastward belonging to Giles
Hysell, Minersville, lost
control in gravel, went off the
road into a ditch, and flipped
over about 50 ft. farther along
the ditch.
Poole was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy E-R squad where he
was treated and released . He
was later lodged in county jail.

SEARS NAMED
5; Sutton, LA, Torres, Mont,
CLEVEI:AND (UP! ) Cleveland and Gibson, SI.L 12Gerry
Sears,
a
for- .
6: Seaver. NY 12-9.
mer
basketball
standout
American League : Lolich,
at Miami (Ohio) UniDet 18-6; Perry, Clev 18·8i
Wood, Chi 17·11; Palmer, Ball
versity, Thursday
was
and Hunter, Oak 14-4; Holtz·
named
.
assistant
basketball
man, Oak 14-9.
coach at Cleveland State
University.
REDS BACK HOME
Sears will replace Marlo
CINCINNATI (UP!) ~ The
Termini on Sept. I and will
Cincinnati Reds host a fiveSCIOTO RESULTS
game series at home against
COLUMBUS I UPI) - Angel work with both the varsity and
the Atlanta Braves, starting Crystal set a new lifetime junior varsity squad.
tonight with a doubleheader. mark Thursday in winning the
Cincinnati starting pitchers featured eighth race at Scioto
BAND TO MEET
tonight will be Ross Grimsley Downs in 2:04 2-5.
All Soutbern High School
(9-4) and Tom Hall (4-1) .
Has Time placed and Steady Band members from the
Pitching for Atlanta will be Cathy showed.
seventh through the -12th
George Stone (3-8) and Denny
A lh'l nightly double com- grades wtu meet at the high
McLain (2-1) .
bination of-Kokosing and Little school in Racine from 7 to ·g
The Reds and Braves will Direct paid $26.40.
p.m. Monday.
play single games Saturday,
Attendance was 4,ii55 and the
Sunday and Monday.
night's handle was $209,764.
LODGE TO MEET
.
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM,
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
for work in the master mason
degree for one candidate.
Refreshments wtu be served.
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
All master masons are
welcome.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

Relax , . , Drive in for a Delicious
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance

Bottom,O,

PICNIC SET
Racine American Legion
Post 602 wiD ' hold Its annual
picnic Sunday at Hidden Lakes
with a potluck dinner at noon,
Commander Harry Wilford
annOWlced today. Barbecue
chicken and beverage will be
furnished by the post.

REYKJAVIK (UP!) - The
moves in the lOth game of the
Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer
world che!IS championship:
Flscber (w)
Spas sky (b)
I. P-K4
P-K4
2. KT-KB3
KT-QB3
3. B-KT5
P-QR3
4. B-R4
KT-KB3
5. 0.0
B-K2
6. R-Kl
P-QKT4
7. B-KT3
P-Q:I
8. P-B3
O.Q
9. P-KR3
KT-QKTI
10. P-Q4
KT(QKTI)-Q2
II. Kt (QKI1)-Q2
B-Kt2
12. B-B2
R-KI
13. P-Q){t4
B(K2)-BI
14. P-QR4
Kt-Kl3
15. P-QR5
Kt-Q2
16. B-Kt2
Q-Ktl
17. R-Ktl
P-B4
18. P(Kt4)XP
P(Q3)XP
19. PXP (K5)
Kt(Q2)XP
20. KtXKt
QXKt

21. P-QB4
'22. BxKT
23. PxP
24. Q-Bl
25. KT-B3
26. B-KT3
27. Q-KB4
28. KT-K5
29. R(Kil)-Ql
30. BxP ch
31. QxR ch
32. KtxQ
33. RxB
3-1. R-Q7 ch
35. R-Kt7
36.K-R2
37 .. P-Kt3
38. K-Kt2
39. R-Kt6
40. K-B3
Adjourned

·Q-85

QxB
R(KI)-Ql
Q-QB6

QxP

PxP
R-Q2
Q-B2
R-K2
RxB

QxQ
BxP
KxKt
K-83
R·R8 ch
B-Q:rch
P-Kt.l
P-R4
R-Qil

K-B2

HAVE FUN
An old rashioned wiener
roast and hayride was held last
SaturdaY night at the farm
home or Mr. and Mrs. James
Sheets 11ear Harrisonville .
Guests enjoying a rousing
~oftball game and the food and
fire were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Poulin and son, Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Tripp and sons, Mr. and
Mrr-1
. obert lltch, Mr. and
Mr . John McGraw and son,
Mr and Mrs. John Reece and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
May and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Buck.

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THE BAND stands at attenUon waiting for the whistle to
blow beginning marching practice.
PERCUSSION SECTION of the Meigs Band, while waiting to line up for marching
practice, gave out with the beat Wednesday afternoon. Even though the temperatures were
well in the IJjB band members were all present at 3:45 to begin their drills.

SPEAKING OF

Pictures by Katie Crow
. ..

COOLVILLE - Mrs. Trena serve at the annual Beegle
Ethel Blizzard, 83, Coolville Family reunion this weekend
Route I, died early Friday at the Racine American Legion
morning at her home following Hall are:
Registration, Vera Beegle,
an extended illness.
Lora
Theiss, Jan Hill, and
Mrs. Blizzard was born at the
Melanie
Beegle ; tables,
farm home where she died. She
was the daughter of the late Lawrence Beegle, Robert E.
William and Mary Berrill Beegle, Robert G. Beegle, and
Baker. Mrs. Blizzard was a Ronald Beegle ; program,
member of the Ireland Franie McKelvey, Jean Alkire,
Fern Gaul, Bonnie Theiss;
Congregational Church.
Surviving are her husband, nominating, Robert G. Beegle,
Clyde; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Martha Lou Beegle and Fern
Rupe, and two grandsons, Gaul; square dance, Charles
Charles and David Rupe , ail of Alkire and Bob McKelvey.
Beegle family reunion olCoalville Route I. Also surficers
for 1972 are Lawrence
viving are several cousins .
Funeral services will be held Beegle, president; Janet
at 3 p.m. S~U~~nt the White Beegle Roush, vice president;
Funeral Home there with the Vera Beegle, treasurer and
Rev . Roy Deeter officiating. Leanna Beegle, secretary .
Saturday there will be a
Burial will be in the Coolville
square
· dance lor Beegle
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime alter families and friends at 9 p.m.
Music will be provided by the
noon Saturday.
Francis Andrews Band.
Registration is Sunday at II
a.m. with a basket dinner at
12 :30 p.m. lollowed by a
TO KINGS ISLAND
program
at 2. Ail members or
All summer Neighborhood
Youth Corps enrollees of the the family are cordially invited
Community Action Program to the dance and reunion.
will go . to Kings Island
Saturday morning. They will
leave from the Meigs High
School at Rock Springs at 6:30
a.m. Mrs. Jeanne Slawter,
CAP co-ordinator counselor,
said.

108 Attending Camp

begins at 8 a.m. following breakfast at 7:15. It's practice,
practice and more practice, and then a break to do just the
things they want to do. From 2 to 3:45p.m. is tbe designated
free time, then back to the marching fteld until 5:15, Dmner
is served at 5:30, but then from 7 to 8:30 p.m., back to the
field! Students are in tbeir rooms at !be dorms at 10:30 and
lights are out at II pm.

Hair Styling
··~·····················1·

by
KAY
AT THE WASffiNG MACHINES Wednesday were Carmel Murphy, Liz Blaettnar,
Debbie Gallagher, Donna Francis and Sheila McKnight, front to back. Following lunch at
12:45 band members are given free time to do tbeir laundry and go swimming. They report
back to the marching field at 3:45.

Top-most hair stylists

~

~~~m;~ili~~~!~l~l~~l~;j;~;;~~~f:~~~~;~~•;m~;;;;;;;lli;m~~~~;;;~;;mmj;i~~lji;:;m;~;:~~~~m~;~;~;l~~~~ffi~~J~

relate that regular care of
the hair and use of creme
r inses keeps most ha lr,

even tinted hair looking

Ham.

LUNCH TIME at Camp O'eacendo.
lunch In the cafeteria were Donna Fmter,
SheUa McKnight and Patty Well, left. On right serving the young ladies were Wilma Arnold
and Kathryn Jooes.

natural , glow ing , and easy
to manage.
However, If you have .
ha ir problems, such as spilt
ends or oil , limp hair,
wh ic h needs professional

allenllon. you should
consult your ha ir stylist,

who knows how to &lt;:ope

wllh

these

problems

properly . and can give your

hair professional attention
care to relristate it to
he~lth asaln.

and

..
•'

5omet~lng

worthwhile
remembering Is the foci
thai we keer, up with ali lhe
latest sty es, producls ,
methods. and lechnlques
for properly caring for the
hair .

CHATEAU BEAUTY
SALON

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MEIGS BAND MEMBERS took part of their free time
Wednesday to practice before meeting on the marching fie ld.
Left to right are Lisa Thomas, Angie Sission, Karen Johnson,
Linda Reuter, Diana Carsey, Melanie Burt, Carmel Murphy
and Mary Krawsczyn.
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IT WAS TIME to call home
for Rayanna Cole, a member
of the Meigs Band attending
Camp Crescendo at Rio
Grande College lor one
week.

214 t . SeCOND ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

P N_r;;m-7*--·

Muskie Out Front

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Do Yourself

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0

A Flavor/

•'

Drive in for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. let us fill your party
needs, too.

.

McCLURE'S
992-5248

w

Middleport, 0,

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rr ISN'T ALL WORK at Camp Crescendo, Rio Grande
College wbere 108 members of the Meigs High School Band
are spe~ding the week . These young ladies were enjoying the
indoor pool, Judy Radford, Mona King, Cathy Osborne,
Renny Eblin and April Fraser.

WASHINGTON (UPI )--Sen.
GeorgeS.McGovern's apparent
first choice for the Democratic
vice presidential nomination is
party stalwart Edmund S.
Muskie, but McGovern is
keeping his options open.
During a. 25-minute news
conference Thursday, McGovern refused to say specifically who was highest in his
estimation. But it was clear
from his remarks and those of
a source close to him that
Muskie is out in front .
He also indicated that he does
not believe the uncertainties
over the vice presidential
nominee have hurt his cam·
paign.
"There won 't be any decision
made until I've had a long talk
with Ed Muskie," McGovern
said. "Be sure that Ed Muskie

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A Great Once-A-Year

FROM'

. ....

One hundred and eight members of the Meigs High
School marching band are attending Camp Crescendo at Rio
Grande College for one week. The students agree It is hard
work but they are loving every minute of it. Their work day

Committees
For Reunion

4th &amp; Locust

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Veteran.s Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Franklin
Sisson, Pomeroy; Charles
Morebead, Belpre, and Nara
Hartman, Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Ronald
Bostic, Marla Walding, and
Robert Barrett.

Trena Blizzard
Are Announced
Died on Friday Committees appointed to

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called to near Royal Oak Park
at I :38 p.m. Thursday for
Charles Rodney Poole, 18, of
Davisville, W. Va., who was
injured when he leU from ·a
motorcycle . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
released.

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ALE

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They'll Do It Every Time
VERMIN SNEAKER THOUGfll' HE WI-$_

BIOOOMeS CH I E~ •yES M.t.N'~ ·:rHIS'LL
PUT HIM SIX APPLES EIEHIND
pHQ01'Yoo o

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

See Special Insert In This
Newspaper TODAY!!

MAAINGaooK ON
TI-lE TEJ&gt;GHER'5 PET
SWEEPSTAKES• '·
fj,~ A.f..o A Til" 011 THC"
MII:N H.I\TTO

DON'T MISS IT I I

RAY d IIRANNIGAN
58Tt'iR&amp;-

MQNiiiOiVIU.E,
PE&gt;INA. ·

will be fully consulted before I
make any final decision."
Asked whether he bad raised
the possibility of Muskie ,
becoming the nominee, MeGovern said, "Not with him... but in talking with others
whose political judgment I
value I have raised his name."
A source close to McGovern
said earlier in the day that
unless Muskie, the 1968 vice
presidential nominee and contender in the recent presidential primaries, takes himself
out of the race, he wlli be
McGovern's choice.
The Democratic National

I

---------BROWNING, NOT CALL
R. J. Browning is assistant
manager of the Pomeroy AllStars Little League team, not
Woody Call as previously
stated.
The All-Stars, who defeated
Jackson 14-13 Wednesday
niglit, play tonight against
South Webster in the second
round of the Wellston Little
League All-Star Tournament.
TREATMENT SOUGHT
HOUSTQN (UPI)-If an astronaut gets sick while on a
long journey Into space, the
space agency wants to fmd
some way doctors on earth can
treat him by remote control.
The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration said
Thursday It was negotiating
with Lockheed to design Slid
test a $4.9 mlliton health ·care
Wlit to do the job.
A special health staUon will
be built .Jn some remo.te area
wbere there Ia a shortage of
doctors. Alling residents will
enter the station and aee If
phystcla.. In a faraway boiPtal can dlagna.e and treat
them through telephone, ·
television and data relay
systenla Instead of In peraon.
The locatlm of the health
llatlon hal not beln ohotlen.

Committee will meet Tuesday
to choose the nominee, and it is
almost certain to accept
McGovern's choice.
He said he was "determined
to take advantage of the luxury
of this full week" to make the
decision. He said he would
name his choice no later than
Monday.
McGovern said that sens.
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, Edward M. Kennedy of
MassacbusettsandAbrahamA.
Ribicoff of Connecticut had
indicated again this week that
they were not interested in the
post. He said he did not
pressure them to change their
minds.
McGovern took note of the
present method of selecting the
vice presidential nominee when
the prestdenUal candidate Ia
"exhausted and rushed." He
said that he has asked
Democratic National Chairman
Mrs. Jean Westwood to assign
the new charter commission the
responsibility for reviewing and
recommending a better method
of selection.

ESTHER LOWERY was
deep in coocentration as she
practiced on her flute at
Band Camp Wednesday.

KAREN JOHNSON AND Shetla Edwards, froot to back,
were busy sorting clothes to be laundered Wednesday at
Camp Crescendo at Rio Grande College.

REUNION SET
The descendants of Hoit and
Mary Foster Curtis will hold
their 66th annual reunion at the
Shelter house at Hoback Park,
Dorsey Mlil Road, Heath, Ohio,
oo Sunday, Aug. 20. A basket
dinner will be held at noon. The
reunion this year will be hosted
by the Damon Curtis family

DWIGNI' GOINS, the leW
band lnatrudor, was busy
giving orders and llnlng up
members Wednesday prior
to the marching session.

Guns Stolen

A lnaktng and entering was
inveslfgated at the Hiram
Stutes residence in Mills
Village at 12:15 a.m. today i,y
the Gallia County Sherifl's
Department.
Entry, which was reported to
have happened between 7:30
p.m., and midnight Thursday,
Pleasant Valley Hospital ·
was
gained after the back door
Discharges : Harold Bush,
Sr., Debbie Filson, Point Nas forced open. The intruders
Pleasant; Mrs. Phillip HaU, ransacked the house and were
West Columbia, and Opal reported to have stolen a
Browning Automatic 16 gauge
McClure, Point Pleasant.
shotgun. a Winchester Modell2
shotgun, a .22 caliber bolt
action 7-shot Marlin rifle, and
Q- What is the lightest of
six
boxes of ammuniUon. The
substances?
incident
is still under inA- The hydrogen atom .
vesti~ation.

Blankenship Sentence Is Changed To Life Terna
A Gallla County man is
among 18 of the remaining 3f
ll'isoners on death row at the
Ohio Penitentiary who had
their sentencl!ll changed to llfe
terms Tlllrsday by the Ohio
&amp;lpreme Court.
Rell Blankenship, 57, formerly of VInton, has been
jailed In varloua state prisons
since his Oct. 9, 1957 ftrlt
degree murder conviction.
Blankenship was · convicted
in the shoolin&amp; death of Loren
C. Borden, 28, of Bidwell.
Arnold Fra'*lln Cooper, 23, of
Porter, was also shot in the
1181De Incident. Cooper suffered
a bullet wwnd to the spine
which baa paraiJ1e(l him for
Ufe.
TheshootiJtcOCCiin'tllrielrl)'

15 years ago, Aug. 14, 1957 at
the Gallla County Jall.
Blankenship, who was
awaiting · arraignment on a
non.,upport charge, grabbed
Slierlff Oscar Baird's revolver
from its holster as Baird
opened the jail door to admit
another prisoner.
Blankenship demanded that
he be given hta freadom from
the jail. Sheriff Baird slammed
a solid Bleel retalntilg dbor in
hta face, closing elf hta only
route of escape. Blankenship
then whirled and began
shooting at the twL prisoners
who were standing behind him.
On Oct. 9, 1957, Bla'*enshlp
Wl8. sentenced to die in the
electric chair on Jan. 15, i918,
liter a Gallia County jury

returned a guilty verdict.
Blankenship's sentencing
never came about since an
appeal was Wed on hta behalf.
Before the U. S. Supreme
Court ruling on June 29
abolishing the death sentence
on grounds it was cruel and
unusual punishment, 54 Inmates were waiting in death
row.
Atty. Gen. Wil1talfi J. Brown
had aaked that the high coort
modify the death sentences for
14 of the 18 men In accordance
with the U. S. Supreme Court
decision, a coort spokesman

Associate Ohio Pl!nltentlary
Warden LoweD G. Ridenour
said as soon as the prison
received court orders oo the 18
men, they will be taken olf
death row.
"It usually takes several
days before we get the order,"
Ridenour said. "Once we do we
move quickly."
The 18 llimatea, who wiD
become llfers and eligible for
parole after servln8 at least II
yean, will be taken to the
reception area for ab:.weeka Ill
mentaUon and teat!Jw befcn
receiving a job assigrunent.

said.
The five additional prlsomn
had their sentences vacated at
the ~Uest of the inmalel'
atlw'il!IJ&amp;. lw a4dH.

Q---What ia lightest knoW!I
metal?
A-Lttbium.

�.

4- The IlaiJy Sentinel, MidcQeport-Pomeroy, o., Aug. 4,1972

Linescores
League Nesults
By United Press International

I

f

Nationallfagu~

By FRED McMANE
and Minnesota routed Texas, 9UPI Sports Writer
1.
From the Milwaukee Brew.Pittsburgh edged St. Louis, 2ers' point of view the Detroit 1, in 10 jnnings, San Diego
Tigers' pitching stall is great ·nipped Atlanta, IN, in 11
for "batting practice." ,
innings, Philadelphia beat New
The Brewers, one of base- York, 4-1, Los Angeles blanked
·ball's lightest fiitting teams, San Francisco, 3-0, and Mon- ·
skipped batting practice for the treal downed Chicago, 2-1, in 13
second straight ,day Thursday innings then lost, . 3-0, ,Jo
night but continued to batter National League action.
the Tigers' pitchers as they
Chris Chambliss collected
collected ·u hits and beat three hits, including a pair of
Detroit, 6-3, for the third doubles, as the Indians beat the
consecutive night.
Orioles for the fifth time in
· Over the last three nights the seven games since the All-Star
Brewers have resembled a break. Tom Hilgendorf and Phil
veritable powerhouse, rapping Hennigan combined for a sevenout 45 hits and scoring 28 runs hitter in besting Mike CUellar.
while preventing the Tigers • Brooks Robinson had a homer
from gaining on the Baltimore for tbe Orioles.
Orioles in the American League
Carlton Fisk tied a record for
East.
·
Boston catchers with his 17th
Ellie Rodriguez and John homer ' and the Red Sox
Briggs did most of the damage collected 15 hits to defeat the
to the Tigers Thursday night. Yankees. Rico Petrocelli paced
Rodriguez had a two-run double the Red Sox' attack with four
in the second inning and Briggs hits as Lynn McGlothen coasted
cracked his 15th homer in the to his fifth victory.
sixth as the Brewers beat the . Luis Alvarado's 2-run triple
Tigers for the eighth time in 12 in the eighth inning sparked the
games. Milwaukee's George White Sox to victory and
Scott also had three hits for the enabled Wilbur Wood to win his
second straight game.
17th game. Ken Berry and Jack
The Tigers continue to lead Hiatt accounted for the Angels'
the AL East,.by two games but runs with homers.
for the second successive night
Jim Perry pitched a threethey failed to gain ground on hitter and Bobby Darwin and
the Orioles, who lost to Rich Reese knocked in five
Cleveland, 4-3.
runs between them in the
In other AL games, Boston Twins' triumph over Texas.
defeated New York, 7-2, Chica- Darwin and Rod Carew each
go turned back California, 4-2, hadthreehitsforMinnesola.

Allin·Thirsk
Share Lead.
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
U.S. Open at Pebble Beach,
BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (UPI) Calif., in June, so he went to
-Names like Brian "Buddy" the guy everybody turns to for
Allin and Stan Thirsk nearly golfing advice - ht:friiatiman.
always surface in a major golf
"Since tben;'• Allin said of his
championship. After the first consultation with Jim Judd of
round of the Professional Escondido, Calif., "I've been in
Golfers' Association champion- contentionalmosteveryweek."
ship, it's both of them.
Judd is an ex-municipal course
Altin emerged at midday pro who was Allin's first golf
Thursday wilh a 34-34-08 while tea,cher.
Thirsk waited until dusk at the
Palmer has been accused of
Oakland Hills Country Club psyching himself out of the
co- ll!l(Qre finishing a PGA but he was off to his best
dramatic 36-32 for his share of start in eight years in his quest
th~ 'lead in the 54th annual for the only major title he's
tournament.
never won. His 69 put him in a
"This is as big a surprise to one-undergroupwhichincluded
me as it is to everyone else," 1969 PGA winner Ray Floyd,
said Thirsk, 44, a club pro from Jerry Heard, Larry Gilbert and
Kansas City Country Club in Jim Jamieson.
Shawnee Mission, Kan .
Sam Snead, 60, was in a six" They're the greatest", player bunch at par. He's won
Thirsk said of the )ikes of three PGA titles but 'the last
Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, was in 1951.
Gary Player and Lee Trevino,
Gary Player led the eight
whose scores he beat. '.'Every- pros at one-over 71 while
body knows that. But once in a Nicklaus struggled in with a 72
while somebody gets hot..."
, ./!long with 13 others and
Goes to Mailman
· Trevino played a "dumb" 73.
Allin, 27, of Santa Barbara,
"I'm not griping or complainCalif., wasn't belting the ball ing," Palmer said of his best
overly well when before the PGA start since he hung a pair
of 68s and two 69s together to
tie for second in 1964. "But I've
just got to stop doing that.
FOR
Once . or twice you can
BACK TO understand taking three
\SCHOOL (putts), but not four times like
U1at.,
BOOK SATCHELS
Trevino said he had the
PENCIL CASES
wrong club in his hands four
times during his round.
Other School Supplies
"I flaked out," he said. "I
knew I had the wrong club in
my hands but I wouldn 'I
change. I think I got away with
a dumb round."

MIDDLEPORT

BOOK STORE

DO YOU NEED ANYTHING
FOR YOUR STABLES?
IF WE OON1 HAVE IT - WE WILL
TRY HARDER!
CAITLE HALTERS - HORSE &amp;
PONY HALTERS - WHIPS LEADS - STOCK CANES BLANKETS - FORTEX TUBS &amp;
BUCKETS - GALVANIZED TUBS
&amp; BUCKETS - SHAMPOOS FLY SPRAYS &amp; REPELLENTS BRUSHES - CURRY COMBS GROOMING SUPPLIES VETERINARY SUPPLIES.

MODERN SUPPLY
J99WESTMAIN STREET 992-216A POMEROY. OHIO
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR PETS
STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS
LAWNS - GARDENS
'.

. CLAS$ SCHEDUlES fur hltlt achool studellta Ill'!!
being mailed as soon as they can be written. Students
should follow tbe directions given if tbere is a reason
(.Continued from page 1)
to request a change.
About 120 band members are attending the band
in the junior high in Middleport about 8 oc'clock. Of
course, all board meetings a.·e onen tQ the p~bllc, but caiJlp at Rio Grande College this week. The Meigs
this one carries a special invitation. Come and tell us · Band will compete with several others on Saturday
what's on your mind. We want to know. We will look morning in presenting a half-time show.
forward to seeing yo~. ·
SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS soon will be
Just in case you may have forgotten, let me available. There will be seven ~ome games this year,
remind you that school begins, with a full day, on against Reemelin, Belpre; Wellston, Jackson,
Monday, August 28. All teachers and principals will Athens, Gallipolis and Point Pleasant. Our three
have meetings on.,Friday, August ~. in the morning away games are with Logan, Ironton and Waverly.
WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE the start of a Meigs
in Middleport and in the afternoon in their assigned
High Alumni Association. Is there any start on this
buildings.
,

SpeJJking pf Schools

Major

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5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972

Brewers Continue
.Tiger Feast, 6-3
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Phlla
001 002 OlD- A 8 0
New York
000 000 lOD- 1 6 0
Lersch, Scarce (8) and
Bateman, Ryan (6); Gentry,
Rauch (6), Sadeckl (8) and
Dyer. WP- Lersch (2-4) . LPGenlry 15-8). HR- Doyle (lstl .
110 innings)
Pi!tsbrgh 010 000 000 1- 2 6 1
St. Louis 000 010 000 o- 1 8 0
Blass, . Hernandez (10) and
Sangulllen; Wise 110-12) and
Simmons. WP- Biass (12-5) .
(11 innings)
S.D.
300 001 010 01--;- 6 u 1
Alia
011 001 020 oo- 5 9 0
Grell. Corklns 16), Ross 1111
and Blefary; Reed. Upshaw (9)
and Williams. WP-Corkins (3-5).
LP- Upshaw ll-5) . HRs-Colbert (31st(, Blefary (2nd),
Breazeale (2nd !.

Fischer, Spassky Agree to Adjourn

REYKJAVIK (UPI)-Bobby played his opening move, did
Fischer, alter waiting 21 Spassky push the curtains
San Fran
000 000 ooo- 0 3 2 minutes and double-checking aside and walk in slowly to
LosAng
10010001&gt;- 3 51
I ..
Reber er McMahon (81 and that no te eVISlon cameras play.
Rader; ~oh~ (9-S, and Yeager. . were filming him, shielded the
Grandmasters praised both
LP- Reberger 12-11 .
writing pad with his hand and players for the game.
scribbled his 41st move in the
"The best-fought and most
II st game, 13 inns I
Chi
000 000 100 000 o- 1 6 0 battle with world chess cham- exciting battle to date," OlafMil ' 100 000 000 000 1- 2 8 1 pion Boris Spassky.
sson said.
Reuschel , Aker (10), Hamil Larsen agreed ·" it was
ton (13) and Martin ; McAnally, Then the Russian champion
Marshall 171 and McCarver. and the 29-year-old American worthy of a world chamWP- Marshall 19-3). LP- Aker challenger agreed to adjourn pionship playoff and a pleasant
14-31 .
the game until today.
surprise after Spassky's
(2nd game)
.
Chicago
100 002 ooo- 3 9 0 Fiscber had two rooks and earlier mistakes."
Montreal
000 000 ooo- o 1 0 three pawns to Spassky's one
Hands 19-71 and Hundley ; rook, a bishop and four pawns
Morton. Slrohmayer (6) and
Humphrey, Boccabella (9 ). LP when the game adjourned
- Morton (5-10).
Thursday. A game can be
adjourned
either after live
(Only games scheduled)
hours or 40 moves.
American league
New York 001 100 ooo- 2 8 1 The lOth game in the $250,000
Boston
021 001 30x- 7 15 2 match will be resumed at 10:30
Klimkowski, R o Ian d lSI. a.m. EDT, 2% hours earlier
Gardner 161 and Munson;
McGiolhen (5-31 and Fisk. LP- than normal out of courtesy to .
Kiimkowski (0-2). HR- Fisk the American who observes his
(17th(.
Sabbath for 24 hours starting at
sunset
on Friday . Fischer's
Minnesota 000 240 21Q- 9 11 0
TUPPERS PLAINS
Texas . ooo 000 001- I 3 I written move will be opened at Marcia and Teresa Carr,
Perry 110-9) and Borgmann ; the start aod then Spassky will
daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Bosman, Lawson (5), Gogolewski ( 7) and Fahey. LP- Bosman play.
Charles D. Carr of Tuppers
(4-8).
Having spotted Spassky a Plains, have returned from
two-game lead, Fischer won
Baltimore 010 002 ooo- 3 7 0 four and drew three to lake a Da~ton where they took part in
the Miss Ohio Teenager
Cleveland ooo 220 OOx- 4 8 1
Cuellar ( 10-91 and Elchebar- 5.5 to 3.5 point lead with Pageant.
ren ; Hilgendorf, Hennigan (8) another seven points needed to
There were 296 girls in the
and Fosse. WP- Hilgendorl (2- win the world title .
event, the largest or any state
0) . HR- Roblnson (6thl.
Grandmasters who watcbed this year. Contestants were
Ca lifornia 000 010 OlD- 2 8 2 the game on closed-circuit divided into two groups with 50
Chicago
000 200 02x- 4 6 1 television in the corridors and
girls selected from 126 entries
Messersm ith (2-5) and Torborg, Hiatt 181: Wood (17-lll cafetaria outside the dark hall in Group I and 60 from I70
and Herrmann. HRs- Berry diflered only over Fischer's
entries in Group 2 to lak•J part
(5th). Hiatt (lstl .
chances of winning. ·
in the finals Saturday evening.
Mi lw
023 001 ooo- 6 11 1 Denmark's Bent Larsen, ratEach girl was interviewed by
Delroi I
100 100 OlD- 3 8 0 ed among the top live in the a panel of lour judges on
Colborn (A-2 ) and E. Rodri -' world, said "the game is
Friday and the preliminary for
guez : Holdsworth, Fryman (3),
Seelbach (5). Hiller (8) and hopelessly lost for Spassky." Saturday night's finals was
Freehan. LP- Holdsworlh I0-1 ). Iceland's 'Fridrik Olafsson held on Saturday morning and
HR- Briggs 1151h l.
disagreed.
afternoon when the girls
Spassky walked outside the modeled in formals . Interviews
!Only games scheduled)
ball before the game began and counted 50 per cent and formal
Major league leaders
tossed his umbrella into tbe air competition 50 per ~nt.
By United Press International and pointed to tbe far~way
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leading Batters
Both ·Marcia and Teresa
mountains. Only after Fischer, were selected to vie lor the tiUe
National Le01.gue
g. ab r. h. pet. arri'ving seven minutes late,
Cdeno, Hou 86 346 71 122 .353 had settled into tbe chair and on Saturday evening. The
Dvlllo, Pit 75 227 38 so .352
winner was from Toledo. Mrs.
Wilms, Chi '1'1 392 62 133 .339
Carr accompanied
her
Mota . LA 76 245 39 82 .335
daughters
and
was
a
Garr.Atl 91 369 58 120 .325
Snguiln, Pll
chaperone.
92 353 40 114 .323
Alou,SI.L 89 345 41111 .322
Brock . SI.L 97 415 52 133 .320
Bckner. LA 67 231 26 74 .320
Lee, SD
68 251 35 79 .315

Carr Sisters

Competed in

Teen Pageant

Experts Join

Horseshoe
Events

American League

g. ab

Rudi.Oak 95
Pnlela. KC 95
Shblm,KC 82
Berry, Cal 70
Fisk, Bos 79
Allen, Chi 98
Carew. Min 81&gt;
Oils, KC 91
Krkpirk,KC

387
366
278
247
271
334
321
343

r. h. pel.
66 122 .315

52 115 .314
37 87 .313
31 77 .312
51 84 .310
65 103 .308
36 98 .305
47 103 .300

234 32 69 .295
May, Chi 96 341 61 100 .293
Home Runs
National League : Colbert, SD
72

31;

Bench , Cin 24 ; Williams,

Chi, May. Hou and Stargell,
Pitt 22.
American league: Allen, Chi
n Jackson, Oak 21; Cash, Del
' 0. Killebrew, Mlnn and Ep&lt;; fCIIl ,

Oak 18.

Runs Baffed In
Nalionol Laague: Colbert, SD
8A ; Bench, Cin and Stargell,
Pill 76 ; Williams, Chl71 ; May,
Hou 68.
American League: Allen, Chi
77; Jackson, Oak 61 ; Scoll, Mil
and Murcer, NY 59 ; Mayberry,

KC 56.

Pitching
National League: Carlton.
Phil 16-6; Jenkins, Chi 14-9;
Nolan, Cln 13-3; Blass, Pill 12-

yet? If 110, would you let me llllow. Tllole Wbo w.ld
be interested in such 111 organlution should crop me
a note and we'll see If we can belp get It moving. We
would like to help. . ..
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NEWS &amp; NOTES - Our teaching lltaff should
soon be complete- With 140 staff· members, we are
never altogether certain until the first day of 8Citool
- We are still receiving letters with suggestions,
complaints, etc.'- We encourage you to send more. '
_; They are helpful. - Remember the ·achool insurance offered this year will be in effect as of tbe
datetheprerniumisreceivedin School.- The August
physical fitness program is drawing about five dozen
participants.

GREENVILLE,Ohio(UPI )Horseshoeexperts in Classes B,
C and D today join the 36 in
Class A in competition at the
1972 World Horseshoe Tournament.
Perfect 6-0 scores Thursday
in the opening of men's Class A
action were posted by Kurt
Day of Franklort, Ind., the defending champion; ElmerHohl,
Wellesley, Ont., the top qualifier; Dan Kuchcinski, Bryant,
Ind., two-time world titiist; and
Mark Seibold, Huntington, Ind.
Each will pitch 35 games to
decide the 1972 winner.
At a Thursday business meeting, it was decided to hold the
1974 world tournament at
Keene, N.H.
New officers elected were
John Rademacher, Plant City,
Fla., 2nd vice president; Earl
Winston, Lamonte, Mo., third
vice president; Dorothy Pinch,
Sharon, Pa., lourth vice president, and W. Ray Williams,
Eureka, Cali!., secretary-treasurer: Williams ·succeeds Bob
Pence, who held the post 14
years. The president and first
vice president were not up for
grabs this year.

Cycle Driver
Hurt, Otarged

The driver of a motorcycle
was arrested on a charge of
reckless operation following an
accident Thursday at I :30 p.m.
on township road 119 in
Chester.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. said Charles Rodney
Poole, 18, Davisville, Rt. I,
operating a motorcycle
eastward belonging to Giles
Hysell, Minersville, lost
control in gravel, went off the
road into a ditch, and flipped
over about 50 ft. farther along
the ditch.
Poole was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy E-R squad where he
was treated and released . He
was later lodged in county jail.

SEARS NAMED
5; Sutton, LA, Torres, Mont,
CLEVEI:AND (UP! ) Cleveland and Gibson, SI.L 12Gerry
Sears,
a
for- .
6: Seaver. NY 12-9.
mer
basketball
standout
American League : Lolich,
at Miami (Ohio) UniDet 18-6; Perry, Clev 18·8i
Wood, Chi 17·11; Palmer, Ball
versity, Thursday
was
and Hunter, Oak 14-4; Holtz·
named
.
assistant
basketball
man, Oak 14-9.
coach at Cleveland State
University.
REDS BACK HOME
Sears will replace Marlo
CINCINNATI (UP!) ~ The
Termini on Sept. I and will
Cincinnati Reds host a fiveSCIOTO RESULTS
game series at home against
COLUMBUS I UPI) - Angel work with both the varsity and
the Atlanta Braves, starting Crystal set a new lifetime junior varsity squad.
tonight with a doubleheader. mark Thursday in winning the
Cincinnati starting pitchers featured eighth race at Scioto
BAND TO MEET
tonight will be Ross Grimsley Downs in 2:04 2-5.
All Soutbern High School
(9-4) and Tom Hall (4-1) .
Has Time placed and Steady Band members from the
Pitching for Atlanta will be Cathy showed.
seventh through the -12th
George Stone (3-8) and Denny
A lh'l nightly double com- grades wtu meet at the high
McLain (2-1) .
bination of-Kokosing and Little school in Racine from 7 to ·g
The Reds and Braves will Direct paid $26.40.
p.m. Monday.
play single games Saturday,
Attendance was 4,ii55 and the
Sunday and Monday.
night's handle was $209,764.
LODGE TO MEET
.
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM,
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
for work in the master mason
degree for one candidate.
Refreshments wtu be served.
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
All master masons are
welcome.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN

Relax , . , Drive in for a Delicious
Moo Burger. Best yet for the united
tastes of America. Or a refreshing
malt, shake, cone or sundae.

MOO MOO DAIRY BARN
At Forked Run Lake Entrance

Bottom,O,

PICNIC SET
Racine American Legion
Post 602 wiD ' hold Its annual
picnic Sunday at Hidden Lakes
with a potluck dinner at noon,
Commander Harry Wilford
annOWlced today. Barbecue
chicken and beverage will be
furnished by the post.

REYKJAVIK (UP!) - The
moves in the lOth game of the
Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer
world che!IS championship:
Flscber (w)
Spas sky (b)
I. P-K4
P-K4
2. KT-KB3
KT-QB3
3. B-KT5
P-QR3
4. B-R4
KT-KB3
5. 0.0
B-K2
6. R-Kl
P-QKT4
7. B-KT3
P-Q:I
8. P-B3
O.Q
9. P-KR3
KT-QKTI
10. P-Q4
KT(QKTI)-Q2
II. Kt (QKI1)-Q2
B-Kt2
12. B-B2
R-KI
13. P-Q){t4
B(K2)-BI
14. P-QR4
Kt-Kl3
15. P-QR5
Kt-Q2
16. B-Kt2
Q-Ktl
17. R-Ktl
P-B4
18. P(Kt4)XP
P(Q3)XP
19. PXP (K5)
Kt(Q2)XP
20. KtXKt
QXKt

21. P-QB4
'22. BxKT
23. PxP
24. Q-Bl
25. KT-B3
26. B-KT3
27. Q-KB4
28. KT-K5
29. R(Kil)-Ql
30. BxP ch
31. QxR ch
32. KtxQ
33. RxB
3-1. R-Q7 ch
35. R-Kt7
36.K-R2
37 .. P-Kt3
38. K-Kt2
39. R-Kt6
40. K-B3
Adjourned

·Q-85

QxB
R(KI)-Ql
Q-QB6

QxP

PxP
R-Q2
Q-B2
R-K2
RxB

QxQ
BxP
KxKt
K-83
R·R8 ch
B-Q:rch
P-Kt.l
P-R4
R-Qil

K-B2

HAVE FUN
An old rashioned wiener
roast and hayride was held last
SaturdaY night at the farm
home or Mr. and Mrs. James
Sheets 11ear Harrisonville .
Guests enjoying a rousing
~oftball game and the food and
fire were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Poulin and son, Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Tripp and sons, Mr. and
Mrr-1
. obert lltch, Mr. and
Mr . John McGraw and son,
Mr and Mrs. John Reece and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Tony
May and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Buck.

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THE BAND stands at attenUon waiting for the whistle to
blow beginning marching practice.
PERCUSSION SECTION of the Meigs Band, while waiting to line up for marching
practice, gave out with the beat Wednesday afternoon. Even though the temperatures were
well in the IJjB band members were all present at 3:45 to begin their drills.

SPEAKING OF

Pictures by Katie Crow
. ..

COOLVILLE - Mrs. Trena serve at the annual Beegle
Ethel Blizzard, 83, Coolville Family reunion this weekend
Route I, died early Friday at the Racine American Legion
morning at her home following Hall are:
Registration, Vera Beegle,
an extended illness.
Lora
Theiss, Jan Hill, and
Mrs. Blizzard was born at the
Melanie
Beegle ; tables,
farm home where she died. She
was the daughter of the late Lawrence Beegle, Robert E.
William and Mary Berrill Beegle, Robert G. Beegle, and
Baker. Mrs. Blizzard was a Ronald Beegle ; program,
member of the Ireland Franie McKelvey, Jean Alkire,
Fern Gaul, Bonnie Theiss;
Congregational Church.
Surviving are her husband, nominating, Robert G. Beegle,
Clyde; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Martha Lou Beegle and Fern
Rupe, and two grandsons, Gaul; square dance, Charles
Charles and David Rupe , ail of Alkire and Bob McKelvey.
Beegle family reunion olCoalville Route I. Also surficers
for 1972 are Lawrence
viving are several cousins .
Funeral services will be held Beegle, president; Janet
at 3 p.m. S~U~~nt the White Beegle Roush, vice president;
Funeral Home there with the Vera Beegle, treasurer and
Rev . Roy Deeter officiating. Leanna Beegle, secretary .
Saturday there will be a
Burial will be in the Coolville
square
· dance lor Beegle
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime alter families and friends at 9 p.m.
Music will be provided by the
noon Saturday.
Francis Andrews Band.
Registration is Sunday at II
a.m. with a basket dinner at
12 :30 p.m. lollowed by a
TO KINGS ISLAND
program
at 2. Ail members or
All summer Neighborhood
Youth Corps enrollees of the the family are cordially invited
Community Action Program to the dance and reunion.
will go . to Kings Island
Saturday morning. They will
leave from the Meigs High
School at Rock Springs at 6:30
a.m. Mrs. Jeanne Slawter,
CAP co-ordinator counselor,
said.

108 Attending Camp

begins at 8 a.m. following breakfast at 7:15. It's practice,
practice and more practice, and then a break to do just the
things they want to do. From 2 to 3:45p.m. is tbe designated
free time, then back to the marching fteld until 5:15, Dmner
is served at 5:30, but then from 7 to 8:30 p.m., back to the
field! Students are in tbeir rooms at !be dorms at 10:30 and
lights are out at II pm.

Hair Styling
··~·····················1·

by
KAY
AT THE WASffiNG MACHINES Wednesday were Carmel Murphy, Liz Blaettnar,
Debbie Gallagher, Donna Francis and Sheila McKnight, front to back. Following lunch at
12:45 band members are given free time to do tbeir laundry and go swimming. They report
back to the marching field at 3:45.

Top-most hair stylists

~

~~~m;~ili~~~!~l~l~~l~;j;~;;~~~f:~~~~;~~•;m~;;;;;;;lli;m~~~~;;;~;;mmj;i~~lji;:;m;~;:~~~~m~;~;~;l~~~~ffi~~J~

relate that regular care of
the hair and use of creme
r inses keeps most ha lr,

even tinted hair looking

Ham.

LUNCH TIME at Camp O'eacendo.
lunch In the cafeteria were Donna Fmter,
SheUa McKnight and Patty Well, left. On right serving the young ladies were Wilma Arnold
and Kathryn Jooes.

natural , glow ing , and easy
to manage.
However, If you have .
ha ir problems, such as spilt
ends or oil , limp hair,
wh ic h needs professional

allenllon. you should
consult your ha ir stylist,

who knows how to &lt;:ope

wllh

these

problems

properly . and can give your

hair professional attention
care to relristate it to
he~lth asaln.

and

..
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5omet~lng

worthwhile
remembering Is the foci
thai we keer, up with ali lhe
latest sty es, producls ,
methods. and lechnlques
for properly caring for the
hair .

CHATEAU BEAUTY
SALON

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MEIGS BAND MEMBERS took part of their free time
Wednesday to practice before meeting on the marching fie ld.
Left to right are Lisa Thomas, Angie Sission, Karen Johnson,
Linda Reuter, Diana Carsey, Melanie Burt, Carmel Murphy
and Mary Krawsczyn.
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IT WAS TIME to call home
for Rayanna Cole, a member
of the Meigs Band attending
Camp Crescendo at Rio
Grande College lor one
week.

214 t . SeCOND ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

P N_r;;m-7*--·

Muskie Out Front

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Do Yourself

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A Flavor/

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Drive in for a delicious sundae, shake,
malt or cone. let us fill your party
needs, too.

.

McCLURE'S
992-5248

w

Middleport, 0,

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rr ISN'T ALL WORK at Camp Crescendo, Rio Grande
College wbere 108 members of the Meigs High School Band
are spe~ding the week . These young ladies were enjoying the
indoor pool, Judy Radford, Mona King, Cathy Osborne,
Renny Eblin and April Fraser.

WASHINGTON (UPI )--Sen.
GeorgeS.McGovern's apparent
first choice for the Democratic
vice presidential nomination is
party stalwart Edmund S.
Muskie, but McGovern is
keeping his options open.
During a. 25-minute news
conference Thursday, McGovern refused to say specifically who was highest in his
estimation. But it was clear
from his remarks and those of
a source close to him that
Muskie is out in front .
He also indicated that he does
not believe the uncertainties
over the vice presidential
nominee have hurt his cam·
paign.
"There won 't be any decision
made until I've had a long talk
with Ed Muskie," McGovern
said. "Be sure that Ed Muskie

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•~ r..mml~;1;lJ~l~Jm;;;~;~;l;~;~;~;mr~m~mill;~~;s~~~~;mm~t~f:f?:~~:~:;:;;~m~~ ;~~;;~~m;~~~;;!~m;~;~~~~m:mr:;11~;;jl~ljl~lllJ~;mmm;~l~~m~~l~~~l~l1~1;~;ml!l!l~l~l~l~ll~llt~;l~lllm~l

A Great Once-A-Year

FROM'

. ....

One hundred and eight members of the Meigs High
School marching band are attending Camp Crescendo at Rio
Grande College for one week. The students agree It is hard
work but they are loving every minute of it. Their work day

Committees
For Reunion

4th &amp; Locust

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Veteran.s Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Franklin
Sisson, Pomeroy; Charles
Morebead, Belpre, and Nara
Hartman, Long Bottom.
DISCHARGED - Ronald
Bostic, Marla Walding, and
Robert Barrett.

Trena Blizzard
Are Announced
Died on Friday Committees appointed to

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy ER squad was
called to near Royal Oak Park
at I :38 p.m. Thursday for
Charles Rodney Poole, 18, of
Davisville, W. Va., who was
injured when he leU from ·a
motorcycle . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
released.

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ALE

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They'll Do It Every Time
VERMIN SNEAKER THOUGfll' HE WI-$_

BIOOOMeS CH I E~ •yES M.t.N'~ ·:rHIS'LL
PUT HIM SIX APPLES EIEHIND
pHQ01'Yoo o

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

See Special Insert In This
Newspaper TODAY!!

MAAINGaooK ON
TI-lE TEJ&gt;GHER'5 PET
SWEEPSTAKES• '·
fj,~ A.f..o A Til" 011 THC"
MII:N H.I\TTO

DON'T MISS IT I I

RAY d IIRANNIGAN
58Tt'iR&amp;-

MQNiiiOiVIU.E,
PE&gt;INA. ·

will be fully consulted before I
make any final decision."
Asked whether he bad raised
the possibility of Muskie ,
becoming the nominee, MeGovern said, "Not with him... but in talking with others
whose political judgment I
value I have raised his name."
A source close to McGovern
said earlier in the day that
unless Muskie, the 1968 vice
presidential nominee and contender in the recent presidential primaries, takes himself
out of the race, he wlli be
McGovern's choice.
The Democratic National

I

---------BROWNING, NOT CALL
R. J. Browning is assistant
manager of the Pomeroy AllStars Little League team, not
Woody Call as previously
stated.
The All-Stars, who defeated
Jackson 14-13 Wednesday
niglit, play tonight against
South Webster in the second
round of the Wellston Little
League All-Star Tournament.
TREATMENT SOUGHT
HOUSTQN (UPI)-If an astronaut gets sick while on a
long journey Into space, the
space agency wants to fmd
some way doctors on earth can
treat him by remote control.
The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration said
Thursday It was negotiating
with Lockheed to design Slid
test a $4.9 mlliton health ·care
Wlit to do the job.
A special health staUon will
be built .Jn some remo.te area
wbere there Ia a shortage of
doctors. Alling residents will
enter the station and aee If
phystcla.. In a faraway boiPtal can dlagna.e and treat
them through telephone, ·
television and data relay
systenla Instead of In peraon.
The locatlm of the health
llatlon hal not beln ohotlen.

Committee will meet Tuesday
to choose the nominee, and it is
almost certain to accept
McGovern's choice.
He said he was "determined
to take advantage of the luxury
of this full week" to make the
decision. He said he would
name his choice no later than
Monday.
McGovern said that sens.
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, Edward M. Kennedy of
MassacbusettsandAbrahamA.
Ribicoff of Connecticut had
indicated again this week that
they were not interested in the
post. He said he did not
pressure them to change their
minds.
McGovern took note of the
present method of selecting the
vice presidential nominee when
the prestdenUal candidate Ia
"exhausted and rushed." He
said that he has asked
Democratic National Chairman
Mrs. Jean Westwood to assign
the new charter commission the
responsibility for reviewing and
recommending a better method
of selection.

ESTHER LOWERY was
deep in coocentration as she
practiced on her flute at
Band Camp Wednesday.

KAREN JOHNSON AND Shetla Edwards, froot to back,
were busy sorting clothes to be laundered Wednesday at
Camp Crescendo at Rio Grande College.

REUNION SET
The descendants of Hoit and
Mary Foster Curtis will hold
their 66th annual reunion at the
Shelter house at Hoback Park,
Dorsey Mlil Road, Heath, Ohio,
oo Sunday, Aug. 20. A basket
dinner will be held at noon. The
reunion this year will be hosted
by the Damon Curtis family

DWIGNI' GOINS, the leW
band lnatrudor, was busy
giving orders and llnlng up
members Wednesday prior
to the marching session.

Guns Stolen

A lnaktng and entering was
inveslfgated at the Hiram
Stutes residence in Mills
Village at 12:15 a.m. today i,y
the Gallia County Sherifl's
Department.
Entry, which was reported to
have happened between 7:30
p.m., and midnight Thursday,
Pleasant Valley Hospital ·
was
gained after the back door
Discharges : Harold Bush,
Sr., Debbie Filson, Point Nas forced open. The intruders
Pleasant; Mrs. Phillip HaU, ransacked the house and were
West Columbia, and Opal reported to have stolen a
Browning Automatic 16 gauge
McClure, Point Pleasant.
shotgun. a Winchester Modell2
shotgun, a .22 caliber bolt
action 7-shot Marlin rifle, and
Q- What is the lightest of
six
boxes of ammuniUon. The
substances?
incident
is still under inA- The hydrogen atom .
vesti~ation.

Blankenship Sentence Is Changed To Life Terna
A Gallla County man is
among 18 of the remaining 3f
ll'isoners on death row at the
Ohio Penitentiary who had
their sentencl!ll changed to llfe
terms Tlllrsday by the Ohio
&amp;lpreme Court.
Rell Blankenship, 57, formerly of VInton, has been
jailed In varloua state prisons
since his Oct. 9, 1957 ftrlt
degree murder conviction.
Blankenship was · convicted
in the shoolin&amp; death of Loren
C. Borden, 28, of Bidwell.
Arnold Fra'*lln Cooper, 23, of
Porter, was also shot in the
1181De Incident. Cooper suffered
a bullet wwnd to the spine
which baa paraiJ1e(l him for
Ufe.
TheshootiJtcOCCiin'tllrielrl)'

15 years ago, Aug. 14, 1957 at
the Gallla County Jall.
Blankenship, who was
awaiting · arraignment on a
non.,upport charge, grabbed
Slierlff Oscar Baird's revolver
from its holster as Baird
opened the jail door to admit
another prisoner.
Blankenship demanded that
he be given hta freadom from
the jail. Sheriff Baird slammed
a solid Bleel retalntilg dbor in
hta face, closing elf hta only
route of escape. Blankenship
then whirled and began
shooting at the twL prisoners
who were standing behind him.
On Oct. 9, 1957, Bla'*enshlp
Wl8. sentenced to die in the
electric chair on Jan. 15, i918,
liter a Gallia County jury

returned a guilty verdict.
Blankenship's sentencing
never came about since an
appeal was Wed on hta behalf.
Before the U. S. Supreme
Court ruling on June 29
abolishing the death sentence
on grounds it was cruel and
unusual punishment, 54 Inmates were waiting in death
row.
Atty. Gen. Wil1talfi J. Brown
had aaked that the high coort
modify the death sentences for
14 of the 18 men In accordance
with the U. S. Supreme Court
decision, a coort spokesman

Associate Ohio Pl!nltentlary
Warden LoweD G. Ridenour
said as soon as the prison
received court orders oo the 18
men, they will be taken olf
death row.
"It usually takes several
days before we get the order,"
Ridenour said. "Once we do we
move quickly."
The 18 llimatea, who wiD
become llfers and eligible for
parole after servln8 at least II
yean, will be taken to the
reception area for ab:.weeka Ill
mentaUon and teat!Jw befcn
receiving a job assigrunent.

said.
The five additional prlsomn
had their sentences vacated at
the ~Uest of the inmalel'
atlw'il!IJ&amp;. lw a4dH.

Q---What ia lightest knoW!I
metal?
A-Lttbium.

�' ,,

.. .

~

•

6-:- Tl_le D,aily Senlinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Aug. 4, 1972

H

Fourth Reunion .Held .
At Forest Acres Park ·
The fourth annual reunion of
the Taylor-Harper families
was held Sunday at Forest
Acres Park, Rutland.
A basket lunch was served at
noon with Ben Rife giving the
table grace. During a business
meeting the death of Mrs.
Pearl Taylor was noted and
officers for 1973 were elec!M.
They are Mrs. Ruby Rife,
president; John L.. Werner,
vice president; Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, secretary; and Earl
Werner, treasurer.
Recognized were James A.
Taylor, Middleport, oldest man
present; Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Columbus, oldest woman
present;
Joseph
Glenn
Starkey, two week old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Starkey,
Kent, the youngest present,
and Mr . and Mrs . Earl
Rickard, Norwalk, the ones
traveH~g. the farthest. distance.
Receovmg door prozes were
Mark Stout, Cincinnati, and
Karmel DeLong, Pomerov. A
ball game was held bet 1een
the Taylors and the Harpers.
Other games were enjoyed.
The next reunion was set for
July 29, 1973 at Forest Acres
Park.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Rife, Carla and Becky;
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Taylor,
Roy and Larry; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Taylor, Barbara and
Dale; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Taylor and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Taylor, Mr. Harold Taylor
and Marte, Mr. and Mrs.

Headquarters for

Accutron•
by Bulova
The heart of an Aecutron
watch is a tiny,
electron lca lly·powered
tunina: fork that splits a
second into 360 equal

p•rts. This split·second

tlmina is so precise that
Bulova guarantees
·
accuracy to within a

minute a month.• See

Ronald Adrian, M{. and Mrs.
Michel Garland, Kevin
Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
. Harper, Mr. and Mrs. Guy W.
H3rper and Ryan, Mr. and
Mo·s. Earl J. Richard, Miss
Kathryn Werner,
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Taylor, Mrs. Larry Hoschsr
and sons, Mrs. Ronald Carman, Richsrd and Ronald,
Ernest VanCooney, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Taylor, Tanya
and Scott, Harriett Thompson,
Mr. and Mrs. Karmel DeLong,
Martin Davis, ' Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Starkey, Jimmy and Joey,
Robert .Delong, Jeff Delong,
Mr. and Mrs. John Warner,
Mrs. Meda Jane Stout, Greg
and Mark, and Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Werner.

•

{'I~

Jr.JOWer Gtven
B,..j1-UIJe-to-b·n
1

c;-

.RACINE _ A bridal shower
was held recently in honor of
Miss Donna Theiss, bride-elect
of Mr. Daniel Sayre. Miss
Paula Crabtree hosted the
shower at the Kenneth Theiss
residence.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Gretta
Carnahan, Mrs. Tom Diddle,
and Mrs. Blythe Theiss.
Assisting with the refreshments were Mrs. Jack Crabtree and Mrs. Roger Birch.
Attending besides those
named above were Martha Lou
Beegle, Sharon Russell, Joyce
Ritchie, Dauna Rhodes,
Mildred Carnahan, Ruth
Simpson, Ida Diehl, Florence
Circle, Irene Hoback, Belle
Theiss, Karen Johnson, Bonnie
Theiss, Debbie Norris, Linda
Cleland, Connie Van Maire,
Arlene Wallace, Wilma
Wallace, Hazel Wickline, Fern
Cheesebrew, Jannine Petrel,
Mattie Beegle, Peggy Crabtree, Doris Rogers and Bernice

our full selection of

' Theiss.

Accutron watches.

Others presenting gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre,
Sadie Thuener, Ann Beegle,
Beverly Price, Janice Lisle,
Margaret Lehew, Sharon
Diddle, Rose Grindstaff, Laura
Circle, Edna Knopp, Frances
· Foster, Margie Salser, Emma
Salser, Esther West, Joyce
Hoback,
Vera
Beegle,
Josephine Smith, Hattie Paynter, and Carol McChesney.

From SilO.

•we will tdjult to thla tolarantt, II
NCtsury.

~Uiranttt

Is for ont yttr.

Cycle .Set Has Style All its Owf!
II)'

II~U: !Ii

llt:NSESS\'
:"t:A 1\'onll'n'• Editur
Nt:\1' YOlO\ - 1 NI•: AI -

Tht.• j!l'f.'al ould(KII':&gt; hnn.' &lt;tl wavs bt't&gt;ll just whrn• lht·,-

ar~ . Rut as· or lall· lht.•\·· v~

b t.• t o m f.' thr stomjling
j.!rnunds for at'tivr sport s
fans.
Could be that thr bi~
lwalth kick was the impetus
More people than ever are
into the health fo&lt;Kl svn·
dronw . E;\31ing onl~, what
&lt;·omes naturallv . Health food
stores are popping up rvery where and organic food is
stocked on a meaningful
number or shelves in vour
favorite supermarket . ·The
t&gt;cology movpment has taken
oveo·. Additives have beeome
the enemy - natural vitamins the vidor· . And rresh
unpolluted air. c lear water
a nd clean living arp common
goals .
B i c I' c I in g. the anv·age
travel-at·your . 0 w n . s Peed
spnrt . is witnessing a special
status all its own. For while
skiing and tennis. both so
popular. o·eqture a certaon
amount of skill and advance
~n·pao·atoon. bicycle riding is
an anytome · any:-- here sort
of actovoty for whtch there is
only one requirement _ a
bike .
Sweater Bee and BeeWear. a misses and junior
sweater maker respectively,
make way for this sport with
a group of bicycle·geared
tops in their latest collection s. Sweater Bee sports
a variety ol hip length capes
which clear the wheels and
spokes with many inches to
spare . Capes are layered
o v e r matching sweaters
which in turn layer over turtleneck t o p s for extra
warmth since bicycle riding
ts now a 12·month a year
sport.
T-shirts and sweaters with
color-sliced inserts or placed
stripes in very obvious colors are the standard tops
for cycling. The brighter the

Free,-wheel1ng stripes on acryl ic bicycle sweater ore designed to allow the
cycl 1st to stand out to oncomi ng t-rofl1c. Spoke folk toke to swea ter layers for
breezy b1cycl1ng . Over o turtleneck goes on Orion, pebble tweed sweater vest
and then o matching fnnged cope ond tweedy kn it pants.
(By Be. Wtor, ltlf, and

top , the easier it is for
motorists to spot cyclists and
clear the way for them . Bee·
Wear's young, junior clinging
bicycle sweater can't be
missed in its bright array of
colors and stripes.
Apartment dwellers in
large cities may have problems storing bikes . So they
choose to rent them . When-

ever there's a group of en·
thusiasts in vivid mulii·
colored tops hovering around
a store front , you can be reasonably sure the store rents
bicycles.
In the 1930s the ' 'hothouse
fl ow e r s" tpamper.ed fe.
males I occasionally pedalled
around on bicycles, very
tongue-in-eheek . wearing

~wratrr

IJrt, right)

PROFILES ·in COAL

A silent au~tlon was held by Zona Biggs, Mrs. Mary Jo
the good of the order com- Pooler, Mrs. Mabel Van Meter,
mittee at the Tuesday night Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs.
meeting of Chester Council323, Ethel Orr, Mrs. Zelda Weber,
Mrs. Golda Wolle, MrS. Erma
Daughters of America.
Mrs. Thelma White, coWl· Cleland, Mrs. Elizabeth
cilor, presided at the meeting Wickham, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
attended by 20 members and Mrs. Inzy Newell, Mrs. Goldie
one guest. It was repor!M that Frederick, Mrs. Helen WoU,
Mrs. Betty Roush Is home from Mrs. Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
the hospital. Mrs. Esther Ada Neutzling, Mrs. Letha
Ridenour reported on activities Wood, and Mrs. Marcia Keller .
of the good of the order com- , - -- -- - - - - mittee, and Mrs. Ada Morris
gave out letters to the members co ncerning ways and
means and pW'ctulsing chairs
for the hall. Mrs. Ada Van
Me!Jor annoWlced that this
month's past councilors'
meeting will be held at the
lodge hall.
Attending the meeting Who cares about smoggy skies
besides those named were Mrs. About empty and polluted lakes.
- - - - - . , . - - - - - cans and .trash littering our
countryside. About plants and
CHAIRMAN NOTED
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle Is trees dying in our forests.
And animals too. Who cares?
the flower and memorial
committee · chairman for the Woodsy Owl, the Nation's new
American Legion Auxiliary of battlerfor a clean environment
Racine Post 602. Her ap- cares. And so should you.
pointment was annowoced at a Join Woodsy in the fight against
pollution .
recent meeting of the unit.

By John Reece

ED. NOTE: PROFilES in COAL, by John Reece of
Pomeroy, iB expected to be a periodic feature in newspapers of
Ute Ohio Valley Publishing Co. PROFilES will be personality
Bktlches of the men who take the coal from the mines that will
fire the General James M, Gavin Power Plant.
Meigs Mines No. I and 2, the most modem hi the world will
be operated by a new kind of coal miner: managed by 'men
trained in engineering and worked by men with extensive
technical akills.
are iltteresling people, certain to become
leaders In their communities.
Mr. Jleece, public affairs coordinator for the Gavin Plant Is
a native of Longview, Wash., attended the University' of
Waahington and serv~ in tbe U.S. Marine Corps, 1959-1963. He
began employment With the Ohio Power Co. in Canton in 1963.

noer

"Since I've been out of
college, I've been a coal
miner," stated Paul R.
Williams, Superintendent of
Meigs Mine No. 2 of the
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
"And It's the type of career
lhatl18s provided well for my
family ."
Williams, who is respon.
slble for the total operation of
Meigs Mine No. 2 near Point
Rock in Meigs County, is a
native of Logville, Ky . He
attended Campbellsville (Ky .)
Junior College following his
graduation from Morgan
County (Ky.) High School in
1940. His education was interrupted by a four year hitch
in the U. S. Army Signal Corps
during World War II.
Following his dischsrge, he
attended the University of
Kentucky where he grad ua!M
In 1949 with a BS In Electrical
Engineering.
His previous employment
has ranged from Mining

NEUMANS ARE HOME
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Charles
Neuman
have
retlU'ned from a vacation trip
in which they toured the states
of Virginia, Tennessee and
Kentucky,
stopping
at
Mountain Lake at Blacksburg,
Va.; Knoxville, and the Clinch
Mowotalns. They watched a
television show at Renfro
Valley, Tenn., and visited in
Moorehead, Ky.

long flowered skirts, !eg-omutton sleeved tops and
large brimmed hats. They
were a whole other thing
from the ·liberated, bodyconscious cyclists of the '70s,
who consider this form of
exercise as one of the daily,
or at least weekly , necessities.

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Weese returned recently
from a trip which took them

Eddy s Schedule
In Meigs County

BIGWSOISTO

Mr . Eddy Educator 's
Schedule In Meigs County for
the week of Aug. 7· 11 •
MONDAY - Page town.
3•30·4; 15; Harrisonville. 4• 45.
5: 30 ; Wh istle Stop, Wolf Pen,
6: 30·7; Rutland Ma in, 7•30·

Quasac H cciNs'OlE"coLOR TV
,,.m

Where has the swruner gone!
Two weeks from now the Meigs county Fair will be in full
swing, and just three weeks from Monday school begins.
The peak vacation season hss passed, and more than one
family Is setUing back into old routines after a week or two of
those lazy, hazy, crazy days away from a schedule.
The Rev. and Mrs. llobert Kuhn retW'ned Thursday from
their vacation. Just the two went. They drove to Newport News,
Va. to visit their son, David, an Air Force sergeant at the Langley Base. They saw Apollo 12, visited the Mariners Museum and
took the two hour Newport News Harbor Cruise .
From there they went. historic with visits to Jamestown,
Yorktown, and Williamsburg. Then it was on to Glen Burnie, Md.
to visit Edward Kuhn and his wife, and Pittsburgh to visit Mrs.
Kuhn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Miller. Today they
drove to Mansfield where Mrs. Kuhn will play for a wedding
tomorrow night.

MR. AND MRS. ED KENNEDY and their five youngsters
enjoyed a baseball game in Cincinnati and then went up to Kings
Island for a day at the amusement park.
AND WHAT ABOUT YOUR vacation? Tell us about it -992-

5292.

Today
MOTOROLA
SCHEDULED MEETING of Serving starting at 5 p.m . with
Middleport Chamber of pies, cake and sandwiches also
Commerce for tonight, Friday, -..,.to be served. Proceeds to •
postponed until Friday, Aug. church building fund.
,.
tO, at offices of Columbus .and
· · " ' !lUNDA-Y: • • ·
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
TEAFORD FAMILY
reunion, Sunday, state park,
SATURDAY
Route 33, on left going north.
CHICKEN BARBECUE Potluck dinner, 1!.30 a.m.
Saturday at Legion Park followed by business meeting
behind Middleport Post Office and games.
beginning at II a . m. by
ANNUAL ALBERT Young
Middleport Fire Department. family reunion S411day in !he
Proceeds to new fire station Woode Grove at Alfred.
equipment fund .
MARTIN AND Emma Sayre
OLD FASHIONED ice cream family reunion, Sunday, 12.30
soc ial, Saturday, Columbia p.m . Sunday, at Shriner Park,
...... W\MITH&amp;. fM11-ill'lllftl. ,_.. .._.
........................._. .........c-.
Chapel Church located on Racine.
Route 689 at Point Rock,
DESCENDANTS of Thomas
Albany-Wilkesville
Road . Durst and Mary Shirley Durst
PLUS ...
will hold annual reunion
THESE
OTHER
Sunday, at large shelter at
REASONS:
Kera-Land near Ravenswood,
W. Va. Basket dinner, 12 :30
p.m. All relatives, friends
inv ited.
A picnic was planned for
September when the East
MONDAY
Letart Women's Society of
FELLOWSHIP meeting,
Christian Service met Tuesday Monday , 7:30p. m.at Mt. Olive
· night at the church.
Church, Long Bottom. Public
Mrs. Mary Roush, vice invi!M.
president, opened the meeting
ALL SENTmEL carriers of
with a reading from the
r;=::;:: See 25' Qr • I pr U Color TV Today at: ==il
Meigs
- Mason area and inResponse magazine entitled
" Fa ilh
Means Humble terested parents will meet at
Obedience." Reports were 7: :W p.m. Monday at The Daily
Middleport, 0.
given by Mrs. Hazel Fox, Sentinel office, Court St.,
secretary, and Mrs. Eileen Pomeroy.
Roush, treasurer.
Mrs.
Mabel
Shields
presented the program using
"One Day Can Change Your
Life," as her topic. Prayer was
by Mrs. Mildred Donahue,
scripture was taken from St.
Matthew, and the hymn used
was Are You Able." Mrs.
Eileen Roush and Mrs. Lucy
Donahue served refreshment.~
to thooe named and Mrs. Doris
Sayre,
Mrs.
Margaret
Gloeckner and Mrs . Julia
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Norris.

Picnic Planned
At East Letart

8•30.

TUESDAY -

~ · 45·4;

INTEREST

On Passbook
Savin~
5 per cent per year paid on

Regular Passbook Savings.
No Minimum . Interest from
date of deposit to date of
·withdrawal. Interest com·
pounded quarterly. Interest
l'Oid as long as an open
account Is ma intained.

DOLLAR DAYS

Tht Athtfts County
S.vints &amp; Loan Co.

196 Socond St.

Pomeroy, OtoiG
All Accounfl ·Insured To
120,000.00 by FSLIC.

11

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells
and Grit - Fertilizers - Lime Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt Water Softener • Remedies • Salt .
(itters- Vaccine •,,Roofing- Paints
- Red Brand Fencing - Baler and
Binder Twine - Sprays - Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

P'omeroy

tba

,,

2-HOUR

CLEANING
(UPOn Request)

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVJNGS!

7009 'toW.
Main
•
Pomeroy
·9 Daily-sunday 1·9

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phont 992-54

• · IJ-j;;.d nola's 5: ~5.7 ;

5%

.......
·--

ANY CARPET. REMNANT
PURCHASED DURING DOLLAR
DAYS YOU MAY DEDUa•••

Sno~

Carpen ter.

~~rwln 5·5•30[
·=b's Gulf 7• JO.a.
WEDNESDAY - Rutland
Park. 7·8 p. m.
THURSDAY - Reedsv ille f .
I • IS ; Tuppers Plains 2• 15·3;
Elmwood 3: 30·4; Alfred 4: 15·
4: 45 ; Burlingham 5: 15·5•30;
Whistle Stop, Forest Run 7.
7:30; Five Points 7•45·8.
FRIDAY - State Garage
and VIc. 12 : J0.3; Pomeroy Ele.
&amp; VIc. 3: 40·4: Whistle Stop,
Laurel Cliff 4•30·5; Chester
Community .5: 30 · 6 • 30 ;
Minersville 7·8.

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

SUPPER ENJOYED
The congregation of 'the
United Faith Church in
Pomeroy met Tuesday night at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Hill, Racine . Nine adults and
eight children were present.
Norman E. Hysell gave grace
preceding a potluck ·supper.
Leo Hill presided at the
meeUng dW'ing which several
items of church business were
discussed.

Engineer with U. S. Steel
Corp oration, Mine Superintendent with Consolidation
Coal Company, GeneFal
Product Manager of Jeffrey
Mining Machine Compa ny,
Assistant General Superintendent of Union Carbide's
Putnam Mine, to the Manager
of Mines of Pittston Company's
Elkray and
Snapcreek
Divisions. He assumed his
position with Southern Ohio
Coal Company on February 1
of this year.
Williams is married to the
former Virginia Catherine
Nave and they have four
children, B. Douglas Williams,
23, of Columbus; Mrs. Carol
Ann Agler, 22, a music teacber
in Columbus; P. David
Williams, 18, who will attend
Western Kentucky State
University this fall , and Gary
G. Williams, 12, a student at
Green Local School. The
Williamses have purchased a
home on Patriot Star Route out
of Gallipolis.

Family Tours 10 Western States

(Nf:WSPAPU INTUPkiS( ASSN .)

Social Calendar

RELATIVES VISITED
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Damon Ferrell and their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Tim Cozart, have
returned from a two-week
southern trip in which they
AffiGHLIGHT of the vacation of the Rev. and Mrs. Chsrles
visited the former's son and
Simons
was a return to the scene of the honeymoon which they
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Frierson and two sons and took 13 years ago. Carol and Wes remained with tbeir grandson and daughter-in-law, Mr. . mother while the couple enjoyed three days at Ocean City.
The family spent two weeks with the Rev. Mr. Simons'
and Mrs. Damon Ferrell Jr.
mother
at her summer home at Haynes Port, N.J. and while
and family of Orlando, Fla. Mr.
and Mrs. Cozart visited with there learned how to water ski. A week of their vacation they
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. spent in Philadelphia with Mrs. Simons' family. While there the
Rev. Mr. Simons returned to the pulpit at his home church .
Robert Cozart, of Gulfport,
Miss. They also visited Mr. and
MR. AND MRS. KENNETH HARRIS, Kenny and Davis,
Mrs. John Popvitch in Orlando,
Fla., and went to Disneyland. spent a week at Wrights Beach, N. C. and were joined there by
her sister and brother~n-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Alexander
and family of Hockessin, Del.

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

Silent Auction Held- by Council ·

lmpeneal.s~... Struhy •.s

..

•

•
•
•

'

• .:.

News;.uNotes

::::::::::::::::~;;;;NU;";d;d;le;~;r;t;;;;~~R~obe~r•t•M•urp~by•f•
or•a•f•ew. .d~ay~s
visit.

:

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
COMPANY
OF MIDDLEPORT
ON THE MOVE

OFF

Wolfpen

TO 1 'BLOCK NORTH405 N. SECOND AVENUE

NEW AND LARGER QUARTERS TO GIVE YOU ABETTER
SELECIION AND BETTER SERVICE. FREE PARKING
AND CONVENIENT LOADING RAMPS.

THE REGULAR
LOW PRICE

GIAN.T SAVINGS AT

CARPETLAND, Inc.
"WaU-To-WaU C.ipet Spee;.U.U"

MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHiO

OPEN 6 DAYS AWEEK 7:30 to 5 PIM.

116

992-759!0

'

•.."
h

r.

••

•

(We apologize for any mconvenience caused our customers ·

during this move, but will soon be able to serve you bett,r.)

l l1

•

.. ... -·-- . ... . .·:~ ~~

::t: . Bzble
Loan
Compan
t
Dir
.
y
~~ .

Meigs 4-H Club News

through 10 western states.
Points of interest enjoyed
were Yellowstone National
Park, Deadwood, S. D., a rodeo
in Cody, Wyo., Devils' Tower,
Mt. Rushmore, Bad Lands,
Black Hills, the Grand Tetons,
Great Salt ·Lake, Rocky
Mowotain National Park, Old
Faithful , an organ recital in the "-~/
Mormon Tabernacle,
Pipestone National Monument,
and the burial place of
President Eisenhower in
Abilene, Kan.
'!Y!ldlife . observed included
praiTte dogs, buffalo, bear, '
I
I
.
deer, antelope and elk. AcMr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
companing Mr . and Mrs. of Clncinna ti were Sunday
Weese were Mr. and Mrs. Jack visitors of her grandparents,
Weese and children of Berea. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
returned Sunday after a visit
HOME FROM SOUTH
with their children , Mr. and
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freda Mrs. Donald Russell of Akron
Duffy and daughters, Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Tom SumJean Duerr and Mrs. Kathleen merfield and family of Illinois
Francis have returned from a last week .
trip to Florida where they
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Boyce of
visited Mrs . Duffy's sister and Columbus were visitors of Mr.
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Howard Russell.
H. B. Powell and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene ThompDon Powell and family of son were Sunday visitors of Mr.
Branden. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. and Mrs. H. E. Warner and
Powell, accompanied them Mark and Mr. and Mrs. Ted
home. Enroute, they visited Warner and fainily .
another sister, Mrs. Beulah
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Darby, in Albany, Ga.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Chsrley
Smith Sunday afternoon.
Carmel
Murphy
and
Christine Bailey are attendi~g
band camp at Rio Grande this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shumate
and sons of Mansfield and Mrs.
Geneva Shumate vlsi!M with
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
and family of Bantytown~ W.
Va., and also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson and family
before going to W. Va.
John Murphy of Columbus
visi!M this weekend with his
mother, Mrs. J. R. Murphy and
family.
Mrs . Lena Knapp and
grandson, Mlchsel Knapp, of
Langsville vlsi!M with Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp and family
Royal Crown
recently .
Peggy Murphy went to
Bottling Company Illinois with her brother,

..

:;:;:;':';i;';i;'::::::;:;:;:::::::::::r:::;:::::::::::::::::;:::;:;::;:;::!:::;:;::;:;:;!;!:!~:!:i;!:!fi~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::;::~«f.{&amp;:~*:?::g-:fl®f-$l%.1t!.W::@

~

. Henry B. Struby, who was
lllstalled lmperoal Potentate uf
the Shrine of North America at
the Shrinetennial ImperiaL
Council Session in Dallas,
Texas , July 19, is vi ce
president and director of
CREDITHRIFT of America,
which has an office at 300
Second St., Gallipolis.
The new leader of the nearly
900,000-member international
fraternity has been active in
.
for more
consumer fonance
lhan 40 years. Ernest Covert,
former1y of Middleport and
Ia ter Be Ipre, is manager of the
Gallipolis office.
· 1 s·or Stru by ·on 1970
Imperoa
was named, Shriner of the
Year, an honor base d on his
many years of devoted service
. , the Shriners
PAUL WILLIAMS
to the Shrone
· 1s for cnpp
· 1ed ch'l1 dren,
hospota
'
.
The new superintendent is a Masonry, an d a11 ots .Lodges.
. of
e was the secon d recopoent
member of the Masons, a H
the honor, the first going to
scratch bowler, and he and his' silent(lloviestarHaroldLloyd,
wife are very active square then head of the Shrine hospital
dancers, already having joined
sys te m.
the Tri-Lighters Club of
AI ong wo'th famous comed'oan
Gallipolis .
Red Skelton, Imperial Sir

The seventh meeting of the
Leading Creek Helpers 4-H
club was presided over by
Diane Milliron, past president
and member. Members tlU'ned
in pop bottle caps they had
collec ted, and set up dates to
make posters for the fair booth
and to decorate it. All projects
are complete and ready for the
fair . The entire group gave
reports, talkep about Safety in
the home and in swimming,
and discussed drug abuse . Tami Milliron.
THE MoONDUSTERS 4-H
club met July 26 at the home of
Mrs . Hayes. Attending were
two advis or s and seven
members . From there, the
group went roller skating. Opal Dyer.

..'....... ,•,•,•,•,·,·.··················································· ..,..... . .. •..•. ...••, . -••.•. v,&gt;n=·xmw«&lt;

THE T.N .T. 4-H club held a
meeting August I at the home
of Betty Osborne with four
advisors and II members
present. Plans ·were made to
serve lunch at a sale. Refresh·
ments were served by Betty
Osborne. The next meeting will
be held at the home of Diana
Pullins on August 4 when
members' projects will be
judged. - Sandra VanMeter.
THE STITCH AND Sew 4-H
club met July 26 at !he home of
Mrs . Fortu'loe . The group
worked on projects and
donated money. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Fortune .
- Carmen Thoma.
AJuly 26 meeting of the Irish
Leprechsuns was held at the
Longstreth home with on e
advisor and 13 members attendin g and discussing
swimming, the completion of
their projects, and project
books . Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Longstreth.
The next meeting will take
Place &lt;.j at ~~the Garnes' home
August9. All projects must be
finished at that time. - Diana
Thornton.
THE CHESTER Farm Boys
met July 24 at the Lowell
Ridenour home with one ad-

Struby received the 3Jrd and
lughest degree on Freemasonry
in 1972.
Imperial Sir Struby joined
1 he
c RED 1THR I FT
orga ni za tion in !962 wh en
Thrift, In c. of Evansville,
Indiana, of which he was
president, became part of the
growing conswner loan and
retail financing system which
then numbered less than 200
branches and today includes
more than 485 offices from
coast to coast. He was elected
.
Vice Presid ent of the
CREDITHRIFT Finan cial
Manageme nt Corporation in
1968 and since that time has
made his headquarters in the
lirm's national headquarters in
Evan 5ville.

DarreII Rardin
Died in Texas

Verses Reveal the :mm
=:~: : · True Nixon and McGovern f~:3:~
;:;:::;:

·:·~:·:

. By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
You can tell something about
a man from the Bible verses he
cherishes.
That's especially true of men

of God and Man
such as President Nixon and
Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, who
grew up in religious homes and
were exposed to Bible reading
from early childhood.
McG overn 's favorite Bible
verses are easy to ascertain,
'inasmuch as. he has them
framed and hanging on the wall
of his Senate office .
The Democratic presidential
candidate clearly reveals his
deep concern for social justice
in the passages of scripture he
. has chosen as guiding lights to
his life .
One is the climactic line from
Jesu&gt;' famous parable about
the Last Judgment. In that
parable, Jesus says that men
'11 b · d db God 1 1
wo
e JU
e Yond
th e basos
· 0ge
f howY they sorespon
· th·IS 1·f
on
I e to the hunger,
ff
·
·
su erong an d nee d of th eor
re11 uw human beongs.
·
The 40th Verse
The parable, in the 25th

PLEASANT
Graveside services for Darrell
c. Rardin, 67, of Dallas, Texas,
brother of Attorney William H.
Rardin of Point Pleasant, were
conducted Wednesday al2 p.m.
at the Ravenswood Cemetery
at Ravenswood .
Mr. Rardin was born in
Cabell County, a son of Francis
M. Rardin and Rosa Staats
Rardin , both of early pionee r
families of Jackson County . He
was a graduate of .Gallia
Academy High School, West
Virginia Wesleyan College,
Boston University and Boston
Theological Seminary . He held
various ministerial char ges
and did extensive social work
until forced in to ea rly
retirement beca use of ill
health.
1
The latter p;ut of his life was
spent in Texas where most of
his children reside.
Mr . Rardin is survived in
addition to his brother, by his
widow, the former Virginia
Huff of Buchan non; two sons,
Paul of Kauai , Hawaii ; John of
Dallas, and two daughters,
Mrs. Helen Nastri and Mrs.
John Charleston, both of
Dallas ; sixteen grandchildren ·
andasister, CiaraB. Rardinof
New York City.
PT.

NUMBER DROPS
WASHmGTON (UPI)-The
number of federal employes
authorized to stamp government information as top secret,
secret or confidential has
dro~ped from 43,586 to 16,238 in
the past two months, President
Nixon was told Thursday.
John S. Eisenhower , chairman of the Interagency Classi.
fication Review Committee,
said in a report' to Nixon the
number of officials authorized
to use the highest classification
- top sec ret- had
been
reduced oy 53 per cent from
2,275 to 1,076.

Chapter of Matthew's gospel,
enumerates various acts of
simple human kindness, and
then, in the 40th verse which
McGovern has on his wall, it
quotes God as saying to men
that "Whenever you did this (a
kind deed) for one of the least
important of your brothers, you
did it for me."
McGovern also likes Jesus'
·
sayong recorded in Luke 9:24 :
h
"Fort e person who wants to
h'
save IS own life will lose it ;
but the one who loses his life
for my sa ke will ·save it."
His favorite Old Testament
· M'
verse os ocah 6:8:
"God has told you what is
good;
"And what is it that the Lord
asks of you ?
" 0 n1y to act justly, to love
loyalty,
"And to walk wisely before
your God."
Th os
' verse, by the way, also
was the favorite of another
Democratic presidential cando·date- Adlai E. Stevenson.
One way to get a clue to
President Nix on' s favorite
Bible verses is to study his
speeches and other public
statements and ascertain
which passages of scripture he
likes to quote.
Nixon's Favorites
Such an analysis indicates
Nixon is greatly attached to
biblical passages dealing with
peace and personal integrity.

'
:::::;.
One o1 his favorites is Isaiah
32.17, in which one of the
greatest of Israel's prophets
looks forward to a day "when
righteousness shall yield peace,
and its fruit will be quietness
and contentment forever ."
Nixon's yearning for "a
•eneration
of peace" also is
o
reflected in another verse he
likes to quote, Judges 5:31.
After a long chronicle of the
bloody battles by which the
Israelites conquered Canaan ,
theancienthistorianrecords•
"The land was at peace fo r
forty years."
Nixon's c,oiicern for persona l
integrity is reflected in a
favorite New Teolament pas·
sage-one whic h he ma)' have
been taught in childhood by his
Quaker mother . It is Mark
8:36 :
"What does a man gain by
winning the whole world at lhe
cost of his true self? What ca n
he give to buy that self back
a•a 'on?."

lro-•--•----.

We wire flowers
Everywhere

992-2039

STEAK
HOUSE

•

Home of

........

·--

TomBoy

Pomeroy Rower Shop
~utternut

Ave., Pomeroy

Mrs. Millard Van M~ter

SANDWICH

.N W CQM pTQN, 0.0.
o

CROW'S

the Fabulous

FLOWERS
Ulr All Occasions
----.......

~

•

Order By Phone

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - FAST COURT &lt;;T
POMEROY .

l'l\1bl)!tl

ltul\

:ldr!olJ!tl ''

And Toke Em Home

,· 1 ~'

,---------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!

~. .-

992-5432

1

".il'iil''ii'i iiit-•"'\

...

visor a'nd six members in at-

tendance. Project hooks were
discussed. For recreation the
group played a game of softball . Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Ridenour.
Randy Keller.
HECK AT HOME
Seaman 2nd. Class Mike A.
Heck, 19, Pomeroy, is home on
leave after completing nine
weeks of basic training in San
Diego, Calif. Heck, the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Shank, 105
Union Ave., Poraeroy, will be
home Wltil August 17.

RACINE
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls visi!M Mrs. Frankie
Nelgler recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris
of Athens, Mrs. Elsie Roush
and Mrs. Marie Chspman of
Pomeroy called Sunday afternoon on Mr. and Mrs .
Francis Morris.
RAYBURN CONFINED
Sterling Rayburn, formerly
of Meigs County, Is confined to
the Patterson Army Hospital,
Third Floor, Room B-13 at Fort
Mammouth, N. J .

CARRSTOCELEBRATE
The 25th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Carr will be observed
Sunday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m .
with an open house at their
Harrisonville residence .·
VISITS IN BASHAN
Terry Hysell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman E . Hysell,
Children's · Home Road,
Pomeroy, Is visiting his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman M. Hysell, Bashan.
HARBOUR ASSIGNED
MASON, W. Va. - Airman
Michael S. Harbour; son of Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Harbour, has
been assigned to Keesler AFB,
Miss., after completinK Air
Force basic training. The
airman has been uslgned for
further training and duty u a
musician. Alnnan Harbour, a
11168 graduate ol Wahama High·
School, received his B.A.
degree In 19'12 from Marshall
Ur.ivenity. ·

CLEARANCE
BARGAINS

PM/CIDAA

NOW
w
JOy Is adeaa-ap deal tbat doesa't
AUTMORIZEO'DEAI.Efl •

CHRYSLER
MIJ10NI COIIPOR4l10N

1811011L
l

TOM RUE MOTORS,

399 SOUTH 3rd AVE., MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�' ,,

.. .

~

•

6-:- Tl_le D,aily Senlinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Aug. 4, 1972

H

Fourth Reunion .Held .
At Forest Acres Park ·
The fourth annual reunion of
the Taylor-Harper families
was held Sunday at Forest
Acres Park, Rutland.
A basket lunch was served at
noon with Ben Rife giving the
table grace. During a business
meeting the death of Mrs.
Pearl Taylor was noted and
officers for 1973 were elec!M.
They are Mrs. Ruby Rife,
president; John L.. Werner,
vice president; Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, secretary; and Earl
Werner, treasurer.
Recognized were James A.
Taylor, Middleport, oldest man
present; Mrs. Joe Taylor,
Columbus, oldest woman
present;
Joseph
Glenn
Starkey, two week old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Starkey,
Kent, the youngest present,
and Mr . and Mrs . Earl
Rickard, Norwalk, the ones
traveH~g. the farthest. distance.
Receovmg door prozes were
Mark Stout, Cincinnati, and
Karmel DeLong, Pomerov. A
ball game was held bet 1een
the Taylors and the Harpers.
Other games were enjoyed.
The next reunion was set for
July 29, 1973 at Forest Acres
Park.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Rife, Carla and Becky;
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Taylor,
Roy and Larry; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Taylor, Barbara and
Dale; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Taylor and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Taylor, Mr. Harold Taylor
and Marte, Mr. and Mrs.

Headquarters for

Accutron•
by Bulova
The heart of an Aecutron
watch is a tiny,
electron lca lly·powered
tunina: fork that splits a
second into 360 equal

p•rts. This split·second

tlmina is so precise that
Bulova guarantees
·
accuracy to within a

minute a month.• See

Ronald Adrian, M{. and Mrs.
Michel Garland, Kevin
Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
. Harper, Mr. and Mrs. Guy W.
H3rper and Ryan, Mr. and
Mo·s. Earl J. Richard, Miss
Kathryn Werner,
Also, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Taylor, Mrs. Larry Hoschsr
and sons, Mrs. Ronald Carman, Richsrd and Ronald,
Ernest VanCooney, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Taylor, Tanya
and Scott, Harriett Thompson,
Mr. and Mrs. Karmel DeLong,
Martin Davis, ' Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Starkey, Jimmy and Joey,
Robert .Delong, Jeff Delong,
Mr. and Mrs. John Warner,
Mrs. Meda Jane Stout, Greg
and Mark, and Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Werner.

•

{'I~

Jr.JOWer Gtven
B,..j1-UIJe-to-b·n
1

c;-

.RACINE _ A bridal shower
was held recently in honor of
Miss Donna Theiss, bride-elect
of Mr. Daniel Sayre. Miss
Paula Crabtree hosted the
shower at the Kenneth Theiss
residence.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Gretta
Carnahan, Mrs. Tom Diddle,
and Mrs. Blythe Theiss.
Assisting with the refreshments were Mrs. Jack Crabtree and Mrs. Roger Birch.
Attending besides those
named above were Martha Lou
Beegle, Sharon Russell, Joyce
Ritchie, Dauna Rhodes,
Mildred Carnahan, Ruth
Simpson, Ida Diehl, Florence
Circle, Irene Hoback, Belle
Theiss, Karen Johnson, Bonnie
Theiss, Debbie Norris, Linda
Cleland, Connie Van Maire,
Arlene Wallace, Wilma
Wallace, Hazel Wickline, Fern
Cheesebrew, Jannine Petrel,
Mattie Beegle, Peggy Crabtree, Doris Rogers and Bernice

our full selection of

' Theiss.

Accutron watches.

Others presenting gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre,
Sadie Thuener, Ann Beegle,
Beverly Price, Janice Lisle,
Margaret Lehew, Sharon
Diddle, Rose Grindstaff, Laura
Circle, Edna Knopp, Frances
· Foster, Margie Salser, Emma
Salser, Esther West, Joyce
Hoback,
Vera
Beegle,
Josephine Smith, Hattie Paynter, and Carol McChesney.

From SilO.

•we will tdjult to thla tolarantt, II
NCtsury.

~Uiranttt

Is for ont yttr.

Cycle .Set Has Style All its Owf!
II)'

II~U: !Ii

llt:NSESS\'
:"t:A 1\'onll'n'• Editur
Nt:\1' YOlO\ - 1 NI•: AI -

Tht.• j!l'f.'al ould(KII':&gt; hnn.' &lt;tl wavs bt't&gt;ll just whrn• lht·,-

ar~ . Rut as· or lall· lht.•\·· v~

b t.• t o m f.' thr stomjling
j.!rnunds for at'tivr sport s
fans.
Could be that thr bi~
lwalth kick was the impetus
More people than ever are
into the health fo&lt;Kl svn·
dronw . E;\31ing onl~, what
&lt;·omes naturallv . Health food
stores are popping up rvery where and organic food is
stocked on a meaningful
number or shelves in vour
favorite supermarket . ·The
t&gt;cology movpment has taken
oveo·. Additives have beeome
the enemy - natural vitamins the vidor· . And rresh
unpolluted air. c lear water
a nd clean living arp common
goals .
B i c I' c I in g. the anv·age
travel-at·your . 0 w n . s Peed
spnrt . is witnessing a special
status all its own. For while
skiing and tennis. both so
popular. o·eqture a certaon
amount of skill and advance
~n·pao·atoon. bicycle riding is
an anytome · any:-- here sort
of actovoty for whtch there is
only one requirement _ a
bike .
Sweater Bee and BeeWear. a misses and junior
sweater maker respectively,
make way for this sport with
a group of bicycle·geared
tops in their latest collection s. Sweater Bee sports
a variety ol hip length capes
which clear the wheels and
spokes with many inches to
spare . Capes are layered
o v e r matching sweaters
which in turn layer over turtleneck t o p s for extra
warmth since bicycle riding
ts now a 12·month a year
sport.
T-shirts and sweaters with
color-sliced inserts or placed
stripes in very obvious colors are the standard tops
for cycling. The brighter the

Free,-wheel1ng stripes on acryl ic bicycle sweater ore designed to allow the
cycl 1st to stand out to oncomi ng t-rofl1c. Spoke folk toke to swea ter layers for
breezy b1cycl1ng . Over o turtleneck goes on Orion, pebble tweed sweater vest
and then o matching fnnged cope ond tweedy kn it pants.
(By Be. Wtor, ltlf, and

top , the easier it is for
motorists to spot cyclists and
clear the way for them . Bee·
Wear's young, junior clinging
bicycle sweater can't be
missed in its bright array of
colors and stripes.
Apartment dwellers in
large cities may have problems storing bikes . So they
choose to rent them . When-

ever there's a group of en·
thusiasts in vivid mulii·
colored tops hovering around
a store front , you can be reasonably sure the store rents
bicycles.
In the 1930s the ' 'hothouse
fl ow e r s" tpamper.ed fe.
males I occasionally pedalled
around on bicycles, very
tongue-in-eheek . wearing

~wratrr

IJrt, right)

PROFILES ·in COAL

A silent au~tlon was held by Zona Biggs, Mrs. Mary Jo
the good of the order com- Pooler, Mrs. Mabel Van Meter,
mittee at the Tuesday night Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs.
meeting of Chester Council323, Ethel Orr, Mrs. Zelda Weber,
Mrs. Golda Wolle, MrS. Erma
Daughters of America.
Mrs. Thelma White, coWl· Cleland, Mrs. Elizabeth
cilor, presided at the meeting Wickham, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
attended by 20 members and Mrs. Inzy Newell, Mrs. Goldie
one guest. It was repor!M that Frederick, Mrs. Helen WoU,
Mrs. Betty Roush Is home from Mrs. Hattie Frederick, Mrs.
the hospital. Mrs. Esther Ada Neutzling, Mrs. Letha
Ridenour reported on activities Wood, and Mrs. Marcia Keller .
of the good of the order com- , - -- -- - - - - mittee, and Mrs. Ada Morris
gave out letters to the members co ncerning ways and
means and pW'ctulsing chairs
for the hall. Mrs. Ada Van
Me!Jor annoWlced that this
month's past councilors'
meeting will be held at the
lodge hall.
Attending the meeting Who cares about smoggy skies
besides those named were Mrs. About empty and polluted lakes.
- - - - - . , . - - - - - cans and .trash littering our
countryside. About plants and
CHAIRMAN NOTED
Mrs. Martha Lou Beegle Is trees dying in our forests.
And animals too. Who cares?
the flower and memorial
committee · chairman for the Woodsy Owl, the Nation's new
American Legion Auxiliary of battlerfor a clean environment
Racine Post 602. Her ap- cares. And so should you.
pointment was annowoced at a Join Woodsy in the fight against
pollution .
recent meeting of the unit.

By John Reece

ED. NOTE: PROFilES in COAL, by John Reece of
Pomeroy, iB expected to be a periodic feature in newspapers of
Ute Ohio Valley Publishing Co. PROFilES will be personality
Bktlches of the men who take the coal from the mines that will
fire the General James M, Gavin Power Plant.
Meigs Mines No. I and 2, the most modem hi the world will
be operated by a new kind of coal miner: managed by 'men
trained in engineering and worked by men with extensive
technical akills.
are iltteresling people, certain to become
leaders In their communities.
Mr. Jleece, public affairs coordinator for the Gavin Plant Is
a native of Longview, Wash., attended the University' of
Waahington and serv~ in tbe U.S. Marine Corps, 1959-1963. He
began employment With the Ohio Power Co. in Canton in 1963.

noer

"Since I've been out of
college, I've been a coal
miner," stated Paul R.
Williams, Superintendent of
Meigs Mine No. 2 of the
Southern Ohio Coal Company.
"And It's the type of career
lhatl18s provided well for my
family ."
Williams, who is respon.
slble for the total operation of
Meigs Mine No. 2 near Point
Rock in Meigs County, is a
native of Logville, Ky . He
attended Campbellsville (Ky .)
Junior College following his
graduation from Morgan
County (Ky.) High School in
1940. His education was interrupted by a four year hitch
in the U. S. Army Signal Corps
during World War II.
Following his dischsrge, he
attended the University of
Kentucky where he grad ua!M
In 1949 with a BS In Electrical
Engineering.
His previous employment
has ranged from Mining

NEUMANS ARE HOME
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Charles
Neuman
have
retlU'ned from a vacation trip
in which they toured the states
of Virginia, Tennessee and
Kentucky,
stopping
at
Mountain Lake at Blacksburg,
Va.; Knoxville, and the Clinch
Mowotalns. They watched a
television show at Renfro
Valley, Tenn., and visited in
Moorehead, Ky.

long flowered skirts, !eg-omutton sleeved tops and
large brimmed hats. They
were a whole other thing
from the ·liberated, bodyconscious cyclists of the '70s,
who consider this form of
exercise as one of the daily,
or at least weekly , necessities.

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Weese returned recently
from a trip which took them

Eddy s Schedule
In Meigs County

BIGWSOISTO

Mr . Eddy Educator 's
Schedule In Meigs County for
the week of Aug. 7· 11 •
MONDAY - Page town.
3•30·4; 15; Harrisonville. 4• 45.
5: 30 ; Wh istle Stop, Wolf Pen,
6: 30·7; Rutland Ma in, 7•30·

Quasac H cciNs'OlE"coLOR TV
,,.m

Where has the swruner gone!
Two weeks from now the Meigs county Fair will be in full
swing, and just three weeks from Monday school begins.
The peak vacation season hss passed, and more than one
family Is setUing back into old routines after a week or two of
those lazy, hazy, crazy days away from a schedule.
The Rev. and Mrs. llobert Kuhn retW'ned Thursday from
their vacation. Just the two went. They drove to Newport News,
Va. to visit their son, David, an Air Force sergeant at the Langley Base. They saw Apollo 12, visited the Mariners Museum and
took the two hour Newport News Harbor Cruise .
From there they went. historic with visits to Jamestown,
Yorktown, and Williamsburg. Then it was on to Glen Burnie, Md.
to visit Edward Kuhn and his wife, and Pittsburgh to visit Mrs.
Kuhn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Miller. Today they
drove to Mansfield where Mrs. Kuhn will play for a wedding
tomorrow night.

MR. AND MRS. ED KENNEDY and their five youngsters
enjoyed a baseball game in Cincinnati and then went up to Kings
Island for a day at the amusement park.
AND WHAT ABOUT YOUR vacation? Tell us about it -992-

5292.

Today
MOTOROLA
SCHEDULED MEETING of Serving starting at 5 p.m . with
Middleport Chamber of pies, cake and sandwiches also
Commerce for tonight, Friday, -..,.to be served. Proceeds to •
postponed until Friday, Aug. church building fund.
,.
tO, at offices of Columbus .and
· · " ' !lUNDA-Y: • • ·
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
TEAFORD FAMILY
reunion, Sunday, state park,
SATURDAY
Route 33, on left going north.
CHICKEN BARBECUE Potluck dinner, 1!.30 a.m.
Saturday at Legion Park followed by business meeting
behind Middleport Post Office and games.
beginning at II a . m. by
ANNUAL ALBERT Young
Middleport Fire Department. family reunion S411day in !he
Proceeds to new fire station Woode Grove at Alfred.
equipment fund .
MARTIN AND Emma Sayre
OLD FASHIONED ice cream family reunion, Sunday, 12.30
soc ial, Saturday, Columbia p.m . Sunday, at Shriner Park,
...... W\MITH&amp;. fM11-ill'lllftl. ,_.. .._.
........................._. .........c-.
Chapel Church located on Racine.
Route 689 at Point Rock,
DESCENDANTS of Thomas
Albany-Wilkesville
Road . Durst and Mary Shirley Durst
PLUS ...
will hold annual reunion
THESE
OTHER
Sunday, at large shelter at
REASONS:
Kera-Land near Ravenswood,
W. Va. Basket dinner, 12 :30
p.m. All relatives, friends
inv ited.
A picnic was planned for
September when the East
MONDAY
Letart Women's Society of
FELLOWSHIP meeting,
Christian Service met Tuesday Monday , 7:30p. m.at Mt. Olive
· night at the church.
Church, Long Bottom. Public
Mrs. Mary Roush, vice invi!M.
president, opened the meeting
ALL SENTmEL carriers of
with a reading from the
r;=::;:: See 25' Qr • I pr U Color TV Today at: ==il
Meigs
- Mason area and inResponse magazine entitled
" Fa ilh
Means Humble terested parents will meet at
Obedience." Reports were 7: :W p.m. Monday at The Daily
Middleport, 0.
given by Mrs. Hazel Fox, Sentinel office, Court St.,
secretary, and Mrs. Eileen Pomeroy.
Roush, treasurer.
Mrs.
Mabel
Shields
presented the program using
"One Day Can Change Your
Life," as her topic. Prayer was
by Mrs. Mildred Donahue,
scripture was taken from St.
Matthew, and the hymn used
was Are You Able." Mrs.
Eileen Roush and Mrs. Lucy
Donahue served refreshment.~
to thooe named and Mrs. Doris
Sayre,
Mrs.
Margaret
Gloeckner and Mrs . Julia
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Norris.

Picnic Planned
At East Letart

8•30.

TUESDAY -

~ · 45·4;

INTEREST

On Passbook
Savin~
5 per cent per year paid on

Regular Passbook Savings.
No Minimum . Interest from
date of deposit to date of
·withdrawal. Interest com·
pounded quarterly. Interest
l'Oid as long as an open
account Is ma intained.

DOLLAR DAYS

Tht Athtfts County
S.vints &amp; Loan Co.

196 Socond St.

Pomeroy, OtoiG
All Accounfl ·Insured To
120,000.00 by FSLIC.

11

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells
and Grit - Fertilizers - Lime Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt Water Softener • Remedies • Salt .
(itters- Vaccine •,,Roofing- Paints
- Red Brand Fencing - Baler and
Binder Twine - Sprays - Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

P'omeroy

tba

,,

2-HOUR

CLEANING
(UPOn Request)

FOR BIG DISCOUNT SAVJNGS!

7009 'toW.
Main
•
Pomeroy
·9 Daily-sunday 1·9

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phont 992-54

• · IJ-j;;.d nola's 5: ~5.7 ;

5%

.......
·--

ANY CARPET. REMNANT
PURCHASED DURING DOLLAR
DAYS YOU MAY DEDUa•••

Sno~

Carpen ter.

~~rwln 5·5•30[
·=b's Gulf 7• JO.a.
WEDNESDAY - Rutland
Park. 7·8 p. m.
THURSDAY - Reedsv ille f .
I • IS ; Tuppers Plains 2• 15·3;
Elmwood 3: 30·4; Alfred 4: 15·
4: 45 ; Burlingham 5: 15·5•30;
Whistle Stop, Forest Run 7.
7:30; Five Points 7•45·8.
FRIDAY - State Garage
and VIc. 12 : J0.3; Pomeroy Ele.
&amp; VIc. 3: 40·4: Whistle Stop,
Laurel Cliff 4•30·5; Chester
Community .5: 30 · 6 • 30 ;
Minersville 7·8.

WERNER RADIO &amp; T.V.

SUPPER ENJOYED
The congregation of 'the
United Faith Church in
Pomeroy met Tuesday night at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Hill, Racine . Nine adults and
eight children were present.
Norman E. Hysell gave grace
preceding a potluck ·supper.
Leo Hill presided at the
meeUng dW'ing which several
items of church business were
discussed.

Engineer with U. S. Steel
Corp oration, Mine Superintendent with Consolidation
Coal Company, GeneFal
Product Manager of Jeffrey
Mining Machine Compa ny,
Assistant General Superintendent of Union Carbide's
Putnam Mine, to the Manager
of Mines of Pittston Company's
Elkray and
Snapcreek
Divisions. He assumed his
position with Southern Ohio
Coal Company on February 1
of this year.
Williams is married to the
former Virginia Catherine
Nave and they have four
children, B. Douglas Williams,
23, of Columbus; Mrs. Carol
Ann Agler, 22, a music teacber
in Columbus; P. David
Williams, 18, who will attend
Western Kentucky State
University this fall , and Gary
G. Williams, 12, a student at
Green Local School. The
Williamses have purchased a
home on Patriot Star Route out
of Gallipolis.

Family Tours 10 Western States

(Nf:WSPAPU INTUPkiS( ASSN .)

Social Calendar

RELATIVES VISITED
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Damon Ferrell and their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Tim Cozart, have
returned from a two-week
southern trip in which they
AffiGHLIGHT of the vacation of the Rev. and Mrs. Chsrles
visited the former's son and
Simons
was a return to the scene of the honeymoon which they
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Frierson and two sons and took 13 years ago. Carol and Wes remained with tbeir grandson and daughter-in-law, Mr. . mother while the couple enjoyed three days at Ocean City.
The family spent two weeks with the Rev. Mr. Simons'
and Mrs. Damon Ferrell Jr.
mother
at her summer home at Haynes Port, N.J. and while
and family of Orlando, Fla. Mr.
and Mrs. Cozart visited with there learned how to water ski. A week of their vacation they
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. spent in Philadelphia with Mrs. Simons' family. While there the
Rev. Mr. Simons returned to the pulpit at his home church .
Robert Cozart, of Gulfport,
Miss. They also visited Mr. and
MR. AND MRS. KENNETH HARRIS, Kenny and Davis,
Mrs. John Popvitch in Orlando,
Fla., and went to Disneyland. spent a week at Wrights Beach, N. C. and were joined there by
her sister and brother~n-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Alexander
and family of Hockessin, Del.

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

Silent Auction Held- by Council ·

lmpeneal.s~... Struhy •.s

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•
•

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News;.uNotes

::::::::::::::::~;;;;NU;";d;d;le;~;r;t;;;;~~R~obe~r•t•M•urp~by•f•
or•a•f•ew. .d~ay~s
visit.

:

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY
COMPANY
OF MIDDLEPORT
ON THE MOVE

OFF

Wolfpen

TO 1 'BLOCK NORTH405 N. SECOND AVENUE

NEW AND LARGER QUARTERS TO GIVE YOU ABETTER
SELECIION AND BETTER SERVICE. FREE PARKING
AND CONVENIENT LOADING RAMPS.

THE REGULAR
LOW PRICE

GIAN.T SAVINGS AT

CARPETLAND, Inc.
"WaU-To-WaU C.ipet Spee;.U.U"

MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHiO

OPEN 6 DAYS AWEEK 7:30 to 5 PIM.

116

992-759!0

'

•.."
h

r.

••

•

(We apologize for any mconvenience caused our customers ·

during this move, but will soon be able to serve you bett,r.)

l l1

•

.. ... -·-- . ... . .·:~ ~~

::t: . Bzble
Loan
Compan
t
Dir
.
y
~~ .

Meigs 4-H Club News

through 10 western states.
Points of interest enjoyed
were Yellowstone National
Park, Deadwood, S. D., a rodeo
in Cody, Wyo., Devils' Tower,
Mt. Rushmore, Bad Lands,
Black Hills, the Grand Tetons,
Great Salt ·Lake, Rocky
Mowotain National Park, Old
Faithful , an organ recital in the "-~/
Mormon Tabernacle,
Pipestone National Monument,
and the burial place of
President Eisenhower in
Abilene, Kan.
'!Y!ldlife . observed included
praiTte dogs, buffalo, bear, '
I
I
.
deer, antelope and elk. AcMr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
companing Mr . and Mrs. of Clncinna ti were Sunday
Weese were Mr. and Mrs. Jack visitors of her grandparents,
Weese and children of Berea. Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
returned Sunday after a visit
HOME FROM SOUTH
with their children , Mr. and
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freda Mrs. Donald Russell of Akron
Duffy and daughters, Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Tom SumJean Duerr and Mrs. Kathleen merfield and family of Illinois
Francis have returned from a last week .
trip to Florida where they
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Boyce of
visited Mrs . Duffy's sister and Columbus were visitors of Mr.
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Howard Russell.
H. B. Powell and Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene ThompDon Powell and family of son were Sunday visitors of Mr.
Branden. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. and Mrs. H. E. Warner and
Powell, accompanied them Mark and Mr. and Mrs. Ted
home. Enroute, they visited Warner and fainily .
another sister, Mrs. Beulah
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
Darby, in Albany, Ga.
called on Mr. and Mrs. Chsrley
Smith Sunday afternoon.
Carmel
Murphy
and
Christine Bailey are attendi~g
band camp at Rio Grande this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Shumate
and sons of Mansfield and Mrs.
Geneva Shumate vlsi!M with
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
and family of Bantytown~ W.
Va., and also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson and family
before going to W. Va.
John Murphy of Columbus
visi!M this weekend with his
mother, Mrs. J. R. Murphy and
family.
Mrs . Lena Knapp and
grandson, Mlchsel Knapp, of
Langsville vlsi!M with Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp and family
Royal Crown
recently .
Peggy Murphy went to
Bottling Company Illinois with her brother,

..

:;:;:;':';i;';i;'::::::;:;:;:::::::::::r:::;:::::::::::::::::;:::;:;::;:;::!:::;:;::;:;:;!;!:!~:!:i;!:!fi~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::;::~«f.{&amp;:~*:?::g-:fl®f-$l%.1t!.W::@

~

. Henry B. Struby, who was
lllstalled lmperoal Potentate uf
the Shrine of North America at
the Shrinetennial ImperiaL
Council Session in Dallas,
Texas , July 19, is vi ce
president and director of
CREDITHRIFT of America,
which has an office at 300
Second St., Gallipolis.
The new leader of the nearly
900,000-member international
fraternity has been active in
.
for more
consumer fonance
lhan 40 years. Ernest Covert,
former1y of Middleport and
Ia ter Be Ipre, is manager of the
Gallipolis office.
· 1 s·or Stru by ·on 1970
Imperoa
was named, Shriner of the
Year, an honor base d on his
many years of devoted service
. , the Shriners
PAUL WILLIAMS
to the Shrone
· 1s for cnpp
· 1ed ch'l1 dren,
hospota
'
.
The new superintendent is a Masonry, an d a11 ots .Lodges.
. of
e was the secon d recopoent
member of the Masons, a H
the honor, the first going to
scratch bowler, and he and his' silent(lloviestarHaroldLloyd,
wife are very active square then head of the Shrine hospital
dancers, already having joined
sys te m.
the Tri-Lighters Club of
AI ong wo'th famous comed'oan
Gallipolis .
Red Skelton, Imperial Sir

The seventh meeting of the
Leading Creek Helpers 4-H
club was presided over by
Diane Milliron, past president
and member. Members tlU'ned
in pop bottle caps they had
collec ted, and set up dates to
make posters for the fair booth
and to decorate it. All projects
are complete and ready for the
fair . The entire group gave
reports, talkep about Safety in
the home and in swimming,
and discussed drug abuse . Tami Milliron.
THE MoONDUSTERS 4-H
club met July 26 at the home of
Mrs . Hayes. Attending were
two advis or s and seven
members . From there, the
group went roller skating. Opal Dyer.

..'....... ,•,•,•,•,·,·.··················································· ..,..... . .. •..•. ...••, . -••.•. v,&gt;n=·xmw«&lt;

THE T.N .T. 4-H club held a
meeting August I at the home
of Betty Osborne with four
advisors and II members
present. Plans ·were made to
serve lunch at a sale. Refresh·
ments were served by Betty
Osborne. The next meeting will
be held at the home of Diana
Pullins on August 4 when
members' projects will be
judged. - Sandra VanMeter.
THE STITCH AND Sew 4-H
club met July 26 at !he home of
Mrs . Fortu'loe . The group
worked on projects and
donated money. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Fortune .
- Carmen Thoma.
AJuly 26 meeting of the Irish
Leprechsuns was held at the
Longstreth home with on e
advisor and 13 members attendin g and discussing
swimming, the completion of
their projects, and project
books . Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Longstreth.
The next meeting will take
Place &lt;.j at ~~the Garnes' home
August9. All projects must be
finished at that time. - Diana
Thornton.
THE CHESTER Farm Boys
met July 24 at the Lowell
Ridenour home with one ad-

Struby received the 3Jrd and
lughest degree on Freemasonry
in 1972.
Imperial Sir Struby joined
1 he
c RED 1THR I FT
orga ni za tion in !962 wh en
Thrift, In c. of Evansville,
Indiana, of which he was
president, became part of the
growing conswner loan and
retail financing system which
then numbered less than 200
branches and today includes
more than 485 offices from
coast to coast. He was elected
.
Vice Presid ent of the
CREDITHRIFT Finan cial
Manageme nt Corporation in
1968 and since that time has
made his headquarters in the
lirm's national headquarters in
Evan 5ville.

DarreII Rardin
Died in Texas

Verses Reveal the :mm
=:~: : · True Nixon and McGovern f~:3:~
;:;:::;:

·:·~:·:

. By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
You can tell something about
a man from the Bible verses he
cherishes.
That's especially true of men

of God and Man
such as President Nixon and
Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, who
grew up in religious homes and
were exposed to Bible reading
from early childhood.
McG overn 's favorite Bible
verses are easy to ascertain,
'inasmuch as. he has them
framed and hanging on the wall
of his Senate office .
The Democratic presidential
candidate clearly reveals his
deep concern for social justice
in the passages of scripture he
. has chosen as guiding lights to
his life .
One is the climactic line from
Jesu&gt;' famous parable about
the Last Judgment. In that
parable, Jesus says that men
'11 b · d db God 1 1
wo
e JU
e Yond
th e basos
· 0ge
f howY they sorespon
· th·IS 1·f
on
I e to the hunger,
ff
·
·
su erong an d nee d of th eor
re11 uw human beongs.
·
The 40th Verse
The parable, in the 25th

PLEASANT
Graveside services for Darrell
c. Rardin, 67, of Dallas, Texas,
brother of Attorney William H.
Rardin of Point Pleasant, were
conducted Wednesday al2 p.m.
at the Ravenswood Cemetery
at Ravenswood .
Mr. Rardin was born in
Cabell County, a son of Francis
M. Rardin and Rosa Staats
Rardin , both of early pionee r
families of Jackson County . He
was a graduate of .Gallia
Academy High School, West
Virginia Wesleyan College,
Boston University and Boston
Theological Seminary . He held
various ministerial char ges
and did extensive social work
until forced in to ea rly
retirement beca use of ill
health.
1
The latter p;ut of his life was
spent in Texas where most of
his children reside.
Mr . Rardin is survived in
addition to his brother, by his
widow, the former Virginia
Huff of Buchan non; two sons,
Paul of Kauai , Hawaii ; John of
Dallas, and two daughters,
Mrs. Helen Nastri and Mrs.
John Charleston, both of
Dallas ; sixteen grandchildren ·
andasister, CiaraB. Rardinof
New York City.
PT.

NUMBER DROPS
WASHmGTON (UPI)-The
number of federal employes
authorized to stamp government information as top secret,
secret or confidential has
dro~ped from 43,586 to 16,238 in
the past two months, President
Nixon was told Thursday.
John S. Eisenhower , chairman of the Interagency Classi.
fication Review Committee,
said in a report' to Nixon the
number of officials authorized
to use the highest classification
- top sec ret- had
been
reduced oy 53 per cent from
2,275 to 1,076.

Chapter of Matthew's gospel,
enumerates various acts of
simple human kindness, and
then, in the 40th verse which
McGovern has on his wall, it
quotes God as saying to men
that "Whenever you did this (a
kind deed) for one of the least
important of your brothers, you
did it for me."
McGovern also likes Jesus'
·
sayong recorded in Luke 9:24 :
h
"Fort e person who wants to
h'
save IS own life will lose it ;
but the one who loses his life
for my sa ke will ·save it."
His favorite Old Testament
· M'
verse os ocah 6:8:
"God has told you what is
good;
"And what is it that the Lord
asks of you ?
" 0 n1y to act justly, to love
loyalty,
"And to walk wisely before
your God."
Th os
' verse, by the way, also
was the favorite of another
Democratic presidential cando·date- Adlai E. Stevenson.
One way to get a clue to
President Nix on' s favorite
Bible verses is to study his
speeches and other public
statements and ascertain
which passages of scripture he
likes to quote.
Nixon's Favorites
Such an analysis indicates
Nixon is greatly attached to
biblical passages dealing with
peace and personal integrity.

'
:::::;.
One o1 his favorites is Isaiah
32.17, in which one of the
greatest of Israel's prophets
looks forward to a day "when
righteousness shall yield peace,
and its fruit will be quietness
and contentment forever ."
Nixon's yearning for "a
•eneration
of peace" also is
o
reflected in another verse he
likes to quote, Judges 5:31.
After a long chronicle of the
bloody battles by which the
Israelites conquered Canaan ,
theancienthistorianrecords•
"The land was at peace fo r
forty years."
Nixon's c,oiicern for persona l
integrity is reflected in a
favorite New Teolament pas·
sage-one whic h he ma)' have
been taught in childhood by his
Quaker mother . It is Mark
8:36 :
"What does a man gain by
winning the whole world at lhe
cost of his true self? What ca n
he give to buy that self back
a•a 'on?."

lro-•--•----.

We wire flowers
Everywhere

992-2039

STEAK
HOUSE

•

Home of

........

·--

TomBoy

Pomeroy Rower Shop
~utternut

Ave., Pomeroy

Mrs. Millard Van M~ter

SANDWICH

.N W CQM pTQN, 0.0.
o

CROW'S

the Fabulous

FLOWERS
Ulr All Occasions
----.......

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Order By Phone

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12,2 TO 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - FAST COURT &lt;;T
POMEROY .

l'l\1bl)!tl

ltul\

:ldr!olJ!tl ''

And Toke Em Home

,· 1 ~'

,---------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!

~. .-

992-5432

1

".il'iil''ii'i iiit-•"'\

...

visor a'nd six members in at-

tendance. Project hooks were
discussed. For recreation the
group played a game of softball . Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Ridenour.
Randy Keller.
HECK AT HOME
Seaman 2nd. Class Mike A.
Heck, 19, Pomeroy, is home on
leave after completing nine
weeks of basic training in San
Diego, Calif. Heck, the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Shank, 105
Union Ave., Poraeroy, will be
home Wltil August 17.

RACINE
Mrs. Vashti Grimm of Letart
Falls visi!M Mrs. Frankie
Nelgler recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris
of Athens, Mrs. Elsie Roush
and Mrs. Marie Chspman of
Pomeroy called Sunday afternoon on Mr. and Mrs .
Francis Morris.
RAYBURN CONFINED
Sterling Rayburn, formerly
of Meigs County, Is confined to
the Patterson Army Hospital,
Third Floor, Room B-13 at Fort
Mammouth, N. J .

CARRSTOCELEBRATE
The 25th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Carr will be observed
Sunday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m .
with an open house at their
Harrisonville residence .·
VISITS IN BASHAN
Terry Hysell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman E . Hysell,
Children's · Home Road,
Pomeroy, Is visiting his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman M. Hysell, Bashan.
HARBOUR ASSIGNED
MASON, W. Va. - Airman
Michael S. Harbour; son of Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Harbour, has
been assigned to Keesler AFB,
Miss., after completinK Air
Force basic training. The
airman has been uslgned for
further training and duty u a
musician. Alnnan Harbour, a
11168 graduate ol Wahama High·
School, received his B.A.
degree In 19'12 from Marshall
Ur.ivenity. ·

CLEARANCE
BARGAINS

PM/CIDAA

NOW
w
JOy Is adeaa-ap deal tbat doesa't
AUTMORIZEO'DEAI.Efl •

CHRYSLER
MIJ10NI COIIPOR4l10N

1811011L
l

TOM RUE MOTORS,

399 SOUTH 3rd AVE., MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�.

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BARNEY
MIOOLEPORT PEN UNITED MINISTRY OF Service, 7: 30 p.rn .: Youth
TEC(;~ TAL ·· Third Ave., Ihe MEIGS COUNTY, The United mee ting 6:30 p.m.; Evening

, Rev. Will iam Knittel. pastqr .

Ronald D1Jgan, Sunday school

sup!. Classes for all ages ; ~orge W. Hult on and Rev .
evenlnq service, 7:30 p.m .; Linson Sl!!bbins, Ass't. PastorRihle Study. W~dn esday . 7:30 Directors .
•
• ·ervices, Friday.
1
FIRST UNITEO PRES
1 . . 10p.m .
BYTERIAN , Harri sonville,

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J
I.

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-Mulberry

service and young peoples

meeting, both 7:30p.m. Sunday
Wednesday , combined Bible
study and prayer meeting , 7: 30
·'-··

..

P·!f'HE SALVATION ARMY Envoy RayS. Wining, officer in
charge . Sunday, 10 a.m .. ,
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a.m .,

Sunday School. Young People's
Leg ion, 7 p.m.; Thursda y, 1 to 3
p.m., Ladies Home League ; 7
p.m., Prep classes.

SACRED HEART -

Rev .

Father Bernard Kra jcovlc,

pastor .
Phone
992-2825.
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10

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Height s,

Pomeroy . Herbert Morgan,
pastor .
Sabbath
school,
Saturday, 2 p.m.' with ctlurch
serVice following at 3: 1.5 p.m.
Open Bibl e discuss_ion each
Thursday, 7:30p .m .

worship, 10: 30 a.m .; evening
service, 7: 30 ; mid-week ser - GRAHAM
UNITED
vice, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
METHODIST - Preaching 9: 30
.. first and second Sunday&amp;
" GRACE EPISCOPAL - a.m
each month ; third and fourth
Rev. Leroy Davis, m inister. of
Sundays each month, worship
Morning prayer and sermon, serv ice at 7: 30p.m. Wednesday
10:30a.m. Holy communion and
ngs at 7: 30. Prayer and
sermon, first Sundays, 10:30 eveni
Study .
a.m. Church school, kin · Bible
FIRST
SOUTHERN BAPdergarten thr ough eighth

grade, 10:30 a.m .
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .,
pastor. Bible School. 9:30a.m ..
worship, 10:30; adull worship

a.m . Confessions, Saturday, 7·

7:30p.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
-Robert Kuhn, pastor; William
Wa tson, Sunday school supt.

Sunday school, 9:30a .m.; BYF,

6 p.m.: Bible study, Wed nesday, 7 p.m. ; choir pract ice,

Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.

Grate, pas lOr. WorShip service ,
1"i a.m. and 7:""30 p.m. Sunday .

Palmer 'slreets, Rev . Charles PRESBYTERIAN,

Simons ,

Hoffman,

pastor.

Sunday

Fred

School

Superintendent. Sunday church
s.! hool for everyone 9: 15a.m .; .
M orn ing worship 10:15 a.m.;
Evening services. 7:30 p.m .;
Wednesday prayer service, 7:30
p .m . EKtra youth acti\lities on

Sunday, 5 fl'.m., for all youth up
to shc th grade ; 6: 30 for junior
and senior high students.

CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Middl eport, 5th and Main .

Raulin Moyer, pastor . Michael
Gerlach, Sunday School sup!.
Bible School, 9:30a .m .; mor TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ., ning worship , 10 : 30 a.m. ;
Pomeroy, affiliated with S.B.C., evening worship, 7: 30 p.m .;
the Rev . Fred Hill, pastor. prayer service 7 p.m. WedSunday Schoo l, 9:30 a .m.; nesday.
morning worship, 10: 30 a.m .;
CHURCH
OF
THE
junior socie ty, 6: 30a .m . NYPS, NAZARENE - Middleport ,
6: 45 p.m. Sunday evangelistic Rev . Audry Miller, pastor;
meeting, 7:30 p .m . Prayer Fl oyd Carson, supl . Sunday
mee ting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . sc hoo l , 9: 30 a.m.; Morning
MIOOLEPORT
worship 10 : 30 a .m . ; j unior

CHRtST -

Clifford Smith,

minister . Sunday School 9:30
am .; morning church 10:30
a.m .: Sunday evening service , '
7:30p.m . Wednesday service, 8
p.m.

. LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHOOIST - Rev. Eugene

Sunday Church School. 10 a.m. Morning worship. 10:30 a.m.;
Mr s. Samoson Hall. Supt.
Evening worship, 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday, Christian Youth
STIVERSVILLE
COM- Crusade, 6: 30 p.m. i Prayer
MUNITY , Rev. Edsel Harl. meeting 7: 30 p.m. Thursday,
pastor . Sunday Schoof service choir practice. 7 p.m.
10 a .m . Prayer Meeting each
DEXTER CHURCH OF
Thursday 7:30 p.m. Sunday .CHRIST Danny Evans,
evening service, 7: 30 o.m.
pastor : Norman C. Will, supt.

Sunday School 9:30 a .m.;
ZION CHURCH OF ' CHRIST Worship service. 10 :30 a.m.

Pomeroy -Harrisonville Christian Endeavor Sunday
Road ... Kenneth Eberts, pastor . evening .
·

Su...t•y
• N,Jn,.,.
. 1:7-ll

llfo...t.,
• Job
J:l-1

A WELL-KNOWN PERSON
APPEARED BEFORE OUR

• Job·'
·6:1-/1

PRES IDEN TIA L SE~RCI!
80ARD TOD l~, J.Q.

Wtd•tul•y
• Psalr1u

l'·l l
lT Ll BERTY
TO D•VU LGE HIS
NAME . BESIDES, WE
, WERE NOT TOO

. .. WITH I-llS I-IAB IT
01' lDDRESS I~G tJS ~S
" EFFETE SNOBS"

Tlnmd•y

I KNOW '&gt;OU

• PsalfiiJ
96:1-IJ

SA'/ 11-IAT, BEN,
BUT DO '&gt;OU
'THINK I'M ...

Frid•y

S.turd•y
• Psalws

Moybe you know her as Mill
Lizzie or Granny Hill or Aunt
Mary Jonea. Through the yean
'she's been a tower of strength in
her community ... helping with
th.e si.ck, sharing with the poor
, . , a friend to all . .
She doean't s.eem to worry
about the future, ju1t look• to
the brighter side and iJ happy.
You envy her, thinking the geu
much out of life that you mi.,,
Does she have 11. secret, a magic:
fonnuia?
No, you can.'t oay that her fellowship with God is a secret, for
God is for everyone!

142:1-7

evening prayer meeting and 10:30 a.m .; Sunday evening
Bible study, 7: 30p.m.
service 7 p.m . Wednesday

Charles Norris.. pastor . Sunday
School, 9:30 a .m.; Morn ing
worship . 10: 45 a.m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7:30 p.m .;
Wednesday evening Bible

BE AVAILABLE
TO HEAD THE CJLLoGE
AFTER 4i.!GUST

... 00 val 'TiiiNK I'M A,&lt;;
Pl&lt;'eTTY I&gt;S mE. G&lt;Rl-S 'rtlU
ARReST WHEN ON
VICe SQUAD ?

IMPRESSED ...

evening prayer services, 7:30
p.m.

- BUT IT'S
TRUE!:'-M!LL.£R;;

SKY·LIFE 13/RP·

~

WGWTN IT TO

FOLKS WHO J.OIIE
THEIR PETS.'.'

1'----Jt..a,,,------, r-=-1

~
e::

SEEP COSTS
NORE-

@JT. M~NJNA!
TM OFF YJ-;:a:
MY PHYSICI.AN,
AND NEEO
~Yfft.INY.

ONE Cf' THOSE

SF'S::IAUSTs, HUH?
.. WHATS HIS &amp;6 f'

/1--- - - --, r-;:::o:&lt;l-1

!:
"' l.L.-"'1

~
I'LL HAVE T' PUT

. .. ...... . .
'"· ,.. ~

THIS OUGHTA

IN A NEW LENGTH
0' PIPE BUT I
HAVEN 'T GOT IT

~~.'

WI1'H
ME~

Would you like to possess some of her Jtrengtb to look
ahead, tG face danger and conquer fear? The Chur~h can
help you reach this goal. All through the yean. •t ~as
strengthened mankind and ·helped him find the best 1n hunself and in othen.

Sennonette

UMYF 7 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Worship
9 a.m.; Church School 10 a.m.;

~ E IM PLIED ~~

M IG ~T

67:1-7

Combs, pastor . Sunday school.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST .s9c iely, 6;30 p.m.; NYPS , 6:45 9:30 a .m .; church services. Great Bend. Charles Norns,
Corner Fou rt h and Main . p. m . Sunday eva ngeli stic
pastor. Worship service, 9: 30
Middlepor t. Rev. Henry L. Key , m ee ting , 7:3 0 p .m . Praye r 10:30 a.m .
a.m.; Sunday School, 10:30a.m.
Jr ., pastor . Sunday School 9:30 meeting Wednesday . 7:30p.m.
CAR'.ETON CHURCH BRAOBURY CHURCH OF
a.m ., Arnold Richards. sup t.;
Kingsbury Road . Sunday
CHRIST.
Bible
School
,
9:30
Morning worship 10 :30 a.m.
MEIGS
a.m ., morning worship, 10: lO SchooL 9:30 a.m.. Ralph Carl ,
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES COOPERATIVE
a.m . Sunday evening Wors h~p supt. Wor ship service, 10:30
Larry Carnahan presid ing
PARISH
Service. 7: 30 p.m ., cho1r a.m. and 7: 30p.m . alternately .
minister. Sunday , Bible lecture,
THE UNITED
practice
Sunday and Wed- Prayet meeting, Wednesday,
9: 30 a.m. ; Watchtower study ,
METHODIST CHURCH
nesday,
7
p.m.,
prayer meeting 7:30 p.m. Rev . Jay Stiles,
10 :30 a.m.: Tuesday, Bible
Robert R. Card
and
Bible
study
Wednesday
7:30 pastor.
study, 7:30 p.m.; Thursday ,
Rev . Stanten Smilh
0 LD
0 E XT E R
min1 stry school 7: 30 p.m.,
CHESTER - Worship 9: 15 p.m.
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
ser vice meeting 8:30p .m.
a .m .; Church School 10 a.m .
- Rev . Willard Dutcher ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
ANTIQUilY BAPTIST ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
Christ in Christian Union - a.m .; Church School. 10 a.m . Rev . Freeland Norris, pastor . pastor. Mrs. Worley Francis,
Sunday School Sup! . Sunday
Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs.
FLATWOODS- Worsh ip, 11 Sunday school, 10 a .m. ; church School. 9:45 a .m. Church SerRu sse ll Young, Sunday School a.m.; Church School 10 a.m.
servi'Ce , 7 p .m . Wedn es day vices first and third Sundays
Supt . Sunday School 9:30a .m
POMEROY - Worship , 10:30 Bible study, 7 p.m.
following
Sunday Schoo l ,
Evening worship 7:30. Wea· a.m .: Church School9: 15 a.m .;
Second
and
fourth Saturday
nesday pr ayer meeting . 7:30 UMYF 6:30p.m.
•
RACINE FIRST CHURCH evenings , 8 p.m. services.
p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship OF THE NAZARENE LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
10 a .m.; Church School9 a.m .; Sunday School , 9: JO a.m.; - Mr . Robert Wyatt , pastor ;
UMYF 6:30p.m.
.
Morn ing Worsh ip. 10:30 a.m. ; Sunday School sup!., Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Evenina worshio. 7:30 p.m., Osborne. Bible School, 9:30
Wednesday Mid-Week Service.l a.m .; preaching 10; ~5 a.m.;
Rtv. R:obtrf Bumgarner
HEATH -· Worship 10:30 Sunday School Superintendent, Evening services, 7: 30 p.m.
a.m .; Chur ch School 9:30a .m .; Gerald Weells . Pastor, Rev . .
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Morri s M,. Wolfe .
UMYF 7 p.m.
METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
RUTLAND - Worship 9: 15
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - Pastor . Sunday School. 9:JO
a .m .; Church School 10 a.m. ;

Sl-IT ALMA , YOU KNOW I
'TiiiNK YOW't&lt;:E 6EAUTIFJ..IL

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

r ..,l!l•y

munion, 10 : 30 a.m.; Sunday Racine Road. Ralph Johnson,
evening youth Christian en - pastor . Herbert White, Sunday
deavor, 6:30.· Worship services, School Director. Sunday School,

9:30a .m.; Morning worship,

•
'

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST -

The Sin Forgiver

WATCH IN Ol'
PITCHER
.SHClW5 ON TH'

ID JIT BOX

• Pltll1fu
91:1-9

Pine Grove, the Rev . Arthur

AT TH' SAWMILL

-~,

l

ScripiU rK ~1M b~
1he Ametk.an libte ~iely

Paul McElroy, Sunday School
REORGANIZEO CHURCH
Supl. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; .OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATmorn ing ·worship and com - . TER DAY SAINTS- Portland ·

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN -

NIGHT WATCH IN' JOB

Richard Barton, supt. Prayer

Syracuse, Gill, pastor . William Bailey,
Morring Worship , 9 a.m .; supt. Sunday School , 9:30a.m.;

Sunday, 7:30p.m. Wednesday

HE DID-- BUT
NOW HE SETS
UP AL L N IGHT

RETIRED FROM THAT

•unday School, 9:30 a.m .

FREEWILL BAPTIST -

Noel
Herrman , Morning Worship 10:30 a .m.
Sunday School. 9: 15, a.m... dleport ;
U N, I T E 0
Char les Evans. Supt. ; worshap past or. Sa turday evening F I R S T
se r vice. 10 :30 a .m . Con · serv ice, 7 p.m. Sunday school, PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
firma lion class, Tuesday . -4: 15 · to a .m . : Sunday evening Sunday Church Schoof , 9 :30
a .m ., Lewi s Sauer , Supt. ;
to 5: 30 p .m .; Junior Con · worShip, 7 p.m .
Mornint:~ Worsh ic, 10:30 a.m.
firmalion class . Thursday, 6: 30
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid to 7:45p .m .
F I RST
u· N I T E 0
SEVEN-OAY ADVENTIST dleport, corner of Sixth and

Rev . W. H. Perrin, pastor . Roy
Mayer, Sup I. Church schoool,
t : lS a .m. ; worship, 10:24 a .m.;
youth choir rehearsal Monday,
6:3() p.m .; Mrs. Marvin Burl.
dir ector;
sen i or
choir
rehearsal. 7:30p.m ., Thursday,
Mrs. Paul NeaS:e. director .,

POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry . Rev .
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor.
S..nday school. 9:30 a.m .. Glen
McC lung, supt.; morning
I

NAZARENE :... Rev . Herbert

Sunqay Church School. 9:30 ·meetlnq. Wednesday, 7:30 p.mc
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Rev . Arlhur C. Lund, pas lor . Corner Ash and Plum, Mid - a.m .. Mrs . Homer Lee, Supt .;
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN, -

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY

I THOUGHT HE ·.

•

I WALKED PAST '&lt;ORE PAW'S
HOUSE 'IESTIDDY, ELVINEV--AN' I SEEN A SIGN ON TH'
DOOR SA'IIN' '' DAV SlEEPER"

Pre5byterian Churc.h. Dwight worship, 7:30 p.m.
L. lavill . Pasto r-Director:
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE

IF 11' KEEPS
LEAKING
LIKE

TAKE' CARE 0'
1'HINO.S 'TIL ::t
O.ET BACK
WITH 1'W PIPE!

'T~tS 1

MY CELLAR
WILL 8£
FLOOOE'D~

Cupvrlsl1• 1971
K~"lt • Atlve• li•ina

a.m .; Morning worship , 10:30
a .m.; Young People's service ,

Se"''" · lr.c.

S1r1Jbu rg,

Vlrginli

BY HOYT ALLEN, JR.
Minister, Pomeroy Church of Christ
6:
.; Evangelistic
service
7;45p
30 .m
p.m.
Prayer mee
ilng , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Thursday, 7:30p .m.
Jesus not only healed physical ills, He also forgave people of UM~~RTtc\l~iYC:[J'sre R
Study, 7:30p.m.
FREEOOM
GOSPEL
their sins, In fact, this was the reason for Jesus' coming. The
Rev . Forrest R. Ooniey
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev .
angel told Joseph, "Thou shalt call his name Jesus: for He shall
ASBURY - Worship 11 a.m. : Rev . lawrence Sullivan. L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor .
With the hope it will. in some measure, foster and help
Church School9 : 50 a.m.; WSCS , pastor . Sunday Schoo l 9: 30 Roger Wi lfred, Sr .. Sunday
save His people from their sins." (Matthew 1:21).
d
lsi Tuesday .
a.m.; youth and jun ior youth School Supt. Sunday School.
No doubt Jesus wanted to free men from their diseases an
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 service, 6: 45 p.m.; evening
30 a .m . ; Sunday evening
sustain that which is good in family and community life, this
demons. But His main purpose was to save men from sin. The a .m.: Church School 10 a.m. : worship , 7:30p .m .; prayer and 9:
worship 7: 30 . Prayer meeting,
reason! say this is because physical illnesses may bring much WSCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7:30 praise, Wednesday, 7;30 p.m. Tuesday , 7; 30 p.m. Ernest
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Deeter, class leader. Youth
anguish whileoneislivingphyslcally, but sin, if not forgiven, will P - ~·INERSVILLE - Worshl p TIST
feature is sponsored by the business firvs and organizations
- Rev . Howard Kimble,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.rJ\.,
10 a.m.; Church School9 a.m. ; pa stor. Sunday schocl, 10 a.m.; Meeting
, trlngmuchangulshinthefiresofhellforeterruty.. .
Ernest Deeter, leader .
In the Gospels we have a record of Jesus hvmg m the flesh WSCS. 3rd Monday. 7:30. p.m. Henry Dav is. sup!. ; evening
whose names appear below.
serv ic e. 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
· , He could , an d~~
SYRACUSE
, here on ljil!;lh. At_t_h'at tune
. I , say .·
, , 1, ,~, 'il;n.:
Clillt~' -c~ 09Worsh1p,
1 , 9 .a .m.;8 meeling , Thurday , 7: 30p.m .
',MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
"
,'
''ThyslnsiU'eforglventhee_.ThyfaJ~h. , thma_dethee:whole, "Pro'yer ·an :" Bible Study,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE UNITEO BRETHREN IN
·. '
~ --.Today shalt thou be with me m paradi . ··
Wednesday, .30 p.m.
GOO - Rev . James Satterfield, CHRIST - Robert Shook ,
pastor
.
Sunday
school,
9:
30
pas
tor
.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Meigs County Branch
··
But after
. His work of preparation for the Kingdom (the
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
.
Rev , W, Dale McClurg
a.m .; worship service. 11 a.m.; a.m .. Russell Spencer, supt. ;
GAULS
SHAKE
HAVEN
church) was completed by His death and resurrection, He_sent
Rev . Frank Cheesebrew
eveni ng service, 7; prayer worship service, 10: 45 a.m .•
THE ATHENS COUNTY
the Holy Spirit to guide His chosen apostles as they proclauned
Rev . Martha Ann Mattner
service and yout h service . e":ening worship alternat ing
Trailer Rentals and Supplies
w1
th
C.
E.
at
7:
30
p.m.
on
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
salvation for all men for all time.
W~r~~HA~·'io ~ D~rca~~ urch Thursday, 7 p.m
Chester , Ohio
St. Rt . 7
Sunday . Prayer meet ing, 7:30
296
W,
Second
Pomeroy Ph . 992. 3865
When the Jews, who had been responsible for the death of School ~O : 30 a .m .· ..
p.m. Wedne•day, Alfred Wolfe,
'
Lord ' they
LANGSVILLE
Jesus heard the Apost Ie P eter prea ch of th e rtsen
CARMEL - Wors hip, II CHURCH
- RobertCHRISTIAN
E. Musser , lay leader .
LODWICK'S MARKET
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
were ;.rry they had sinned. They then believed that Jesus was a .m.. 1st and 3rd Sundays; pastor. Sunday SchooL 9:30
Member of the Big 3
the Messiah and desired their sins forgiven. Thus they asked the Ch~f,'j!t~c'(l'~~J~ a~mWorship , a.m.; Robert Bobo, s u~t.;
WHITE'S CHAPEL
" We Sponsor Jesus"
General
Merchandise
inspired apostles what to do to have their sins forgiven. (Acts 1 30 p.m.; .church school, 9:30 :;;,~~~:ni~go~~~~~e~ 0;3 ~; M~d: Coolville RD. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Rev
.
Stan
Craig,
Pastor
school,
9;30
pastor
.
Sunday
·.37).
·
a.m.;
m1
d-week
serv1ce,
k
2
Tuppers Plains
Ph . 667 -3280
w~dASfdfETA"Iir
B
wee service, Wednesday, 7:30 a .m .; worship service, 10:30
The LAird answering through Peter, told them, since ~hey
' _ Worship, p.m.
a.m . Bible study and prayer
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
now believed in Jesus, to repent, (turn from sm) and be baptized. 10 a.m., firs\ and third Sundays:
syRACUSE CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7: 30p .m.
MARK V STORE
He told them they would not only have their sins forgiven , but 9 a.m., second and fourth THE NAZARENE - Rev. M. C.
Rexall Drugs
they would also receive the gifl of the Holy Spirit . (Acts 2 38) . .
~~~~:~~ 't~i~~r~~nsJ:~~\~: ~:: ~~~~';;~resc~::orSu~~b tt,'::'J.";,
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriplions
Middleport, Ohio
So It Is today. To the sinner who des1res to have his Sins second and lourlh Sundays. School . classes tor all ages , 9:30
RUTLAND
992 -2955
Pomeroy
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
covered by the blood of Ou'ist, he too must not only believe, but Mid week service. Wednesday, a.m.; morning worship, 10:45.
Rev . Samuel Jackson
atsorepentandhebaptized. Th~nashearisesfro~thewatery 8 pG. ~EATBEND - Worship 11 NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p.m.; ROYAL OAK PARK
pas lor . Sunday School, 10 a.m. ;'
grave of baptism he is to walk m the newness of life. (Romans a.m .. 2nd and 4th sundays; ~~fong~~~ic J!:tr~~:k S~~~~~; Mrs. Gertrude Butler , supt
OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
6·4)
Church School , 10 a.m.
meeling , Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Prayer Service, 1: 30 p.m . ;
Family Recreation
Bakers of Holsum Bread
LETART FALLS- Worship Missionary meeting , second preaching service, 2 p.m.
· ·
Swimming,
Camping
RUTLANO
CHURCH
OF
10 a .m.; Church School 9 a.m. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Middleport. Ohio
MORNING STAR - Worship ·
CHRIST - Keith Wise, poslor
UNIT EO FAITH NON
9:30a.m.; Church School 10 ·30
Sunday school, 9:30a .m.• V. H
a
.m.;
Mid
-Week
Service,
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Braley, supt.; worship service
Mrs. Leonard Peale.
THE FARMERS BANK
Wednesday , 8,p .m.
Robert Smith, pastor. Sunday and communion, 10: 30 a.m. ;
Mrs. MaryK. Yost, president
GAUL'S MARKET
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship school, 9:30a .m.; class leader, evening service, 7: 30 p.m
AND
SAVINGS
CO.
of the Bertha M. Sayre and Ray of Columbus spent a 11 a.m.. 1st and 3rd Sundays: , Leo Hill ; worship service, 10:30 Wednesday , Bible study, 7:30
Pomeroy-Member FDIC&amp;
a.m.; church, 7:30p.m .•· prayer p.m. Regular board meeting
Missionary Society, presided day with her mother, Mrs . Church School , 10 a.m.
Chester. Ohio
'
Federal Reserve System
7:30p.m
..
third
Saturday
each
at the meeting held at First Howard Neigler. The Cross '
PORTLAND - Worship 7 30 m~~i~~ U~~n~~;~ETH~EN
month .
.; Church
School 9' 30
Baptist Church Tuesday are leaving by plane to visit p.m
SUTTON
- Worship,
II a.m.
a.m. IN . CHRIST- Eldon R. Bla ke,
BOGGS EQUIPMENT
THE
RUTLAND COM
evening, August 1 and opened their son-in-law and daughter 2nd and 4th Sundays; Church pastor . Sunday School. 10a.m,;
HEINER'S
BAKERY
Rev
Sales-Allis Chalmers · Service
School 10 a.m .
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Nlor- MUNITY CHURCH with a meditation , 11 A in California.
WESLEYAN
(Racine) ning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening Richard Dubbeld , pastor
Bakers of Good Bread
Farm · Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Woman 's Conversation with
Mrs. Jean Lindsey of Grove ' Worship , 11 a.m. ; Ch urch service Christian Endeavor, School. 9:30 a .m.; Worshl p
Huntington,
W.
Va.
service,
11
a
.m.;
Wednesda
Tuppers
Plains
y
667-3435
God
Mental House City spent over the weekend School, 10 a.m.
7:30p.m .; Mrs . Lyda Cheval ier,
prayer
meeting,
7:
30
p.m
UMYF for all churches of the prestdent. Song service and
Cleaning," The group sang the with her mother, Mrs. Mason
Soulhern Cluster, 7:30 p.m. sermon , 8:20. Mid-Week prayer Sunday night worship, 7: 30.
theme sqng, "They'll Know We Spencer.
DICK'S GROCERY
RUTLAND CHURCH 0 F
each Sunday at the Youth mee ting Wednesday , 7: 30p.m.
RACINE
FOOD
MARKET
{Formerly
Domlgonsl
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Are Christians by OW' Love".
Mrs. Marie Holsinger. class
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Shronlz Center (Oak Grove Road .)
Lloyd D. Grimm , Jr., pasto r.
• New Owner - Dick Sargent
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
leader.
The business session was held and dau ghter, Amy of
The Store With A Heart
Rev. Jacob Lehman
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School , 9: 30 a .m .'
Old U. S. 33
Ph . 992-7735
and the Love Gift offerings of Washington, Pa., were Sunday
Morning
worship,
10:30
a.m
Ph. 949-3342
Racine
Rev . Standley Brandum
CHURCH Harrisonvill e
Stop In and See Us
the circles and dedication was guests of their aunt, Mrs.
JOPPA - Worship 10 a.m.; Road, Rev . Roy Taylor, pastor; Young people's service, 6:45
p.m
.:
Evangelistic
services
by Grella Simpson, Sandra James Swart and the Alfred Church School 9 a.m.; Prayer Henry Eblin, Sunday School .
'
Meeling , Wednesday , 8 p.m .
:,up1. ~unday School, 9: 30a .m.; 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday evenin g
Boothe and Dorothy Badgley. Crow family .
R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
LONG BOTTOM - Church evening worship , 7: 30 p.m. service 7: 30 p.m.
GOEGlfiN READY MIX CO.
After a devotional program by
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lewis of services, 9a .m.; Sunday School Prayer and praise service,
MASON COUNTY
Ohio' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
Helen Simpson, reports from New Lexington spent Tuesday 9: 45 a.m. Bible study every Thursday, 7:30p.m.
.
THE HILAND CHAPEL
Phone 992-3284
Middleport
Thursday,
7:30p.m.
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
Middleport, Ohio
the women's conference were evening, Aug, 25 with Mrs.
'
NORTH BETHEL- Worship Dexter - Worship services George Casto, pastor . Sunda y
given by Grella Simpson, Margaret Houdashelt.
School
,
9:
30
;
evening
worshl
p.
11 a.m .; Church Sc hool10a.m. Saturday and Sunday , 7: 30
Marjorie Grimm and Mary K.
ALFRED - Sunday school. .£·!"_,
.
. ... 7:30. Thursday evening praye r
ALL WEATHER ROOFING
Mrs . Lillian Jividen is
7: 30p .m .
M&amp;R
FOODLINER
HEMLOCK . GROVE service.
Yost.
Refreshments
of visiting in Athens with her son, 9: 45 a .m. ea ch Sunday ;
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.
MASON FIRST BAPTISThomemade ice cream, cake, Dr. and Mrs . Charles Jividen. preaching at 11 a .m. each CHRISTIAN .- David Stautter, Second and Pomeroy Sis., Sta n
D. B.A. ANTHONY
Sunday. Prayer meeting, 7: AS pastor ; Stanford Stockton, supt . Craig, pastor . Sunday schoo I,
Middleport, Ohio
PLUMBING
and HEATING
tea and coffee were served by
Mr . and Mrs. Michael p.m. Wednesday ; WSCS , 8 p.m. McrninQ worsh ip, 9:30 a.m.; 9:
. 337 N. 2nd Middleport
45a.m.; worship service, 11
992-3550
'the Ruth Circle in the George and ·family of on third Tuesday each month. church school. 10 : 30 a .m .; a.m.;
training union, 6:30p.m
REEDSVILLE
'Sunday
young
peoples
meeting,
6:30
basement social rooms .,
Colwnbus spent a week with sc hool, 9:30; preaching , 7:30 p.m.; evening worship, 7:30. evening worship service, 7: 30
MONTG'JMERY WARD
CARPET-LAND1 INC.
Mrs. Alice Fink has returned her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Bob p.m. Sunday ; prayer meeting, Bible~dy, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . Mid-week prayer servlc••
Wall
-to-Wall Carpel Specialists
Wednesday,
7:go
p.m.
home from the hospital.
CATALOGl)ESTORE
'·
Roush and Mr. and Mrs. Owen 7:30p.m. Tuesday ; WSCS, 7:30 p.m.
116W, Main
· MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURC H
first Thursday each month .
· Ph. 992-7590
Mrs. Cora Birch returned Watson .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles R. Sheets
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip, Rev . Cecil Cox, pastor. Sundoy -Letart Route 1, the Rev. Sla
home from Holzer Medical
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001
Free Estimates -Guaranteed Installation
Mr. and Mrs. Don Reel of 10 a .m.; Church School, 9 a.m. school sup!., Joe Sayre. Sunday Craig , pastor . Sunday schoo n
I,
Center.
Coshocton were weekend
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school, 9: 45 a.m .; Sunday 9:30a .m.; prayer and Bible
Mrs. Virginia Rees spent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Worship 9 a.m .: Church School evening worsh ip, 7:30. Wed- study, 7:30p.m. Cottage praye r
J. PAULEYI AGENT
SADIE'S MARKET
10 a.m .
nesday prayer and Bible study, service, Tuesday , 10 a .m . '
several days for observation at Johnson.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 7:30p.m.·
,
,worship service, Friday, 7:30
Nationwide Insurance Co. ol Columbus, 0 .
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs . Edna Pickens ac- Hobart Newell , suot. Services
T UP P E RS
P LA I N S p.m.
,
Meats
and
Groceries
Mrs. Carolyn Kucsma of companied Mr. and Mrs. Don weekly , 9:30a .m. on Sunday. CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
0F
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-3986
Syracuse
·. Gahanna spent a day with her Wadsworth and children to Preaching first and third Eugene Underwood , pastor ; CHRIST - Loren T. Stephens.
PI)
,
992-2318
of month by Clifford Howard Caldwell. Jr .. Sundar. minister. Worship, 10 a.m
mother, Mrs. Mattie Yost, who their home in Philadelphia for Sundays
Smith, 9:30a .m.
School Supt. ; Sunday Schoo, Bible study, 11 ; 15 a .m.; even in
accompanied her home for a a visit.
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN 9:30a . m.; Morning sermon, worship, 7:30p.m. Mid -wee~
SEARS
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
UNION - Darrel Doddrill, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday evening service, Wednesday, 7;30 p.m
visit.
Miss Beverly Houdashelt of pastor.
Sunday
School,
9:30
servi~e. i o. m.
MASON
ASSEMBLY
0
F
Mr. and Mrs, Kyle Stump of Gallipolis is a guest of her a.m .. Leonard Gilmore, first
Authorized Catalog Merchant
LETART FALLS JINITED GOD- Second St., Mason, W
Furniture and Appliances
,
Louis W. Osborne
Akron were here over the grandmother, Mrs. Margaret elder ; evening serv ice, 7:30 BRETHREN - Rev . Robert Va. Chester Tennant, pasto r .
Ph.
98~- 3308
Chester.
0
.
.
220
E.
Main
Pomeroy Ph. 992-2118
p.m. Wednesday prayer Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris, Sunday school, 10 a.m,; mo rweekend and took her mother, Houdashelt.
meet
ing,
7:30p.m.
.
s
upl.
.Sunday
school,
9:30a.m.;
nlng
wor1hlp,
11 a.m
.,
Mn, Clara Roush, back to their
Mr, and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Attend the Church of Your Choice
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF morning sermon, 10:30 a .m.; evangelistic service, 7:30 p.m
home.
spent a week vacationing in GOD - Ractne .·Rouie 2. The evening sermon, 7:30 alter - Bible •tudy and prayer servlc e.
MIDDLPORT 1BOOK STORE
Rev . Chr.rles Rand, ~astor . noling each Sunday. Prayer Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Phon e ,
Mrs. Laura Shaifer of Wisconsin and Michigan .
BEN
FRANKLIN
STORE
Sunday school, 9: 45 a .m. ; service, Wednesday , 7:30p.m. 773-5133.
Church and Office Supplies- Gifts
Poineroy spent a few days with
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie m orning worship , "11 a .m . Prayer .meeting, 7: 30 p.m .
Ph . 992-3496 •
Pomeroy
992-2641
Middleport
her sister, Mrs._Margaret and children of Gallipolis Ev ening services, Thuesday alternating Sundays.
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
F
d
•o
CHESHIRE
CHURCH
OF
CHRISTinChrlsllan
Union
Ida
7
Houdalhell.
called on Mr.' and Mrs. Roy an
r 1Y· :. ·
t
BEARWA·LLOW
RIDGE GOO OF PROPHECY! G. P . R
. ev. Auf um ScoIt , paso
r.
Mr. anct' Mrs. Ray Rieth- Riffle Monday.
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David Smith, pa1t 0r. Sunday School, Sunddy school, 9:30 a.m
F. J. WALLACE, J£WELERS
YORK
HOUSE
miller oC Sarasota, Fla., who
Mr , and Mrs. E. A. Wingett Jewell, pastor. Bible study, 9:30 1D a.m.; Arthur Henson, Supt.; James Hughes, Supt ' ;
Bulova Watches · Sales &amp; Service
service· 7:30, Wed .
d
were guata of Mrs. Ann Coe, and Mrs. Ann Coe visited Dave "o.m.; mor nlng worshl p, 10 : 30 ; Morn· in~ Worship 11 a.m .; evening
100 Years In Pomeroy
evening
worship,
6:30
p.m.
Young
eoples
service,
7
p.m.;
nos
ay
evenmg
prtya
186 N. Second
Middleport
left togo kl Brewcter, N. Y.,lo and Walter Thomas Sunday in Wednesday Bible study, 7:30 Evening oervl~e. 7:30 p.m,; meeting, 7: 30 p.m . N0r
Kermit W1lton
villi tbelr dw'lhllr, Mr. and Colwnbul.
p.m.
~sday Mid•WMI&lt; l&gt;rayer 't~~tld•y Mr~lce,
•

No!
!'II
drive
LjOU

out
to
the

hiqhwa4!

I THOUf,HT
'/OJ wer&lt;e

-~

&amp;01~10

lF:-110

3

cur c:o,o.Jf.l!

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Seasoning
5, Johnny of
song
11. Musical
group
12. Eastern
·• Asia
13, Latvian

RaCl· ne Social Events

capital
IF 'Ill ~E SOMETHIN: I FIGURE
YOU 'Ll FIND A WA'f O' Tf:LLIN'

US ABOUT IT, 1:;:\RWIN!

~~A;;:;:ij'";;t,:;;;i~~w.l r-v,-~-lA_IIO_ICl-,-1-WW-E~.IO"'NI-D A5 ACITIZE~~~.lO~U~~~~~~~~~
JIJ5T HEPRI' OF TIE PfMAND 10 &lt;JCtl

COlD·tlloo&lt;&gt;Et:'
MU~OI' MY

,(

.

)

a.DTHING
\'

0)

f!£1116 DONE, I!IGHT,

"'-""""THE M5WER IS,
5lJPPORIER ANI'
' 1Nrn;Tt6ATIN6.

FRIENY,'

NEUTAL. ..

(2

-

fault

(2 wds.)

5. Esprit de
corps
6. Region
1. Stannum

DMMM

I

EPITIE

25. Body of
water
26. Comparative word
21. Jason's
ship
28. Prolfer
31. Colorado
Indian
32. Unhinged
33. A Wag-

I

nerian

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A X Y D L I , A A X lL
b LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another.. In this sample A Is
used for the throe L's, X for the two O's, et~. Sin&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, the leneth and formatiol) of the words are Ill
hlnta, E1cb day the codeletten are different. •
.
·

i

I
••'

CIYPTOQUOTES

•

SPRPZBVYCN YV SYFYRS OBZP CIKR

t

~

N B Q. A K R , K R H T Z Y H P

.,'lo .·

UPVV

•'

CIKR

NBQ

YV CKLYR S

RPPH. -LKIUYU!::~~

•

SYXZXR

~

YlllaUtt O.Aq.llle: l UKE THE DIIEAIIS OF Till:
J'UTUBI
TIIAN TH1 HISTORY OF TilE PAST.PATJlCX IIIHRY ,

•

Hull

•

f

I

10
I

t)
KJ

THEY MAKE A LIVINC:.
~ETWEEN ~E5.

Now ornnp the cin:led )etten
to form the 1urpri,. anawer, u
IUUU!ed by the oboYt cartoon.

(A.wen l...arrow)

J•...Ieo• MANLY IlLLI IPIUCI . CYMIAL

Ye•terd•r'•

lass
34. Worked
with the
sick .
36. Chief
Norse god
31.lnvent
38. Jolly
Roger, for
example

..

NEW

s~!

Yesttrday's Answer
8. In an op23. Torment
pressive
24. Lean-to
manner (2 25. Potbelly
wds.)
26. Bartered
9. Meantime 29. French
10. Island in
health
N.Y. Bay
resort
16. Bare
30. Scope
19. Musical
32, Boundary
repetition 35. Droop
20. " 36. FrequentFrome"
ly (poet. )

show

p.

..

about
3. Like
an
adroit
pick-

nerous

18. "Stormy"
bird
ZO. "Jane-"
21. Links'
cry
22. Tenuous
23. Prong
24. False

.

0

DOWN
I. Belt
2. Come

utterance
soldier

Unscramble the,. four Jumbles,
one Jetttr to each aqu-, to
form four ordinary words.

river

17. Old

..

..

,---&lt;.!:"

U. Cantatrice
Tebaldi
15. Wood for
oars
16. Lamb's

~&amp;WffiM;&amp;.t ~••wild ...J ,_

39. Beat
about th e
bush
40. English

'

,.

A.wm IJ'Iaat they loolcfor duri,..leop rear- YIS.MIN

�.

'

...

.. . ....

BARNEY
MIOOLEPORT PEN UNITED MINISTRY OF Service, 7: 30 p.rn .: Youth
TEC(;~ TAL ·· Third Ave., Ihe MEIGS COUNTY, The United mee ting 6:30 p.m.; Evening

, Rev. Will iam Knittel. pastqr .

Ronald D1Jgan, Sunday school

sup!. Classes for all ages ; ~orge W. Hult on and Rev .
evenlnq service, 7:30 p.m .; Linson Sl!!bbins, Ass't. PastorRihle Study. W~dn esday . 7:30 Directors .
•
• ·ervices, Friday.
1
FIRST UNITEO PRES
1 . . 10p.m .
BYTERIAN , Harri sonville,

~

•...
J
I.

'
I

I

••

-Mulberry

service and young peoples

meeting, both 7:30p.m. Sunday
Wednesday , combined Bible
study and prayer meeting , 7: 30
·'-··

..

P·!f'HE SALVATION ARMY Envoy RayS. Wining, officer in
charge . Sunday, 10 a.m .. ,
Holiness meeting; 10:30 a.m .,

Sunday School. Young People's
Leg ion, 7 p.m.; Thursda y, 1 to 3
p.m., Ladies Home League ; 7
p.m., Prep classes.

SACRED HEART -

Rev .

Father Bernard Kra jcovlc,

pastor .
Phone
992-2825.
Saturday evening Mass, 7:30
p.m. Sunday Mass, 8 and 10

'
••
'

'I
~

Height s,

Pomeroy . Herbert Morgan,
pastor .
Sabbath
school,
Saturday, 2 p.m.' with ctlurch
serVice following at 3: 1.5 p.m.
Open Bibl e discuss_ion each
Thursday, 7:30p .m .

worship, 10: 30 a.m .; evening
service, 7: 30 ; mid-week ser - GRAHAM
UNITED
vice, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
METHODIST - Preaching 9: 30
.. first and second Sunday&amp;
" GRACE EPISCOPAL - a.m
each month ; third and fourth
Rev. Leroy Davis, m inister. of
Sundays each month, worship
Morning prayer and sermon, serv ice at 7: 30p.m. Wednesday
10:30a.m. Holy communion and
ngs at 7: 30. Prayer and
sermon, first Sundays, 10:30 eveni
Study .
a.m. Church school, kin · Bible
FIRST
SOUTHERN BAPdergarten thr ough eighth

grade, 10:30 a.m .
POMEROY CHURCH OF
CHRIST- Mr. Hoyt Allen, Jr .,
pastor. Bible School. 9:30a.m ..
worship, 10:30; adull worship

a.m . Confessions, Saturday, 7·

7:30p.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
-Robert Kuhn, pastor; William
Wa tson, Sunday school supt.

Sunday school, 9:30a .m.; BYF,

6 p.m.: Bible study, Wed nesday, 7 p.m. ; choir pract ice,

Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.

Grate, pas lOr. WorShip service ,
1"i a.m. and 7:""30 p.m. Sunday .

Palmer 'slreets, Rev . Charles PRESBYTERIAN,

Simons ,

Hoffman,

pastor.

Sunday

Fred

School

Superintendent. Sunday church
s.! hool for everyone 9: 15a.m .; .
M orn ing worship 10:15 a.m.;
Evening services. 7:30 p.m .;
Wednesday prayer service, 7:30
p .m . EKtra youth acti\lities on

Sunday, 5 fl'.m., for all youth up
to shc th grade ; 6: 30 for junior
and senior high students.

CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Middl eport, 5th and Main .

Raulin Moyer, pastor . Michael
Gerlach, Sunday School sup!.
Bible School, 9:30a .m .; mor TIST - 282 Mulberry Ave ., ning worship , 10 : 30 a.m. ;
Pomeroy, affiliated with S.B.C., evening worship, 7: 30 p.m .;
the Rev . Fred Hill, pastor. prayer service 7 p.m. WedSunday Schoo l, 9:30 a .m.; nesday.
morning worship, 10: 30 a.m .;
CHURCH
OF
THE
junior socie ty, 6: 30a .m . NYPS, NAZARENE - Middleport ,
6: 45 p.m. Sunday evangelistic Rev . Audry Miller, pastor;
meeting, 7:30 p .m . Prayer Fl oyd Carson, supl . Sunday
mee ting Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . sc hoo l , 9: 30 a.m.; Morning
MIOOLEPORT
worship 10 : 30 a .m . ; j unior

CHRtST -

Clifford Smith,

minister . Sunday School 9:30
am .; morning church 10:30
a.m .: Sunday evening service , '
7:30p.m . Wednesday service, 8
p.m.

. LAUREL CLIFF FREE
METHOOIST - Rev. Eugene

Sunday Church School. 10 a.m. Morning worship. 10:30 a.m.;
Mr s. Samoson Hall. Supt.
Evening worship, 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday, Christian Youth
STIVERSVILLE
COM- Crusade, 6: 30 p.m. i Prayer
MUNITY , Rev. Edsel Harl. meeting 7: 30 p.m. Thursday,
pastor . Sunday Schoof service choir practice. 7 p.m.
10 a .m . Prayer Meeting each
DEXTER CHURCH OF
Thursday 7:30 p.m. Sunday .CHRIST Danny Evans,
evening service, 7: 30 o.m.
pastor : Norman C. Will, supt.

Sunday School 9:30 a .m.;
ZION CHURCH OF ' CHRIST Worship service. 10 :30 a.m.

Pomeroy -Harrisonville Christian Endeavor Sunday
Road ... Kenneth Eberts, pastor . evening .
·

Su...t•y
• N,Jn,.,.
. 1:7-ll

llfo...t.,
• Job
J:l-1

A WELL-KNOWN PERSON
APPEARED BEFORE OUR

• Job·'
·6:1-/1

PRES IDEN TIA L SE~RCI!
80ARD TOD l~, J.Q.

Wtd•tul•y
• Psalr1u

l'·l l
lT Ll BERTY
TO D•VU LGE HIS
NAME . BESIDES, WE
, WERE NOT TOO

. .. WITH I-llS I-IAB IT
01' lDDRESS I~G tJS ~S
" EFFETE SNOBS"

Tlnmd•y

I KNOW '&gt;OU

• PsalfiiJ
96:1-IJ

SA'/ 11-IAT, BEN,
BUT DO '&gt;OU
'THINK I'M ...

Frid•y

S.turd•y
• Psalws

Moybe you know her as Mill
Lizzie or Granny Hill or Aunt
Mary Jonea. Through the yean
'she's been a tower of strength in
her community ... helping with
th.e si.ck, sharing with the poor
, . , a friend to all . .
She doean't s.eem to worry
about the future, ju1t look• to
the brighter side and iJ happy.
You envy her, thinking the geu
much out of life that you mi.,,
Does she have 11. secret, a magic:
fonnuia?
No, you can.'t oay that her fellowship with God is a secret, for
God is for everyone!

142:1-7

evening prayer meeting and 10:30 a.m .; Sunday evening
Bible study, 7: 30p.m.
service 7 p.m . Wednesday

Charles Norris.. pastor . Sunday
School, 9:30 a .m.; Morn ing
worship . 10: 45 a.m.; Sunday
evening worship, 7:30 p.m .;
Wednesday evening Bible

BE AVAILABLE
TO HEAD THE CJLLoGE
AFTER 4i.!GUST

... 00 val 'TiiiNK I'M A,&lt;;
Pl&lt;'eTTY I&gt;S mE. G&lt;Rl-S 'rtlU
ARReST WHEN ON
VICe SQUAD ?

IMPRESSED ...

evening prayer services, 7:30
p.m.

- BUT IT'S
TRUE!:'-M!LL.£R;;

SKY·LIFE 13/RP·

~

WGWTN IT TO

FOLKS WHO J.OIIE
THEIR PETS.'.'

1'----Jt..a,,,------, r-=-1

~
e::

SEEP COSTS
NORE-

@JT. M~NJNA!
TM OFF YJ-;:a:
MY PHYSICI.AN,
AND NEEO
~Yfft.INY.

ONE Cf' THOSE

SF'S::IAUSTs, HUH?
.. WHATS HIS &amp;6 f'

/1--- - - --, r-;:::o:&lt;l-1

!:
"' l.L.-"'1

~
I'LL HAVE T' PUT

. .. ...... . .
'"· ,.. ~

THIS OUGHTA

IN A NEW LENGTH
0' PIPE BUT I
HAVEN 'T GOT IT

~~.'

WI1'H
ME~

Would you like to possess some of her Jtrengtb to look
ahead, tG face danger and conquer fear? The Chur~h can
help you reach this goal. All through the yean. •t ~as
strengthened mankind and ·helped him find the best 1n hunself and in othen.

Sennonette

UMYF 7 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Worship
9 a.m.; Church School 10 a.m.;

~ E IM PLIED ~~

M IG ~T

67:1-7

Combs, pastor . Sunday school.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST .s9c iely, 6;30 p.m.; NYPS , 6:45 9:30 a .m .; church services. Great Bend. Charles Norns,
Corner Fou rt h and Main . p. m . Sunday eva ngeli stic
pastor. Worship service, 9: 30
Middlepor t. Rev. Henry L. Key , m ee ting , 7:3 0 p .m . Praye r 10:30 a.m .
a.m.; Sunday School, 10:30a.m.
Jr ., pastor . Sunday School 9:30 meeting Wednesday . 7:30p.m.
CAR'.ETON CHURCH BRAOBURY CHURCH OF
a.m ., Arnold Richards. sup t.;
Kingsbury Road . Sunday
CHRIST.
Bible
School
,
9:30
Morning worship 10 :30 a.m.
MEIGS
a.m ., morning worship, 10: lO SchooL 9:30 a.m.. Ralph Carl ,
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES COOPERATIVE
a.m . Sunday evening Wors h~p supt. Wor ship service, 10:30
Larry Carnahan presid ing
PARISH
Service. 7: 30 p.m ., cho1r a.m. and 7: 30p.m . alternately .
minister. Sunday , Bible lecture,
THE UNITED
practice
Sunday and Wed- Prayet meeting, Wednesday,
9: 30 a.m. ; Watchtower study ,
METHODIST CHURCH
nesday,
7
p.m.,
prayer meeting 7:30 p.m. Rev . Jay Stiles,
10 :30 a.m.: Tuesday, Bible
Robert R. Card
and
Bible
study
Wednesday
7:30 pastor.
study, 7:30 p.m.; Thursday ,
Rev . Stanten Smilh
0 LD
0 E XT E R
min1 stry school 7: 30 p.m.,
CHESTER - Worship 9: 15 p.m.
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
ser vice meeting 8:30p .m.
a .m .; Church School 10 a.m .
- Rev . Willard Dutcher ,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH of
ANTIQUilY BAPTIST ENTERPRISE- Worship, 9
Christ in Christian Union - a.m .; Church School. 10 a.m . Rev . Freeland Norris, pastor . pastor. Mrs. Worley Francis,
Sunday School Sup! . Sunday
Lawrence Manley, pastor ; Mrs.
FLATWOODS- Worsh ip, 11 Sunday school, 10 a .m. ; church School. 9:45 a .m. Church SerRu sse ll Young, Sunday School a.m.; Church School 10 a.m.
servi'Ce , 7 p .m . Wedn es day vices first and third Sundays
Supt . Sunday School 9:30a .m
POMEROY - Worship , 10:30 Bible study, 7 p.m.
following
Sunday Schoo l ,
Evening worship 7:30. Wea· a.m .: Church School9: 15 a.m .;
Second
and
fourth Saturday
nesday pr ayer meeting . 7:30 UMYF 6:30p.m.
•
RACINE FIRST CHURCH evenings , 8 p.m. services.
p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS - Worship OF THE NAZARENE LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
10 a .m.; Church School9 a.m .; Sunday School , 9: JO a.m.; - Mr . Robert Wyatt , pastor ;
UMYF 6:30p.m.
.
Morn ing Worsh ip. 10:30 a.m. ; Sunday School sup!., Ronald
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
Evenina worshio. 7:30 p.m., Osborne. Bible School, 9:30
Wednesday Mid-Week Service.l a.m .; preaching 10; ~5 a.m.;
Rtv. R:obtrf Bumgarner
HEATH -· Worship 10:30 Sunday School Superintendent, Evening services, 7: 30 p.m.
a.m .; Chur ch School 9:30a .m .; Gerald Weells . Pastor, Rev . .
HYSELL
RUN
FREE
Morri s M,. Wolfe .
UMYF 7 p.m.
METHODIST - Cecil Wise,
RUTLAND - Worship 9: 15
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST - Pastor . Sunday School. 9:JO
a .m .; Church School 10 a.m. ;

Sl-IT ALMA , YOU KNOW I
'TiiiNK YOW't&lt;:E 6EAUTIFJ..IL

CAMPUS CLA'ITER

r ..,l!l•y

munion, 10 : 30 a.m.; Sunday Racine Road. Ralph Johnson,
evening youth Christian en - pastor . Herbert White, Sunday
deavor, 6:30.· Worship services, School Director. Sunday School,

9:30a .m.; Morning worship,

•
'

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST -

The Sin Forgiver

WATCH IN Ol'
PITCHER
.SHClW5 ON TH'

ID JIT BOX

• Pltll1fu
91:1-9

Pine Grove, the Rev . Arthur

AT TH' SAWMILL

-~,

l

ScripiU rK ~1M b~
1he Ametk.an libte ~iely

Paul McElroy, Sunday School
REORGANIZEO CHURCH
Supl. Sunday School 9:30a.m .; .OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATmorn ing ·worship and com - . TER DAY SAINTS- Portland ·

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN -

NIGHT WATCH IN' JOB

Richard Barton, supt. Prayer

Syracuse, Gill, pastor . William Bailey,
Morring Worship , 9 a.m .; supt. Sunday School , 9:30a.m.;

Sunday, 7:30p.m. Wednesday

HE DID-- BUT
NOW HE SETS
UP AL L N IGHT

RETIRED FROM THAT

•unday School, 9:30 a.m .

FREEWILL BAPTIST -

Noel
Herrman , Morning Worship 10:30 a .m.
Sunday School. 9: 15, a.m... dleport ;
U N, I T E 0
Char les Evans. Supt. ; worshap past or. Sa turday evening F I R S T
se r vice. 10 :30 a .m . Con · serv ice, 7 p.m. Sunday school, PRESBYTERIAN, Middleport,
firma lion class, Tuesday . -4: 15 · to a .m . : Sunday evening Sunday Church Schoof , 9 :30
a .m ., Lewi s Sauer , Supt. ;
to 5: 30 p .m .; Junior Con · worShip, 7 p.m .
Mornint:~ Worsh ic, 10:30 a.m.
firmalion class . Thursday, 6: 30
FIRST BAPTIST of Mid to 7:45p .m .
F I RST
u· N I T E 0
SEVEN-OAY ADVENTIST dleport, corner of Sixth and

Rev . W. H. Perrin, pastor . Roy
Mayer, Sup I. Church schoool,
t : lS a .m. ; worship, 10:24 a .m.;
youth choir rehearsal Monday,
6:3() p.m .; Mrs. Marvin Burl.
dir ector;
sen i or
choir
rehearsal. 7:30p.m ., Thursday,
Mrs. Paul NeaS:e. director .,

POMEROY CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE - Corner
Union and Mulberry . Rev .
Clyde V. Henderson, pastor.
S..nday school. 9:30 a.m .. Glen
McC lung, supt.; morning
I

NAZARENE :... Rev . Herbert

Sunqay Church School. 9:30 ·meetlnq. Wednesday, 7:30 p.mc
BRADFORD CHURCH OF
Rev . Arlhur C. Lund, pas lor . Corner Ash and Plum, Mid - a.m .. Mrs . Homer Lee, Supt .;
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN, -

POMEROY
POMEROY TRINITY

I THOUGHT HE ·.

•

I WALKED PAST '&lt;ORE PAW'S
HOUSE 'IESTIDDY, ELVINEV--AN' I SEEN A SIGN ON TH'
DOOR SA'IIN' '' DAV SlEEPER"

Pre5byterian Churc.h. Dwight worship, 7:30 p.m.
L. lavill . Pasto r-Director:
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE

IF 11' KEEPS
LEAKING
LIKE

TAKE' CARE 0'
1'HINO.S 'TIL ::t
O.ET BACK
WITH 1'W PIPE!

'T~tS 1

MY CELLAR
WILL 8£
FLOOOE'D~

Cupvrlsl1• 1971
K~"lt • Atlve• li•ina

a.m .; Morning worship , 10:30
a .m.; Young People's service ,

Se"''" · lr.c.

S1r1Jbu rg,

Vlrginli

BY HOYT ALLEN, JR.
Minister, Pomeroy Church of Christ
6:
.; Evangelistic
service
7;45p
30 .m
p.m.
Prayer mee
ilng , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Thursday, 7:30p .m.
Jesus not only healed physical ills, He also forgave people of UM~~RTtc\l~iYC:[J'sre R
Study, 7:30p.m.
FREEOOM
GOSPEL
their sins, In fact, this was the reason for Jesus' coming. The
Rev . Forrest R. Ooniey
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, MISSION - Bald Knobs, Rev .
angel told Joseph, "Thou shalt call his name Jesus: for He shall
ASBURY - Worship 11 a.m. : Rev . lawrence Sullivan. L. R. Gluesencamp, pastor .
With the hope it will. in some measure, foster and help
Church School9 : 50 a.m.; WSCS , pastor . Sunday Schoo l 9: 30 Roger Wi lfred, Sr .. Sunday
save His people from their sins." (Matthew 1:21).
d
lsi Tuesday .
a.m.; youth and jun ior youth School Supt. Sunday School.
No doubt Jesus wanted to free men from their diseases an
FOREST RUN - Worsh ip 9 service, 6: 45 p.m.; evening
30 a .m . ; Sunday evening
sustain that which is good in family and community life, this
demons. But His main purpose was to save men from sin. The a .m.: Church School 10 a.m. : worship , 7:30p .m .; prayer and 9:
worship 7: 30 . Prayer meeting,
reason! say this is because physical illnesses may bring much WSCS. 3rd Wednesday , 7:30 praise, Wednesday, 7;30 p.m. Tuesday , 7; 30 p.m. Ernest
SILVER RUN FREE BAP- Deeter, class leader. Youth
anguish whileoneislivingphyslcally, but sin, if not forgiven, will P - ~·INERSVILLE - Worshl p TIST
feature is sponsored by the business firvs and organizations
- Rev . Howard Kimble,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.rJ\.,
10 a.m.; Church School9 a.m. ; pa stor. Sunday schocl, 10 a.m.; Meeting
, trlngmuchangulshinthefiresofhellforeterruty.. .
Ernest Deeter, leader .
In the Gospels we have a record of Jesus hvmg m the flesh WSCS. 3rd Monday. 7:30. p.m. Henry Dav is. sup!. ; evening
whose names appear below.
serv ic e. 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
· , He could , an d~~
SYRACUSE
, here on ljil!;lh. At_t_h'at tune
. I , say .·
, , 1, ,~, 'il;n.:
Clillt~' -c~ 09Worsh1p,
1 , 9 .a .m.;8 meeling , Thurday , 7: 30p.m .
',MT. HERMON CHURCH OF
"
,'
''ThyslnsiU'eforglventhee_.ThyfaJ~h. , thma_dethee:whole, "Pro'yer ·an :" Bible Study,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE UNITEO BRETHREN IN
·. '
~ --.Today shalt thou be with me m paradi . ··
Wednesday, .30 p.m.
GOO - Rev . James Satterfield, CHRIST - Robert Shook ,
pastor
.
Sunday
school,
9:
30
pas
tor
.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Meigs County Branch
··
But after
. His work of preparation for the Kingdom (the
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
.
Rev , W, Dale McClurg
a.m .; worship service. 11 a.m.; a.m .. Russell Spencer, supt. ;
GAULS
SHAKE
HAVEN
church) was completed by His death and resurrection, He_sent
Rev . Frank Cheesebrew
eveni ng service, 7; prayer worship service, 10: 45 a.m .•
THE ATHENS COUNTY
the Holy Spirit to guide His chosen apostles as they proclauned
Rev . Martha Ann Mattner
service and yout h service . e":ening worship alternat ing
Trailer Rentals and Supplies
w1
th
C.
E.
at
7:
30
p.m.
on
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.
salvation for all men for all time.
W~r~~HA~·'io ~ D~rca~~ urch Thursday, 7 p.m
Chester , Ohio
St. Rt . 7
Sunday . Prayer meet ing, 7:30
296
W,
Second
Pomeroy Ph . 992. 3865
When the Jews, who had been responsible for the death of School ~O : 30 a .m .· ..
p.m. Wedne•day, Alfred Wolfe,
'
Lord ' they
LANGSVILLE
Jesus heard the Apost Ie P eter prea ch of th e rtsen
CARMEL - Wors hip, II CHURCH
- RobertCHRISTIAN
E. Musser , lay leader .
LODWICK'S MARKET
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
were ;.rry they had sinned. They then believed that Jesus was a .m.. 1st and 3rd Sundays; pastor. Sunday SchooL 9:30
Member of the Big 3
the Messiah and desired their sins forgiven. Thus they asked the Ch~f,'j!t~c'(l'~~J~ a~mWorship , a.m.; Robert Bobo, s u~t.;
WHITE'S CHAPEL
" We Sponsor Jesus"
General
Merchandise
inspired apostles what to do to have their sins forgiven. (Acts 1 30 p.m.; .church school, 9:30 :;;,~~~:ni~go~~~~~e~ 0;3 ~; M~d: Coolville RD. Rev . Roy Deeter,
Rev
.
Stan
Craig,
Pastor
school,
9;30
pastor
.
Sunday
·.37).
·
a.m.;
m1
d-week
serv1ce,
k
2
Tuppers Plains
Ph . 667 -3280
w~dASfdfETA"Iir
B
wee service, Wednesday, 7:30 a .m .; worship service, 10:30
The LAird answering through Peter, told them, since ~hey
' _ Worship, p.m.
a.m . Bible study and prayer
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
now believed in Jesus, to repent, (turn from sm) and be baptized. 10 a.m., firs\ and third Sundays:
syRACUSE CHURCH OF service, Wednesday, 7: 30p .m.
MARK V STORE
He told them they would not only have their sins forgiven , but 9 a.m., second and fourth THE NAZARENE - Rev. M. C.
Rexall Drugs
they would also receive the gifl of the Holy Spirit . (Acts 2 38) . .
~~~~:~~ 't~i~~r~~nsJ:~~\~: ~:: ~~~~';;~resc~::orSu~~b tt,'::'J.";,
We Fill All Doctors' Prescriplions
Middleport, Ohio
So It Is today. To the sinner who des1res to have his Sins second and lourlh Sundays. School . classes tor all ages , 9:30
RUTLAND
992 -2955
Pomeroy
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST
covered by the blood of Ou'ist, he too must not only believe, but Mid week service. Wednesday, a.m.; morning worship, 10:45.
Rev . Samuel Jackson
atsorepentandhebaptized. Th~nashearisesfro~thewatery 8 pG. ~EATBEND - Worship 11 NYPS Sunday, 6:30 p.m.; ROYAL OAK PARK
pas lor . Sunday School, 10 a.m. ;'
grave of baptism he is to walk m the newness of life. (Romans a.m .. 2nd and 4th sundays; ~~fong~~~ic J!:tr~~:k S~~~~~; Mrs. Gertrude Butler , supt
OHIO VALLEY BAKING CO.
6·4)
Church School , 10 a.m.
meeling , Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Prayer Service, 1: 30 p.m . ;
Family Recreation
Bakers of Holsum Bread
LETART FALLS- Worship Missionary meeting , second preaching service, 2 p.m.
· ·
Swimming,
Camping
RUTLANO
CHURCH
OF
10 a .m.; Church School 9 a.m. Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Middleport. Ohio
MORNING STAR - Worship ·
CHRIST - Keith Wise, poslor
UNIT EO FAITH NON
9:30a.m.; Church School 10 ·30
Sunday school, 9:30a .m.• V. H
a
.m.;
Mid
-Week
Service,
DENOMINATIONAL
Rev
.
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Braley, supt.; worship service
Mrs. Leonard Peale.
THE FARMERS BANK
Wednesday , 8,p .m.
Robert Smith, pastor. Sunday and communion, 10: 30 a.m. ;
Mrs. MaryK. Yost, president
GAUL'S MARKET
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
MORSE CHAPEL - Worship school, 9:30a .m.; class leader, evening service, 7: 30 p.m
AND
SAVINGS
CO.
of the Bertha M. Sayre and Ray of Columbus spent a 11 a.m.. 1st and 3rd Sundays: , Leo Hill ; worship service, 10:30 Wednesday , Bible study, 7:30
Pomeroy-Member FDIC&amp;
a.m.; church, 7:30p.m .•· prayer p.m. Regular board meeting
Missionary Society, presided day with her mother, Mrs . Church School , 10 a.m.
Chester. Ohio
'
Federal Reserve System
7:30p.m
..
third
Saturday
each
at the meeting held at First Howard Neigler. The Cross '
PORTLAND - Worship 7 30 m~~i~~ U~~n~~;~ETH~EN
month .
.; Church
School 9' 30
Baptist Church Tuesday are leaving by plane to visit p.m
SUTTON
- Worship,
II a.m.
a.m. IN . CHRIST- Eldon R. Bla ke,
BOGGS EQUIPMENT
THE
RUTLAND COM
evening, August 1 and opened their son-in-law and daughter 2nd and 4th Sundays; Church pastor . Sunday School. 10a.m,;
HEINER'S
BAKERY
Rev
Sales-Allis Chalmers · Service
School 10 a.m .
Winnie Holsinger, supt. Nlor- MUNITY CHURCH with a meditation , 11 A in California.
WESLEYAN
(Racine) ning sermon, 11 a.m.; Evening Richard Dubbeld , pastor
Bakers of Good Bread
Farm · Industrial - Lawn · Garden
Woman 's Conversation with
Mrs. Jean Lindsey of Grove ' Worship , 11 a.m. ; Ch urch service Christian Endeavor, School. 9:30 a .m.; Worshl p
Huntington,
W.
Va.
service,
11
a
.m.;
Wednesda
Tuppers
Plains
y
667-3435
God
Mental House City spent over the weekend School, 10 a.m.
7:30p.m .; Mrs . Lyda Cheval ier,
prayer
meeting,
7:
30
p.m
UMYF for all churches of the prestdent. Song service and
Cleaning," The group sang the with her mother, Mrs. Mason
Soulhern Cluster, 7:30 p.m. sermon , 8:20. Mid-Week prayer Sunday night worship, 7: 30.
theme sqng, "They'll Know We Spencer.
DICK'S GROCERY
RUTLAND CHURCH 0 F
each Sunday at the Youth mee ting Wednesday , 7: 30p.m.
RACINE
FOOD
MARKET
{Formerly
Domlgonsl
THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Are Christians by OW' Love".
Mrs. Marie Holsinger. class
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Shronlz Center (Oak Grove Road .)
Lloyd D. Grimm , Jr., pasto r.
• New Owner - Dick Sargent
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
leader.
The business session was held and dau ghter, Amy of
The Store With A Heart
Rev. Jacob Lehman
POMEROY LOWER LIGHT Sunday School , 9: 30 a .m .'
Old U. S. 33
Ph . 992-7735
and the Love Gift offerings of Washington, Pa., were Sunday
Morning
worship,
10:30
a.m
Ph. 949-3342
Racine
Rev . Standley Brandum
CHURCH Harrisonvill e
Stop In and See Us
the circles and dedication was guests of their aunt, Mrs.
JOPPA - Worship 10 a.m.; Road, Rev . Roy Taylor, pastor; Young people's service, 6:45
p.m
.:
Evangelistic
services
by Grella Simpson, Sandra James Swart and the Alfred Church School 9 a.m.; Prayer Henry Eblin, Sunday School .
'
Meeling , Wednesday , 8 p.m .
:,up1. ~unday School, 9: 30a .m.; 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday evenin g
Boothe and Dorothy Badgley. Crow family .
R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.
LONG BOTTOM - Church evening worship , 7: 30 p.m. service 7: 30 p.m.
GOEGlfiN READY MIX CO.
After a devotional program by
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lewis of services, 9a .m.; Sunday School Prayer and praise service,
MASON COUNTY
Ohio' s Oldest Dodge Dealer
Helen Simpson, reports from New Lexington spent Tuesday 9: 45 a.m. Bible study every Thursday, 7:30p.m.
.
THE HILAND CHAPEL
Phone 992-3284
Middleport
Thursday,
7:30p.m.
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
Middleport, Ohio
the women's conference were evening, Aug, 25 with Mrs.
'
NORTH BETHEL- Worship Dexter - Worship services George Casto, pastor . Sunda y
given by Grella Simpson, Margaret Houdashelt.
School
,
9:
30
;
evening
worshl
p.
11 a.m .; Church Sc hool10a.m. Saturday and Sunday , 7: 30
Marjorie Grimm and Mary K.
ALFRED - Sunday school. .£·!"_,
.
. ... 7:30. Thursday evening praye r
ALL WEATHER ROOFING
Mrs . Lillian Jividen is
7: 30p .m .
M&amp;R
FOODLINER
HEMLOCK . GROVE service.
Yost.
Refreshments
of visiting in Athens with her son, 9: 45 a .m. ea ch Sunday ;
AND CONSTRUCTION CO.
MASON FIRST BAPTISThomemade ice cream, cake, Dr. and Mrs . Charles Jividen. preaching at 11 a .m. each CHRISTIAN .- David Stautter, Second and Pomeroy Sis., Sta n
D. B.A. ANTHONY
Sunday. Prayer meeting, 7: AS pastor ; Stanford Stockton, supt . Craig, pastor . Sunday schoo I,
Middleport, Ohio
PLUMBING
and HEATING
tea and coffee were served by
Mr . and Mrs. Michael p.m. Wednesday ; WSCS , 8 p.m. McrninQ worsh ip, 9:30 a.m.; 9:
. 337 N. 2nd Middleport
45a.m.; worship service, 11
992-3550
'the Ruth Circle in the George and ·family of on third Tuesday each month. church school. 10 : 30 a .m .; a.m.;
training union, 6:30p.m
REEDSVILLE
'Sunday
young
peoples
meeting,
6:30
basement social rooms .,
Colwnbus spent a week with sc hool, 9:30; preaching , 7:30 p.m.; evening worship, 7:30. evening worship service, 7: 30
MONTG'JMERY WARD
CARPET-LAND1 INC.
Mrs. Alice Fink has returned her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Bob p.m. Sunday ; prayer meeting, Bible~dy, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . Mid-week prayer servlc••
Wall
-to-Wall Carpel Specialists
Wednesday,
7:go
p.m.
home from the hospital.
CATALOGl)ESTORE
'·
Roush and Mr. and Mrs. Owen 7:30p.m. Tuesday ; WSCS, 7:30 p.m.
116W, Main
· MT. UNION BAPTIST FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURC H
first Thursday each month .
· Ph. 992-7590
Mrs. Cora Birch returned Watson .
Mr . and Mrs. Charles R. Sheets
SILVER RIDGE - Worsh ip, Rev . Cecil Cox, pastor. Sundoy -Letart Route 1, the Rev. Sla
home from Holzer Medical
106 Court St. Pomeroy 992-3001
Free Estimates -Guaranteed Installation
Mr. and Mrs. Don Reel of 10 a .m.; Church School, 9 a.m. school sup!., Joe Sayre. Sunday Craig , pastor . Sunday schoo n
I,
Center.
Coshocton were weekend
TUPPERS
PLAINS
school, 9: 45 a.m .; Sunday 9:30a .m.; prayer and Bible
Mrs. Virginia Rees spent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Worship 9 a.m .: Church School evening worsh ip, 7:30. Wed- study, 7:30p.m. Cottage praye r
J. PAULEYI AGENT
SADIE'S MARKET
10 a.m .
nesday prayer and Bible study, service, Tuesday , 10 a .m . '
several days for observation at Johnson.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, 7:30p.m.·
,
,worship service, Friday, 7:30
Nationwide Insurance Co. ol Columbus, 0 .
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs . Edna Pickens ac- Hobart Newell , suot. Services
T UP P E RS
P LA I N S p.m.
,
Meats
and
Groceries
Mrs. Carolyn Kucsma of companied Mr. and Mrs. Don weekly , 9:30a .m. on Sunday. CHRISTIAN CHURCH
MASON
CHURCH
0F
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy
992-3986
Syracuse
·. Gahanna spent a day with her Wadsworth and children to Preaching first and third Eugene Underwood , pastor ; CHRIST - Loren T. Stephens.
PI)
,
992-2318
of month by Clifford Howard Caldwell. Jr .. Sundar. minister. Worship, 10 a.m
mother, Mrs. Mattie Yost, who their home in Philadelphia for Sundays
Smith, 9:30a .m.
School Supt. ; Sunday Schoo, Bible study, 11 ; 15 a .m.; even in
accompanied her home for a a visit.
HOBSON
CHRISTIAN 9:30a . m.; Morning sermon, worship, 7:30p.m. Mid -wee~
SEARS
RIDENOUR SUPPLY
UNION - Darrel Doddrill, 10:30 a. m.; Sunday evening service, Wednesday, 7;30 p.m
visit.
Miss Beverly Houdashelt of pastor.
Sunday
School,
9:30
servi~e. i o. m.
MASON
ASSEMBLY
0
F
Mr. and Mrs, Kyle Stump of Gallipolis is a guest of her a.m .. Leonard Gilmore, first
Authorized Catalog Merchant
LETART FALLS JINITED GOD- Second St., Mason, W
Furniture and Appliances
,
Louis W. Osborne
Akron were here over the grandmother, Mrs. Margaret elder ; evening serv ice, 7:30 BRETHREN - Rev . Robert Va. Chester Tennant, pasto r .
Ph.
98~- 3308
Chester.
0
.
.
220
E.
Main
Pomeroy Ph. 992-2118
p.m. Wednesday prayer Shook, pastor ; Herschel Norris, Sunday school, 10 a.m,; mo rweekend and took her mother, Houdashelt.
meet
ing,
7:30p.m.
.
s
upl.
.Sunday
school,
9:30a.m.;
nlng
wor1hlp,
11 a.m
.,
Mn, Clara Roush, back to their
Mr, and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Attend the Church of Your Choice
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF morning sermon, 10:30 a .m.; evangelistic service, 7:30 p.m
home.
spent a week vacationing in GOD - Ractne .·Rouie 2. The evening sermon, 7:30 alter - Bible •tudy and prayer servlc e.
MIDDLPORT 1BOOK STORE
Rev . Chr.rles Rand, ~astor . noling each Sunday. Prayer Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Phon e ,
Mrs. Laura Shaifer of Wisconsin and Michigan .
BEN
FRANKLIN
STORE
Sunday school, 9: 45 a .m. ; service, Wednesday , 7:30p.m. 773-5133.
Church and Office Supplies- Gifts
Poineroy spent a few days with
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie m orning worship , "11 a .m . Prayer .meeting, 7: 30 p.m .
Ph . 992-3496 •
Pomeroy
992-2641
Middleport
her sister, Mrs._Margaret and children of Gallipolis Ev ening services, Thuesday alternating Sundays.
HARTFORD CHURCH 0 F
F
d
•o
CHESHIRE
CHURCH
OF
CHRISTinChrlsllan
Union
Ida
7
Houdalhell.
called on Mr.' and Mrs. Roy an
r 1Y· :. ·
t
BEARWA·LLOW
RIDGE GOO OF PROPHECY! G. P . R
. ev. Auf um ScoIt , paso
r.
Mr. anct' Mrs. Ray Rieth- Riffle Monday.
CHURCH OF CHRIST- David Smith, pa1t 0r. Sunday School, Sunddy school, 9:30 a.m
F. J. WALLACE, J£WELERS
YORK
HOUSE
miller oC Sarasota, Fla., who
Mr , and Mrs. E. A. Wingett Jewell, pastor. Bible study, 9:30 1D a.m.; Arthur Henson, Supt.; James Hughes, Supt ' ;
Bulova Watches · Sales &amp; Service
service· 7:30, Wed .
d
were guata of Mrs. Ann Coe, and Mrs. Ann Coe visited Dave "o.m.; mor nlng worshl p, 10 : 30 ; Morn· in~ Worship 11 a.m .; evening
100 Years In Pomeroy
evening
worship,
6:30
p.m.
Young
eoples
service,
7
p.m.;
nos
ay
evenmg
prtya
186 N. Second
Middleport
left togo kl Brewcter, N. Y.,lo and Walter Thomas Sunday in Wednesday Bible study, 7:30 Evening oervl~e. 7:30 p.m,; meeting, 7: 30 p.m . N0r
Kermit W1lton
villi tbelr dw'lhllr, Mr. and Colwnbul.
p.m.
~sday Mid•WMI&lt; l&gt;rayer 't~~tld•y Mr~lce,
•

No!
!'II
drive
LjOU

out
to
the

hiqhwa4!

I THOUf,HT
'/OJ wer&lt;e

-~

&amp;01~10

lF:-110

3

cur c:o,o.Jf.l!

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Seasoning
5, Johnny of
song
11. Musical
group
12. Eastern
·• Asia
13, Latvian

RaCl· ne Social Events

capital
IF 'Ill ~E SOMETHIN: I FIGURE
YOU 'Ll FIND A WA'f O' Tf:LLIN'

US ABOUT IT, 1:;:\RWIN!

~~A;;:;:ij'";;t,:;;;i~~w.l r-v,-~-lA_IIO_ICl-,-1-WW-E~.IO"'NI-D A5 ACITIZE~~~.lO~U~~~~~~~~~
JIJ5T HEPRI' OF TIE PfMAND 10 &lt;JCtl

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MU~OI' MY

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f!£1116 DONE, I!IGHT,

"'-""""THE M5WER IS,
5lJPPORIER ANI'
' 1Nrn;Tt6ATIN6.

FRIENY,'

NEUTAL. ..

(2

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fault

(2 wds.)

5. Esprit de
corps
6. Region
1. Stannum

DMMM

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EPITIE

25. Body of
water
26. Comparative word
21. Jason's
ship
28. Prolfer
31. Colorado
Indian
32. Unhinged
33. A Wag-

I

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A X Y D L I , A A X lL
b LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another.. In this sample A Is
used for the throe L's, X for the two O's, et~. Sin&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, the leneth and formatiol) of the words are Ill
hlnta, E1cb day the codeletten are different. •
.
·

i

I
••'

CIYPTOQUOTES

•

SPRPZBVYCN YV SYFYRS OBZP CIKR

t

~

N B Q. A K R , K R H T Z Y H P

.,'lo .·

UPVV

•'

CIKR

NBQ

YV CKLYR S

RPPH. -LKIUYU!::~~

•

SYXZXR

~

YlllaUtt O.Aq.llle: l UKE THE DIIEAIIS OF Till:
J'UTUBI
TIIAN TH1 HISTORY OF TilE PAST.PATJlCX IIIHRY ,

•

Hull

•

f

I

10
I

t)
KJ

THEY MAKE A LIVINC:.
~ETWEEN ~E5.

Now ornnp the cin:led )etten
to form the 1urpri,. anawer, u
IUUU!ed by the oboYt cartoon.

(A.wen l...arrow)

J•...Ieo• MANLY IlLLI IPIUCI . CYMIAL

Ye•terd•r'•

lass
34. Worked
with the
sick .
36. Chief
Norse god
31.lnvent
38. Jolly
Roger, for
example

..

NEW

s~!

Yesttrday's Answer
8. In an op23. Torment
pressive
24. Lean-to
manner (2 25. Potbelly
wds.)
26. Bartered
9. Meantime 29. French
10. Island in
health
N.Y. Bay
resort
16. Bare
30. Scope
19. Musical
32, Boundary
repetition 35. Droop
20. " 36. FrequentFrome"
ly (poet. )

show

p.

..

about
3. Like
an
adroit
pick-

nerous

18. "Stormy"
bird
ZO. "Jane-"
21. Links'
cry
22. Tenuous
23. Prong
24. False

.

0

DOWN
I. Belt
2. Come

utterance
soldier

Unscramble the,. four Jumbles,
one Jetttr to each aqu-, to
form four ordinary words.

river

17. Old

..

..

,---&lt;.!:"

U. Cantatrice
Tebaldi
15. Wood for
oars
16. Lamb's

~&amp;WffiM;&amp;.t ~••wild ...J ,_

39. Beat
about th e
bush
40. English

'

,.

A.wm IJ'Iaat they loolcfor duri,..leop rear- YIS.MIN

�~ .. ; ; l f " ( f 1 t ,.. f ' l

. .... . .

For Sale

l
Cl
./.;
d
G
A
•
,
Senttne
ass11 "e s et ctzon. ~~~:~~" i~~~:~~:~ ~~J
Sentinel Clll.ssifieds Get Results,! AK~;~~:~~:::::an~~:::::~:
STA ~CRAFT

~

models ScWf"

~700

on 18 If ,

pups J E Pape,

265,

~OK

Syracuse Oh1o 45779, phone

992 3420

) PM Day Before Publlcatlort
Monday Deadtme 9 a m
Can.ce!lat1on - Corrections
Will be accepted unt119 am tor
Day of Publ1cat1on

Not1ce
NOTICE
YARD SALE Saturday August I WILL NOT be responsoble for
any debts contracted by
Sth starts 9 30 a m used
lawnmower
dishes
&amp;
miscellaneous clothmg at 383
Ash Street Moddleport

832tc

REGULATIONS

Tht Publisher reserves the
r1ght to ed1l or re1ect any ads,
deemed
Obtecllonat
The
publiSh Elf will not be responsible
for moi"e than one mcorrect
msert•on

RATES

1

WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted b
{.
anyone other than mysel
S1gned Lowell Mc N1ckle,
Racme Oh10

823lp

•For Wan, Ad Serv1ce
, :c-:c:-:-----,----- 5 cents per Word one msertion WILL c are for preschool
M !n1mum Charge 75c "
children 1n my home, $3 a
co~~ec~~?:~ , ts~rt ~~rd three day Mrs Glenn Sm1th,
18 cents per word s!x con
phone 992 6187
sec ut!ve lnserl1ons ,
7 30 6tc
25 Per Cent DISCount on paid _ _ _ _ _ __ ___:_
ads and ads pa1d wlrhm 10 days
GUN SHOOT also rofle mat
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
ches open s1tes only Forked
Sl 50 for 50 word m inimum
Run Sportsman Club Sunday,
Each addJt1ona1 word 2c
August 6 12 noon
BLIND ADS
Add1t1onal 25c Charye per ___ _ _ _ _ __ 8
_2 3tc
Advertisement
YARD Sale. new and used
OFFICE HOUR$"
clothmg ant1que d•shes and
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m DIIIIIV
furn1ture
Fnday
and
8 30 a m to 12 oo' Noon
Saturday
Saturday, August 4th and Sth,

1

lOam to 7 p m at Utah Swan

res1dence on State R'1ute 7 m

a11yone other than myself

Sogned John D Lambert, Rt
I Moddleport Ohoo
843tp

nHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Wmdow ,
Aor Condtltoners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbmg
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

Not1ce
Tuppers
Plaons
Not
REWARD for shoppong at respon s1ble for acc1dents
Showalter s Wet Pet Shop, _ __ _ _ ___8~ntp WHY not try cosmet1cs that are
truly
different
and
Chester Ohoo 10 per cent of
refreshing' The famous m~nk
your total purchase mar be YARD Sale Thursday, Froday
oil base and now we have the
and Saturday on Larkin
applied to the purchase o any
lemon grove Just think, 14
Street Rutland
ceram1c 1tems
specials
this month, some for
8 2 3tc
8 2 30tp
men as well as women It's
-----KOSCOT of course Phone
992 5113

WOMAN to live 1n w1th elderly
lady l1ght housework, no

-•
i
•

We need 12 men and
women 1mmed1ately
Ages
19 35, neat and
dependable No exper1ence
necessary

Call Mr. Row 446.0694
GALLIPOLIS

wASHJNGTON

,:.
'·
•;;
~

.;.
~

•,
-:;
~
..
.~~:
;

.,

~
~

-

•

I NEA

I
Most leaders of the street delegates - Yoppoes Zop·
poes welfaie gooups the gal crowd - promose Moamo
Beach authollties no voolence at the Republican conven·
toon scene a few weeks hence The1 thonk toouble 1\0uld
work on favoo of Presodent Noxon
But so probably would plaon nuttiness and this the
street types plan plent) of Recent onquuoes suggest Ihal
among some blue collar workers and othe• s Sen George
McGovein badly needs 111 hos vote column he gets blamed
for everythmg goofy that happens
If these fmdongs ao e ondocatove then the outs ode go oups
may be workmg from a massive mtsconcepllon Thev ieel
they caused the downfall of the Democrats' woth theor
storrongs at Chocago on 1968 and can do the same tor
Noxon thos tome
,., ~ . J&gt;Ila!Ai,.Beac.n Mayor Chuck Hall ,and h1s poJ•~e. authorl· • ,Q~s otw1st1 however, that Chocago·style rough stuff os not
planned Hall told me m a telephone ontervoew antowar
Voetnam vete&lt;ans and others advose hom almost daily of
theor mtent to pollee theor own ranks and keep thongs cool
They say they wtll deal summanly woth any elements
bent on violence
A Miami Beach pohce offoctal read me a Ytppie pledge
evidently given voluntarily, vowmg opposition to mass
violence as a " tache" on the ground ot would only reactivate the law and order oss ue" and by that fact help
N1xon
The Yipp1e statement went on to say that Moamo Beach
would be a bad 1place to make trouble For one thong, 'old
people would be hurt "
It IS further noted that the Ztppoes - a Yippoe faction "can't bear the heat and cost of mass arrest sotuations "
What that means Is that some already are on doffJCulty
with the law
With such assurances on hand, Mtamo Beach offocoals are
cautwusly optimiStic about the GOP convention A check
at Republican natwnal commtttee headquarters revealed
the same
'We are not unduly concerned," says one committee
officer
If the forecast has any soft spots, they center on one
black na!Ionahst facbon and the Students for a Demo
crat1c Society The off1c1al word for them Is "dangerous,"
but aulhonlies nevertheless say they can contaon any sort
of unexpected unpleasantness
Yet, as suggested, goofmess alone may hurt McGovern
Voters who don't Joke long·hatred, pot·srnokmg, free sex·
ong youths often seem these days to assogn them all to the
Democratic nommee
That bemg so the Yoppie Zoppoe schedule for the GOP
conventwn, as submotted to pohce, can hardly cheer
Democrats
On Aug 20, the eve of the convenllon , the program calls
for 'Doshonor Amenca Day, " With flags to be burned, a
·welfare Cadillac" (whatever that IS) to be burned, eggs
to be tossed at a giant photograph of Martha Raye, actress famed for entertaonmg troops
Later In the week, on "Support for Women Day, " the
street folk woll 'ridicule male chauvtmsts," namely, Pope
Paul VI, Mr Noxon, his aode Henry K1ssmger, actor John
Wayne Playboy magazone publisher Hugh Hefner
Stoll later Will come "lmperoahsm Day," featurmg a
protest rally and "massove march" against "Coca Cola
tmpenahsm "
A lot of 1t sounds like harmless fun But If some waver·
ong voters are gomg to dub the funmakers as "McGovern
people," the laughter may be rather thon at the senator's
headquarters

with Motor Hoople

t .:::,u. . C'
\,._KE A
F~EE

1&gt;1EAL

E'IEN IF

HES 'Tt!E

COOK

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED
IN

Phone Faye Manley
992·5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992 2156

p m and Saturday, August

wash

stand,

lamp

woad beds, large penn 1es, In
cent p1eces, dmner bell (18
1n ), fmger carved rocker,

OLD•GOINS !Silver dOll an,
lnd1an penn1es

Oldesl date

18351 Stone tars churn. wood
potato masher , oval trunks,
g lass 1nsulato r s c arn1 va l
glass (or1gmal) , milk cans,

anvol old books McGuttey

Readers, wood butter mold,
v1ctrola, ch1ld rocker,"' four
rockers, several n1ce Chma
p1eces whtfe oak m1rror, 1919

cupboard l9lass door)
AUCT NOTE There are

••

-- - -- '71 CHEVY Vega and 72 Honda
350 call

742 3n3

Dept , Not responsib le
for acc1dent s
Bradford
Auction Co , Racme, Oh1o A

C Bradford, Manoger C C
Bradford, Auctioneer , Sogned
James Foelds
7 30 ltc

For Sale
DON'T PUMP your sluggosh
septic tank Get Klean Em All
septic tank cleaner Land
mark
Farm
Pomeroy

Bureau,

------Mobile Homes for sale

8 4 He

WANTED- Your mobole home
business

Veteran financing

For

8 3 3tc

-~----

... P.Ian~ng M1ll s-ponsored by the
Syracuse F1re Dept , lease
expired

8 3 3tp
PIANO

&amp; Organ lessons by
quallf•ed graduate ol C1n
c• nnat1 Conservatory of
Mu s1 c Phone 992 3825

8 3 I21c

- - -- -COAL

Musser

7 30 ttc

UN

YOUR

DIAL

Sanitaf1on Stewart, Oh10 Pn

662 3031

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph 992 2114

2 12 ftc
-~---,.---

READY MIX

&amp; JEANS
SALE I

PANTS

!

• f i 1 J' / ( ( r• 1

1

serviCe, all makes 992 2284

The Fa broc Shop, Pomeroy

Authorized S1nger Sales and
Serv ice We Sharpen Sc1ssors

estomates Phone 992 3284 · - - - - - -Goegle1n

Ready M1x

GET I PAl R FREE

r

POMEROY

9.- Jack W Carsey Mgr ,
oloioll
Phone 992 2181
&amp;
P1oneer cha1n saw excel lent
cond1t1on left on Rt
124
towards Rutland across from
su b power stat10n 2nd house
on nght

8 4 31c
·- - -- - SHEEP rams . I Suffolk

2966

Balan ce $68 32

Use

our

EARLY Amen can Stereo AM
FM rad 10 4 speed changer , 4
speaker
sou nd
system

Balance $73 56 Use our
budget terms Call 992 7085
8 46tc

- - -- - -

CLOSE out on 1971 full soze zig
zag sew1ng ma ch ~ne
For
sew 1ng slretch
fabr~cs ,
buttonholes, fan cy des•gns

etc

Paont sloghtly blemoshed

Cho1ce of carrymg case or
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
terms ava1lable Phone 992

__

You can save S S $ on a late
model used or repossessed
Mobile Home at Berry Mil ler
Mobile Home Sales Used and
repossessed Mobile Homes 1s
our spec1attv not our
s•de lln e We have a comp le te
se lechon of 8 10 &amp; 12 w1de
Mobile Homes 1n stock We
are also the area 's franch1sed
dea ler for one of the oldest
and best homes 1n the

Real Estate For Sale
FOR SALE by owner Yellow
frame house. s1x rooms and

bath Large lot Located In
Syracuse on Rt 124 Second
house on left gomg north
1ns1de corporat1on line

I

27 If

business - DETROITER -

famous for pn ce and quat 1t y
Don ' t wa1 t, stop now at Berry

CLELAND
REALTY
608 E Maon

level lot good neoghborhood
fru 1t and storage room
porches 1n good cond!t1on 10

NEED2BEDROOMS
Here 1s a buy 1 story frame
l1v 1ng room has l1replace
large bath large k 1fchen and
dmmg area w1th cabinets
porches , 2 car garage
hardwo od floors. lots of
shrubery, all In eKcellent
cond1t1on $14 900 00

IS YOUR HOUSE
FOR SALE?
Use a 'nothmg to do' af
ternoon to f1x lea k1ng
faucets Onppmg water
d1 scolors s1nk enamel and

suggests faulty plumbing IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
ASSISTANCE on gettong a
qu1ck buver call us today

HENRY E CLELANDSR
REALTOR
n2·2259
If no answer 992·2658

- - -- - - -

corn
cucumbers
and 1969 TOYOTA $650, 30 m1les per
mangoes , Geraldine Cleland,
gallon must se ll , phone 992

7 28 tic

- -----

model gas furnaces and 2
Republ iC new gas convers1on

burners , phone 949 2803
8 2 3tc

----'70 HONDA 350, excellent
condotlon phone 667 3533
8 2 3tp

-----AT PARSONS' New &amp; Used
nlture and appliances at ~ur
store at 1415 Eastern Ave ,
Gallipolis USED FUR
NITURE - couches as low as
SID and up, dinette sets a slow
as $1995 and up , wringer type
washers, S29.95 and up ,
wrotlng desks, $29 95 and up ,
swovel rockers, $10 and up ,
stoves, gas and electric,

and up , NEW FUR
NITURE - 2 pc llvong room
suo teas low as Sl2'1 95 , donette
sets, $59 91 and up , recliner
chairs, $69 95 and up
8·2 3tc
$19 95

----------

NEW HOMES

3372
8 2 3tp

3 BEDROOMS

- ------

'71 FIAT Spoder woth radoo and
tape player. 10.000 actual
moles phone 985 4211
_ _ _ _ __ _ _7.:_
30 6tp

or used mobile home try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Kanauga Oh10

2 New Homes, all electnc, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, w1th take frontage ;
at F1ve Points area

Real Estate For Sale
5 ROOM house and bath, $6,500,
phone 992 5786
7 30 6tc

7 I6 30tc

4

k1tchen sf9,rm WJ I'ldOWS and
doorS'. wnrl'l'epctlnt the out
s•de to su1t' yoti $16,900 00

PH. 992·2571

.
,

• A1r Condtttoners
•Awnmgs
• Underptnnong
Complete mob ile home
serv1ce --- plus g1gant~e

dosplay of mobile homes
always available at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washongton Blvd
4237121
BELPRE, 0
AIR CONDITIONED
mobile
home and lot, $3,500 phone
992 5786
7 30 6tc
LEGAL NOTICE

Sealed bids w 1ll be rece 1ved
by the Me1gs Local School
D1stri c t Board of Educat ion at
their off 1ce m the Me 1o s Junior
H1gh Sc hoo l Bu ll d1ng , Mid
dleport Oh10 tor school bus
l •r es until 12 00 o'clock noon
Eastern Davllghl Stan dard
T1me , on Augus t 11 1972, at
wh 1ch tlme B1ds will be opened
The Tire bid prices are to In
elude the demount 1ng ol th e old
tire and mounting the new or
recapped I r e on th e nm and
plac.ng the mounted ti re and
rim on the bus
For spec1f1cat1ons pteue ca ll
or write L arry Mornson 992
2153
Me 1gs Local School D1stnct
Board of Educat ion
Lee w McComas , Clerk
171 14, 21 28 181 4, 4tc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE

Bids will be rcce 1ved at the
OffiCes ot Webster and Fultz,
OR 992-3975
Attornevs, Pom eroy National
s ROOM house double lot, 2 car '----------- ~ Bank Building , Pomerov , Oh io,
Saturday August S 1912.
garage, Carson Reed, Mason, RACINE - 10 room houS&lt;!, unt•l
at 10 CO o'c lock A M for the sale
W Va , phone 773·5606
~ath , basement, garage. two of the Merv L Emm•sh real
8 I 6tp lots
estate The real es.tate 1s located
Phone 949 4313
al
462 S F1ftt1 Avenue , M •d
4 5 tfp dleport,
Ohio, and cons ists of a
6 ROOM house, bath, 2 car
two s tory , thre e b edroom
garage, enclosed porch. I RACINE - 6 room house, bath, res1dence
W1th basement
acre land, Rt 1, Racme,
forced a •r heat , two bathrooms
ulollty
room
garage.
$10.000,
Ohoo, phone 949 47~5
hardwood floors and plenty of
_________8_4·31c • hone 949 4195
The r esi den ce may be
3 31 tfc storage
seen
by
illppomtment
Telephone 992 2186 Th e r1ght Is
reserv ed to rej ec t any or all
bid S

-------

- -- - - -

-------

r-----------..:::=========--.
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

doors and windows ct!lrports
marquees, aluminum s1dlng

and ra iling 'A Jacob, sales
representative
For free
est1mates phone Charles
L1 sle, Syracuse, V
V
Johnson and Son. Inc

3 2 Hot
--~----

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEU
REASONABLE rates Ph 44&lt;1·
4782, Galllpolos, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Opera tor

Complete Serv1ce

Phone 949 3821
Racine, Ohio
Croft Bradford

5I

tic

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

SHERIFF ' S SALE
By v•rtue ot an Order of S111e
duty Issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
1County1 P.h:IP •lln tl'le Cti:Jt: or The
Trl County Bank , Coolville ,
Oh io, vS1 1 'J•~es Fultz, et al
Defendants on a judgment
th ere in rendered be ng Case
No 15 056 In sa id Court , t wil l
offer lll public sale at tl'le front
door of the Co urlhou se In
Pomeroy Oh io. on the 15th dav
ot August , 1972, at 10 00 o'clock
A M the follow ing described
la nds and tenements to w1t
Pillrcel No 1
The followlno real estate ,
situated In the Township of
Ohve, Cou•'lty of Me igs and
Sta te of Oh 10, In Range 11 Town
4 Sec tion JS Oh io Company s
Purchase
bounded
and
descr ibed as follows
Beg inn ing In the center of
Slate Route No 681, at the
northeast corner ot Lot 21 of
George P McCune s Second
SubdiviS ion 10 Olive Township
now owned by Donald P
Landon and Eulah Mae Lin
don thence east along State
Route No 681. a dista nce of
US ' thence south 280 S' parallel
with the east boundary line ot
sa1d Lo.t No 21 thence west US '
to the southeast corner of said
Lot 21 of McCune's Addition ,
thence north 280 s fo llowing the
eastern boundary line of sa id
Lot 21 , to the place of beginning
Deed Reference Volume 239,
Page 13, Meigs County Deed
Records
Parcel No 2
The follow ing real estate ,
sltualed In Olive Township,
Me1gs county , Oh io .n Section
35 Town 4, Range II bounded
and described as follows
Beg inn ing at a point 286 0 feet
south of middle of State Road
No 681. whi ch point Is the
southeast corner of Lot No 21,
of McCune's Second AddUion to
Olive Township , thence east us
feet along the south lrne of lot
owned by James A Fultz and
Jan et Fu tz, by deed recorded ln
Volume 238. Page 09, Meigs
County Deed Records thence
south 285 0 feet parallel wllh
lines of Lots 23 and 25 of Me
Cune's Second Add itiOn to Olltt~e
Township , thence west US feet
to the southeast corner of Lot 25
at McCune's Second Addition
thence north alono the lines of
Lotx 23 and 25 of McCune's
Second AddJtlon to the plac:e of
beg,nnlng, eontalnlng one acre
more or less
'
Deed Reference Volume 2.40
Page 695, Me igs County Oeeci
Records
Terms of Sale Cash In hand
on delivery of deed The ap
praised value of the real estate
Is 13.030 OQ
Robert C Hertenbach
Shtriff of Me igs County Bernard

v Fultz

Webster and Fu1t2
Willetta A Bougher Attornevs for Plelntlft
executrix P 0 Box 723
Estate of Marv L Emmlsh Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
July l.f, 21, 28 , Aug .f, 11, 51c
(7 1JO,JI(8112,3,4,6t

Big C1pat1ly

Maytag

Automo~tlu

2 speed optr at ion
Choice Of water
temps
Auto
water
level
cohtrol
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator
Perm1-Pren
M1yt11
HIIO Of Htlt

kotchen woth double sink Wall to wall carpeting Full
basement, level lot. All fnr only $18,000 00
NEW LISTING •
HARRI SONVILLE - 3 nice lots suitable for housing
$2,000 00
DOWNTOWN
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath, fireplace with bookshelves
on each side Gas furnace. full basement, Double garage
Front porch side yard Only $21,000 oo

"2·3325
~~~~~~~~~--~~~

5 12 He

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

f1replace and a1r condlt1oned Bath, gas furnace, modern

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

o;'

SEE US FOR Awnings. storm

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 nice bedrooms, large living with

CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKER FOR MORE IN
FORMATION ON THE ABOVE

.,

~

Pomeroy,Ohio 45769

.-;
COUNTRY ACRES
OVER 7 ACRES - On Route 7 with T P - CHESTER
water Mostly cleared and ready for housing

'

Drnu

Surround cloth11
with gentle, even

heal No hotspots,
no

overdrylng

Fine Mllh Lint
Fjlter
We SptCIIIIItln

MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~.~~~:·'
741-4211

Arnold Gr1tt

Rutland

'60 FORD F-100 1h TON ...............1795

69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air............. 13200
66 Cadillac 2 Dr. H.T., air

Pock up truck, tong bed, 6 cyl , stand trans

11295

'69 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER .....11495

70 Chey. lm pala 4 Dr., V-8, auto. .. .. .. • '2195

70

Volkswagen

2 Door,

2 Dr H T , 383 auto, orange &amp; black Real sharp

4 speed .......... .'1595

71 .MERCURY COMET 2 DR........ 11895

1

69 Dodge Polara 4 Dr. H.T., air ...........'1995

Bremer, Bored
Wanted to Kill

FOR THE BEST deal on a new

Rutland
JUST 4 YEARS OL!l
bedrooms. bath TV room
storage buoldong, modern

•-.

6 Cyl , stand tra ns, A 1 cond ition Th1s week &lt;A'Ify

6 Cyl

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., a1r..... '1995

CAS!i patd for all makes ana PAPER hangong , onterlor and
models of mobile homes
ex t enor pa lntmg Arthur
PhOfle area code 614 423 9531 Musser, phone 742 5223
4 13 lfc
7 18 3Qtp

I story frame, 6 room s 3
bedrooms paneled , bath ,

ground ,

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
.PPMEROY, OHIO

~ J •, 1- ""-· -

Farson Street. Belpre , Ohio,

NO STEPS HERE

acres of

I"

phone 423 9531- Open 7 days
8 3 2tc

Pomtroy, OhiO

1'11

, ,, ,

Moller Mobole Home Sa les 705

...__,......,.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

protechon 32 N 2nd 992
3918
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR CO

.-·

$1850

Local1 owner ca r. green fln1 sh, clea n Inferior. good tires
2000cc eng me radio, 4 speed trans

Estimate

6 15 tic

(Boll) Putlons Phone 992 2478
_,__
4 25 tfc Mobile Homes For Sale

tcebo&lt; KUHL'S BARGAIN Auto Sales
CENTER, Rt 7 at auctiOn
l1ght ' Tuppers Pla •ns 1969 FIAT Fastback, phone 773
5925 or can be seen at Foster
Closed Mondays only Phone
SE on Long Bottom, phone'
St , Mason, second house HOU
667 3858
985
3529
7 30 6tc behmd car wash
6 11 ttc
843tc
CANNING lo matoes. sweet
Racone, 0

tic

Sephc tanks mstalted Georqe

___

1971 FORD PtNT02 DR

.,

UPPER MARLBORO, Md
(UP!) - Arthur H Bremer
asked hunsell on hos diary why
he wanted to shoot Presodent
NIXon or Gov George C
Wallace
"I don't know," he jotted
"Nothmg else to do I have w
ldll somebody. That's how far
gone I am."
The llt.page JOUrnal was
read Into the record at
Bremer's troal on charges of
shootmg
the
Alabama
governor at a Laurel, Md ,
political rally May 15 The
delense rested Thursday-Its
case based on the contention
Bremer, 21, a fcrmer
Milwaukee busboy, Is msane
Today, fmal argwnents were
scheduled by prosecuting
atlooley Arthur A Marshall
Jr and defense attorney
Benjanun UpSitz Judge Ralph
W Powers of the Prince
Georges County Court then will
consign the case to a jury of six
men and six women
Powers disnussed lor msuffl·
Clent evtdence Thursday four
charges of assault with tn·
tent
to
ma1m
Bre·
mer stoll 1s char~ed
with 13 counts of assault wtth
Intent to murder and lesser
charges. If he Is convicted on
the relll8llllng charges, he
could receive maximum
. sentence• of ea~eara1n prlaon.
Jurors LilteD Joteotly
The jurors listened Intently
Thursday when Lipsitz read
the doary out loud It revealed
Bremer stalked Nixon through
Ottawa when the President
visited CBIUida last April
"I had a good view as he
went past me," Bremer wrote
"Past me for the SIXth time and
still alive "
Bremer recorded that he
tried on SIX occasions to try w
assassinate the President m
Ottawa-twice In the streets as
the presldentlal motorcade
passed, three tomes when
Nixon appeared at Ottawa's
Parliament bwlding and once
when the Prestdent attended a
lonna! affall' at the Fine Arts

THE LEADERS
OXFORD, Ohto (UPI)-John
Williams, 18, Cranesvtlle, Pa ,
the natoonal and world archery
champion, held a one-poll)! lead
Thursday In the men's division
competition for the United
States0lymp1carcheryteam.
Mrs. Doreen Wllbur, 42,
Jeffel'!Ion, Iowa, had a 29-p(ilnt
lead in the women's divoalon

68 Olds
68

Chev.

Cut

2 Dr H T 351 auto

. y a.

auto Real mce

'62 CADillAC 4 DR.................... 1450

H.T., V-8 auto., P.S...... 1495

H T Like new

1971 DODGE ........ Only s2395

66 COMET 2 DR...................... ..'395

66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, V-8 auto........ 1495

Center
When Bremer faoled on his
68 Ford F-100 Pickup, 6 cyL, std ......... 11595
mosswn at Ottawa, he left for
Washmgton, DC , wr1tmg ,
68 Dodge 1h T. Pickup, V-8 std .... .... ...11395
"You can't get Nixie boy if you
run 't close to hu:n "
But then the focus of his
attention turned elsewhere "I
saw 'A Clockwork Orange' and
thought about getting Wallace
durong the fllm. I've decided
Wallace would have the honor
of- what would you callol'"
However, he harbored
doubts that killing Wallace
would not won hu:n the same
attention to be gruned from a
" You'll Loke Our Qual tty Way
presulentoal assassmation ••1
of Doong Busoness"
won't even rate publicity m
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
~OMEROY
RUSSia or elsewhere if Wallace
Open Evenongs Unt•l 6&gt;G0- To I ~ PM. Sat
IS dead He won't get more than
three mmutes on TV "
Considers McGovern
And, at a tune when George
McGovern was still a long shot
for
the
Democrahc
pres1dentoal nommal!on, he
Mr and Mrs. Fred Larkms They also VISited Mrs Goldte
wrote , "Yesterday I even
received
word of the dealh of Beegle and Roy Jom Clone flew
constdered Mc(;(overn as a
thetr grandson, Denms on at the local airport and
VICtim
Larkons,
who was kolled on an Vll!Iled br1efly wtth Mr and
The youth also wrote of the
acc1denl
tn
Germany
Mrs Cline
life of Arllrur Bremer after he
Ella Hannum has been
Mr and Mrs Ollie Sayre
achieved his goal Once he
VISillng
wtth
her
daughter,
(
Connoe
Wells) are announcmg
wrote, "I'm going w be conEleanor,
m
Vlrgmta
the birth of a daughter at
VICted It's g01ng In he very
Mrs Jumor Koenog and Pleasant Valley Hospital, PI
s1molar with Sirhan."
But on one day he looked at choldren of Keno were visolong Pleasant Maternal grand·
parents are Mr and Mrs
the expanding dlary and Mrs Leona Cline
Mr and Mrs Tom Drake of Chester Wells
remarked "I should have been
Colum~ " 4)1ent a w~kend
John Newlun, who \s
dead 86o70 pages ago."
With
M•"
and
Mrs
Davod
stationed on New Jersey spent
On yet another occas1on It
several days w1th hos wife,
was money and recognition S!!Uth
VIsiting Mr. and Mrs Ern· Mary, and Mr and Mrs
thai would fall hlS due He
would sell his diary for $100,000 melt Stethem were Mr and Chfford Newlun
wTime..ute, go to Hollywood Mrs Edward Hedwick, Mr and Mrs Ted Hayman of
and appear on the television Columbus; Mr. and Mrs IJavtd Westervolle were vlsitmg Mr
Neal
and
ch1ldren, and Mrs Joe Bossell
talks shows
Built was lmporlanl w pull Washington, W Va , Rev
Suzoe Cooley of Steubenvolle
the assassination off suc- Herbert Morgan, Coolvtlle; spent several days woth Mary
cessfully "I didn 't want wget Katie Young and Mrs Elva Pierce
killed or Imprisoned in an Hudson, Minersville , Mr and
V1rg1e Mora and Olhe Young
WISUCCCssful attempt Couldn't Mrs Gerald Slethem and son, of Pomeroy VIsoted Mr and
Caton, Betty Pigott and Mrs Garth Smith
afford that."
He calculated that an assas- Rolland Stethem.
Mr and Mrs Robert
sination would guarantee hu:n a
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barton Erlewme of Sprongfield and
position In the world that would of Flonda VISited Leona Mr and Mrs Don Sosson and
warrant attention He wrote, Hensley
daughters of Vtenna, W Va ,
Mr and Mrs Russell Clone VISited Serena Sosson
"l'm as Important as lhe slart
of World War 1," a conflict were tn Moddletown recently
- VwletSmtth
begun when the Austnan
archduke was murdered.

Easy On the Pocket
USED CARS

'65 FORD 4 DR. WAGON ............ ..S595

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air.......... 11895

1

ve

WOULD YOU BELIEVE

Cornet custom 4 dr sed , blue with black vinyl
top, V 8, auto, P S, P B , factory aor, local
owner Real sharp car

65 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE ......... 1395

1969 FORo .....................51895

stand trans

1

Only 14-1972 Oldsmobiles
Remaining At Sale Prices

V 8 auto

LTD 2 dr H T, beoge fonosh , factory a or, one
owner Priced to sell

runs good

'63 OLDS. CONVERTIBLE .............. 1295

1968 BUICK .......... Only 51395

F 85, auto n1ce body, runs good

Lesabre, 2 dr H T, beoge woth vinyl top Real
good 68 model

NO DO&amp;S ALLOWED HERE

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Long Bottom Social Notes

'65
'65
'64
'64
'64

DENTAL WORK
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)
They put Kundur asleep for his
dental VISit because he could
have ripped off the dentist's
arm if the root canal work hit a
sensttive nerve.
Kundur, a Z.year1lld male
Siberian tiger, received the
treabnent Thursday at University of PellliiYlvanla School of
Dental Medicine.
Earlier dental work showed
the big tiger had bad lower
canine teeth, which he uses w
rip and tear at his meals. The
teeth abcessed and could have
caused the tiger's death.

Ohio Democrats
Revise Committee
•

APPLE
OUNTRYS

Henderson, W. Va.

Girls Sizes 7 through 14

.If

Oh10 delegallon m Moa!IU, will
have one vole each
~charged Lavelle lllegaily certified three other Ohio
delegates to the national committee.
~ saJd Lavelle later re·
tracted the certifications, built
still amounted to "brazen
Interference with the rights of
the Oh1o delegation to the
national convention "
Deoles Accll88tion
FollOWlllll King's charges,
Lavelle Issued a statement
saying he made no certiftcatlons other than himself
and Mrs. May!. Lavelle satd he
was "aware" the names of flve
other persons were listed as
Ohto members of the nattonal
commlttee, but he did not say
who listed them.
''Thelrnamesweretakenbecause they attended the meetlng of the Democratic National
Convention on Friday, July 14,
In Miami Beach," Lavelle said.
Gov.JohnJ.Gilligansaldthe
only thing LavetTe did was to
flle a letter with lhe aecrelarY
of the national committee, saylng Lavelle and Mrs. May!
would flU the two esolflclo

2 Dr sed, be1ge fonosh , engine lUSt over
hauled. A steal
'

ONLY

IW:Jty, 4 dr sed , runs real good Body a little
rough but proced to sell

1966 MERCURy...............s495

$195

1965 FORD ............ Only 5695
1966 MERCURy...... only 5695

11pots.
"That's all he hu said and
that's all he wW 18y," Gllllgan
aatd. ''There is no way the ball
game can be taken away !rool
Mr. ~ aa tong a a he baa the
111J1J11ri of the majority of the
delegates. They wilt control the
meetq on Saturday."

Q-To whom would a US
• a:mfftclo members. Joleph prerident submtt hiS res1gna·
E. Cole ol Cleveland and Carol tio117

A-To the secretary of
Meelendan, Clneland State.
dlwtlll&amp;ll, cbolen by the full

Comet 4 dr .. 6 cyl .. standard shoft Real cheap
to operator

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985 4100
Located on St. At. 7

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond
Open Evenmgs Till 7 p. m . &amp; Sat. Ttll 5 p M
Servtce Toll 12 Noon 011 Sat.
· ·

Chester, 0 .

.,.~ lrtELSON MOtORS~ l'INC.

'

Kingsbury News, Notes

NEWS
Births August 1 - Mrs Ray
Clarke, daughter, Letart, W
Va., and Mrs Kenneth
Puckett, daughter, Oak Hllf.
Discharges August 1 -Gwen
Haffel~ Karen Austin, Cleo
Gaudill, Christine Long, Mrs
Steven Weethec, Katharine
Stevenson, Bernard Harper,
Margaret Wlmgman, Jesse
Cunmngham, Dora Carter,
Shawn Johnson,
Larry
Howard, Jack Spratt, Doldle
Ewing, Nellie Coon, Karen
Tilley, Mrs Jerry Downing
and da~hter, Edwin Smlth,
Paul Lyons, James Queen,
Br1an Presoon, Oi'lllan Mays,
Ronald Dugan, Kandi Boggess,
Lila
Vanmeter,
Carl
Ostergren, Vlrsll Jackstn,
Brady Huffman, Campbell
Hamklns, Irvin Fellure, Myra
Daniels, Mrs. Lee Combs, Jr.
and daughter and John
Branuner.
Augu11 Z Rebecca
Boo111ue, Scott Coen, Karen
Riegel, Lincoln SWbter, Lew
Frisby, Cheryl Gray, Charles
Parks, Evelyn Waller, Ellen
Mullins, Diane Caruthers, Carl
P1erso!, Gertrude Kloea,
Dorothy Glenn, Archie Ellis,
Lun Dillon, Meliasa Bloomer
and VIvian Blake.

s,

Gal 500, 2 dr H T , V 8, auto .• p S, p
factory a or , real good 65 model.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

HOSPITAL

Sale s395

YOUR
CHOICE
OLDS, 2 dr. H.T.
CHEVROLET, 4 dr . sedan .
RAMBLER, 4 dr.
PLYMOUTH, 4 dr
RAMBLER, v.8, auto ., A·1 condttton.

The Carleton Church had 1Ls
annual pocmc Sunday at Fort
Meogs woth a baskel donner
followong Sunday School
Recent vosotors of Mrs Neva
Kong were Mr. and Mrs
Courtney Williams, Mrs. Jesse
Carr of Portsmouth, Mr Ralph
Carr of Vtrgonla Beach, Va ,
Mr and Mrs Ernest Hellman
and George of P1llsburgh, Pa ,
Mr and Mrs Weber Wood of
Snowvtlle and Rtchard
Hellman of Hemlock Grove
Those attendong Boble Camp
at Ewmgwn the past week
were David and Geneva Kmg,
Karla Beal and Demse Hen·
drtcks Also here from
Kankakee, Ill , w cowtsel at
the camp was Judy Kmg Mrs
Delores King was one of the
cooks
Recent VISitors of Mr and

v.w.

1967

II

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Frank
W. King, chairman of Oluo's
15J.member delegation In the
Democratlc National Conventlon, said Thursday the group
will assemble here this
weekend w choooe Jour more
persons w help select a vtce
presidential nominee.
HARRELSON DISABLED
In announcing the meeting,
NEW YORK (UPI)-ShortKing also berated Democratic
stop Bud Harrelson, plagued by
State Chalnnan WiUiam A. Laan Injured back and batting a
velle
sickly .192, was placed on the
The delegation Is to meet at
1$-day disabled list by the New
the NeU House at 4 p.m. SatYork Mets Thursday
Q-On what mountain urday wfill four vacancies In
The Mets called up shortstop was Solomon's Temple built' Ohio's membershtp on the
Lute Barnes ( .254) from
A-Mount Moriah The Democratic National Com·
Tidewater of the International Mohammedan Mosque of mittee. The committee conOmar Is there now
venes Aug 8 to name a sueLeague.
ceasor to Sen. Thomas
Eagleton.
Klng accused Lavelle of
"brazen" meddling In the affalrs of the delegation aDd •
charged that Lavelle IUegally
certified three delegates as
members of the party's nationat committee
Gets Elliot Memben
King, president of the Ohio
AFLCI0,18Id "it would be all
right with me If he (Lavelle)
resigned," but later King saki
he wasn't calling for Lavelle's
ALL REMAINING SUMMER STOCK
l'ellignation.
Under new rules adopted oq
MARKED DOWN 40 and 50%
the final night of the Demoera tic conventloo last month,
Oblo Is to have eight naliooal
Tops, Slacks, Shorts, Bermudas
committee members with a to.
tal of seven voletl.
Golf Skirts
Lavelle and Ealher May! of
D~Qrton, the party's vice chalrwcman, have
vote each
Mis$es Sizes 5 through 18

.

70 MERCURY MONTEGO MX .......11895

H.T. Cpe., V-8, auto. ....... 1l695

2 Dr.

auto , vmyl top

1

Bel. 4 Dr., V-8, auto., air........ 11495

65 Mercury

August is Clean-Up
Month
at
Smith
Nelson. We want to
move what 72 models
we have left. Giving
Big Trade Ins on Used
Cars. So come in &amp;
Trade with Us.

SPECIAL - SPECIAL USED CARS
1
70 REBEL 4 DR. WAGON ...........11495

USED CARS

$1995

Galax1e SOO hardtop coupe, V 8 eng1ne automat1c tran s
mission, power steenng &amp; brakes wh1te f1n1sh, black
vmyl top VInyl interior White wall t l res, like new radiO

customer satisfaction We
are fully Insured for your

ca ncelled'
Lost
your
operator's li cense? Call 992

6 30 ttc
- ---,, - - - -BACKHOE AND DOZER work

1970 FORD

PHONE 992·2550

AUTOMOBILE onsurance been

Co .

Mtddleport Ohoo

3 29

For Free

LG)G)K

$2195

Polara, fa ctorv a1r condlt1onmg , V 8 engine, automatiC
transmission , power steermg, power brakes, good wh1te
side walls. many more extras White f in1sh black vinyl
roof Pnced to move 1

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and e&lt;lerlor painting,
complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work All work guaranteed to

SEWING MACHINES Repair

CONCRETE

tf70 DODGE

•ROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
eCARPENTRY
eSPOUTING
•PAINTING

and commercial roofing ,

Pomerov

delivered rtght to y.our
pro1ect Fast and easy Free

Buy 2 Pa1rs and

QUALITY

J Bedroqm home, wtlh
brick front, I car
garage,
carpeting .
Pnced at ••
ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vonyl ilnd steel siding ,
fiberglas. brick and stone:
complete line of reslile~t1ao

From the largest
Bulldozer RacUaJor . to the
Smallest Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Spec1ahst

SEPTIC tanks cleaned Moiler

Price Smash!

but cleans and looks l•ke new
l of'' ' Bes 1des our usual
se lection of clean, used fur
Woll sell for $3125 cash or
n 1ture.
guaranteed
ap
terms available Phone 992
5641
pl1ances 1ust arn ved are
several elegant dm •ng r oom
8 4 61c
ou tfi ts bedroom su 1tes new _ _ _ __ _ _ __:_
&lt;)Old nylon ca rpets, oak

East of Pomeroy, phone 992
Rt t7room,
phonetool
667 shed
3181 , on old
fruo
6329
8 2 3tc
719 tfc - - -- - -- - -------4 ELECTROMDDE Wall
PASTURE, phone 992 6329
Heaters, 8 It long, 240 volts,
8 2 61p
1650 watts , 4 gas water
--------heaters 30 gallon. 3 floor

at the Meogs Inn See John

Complete front end serv1ce,
tune up and brake serv1ce
Wheels
balanced
elec
troniCally
All
work
guaranteed
RPr~'llnno:~~hiP
rates Phone 742 3232 or
992 3213
I 't TT&lt;

1 21 tic

5641

------~

prefer couple to live 1n apply

Pomeroy Hom·t ·&amp; Auto
Open&amp; Tot 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Maon, Pom.troy, ~

Excavatmg, Phone 992 5367,
D1 ck Karr, Jr

budget terms Call 992 7085
THERE woll be no more
846tc
Shootong Matches at Racone - - - -- - - - -

with no down payment Valley POODLE puppoes, Solver Toy
Estates Mobile Homes, Rt so
Parkv1ew Kennels, Phone 992
East - dust east of Heck's
5443
Athens, hlo Phone 593 8762
8 15 He
8 4 2tc
-----TOMATOES,
potatoes,
c ucumbers
and
beans,
Wanted To Buy
Clarence Proffit, Portland,
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Ohio, phone 843 2254
organs d1shes, clocks brass
7 19 tic
beds or complete households
Write M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio Call 992 6271 KENNEBEC potatoes, Mon
nesota sewing mach1ne
.b 28 tic
Maytag washer, phone 949
3718 every weekday e)(cept
For Rent
Fnday mornmg
3 AND • ROoM furnished an'd _ _ _ _ _ _ _8_23tp
unfurnished
apartments I TRAILER, 12 x SO woth a noce
Phone 992·5434
front porch, 1 acre ground ,
4 12 tic
concrete block bulldong 24 K32
2 BEDROOM mobole home woth
woth garage utototy room and

Help Wanted
WANTED
MANAGER ,
LaSalle Hotel In Moddleport.

$5.55

On Most Amerocon C;!!:l
-GUARANTEEo-;
Phone 992-2b94

DOZE I&lt; and back hoe work,
8 I 6tp
ponds and septoc tanks B &amp; K

L1m eston e, EKcels1or
8 4 6tc
Salt Works, E Main St ,
Pomeroy
Phone
992
3891
many collector 1tems m th1s
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delu&lt;e
4 12 tic
sale with .terns of 1nterest to
model Complete woth all
all many 1tems not li sted : - - - - -cleaning attachments and
Plan to attend both days DRIVE A LITTLE - save a usospaperbags Sloghtlyused
lunch served by New Haven
F~re

Wh• ~ignment'

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement , landscapmg We have 2 · s1ze
dozers. 2 s11e loaders Work
done by hour or contract .•
Free Esltmates We also·"!
haul f1ll d1rt , top sml Dump
trucks and low boy for h1re
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

or 949 3858

Mutt and Jeff Cartoon dutch FRIGIDAIRE washer and
dryer Phone 992 3592
8 2 3tc

oven oak round table, caned
bcittom ro cker, dated 1ar 1885
and other bottles k1tchen

EXPERT

EARTH MOVING

reg1stered 1 Cornedale, 3
spnng ram s phone 949 4828

stand

{glass ball feetl. several old

WMP0/1390
~,~

8 I 6tp

Sale or Traae
8 4 3tc
-ROOMS
bath,
noce
lol
on
Rt
4
32 V8 model B eng one, 1949
124 close to deep mme take 1970 HONDA 350 phone 992
Ford Pock Up Truck 1969
5951
late
model car or housetra1ler
Dune Buggy ) NOTE Cars
m trade also tra1ler space for _ _ __;__ _ __ a_ Htp
se ll 2 30 p m Saturday
ren t M &amp; G Food Market, 3
August 5th Claw foot round
m• Soulh Moddleport Rt I 1968 BANNER Travel Traoler.
table wall telephone, walnut
19 1~ ft
comp l e tely se lf
8 3 3tp
gate leg table oak dressers
con la med sleep'i 6 , Sl 800 or
oak bed chma cupboard (oval
best otter phone 142 3128
g lass) spool bed, wash stand
8 4 4tc
For Sale
old lamps (several ) arrow
-heads ( 12) organ and stool
72 KAWASAKI 175 cc eKcellent WALNUT Stereo com bmat1on
p1e safe walnut dresser ,
cond lf1 on J1m Anderson
4 speaker sound system, 4
brass beds, roll top desk, oak
phone 992 3010
speed dual volume control

Hket,.;fi

-~·· ~

phone 992 5082

1951 FARMALL A tra ctor

MIDDLEPORT

Augusl 4th 10 30 a m to 4 30

We talk to JOU

...

good cond1f1on,

women young men, b.,ys
and girls Hurry to

Furn iture we have rust
rece1ved a lot of used fur

(,,

cc Enduro

All kmds, all s•zes for men,

Fr1day

- - - - ---,-

n-c-:

1971 YAMAHA motorcyc le, 175

Barbara Lambert 44&lt;1 3411
7 26 30tc

air conditioning , 10 m 1les

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

pay

------

Free trammg
Good com
m1sslon. No cash 1nvestment
No del1very No co/lectmg S
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus Call
Margaret Fortune 9.49 5414 or

U S Route 33 New Haven

Ford Tourmg Car (nearly
1930
ong1nal condlt•on)
Model A (needs repa1rl w1th

5tc

balance of $96 41 or pay $7 21
a month call 992 5331
8 1 6tc

TOYS 1 Toys' Toys' Sell
Playhouse toys, Aug to Dec

5th 10 30 a m IT Model 1923

8• BRl'CE BIOSSAT

~

1 31

handrubbed conso le,

DRIVER-SALES

followmg personal property of
the late Dr B F Bryant wilt
be so ld at Res1dence located
V•rg1n1a

3949

----8 TRACK stereo 1n lovely

Auclton
AUCTION - Two Days The

West

TWO Hereford bulls Phone 142

OF

•

Pomeroy Phone 992 3525
laundry Phone 992 5391 or
·- - - · -- after 7 p m or phone "2·
992 3507
5232
8 3 3tc SINGER Sewing Machone, will
sell tor small balance of $31 20
or pay 51 a month , call 992
5331
WHEEL alignment
8 I 6tc O'bELL
located at Crossroads Rt 124
DELIVERY

79Hc

Yippies, etc., Set
Program for GOP

7 28 12tc

Help Wanted

-------

BRUCE BIOSSAT

f

is 'the place
l'o
.

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

2~1S

Business Services

Close Oul on 1972

ca mpers 1n stock Camp . . - - - - - -- - -Conlep Starcraft Sales Rt 62,

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEAD1.1NES

1

11- The Dilly Semtnet,Mlddleport.PcmtrOy, 0., Aug. 4,19'12

10-The DaUy Sentinel,Middleport..Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972

1

I

Mrs John Dean were Mr. and
Mrs Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr and Mrs Hobart
Smalley of Chesler, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Markms of
Racme, Mr and Mrs Jwtior
Smalley, Judy, SuSie, Dale,
Hoboe and Kathy of W1erton,
W Va , Mr. and Mrs Robert
R1ed of Pataskala, Mrs Anna
Mae Terrell and Juamta of
Pomeroy and Amta Watkins of
Chester
On Sunday afternoon Mr and
Mrs Roed, Mr and Mrs
Markons , Mr. and Mrs.
Smalley and Mr. and Mrs.
Dean
vistted Veterans
Memorial Hosp1lal where thetr
mece, Susle Riffle, IS a patient
suffermg ' from mjuroes
received \'(hen she was m an
auto accident on her way home
from her job at Letart. She 1S
u:nprovmg slowly from sertous
on1ury
Mlss Mary Lou King was
home for lhe weekend from Ml
Vernon Nazarene College lo
viSot her parents
Mr Alvm S!!Uth left Monday
for Paris Island where he wlll
be m trammg as a Marine.
Kenny Wood has been
spendmg a short leave at home
wlth hls parents, Mr and Mrs
Norman Wood He Is enroute
from Texas to another aor force
base
Mr. and Mrs Rowland Dais
VISited recently wtth Mr. and
Mrs Kenneth Markms at
Racme.
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Chase of
Columbus are spending some
time at their farm here.

-

TIHJCKS

992 2174
8utck
MAIN

Ponttac

ST.,

POMEROY, OHIO

8

Contradiction in
Hanoi- is Charged
PARIS (UPI)-U S. peace
negotiator W!lliam J Porter
charged Thursday that a photo
appearmg man Hanoi newspaper contradicts the Commun!St
"propaganda !me" complaining of American bombing
of flood dikes
At last week's sess1on of the
V1etnam peace conference,
Hano1 negotiator Xuan Thuy
lliSisted no gWIS were w be
found on the North Vlelnam's
dikes
Thursday, Porter stood up w
say that the Hano1 newspaper,
Hanoi Mot, carried a photo.
graph of an antlatrcraft gun
mounted on or near a dike.
"ThlS photograph appears to
contradict your propaganda
line," he declared
The charge came during a
session of mutual accusations
of ufabr1calton" and 11lies"
that saw the Conu:nunlsls ooce
agatn charge the Umted Stales
with deliberately bombing the
North VIetnamese flood dikea.
Observers found In statements by Porter a hint that the
Umted States might again
boycott the Ialka If the current
Impasse contl!ates.
US delegation spokesman

Dav1d Lambertson wid reporters the Corrununlst slde used
so much "invective and propa.
ganda" that Porter told them,
"Your presentations next week
must he more In keeping with
the minimum standing of
diplomatic Interchange."
But Lambertson denied Por·
fer's words meant a threat of
another suspension. The
United Slates halted the talks
for 10 weeks from May wmidJuly
The four delegatims agreed
to meet again next Thursday,
but Lambertson pointed out ll't
Uruted Slates had not consented to attend the talks on an
aulnmatlc basis.
Allhough there no mention of
the Tuesday meeting between
Presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due
Tho, the North Vletnameae
delegatloo spokesman, Nguyen
Than Le said, ''The Nixon
administration speaks ol peace
and negotiation, bit an W111'ecedented mtenslflcatlon of the
war Is taking place "

Q- What 13 a nebula?
A-A cloud of dust and
gas In outer space.

SOFT DRIIIII$. BREAD, MILK; PICRIC sUrPw, ETt.

THIS
WEEK'S SPECIAL
NEW HOME GROWN

PDTATOES :A~B. $1.69
7-33 MARKET

·------------~---------

OPEN 8 AM 'TIL 9 PM- 7 DAYS A WEEK

992-5880

Worthy Rogerund Mlrcl• Capehart
Cornw5R7&amp;33
•

l

�~ .. ; ; l f " ( f 1 t ,.. f ' l

. .... . .

For Sale

l
Cl
./.;
d
G
A
•
,
Senttne
ass11 "e s et ctzon. ~~~:~~" i~~~:~~:~ ~~J
Sentinel Clll.ssifieds Get Results,! AK~;~~:~~:::::an~~:::::~:
STA ~CRAFT

~

models ScWf"

~700

on 18 If ,

pups J E Pape,

265,

~OK

Syracuse Oh1o 45779, phone

992 3420

) PM Day Before Publlcatlort
Monday Deadtme 9 a m
Can.ce!lat1on - Corrections
Will be accepted unt119 am tor
Day of Publ1cat1on

Not1ce
NOTICE
YARD SALE Saturday August I WILL NOT be responsoble for
any debts contracted by
Sth starts 9 30 a m used
lawnmower
dishes
&amp;
miscellaneous clothmg at 383
Ash Street Moddleport

832tc

REGULATIONS

Tht Publisher reserves the
r1ght to ed1l or re1ect any ads,
deemed
Obtecllonat
The
publiSh Elf will not be responsible
for moi"e than one mcorrect
msert•on

RATES

1

WILL not be responsible for
any debts contracted b
{.
anyone other than mysel
S1gned Lowell Mc N1ckle,
Racme Oh10

823lp

•For Wan, Ad Serv1ce
, :c-:c:-:-----,----- 5 cents per Word one msertion WILL c are for preschool
M !n1mum Charge 75c "
children 1n my home, $3 a
co~~ec~~?:~ , ts~rt ~~rd three day Mrs Glenn Sm1th,
18 cents per word s!x con
phone 992 6187
sec ut!ve lnserl1ons ,
7 30 6tc
25 Per Cent DISCount on paid _ _ _ _ _ __ ___:_
ads and ads pa1d wlrhm 10 days
GUN SHOOT also rofle mat
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
ches open s1tes only Forked
Sl 50 for 50 word m inimum
Run Sportsman Club Sunday,
Each addJt1ona1 word 2c
August 6 12 noon
BLIND ADS
Add1t1onal 25c Charye per ___ _ _ _ _ __ 8
_2 3tc
Advertisement
YARD Sale. new and used
OFFICE HOUR$"
clothmg ant1que d•shes and
8 30 a m to 5 00 p m DIIIIIV
furn1ture
Fnday
and
8 30 a m to 12 oo' Noon
Saturday
Saturday, August 4th and Sth,

1

lOam to 7 p m at Utah Swan

res1dence on State R'1ute 7 m

a11yone other than myself

Sogned John D Lambert, Rt
I Moddleport Ohoo
843tp

nHEIL"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Wmdow ,
Aor Condtltoners
Hot Water Heaters
Plumbmg
Electrical Work

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992 2448
Pomeroy, 0 .

Not1ce
Tuppers
Plaons
Not
REWARD for shoppong at respon s1ble for acc1dents
Showalter s Wet Pet Shop, _ __ _ _ ___8~ntp WHY not try cosmet1cs that are
truly
different
and
Chester Ohoo 10 per cent of
refreshing' The famous m~nk
your total purchase mar be YARD Sale Thursday, Froday
oil base and now we have the
and Saturday on Larkin
applied to the purchase o any
lemon grove Just think, 14
Street Rutland
ceram1c 1tems
specials
this month, some for
8 2 3tc
8 2 30tp
men as well as women It's
-----KOSCOT of course Phone
992 5113

WOMAN to live 1n w1th elderly
lady l1ght housework, no

-•
i
•

We need 12 men and
women 1mmed1ately
Ages
19 35, neat and
dependable No exper1ence
necessary

Call Mr. Row 446.0694
GALLIPOLIS

wASHJNGTON

,:.
'·
•;;
~

.;.
~

•,
-:;
~
..
.~~:
;

.,

~
~

-

•

I NEA

I
Most leaders of the street delegates - Yoppoes Zop·
poes welfaie gooups the gal crowd - promose Moamo
Beach authollties no voolence at the Republican conven·
toon scene a few weeks hence The1 thonk toouble 1\0uld
work on favoo of Presodent Noxon
But so probably would plaon nuttiness and this the
street types plan plent) of Recent onquuoes suggest Ihal
among some blue collar workers and othe• s Sen George
McGovein badly needs 111 hos vote column he gets blamed
for everythmg goofy that happens
If these fmdongs ao e ondocatove then the outs ode go oups
may be workmg from a massive mtsconcepllon Thev ieel
they caused the downfall of the Democrats' woth theor
storrongs at Chocago on 1968 and can do the same tor
Noxon thos tome
,., ~ . J&gt;Ila!Ai,.Beac.n Mayor Chuck Hall ,and h1s poJ•~e. authorl· • ,Q~s otw1st1 however, that Chocago·style rough stuff os not
planned Hall told me m a telephone ontervoew antowar
Voetnam vete&lt;ans and others advose hom almost daily of
theor mtent to pollee theor own ranks and keep thongs cool
They say they wtll deal summanly woth any elements
bent on violence
A Miami Beach pohce offoctal read me a Ytppie pledge
evidently given voluntarily, vowmg opposition to mass
violence as a " tache" on the ground ot would only reactivate the law and order oss ue" and by that fact help
N1xon
The Yipp1e statement went on to say that Moamo Beach
would be a bad 1place to make trouble For one thong, 'old
people would be hurt "
It IS further noted that the Ztppoes - a Yippoe faction "can't bear the heat and cost of mass arrest sotuations "
What that means Is that some already are on doffJCulty
with the law
With such assurances on hand, Mtamo Beach offocoals are
cautwusly optimiStic about the GOP convention A check
at Republican natwnal commtttee headquarters revealed
the same
'We are not unduly concerned," says one committee
officer
If the forecast has any soft spots, they center on one
black na!Ionahst facbon and the Students for a Demo
crat1c Society The off1c1al word for them Is "dangerous,"
but aulhonlies nevertheless say they can contaon any sort
of unexpected unpleasantness
Yet, as suggested, goofmess alone may hurt McGovern
Voters who don't Joke long·hatred, pot·srnokmg, free sex·
ong youths often seem these days to assogn them all to the
Democratic nommee
That bemg so the Yoppie Zoppoe schedule for the GOP
conventwn, as submotted to pohce, can hardly cheer
Democrats
On Aug 20, the eve of the convenllon , the program calls
for 'Doshonor Amenca Day, " With flags to be burned, a
·welfare Cadillac" (whatever that IS) to be burned, eggs
to be tossed at a giant photograph of Martha Raye, actress famed for entertaonmg troops
Later In the week, on "Support for Women Day, " the
street folk woll 'ridicule male chauvtmsts," namely, Pope
Paul VI, Mr Noxon, his aode Henry K1ssmger, actor John
Wayne Playboy magazone publisher Hugh Hefner
Stoll later Will come "lmperoahsm Day," featurmg a
protest rally and "massove march" against "Coca Cola
tmpenahsm "
A lot of 1t sounds like harmless fun But If some waver·
ong voters are gomg to dub the funmakers as "McGovern
people," the laughter may be rather thon at the senator's
headquarters

with Motor Hoople

t .:::,u. . C'
\,._KE A
F~EE

1&gt;1EAL

E'IEN IF

HES 'Tt!E

COOK

SENTINEL
CARRIERS WANTED
IN

Phone Faye Manley
992·5592
In
Pomeroy
Phone 992 2156

p m and Saturday, August

wash

stand,

lamp

woad beds, large penn 1es, In
cent p1eces, dmner bell (18
1n ), fmger carved rocker,

OLD•GOINS !Silver dOll an,
lnd1an penn1es

Oldesl date

18351 Stone tars churn. wood
potato masher , oval trunks,
g lass 1nsulato r s c arn1 va l
glass (or1gmal) , milk cans,

anvol old books McGuttey

Readers, wood butter mold,
v1ctrola, ch1ld rocker,"' four
rockers, several n1ce Chma
p1eces whtfe oak m1rror, 1919

cupboard l9lass door)
AUCT NOTE There are

••

-- - -- '71 CHEVY Vega and 72 Honda
350 call

742 3n3

Dept , Not responsib le
for acc1dent s
Bradford
Auction Co , Racme, Oh1o A

C Bradford, Manoger C C
Bradford, Auctioneer , Sogned
James Foelds
7 30 ltc

For Sale
DON'T PUMP your sluggosh
septic tank Get Klean Em All
septic tank cleaner Land
mark
Farm
Pomeroy

Bureau,

------Mobile Homes for sale

8 4 He

WANTED- Your mobole home
business

Veteran financing

For

8 3 3tc

-~----

... P.Ian~ng M1ll s-ponsored by the
Syracuse F1re Dept , lease
expired

8 3 3tp
PIANO

&amp; Organ lessons by
quallf•ed graduate ol C1n
c• nnat1 Conservatory of
Mu s1 c Phone 992 3825

8 3 I21c

- - -- -COAL

Musser

7 30 ttc

UN

YOUR

DIAL

Sanitaf1on Stewart, Oh10 Pn

662 3031

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph 992 2114

2 12 ftc
-~---,.---

READY MIX

&amp; JEANS
SALE I

PANTS

!

• f i 1 J' / ( ( r• 1

1

serviCe, all makes 992 2284

The Fa broc Shop, Pomeroy

Authorized S1nger Sales and
Serv ice We Sharpen Sc1ssors

estomates Phone 992 3284 · - - - - - -Goegle1n

Ready M1x

GET I PAl R FREE

r

POMEROY

9.- Jack W Carsey Mgr ,
oloioll
Phone 992 2181
&amp;
P1oneer cha1n saw excel lent
cond1t1on left on Rt
124
towards Rutland across from
su b power stat10n 2nd house
on nght

8 4 31c
·- - -- - SHEEP rams . I Suffolk

2966

Balan ce $68 32

Use

our

EARLY Amen can Stereo AM
FM rad 10 4 speed changer , 4
speaker
sou nd
system

Balance $73 56 Use our
budget terms Call 992 7085
8 46tc

- - -- - -

CLOSE out on 1971 full soze zig
zag sew1ng ma ch ~ne
For
sew 1ng slretch
fabr~cs ,
buttonholes, fan cy des•gns

etc

Paont sloghtly blemoshed

Cho1ce of carrymg case or
sewmg stand $49 80 cash or
terms ava1lable Phone 992

__

You can save S S $ on a late
model used or repossessed
Mobile Home at Berry Mil ler
Mobile Home Sales Used and
repossessed Mobile Homes 1s
our spec1attv not our
s•de lln e We have a comp le te
se lechon of 8 10 &amp; 12 w1de
Mobile Homes 1n stock We
are also the area 's franch1sed
dea ler for one of the oldest
and best homes 1n the

Real Estate For Sale
FOR SALE by owner Yellow
frame house. s1x rooms and

bath Large lot Located In
Syracuse on Rt 124 Second
house on left gomg north
1ns1de corporat1on line

I

27 If

business - DETROITER -

famous for pn ce and quat 1t y
Don ' t wa1 t, stop now at Berry

CLELAND
REALTY
608 E Maon

level lot good neoghborhood
fru 1t and storage room
porches 1n good cond!t1on 10

NEED2BEDROOMS
Here 1s a buy 1 story frame
l1v 1ng room has l1replace
large bath large k 1fchen and
dmmg area w1th cabinets
porches , 2 car garage
hardwo od floors. lots of
shrubery, all In eKcellent
cond1t1on $14 900 00

IS YOUR HOUSE
FOR SALE?
Use a 'nothmg to do' af
ternoon to f1x lea k1ng
faucets Onppmg water
d1 scolors s1nk enamel and

suggests faulty plumbing IF
YOU
WANT
PROFESSIONAL
ASSISTANCE on gettong a
qu1ck buver call us today

HENRY E CLELANDSR
REALTOR
n2·2259
If no answer 992·2658

- - -- - - -

corn
cucumbers
and 1969 TOYOTA $650, 30 m1les per
mangoes , Geraldine Cleland,
gallon must se ll , phone 992

7 28 tic

- -----

model gas furnaces and 2
Republ iC new gas convers1on

burners , phone 949 2803
8 2 3tc

----'70 HONDA 350, excellent
condotlon phone 667 3533
8 2 3tp

-----AT PARSONS' New &amp; Used
nlture and appliances at ~ur
store at 1415 Eastern Ave ,
Gallipolis USED FUR
NITURE - couches as low as
SID and up, dinette sets a slow
as $1995 and up , wringer type
washers, S29.95 and up ,
wrotlng desks, $29 95 and up ,
swovel rockers, $10 and up ,
stoves, gas and electric,

and up , NEW FUR
NITURE - 2 pc llvong room
suo teas low as Sl2'1 95 , donette
sets, $59 91 and up , recliner
chairs, $69 95 and up
8·2 3tc
$19 95

----------

NEW HOMES

3372
8 2 3tp

3 BEDROOMS

- ------

'71 FIAT Spoder woth radoo and
tape player. 10.000 actual
moles phone 985 4211
_ _ _ _ __ _ _7.:_
30 6tp

or used mobile home try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Kanauga Oh10

2 New Homes, all electnc, 3
bedrooms, full basement and
garage, w1th take frontage ;
at F1ve Points area

Real Estate For Sale
5 ROOM house and bath, $6,500,
phone 992 5786
7 30 6tc

7 I6 30tc

4

k1tchen sf9,rm WJ I'ldOWS and
doorS'. wnrl'l'epctlnt the out
s•de to su1t' yoti $16,900 00

PH. 992·2571

.
,

• A1r Condtttoners
•Awnmgs
• Underptnnong
Complete mob ile home
serv1ce --- plus g1gant~e

dosplay of mobile homes
always available at

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES
1220 Washongton Blvd
4237121
BELPRE, 0
AIR CONDITIONED
mobile
home and lot, $3,500 phone
992 5786
7 30 6tc
LEGAL NOTICE

Sealed bids w 1ll be rece 1ved
by the Me1gs Local School
D1stri c t Board of Educat ion at
their off 1ce m the Me 1o s Junior
H1gh Sc hoo l Bu ll d1ng , Mid
dleport Oh10 tor school bus
l •r es until 12 00 o'clock noon
Eastern Davllghl Stan dard
T1me , on Augus t 11 1972, at
wh 1ch tlme B1ds will be opened
The Tire bid prices are to In
elude the demount 1ng ol th e old
tire and mounting the new or
recapped I r e on th e nm and
plac.ng the mounted ti re and
rim on the bus
For spec1f1cat1ons pteue ca ll
or write L arry Mornson 992
2153
Me 1gs Local School D1stnct
Board of Educat ion
Lee w McComas , Clerk
171 14, 21 28 181 4, 4tc

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE

Bids will be rcce 1ved at the
OffiCes ot Webster and Fultz,
OR 992-3975
Attornevs, Pom eroy National
s ROOM house double lot, 2 car '----------- ~ Bank Building , Pomerov , Oh io,
Saturday August S 1912.
garage, Carson Reed, Mason, RACINE - 10 room houS&lt;!, unt•l
at 10 CO o'c lock A M for the sale
W Va , phone 773·5606
~ath , basement, garage. two of the Merv L Emm•sh real
8 I 6tp lots
estate The real es.tate 1s located
Phone 949 4313
al
462 S F1ftt1 Avenue , M •d
4 5 tfp dleport,
Ohio, and cons ists of a
6 ROOM house, bath, 2 car
two s tory , thre e b edroom
garage, enclosed porch. I RACINE - 6 room house, bath, res1dence
W1th basement
acre land, Rt 1, Racme,
forced a •r heat , two bathrooms
ulollty
room
garage.
$10.000,
Ohoo, phone 949 47~5
hardwood floors and plenty of
_________8_4·31c • hone 949 4195
The r esi den ce may be
3 31 tfc storage
seen
by
illppomtment
Telephone 992 2186 Th e r1ght Is
reserv ed to rej ec t any or all
bid S

-------

- -- - - -

-------

r-----------..:::=========--.
Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

doors and windows ct!lrports
marquees, aluminum s1dlng

and ra iling 'A Jacob, sales
representative
For free
est1mates phone Charles
L1 sle, Syracuse, V
V
Johnson and Son. Inc

3 2 Hot
--~----

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANEU
REASONABLE rates Ph 44&lt;1·
4782, Galllpolos, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Opera tor

Complete Serv1ce

Phone 949 3821
Racine, Ohio
Croft Bradford

5I

tic

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

SHERIFF ' S SALE
By v•rtue ot an Order of S111e
duty Issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
1County1 P.h:IP •lln tl'le Cti:Jt: or The
Trl County Bank , Coolville ,
Oh io, vS1 1 'J•~es Fultz, et al
Defendants on a judgment
th ere in rendered be ng Case
No 15 056 In sa id Court , t wil l
offer lll public sale at tl'le front
door of the Co urlhou se In
Pomeroy Oh io. on the 15th dav
ot August , 1972, at 10 00 o'clock
A M the follow ing described
la nds and tenements to w1t
Pillrcel No 1
The followlno real estate ,
situated In the Township of
Ohve, Cou•'lty of Me igs and
Sta te of Oh 10, In Range 11 Town
4 Sec tion JS Oh io Company s
Purchase
bounded
and
descr ibed as follows
Beg inn ing In the center of
Slate Route No 681, at the
northeast corner ot Lot 21 of
George P McCune s Second
SubdiviS ion 10 Olive Township
now owned by Donald P
Landon and Eulah Mae Lin
don thence east along State
Route No 681. a dista nce of
US ' thence south 280 S' parallel
with the east boundary line ot
sa1d Lo.t No 21 thence west US '
to the southeast corner of said
Lot 21 of McCune's Addition ,
thence north 280 s fo llowing the
eastern boundary line of sa id
Lot 21 , to the place of beginning
Deed Reference Volume 239,
Page 13, Meigs County Deed
Records
Parcel No 2
The follow ing real estate ,
sltualed In Olive Township,
Me1gs county , Oh io .n Section
35 Town 4, Range II bounded
and described as follows
Beg inn ing at a point 286 0 feet
south of middle of State Road
No 681. whi ch point Is the
southeast corner of Lot No 21,
of McCune's Second AddUion to
Olive Township , thence east us
feet along the south lrne of lot
owned by James A Fultz and
Jan et Fu tz, by deed recorded ln
Volume 238. Page 09, Meigs
County Deed Records thence
south 285 0 feet parallel wllh
lines of Lots 23 and 25 of Me
Cune's Second Add itiOn to Olltt~e
Township , thence west US feet
to the southeast corner of Lot 25
at McCune's Second Addition
thence north alono the lines of
Lotx 23 and 25 of McCune's
Second AddJtlon to the plac:e of
beg,nnlng, eontalnlng one acre
more or less
'
Deed Reference Volume 2.40
Page 695, Me igs County Oeeci
Records
Terms of Sale Cash In hand
on delivery of deed The ap
praised value of the real estate
Is 13.030 OQ
Robert C Hertenbach
Shtriff of Me igs County Bernard

v Fultz

Webster and Fu1t2
Willetta A Bougher Attornevs for Plelntlft
executrix P 0 Box 723
Estate of Marv L Emmlsh Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
July l.f, 21, 28 , Aug .f, 11, 51c
(7 1JO,JI(8112,3,4,6t

Big C1pat1ly

Maytag

Automo~tlu

2 speed optr at ion
Choice Of water
temps
Auto
water
level
cohtrol
Lint
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator
Perm1-Pren
M1yt11
HIIO Of Htlt

kotchen woth double sink Wall to wall carpeting Full
basement, level lot. All fnr only $18,000 00
NEW LISTING •
HARRI SONVILLE - 3 nice lots suitable for housing
$2,000 00
DOWNTOWN
6 ROOMS - 3 bedrooms, bath, fireplace with bookshelves
on each side Gas furnace. full basement, Double garage
Front porch side yard Only $21,000 oo

"2·3325
~~~~~~~~~--~~~

5 12 He

C BRADFORD, Auctioneer

f1replace and a1r condlt1oned Bath, gas furnace, modern

HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

o;'

SEE US FOR Awnings. storm

NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 nice bedrooms, large living with

CALL YOUR EXCLUSIVE BROKER FOR MORE IN
FORMATION ON THE ABOVE

.,

~

Pomeroy,Ohio 45769

.-;
COUNTRY ACRES
OVER 7 ACRES - On Route 7 with T P - CHESTER
water Mostly cleared and ready for housing

'

Drnu

Surround cloth11
with gentle, even

heal No hotspots,
no

overdrylng

Fine Mllh Lint
Fjlter
We SptCIIIIItln

MAYTAG

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~.~~~:·'
741-4211

Arnold Gr1tt

Rutland

'60 FORD F-100 1h TON ...............1795

69 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, air............. 13200
66 Cadillac 2 Dr. H.T., air

Pock up truck, tong bed, 6 cyl , stand trans

11295

'69 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER .....11495

70 Chey. lm pala 4 Dr., V-8, auto. .. .. .. • '2195

70

Volkswagen

2 Door,

2 Dr H T , 383 auto, orange &amp; black Real sharp

4 speed .......... .'1595

71 .MERCURY COMET 2 DR........ 11895

1

69 Dodge Polara 4 Dr. H.T., air ...........'1995

Bremer, Bored
Wanted to Kill

FOR THE BEST deal on a new

Rutland
JUST 4 YEARS OL!l
bedrooms. bath TV room
storage buoldong, modern

•-.

6 Cyl , stand tra ns, A 1 cond ition Th1s week &lt;A'Ify

6 Cyl

69 Pontiac Bonneville 2 Dr. H.T., a1r..... '1995

CAS!i patd for all makes ana PAPER hangong , onterlor and
models of mobile homes
ex t enor pa lntmg Arthur
PhOfle area code 614 423 9531 Musser, phone 742 5223
4 13 lfc
7 18 3Qtp

I story frame, 6 room s 3
bedrooms paneled , bath ,

ground ,

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
.PPMEROY, OHIO

~ J •, 1- ""-· -

Farson Street. Belpre , Ohio,

NO STEPS HERE

acres of

I"

phone 423 9531- Open 7 days
8 3 2tc

Pomtroy, OhiO

1'11

, ,, ,

Moller Mobole Home Sa les 705

...__,......,.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

protechon 32 N 2nd 992
3918
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR CO

.-·

$1850

Local1 owner ca r. green fln1 sh, clea n Inferior. good tires
2000cc eng me radio, 4 speed trans

Estimate

6 15 tic

(Boll) Putlons Phone 992 2478
_,__
4 25 tfc Mobile Homes For Sale

tcebo&lt; KUHL'S BARGAIN Auto Sales
CENTER, Rt 7 at auctiOn
l1ght ' Tuppers Pla •ns 1969 FIAT Fastback, phone 773
5925 or can be seen at Foster
Closed Mondays only Phone
SE on Long Bottom, phone'
St , Mason, second house HOU
667 3858
985
3529
7 30 6tc behmd car wash
6 11 ttc
843tc
CANNING lo matoes. sweet
Racone, 0

tic

Sephc tanks mstalted Georqe

___

1971 FORD PtNT02 DR

.,

UPPER MARLBORO, Md
(UP!) - Arthur H Bremer
asked hunsell on hos diary why
he wanted to shoot Presodent
NIXon or Gov George C
Wallace
"I don't know," he jotted
"Nothmg else to do I have w
ldll somebody. That's how far
gone I am."
The llt.page JOUrnal was
read Into the record at
Bremer's troal on charges of
shootmg
the
Alabama
governor at a Laurel, Md ,
political rally May 15 The
delense rested Thursday-Its
case based on the contention
Bremer, 21, a fcrmer
Milwaukee busboy, Is msane
Today, fmal argwnents were
scheduled by prosecuting
atlooley Arthur A Marshall
Jr and defense attorney
Benjanun UpSitz Judge Ralph
W Powers of the Prince
Georges County Court then will
consign the case to a jury of six
men and six women
Powers disnussed lor msuffl·
Clent evtdence Thursday four
charges of assault with tn·
tent
to
ma1m
Bre·
mer stoll 1s char~ed
with 13 counts of assault wtth
Intent to murder and lesser
charges. If he Is convicted on
the relll8llllng charges, he
could receive maximum
. sentence• of ea~eara1n prlaon.
Jurors LilteD Joteotly
The jurors listened Intently
Thursday when Lipsitz read
the doary out loud It revealed
Bremer stalked Nixon through
Ottawa when the President
visited CBIUida last April
"I had a good view as he
went past me," Bremer wrote
"Past me for the SIXth time and
still alive "
Bremer recorded that he
tried on SIX occasions to try w
assassinate the President m
Ottawa-twice In the streets as
the presldentlal motorcade
passed, three tomes when
Nixon appeared at Ottawa's
Parliament bwlding and once
when the Prestdent attended a
lonna! affall' at the Fine Arts

THE LEADERS
OXFORD, Ohto (UPI)-John
Williams, 18, Cranesvtlle, Pa ,
the natoonal and world archery
champion, held a one-poll)! lead
Thursday In the men's division
competition for the United
States0lymp1carcheryteam.
Mrs. Doreen Wllbur, 42,
Jeffel'!Ion, Iowa, had a 29-p(ilnt
lead in the women's divoalon

68 Olds
68

Chev.

Cut

2 Dr H T 351 auto

. y a.

auto Real mce

'62 CADillAC 4 DR.................... 1450

H.T., V-8 auto., P.S...... 1495

H T Like new

1971 DODGE ........ Only s2395

66 COMET 2 DR...................... ..'395

66 Buick LaSabre 4 Door, V-8 auto........ 1495

Center
When Bremer faoled on his
68 Ford F-100 Pickup, 6 cyL, std ......... 11595
mosswn at Ottawa, he left for
Washmgton, DC , wr1tmg ,
68 Dodge 1h T. Pickup, V-8 std .... .... ...11395
"You can't get Nixie boy if you
run 't close to hu:n "
But then the focus of his
attention turned elsewhere "I
saw 'A Clockwork Orange' and
thought about getting Wallace
durong the fllm. I've decided
Wallace would have the honor
of- what would you callol'"
However, he harbored
doubts that killing Wallace
would not won hu:n the same
attention to be gruned from a
" You'll Loke Our Qual tty Way
presulentoal assassmation ••1
of Doong Busoness"
won't even rate publicity m
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
~OMEROY
RUSSia or elsewhere if Wallace
Open Evenongs Unt•l 6&gt;G0- To I ~ PM. Sat
IS dead He won't get more than
three mmutes on TV "
Considers McGovern
And, at a tune when George
McGovern was still a long shot
for
the
Democrahc
pres1dentoal nommal!on, he
Mr and Mrs. Fred Larkms They also VISited Mrs Goldte
wrote , "Yesterday I even
received
word of the dealh of Beegle and Roy Jom Clone flew
constdered Mc(;(overn as a
thetr grandson, Denms on at the local airport and
VICtim
Larkons,
who was kolled on an Vll!Iled br1efly wtth Mr and
The youth also wrote of the
acc1denl
tn
Germany
Mrs Cline
life of Arllrur Bremer after he
Ella Hannum has been
Mr and Mrs Ollie Sayre
achieved his goal Once he
VISillng
wtth
her
daughter,
(
Connoe
Wells) are announcmg
wrote, "I'm going w be conEleanor,
m
Vlrgmta
the birth of a daughter at
VICted It's g01ng In he very
Mrs Jumor Koenog and Pleasant Valley Hospital, PI
s1molar with Sirhan."
But on one day he looked at choldren of Keno were visolong Pleasant Maternal grand·
parents are Mr and Mrs
the expanding dlary and Mrs Leona Cline
Mr and Mrs Tom Drake of Chester Wells
remarked "I should have been
Colum~ " 4)1ent a w~kend
John Newlun, who \s
dead 86o70 pages ago."
With
M•"
and
Mrs
Davod
stationed on New Jersey spent
On yet another occas1on It
several days w1th hos wife,
was money and recognition S!!Uth
VIsiting Mr. and Mrs Ern· Mary, and Mr and Mrs
thai would fall hlS due He
would sell his diary for $100,000 melt Stethem were Mr and Chfford Newlun
wTime..ute, go to Hollywood Mrs Edward Hedwick, Mr and Mrs Ted Hayman of
and appear on the television Columbus; Mr. and Mrs IJavtd Westervolle were vlsitmg Mr
Neal
and
ch1ldren, and Mrs Joe Bossell
talks shows
Built was lmporlanl w pull Washington, W Va , Rev
Suzoe Cooley of Steubenvolle
the assassination off suc- Herbert Morgan, Coolvtlle; spent several days woth Mary
cessfully "I didn 't want wget Katie Young and Mrs Elva Pierce
killed or Imprisoned in an Hudson, Minersville , Mr and
V1rg1e Mora and Olhe Young
WISUCCCssful attempt Couldn't Mrs Gerald Slethem and son, of Pomeroy VIsoted Mr and
Caton, Betty Pigott and Mrs Garth Smith
afford that."
He calculated that an assas- Rolland Stethem.
Mr and Mrs Robert
sination would guarantee hu:n a
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barton Erlewme of Sprongfield and
position In the world that would of Flonda VISited Leona Mr and Mrs Don Sosson and
warrant attention He wrote, Hensley
daughters of Vtenna, W Va ,
Mr and Mrs Russell Clone VISited Serena Sosson
"l'm as Important as lhe slart
of World War 1," a conflict were tn Moddletown recently
- VwletSmtth
begun when the Austnan
archduke was murdered.

Easy On the Pocket
USED CARS

'65 FORD 4 DR. WAGON ............ ..S595

68 Olds 98 H.T. Cpe., power, air.......... 11895

1

ve

WOULD YOU BELIEVE

Cornet custom 4 dr sed , blue with black vinyl
top, V 8, auto, P S, P B , factory aor, local
owner Real sharp car

65 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE ......... 1395

1969 FORo .....................51895

stand trans

1

Only 14-1972 Oldsmobiles
Remaining At Sale Prices

V 8 auto

LTD 2 dr H T, beoge fonosh , factory a or, one
owner Priced to sell

runs good

'63 OLDS. CONVERTIBLE .............. 1295

1968 BUICK .......... Only 51395

F 85, auto n1ce body, runs good

Lesabre, 2 dr H T, beoge woth vinyl top Real
good 68 model

NO DO&amp;S ALLOWED HERE

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Long Bottom Social Notes

'65
'65
'64
'64
'64

DENTAL WORK
PHILADELPIDA (UP!)
They put Kundur asleep for his
dental VISit because he could
have ripped off the dentist's
arm if the root canal work hit a
sensttive nerve.
Kundur, a Z.year1lld male
Siberian tiger, received the
treabnent Thursday at University of PellliiYlvanla School of
Dental Medicine.
Earlier dental work showed
the big tiger had bad lower
canine teeth, which he uses w
rip and tear at his meals. The
teeth abcessed and could have
caused the tiger's death.

Ohio Democrats
Revise Committee
•

APPLE
OUNTRYS

Henderson, W. Va.

Girls Sizes 7 through 14

.If

Oh10 delegallon m Moa!IU, will
have one vole each
~charged Lavelle lllegaily certified three other Ohio
delegates to the national committee.
~ saJd Lavelle later re·
tracted the certifications, built
still amounted to "brazen
Interference with the rights of
the Oh1o delegation to the
national convention "
Deoles Accll88tion
FollOWlllll King's charges,
Lavelle Issued a statement
saying he made no certiftcatlons other than himself
and Mrs. May!. Lavelle satd he
was "aware" the names of flve
other persons were listed as
Ohto members of the nattonal
commlttee, but he did not say
who listed them.
''Thelrnamesweretakenbecause they attended the meetlng of the Democratic National
Convention on Friday, July 14,
In Miami Beach," Lavelle said.
Gov.JohnJ.Gilligansaldthe
only thing LavetTe did was to
flle a letter with lhe aecrelarY
of the national committee, saylng Lavelle and Mrs. May!
would flU the two esolflclo

2 Dr sed, be1ge fonosh , engine lUSt over
hauled. A steal
'

ONLY

IW:Jty, 4 dr sed , runs real good Body a little
rough but proced to sell

1966 MERCURy...............s495

$195

1965 FORD ............ Only 5695
1966 MERCURy...... only 5695

11pots.
"That's all he hu said and
that's all he wW 18y," Gllllgan
aatd. ''There is no way the ball
game can be taken away !rool
Mr. ~ aa tong a a he baa the
111J1J11ri of the majority of the
delegates. They wilt control the
meetq on Saturday."

Q-To whom would a US
• a:mfftclo members. Joleph prerident submtt hiS res1gna·
E. Cole ol Cleveland and Carol tio117

A-To the secretary of
Meelendan, Clneland State.
dlwtlll&amp;ll, cbolen by the full

Comet 4 dr .. 6 cyl .. standard shoft Real cheap
to operator

RIGGS BROS., INC.
USED CARS
Ph. 985 4100
Located on St. At. 7

We Service What We Sell
Our Word Is Our Bond
Open Evenmgs Till 7 p. m . &amp; Sat. Ttll 5 p M
Servtce Toll 12 Noon 011 Sat.
· ·

Chester, 0 .

.,.~ lrtELSON MOtORS~ l'INC.

'

Kingsbury News, Notes

NEWS
Births August 1 - Mrs Ray
Clarke, daughter, Letart, W
Va., and Mrs Kenneth
Puckett, daughter, Oak Hllf.
Discharges August 1 -Gwen
Haffel~ Karen Austin, Cleo
Gaudill, Christine Long, Mrs
Steven Weethec, Katharine
Stevenson, Bernard Harper,
Margaret Wlmgman, Jesse
Cunmngham, Dora Carter,
Shawn Johnson,
Larry
Howard, Jack Spratt, Doldle
Ewing, Nellie Coon, Karen
Tilley, Mrs Jerry Downing
and da~hter, Edwin Smlth,
Paul Lyons, James Queen,
Br1an Presoon, Oi'lllan Mays,
Ronald Dugan, Kandi Boggess,
Lila
Vanmeter,
Carl
Ostergren, Vlrsll Jackstn,
Brady Huffman, Campbell
Hamklns, Irvin Fellure, Myra
Daniels, Mrs. Lee Combs, Jr.
and daughter and John
Branuner.
Augu11 Z Rebecca
Boo111ue, Scott Coen, Karen
Riegel, Lincoln SWbter, Lew
Frisby, Cheryl Gray, Charles
Parks, Evelyn Waller, Ellen
Mullins, Diane Caruthers, Carl
P1erso!, Gertrude Kloea,
Dorothy Glenn, Archie Ellis,
Lun Dillon, Meliasa Bloomer
and VIvian Blake.

s,

Gal 500, 2 dr H T , V 8, auto .• p S, p
factory a or , real good 65 model.

See Ray Riggs or Roger Riebel

HOSPITAL

Sale s395

YOUR
CHOICE
OLDS, 2 dr. H.T.
CHEVROLET, 4 dr . sedan .
RAMBLER, 4 dr.
PLYMOUTH, 4 dr
RAMBLER, v.8, auto ., A·1 condttton.

The Carleton Church had 1Ls
annual pocmc Sunday at Fort
Meogs woth a baskel donner
followong Sunday School
Recent vosotors of Mrs Neva
Kong were Mr. and Mrs
Courtney Williams, Mrs. Jesse
Carr of Portsmouth, Mr Ralph
Carr of Vtrgonla Beach, Va ,
Mr and Mrs Ernest Hellman
and George of P1llsburgh, Pa ,
Mr and Mrs Weber Wood of
Snowvtlle and Rtchard
Hellman of Hemlock Grove
Those attendong Boble Camp
at Ewmgwn the past week
were David and Geneva Kmg,
Karla Beal and Demse Hen·
drtcks Also here from
Kankakee, Ill , w cowtsel at
the camp was Judy Kmg Mrs
Delores King was one of the
cooks
Recent VISitors of Mr and

v.w.

1967

II

COLUMBUS (UPI) -Frank
W. King, chairman of Oluo's
15J.member delegation In the
Democratlc National Conventlon, said Thursday the group
will assemble here this
weekend w choooe Jour more
persons w help select a vtce
presidential nominee.
HARRELSON DISABLED
In announcing the meeting,
NEW YORK (UPI)-ShortKing also berated Democratic
stop Bud Harrelson, plagued by
State Chalnnan WiUiam A. Laan Injured back and batting a
velle
sickly .192, was placed on the
The delegation Is to meet at
1$-day disabled list by the New
the NeU House at 4 p.m. SatYork Mets Thursday
Q-On what mountain urday wfill four vacancies In
The Mets called up shortstop was Solomon's Temple built' Ohio's membershtp on the
Lute Barnes ( .254) from
A-Mount Moriah The Democratic National Com·
Tidewater of the International Mohammedan Mosque of mittee. The committee conOmar Is there now
venes Aug 8 to name a sueLeague.
ceasor to Sen. Thomas
Eagleton.
Klng accused Lavelle of
"brazen" meddling In the affalrs of the delegation aDd •
charged that Lavelle IUegally
certified three delegates as
members of the party's nationat committee
Gets Elliot Memben
King, president of the Ohio
AFLCI0,18Id "it would be all
right with me If he (Lavelle)
resigned," but later King saki
he wasn't calling for Lavelle's
ALL REMAINING SUMMER STOCK
l'ellignation.
Under new rules adopted oq
MARKED DOWN 40 and 50%
the final night of the Demoera tic conventloo last month,
Oblo Is to have eight naliooal
Tops, Slacks, Shorts, Bermudas
committee members with a to.
tal of seven voletl.
Golf Skirts
Lavelle and Ealher May! of
D~Qrton, the party's vice chalrwcman, have
vote each
Mis$es Sizes 5 through 18

.

70 MERCURY MONTEGO MX .......11895

H.T. Cpe., V-8, auto. ....... 1l695

2 Dr.

auto , vmyl top

1

Bel. 4 Dr., V-8, auto., air........ 11495

65 Mercury

August is Clean-Up
Month
at
Smith
Nelson. We want to
move what 72 models
we have left. Giving
Big Trade Ins on Used
Cars. So come in &amp;
Trade with Us.

SPECIAL - SPECIAL USED CARS
1
70 REBEL 4 DR. WAGON ...........11495

USED CARS

$1995

Galax1e SOO hardtop coupe, V 8 eng1ne automat1c tran s
mission, power steenng &amp; brakes wh1te f1n1sh, black
vmyl top VInyl interior White wall t l res, like new radiO

customer satisfaction We
are fully Insured for your

ca ncelled'
Lost
your
operator's li cense? Call 992

6 30 ttc
- ---,, - - - -BACKHOE AND DOZER work

1970 FORD

PHONE 992·2550

AUTOMOBILE onsurance been

Co .

Mtddleport Ohoo

3 29

For Free

LG)G)K

$2195

Polara, fa ctorv a1r condlt1onmg , V 8 engine, automatiC
transmission , power steermg, power brakes, good wh1te
side walls. many more extras White f in1sh black vinyl
roof Pnced to move 1

remodeling,
building ,
suspended ceilings, Interior
and e&lt;lerlor painting,
complete lin&amp; of Masonry
work All work guaranteed to

SEWING MACHINES Repair

CONCRETE

tf70 DODGE

•ROOFING
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
eCARPENTRY
eSPOUTING
•PAINTING

and commercial roofing ,

Pomerov

delivered rtght to y.our
pro1ect Fast and easy Free

Buy 2 Pa1rs and

QUALITY

J Bedroqm home, wtlh
brick front, I car
garage,
carpeting .
Pnced at ••
ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vonyl ilnd steel siding ,
fiberglas. brick and stone:
complete line of reslile~t1ao

From the largest
Bulldozer RacUaJor . to the
Smallest Heater Core
Nathan B1ggs
Radiator Spec1ahst

SEPTIC tanks cleaned Moiler

Price Smash!

but cleans and looks l•ke new
l of'' ' Bes 1des our usual
se lection of clean, used fur
Woll sell for $3125 cash or
n 1ture.
guaranteed
ap
terms available Phone 992
5641
pl1ances 1ust arn ved are
several elegant dm •ng r oom
8 4 61c
ou tfi ts bedroom su 1tes new _ _ _ __ _ _ __:_
&lt;)Old nylon ca rpets, oak

East of Pomeroy, phone 992
Rt t7room,
phonetool
667 shed
3181 , on old
fruo
6329
8 2 3tc
719 tfc - - -- - -- - -------4 ELECTROMDDE Wall
PASTURE, phone 992 6329
Heaters, 8 It long, 240 volts,
8 2 61p
1650 watts , 4 gas water
--------heaters 30 gallon. 3 floor

at the Meogs Inn See John

Complete front end serv1ce,
tune up and brake serv1ce
Wheels
balanced
elec
troniCally
All
work
guaranteed
RPr~'llnno:~~hiP
rates Phone 742 3232 or
992 3213
I 't TT&lt;

1 21 tic

5641

------~

prefer couple to live 1n apply

Pomeroy Hom·t ·&amp; Auto
Open&amp; Tot 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Maon, Pom.troy, ~

Excavatmg, Phone 992 5367,
D1 ck Karr, Jr

budget terms Call 992 7085
THERE woll be no more
846tc
Shootong Matches at Racone - - - -- - - - -

with no down payment Valley POODLE puppoes, Solver Toy
Estates Mobile Homes, Rt so
Parkv1ew Kennels, Phone 992
East - dust east of Heck's
5443
Athens, hlo Phone 593 8762
8 15 He
8 4 2tc
-----TOMATOES,
potatoes,
c ucumbers
and
beans,
Wanted To Buy
Clarence Proffit, Portland,
OLD Furniture, oak tables,
Ohio, phone 843 2254
organs d1shes, clocks brass
7 19 tic
beds or complete households
Write M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio Call 992 6271 KENNEBEC potatoes, Mon
nesota sewing mach1ne
.b 28 tic
Maytag washer, phone 949
3718 every weekday e)(cept
For Rent
Fnday mornmg
3 AND • ROoM furnished an'd _ _ _ _ _ _ _8_23tp
unfurnished
apartments I TRAILER, 12 x SO woth a noce
Phone 992·5434
front porch, 1 acre ground ,
4 12 tic
concrete block bulldong 24 K32
2 BEDROOM mobole home woth
woth garage utototy room and

Help Wanted
WANTED
MANAGER ,
LaSalle Hotel In Moddleport.

$5.55

On Most Amerocon C;!!:l
-GUARANTEEo-;
Phone 992-2b94

DOZE I&lt; and back hoe work,
8 I 6tp
ponds and septoc tanks B &amp; K

L1m eston e, EKcels1or
8 4 6tc
Salt Works, E Main St ,
Pomeroy
Phone
992
3891
many collector 1tems m th1s
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delu&lt;e
4 12 tic
sale with .terns of 1nterest to
model Complete woth all
all many 1tems not li sted : - - - - -cleaning attachments and
Plan to attend both days DRIVE A LITTLE - save a usospaperbags Sloghtlyused
lunch served by New Haven
F~re

Wh• ~ignment'

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement , landscapmg We have 2 · s1ze
dozers. 2 s11e loaders Work
done by hour or contract .•
Free Esltmates We also·"!
haul f1ll d1rt , top sml Dump
trucks and low boy for h1re
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,

or 949 3858

Mutt and Jeff Cartoon dutch FRIGIDAIRE washer and
dryer Phone 992 3592
8 2 3tc

oven oak round table, caned
bcittom ro cker, dated 1ar 1885
and other bottles k1tchen

EXPERT

EARTH MOVING

reg1stered 1 Cornedale, 3
spnng ram s phone 949 4828

stand

{glass ball feetl. several old

WMP0/1390
~,~

8 I 6tp

Sale or Traae
8 4 3tc
-ROOMS
bath,
noce
lol
on
Rt
4
32 V8 model B eng one, 1949
124 close to deep mme take 1970 HONDA 350 phone 992
Ford Pock Up Truck 1969
5951
late
model car or housetra1ler
Dune Buggy ) NOTE Cars
m trade also tra1ler space for _ _ __;__ _ __ a_ Htp
se ll 2 30 p m Saturday
ren t M &amp; G Food Market, 3
August 5th Claw foot round
m• Soulh Moddleport Rt I 1968 BANNER Travel Traoler.
table wall telephone, walnut
19 1~ ft
comp l e tely se lf
8 3 3tp
gate leg table oak dressers
con la med sleep'i 6 , Sl 800 or
oak bed chma cupboard (oval
best otter phone 142 3128
g lass) spool bed, wash stand
8 4 4tc
For Sale
old lamps (several ) arrow
-heads ( 12) organ and stool
72 KAWASAKI 175 cc eKcellent WALNUT Stereo com bmat1on
p1e safe walnut dresser ,
cond lf1 on J1m Anderson
4 speaker sound system, 4
brass beds, roll top desk, oak
phone 992 3010
speed dual volume control

Hket,.;fi

-~·· ~

phone 992 5082

1951 FARMALL A tra ctor

MIDDLEPORT

Augusl 4th 10 30 a m to 4 30

We talk to JOU

...

good cond1f1on,

women young men, b.,ys
and girls Hurry to

Furn iture we have rust
rece1ved a lot of used fur

(,,

cc Enduro

All kmds, all s•zes for men,

Fr1day

- - - - ---,-

n-c-:

1971 YAMAHA motorcyc le, 175

Barbara Lambert 44&lt;1 3411
7 26 30tc

air conditioning , 10 m 1les

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

pay

------

Free trammg
Good com
m1sslon. No cash 1nvestment
No del1very No co/lectmg S
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus Call
Margaret Fortune 9.49 5414 or

U S Route 33 New Haven

Ford Tourmg Car (nearly
1930
ong1nal condlt•on)
Model A (needs repa1rl w1th

5tc

balance of $96 41 or pay $7 21
a month call 992 5331
8 1 6tc

TOYS 1 Toys' Toys' Sell
Playhouse toys, Aug to Dec

5th 10 30 a m IT Model 1923

8• BRl'CE BIOSSAT

~

1 31

handrubbed conso le,

DRIVER-SALES

followmg personal property of
the late Dr B F Bryant wilt
be so ld at Res1dence located
V•rg1n1a

3949

----8 TRACK stereo 1n lovely

Auclton
AUCTION - Two Days The

West

TWO Hereford bulls Phone 142

OF

•

Pomeroy Phone 992 3525
laundry Phone 992 5391 or
·- - - · -- after 7 p m or phone "2·
992 3507
5232
8 3 3tc SINGER Sewing Machone, will
sell tor small balance of $31 20
or pay 51 a month , call 992
5331
WHEEL alignment
8 I 6tc O'bELL
located at Crossroads Rt 124
DELIVERY

79Hc

Yippies, etc., Set
Program for GOP

7 28 12tc

Help Wanted

-------

BRUCE BIOSSAT

f

is 'the place
l'o
.

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

2~1S

Business Services

Close Oul on 1972

ca mpers 1n stock Camp . . - - - - - -- - -Conlep Starcraft Sales Rt 62,

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEAD1.1NES

1

11- The Dilly Semtnet,Mlddleport.PcmtrOy, 0., Aug. 4,19'12

10-The DaUy Sentinel,Middleport..Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 4,1972

1

I

Mrs John Dean were Mr. and
Mrs Paul Paynter of Carpenter, Mr and Mrs Hobart
Smalley of Chesler, Mr and
Mrs Kenneth Markms of
Racme, Mr and Mrs Jwtior
Smalley, Judy, SuSie, Dale,
Hoboe and Kathy of W1erton,
W Va , Mr. and Mrs Robert
R1ed of Pataskala, Mrs Anna
Mae Terrell and Juamta of
Pomeroy and Amta Watkins of
Chester
On Sunday afternoon Mr and
Mrs Roed, Mr and Mrs
Markons , Mr. and Mrs.
Smalley and Mr. and Mrs.
Dean
vistted Veterans
Memorial Hosp1lal where thetr
mece, Susle Riffle, IS a patient
suffermg ' from mjuroes
received \'(hen she was m an
auto accident on her way home
from her job at Letart. She 1S
u:nprovmg slowly from sertous
on1ury
Mlss Mary Lou King was
home for lhe weekend from Ml
Vernon Nazarene College lo
viSot her parents
Mr Alvm S!!Uth left Monday
for Paris Island where he wlll
be m trammg as a Marine.
Kenny Wood has been
spendmg a short leave at home
wlth hls parents, Mr and Mrs
Norman Wood He Is enroute
from Texas to another aor force
base
Mr. and Mrs Rowland Dais
VISited recently wtth Mr. and
Mrs Kenneth Markms at
Racme.
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Chase of
Columbus are spending some
time at their farm here.

-

TIHJCKS

992 2174
8utck
MAIN

Ponttac

ST.,

POMEROY, OHIO

8

Contradiction in
Hanoi- is Charged
PARIS (UPI)-U S. peace
negotiator W!lliam J Porter
charged Thursday that a photo
appearmg man Hanoi newspaper contradicts the Commun!St
"propaganda !me" complaining of American bombing
of flood dikes
At last week's sess1on of the
V1etnam peace conference,
Hano1 negotiator Xuan Thuy
lliSisted no gWIS were w be
found on the North Vlelnam's
dikes
Thursday, Porter stood up w
say that the Hano1 newspaper,
Hanoi Mot, carried a photo.
graph of an antlatrcraft gun
mounted on or near a dike.
"ThlS photograph appears to
contradict your propaganda
line," he declared
The charge came during a
session of mutual accusations
of ufabr1calton" and 11lies"
that saw the Conu:nunlsls ooce
agatn charge the Umted Stales
with deliberately bombing the
North VIetnamese flood dikea.
Observers found In statements by Porter a hint that the
Umted States might again
boycott the Ialka If the current
Impasse contl!ates.
US delegation spokesman

Dav1d Lambertson wid reporters the Corrununlst slde used
so much "invective and propa.
ganda" that Porter told them,
"Your presentations next week
must he more In keeping with
the minimum standing of
diplomatic Interchange."
But Lambertson denied Por·
fer's words meant a threat of
another suspension. The
United Slates halted the talks
for 10 weeks from May wmidJuly
The four delegatims agreed
to meet again next Thursday,
but Lambertson pointed out ll't
Uruted Slates had not consented to attend the talks on an
aulnmatlc basis.
Allhough there no mention of
the Tuesday meeting between
Presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due
Tho, the North Vletnameae
delegatloo spokesman, Nguyen
Than Le said, ''The Nixon
administration speaks ol peace
and negotiation, bit an W111'ecedented mtenslflcatlon of the
war Is taking place "

Q- What 13 a nebula?
A-A cloud of dust and
gas In outer space.

SOFT DRIIIII$. BREAD, MILK; PICRIC sUrPw, ETt.

THIS
WEEK'S SPECIAL
NEW HOME GROWN

PDTATOES :A~B. $1.69
7-33 MARKET

·------------~---------

OPEN 8 AM 'TIL 9 PM- 7 DAYS A WEEK

992-5880

Worthy Rogerund Mlrcl• Capehart
Cornw5R7&amp;33
•

l

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aug. 4,1972
·
went up at a slower ll"ce in
July, increasing 0.2 per cent •
compared with advances of o.3
abdve a year ago.
per cent in the previous two
A fellow has to be careful dumpmuearwasaccldenllllly avoid hitting ~!~!' other vehicle, Hoffman, 39, Ath:, sldt
The 2.2 per cent increase in months. Industrial commodity
about which levers are pulled · activated. With the gravel Yollllg went off the.rfSbt of the swiped ca~ 40 ~~ Y.
. farm product and food prices prices, which most economists
or buttons pressed in tbe cab of JllllOIIdin(l and the subsequent road, hls truck turning o~ on George L.
• • ~
was the . largest of three consider a better measure of
1118 d.u
. mp truck.
sudden ;hlftlng of weight · Its side. There were no Injuries W. Va. Hoffman wasthbon d
·~·' or arrests ·
and Rolllms sou
un
consecutive sharp monthly in- inflation than the more volatile
Of that, Dooald E. Wa ....... , Watldna lost control. The truck
rted b bound
h the two coffided at the
creasesfollowingtwomonthsof farm prices, now stand at 3.1
%1, l\lount Perry, Ohio, Ia went off
road to the right
Jn other mishaps rW~ •-· Y w e~ f hW There were no
decline. This index now has per cent above a year earlier.
and turned onto Its side.
the patrol, Delbert · ,_~n, cres 0 a
· i't
· and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio Secretary of State Ted W. Brown certain today.
gone up more than 1 per cent in
In non-food commodities,
Thursday
avout
4:05
p.m.
Although
the
vehicle
was
35,
l\llnersvllle,
entered
a
injuries
or
c
allons
was
ruled today Gus Hall, secretary of the American Communist
six of the past eight months, price increases were registered
Party, can be put on the Ohio ballot as an independent candidate Watkins was tooling along demollsbed WatklnB was not curve left of center on Eagle moderate damage
and has risen at an annual rate · for gasoline, clothing,footwear,
eastbound on SR 124 in Meigs injured. ~ was no citation Ridge Road in Meigs County at reported for both ~utos.
for president.
of 13.1 per cent over the past furniture, jewelry, lumber,
The lone Galha County
Hall had the necessary S,OOO petitions to certify his can- County west of Salem Center in la5ued by the Gallla-l\lelgs 8:20a.m. and struck theslde of
three months. .
electricity, concrete products,
didacy even if challenged petitions were removed, Brown said. his large dump truck loaded ~tate Patrol which in- an auto being driven bY Julia mishap took pia~ at ~~~
Industrial commodity prices hides and skins, natural gas,
A. Rhodes, 19, Long Bottom. morning on COunty
Brown earlier this week held a hearing here to go over the with gravel. Somehow, the vestlgated.
tires, and machinery and
•
1 Another truck a semi-trailer There was moderate damage
when Phillip C. Hollenbach, 17,
petitions of Hall and his running mate Jarvis Tyner.
- - - - - - - - - rtg, was demolished at 10:45 to both vehicles. No liljuries Bidwell,losl control on a sharp
. .- - - - - - - - - . equipment.
The BLS said lumber and
i.m also on Route 124 in Meigs were reported and Larson waa curve and bit a wall off the
" If I disquailfied every signatures.
Q-Ca-ro
sponges
stay
alive
Cou~ty. when Darrell w. cited for being left of center. rlgh.t side of the road. There
MASON DRIVE-IN wood products led the industrial petition
paper for which
The investigators, at the
commodity
price
increase
with
out
of
water?
YOIIIIi
A foW'Ih accident in Meigs were no injuries or citations
.'o \1 '
33 Rutliand met an
evidence had been presented of hearing, said the petitioners
A-;-No. They must have a
kno' 'ehicl
'
County occurred on Route 143 and Hollenbach's vehicle
an advance of 1.3 per cent.
'
HII r-..1 11' •' I '
e on a narrow
·
h
Patrl 1
d
1 damage
contmuous stream of clean un wn v
· The bureau said there was irregularities in circulation for told many of the signers that aerated
water passing , cumiwestofSalemCenter. To at 11:50 a .m. wen
c a suffere severa
·
signatures,
1,111
signatures
they
were
signing
petitions
to
TONIGHT
little change in the employment
through
their
tissues.
AUGUST4
and unemployment situation would be involved," he said. end the war in Vietnam.
Double Feature Program
during July. The 5.5 per cent " This amount deducted from
" THE REIVERS"
jobless rate for June and July 6,337 signatures which had
(Technicolor)
was the lowest since October of been validated by the boards of
Steve McQueen
elections
would
leave
1970.
Sharon Farrell
remaining
5,226
valid
The BLS said total employ(Continued from page I)
- Plusment remained unchanged at s ignatures, an amou~;~t suf- rorm President Nixon signed May 16 in the Kremlin.
" A MAN
CALLED HORSE "
81.7 million after seasonal ficient to qualify your petition
After a day of unexcited debate, the treaty which forever
( Technicolor)
adjustment and the number of of candidacy.
restricts
the Soviet Union · and the United States in building
Richard Harr is
"You are, therefore, advised
jobless persons held steady at
Dame Judith Anderson
that I have determined that national antiballistic missile systems won Senate ratification
4.
7
million
after
seasonal
iGP)
although misrepresentations Thursday by an 88-2 vote. Opposition came only from Sen. James
adjustment.
and non-compliance with B. Allen, D-Ata., who said the treaty weakened America's
Actually
in
June,
the
number
defenses, and from Sen. James L. Buckley, R-N.Y., who said it
SATURDAY, AUGUSTS
of unemployed persons in- mandatory statues relating to was inunoral for eitber country to give up ''the right to protect
DOUBLE FEATURE
creased by I million because of circulators' allidavits have our civilian populations from nuclear &lt;!evastaUon" from the
SUMMERTREE
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SPECIAL -AUGUST
Michael Doug la s
the influx of students into the been proved, I nevertheless other nation - or from China.
Jack Warden
labor market following the must conclude that your
Brenda Vaccaro
FURNITURE SALE NOW ON THE 3RD FLOOR. SPECIAL
close of school. But since this petitions cOntain in excess of
BIG SUR, CALIF. - FIREFIGHTERS HELPED by a U2
Barbara Bel Geddes
5,000
signatures
which
are
not
was less than normal, the
spy plane and World War II bombers worked today to close a
COLOR
unemployment rate after sea- subject to complaint and that, wide gap and stop spread of a fire which has scorched ahn011t
PRICES ON NATIONALLY KNOWN MAKES OF QUALITY
ALSO
therefore,
your
candidacy
is
sonal adjustment came down.
"A GUNFIGHT"
4,000 acres of spectacular Big Sur.
K i r k Douglas
In actual figures for July, the valid .''
Five fire fighters .were Injured Thursday . One suffered conFURNITURE FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME Hail's petitioners had been
Johnny Cash
number of unemployed persons
cussion and other injuries when he fell35feet down a cllff. AU. S.
accused of "fraud and
COLOR
declined by 250,000.
Forest Service spokesman said the blaze could be under control
misrepresentation" by in· by Saturday. It has swept through ahnost 4,000 acres of tbe Big
AND USE OUR SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE TO
vesligators for the secretary of Sur coastal mountain forest since Tuesday. Officials suspect a
SUNDAY, MONDAY
AND TUESDAY
state's oflice in obtaining the fire left untended by a camper in an out-of-bounds area started
BUDGET YOUR PAYMENTS.
AUGUST 6-7-8
the blaze.
DOUBLE FEATURE

Commies' Hall Truck Dump ·Gear In Action Early

Food wst

On Ohio Ballot

•

Babies Galore

191 in Contest

u.e

GALLIPOLIS - The largest Pretty
. Baby Contest_in Gailia County Junior Fair
AT LEFT, winDers iD the 1972
Pretty Baby Conleit of the ·Gallla
County JuoJor Fair are pictured with
their motbers. They are (left' to rlgbt),
, Brett Finley, Dwayne Willison,
Michelle Easton, Kimberly Theiss,
Coby Davis, Troy Don Miller, Chad
Leach, Amy Jo Brumfield, Vicki Scott
and Brandy Petrie.

I I

News

• • • in Briefs

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Open Friday and Saturday Nights
Until 9 in the Evening

History took place Friday afternoon at tbe
Main Stage of the Fairgrounds with 111
babies entered. Mrs. Thomas Coleman and
Mrs. Bud McGhee were the department
heads ; judges, of the Pt. Pleasant
Women's Club were Mrs. Bill Walll8!ey,
Mrs. Richard Sayre and Mrs. John Thabet.
Third place winners received white
ribbons, second place winners red rlbbona
and first place winners blue ribbona and
trophies.
The top three winners in each eategory
were (first place named first) , Girls ~
(Continued on page 2)

+

tmts

M011Uy sunny Sunday, highs
in the mid 80s. Zero chance of
rain. Chance of showers
Monday.

Your Invited Gu.est
Reaching More
Than 11,()()()

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

30 PAGES

THREE SECTIONS

Families

cv_o_L_v_u_.;.;.N0.;......,2_7;____...,...._:__ _ _. -P-om_er-oy:...;:M_id_dl.....
epo_rt_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
s_uN_D_AY..;,._A_UG_u_sT....:.6,_1.;.97_;:2________r._al...:.lip_oiis_-P_o_int_P.....lea.::..:san.::..:
· .:_t-......,.-------~1~ CUlTS

MEIGS THEATRE

IONIGHTTHR\J TUESDAY
AUGUST 4·8

PROGRAM
William Smith
Kathy Baumann

WALT DISNEY 'S
BEDNOBS &amp; BROOM

Tony Young
Michael Haynes

STICKS
(Technicolor)

"HOT LEATHER"
COLOR
- PLUsEdgar Allen Poe's
"MURDERS IN THE
RUE MORGUE "

Farmers' Share

Of Food Dollar

Angela Lansbury

David Toml inson
Disney Cartoon,

Is Unchanged

Symphony Hour

Admission ' Adulls, $1. 50 ;
Children, 7Sc

Jason Robard s
Christine Kaufmann

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

DOUBLE HEADER
A S aving~ nt th at pays high in terest rates.
A Checking Accou nt thai gives you
an accurate record of your finance s.
. Two great ways to get more for your money.

WASHINGTON ( UP!) Rising farm prices held the
farmer 's share of the consumer lood dollar in the second
quarU,r of 1972 at 40 cents,
un chan ged from the first
quarU,r and 2 cents above a
year earlier, the Agriculture
Department reported today.
Department economists said
in a report that second-quarter
returns to farmers for food in a
typical market basket were up
II.! per cent from a year
earlier, but retail food prices
went up bnly 3.7 per cent. Part
of the farm'price increase was
absorbed before reaching
consumers because processors
and middlemen trimmed their
margins, the report explained.
Looking farther back
produced a different picture,
however.
The report said the farm
value of typical market basket
foods in the second quarter was
up only 8per cent !rom 20 years
earlier while retail prices were
32 per cent above 20 years ago.

Senior
(Continued fr om page

po.......,pomeror
rutland

national
bank

tiM bonkol
tiM century
nt.t112

I)

Stiversvilie, Bashan, Racine,
Letart, Chester, Tuppers
Plains, Alfred , Langsville,
Salem Center, Laurel Cliff,
Pagevilie, Minersville, Five
Point s,
Burlingham ,
Harrisonville , and Syracuse .
A U,nt will be provided for
the senior citizens on the fairgrounds and transportation
will be on the grounds.
Anyon e with crafts or
handiwork they would like to
display, or persons who would
like to provide entertainment,
are invited to notily Mrs.
Thomas.

A GOOD TIME, TOO, TO BUY BACK TO SCHOOL

COLUMBUS - OHIO'S U MilLION-A-YEAR turkey industry will soon be promoted by creation of a "turkey marketing
program," state Agriculture Department Director Gene R.
Abercrombie announced today.
Abercrombie said major turkey producers, in referendum
balloting conducted by his office, voted overwhelmingly to set up
the marketing program. It is to be financed by a :kents per
hundredweight checkoff paid by producers of over 1,000 birds a
year. Abercrombie said 96.9 pet. of the producers voted, with 88
pet. favoring the program. A nine-man "Ohio Turkey Operstlng
Committee" is to be estabiisbed and Aberci'OOlble Ia now considering nominations of producers for appointment.

~oonnnail

WASHINGTON (UPI) - hours Thursday and refused all
Three American space heroes but perfunctory comment on
are under government in- the interrogation.
vestigation for carrying
unauthorized stamped postal
covers Ill the moon, ·some of
which later were sold in
Europe for $1,500 each.
Both Congress and the Department of Justice are look·
ing into the Incident arising
out or the Apollo IS moon mission in the summer or 1971.
Astronauts David Scott,
Alfred Worden and James
Irwin have admitted taking the
unauthorized covers to the
moon after the covers were
canceled at the Cape Kennedy
post office prior to departure of
the mission. The covers were
canceled again at the Naval
Post Office aboard the U.S.S.
Okinawa after the astronauts
returned to earth.
The astronauts originally
were to receive a total of
$21,000 for 100 of the covers but
later decided not to take the
money.
Both the Justice Department
investigation and one being
conducted by the Senate Space
Committee were under light
secrecy today. The committee
questioned the astronauts and
top officials of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration for more than five

AUGUST
SPECIAL
MORSE

Home Stereo

COMPLETE

Live Entertainment

SATORDAY NIGHT

ONLY

$14595

REGULAR 1159.95

Quintet
With

From

Vocalist

. Pt Pleasant

SELECTIONS- AND VERY GOOD VALUES.
MANY ITEMS CLEARANCE SALE PRICED DURING
THIS MONTH -ITE MS THAT YOU CAN USE RIGHT NOW
AND FOR BACK TO SCHOOL AND FALL WEAR.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ALSO

LOWERY
QRGANS
Special On Gultaro

ThisWolk

BILL &amp; LEE'S

AT

MUSIC
CENTER
992-3680
116 E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

BOB EVANS SAUSAGE SHOP (lllid Donald Martin of the Georges Creek
Top banda 4-H Club a record $8 a pound for his 1972 Gran!l. Champiori Market Hog at
the Gallia County Junior Fair Friday .' Shown will),\he' pijzed animal, left to right,
are Donald Martin, Bob Evans, Glendon Effiott, Kala gue Waugh, Miss Gallla
CouRntyW;Millilas Maralee Ostermeier, Rt. l,M~d~d, Ohio, 19J~. Obl~.f?"il Queen apd
oger_
ams.
·

Prize Hog $6/b.

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Bank of
Miss Saunders is a member of the
Gallipolis paid a record $1.65 a pound for Gallipolis FFA. Miss Jenkins is a member
Usa Saunders' 1972 (;rand Champion of the Ohio River Ranchers.
Steer during Friday's 21st annual steer
Three Individuals shared the aucsale at the Gallia CoUJlty Junior Fair .
tioneer 's duties Friday, due to the length of
Previous high mark was SUO a DOUnd. the three sales. They were: John McNeill ,
paid by Concerted Investments, Carter &amp; Lee Johnson, and Tommy Joe Stewart.
Evans Contractors and the Wiseman
Working the ring were Dick Buchy,
Agency for Dean Bush's animal in 1970.
Casey
McKenzie, Harley Crouse, Sr.,
AUctioneer John McNeill said unofficially, Ohio Valley Bank paid $2,145 for Tommy J. Stewart and Lee Johnson.
Charles Sha~er kept tally of the sale.
Miss Saunders' top steer.
,
City
and county vo-ag lnBtructors assisted
Eighty-eight animals were sold during
with
the animals at the gates, along with
Friday's sale. Approximately 900 persons
Mrs. Dick Buchy, 4-H agent.
were on hand lor the big event. ·
Listed in sale order are the exhibitor,
First National Bank of Gallipolis,
his
or
her club, the buyer and price paid
which made a strong bid for the top
animal, purchased Dianna Jenkins ' per huridred weight for the top 25 animals :
Reserve Champion Steer for $1.28 a pound.
(Continued on page 2)

GALLIPOIJS - Bob Evans' Sausage
Shop, for the third consecutive year, paid a
record $6 a pound for Donald Martin's

Deadlines Soon
POMEROY - The deadline lor
entries in the seoJor division of the
Meigs County Fair lB this week.
The beef and dairy catUe, sheep
and swiDe deadline lB 4 p.m. on Wednesday ..All other de(lllrtments, except
the horse show, are 4 p.m. on Thursday.
The secretary, Mrs. Marvin King,
will be at the lair board office on the
Rock Springs fairgrounds from 10 a.m.
Monday through Thursday to accept
·
entries.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Grand Champion Market Hog during
Friday's 12th annual market hog sale at
the Gallla County Junior Fair.
In 1970, the Sausage Shop purchased
thetophog lor $2.02a pound. Last year, the
firm paid $2.50 a pound for the prized
animal.
This year's price shattered both
previous marks by a wide margin.
Larry's Wayside Furniture paid $1.25
a pound for Ricky Martin's Reserve
Champion Hog.
·
Sixty-three animals were sold during
the annual event.
Both Martin boys are members of the
Georges Creek Top Hand! 4-H Club.
Listed in sale order are the exhibitor,
his or her club, the buyer and price paid
per hundred weight for tbe top 50 animals:
(Continued on page 2)

They May Ride

5 pc. Dinette.......................$4400
7 pc. Dinette....................... s7800
9 pc. Dinette ...................... $ggoo
9x12 Linoleum Rugs........... $488
22" Metal Utility Cabinet ..$1898

To School Now

Sofa Beds .............................s5soo
Recliners ...~:~7.1.......................~4800
Table Lampl ......................... $399
Ch,m ....... ~..~~~.":.~~...;..:.......;.... $331s
2 pc.Uving Room Suites sugoo
3 pc. Bedroom Suites......sugoo dtrlFor theotherfines!cleaners
in llorir care Ihis Hoover can' I be beat. Gets
nn't because 'rl it's excluslw triple;
5
action clunirc.
Baby Beds :.:~~~ P~e1 ........... ..s3goo TIO SPEED IOTOR eives 505 1ore suction for atlachTIIIOI~AIAY IM holds more dirt... . ·
Ladder Back Chairs.~~!:~:~~~.~. sg!ll 11errls.l.Aft1lE
needs clarcirc less allen.. 4·POSITIOII RUG ADJUSTIENT
· ••• tl!door1Wioorlloor.cwefircs lo·d~ sill&amp; nts; ·
. I Refngerators
. m cu.......
n.,s197
OIITER'&gt;JACKET never a:dusty odbl. Wipeuietrn
Ad
. m1ra
. 00 VINYl
witlu dtll!fl clolh. .
·
· · ·.
. . (9")......'6000
M'iJdel
_Portable T•eIevts1ons.......
o
~pie or[Walnut
$1088
Bookcase .Sliding
Glass Door........
;]
- : IFull Size)
$5000 .HOOVER BAGS ·3 pkgs. ~2.00.
' Set········· 0
0

OHIO VALLEY BANK of GaUipolls paid Lisa Saunders of the Gallipolis FFA a
record $1.65 a pound for her 1972 Grand Champion Steer at the Gallta County
Junior Fair Friday . Pictured with the top animal are, left to right, C. Leon
Saunders, Morris Haskins, Ruth Wood, Miss Gallla County Beef Princess; Kala
,_ W!!l!8l'o ... Ga~ 0ount1 and 1972Junlor fair queen and Llaa Saunders.

Record $1.65 Paid

I

10 TIL 2

Gary Stewart

.CHILDREN. YOU'LL FIND YOUR CORRECT SIZES- BIG

BAKER FURNITURE

Electro Phonic

COMB ON IN. ..

Probed

CLOTHES FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS - LADIES AND

Gi:AN.TnusBII:,OR ... Ia Ita il1!nl- frlm space,
lllldvertently \Aitlched down on IIIIa friendly earth1 Sam
Nichols, Ill, Pt. Pleasant, aimed his camera for 30 seconds at
II'-I Friday night tow!lfd the Dine Amusement Co.'sSky Dive
.ad got thla result. Some of tbe fair's thousands of visiting
Jllllll8er fry perhaps were willing to concede the Sky Dive
-a macblne out af ipllce. Said one: "You couldn't get me
.,. tblt

am. rw uvtblall"

MIDDLEPORT - Parents wbo have
not been able to send their children to
ldndergarten because of transportation
problems will have these problems solved
this fall in the Meigs Local School Dlatrict.
SUpt. George Hargraves said Friday
that for the frrst time, transportation will
be provided to and from kindergarten by
the district for chlldren living two miles or
more from the school where classes are
being beld.
The names of additional chlldren who
will now be able to attend kindergarten they must be five by Sept. 30 - are needed
so that scheduling of bus routes can be
worked out should
, be given to Hargraves
via phone, 992-2153, at once.
So far, only 101 children in the district
have been registered for kllldergarten.
This includes 32 at Middleport; 45 at
Pomeroy and 24 at Rutiand. Teachers are
Mary Carolyn Wiley at Pomeroy, Mary
Francis at Middleport and Judith Gannaway at Rutland.
REVUE IS TUF.'IDA Y
POMEROY - The annual Meigs
County Junior Fair style rewe wW be held
at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Eastern High
School with ''l'lme for Fashlotll" as the
theme .. l\larcia Carr is committee
chalnnan for the event which Is open to the
public. The 1972falr king and queen wW·be
cr~ foUowlng the style revue.

OSCAR'S RESTAtiRANT of GaWpolls pa~ a near-nccrd $5.90 a pound for
Jack Walker's 1972 Grand Champion Market Lamb at the Gallla County Junior
Fair Friday. Pictured with Walker, a member of the Centerville Electrons are
Kala Sue Waugh, Miss Gallla County, and Lawrence (Panzo) Bastian!.

'

Lamb ·Bid at ·$5.90
GALLIPOLIS - Oscar's Restaurant
paid a near-record $5.90 a pound for Jack
Walker's Graod Champion Market Lamb
during Friday's 14th annual lamb sale at
the Gallla County Junior Fair. '
Panzo Bastian!, who purchased the
fair's lop lamb for the second straight
year, missed the all-time mark of $8 a
pound he paid last year for Teresa Barcus'
animals by 10 cents.
Bob Evans' Sausage Shop paid Diane

Haffelt $2.05 a pound for her Reserve
Champion Market Lamb.
A record 65 animaho were sold during
Friday's sale.
Walker Is a member of the Centerville
Electrons. Miss Haffelt Ia a member of the
Thlvener Pioneers.
Usted m·sale order are the ahlhitll'
'
his or her club, the buyer and price paid
per hundred weight for the top 50 animals:
(Contlnuea on page ~)

.

12,000 Crowd into

Gallia Junior Fair
GALLIPOLIS - Morning, afternoon
and night activities of the 23rd annual
Gallla County Junior Fair Friday attracted approximately 12,000 persons to
push the 1972 fair attendance to 37,000
according to a Gallla County Fairboard
spokesman.
Approximately 1,500 persons were on
hand for Friday's three big Hvestock sales
and the· pretty baby contests.
Friday night's dairy sweepstakes
show, the Farm Bureau Talent contest, the
Gospelaires and the professional Four
Guys attraption drew approximately
10,500 persons.
Two special visitors at Friday's fair
Includes Miss Ruth Wood, Gallla County's
1972 Miss Beef Princess, and Miss Maralee

Ostermeier, Midland, Ohio, the 1972
Ohio Pork Queen. Both attended the anrrualllvestocll aales held Friday afternoon
in the Show Arena.
Rain early Friday, fourth straight day
in which rain fell during the 111'12 fair,
faUed to dampen the 8pirit ol flirgoera .
By mlckfternoon Friday, the weather
cleared up, and from all indlcatlotll, a
rf!Cl)l'd single-day Crowd waa expected to
attend day-long activities at the fair
Saturday.
Jn order to break 1970's all-time altendapce mark, however, Saturday's
turnout bad to ezcettd 21,000, llnla it Illpears the two-y- old recCI'd wW stand
for another year. The 11170 attendance
mark was 57,900.

Questionaires Going to 2,000

POMEROY - More lhan 2,000 area fall by a personal interview by the local
business and professional persons wW librarian, who will have attended
receive by mall a questionnaire from Ohio workab~ on community study and
Valley Area Libraries this week, ac- bullneaa boob.
cording to Jonathan Louden, Director of
Pomeroy and Middleport public llbrar\es.
Bll.linamen lnclicatlng 1 ~ fll'
Realizing that businessmen need "current-awareneu" neWJletten In their
extensive Information but are often not field wW receive this kind of Intwmatloa
aware of the library's resources, the aa available.
B4NJ( PilOPOsEll
tibrarlans have formulated ~ brief . Copiel of the questionnaire wW bl
. GALIJPOlJS - Flnt Natlon81 Bank questionnaire which attempts IQ pin down
at !be public librarl•
1111111
of Gallipolis has filed jilpen wltb the what sources they would U8e If available. avallablt
wbo did not Tecelve one Iii the mall. '1'111
Regiooal Admlnlltrator of National Banb
Results ·of the quesUonnalre wll1 be HlrrJrJ tblnU all relpDIIdn• for ,tbllr
· for an applieatloo lor the elllablllbment of used for planning by the local llbrarla.
valuablt . . .lance In IIIIa C""""'tltr
a bank at 1101 Main St., in VInton.
Selected responses wW be follow ed-ap IIIIa 1\udy.

rw

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