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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 7,1972

,

Harry Gibbs Died Saturday
HARTFORD , W. ' Va. Harry, W. Gibbs, 87, Hartford ,
di ed Saturday evening a t
Veteran s Memorial Hospital. A
retired coal miner , Mr. Gibbs
was born here on Feb. 20, 1883,
the son of the late Charles and
Essie Rogers Gibbs. He was
prece(jed in death by his wife ,
Beulah Embleton Gibbs, in
1963.
.
Mr. Gibbs was a member of
the Hartford United Methodist
Church.
Surviving a.re two sons, Lee ,

of Hartford, and Donald of Los
Angeles: a daughter, Mrs .
Ricb ard (Leota) Fry of
Chester, W. Va.; a ·brother,
Ralph Gibbs of New Haven,
and a sister, Mrs. Russell
McMillin of Mason .
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. William (Bud ) Hat·
field officiating. Burial will be
in Graham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after 3 p.m. today.

Elmer Davis, 82, Died on Sunday

,

Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
John 1Sue) Sellers of PQmeroy,

Eimer (Beeger) Davis, 82,
died at his Pomeroy Route 3
home Sunday. A retired coal
min er , Mr . Da vi ~ wa s a
member of Meigs Chapter,
Disabled American Veterans,
at Pomeroy. He was preceded
in death by his parents,
Thomas and Anna Betzing
Davis. three brothers. and a
sister.

severa l nieces , nephews and

cousins.
Funeral services will be at 1
p. m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Robert Card officiating. Burial
will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

LOCAL TEMPS
TWO GIVEN AID
Temperature in downtown
Two calls answered Sunday Pomeroy Monday at II a. m.
by the Middleport E·R squad was 80 degrees under clqudy
were at 10 :45 to the home of skies.
Mrs.
Garnet
Bachner ,
Harrisonville Road, who was
STEPSON DIES
ill. She was taken to Veterans
CHESTER - Mrs. B. A.
Memorial Hospital where she Dodson of Chester has learned
was admitted. The other came of the death of her stepson,
at 9:20p.m. for Mrs. Jack Hoy Harold Dodson, 714 Reed Ave .,
in Middleport who was ex- Springfield, Ohio, last Wedpe rien c ing difficulty nesday as the result of a heart
breathing. She was also taken atta ck. Mr. Dodson has been
to Veterans Memorial Hospital unable to work the past five
and admitted.
years due to a heart condition.

·

~

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT AND
TUESDAY
AUGUSH·B

WALT DISNEY'S
BEDNOBS &amp; BROOM

STICKS

(Technicolorl
Angela Lansbury
David Tomlinson

Disney Cartoon ;
Symphony Hour
Admission : Adults, Sl.50;
Children, 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

I

MASON DRIVE-IN
·.~,

(ll

., .N •.; ,

II lrHlil \1qldl 1

Tonight &amp; Tuesday
August7-8
DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
Wi lliam Smi1h
Kathy Baumann
Tony Young
Michael Haynes

A trumpet solo "Born F,ee "
was presented by Tim Taylor .
Several skits under direction of
Jean Alkire, who served as
master of ceremonies, were
presen:Cd by Anna Beegle,
portraying Tom Sawyer in a
skit called "Gee Whiz" ; Ruth
Ann Johnson and Bonnie
Theiss as Miss Highball and
Miss Mandy Suds; a powder
puff minstrel included Jean
Alkire, Firn Gaul , Janet
Roush, Unda Diddle and Sue
Ann Beegle all in costume as
Miss Hubb, Miss' Hash, Miss
Potluck, Miss Ladle and Miss
Taken.
Presenting gifts was Aunt
Vera Beegle to the youngest
relati ve attending threemonth-old Jaines Carpenter,
son of U. S. Army Capt. and
Mrs. Spencer (Punkie) Carpenter ; oldest relative, Charles
White Beegle ; . traveling the
greatest distance, Capt. and
Mrs. Carpenter, and having the
largest family present, to
Whitey Beegle (over 50).
. Door prizes went to Mark
Beegle, John Fisher, Dollie
Kleinschmidt and James
Carpenter.
During the business session
presided over by Janet Roush,
officers for 1974 elected were
Robert McKelvey, president ;
Robert E. Beggle, vice
president, and Unda Diddle,
secretary-treasurer .
At the square dan ce
Saturday night at the Beegle
reunion , Whitey Beegle, old
time caller, called four dances
and square danced himself.

"HOT LEATHER "
COLOR

- PLUs-

Edgar Al len Poe's

"MURDERS IN THE
RUE MORGUE "
Jason Robards
Christ ine Kaufmann

LIONS TO MEET
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club will hold a noon
lun cheon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn . Ail club members
arc requested to attend.

I

TUESDAY .MORNING
3 HOURS ONLY
9 AM 'TIL 12 NOON

•

DISOOUNT STYLES
OF MISS WONDERFUL

LADIES' PUMPS

NAVY BROWN
BLACK LEATHER
AND PATENT

ONLY

$388

heritage house
Your

MIDOI.£PORT, 0.

Parade

Mathews Jf.anaging.Braves
CINCINNATI
(UPI)Loman Harris was fired today
as manager of the Atlanta
Braves and Eddi~ Mathews, a
team coach and former
slugging third baseman, was
named to replace him.
Tile announcement was
made in Cincinnati by Bill
Bartholomay, president of the
Braves, and Eddie Robinson,
director of player personnel.
They said Mathews has been
.signed to a contract which
extends through next season.
Robinson, who had been carefully evalutating the team lor
the past two months, strongly
recommended that the change
be made, the Braves an·
nounced.
The Braves have lost seven
of their last eight games. They
have been hurt throughout the
season by weak pitching and

mediocre fielding and hal'e
never Leen able to rise above
.500.
The change carne as the
Braves were at Cincinnati,
where they were to play the
final game tonight of a fivegame series. The divisionleading Reds won the first
three games.
Robinson said, "I am pleased
that a man of the caliber of
Eddie ·Mathews, who is.
familiar with our·rnajor league
perS!)nnel, is available to take
over ieadership of the. club. I
feel we will be able to work
closely together to make the
Braves a pennant contender.'.'
Barthornay said, "I have
always been impressed with
Mathews as a great playl!l' and
I believe he is capable of
providing the type of direction
that the Braves need at this
time.

(Continued from Page 1)
pointment an important st~p in establishing a viable state-wide
drug prevention and educational program. Currently about $4
million is spent on drug programs.
COOPERSTOWN, N. Y.- FORMER PITCHING star Sandy
Koufax, at 36 the youngest inductee ever, Yogi Berra, Early
Wynn and five other baseball greats will be officially enshrined
today in baseball's Hall of Fame.
Also to be inducted with the three most recently retired"
players, wUJ be Lefty Gomez and Buck Lednard. Three others
will be honored posthumously: Ross Youngs, Josh Gibson and
former American League president Will Harridge.

Beegle , 89 years old, walks
with a cane, but enjoyed
festivities .
The program was closed with
the singing of "When You
Come to the End of a Perfect
Day." Benediction was given
by Vera Beegle.

Politics

McGovem
(Continued from Page I)
nature .
"McGovern's entitled to his
choice,'' Nebraska Democratic
Committeeman Tom Ketley
said. "I'd vote for Gladys
Giodflock if he wants her."
Wednesday night, McGovern
will leave for a three.Qay swing
through New England. Shriver
was expected to leave about
the same time on a campaign
tour, but his plans still were
being firmed up.

(Continued from Page I )
but the GAO said it had not
been able to check on the ef·
'
ficiency of the plans in time for
the report.
The
standards
set
A Gallipolis woman, Esta
requirements on roof support,
Flint,
127\'z Pine Street, was
ventilation, electrical equip·
charged
with the shooting of
ment, fire protection, use lind
Herbert
Harrington,
Vinton Rt.
storage of explosives and other
1, early Sunday morning at
procedures.
Pine St. home.
Flint's
Reuss, chairman of the
The Flint woman had her
conservation and natural
preliminary
hearing this
resources subcommittee which
morning
in
Municipal
Court. .
first handled the bill leading to
the law, said he agreed with the She pled not guilty to assault
GAO's conclusion on speedy with a deadly weapon and was
collection and asked Interior released on $1,000 bond to
Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton appear again Aug. 22 .
Harrington is in satisfactory
to reply to his panel by Aug . 18
on what steps he would take to condition at the Holzer Medical
Center with two gunshot
improve the siuation.
The GAl study included a wounds in the ' stomach. The
sample of the assessments wounds were from a .22 caliber
against the Pittston Coal Co ., revolver which had been fired
owner of the Buffalo Creek five times according to the
mine in West Virginia where a Gallia County sheriff 's
refuse dam gave way last department.
February, killing 118 persons
FENCE STRUCK
in the valley below.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Of 37 assessment cases
Dept.
investigated a minor
against the company, th e
accident
Saturday at 8:55p.m.
report said, l5 were reduced by
on Snowball Hill Road in Sutton
nearly $130,000.
·Township.
Marvin (Keith)
Failed To Comply
Wisecup,
20, Pomeroy,
"Then the GAO investigators
checked Pittston's and other traveling north, cut to the left
assessment
files
for to avoid hitting a tree limb in
documentation on how the the highway, lost control In
assessments were determined gravel and hit a fence. There
and amended," Reuss : said, was no damage to the car, no
"They found the documen- injuries or citation .
tation was inadequate."
The report said the bureau
failed to comply with its own
regulations, had not drawn up .
any guidelines for carrying out
requirements of the act, had
been "too liberal" in extending
correction time required of
violators, had hired only 16
employes and four assessors
by Dec. 31 to carry out the act
·even
though
congress
authorized 57 employes, and
had allowed too many delays in
collecting fines .
Reuss, in blaming Failor for
the bureau 's inadequacies,
said , "the N,lxon Ad·
ministration, with its expressed concern for law and
order, should explain why it
entrusts a program aimed at
OHWI
saving the lives and limbs of
coal miners to a political
" A carpenter can hammer
·operative."
home his argument, but his
He said, "Surely the ad- wife always knows how to
ministration can find people to nail him. " ...
fill this post who are qualified
" If a th ing Is right. It can
administrators and concerned be done ; If lfls wrong, It can
be done without! 11
about mine safety."
No matter what you have
Reuss said the only. planned for repaIrs around
qualifications Failor had lor the house, make sure you
his "sabhatical" in the mines start oft on the rlghl foot with
a visit to the '' FRIENDLY
post were "chairmanship of ONES" lor the tools and
the Iowa Young Republicans, materials you need ...
campaign manager lor a GOP
primary challenger to Rep . .
Fred Schwengel, R·lowa,
midwestern GOP aide in the
1964 presidential campaign and
GOP fun~ raiser in the 1970 . .
campaign against Hubert
Humphrey."

Woman Charged
With Shooting

t

Communist Offensive on

MEIGS JUNIOR FAIR PARADE .

(Continued from Page I)
six years of age and they must
be residents of Meigs County.
Another feature of the junior
lair ·night will be review
speaking ,program. In this
program any individual, group
or organization of Meigs
County can present a two
minute talk, or less, on their
activities.
Three entry blanks are
printed in today's Sentinel.
Participants are to complete
the blanka and mall them to the
Meigs County Extension Of.
five, P. 0. Box 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

"I want to expreaa my
personal gratitude and re~pect
to Loman Harris for the fine
work he has done on behalf ~
the ·Braves during the put five
seasons and I wish him well."
Mathewa, 40, the llral bue
coach, slugged 512 home runs
in' his major league career.
Most of his playing time was
with the Braves in.their lmner
hornea, !!olton and Milwaukee.
He played twO seaaons lor the
Allan~ team in the Southern
Association .in 1950 and 11151.
Harris, 57, a driwllng Alabama native, had one successful year at AUanta. In 18119 his Vetenos Memorial H01pllal
SA ~DAY AD\'tfiSSIONS
Braves won the Western
-Uzzle
Hanning, Middleport;
Division UUe but were beaten
Clyde
Bayles,
Middleport;
by the New York Meta in the
playoff lor the league crown. Rhonda Perry, Middleport:
Lela Forrest, Rutland ; Keith
Hayman,
Racine;
Ada
Tackett, Pomeroy, and
Gregory Collins, Tuppers
Plains.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
- Doris Curry, Alvin Barnett,
Iva Howell, Harriett Neigler,
Ronald Lyons, Howard Dailey,
Mary Pugh, Daniel Slanley,
Esther Dailey, Freda Henderson, Clyde Henderson and
COOLVILLE - Best Photo Doris Kiser.
was· honored on Sunday, July
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS 30, when the judges at Cin·
Jamie Anderson, Moundsville,
cinnati's Riverfront Sladiwn W. Va .; Jody Sauvage,
awarded the "Banner Day" Pomeroy; Garnet Bachner,
Grand Prize to two of its employees, Judy MiUs and Linda
Ritenour.
The prasenlation of a $250
check by the Vice Mayor of
Cincinnati,
William
J.
Chenault, culminated over 600
man hours of labor to build a
mammouth banner displaying
the message "Express to
Series '72 - Reds."
The banner was built as a
group project by 20 Best employees and their families. It
consisted of more than 7,200
paper tissues bound to a
chicken-wire frame with 1,500
yards of string.
When fully assembled, their
entry was 15'feet long by 8 feet
high and in its own modest
way, reminiscent of what one
might see at the Rose Bowl
l;'arade.
Work on the banner began
last Monday at the Coolville
Village (population 400) lire
station. Each day during the
week the group met from 6
until 11 p.m., plua all day
Saturday to set their entry in
shape.

'
'
••• ~ .......... ..
Name ···························~···

Group ··•·························· ·······~······•··
Category •••..•••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••

MEIGS JUNIOR FAIR

Two Fronts Given Punch
SAIGON (UPI )-North Vietnam sent more tanks into
eastern Cambodia and into the
Quang Tri area in northeastern
South Vietnam today, raising
concern in Saigon that the
dormant Communist offensive
has resumed.
The major new threat was in .
eastern Cambodia where North
Vietnamese tank units threatened three towns which
control access routes to the
Mekong Delta . Communist
victories there could open a
new invasion route to the key
areas south of Saigon.
The main battle clmtered

\,

Little Prince and Princess Contest
soc entry fee

.

Name •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••
Address •• ·, ••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

J\ge ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

MEIGS JUNIOR FAIR

Speaking Review

Banner Day

Address ••••••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••••••..........
Rutland; Franklin Roush,
Minersville; Vera Searles,
Rutland; David Persinger,
Cheshire; Reva Patterson,
Middleport; Floyd Brookover,
Middleport; Harley Slack,.

Pomeroy; Oretha Snider ,
Pomeroy; Diana Neal, Mason,
and Virginia Hoy, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Jody Sauvage,
Arvllle
. Donahue and Wiklla Riggs.

ROSETTE DISPLAYED- Wallace Bradlord,president of the Meigs County Fair Board.
and Mrs. Mickey King, Sec., display one of scores of rosettes to be awarded winners in the
open competition of the109th annual Meigs County Fair. Mrs. King ts in the fair hoard office on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Thursday this week to accept
entries in the open competition. The deadline for entries in the beef and dairy catUe and sheep
and swine divisions is 4 p.m. Wednesday while 4 p.m. Thursday is the deadline for oth er
departments.

•

VOL. XXV NO. 80

Wrangler and Lee denim (eans, hosiery, underwear,

bells, handkerchiefs, pajamas.

For Girls and lilt Young UldiU·:-VIsll the
2nd floor for dresses, skirts, blouses,
sweaters, slacks. leano, luggage, socks,
robes. A complete setec:tlon ot sizes for
grade school, high school ogers and the
college crowd.
For School Supplies seo tho big
selection on lilt 1st floor. Tobtots,
notebook paper, comp•nu.
rulers, pencils, binders, music

books, 1st grtdo• tobltts. Just
about oviryllllng you'll nMd for
use on your busy school doys.

EtBERFELDS IN POM.EROl

r9ur

'Wide -Jlwake
'Wide-r9pen Voor
Policy
More than a word. More than our smiles. Our time. The wideawake bank has time for you and the eagerness to serve you best.
All banks are big on money- so are we. But we're just as big
on service, in quantity and in quality. If our tellers can't answer
a queRtion, feel free to consult any of our officers- even if, to
settle a friendly argument, you need to know whose picture is on
the thousand-dollar bill. Of course, our easy-going officers are
ready with more impo~tant answers and financial counsel, to
help you make big decisions or plan for your future. And we
won't rush you, ·either. We have the time to let you take your
time. We know how much it matters.

Thomas Werry, Cha rles
Werry, Bob \Verry, Jirn Werry,
Roger W111ebr enne r , Ben
Carsey, Bob Woo ten, Larr y
Holsinger, George Ncsselroad,
are Bill Grueser , Don Grueser , an d
Davi d
Koblcn tz.
Bob Grueser , Philip Werry,

•

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sen. George S. McGovern,
courting organized labor, said
today "Nixonomics" is forcing
workers to get by on poverty
wages and is fostering a tax
structure that rewards the rich
and gouges the middle class.
With his goal of gaining the
support of unions with 10
million membership by Labor
Day more than 40 per cent
achieved, McGovern flew to
Miami Beach, Fla., to address
the annual convention of the
500,QOO.member Amalgamated
Meat CUtlers .
"Deliberately throwing
people out of work-that is
'Nixonomics,"' McGovern said
in his prepared text. He said an
additional2 million persons are
out of work now than when
President Nixon took office.
"And that's not accidental;
it's by design," McGovern
said. "The plan was to stem
inflation by slowing down the
economy." But he said inflation continues.
"A tax structure which
rewards those at the top and
gouges those in the middlethat is 'Nixonomics,"' Me·
Govern said. "It's the same old
Republican approach b.Isiness gets a stern look once
in a while, and workers get
clobbered."
'

' •

0

••

While McGovern flew to desperation. " He said inflation
Florida , the Democratic had dropped from 6 per cent to
National Committee prepared 2.7 per cent in the last four
to ratify this evening his choice years, while the acbninistration
of Sargent Shriver, the former had achieved ''outstanding
Peace Corps dire ctor, as the progress" against unemparty 's candidate lor vice ployment by cutting the jobless
president. Shriver will replace rate to 5.5 per cent. He said
Missouri Sen. Thomas F. real wages were increasing at
Eagle too, who resigned afte; it an impressive rate .
was disclosed he underwent. ·
psychiatric treatment in the
So far the union, with their
1060s.
memberships, supporting MeMonday , Nixon's campaign · Govern are: United ' Auto
manager, Clark MacGregor, Workers, 1.3 million ; State,
argued th e administration had ·county
and
Municipal
brought the economy into such Workers , 550,000; Meat CUt·
good shape that it would not ters, 500,000; Oil, Chemical and
have to ask for a tax increase Atomic Workers, 175.000 ;
for two years.
Communications Workers,
MacGregor said McGovern 357,000; Newspaper Guild ,
was engaging in the "politics of 33,000; Amalgamated Clothing

'

Pomeroy Mayor William
Baroni ck proposed Monday
night in a regular meeting of
council that the town proceed
with plans to erect a new town
hall.

~. ;::;:::::::: :::-..;:;:::~==~*~·~.~:::::::::::~:::::::::~:::::*::::::::::.::::::::::;:,

,OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System· ·

On Fridays our Drive-In Window is Open h.m. to 7 p.m:, (Contliuiously).
•
$20,000 Maxrmum Insurance
Each Dlposltor

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

'

Workers, 388,000; Electrical
Workers, 325,000, and Rebil
Clerks, 552,000.
Neither Gets Su~purt
George Meany, president of
the AFL-CIO, persuaded the
giant federation's executive
council three weeks ago not to
.support either Nixon or Me·
Govern this fall , concentrating
instead ,on coni!J'essional and
state races.
The Teamsters, with 2.1
million members, and the
Marine Engineers, with 11,000,
are supporting Nixon.
In other political developments:
-Georgia, Idaho, Michigan
and Missouri held state primary elections today. Attention

focused on the Missouri balloting where a crowded ·field of
candidates for governor and a
voter backlash over the resigna lion of Eagleton was expected to turn out the largest
primary vote in 30 years.
- Four committees set up to
finance Nixon's re-election
campaign reported receipts of
$2.45 million during June and
July . Filed with the General
Accounting Office, the reports
said there was $7.76 million in
the Nixon campaign account.
- Three Democratic mayors
endorsed Nixon's candidacy.
They were Louis Welch of
Houston, Jack Mal tester of San
Leandro, CaW., and C. Beverly
Briley of Nashville, Tenn.

some were seen last spring
near Tay Ninh, farther eut
near the Cambodian bord!l'.
The Communist offensive
began last March 30 and swept
over Quang Tri Province in
northeastern South Vietnam
but has been largely dormant
since then. This week,
however , new threats appeared in the area of Hue and
the Communists sent in small
probing forces which overran
seven . hitherto peaceful
villages south of Hue.

Schmitz in
All0 ut
Race
·

WASHINGTON (UPl ) - Rep. John G. Schmitz, the John
Birch Society member nominated for President by the American
Party, describes his candidacy as a spark in dry grass -ready
to burst into flame at any moment.
The grass, he contends, is the discontent of the millions who
make up "Middle America." He says they are fed up with loafers
on the welfare rolls at one extreme, and at the other with
inheritors of wealth who flirt with socialism in search of political
power .
The American Party picked Schmitz as its standard bearer
at Louisville, Ky., last week after Alabama Gov. George C.
Wallace decided not to run again.
Schmitz insisted in an interview Monday that he is a "serious
candidate, not an unrealistic one." He said his main problem
would be to reach enough people between now and November and
that he would have to concentrate on television and radio. He
said he had numerous invitations to appear on panel and talk
ahows.

Elderly Foursome
Injured in Wreck
Four persons, all 70 years old

who was northbound on new 7.

or over, were injured in a two- The vehicles collided at the

GEORGE LUSTER, JR.
George T. Luster, Jr.,
majoring in data processing
at Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, is on
the dean' s list with an
average of 3.2. The son of
Mr. and Mrs. George T.
Luster, Sr., 573 Bryan Place,
Middleport, he Is a 1971
graduate of Meigs High
School.

car accident at the junction of
Route 7 and Old Route 7 at the
lower end of Middleport near
the Leading Creek Bridge
Monday at 1:45 p.m.
The Gallia-Meigs State Highway Patrol said James
Finlinson, 77, Huntington, W.
Va. , was southbound moving
from old 7onto new 7 and failed
to yield the right of way to
Loren Neal, 18, Rt. I, Bidwell,

intersection, causing heavy
damage to both autos.
Two passengers in the
Flnlinson auto, George
Finlonson, 75, and Tora
Finlinson, 73, both of
Plymouth, N, C., were taken by
a passing motorist to Holzer
Medical Center where Tora •
Finlinson is in good condition
and George Finlinso.n in
(Continued on Page 6)

The Federal Economic
Development Agency (EDA)
provides up to 80 per cent of the
cost for construction of city
halls, the mayor said.
Council gave the mayor the
go-ahead to secure information
on the type of building most
feasible to serve Pomeroy's
needs. He will submit his
findings at the next regular
meeting later this month.
The new hall, providing a
grant is approved, and council
can afford the remaining 20 per
cent cost of the building, would
be erected where the present
building now stands.
Mayor Baronick wa'rned
Monday night that he is not
going t.ocontend with any more
drinking of intoxicating
beverages on the Pomeroy
parking lots. If one more arrest
is made from the parking area
the ordinance to curb loitering
will be totally enforced, he
said.
Dick Vaughan and Henry ·

Werry will attend .the
associa lion fire convention in
Columbus this weekend with
council providing hall of the
traveling expense .
The signal light at the in·
tersection of Routes 33 and 7
has been damaged, it was
reported. Jeb Webster, police
:::::::~:::::::::::::*:::::::::::::!:::::::::::~:::;:;:;:;;;~:::::::::::

~DS RELEASED
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
state Controlling Board
Monday released more than
$1.4 million for ·sewage
treatment facilities In four
communities in Ohio, as well
as $200,000 to purchase the
Messenger Publishing Co.
Bulldlug, Athens, lor Ohio
UDiversity.

:·srtt ··a-:-:·:·:·:·:·:······.....,.rr ·· r·,-·rn,-·

PT . PLEASANT - A
decision relating to an increase
in salaries for. Mason County's
school bus drivers was iabied
once more Monday night
chief, will order a new li~ht.
pending a study of the budget.
A Jetter fr om Judge John
Supt. Charles Withers during
Bacon, commander of the DA V
a regular Board of Education
informed council that Lincoln
Candid~ t es for public office meeting, replying to the recent
Ter race is seeping into
request by the Transportation
the DAV home on Butternut will speak wh en the Meigs Department, said, ~~ we are
Coun ty Democrat Committee
Ave. Members of co~ncil and meets at 8 p.m. Thursday at going over the budget, item by
the m:'yor will mveshgate the the Episcopal Parish House in item, and cannot make a
recommendation at this time."
Situation. . .
Pomeroy.
A cmnplamt tn regard to the · Expected to be present are He said $10,000 would be
conditiOn of Beech Grobve John E. Halliday, Gallipolis, needed to meet the salary
Cemetery was lodged Y for sb te representa tive ; Mary in creases . Board memMarguerite Meyer · Council Martin, for Meigs Clerk of
agreed to have Youth Corps Couits, and Joe Dennison and
employes clean up the William Snouffer candidates
cemetery under the super.
'
for Me1gs Count y ComCloudy today and tonight,
..
f Jed W'll
1
VISIOn
·
missioner.
chance
of showers continuing
Council earlier announced
that lots at Beech Grove would
Areg ul ar mee ting will follow tonight. Highs today in the low
not be maintained unless a $5 the speaking . E. A. Wingett, to mid 70s. Lows tonight in the
fee was paid. However, per- co unty chairman , is urging all low to mid 50s. Partly cloudy
sons living out of town did not committee members to attend. and continued cool Wednesday,
highs in the 70s.
. (Continued on Page 10)
The public is welcome.

Will Speak

Weather

°

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ber
Charles
Eshenaur
said he didn 't feel the
mechanics should be granted
the increase since they had
received a "Substantial" one
last year. .
Supt. Withers told the board
information concerning the
salary increase would be
presented at the next board
meeting on Aug . 25.
Several more teachers were
employed and assignments
made, but the vice principal's
position at Point Pleasant High
School was not filled.
·Eugene Moore was employed
as attendance director for 10
months. Other teaching personnel employment include;:
Reynolds, kin Pearl
dergarten teacher at Broad
Run; C. R. Schurman, two
hours per day for mechanical
drawing at PPHS; Connie
Jordan, elementary teacher to
be placed later; U-Dean Cisco
Browning, teacher at Point
Pleasant High School; Beverly
Lynn Bolen, kindergarten
teacher at Mt. Olive; Nancy
Roll, Roosevelt and Mt. Flower
(Continued on Page 10)

'

WASHINGTON - ANXIOUS TO SHED TIIEIR internal
problema and get on with the campaign, Democrats today named
Sargent Shriver, former director of the Peace Corps and the
antipoverty program, as their vice-presidential candidate. In an
estraordinary emergency meeting, the ~mocratic National
Committee gather.ed to comply with Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern's
recommendation that Shriver serve as his running-mate.

The Farmers ·Bank ·&amp;Savings .CO•.

TEN CENTS

confer with Allied officers.
UP! reporter Sylvana Foaek
after earlier and possibly
erroneous reports said the
town had been captured . It had
been defended by teen.age
soldiers.
U.S. fi g hte r-bombe~s have
been credited • with knocking
out 14 of th e tanks and Cambodian
artillery
with
destroy ing seven others. This
was the first time Communist
b nks had been reported so far
south in Indochina although

Boosts Delayed
Pomeroy Hoping EDA Fundi~g
Can Be Had for New Town Hall Candidates

By United Press International
COLUMBUS -STATE REP. ROBERT E. NETZLEY, R·
Laura, said today his group attempting to repeal tile state inrome tax has now collected enough signatures ·to meet the first
legal requirement for gelling the issue on the November ballot.
Netzley said a mail delivery of petitions bearing an estimated
10,000 signatures today brought tile total number of signatures to
more than the 316,414 l)eeded to qualify.
"Despite last-minute desperation tactics on the part of
pressure group opponents that border on the illegal," Netzley
said. "Thr ordinary citizens of Ohio have demonstrated that they
recognize an advance in government procedures when they see
it." Netzley said he is ''reasonably sure'' that the total number of
signatUres will approach 350,000 when the Citizens For Repeal of
The State Income Tax deliver the petitions to Secretary of State
Ted W. Brown at 2:30p.m. Wednesday.

The wide-awoke bank 111dkes itll!o ~

PHONE 9922156

'

ews .. in Briefsl·

•

TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1972

Labor Warned of Nixonomics

•

So whether you bank with us or not, we welcome your questions. Our doors are always open. The wide-open, wide-awake
bank always makes you feel you've come to the right place. And
you have!

·-

stati on near Missan obie Lake,
then went by boat fi ve miles
down the rapids. They are
sleeping in tents and cooking
over open fires. In the group

Devoted To The lnteres~ Of'fhe Meilfs-M~on Area

For Boys and Young Men-Stop In on the 1st floor, see
the fine selection of sport and dress shirts. boys sizes 6
to 20, Mens Slzn small, medium. large, extra large. A
fine line ol knit stacks, flare leg jean type slacks.

-

Fourteen Pomeroy Bend
men are roughing it in the far
north this week, fi shing in
Missanobie Lake in northern
Canada. They left Friday and
will return Saturday.
They drove to a ranger

at y

IT'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL TIME AGAIN
MAKE ELBERFELOS IN POMEROY
YOUR HEAQQUARTERS FOR
ALL YOUR SCHOOL NEEDS

I

di a, but others were reported in
a,ction, indicating tha t Hanoi
had no t run out of gas because
of the U.S. · naval blockade of
northern ports.
Lon Nul Worried
The other Communist tank
threats in eastern Cambodia
were aimed at the towns of
Prey Ve ng, 33 miles north of
Kompong Trabek, and Svay
Rieng, about 20 miles southeast
of Kompong Trabek. The
situation was so crucial that
Cambodian President Lon Not
flew to the joint CambodianSouth Vietnamese combat base
at nearby Clleak Luong to

Group Roughing It in the North On Fishing '{'rip

Organization.,,, ••••••. ,, ••• , •••••• , •••.••••••••• ,

Best Photo

For

around the market town of
Kompung Trabek, on Highway
I some 85 miles northeast of
Saigon and 45 miles southeast
of the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh. Its only importance is that it controls major
communication routes to th e
south.
Dispatches fr om Phn om
Penh
said
Cambodia n
paratroopers jumped in to
Kompong Trabek today and
that they destroyed one Soviet.
built T54 tank in the rubbled
streets of the town. So far at
least 21 tanks have been
reported destroyed in Cambo·

Name , •••••• , •••••••••••••.••••••••••••••.••••••••

News .•. in Briefs Taken by

142 Registered at Reunion
RACINE ·- One hundrer'
forty two persons registereu
for the annual Beegle Reunion
picnic held · Sunday at the
Racine American Legion Hail.
The invocation was given by
Paul Beegle and the welcome
by Lawrence Beegle. Group
singing was conducted with
Olive' Weber, long time family
friend, at the piano.
A memorial service for
deceased members of the
family was conducted by
Norma Andri s Firn Gaul,
and Frankie McKelvey.

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday.
Fair Thursday, chance of
ahowers
Friday
and
Saturday. Cool with highs la
lbe mid 7tls to low tJOs and
Iowa in the mid 50s to !.below

Escape Was
By Window

The Meigs Couhty Sheriff's
WASHINGTON - INVOKING THE 1972 EQUAL Em· · Dept. investigated a single car
· pto)'Jhent Owortnnities Act lor the first time, the Justice accident Monday at 9:10 p.m.
Department haa charged the cities of Los Angeles aod Mont· on SR 124, in Sycamore Grove,
gomery, Ala., witli discrimination inldring firemen and sanitary 2'h miles' east of Racine.
Kenneth
D. . Chaffee,
wockers.
Columbus,
driving
west, went
Attotney General Richard G. Kleindienst told UPI June 16
off
the
highway
on
the rigpt,
that many cltii!S and states were violating the new law. He .cited
CaiRe back across and drqve
Montg&lt;rnery, Loa Angeles and Chicago in the interview.
into a ditch, the car turning
I
.
CHARLESTON, 'W.VA.~ IT'S TOUGH TO PICK a front- over.
Chaffee and a passenger,
runner in the race for control of the United Mine WorkerS union.
Betty Upton,17, crawled out of
~ktn.Z at one set of ataliltlca, incumbent President .'W. A. a window as the top was
''Tony•l Boyle is ahead, but other flgUnll pu~ his challe~er.
crushed. Chaffee waa taken to
'reform candidate Arnold Miller, out front.
.
St. J011eph Hoapital in .ParkersBoyle leada in the llllllber of entlonementa by union locals burg by pritate car suffering
215 to 108. Bot MJDer'a presi secretary, Don stillman, said back and shoulder injuries.
MondaY the mlnm in locals committed tO MiUer nwnbered There was heavy damage to
25,481, while tOOIIe lathe ''Boylalocala" totaled 24,342.
the car and no citation.

lOs • .

Mayer Snap Wins

In Area Contest

WIN AT WEUSI'OJii- The Pomeroy Utile League All·
Stars, above, won the Wellston All..Star Tournament with a~
0 win over Welllton Monda.v. First row. left to riltht, Gene
·Humphrey, Bob McClure, Ronnie Snider, Steve Call, Del
Call, Randy Phillips, Randy Marshall, Jeff Grueser, and Tim

Hood ; second row, Hershal McClure, coach; Randy Roach, .
Doug Browning, Creg &amp;nith, Brian Hamilton, Rick Jolmson,
Dale Browning and R. J. Browning, coach. Absent was Mark
Mitch. See other tournament pictures on Page 2, and accwnt
of game on P~. 3~ all by Keith Wisecup.,

WlliJam J. Mayer, 110 Union
Ave., Pomeroy, was .a winner
·in Herald Dispatch's third
week of .competition · in the
Kodak International News·
paper Snapshot Awards in the
Tri State Area.
His picture was an elderly
man, ~years old, and in color.
Five other anapahota were allo
selected u wlnnen, two ·black
and whllll, three CGlar .U..

�3- Till Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PDmeroy, 0., August 1,11!72

All-Stars

Television .Log.
.

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HAPPY MANAGERS- Hershal McClure, right, and R. J. l)rowning,' center, accept the
team championship trophy from Mike Jacobs, tournament· manager. Pomeroy defeated
Jackson 14-13, South Webster W, and Wellston~ for the crown. They will pilot the squad in a
Jackson tournlm)ent opening this week .

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HERO CONGRATULATED - The Pomeroy AD-Stars swarm around pitcher Dale
Browning after the ace righty hurled his second consecutive no-hitter enabling Pomeroy to wln
the Wellston Tournament. The team is entered ina Jackson LL tourney toopentbisweek.

Ohio Democrats Ready for ~ McGovern Campaign
By LEE LEONARD .
UPi ·statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Republican and Democratic
leaders in Ohio agree the
disruption at the top of the
national Democratic ticket
should have a minimal effect
on the Buckeye State's
legislative races.
Democrats said Monday the
problems of Sen. George S.
McGovern finding a suitable
running mate appear to be over
now with the selection of R.
Sargent Shriver Jr. as a vice
presidential candidate.
Republicans agreed legisl .
live raceli do not depend on the
presidential campaign, and
they indicated lack of interest
by Democrats in their national
ticket could mean increased effort in state and local contests.
Ohio Democrats hope to control the House, which Republicans now dominate, M-45. They
also hope to close the 2().13
Republican gap in the Senate.
Republicans were hoping to
benefit !rom a strong showing
by Prl!llident Nixon even before
McGovern released hiS running . mate, Sen. Thomas F.

Eagleton of Missouri, . after with him (McGovern). People
Eagleton disclosed he had been are educated. They can split
treated three limes in the tl1eir ballots. They don't want
W60's lot psychiatric ailments. to vote for him, they can still
Voters Split Ballots
vote for Democratic canDemocratic and Republican didates for Congress and the
leaders in Ohio cited these rea- legislature."
sons for minilpizing the effects
House Speaker Charles F.
of.the Eagleton affair on legis- .Kurfess, R Bowling Green,
lative races:
'agreed with Calabrese that the
- Ohio voters are prone to influence of the top of the ticket
split their ballots, and Demo- on legislative races is minimizcrals or independents dissatis- ed in Ohio.
lied with the national ticket
"We have the office type halwould still stick with lot rather than the party type
Democratic legislative can· ballot," Kurfess pointed out,
dictates.
adding he believes the
- Even if Nixon has the presidential candidates could
power to pull Republican legis- influence the voter turnout.
lative candidates through, it is
Opinions Vary
too early to tell how he will fare
"We would probably have
on Election Day.
. the edge If the election were
- A lot will depend on the today," Kur!ess said. "The
turnout - a heavy vote benefit- disenchanted Democrats and
ing Democrats and a light one independents probably would
Republicans.
· not bother to vote if the election
"lt's not going to hurt," said were held today."
Senate Minority Leader An·
Republican State Chairman
thony 0. Calabrese, O.Oeve- John S. Andrews said the
land, of the Eagleton affair. Eagl~ton affair "certainly has
"We'll run on our own. Con- not helped the Democrats. But
gress and the legislature will unless there is a major sweep
be running their own cam- in one direction or the other,
paigns. We don 't have to run ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::,:::;:::·

Q"

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Beat

•••

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l: I Of the Bend
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By Bob Hoeflich

I

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I

,'j !

•\.! ,•.

Forest Kyle, 332 South High St., Columbus, and son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ira B. Kyle, Tuppers Plains, wrote a song entitled,
"Top Tune Number One" recently.
The song was picked up by an independent recording company and recorded by Monty Montgomery, broth~r of Melba Lee
Montgomery in January. Forest has received word through a
national survey on the song that it has received 551,972 plays on
radio alone since it was recorded.
Kyle has been awarded a lifetime membership in the
American Society of Authors and Publishers as a result of the
successful tune and is now working with Dan Marshall who wrote
"Born loser" and other songs. Marshall wrote "Randy, the
Handy Elf" which was making the rounds the past Christmas
season.
Kyle also has a book under publication by Harper and Row.
It's based on the 21st Psalm and is entitled, "! Will Lilt My
Eyes."
HOPE YOU'VE HAD the opportunity to view the attractive
fountain at the Middleport Village Pharmacy parking lot in the
evening. The lighting is so effective! The fountain at night
resembles the July 4th "fountains " of a day past - hard to
believe that it's water.
'•

~'•,

HAVE YOU AS ASentinel subscriber cast your ballot to send
your carrier to Kings Island yet? Subacribers are asked to
complete the form which appeared in the Sentinel recently on the
personality, promptness and nealness of their carrier. Carriers
pile up points through the subscribers' votes and those scoring
highest will win trips to the new park near Cincinnati. Deadline
for voting is Aug. 18.
AIRMAN CHESTER A. ROUSH, so n of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
0. Roush, Middleport, is now at the Lowrey Air Filrce Base. His
addreSs is AMN Chester A. Roush FR 301-5ll-9908, 3419 Stu.,Sqd.,
PSC Box B 4596, Lowry Air Force Base, Colorado, 80230.· ·
MRS. J. M. THORNTON was delighted to have her son, Bob,
his wife and their four sons, John, Pat, Joe and .Tom for several
days visit. It was the first time that Bob's wife has been able to
make thetrtpin 13 years. The Thorn tons reside at Old Bridge, N.

J.

The group visited in Point Pleasant at historical points and in
Kenova, W. Va., with Mrs. Bob Thornton's aunt, in Gallipolis
with Mrs. J . M. Thornton's sister-in-law, Mrs. Dale Gilkey in
addition to visiting with friends In Meigs County. On Friday the
group went to Canal Win-chester where the elder Mrs . Thornton
visited with Mrs. Guy Porter while the fest of the group went on
north to visit a farm where Mrs. Bob Thornton once resided. Mr.
and Mrs. Thornton also visited Marshall University - where
they met - so that their sons could see the college their parents
once attended.
;

THREE KILLED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio ( UPI )
- Three members •of a Cir·
cleville family were killed
Mpnday in a car-truck crash at
1111 intersection in front of the
Walnut Townahip grade school
northofbei'e. The victims were
ldeiltlfled as Paul Ray Pennlnctoo, 39; his wife, Leona
Mae, 40, and their son, John,
10.

SMITH TO WHALERS
BOSTON (UPI)- Al Smith, a
goalie'who pJayed with Detroit
and Pittsburgh in the National
Hockey League, signed
Monday with the New England
Whalers of the World Hockey
Association.
The flatfish has both eyes
op one side of its head. These
can be turned independently
in different directions at the
same time.

.

Only 11,000
More
.
Signatures are
Needed in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) State Rep. Robert Net1ley, ·
R-Laura, said today he now
had 307,474 signatures on
petitions and was "confident
we will get the other 11,000
needed to qualify the state
income tax question on the
November ballot by the end
of the day."
Netzley said he was
prepared to deliver the
necessary 318,000 signatures
to the secretary of state's
office as scheduled Wed·
ncsday afternoon before the
filing deadline.
Netzley said he had
signatures "on less than 500
petitions and we have 3,500 in
circulation now, so we should

have sufficient to file." The
legislator said he hoped to
present 350,000 signatures.
He said the requirement
was to have 5 pet. from at
least 44 counties and he now
had that many from 60
counties.
His petitions will be
checked by the secretary of
state's office and local
boards of elections to
determine the validity of the
signatures.
Netzley said if any were
disqualified, he would have
10 days in which to present
valid ones to reach the
318,000 requirement.

Judge Overturns
Six-Months Rule
COLUMBUS (UPl) - A
federal judge has overturned
an Ohio law requiring persons
to live in the state at least six
months to be eligible to vote.
U.S. District Court Judge
Carl Rubin, in ruling Monday,
made a permanent a tern·
porary restraining order
issued March 31 by another
judge of the court. The decision
substitutes a 30-day residency
requirement throughout Ohio
for all elections.
''This decision makes it easier for students aad semitransiients to become eligible
to vote," said Benson Wolman,
executive director of the
American Civil Uberties Union
of Ohio which filed the
challenge.
"We think it will enhance the
democratic process
by
!ringing more. people Into it,"
he said.

very few legislative races are
affected substantially by the
presidential candidates."
Andrews said the goal of the
Republican organization is to
carry Ohio for the President,
"but we're not assuming it's
going to be a total sweep. If it
goes heavy one way or the
other, obviously it's going to
have some impact on the legislative races," Andrews said.
"I don't think it's going to
have any effect whatsoever,"
said House Minority Leader A.
G. Lancione. "If the Republicans are hopeful of that, they
are going to be fooled."
Lancione conceded "right
now, the good Lord would have
!rouble coming down here and
beating Nixon, but there is a lot
of lime between now and
then."
He said McGovern and Shri·
ver could make it a close election, and that voters would be
choosing their legislators independently, "according to who
they know at the local leveL"
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, was the most pessimistic o( the Republicans, saying

"there is no question but what
the Eagleton affair will inure to
the advantage of the Demoera tic party" in state and local
races.
Gray pointed out t~at
organized labor and other
contributors to the Democrats
would be ignoring the loP of the
ticket and channeling funds to

New Rules Made
For Trial Courts
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Supreme Court has
adopted two new tules for state
trial courts, including use of
video taped testimony, to
eliminate delay and "improve
the quality of justice administered In Ohio."
The court said Monday one
rule would grant judges
authority to require testimony
by physicians and other expert
wibtesses to be recorded on
video tape if the witnesses are
unable to testify at the time of

$500 Awarded for
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio
(UP!)- James L. Brown, Ashville, was to receive a $500
check here today from the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation for
evidence he provided March 2:i
which led to the arrest and
conviction of a burglary
suspect.
The money, to be presented
by C. William Swank, federation· executive vice president,

· congressional and legislative
candidates.
While conceding Nixon's
popularity, Gray said "It's in
the 'If' deck of cards. Times
are volstile, and there's no
guararitee Nixon will have as
big a lead in the polls in
November as he appears to
have now."

the trial.
The second rule is designed
to eliminate delay caused when
an attorney in a case is unable
to appear in court at the time
scheduled because he is engaged in other cases in other
courts.
The rule allows the judge to
require the attorney to provide •
substitute trial counsel. If the
attorney wa,s appointed by the
court, the court could appoint
other trial counsel.
The rules go into effect Sept.
I.

Evid~nce" ·

is the first under the organization 's property protection serVice program to curb rural-area
crime.
The program, said Swank,
provides a $500 reward to any.
one giving information that
leads to the arrest and conviction for various crimes including arson, malicious injury to
property, burglary or other felopies committed on a Farm

Bureau member's property.
Brown saw two men run
!rom the house of Lowell White
in Ashville and drive away in a
car. He spoted the car's license
number and reported it to the
Pickaway County sheriff.
One of the suspects, Daniel
R. Broughton, was subsequently arrested, tried and convicted
of breaking and entering.

~

TUESDAY, AUGUST I
.
5:00- ttT~keu Thiel ~i ~lee. co. 33: Dick Van Dyke u : if~"
Rogers 33: Wagon Train 3: Maverick 13; Bib Valley6.
5·30- Marshall Dillon 15; Eltc. Co: 33. .
·
,·,oo- News 3, 4, 8, io, 15; CBS. News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie
13'; Truth or Conseq. 6; Seume St. 20; Halh~yoga33.
·
6·30- News3 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; Grand Masters Cliess33.
7:00 - News 6: Elec. Co. 2Q; Farmer's O..ughter 13; Insight 33 ;
· Green Acres 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; Whars My Line? 8; Andy
Griffith 15.
7· 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; Mod Squad U; Jerry Reed 8,
· 10; Mr. Rogers 20; Television Forum 6; Ponderosa 3, ~. 15.
8:00- Maggie ,nd the S.Oulilul Machine 20.
8:30- Evening at Pops 24), 33; Hawaii Flve-0 8; NBC Action
Playhouse3, 4, 15; Mqvie "Kung Fu" 6, 13.
9:30 - Canoon 8, 10; Handfuls of Ashes 33: London Bridge
S~clal ·3, o1. 15; Ron Dell~ms 20.
10:00 - News. Weather, Sports 20; _Firing Line 33; Marcus
Welby, M.D. 6,13.1
10:30...: Arthur Smith 8; Peyton Place A; WSAZ Comment J: The
Issue 10: Death Valley Days 15.
11 :00-News3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11:30- Old&lt; Cavell!; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Salome"
10: Movie "Fort Dobbs" 13; Movie "Three Biles of The Ap.
pie" 8.
1:00- Your Heallh 4.
1:30 - News4.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9
6:00- Sunrise Seminar A; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15- Farmtime 10.
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Sports, 6; Bible
Answers a; Urban League Presents 10: Glory Road 13.
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; News6, s, 13.
·
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Underdog i3.
8:00-.Caplaln Kangaroo 8, 10: New Zoo Revue13, 6; "Sesame
St. 33.
S:30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6; Jack LaLanne 13.
S: 55 - Local News 13.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 : Jackie Oblinger 8;
Peyton Place 13; What Every Wom1m Wants to Know 3;
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6; Mr. Rogers 33.
9:30 - Truth or Conseq. 3; Mike Douglas 6; My Three Sons 8; ·
One Life to Live 13; Electric Co. 33.
9: 55 - Chuck While Reporl1 tO.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Lucille Ball10: Dick Van Dyke 13:
Hathayoga 33.
·
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Dona huH; Spill Second 13: My
Three Sons 10; Beverly Hillbillies 8; ln·School Instruction 33 :
Love, American Style 6.
11:00- Sale of Century 3, 15; Family Affair 8; Love American
Style 13; Communique 6.
11.:30-HoliywoodSquares3,4, 15; Bewilched6. 13; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St. 20. '
12:00- JeopordyJ, 15; BobBraun'slO-SOCiubA; Local News iO;
News 13; Medicine 20; Contact 8; Password 6.
12:30-3 W's Gamel, 15; Spill Second 6; Search for Tomorrow 8,
10.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1:00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; Ail My Children 6, 13; Watqn
Your Child 15: Divorce eourtB; Green Acres 10; French Chef
33.
1:20- Lucille Rivers.
1:30- 3 On A Ma1&lt;.1 3, 4, 15: A!. The World Turns 8, 10:
Designing Women 33; ABC Affernoon Playbreak 6, 13.
2:00 - O..ys ol Our Lives 3. 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13; Virg inia
Graham 6; Love Spiendored Thing 8. 10; Brldge33.
2:30- Doctors 3, 4, 15: Dating Game 13; Guiding Light 8, 10;
Handfuls of Ashes, 33 .
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospllal 6, 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place3,4,15; One Life to Llve6 : Edge
of NigM 8, 10; Jell's Collie 13.
4:00- Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15: Fllntstones 3; Sesame
St. 20, 33; Huckleberry Hound 6; Batman 8; Movie " Along
Came Jones" 10.
4:30 - Green A:cres 3; Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy! : Virginian
8; Password 13: Andy Griffith 15.
5:00- Wagon Train 3; Mister Rogers 33: Maver ick 13: Dick
Van Dyke 15; Big Valley 6.
5:30- Marshall Dillon 15; Electric Co. 33.
6:00- News, Weather, Sports, 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Con seq . 6:
I Dream of Jeannie 13: Sua me SUO; Hathayoga33.
6:30 - NBC News 3. 4, 15; ABC News 6, 13; CBS News 8, 10;
Bridge ll.
.
7:00 •- . News, Weather, Sports 6, \0; Elec. Co. 20; Wild, Wild
West 13; Millstones of Progress 33; Wild and Wonderful" 3;
Mayor's Report15; Dick Van Oyke4; What's My Line 8.
7:30 - Epl$0de: Action 33; To Tell Tht Trujh &amp;J Doctors on Call
4; Lassie15; DragnetS; The Judge iO; Mr. Rogers20.
8:00 - The Super 6. 13; Adam 12 4, 15; O..vld Steinberg 8, 10;
Public Affairs 20, 33. ,
8:30- Corner Bar 6, 13; McCloud 3, A, 15; Movie " Intimate
Lighting'' 20, 33; Death Valley Days 15.
9:00 - Marty Feldman Comedy Machine 13; Medical Center 8,
10.
9:30 - Kopycats 13; Movie "The Spy Killer" 6.
10:00- Night Gallery 3, A, 15; Mannix 8, 10 ; Soul 33 : News.
Weather, Sports 20.
10:30- Newsmake'r '72 13.
11 :00- News. Weather, Sports3,4,6.8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavell 6; Movie "Tribute to
a Bad Man ' 8; Movie "The Grapes of Wrath " 10; Movie "The
Bad Seed" 13.
1:00 - News and Weather •
1:30 - Local News 1.3.

F

By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
64 38 .627
Pittsburgh
New Vorl&lt;
55 46 .545 8'12
Chicago
54 50 .519 il
St. Louis
SO 51 .495 13'12
Montreal
45 55 .450 18
Philadelphia 39 1&gt;3 .382 25
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Cincinnati
62 39 .614

.'
·'

..,.,

Houston

Los Angeles
Atlanta
San Francisco
San Diego

..'

58 46 .558

53 48 .525
47 5ll .448
46 59 .438
41 61 .402

Monday's Results

•.
'.

u

East
w. I.
57 45
55 47
52 48
s1 50
4S 55

Detroit
Baltimore

New York

Boston
Cleveland
Milwaukee

Oakland
Chicago

41 62

5112 Minnesota
9
Kansas City

West
w. I.
62 42
58 44

Long and lanky righthander
pet. g.b. Dale Browning hurled hi%
.449
second straight no-hitter as lhe
.539 2
.520 4 Pomeroy All-Stars won the
.505 5•12 Wellston Little League All-Star
.466 9'12
.398 1.6112 tournament over host Wellston
3-ll Monday night marking the
pet. g.b. first Pomeroy win in the
.596
tournament since 1958.
.569 3

53 47 .SJO

Mi nnesota 2 Tex.as o

Pitts at Mont, ppd .. rain
Cincinnati 9 Atlanta 1
St. Louis 3 New York 2, 13 inns
IOnly games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
I All Times EDTI
Montreal (McAnally 1-11) at
Chicago I Hands 9-7), 2: 15 p.m.
New York (Gentry S·8l at Sf.
Louis IWise 10-12). 9:05p.m.
Los Angeles !John 9-51 at
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10-4), 8:05
p.m.
Philadelphia (Champion 4-11)
at Pillsburgh !Ellis 9.5). 8:05
p.m.
Houslon (Wilson 7-7) at
Atlanta (G. Stone 3·BL 8:05

Kan City 4 Oakland 2
Cleveland 6 Boston 2
Ball 5 Milwaukee 2
(()rlly games scheduled I
Today's Probabie·Pitchers
IAil Times EDTl
Detroit ILolich 18-7) at New
York (Peterson 12-11) , 2 p.m.
Cleveland ·(Tidrow 9.9) at
Boston (Pattin 9-10), 7:30p.m .
Baltimore IDobson 12-11) at
Milwaukee (Colborn 4-2 ), 8:30
p.m. .
Oakland IOdom 9-4) al
Kansas Cily IDal Canton 5·4l.
8:30 p.m .

p.m .

p .m .

Texas

(Bosman

at

4-S)

Minnesota I Blyleven 10-14). 9

Brownlng, who not unly

Linescores
By Uni1ed Press, International

National League

GREENVILLE, Ohio
!UPI) - Curt Day, the
Atlanta
000 000 01 o- 1 9 o defending champion, takes a
Cinci
060 003 OOx- 9 1~ 2 JIHI record into the last
Reed, Hard in (2). McQueen games tonight of the World
(5) , Hoerner (B) and Will iams;
McG lo thlin (5-51 and Bench. LP Horseshoe Tournament.
Day, of Frankfort, Ind.,
- Reed (9-il) . HRs- Morgan
(1 4th) , Menke 16th) .
woo five more games
Monday night and was the
(13 innings)
N.Y. 100 100 000 000 o- 2 9 I only undefeated player
St.L 100 100 000 000 1- 3 B0 among the 36 finalists.
Seaver, McGraw (9) and
Oyer; Gibson , Segui I ill and Elmer Hohl of Wellesley,
Simmons . WP- Segui (3-1). LP Onl., was second with a 29-1
- McGraw (4-9). HRs- Garrelt record an.d Mark Seibold, 18,
(2nd). Sizemore (2nd).
of Huntington, Ind., was
third with 27-3.
!Only games scheduled!
American League
Day pttcbes against five
Oakland
110 000 ooo- 2 7 0 opponents tonight, conKan Ci ly
000 400 OOx- 4 9 1
Hunter. Locker (7). Knowles cluding with competition
against Hob!.
{7) and Duncan ; Drago (8.13)

Houston at Atlanta. nigh·l
Phila at Pittsburgh, night

The

Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHILL .
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
City Editor
Pub l ished da i ly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publi shin g Company, 111
Court Sf., Pome rov. Oh iO,
AS16q _ Bus iness Office Phone

" 2-2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·

21S7 .

Second cl'a ss postage paid at

Pomeroy. Onio .

Nat i onal
advert i sing
representat i ve
Botfinelli

Gettaoher. In c .. 11 Eut 42n&lt;t
St ., N ew York City, New York .

SubHription rates : De l l'ole red by carrier where
ava ilable 50 cents per W@ek ;

Bv Motor Route wnert carrier

s.~rvice

available . One
month sus Bv mai! in Ohio
and W . Va , One year Sloi .OO .
SiK

noT

months

l7 .1S .

Three

month S Sol so . Subscr i ption
pr ice includes Sunday Times .
Sentinel

Baltimore at Milw, nig ht
Texas at M inn esota

International League
Standings
United Press International

Baltimore 010 002 02o- 5 9 I
Miiw
100 001 ooo- 2 6 2
Cuellar, Alexander (6), Ja ck·
son (7) and Hendricks ; Lon·

TEMPORARILY ROMAN
IN TilE GLOAMING
ROME (KFS) - No such fiscal trauma
faced us at the Rome airport as that terrible $250
kick-in-the-wallet we'd experienced in our
ignorance in hiring a car and driver to lug us
from Cherhourg to Paris. OUr penurious nerves
had stopped twanging by the time we landed at
Leonardo da Vinci Airport at Fiumicioo, near
Rome, and our transportation there was simple,
swift and efficient. We've traveled to Europe
dozens of times and adore the difference in life
styles, the change in eating habits, the much
slower pace, the solicitous citizenry; but we do
enjoy a quietly proud aclmowledgment of
American signs of life: the moat popular
American terms in Europe are Coca Cola,
American Express - and Hertz.

For years, until last, we'd experimented
with hiring cars from local firms wherever we
wished to drive in Eruope . we found It, for us, a
very dreary mistake. Most of the local car-hire
firms had little lime for personal attention. 1n
European fashion, they paid cursory heed to
repairing their cars. They apparently never
retire them. We'd never hired a single car over
the many years that it dido~ treak down at leaat
once; often, frequently . Then a year ago we
decided the heck with our .old false psychology
that the little local outfits shOuld be better, and
simply use our American Hertz charge card&amp;.
No influence needed. Nothing except to
reserve a car to meet us at the Rome Airport.
We, last year and this, reserved a Fla t 124, which
is able to take five persons comfortably; we are
four, so we have lots of room. Young people get
Fiat 50ils which are tinier than the VW Beatie
and buzz through Roman traffic's mysteries like
magic. They're one statu.wtep ahead of a
motorbike and don't use much more gasoline. does.
But our 124 is our suggestion to the famUy trade,
The RolDan hotels remain the same· the
small by U. S. monster-car standards but cl06e to vast, in personal Cav11leri Hilton is
large by Italian.
popular with Americana. who never ree11y want
We've found that minor frustrations aren ~ to leave h(llle, II hau swlmming pool but lacks .
there simply because the company employs the personaltouch of the greatluury hotela (the
linguists who must speak Engliali whether in Excelsior, Grand, Hauler) and the warm
Italy, Germany, France of wherever. We can't personal solicil!lde of the fine llllalJer holeJa
guess how big the business IS in Europe but we'd (lngliterra, De Ville). And thoup Rome alnys
guess It is overwhelming. Because of this Is Old, It al"'ys is udtingly :varied; and where
essential economic truth, Hertz takes care of its modernity has invaded, lt'a on a more visually
clients wi~h an efficiency unusual among eJtdting level tban mere ha~. In cloth• ·
Europe's laissez faire traditions. It's not furniture, architecture, food - e"'1thlng u:
manana, domani, or dope domani. It's today, ·cept in traffic - Rome l'tiiDiins a total Ill·
ocgi. It's the one American Invasion of Europeaa dlmioiahed deiJcht.
·
'

a

or

lmnleMeiy

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
It took Eddie Mathews only
two innings at his new job to
acquire Excedrin headache No.

I.

Mathews, a former Braves'
star who was named manag er
of the Atlanta team Monday
afternoon, watched in dismay
Monday night as th e Cincinnati
Reds scored six times in the
second inning en route to a
crushing 9-1 victory in a
nationally televised game.
Mathews got a good loo k at
the major problem that has
h~unted the Braves for the last
several years- pitching. The
Reds jumped on Ron Reed for
six hits in lhe second inning,
including a three-run homer by
Joe Morgan, and Denis Menke
added a three-run homer off
rell·ever Ml' ke McQueen t'n the
sl'xth.
"I
b
was nervous ut I'm sure
I'll get over l·t," sal·d Mathews ..
"W •
· 1 k
e re gmng o la e a 1ong
hard look and evaluate these
fellows for the rema1'nder of the
season. I th'tnk we have bette r
·1 h' tha
·h
h d
PI c mg
n we ave s owe
db
tte
't
h'
th
an e r p1 c mg an peop1e
think we have."
One Other Game Played
In the only other National
League game, St. Lo uts
· edge d
"
.,ew York, 3-2, in 13 innings.
Pittsburgh at Montreal was
rained out.

-

a

I

9 oz.

• •

95C value

65¢

Colgate ,MF."I
63J,oz .

•

•

I

;a

Sl.09
value

55/to

•••
••
Sua~
•e

...

ltmn 2 po• fa mtly

Baby hampoo
from H

r1e Curtis

e
••

16 oz

•

99C value

59¢

•

••

ceeded on the 13th try and Bob
Gresham bolted for five yards,
then carried for three and two
yards to put Unhart in line for
the kick.
"We had to do something to
get the game over," said New
Orleans Coach J. D. Roberts.
"The scoreboard clock didn't
work and we didn't know how
much time was left ...
· It was Roberts' play that
helped Manning pull the Joints
into a 10-10 tie with Philadelphia with 6:13left in the game.
Roberts said he noticed a
"flaw" in the Eagles' defense
and sent wide receiver
Margene Adkins down the
sidelines for a 73-yard touchdown pass.
Eagles rookie Pat Gibba
fumbled a fair catch on a punt
to put the Saints at the Eagles'
:!:i. Two plays later, Eagle
defensive tackle Houston Antwine was called for a personal
foul that touched off the booing
and moved the Saints to 'the 12yard line.
Linhart, who missed a 'll·
yard field goal attempt In the
second quarter, kicked a 20yarder in the third period for
the Saints' first points.
Pete Iiske connected with
Harold Jackson on a tO-yard
pass in the first hail to give
Philadelphia seven points .
Tom Dempsey kicked a 44-yard
field goal in the third quarter.
Despite
the
loss,
Phlladelphia Coach Ed Khayat
said he was pleased with' the
outside
running game.

1 3 Ol .
Ret~ular

Super Hold
Unsc1nted Super
S 1 09 value

Playtex Nurser
Disposable Bottles
'

7 9 C each

MASON - Mason's Utile
League will sponsor a 16-team
double elimination softball
tournament on weekends
sturting August 26-'l/th and
Sept. 2nd, 3rd lllld 4th. Finals
will be held on Sept. 4th (Labor
Day) at Mason 's Ultle League
Ball Field !pealed next to
Mason Drive-In .
The directorg.report that all

a 57 14 vAIUP.

"+

.'

•

CANTON, Ohio (UPI) Team captains were named
Monday for the 27th annual
Ohio High School All -Star
Football Game which will he
played Friday night at Fawcett
Stadium here.
· Ken Kuhn, a linebacker .
fullback from Louisville High
School, and guard Tim Davis of
Former Gallipolis Blue
Devil tackle Chuck Wood Is
scheduled to play for the
South All.Stars Friday night.
Pete Neal, another ex-GARS
gridder, received an In·
vltallon to play In the classic,
but bas declined. Coaches C.
L. (Johnny) Ecker, Ed
Pauley, .Buddy Moore, and
Don (Moose) Maurer, along
witb Ron Logan and
Jim Osborne plan to attend
Friday's encounter.
Warren - Western Reserve,
were named co-captains by the
North's team members.
Rick Slager, a quarterback
from Upper Arlington, and
tackle Steve Niehaus of Cincinnati Moeller, were named
C'/:Captains of the South.
Kuhn plans to play his
lege ball at Ohio State,
w ere his brother, Dick, was
end on the Big Ten and Rose
BQwl champion team of 1968.
bavis plans to attend OSU's

~

teams must be sancuoned by
ASA. Entry fee will he $2:i plus
two Dudley balls. Trophies will
be awarded to the first, second,
and third place teams, and for
the most home runs.
Teams may contact tourllllffient directors Bub Oliver,
77~71; Charles Sian ley, 7735965; Ray (Red) Tucker, 773,
5636. Reireshmenls will be
sold.

Up tight over big bills ?

i$ t~e an$wer

•'

1~5 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone'm-2171

a.....~~..............~................................-..............-.........1 ••a•••••••••••g••••••••.•a•o•••••••••••o•••••

.,

Boston,

6-2,

in

American

League action .
Ted Sizemore hit an insidethe-park homer to lead off the
last of the 13th and give the
Cardinals a victory over the
Mets. Sizemore's hit came off
Tug McGraw and eluded
leftfielder Cleon Jones, who
attempted to make a shoestring
catch. Diego Segui, in relief of
Bob Gibson, was the winning
pilcher . Wayne Garrell had a
homer fo r the Mels.
Mark Belanger's two-out double in the sixth drove in two tiebreaking run s and paved the
way for the Orioles' triumph.
Mike Cuellar, who had completed eight of his last nine
starts, was knocked out in the
sixth but still managed to gain
his lith victory. Brooks Robinson had a . homer for the
Orioles.
The Royals unloaded for four
· run s in the fourth inning off
Jim Hunter and held on to
defeat the Athletics behind the
seven-hit pitching of Dick
Drago. Drago, who had been

hitless in 26 at bats, delivered a
run -scori ng single in the fourth
as did Cookie Rojas and Amos
Otis. Joe Rudi had a homer for
the A's, whose lead in the AL
West was reduced to three
games over Chicago.
Perry Pitches Two-Hitler
Jim Perry pitched a twohitter and Bobby Darwin
slammed a three-run homer as
the Twins blanked the Rangers.
Perry, who has won five games
in a row, also pulled off ·a
rarity for a pitcher-an unassisted double play- in the fifth
inning.
There were runners on first
and second when Bill Fahey· hit
as1Jor t pop between the moun d
' d wh'IC h fe11 to the
an d th II'
d p
· k d th hal
groun d. erry pte e t eth ' dI
up an ran over o · 1r ,
th'10k' h h d f
e a1 t a orce
H mg th
· out.
hd
owever • e P a e umpire. a
ll d ti . f' ld n
ca
e thte bmtt te t Y rule
m ki
· 1,
a ng e a er au oma1tea.
1
t
t th
·h
at nett er
pY ou . excep
F
erry nor ahey heard the call.
In the confusion Fahey wandered off the bag and was
tagged out by Pe
p· h h'tt J rry
h ·B h
me • t er o n ro amer
de1lvere
·
d a thr ee-run doubl e to
cap a four run 1'ghth · ·
·
e
mmng
that gave Clevelan d ·••
· t
I"' VIC ory
overBoston.GraigNettlesalso
dro~e in . two runs for the
Indtans ~t.th a pair of singles.
Ben OgilVIe had a homer for
.- ' •'4
.
.'
This Week's Spec.ial

Boston.

or 6 for

$4.50

Baltimore beat Milwaukee, 52, Kansas City downed Oakland,
4-2, Minnesota blanked Texas,
5..(1, and Cleveland defeated

·

Tourltament Set
Miss
Breck
Halrspray

one tournament championship
under their belts, piloted by
Herschel McClure and R. J .
Browning, now go to Jackson
this week for an all-star
tournament there.
Wellston
000 ()()()....j) 0 0
Pomeroy
000 12x--3 5 I
Hutchinson and Rupp.
Browning and McClure.

orth •s0 uth Tel
I t
schedu IedFri•d8ViJ I

•rl•

I

' \

Brown ing , Tim Hood, and
Ra~dy Marshall, who made the
finest catch of the tournament
in leftfield in the fifth inning,
each with one single .
Hutchinson, a lillie redhaired righthander with excellent control, fannetl three
and walked lwo for Wellston .
were Brian Hamilton, Dale ,
The Pomeroy Ali-Stars, with

borg. Linzy (7) and Rodriguez.
WP- Cueiiar (il-9). LP- LonLouisville
borg (10-6). HR - Robinson
Charleston
62 4B .564 V~
By BILL COOMBE
(7th) .
Sunday's Talladega 500 auto
Tidewaier
61 53 .535 . 4
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
race
won
Bobby
Allison
the
Toledo
59 54 .522 5'12
Cleveland 000 000 141 - 6 8 0 second leg championship in the The New Orleans Saints surRochester
56 47 .496 8
Boston
001 000 001 - 2 10 o
·ved a ""mt'nute
chorus of
Sy ra cuse
53 61 .465 1J1i2
"""
Hilgendorf. Hennigan 17) and NASCAR Winston Cup point Vt
boos
and
a
broken
time
clock to
Richmond
52 60 .464 I P /2
Moses; McGlothen , Lee (8). standings, it was ·announced
Peninsu la
43 68 .387 20
Newhauser {8). Peter s (8) and Monday .
defeat the Philadelphia
Monday's Results
Fisk . WP- Hennigan (J. I). LP
Eagles' 13-10. Monday nt'ght
Richmond 1 Rochester 0
- McGlothen 15-4). HR- Ogiivie
behind the ki cking of an
Toledo 5 Tidewater 4 (l st,
16th) .
12 innings)
Austrian soccer star.
Tidewater 7 Toledo 6 (2 nd)
Texas
000 000 ooo-o 2 o
Rookie Toni Linhart, an
Charleston 3 Louisville 2 ( 11
020 000 03x- 5 6 I FOREMAN GETS SHOT
Minn
import making .,_
Austrian
Innings)
Paul , Panther 18) and Fahey ;
BOSTON (UPI ) - George
'""
!Only games scheduled)
· an Amert· ·
first appearance m
Perr y 111 -9) and Borgman . LP Foreman was promised
- Paul (4-4). HR - Darwin heavyweight title shot at Joe can football game. Won the
I15th l.
SETS RECORD
Frazier Monday if he gels by exhibition game for the Sat'nfs
IOnly games scheduled)
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Oscar Bonavena in a lf&gt;.round with a nine-yard field goal with
Nate Colbert of the San Diego RON CALLED UP
bout on Oct. 11 at the Boston only nine seconds left in the
Padres, who blasted five home
game.
ST. LOUIS ( UPI )-Ron Garden.
"nhart
had to wru't out a
runs and set a major league Allen, brother of the Chicago
"We think you are entitled to
'""
by Eagle fans
demonstration
record ,by knocking in 13 runs White Sox' Dick Allen, was a shot at the title," both
before
his
winning
kick. The
in a doubleheader, was named called up by the St. Louis Frazier and his manager,
Monday as the National Cardinals Monday from Tulsa Yank Durham, said in a fans booed for 20 minutes to
protest a personal foul.
League's player of the week. in the American Association. tlephone interview.
Saints' quarterback ArchieN
Manning tried~nd failed-12
times to call signals at the
Eagles 12-yard line . He sucW. L. Pet. GB
63 48 .568

WZWW:W:~W~::~::::::~&amp;W.:&amp;'.:?'M.*&gt;:·&gt;::;:"~-~·~·:m·~:re:.:::w-4

Japan has a lot of good ideas, like cheap ways to make
transistor radios and small cars.
But they also have a practice that America would do well to
follow -the custom of declaring thelr rilost learned and famous
men to be ''honored and valuable human resources." The poets,
artiats, scient!Sta and others so recognized are given special
recognition, have a comfortable income settled upon them so
they may pursue thelr work aad studies in security, and are
revered citizens of the nation.
I'd like to see America do the same thing- but with a twist.
I'd like to see younger, promising men declared "potentially
valuable human resources," and given stipends and honors for
worltlng in outof.the!way places where they are needed -in the
ghettoes, in Appalachia, Indian re~~erVatlons .
(Everyone knows America does honQr promising yoiDlg men
- by sending them abroad as Fulbright and Rhodes scholars.
I'm wanting to keep someofthesefolka at home.)
The thinking behind lhls whole subject Is prompted by the
fact that Galiia County Is going to have a real, honest-to-pete
"artist in residence" for the coming year.
He's 41-year-old John Spofforth, and he'll lie working with
both elementary and high lchool puplla, the French Art Colony
and the ongoing programa at Riverby Manalon.
We wish Spolforth well, and believe he'll enrich the Gallla
County area culturally.
But why shouldn't every county, or region, have a ' 'valuable
human resource" of lhls type .to wist in lrlnglng an appre.clatlon of esthetic values and cultural enrichment to
resource:poor lll'eBI?
Let'uaythat GaU!a CoiDlty has an artist (as It wlll), Mason
County had a writer-to-residence, and Melga County had an
asplrlng and upwardly-mobUe mllliclan.
&amp;lrely, Ill some point, lhtre COII1d be some b)terdlange
between the lbree, 10 thlilt all of the Melgs-Gallla-Mason area
would be touched by the lllenta of tlree of man'a noblest fOI'Ill.ll
of apr illl (Perhaps !hey could even rotate llllsJUDenta over
a three.,ear fellowlhlp or residency period.)
I'm 111n that none of us geta up .tlfl!ft"/ mornlng and ll&amp;lw,
''Gee,it'a terrible to live in a culturally· deprived area." It lan't
that bid - not with MWip8pll'l, TV and 111dlo lirlnli~W .. so
much that Ia &amp;ood, earlchlna and enlJ&amp;trtenlng,
But tbe fact ill that JIII'IOIUI1 eltpllrieoce cannot be rep~ _
and the 1011111 people (eapeclllly) of thla area jllll don't 1a1ow
what It is to ba able lo drift IIIIo a concert hall, or an art gallery,
or a
ollect~n~ on the areal nterature of this world, u
children in llllll)' large cltlel do.
So a warm welcome Ill In ordw for Gallla'a "artllt-ln·
reaidence," with tile hope that there'll be more 1o come.
&lt;l'i THE TV DIAL: IIIII bel thla ma1n1 Ia Nuhvllle
gullarllt 0111 Alkina In concert with the llaltGn 1'0]11 Ordultn,
at 8:30 on wotJB.TV. (I have an albaal of one of lbelt c:oDtttta,
and - eouliryfan or clullcal fan -It II pmdneiJ IJ"'t)
'I1Ie Plot of a fall adnntun 1erlel 111 ABC llllbO!m IOIIJ&amp;ht,
''KIIIg Fu," alllboul Urate and IIIC:b, 1:10 p.m., Wln'N·TV ...
OlapterlOoflheAppa(eth!'!'IDIPapll'l, ""' YnJof AIIMI,"
wallowa flklnlla ln4M ' 1 ~ 1111n IIJ!e, t:• p.m., WKtJI,
TV.

The Pomeroy ace was helped
lremendously by the play of his
cousin , Doug Browning, at
shor tstop who made some
plays that might turn Cincinnati's Darrell Chaney's face
red. Doug was the game's
leading hitter with two singles.
Other hitters for Pomeroy

In Debut, Reds Win 9-1

Saints Win
Tilt In Last
POINT STANDINGS
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. 9 Seconds
(UP! )-A third-place finish in

By Paul Crabtree
modes and manners we totally admire; and as
we've written before, when you pays your
money, you can tell the truth; and that's a
satisfied paying ·customer's fact we offer as we
proffer also tipa on good restaurants which we'll
package in a future column of advice on Roman
and Parisian grub.
We've been in Italy dozens of limes; in Rome
mostly because it combines both a 50 or 75 pet.
slower pace which is Ideal respite from
Manhattan's feveJ'll. And as we've noted
previously, the Italians a!moat alone in the world
(in Me:dco also) manage an unusual balance of
willing service. They are really delighted to
welcome visitors.
Unlike the French, Italians don't ridicule a
foreigner trying to speak the local language.
Italians are delighted anyone tries to inhale a
little of their local cultures, of speech, wines,
foods or just the general ambience. They are
friendly without the patronizing obsequiousness
or insolence of the French with their lns181enUy
open palms. The English are dlf(ldent but not
insulting. The Spanish are distant, detached,
phlegmatic- untU they know YIRl a while -a
long while. The Germans have the atlftly polite,
totally correct, social apartheid which deflates,
disturhs and discourages. The Irish are friendly
to a fault, the fault - over.frlendllness. In the
city, that is; in the country they are secretive,
furtive, unlikely to be of great help even If you
ask directions. The line still hold&amp; in the "tale of
the American who stopped to ask an old
Corkonian how to get to a certain town, The old
gent puHed his pipe, looked in ali directions
lncllllllng up and down at slry and earth, and
confided: "You can't get there from here."
Not so In Italy. Pollee are uniformly, ahem,
polite and helpful. The ones in mid-Rome speak
Engllsli. Or sOrt ·or can gii along in some
communicative vein. Best to speak Italian
yourself, course, or carry along someone who

ellston

Matthews Unsuccessful

Pitts at Mont , ppd ., rain ·

San Diego !Arlin 8-13 and Chicago (Bahnsen 14-11) al
Greif 5-11) at San Francisco (S. California I Ryan 12·9). 11 p.m.
Stone 4-7 and Reberger 2-11. 2.
Wednesday's Games
5:30 p.m .
Cleveland at Boston
Wednesday's Games
Detroit al New York. 2
Montreal at Chicago
Chicago at Cal if. night
and Kirkpatrick . LP- Hunter
San Diego at San Francisco
Oakland at Kan City, night
(14-S). HR- Rudi (14th) .
New ·York at St. Louis , night
•

throws hard but serves up a
curve every now and then with
great control, fanned 11 and
walked one. He fanned the side
in the first inning on nine
pitches and his first 12 pitcbes
of the game were strikes. The
only other baserunner got on
through an infield error in 'the
fourth.

Browning hurled a perfect
game, that is, he allowed no
base runners, against South
Webster Friday night. He had
another in the making last
night retiring the first eight
batters before walking the
number nine hitter on a close 32 pitch.

7

48 54 .471 13

11
Cal ifornla
47 56 . 456 141J2
18
Texas
41 63 .394 21
21'12
Monday's Results

Los Ang at Cincinnati , night

In

Amefican League

:'
BY JACK O'BRIAN

•

chief rival, the University of
Michigan .
Niehaus, at 6-5 and 265
pounds, is the biggest man in
the all-star game.
Tom Batta,'coach of the 1971
state football champion
Warren Harding Panthers, will
coach the North. Dave Hurst,
whose Cincinnati Sycamore
team was undefeated last year,
is coach of the South.
'The South leads the series
with 12 wins to the North's II .
Three games have ended in
ties. The North 'won last year
13-0.

Sand pine is the principal
tree of the Ocala Na tional
Forest in Florida.

·
VAU.IE
AATI!!D

..
USED CARS

1968 FORD F-100
PICKUP
6 cyl., std .

'1595
Karr &amp; Van Zan.dJ
" Y~u ' li

Like Uur {JualltY.

Way of Doing Business. •

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
,Pomeroy
Open 'Evenings 'Tila :OO ·
Til S p',M. Sat,

Who cares about smoggy skies and polluted lakes.
About empty cans and trash littering our country·
side. About plants and trees dying in our forests. And
animals too. Who cares? Woodsy Owl, the Nation's
new battler for a clean environment cares. And so
should you. Join Woodsy in the fight against pollution.

�3- Till Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PDmeroy, 0., August 1,11!72

All-Stars

Television .Log.
.

.•.
.,'.,,
'·

HAPPY MANAGERS- Hershal McClure, right, and R. J. l)rowning,' center, accept the
team championship trophy from Mike Jacobs, tournament· manager. Pomeroy defeated
Jackson 14-13, South Webster W, and Wellston~ for the crown. They will pilot the squad in a
Jackson tournlm)ent opening this week .

;.'

,,
~­

·'
"·

.'

HERO CONGRATULATED - The Pomeroy AD-Stars swarm around pitcher Dale
Browning after the ace righty hurled his second consecutive no-hitter enabling Pomeroy to wln
the Wellston Tournament. The team is entered ina Jackson LL tourney toopentbisweek.

Ohio Democrats Ready for ~ McGovern Campaign
By LEE LEONARD .
UPi ·statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Republican and Democratic
leaders in Ohio agree the
disruption at the top of the
national Democratic ticket
should have a minimal effect
on the Buckeye State's
legislative races.
Democrats said Monday the
problems of Sen. George S.
McGovern finding a suitable
running mate appear to be over
now with the selection of R.
Sargent Shriver Jr. as a vice
presidential candidate.
Republicans agreed legisl .
live raceli do not depend on the
presidential campaign, and
they indicated lack of interest
by Democrats in their national
ticket could mean increased effort in state and local contests.
Ohio Democrats hope to control the House, which Republicans now dominate, M-45. They
also hope to close the 2().13
Republican gap in the Senate.
Republicans were hoping to
benefit !rom a strong showing
by Prl!llident Nixon even before
McGovern released hiS running . mate, Sen. Thomas F.

Eagleton of Missouri, . after with him (McGovern). People
Eagleton disclosed he had been are educated. They can split
treated three limes in the tl1eir ballots. They don't want
W60's lot psychiatric ailments. to vote for him, they can still
Voters Split Ballots
vote for Democratic canDemocratic and Republican didates for Congress and the
leaders in Ohio cited these rea- legislature."
sons for minilpizing the effects
House Speaker Charles F.
of.the Eagleton affair on legis- .Kurfess, R Bowling Green,
lative races:
'agreed with Calabrese that the
- Ohio voters are prone to influence of the top of the ticket
split their ballots, and Demo- on legislative races is minimizcrals or independents dissatis- ed in Ohio.
lied with the national ticket
"We have the office type halwould still stick with lot rather than the party type
Democratic legislative can· ballot," Kurfess pointed out,
dictates.
adding he believes the
- Even if Nixon has the presidential candidates could
power to pull Republican legis- influence the voter turnout.
lative candidates through, it is
Opinions Vary
too early to tell how he will fare
"We would probably have
on Election Day.
. the edge If the election were
- A lot will depend on the today," Kur!ess said. "The
turnout - a heavy vote benefit- disenchanted Democrats and
ing Democrats and a light one independents probably would
Republicans.
· not bother to vote if the election
"lt's not going to hurt," said were held today."
Senate Minority Leader An·
Republican State Chairman
thony 0. Calabrese, O.Oeve- John S. Andrews said the
land, of the Eagleton affair. Eagl~ton affair "certainly has
"We'll run on our own. Con- not helped the Democrats. But
gress and the legislature will unless there is a major sweep
be running their own cam- in one direction or the other,
paigns. We don 't have to run ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::,:::;:::·

Q"

,.-----------------.-------.-,1

. ,,I

~

Beat

•••

.

l: I Of the Bend
'·
•,'·

'

I1

By Bob Hoeflich

I

•

.. .
·

.1 I

I

,'j !

•\.! ,•.

Forest Kyle, 332 South High St., Columbus, and son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ira B. Kyle, Tuppers Plains, wrote a song entitled,
"Top Tune Number One" recently.
The song was picked up by an independent recording company and recorded by Monty Montgomery, broth~r of Melba Lee
Montgomery in January. Forest has received word through a
national survey on the song that it has received 551,972 plays on
radio alone since it was recorded.
Kyle has been awarded a lifetime membership in the
American Society of Authors and Publishers as a result of the
successful tune and is now working with Dan Marshall who wrote
"Born loser" and other songs. Marshall wrote "Randy, the
Handy Elf" which was making the rounds the past Christmas
season.
Kyle also has a book under publication by Harper and Row.
It's based on the 21st Psalm and is entitled, "! Will Lilt My
Eyes."
HOPE YOU'VE HAD the opportunity to view the attractive
fountain at the Middleport Village Pharmacy parking lot in the
evening. The lighting is so effective! The fountain at night
resembles the July 4th "fountains " of a day past - hard to
believe that it's water.
'•

~'•,

HAVE YOU AS ASentinel subscriber cast your ballot to send
your carrier to Kings Island yet? Subacribers are asked to
complete the form which appeared in the Sentinel recently on the
personality, promptness and nealness of their carrier. Carriers
pile up points through the subscribers' votes and those scoring
highest will win trips to the new park near Cincinnati. Deadline
for voting is Aug. 18.
AIRMAN CHESTER A. ROUSH, so n of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
0. Roush, Middleport, is now at the Lowrey Air Filrce Base. His
addreSs is AMN Chester A. Roush FR 301-5ll-9908, 3419 Stu.,Sqd.,
PSC Box B 4596, Lowry Air Force Base, Colorado, 80230.· ·
MRS. J. M. THORNTON was delighted to have her son, Bob,
his wife and their four sons, John, Pat, Joe and .Tom for several
days visit. It was the first time that Bob's wife has been able to
make thetrtpin 13 years. The Thorn tons reside at Old Bridge, N.

J.

The group visited in Point Pleasant at historical points and in
Kenova, W. Va., with Mrs. Bob Thornton's aunt, in Gallipolis
with Mrs. J . M. Thornton's sister-in-law, Mrs. Dale Gilkey in
addition to visiting with friends In Meigs County. On Friday the
group went to Canal Win-chester where the elder Mrs . Thornton
visited with Mrs. Guy Porter while the fest of the group went on
north to visit a farm where Mrs. Bob Thornton once resided. Mr.
and Mrs. Thornton also visited Marshall University - where
they met - so that their sons could see the college their parents
once attended.
;

THREE KILLED
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio ( UPI )
- Three members •of a Cir·
cleville family were killed
Mpnday in a car-truck crash at
1111 intersection in front of the
Walnut Townahip grade school
northofbei'e. The victims were
ldeiltlfled as Paul Ray Pennlnctoo, 39; his wife, Leona
Mae, 40, and their son, John,
10.

SMITH TO WHALERS
BOSTON (UPI)- Al Smith, a
goalie'who pJayed with Detroit
and Pittsburgh in the National
Hockey League, signed
Monday with the New England
Whalers of the World Hockey
Association.
The flatfish has both eyes
op one side of its head. These
can be turned independently
in different directions at the
same time.

.

Only 11,000
More
.
Signatures are
Needed in Ohio
COLUMBUS (UP!) State Rep. Robert Net1ley, ·
R-Laura, said today he now
had 307,474 signatures on
petitions and was "confident
we will get the other 11,000
needed to qualify the state
income tax question on the
November ballot by the end
of the day."
Netzley said he was
prepared to deliver the
necessary 318,000 signatures
to the secretary of state's
office as scheduled Wed·
ncsday afternoon before the
filing deadline.
Netzley said he had
signatures "on less than 500
petitions and we have 3,500 in
circulation now, so we should

have sufficient to file." The
legislator said he hoped to
present 350,000 signatures.
He said the requirement
was to have 5 pet. from at
least 44 counties and he now
had that many from 60
counties.
His petitions will be
checked by the secretary of
state's office and local
boards of elections to
determine the validity of the
signatures.
Netzley said if any were
disqualified, he would have
10 days in which to present
valid ones to reach the
318,000 requirement.

Judge Overturns
Six-Months Rule
COLUMBUS (UPl) - A
federal judge has overturned
an Ohio law requiring persons
to live in the state at least six
months to be eligible to vote.
U.S. District Court Judge
Carl Rubin, in ruling Monday,
made a permanent a tern·
porary restraining order
issued March 31 by another
judge of the court. The decision
substitutes a 30-day residency
requirement throughout Ohio
for all elections.
''This decision makes it easier for students aad semitransiients to become eligible
to vote," said Benson Wolman,
executive director of the
American Civil Uberties Union
of Ohio which filed the
challenge.
"We think it will enhance the
democratic process
by
!ringing more. people Into it,"
he said.

very few legislative races are
affected substantially by the
presidential candidates."
Andrews said the goal of the
Republican organization is to
carry Ohio for the President,
"but we're not assuming it's
going to be a total sweep. If it
goes heavy one way or the
other, obviously it's going to
have some impact on the legislative races," Andrews said.
"I don't think it's going to
have any effect whatsoever,"
said House Minority Leader A.
G. Lancione. "If the Republicans are hopeful of that, they
are going to be fooled."
Lancione conceded "right
now, the good Lord would have
!rouble coming down here and
beating Nixon, but there is a lot
of lime between now and
then."
He said McGovern and Shri·
ver could make it a close election, and that voters would be
choosing their legislators independently, "according to who
they know at the local leveL"
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, RPiqua, was the most pessimistic o( the Republicans, saying

"there is no question but what
the Eagleton affair will inure to
the advantage of the Demoera tic party" in state and local
races.
Gray pointed out t~at
organized labor and other
contributors to the Democrats
would be ignoring the loP of the
ticket and channeling funds to

New Rules Made
For Trial Courts
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Supreme Court has
adopted two new tules for state
trial courts, including use of
video taped testimony, to
eliminate delay and "improve
the quality of justice administered In Ohio."
The court said Monday one
rule would grant judges
authority to require testimony
by physicians and other expert
wibtesses to be recorded on
video tape if the witnesses are
unable to testify at the time of

$500 Awarded for
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio
(UP!)- James L. Brown, Ashville, was to receive a $500
check here today from the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation for
evidence he provided March 2:i
which led to the arrest and
conviction of a burglary
suspect.
The money, to be presented
by C. William Swank, federation· executive vice president,

· congressional and legislative
candidates.
While conceding Nixon's
popularity, Gray said "It's in
the 'If' deck of cards. Times
are volstile, and there's no
guararitee Nixon will have as
big a lead in the polls in
November as he appears to
have now."

the trial.
The second rule is designed
to eliminate delay caused when
an attorney in a case is unable
to appear in court at the time
scheduled because he is engaged in other cases in other
courts.
The rule allows the judge to
require the attorney to provide •
substitute trial counsel. If the
attorney wa,s appointed by the
court, the court could appoint
other trial counsel.
The rules go into effect Sept.
I.

Evid~nce" ·

is the first under the organization 's property protection serVice program to curb rural-area
crime.
The program, said Swank,
provides a $500 reward to any.
one giving information that
leads to the arrest and conviction for various crimes including arson, malicious injury to
property, burglary or other felopies committed on a Farm

Bureau member's property.
Brown saw two men run
!rom the house of Lowell White
in Ashville and drive away in a
car. He spoted the car's license
number and reported it to the
Pickaway County sheriff.
One of the suspects, Daniel
R. Broughton, was subsequently arrested, tried and convicted
of breaking and entering.

~

TUESDAY, AUGUST I
.
5:00- ttT~keu Thiel ~i ~lee. co. 33: Dick Van Dyke u : if~"
Rogers 33: Wagon Train 3: Maverick 13; Bib Valley6.
5·30- Marshall Dillon 15; Eltc. Co: 33. .
·
,·,oo- News 3, 4, 8, io, 15; CBS. News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie
13'; Truth or Conseq. 6; Seume St. 20; Halh~yoga33.
·
6·30- News3 4, 6, 8, 10, 15; Grand Masters Cliess33.
7:00 - News 6: Elec. Co. 2Q; Farmer's O..ughter 13; Insight 33 ;
· Green Acres 3; Dick Van Dyke 4; Whars My Line? 8; Andy
Griffith 15.
7· 30- Masterpiece Theatre 33; Mod Squad U; Jerry Reed 8,
· 10; Mr. Rogers 20; Television Forum 6; Ponderosa 3, ~. 15.
8:00- Maggie ,nd the S.Oulilul Machine 20.
8:30- Evening at Pops 24), 33; Hawaii Flve-0 8; NBC Action
Playhouse3, 4, 15; Mqvie "Kung Fu" 6, 13.
9:30 - Canoon 8, 10; Handfuls of Ashes 33: London Bridge
S~clal ·3, o1. 15; Ron Dell~ms 20.
10:00 - News. Weather, Sports 20; _Firing Line 33; Marcus
Welby, M.D. 6,13.1
10:30...: Arthur Smith 8; Peyton Place A; WSAZ Comment J: The
Issue 10: Death Valley Days 15.
11 :00-News3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11:30- Old&lt; Cavell!; Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Salome"
10: Movie "Fort Dobbs" 13; Movie "Three Biles of The Ap.
pie" 8.
1:00- Your Heallh 4.
1:30 - News4.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9
6:00- Sunrise Seminar A; Sacred Heart 10.
6:15- Farmtime 10.
6:20- Farm Report 13.
6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; News, Weather, Sports, 6; Bible
Answers a; Urban League Presents 10: Glory Road 13.
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; News6, s, 13.
·
7:30- Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Underdog i3.
8:00-.Caplaln Kangaroo 8, 10: New Zoo Revue13, 6; "Sesame
St. 33.
S:30- Tennessee Tuxedo 6; Jack LaLanne 13.
S: 55 - Local News 13.
9:00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15 : Jackie Oblinger 8;
Peyton Place 13; What Every Wom1m Wants to Know 3;
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6; Mr. Rogers 33.
9:30 - Truth or Conseq. 3; Mike Douglas 6; My Three Sons 8; ·
One Life to Live 13; Electric Co. 33.
9: 55 - Chuck While Reporl1 tO.
10:00- Dinah Shore 3, 15; Lucille Ball10: Dick Van Dyke 13:
Hathayoga 33.
·
10:30- Concentration 3, 15; Phil Dona huH; Spill Second 13: My
Three Sons 10; Beverly Hillbillies 8; ln·School Instruction 33 :
Love, American Style 6.
11:00- Sale of Century 3, 15; Family Affair 8; Love American
Style 13; Communique 6.
11.:30-HoliywoodSquares3,4, 15; Bewilched6. 13; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St. 20. '
12:00- JeopordyJ, 15; BobBraun'slO-SOCiubA; Local News iO;
News 13; Medicine 20; Contact 8; Password 6.
12:30-3 W's Gamel, 15; Spill Second 6; Search for Tomorrow 8,
10.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.
1:00 - News, Weather, Sports 3; Ail My Children 6, 13; Watqn
Your Child 15: Divorce eourtB; Green Acres 10; French Chef
33.
1:20- Lucille Rivers.
1:30- 3 On A Ma1&lt;.1 3, 4, 15: A!. The World Turns 8, 10:
Designing Women 33; ABC Affernoon Playbreak 6, 13.
2:00 - O..ys ol Our Lives 3. 4, 15: Newlywed Game 13; Virg inia
Graham 6; Love Spiendored Thing 8. 10; Brldge33.
2:30- Doctors 3, 4, 15: Dating Game 13; Guiding Light 8, 10;
Handfuls of Ashes, 33 .
3:00- Another World 3, 4, 15; General Hospllal 6, 13; Secret
Storm 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 33.
3:30 - Return to Peyton Place3,4,15; One Life to Llve6 : Edge
of NigM 8, 10; Jell's Collie 13.
4:00- Mister Cartoon 3; Somerset 4, 15: Fllntstones 3; Sesame
St. 20, 33; Huckleberry Hound 6; Batman 8; Movie " Along
Came Jones" 10.
4:30 - Green A:cres 3; Merv Griffin 4; I Love Lucy! : Virginian
8; Password 13: Andy Griffith 15.
5:00- Wagon Train 3; Mister Rogers 33: Maver ick 13: Dick
Van Dyke 15; Big Valley 6.
5:30- Marshall Dillon 15; Electric Co. 33.
6:00- News, Weather, Sports, 3, 4, 8, 10, 15; Truth or Con seq . 6:
I Dream of Jeannie 13: Sua me SUO; Hathayoga33.
6:30 - NBC News 3. 4, 15; ABC News 6, 13; CBS News 8, 10;
Bridge ll.
.
7:00 •- . News, Weather, Sports 6, \0; Elec. Co. 20; Wild, Wild
West 13; Millstones of Progress 33; Wild and Wonderful" 3;
Mayor's Report15; Dick Van Oyke4; What's My Line 8.
7:30 - Epl$0de: Action 33; To Tell Tht Trujh &amp;J Doctors on Call
4; Lassie15; DragnetS; The Judge iO; Mr. Rogers20.
8:00 - The Super 6. 13; Adam 12 4, 15; O..vld Steinberg 8, 10;
Public Affairs 20, 33. ,
8:30- Corner Bar 6, 13; McCloud 3, A, 15; Movie " Intimate
Lighting'' 20, 33; Death Valley Days 15.
9:00 - Marty Feldman Comedy Machine 13; Medical Center 8,
10.
9:30 - Kopycats 13; Movie "The Spy Killer" 6.
10:00- Night Gallery 3, A, 15; Mannix 8, 10 ; Soul 33 : News.
Weather, Sports 20.
10:30- Newsmake'r '72 13.
11 :00- News. Weather, Sports3,4,6.8, 10, 13, 15.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Dick Cavell 6; Movie "Tribute to
a Bad Man ' 8; Movie "The Grapes of Wrath " 10; Movie "The
Bad Seed" 13.
1:00 - News and Weather •
1:30 - Local News 1.3.

F

By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
64 38 .627
Pittsburgh
New Vorl&lt;
55 46 .545 8'12
Chicago
54 50 .519 il
St. Louis
SO 51 .495 13'12
Montreal
45 55 .450 18
Philadelphia 39 1&gt;3 .382 25
West
w. I. pet. g.b.
Cincinnati
62 39 .614

.'
·'

..,.,

Houston

Los Angeles
Atlanta
San Francisco
San Diego

..'

58 46 .558

53 48 .525
47 5ll .448
46 59 .438
41 61 .402

Monday's Results

•.
'.

u

East
w. I.
57 45
55 47
52 48
s1 50
4S 55

Detroit
Baltimore

New York

Boston
Cleveland
Milwaukee

Oakland
Chicago

41 62

5112 Minnesota
9
Kansas City

West
w. I.
62 42
58 44

Long and lanky righthander
pet. g.b. Dale Browning hurled hi%
.449
second straight no-hitter as lhe
.539 2
.520 4 Pomeroy All-Stars won the
.505 5•12 Wellston Little League All-Star
.466 9'12
.398 1.6112 tournament over host Wellston
3-ll Monday night marking the
pet. g.b. first Pomeroy win in the
.596
tournament since 1958.
.569 3

53 47 .SJO

Mi nnesota 2 Tex.as o

Pitts at Mont, ppd .. rain
Cincinnati 9 Atlanta 1
St. Louis 3 New York 2, 13 inns
IOnly games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
I All Times EDTI
Montreal (McAnally 1-11) at
Chicago I Hands 9-7), 2: 15 p.m.
New York (Gentry S·8l at Sf.
Louis IWise 10-12). 9:05p.m.
Los Angeles !John 9-51 at
Cincinnati (Grimsley 10-4), 8:05
p.m.
Philadelphia (Champion 4-11)
at Pillsburgh !Ellis 9.5). 8:05
p.m.
Houslon (Wilson 7-7) at
Atlanta (G. Stone 3·BL 8:05

Kan City 4 Oakland 2
Cleveland 6 Boston 2
Ball 5 Milwaukee 2
(()rlly games scheduled I
Today's Probabie·Pitchers
IAil Times EDTl
Detroit ILolich 18-7) at New
York (Peterson 12-11) , 2 p.m.
Cleveland ·(Tidrow 9.9) at
Boston (Pattin 9-10), 7:30p.m .
Baltimore IDobson 12-11) at
Milwaukee (Colborn 4-2 ), 8:30
p.m. .
Oakland IOdom 9-4) al
Kansas Cily IDal Canton 5·4l.
8:30 p.m .

p.m .

p .m .

Texas

(Bosman

at

4-S)

Minnesota I Blyleven 10-14). 9

Brownlng, who not unly

Linescores
By Uni1ed Press, International

National League

GREENVILLE, Ohio
!UPI) - Curt Day, the
Atlanta
000 000 01 o- 1 9 o defending champion, takes a
Cinci
060 003 OOx- 9 1~ 2 JIHI record into the last
Reed, Hard in (2). McQueen games tonight of the World
(5) , Hoerner (B) and Will iams;
McG lo thlin (5-51 and Bench. LP Horseshoe Tournament.
Day, of Frankfort, Ind.,
- Reed (9-il) . HRs- Morgan
(1 4th) , Menke 16th) .
woo five more games
Monday night and was the
(13 innings)
N.Y. 100 100 000 000 o- 2 9 I only undefeated player
St.L 100 100 000 000 1- 3 B0 among the 36 finalists.
Seaver, McGraw (9) and
Oyer; Gibson , Segui I ill and Elmer Hohl of Wellesley,
Simmons . WP- Segui (3-1). LP Onl., was second with a 29-1
- McGraw (4-9). HRs- Garrelt record an.d Mark Seibold, 18,
(2nd). Sizemore (2nd).
of Huntington, Ind., was
third with 27-3.
!Only games scheduled!
American League
Day pttcbes against five
Oakland
110 000 ooo- 2 7 0 opponents tonight, conKan Ci ly
000 400 OOx- 4 9 1
Hunter. Locker (7). Knowles cluding with competition
against Hob!.
{7) and Duncan ; Drago (8.13)

Houston at Atlanta. nigh·l
Phila at Pittsburgh, night

The

Dai~ Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHILL .
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
City Editor
Pub l ished da i ly except
Saturday by The Oh io Valley
Publi shin g Company, 111
Court Sf., Pome rov. Oh iO,
AS16q _ Bus iness Office Phone

" 2-2156, Editorial Phone 992 ·

21S7 .

Second cl'a ss postage paid at

Pomeroy. Onio .

Nat i onal
advert i sing
representat i ve
Botfinelli

Gettaoher. In c .. 11 Eut 42n&lt;t
St ., N ew York City, New York .

SubHription rates : De l l'ole red by carrier where
ava ilable 50 cents per W@ek ;

Bv Motor Route wnert carrier

s.~rvice

available . One
month sus Bv mai! in Ohio
and W . Va , One year Sloi .OO .
SiK

noT

months

l7 .1S .

Three

month S Sol so . Subscr i ption
pr ice includes Sunday Times .
Sentinel

Baltimore at Milw, nig ht
Texas at M inn esota

International League
Standings
United Press International

Baltimore 010 002 02o- 5 9 I
Miiw
100 001 ooo- 2 6 2
Cuellar, Alexander (6), Ja ck·
son (7) and Hendricks ; Lon·

TEMPORARILY ROMAN
IN TilE GLOAMING
ROME (KFS) - No such fiscal trauma
faced us at the Rome airport as that terrible $250
kick-in-the-wallet we'd experienced in our
ignorance in hiring a car and driver to lug us
from Cherhourg to Paris. OUr penurious nerves
had stopped twanging by the time we landed at
Leonardo da Vinci Airport at Fiumicioo, near
Rome, and our transportation there was simple,
swift and efficient. We've traveled to Europe
dozens of times and adore the difference in life
styles, the change in eating habits, the much
slower pace, the solicitous citizenry; but we do
enjoy a quietly proud aclmowledgment of
American signs of life: the moat popular
American terms in Europe are Coca Cola,
American Express - and Hertz.

For years, until last, we'd experimented
with hiring cars from local firms wherever we
wished to drive in Eruope . we found It, for us, a
very dreary mistake. Most of the local car-hire
firms had little lime for personal attention. 1n
European fashion, they paid cursory heed to
repairing their cars. They apparently never
retire them. We'd never hired a single car over
the many years that it dido~ treak down at leaat
once; often, frequently . Then a year ago we
decided the heck with our .old false psychology
that the little local outfits shOuld be better, and
simply use our American Hertz charge card&amp;.
No influence needed. Nothing except to
reserve a car to meet us at the Rome Airport.
We, last year and this, reserved a Fla t 124, which
is able to take five persons comfortably; we are
four, so we have lots of room. Young people get
Fiat 50ils which are tinier than the VW Beatie
and buzz through Roman traffic's mysteries like
magic. They're one statu.wtep ahead of a
motorbike and don't use much more gasoline. does.
But our 124 is our suggestion to the famUy trade,
The RolDan hotels remain the same· the
small by U. S. monster-car standards but cl06e to vast, in personal Cav11leri Hilton is
large by Italian.
popular with Americana. who never ree11y want
We've found that minor frustrations aren ~ to leave h(llle, II hau swlmming pool but lacks .
there simply because the company employs the personaltouch of the greatluury hotela (the
linguists who must speak Engliali whether in Excelsior, Grand, Hauler) and the warm
Italy, Germany, France of wherever. We can't personal solicil!lde of the fine llllalJer holeJa
guess how big the business IS in Europe but we'd (lngliterra, De Ville). And thoup Rome alnys
guess It is overwhelming. Because of this Is Old, It al"'ys is udtingly :varied; and where
essential economic truth, Hertz takes care of its modernity has invaded, lt'a on a more visually
clients wi~h an efficiency unusual among eJtdting level tban mere ha~. In cloth• ·
Europe's laissez faire traditions. It's not furniture, architecture, food - e"'1thlng u:
manana, domani, or dope domani. It's today, ·cept in traffic - Rome l'tiiDiins a total Ill·
ocgi. It's the one American Invasion of Europeaa dlmioiahed deiJcht.
·
'

a

or

lmnleMeiy

By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
It took Eddie Mathews only
two innings at his new job to
acquire Excedrin headache No.

I.

Mathews, a former Braves'
star who was named manag er
of the Atlanta team Monday
afternoon, watched in dismay
Monday night as th e Cincinnati
Reds scored six times in the
second inning en route to a
crushing 9-1 victory in a
nationally televised game.
Mathews got a good loo k at
the major problem that has
h~unted the Braves for the last
several years- pitching. The
Reds jumped on Ron Reed for
six hits in lhe second inning,
including a three-run homer by
Joe Morgan, and Denis Menke
added a three-run homer off
rell·ever Ml' ke McQueen t'n the
sl'xth.
"I
b
was nervous ut I'm sure
I'll get over l·t," sal·d Mathews ..
"W •
· 1 k
e re gmng o la e a 1ong
hard look and evaluate these
fellows for the rema1'nder of the
season. I th'tnk we have bette r
·1 h' tha
·h
h d
PI c mg
n we ave s owe
db
tte
't
h'
th
an e r p1 c mg an peop1e
think we have."
One Other Game Played
In the only other National
League game, St. Lo uts
· edge d
"
.,ew York, 3-2, in 13 innings.
Pittsburgh at Montreal was
rained out.

-

a

I

9 oz.

• •

95C value

65¢

Colgate ,MF."I
63J,oz .

•

•

I

;a

Sl.09
value

55/to

•••
••
Sua~
•e

...

ltmn 2 po• fa mtly

Baby hampoo
from H

r1e Curtis

e
••

16 oz

•

99C value

59¢

•

••

ceeded on the 13th try and Bob
Gresham bolted for five yards,
then carried for three and two
yards to put Unhart in line for
the kick.
"We had to do something to
get the game over," said New
Orleans Coach J. D. Roberts.
"The scoreboard clock didn't
work and we didn't know how
much time was left ...
· It was Roberts' play that
helped Manning pull the Joints
into a 10-10 tie with Philadelphia with 6:13left in the game.
Roberts said he noticed a
"flaw" in the Eagles' defense
and sent wide receiver
Margene Adkins down the
sidelines for a 73-yard touchdown pass.
Eagles rookie Pat Gibba
fumbled a fair catch on a punt
to put the Saints at the Eagles'
:!:i. Two plays later, Eagle
defensive tackle Houston Antwine was called for a personal
foul that touched off the booing
and moved the Saints to 'the 12yard line.
Linhart, who missed a 'll·
yard field goal attempt In the
second quarter, kicked a 20yarder in the third period for
the Saints' first points.
Pete Iiske connected with
Harold Jackson on a tO-yard
pass in the first hail to give
Philadelphia seven points .
Tom Dempsey kicked a 44-yard
field goal in the third quarter.
Despite
the
loss,
Phlladelphia Coach Ed Khayat
said he was pleased with' the
outside
running game.

1 3 Ol .
Ret~ular

Super Hold
Unsc1nted Super
S 1 09 value

Playtex Nurser
Disposable Bottles
'

7 9 C each

MASON - Mason's Utile
League will sponsor a 16-team
double elimination softball
tournament on weekends
sturting August 26-'l/th and
Sept. 2nd, 3rd lllld 4th. Finals
will be held on Sept. 4th (Labor
Day) at Mason 's Ultle League
Ball Field !pealed next to
Mason Drive-In .
The directorg.report that all

a 57 14 vAIUP.

"+

.'

•

CANTON, Ohio (UPI) Team captains were named
Monday for the 27th annual
Ohio High School All -Star
Football Game which will he
played Friday night at Fawcett
Stadium here.
· Ken Kuhn, a linebacker .
fullback from Louisville High
School, and guard Tim Davis of
Former Gallipolis Blue
Devil tackle Chuck Wood Is
scheduled to play for the
South All.Stars Friday night.
Pete Neal, another ex-GARS
gridder, received an In·
vltallon to play In the classic,
but bas declined. Coaches C.
L. (Johnny) Ecker, Ed
Pauley, .Buddy Moore, and
Don (Moose) Maurer, along
witb Ron Logan and
Jim Osborne plan to attend
Friday's encounter.
Warren - Western Reserve,
were named co-captains by the
North's team members.
Rick Slager, a quarterback
from Upper Arlington, and
tackle Steve Niehaus of Cincinnati Moeller, were named
C'/:Captains of the South.
Kuhn plans to play his
lege ball at Ohio State,
w ere his brother, Dick, was
end on the Big Ten and Rose
BQwl champion team of 1968.
bavis plans to attend OSU's

~

teams must be sancuoned by
ASA. Entry fee will he $2:i plus
two Dudley balls. Trophies will
be awarded to the first, second,
and third place teams, and for
the most home runs.
Teams may contact tourllllffient directors Bub Oliver,
77~71; Charles Sian ley, 7735965; Ray (Red) Tucker, 773,
5636. Reireshmenls will be
sold.

Up tight over big bills ?

i$ t~e an$wer

•'

1~5 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone'm-2171

a.....~~..............~................................-..............-.........1 ••a•••••••••••g••••••••.•a•o•••••••••••o•••••

.,

Boston,

6-2,

in

American

League action .
Ted Sizemore hit an insidethe-park homer to lead off the
last of the 13th and give the
Cardinals a victory over the
Mets. Sizemore's hit came off
Tug McGraw and eluded
leftfielder Cleon Jones, who
attempted to make a shoestring
catch. Diego Segui, in relief of
Bob Gibson, was the winning
pilcher . Wayne Garrell had a
homer fo r the Mels.
Mark Belanger's two-out double in the sixth drove in two tiebreaking run s and paved the
way for the Orioles' triumph.
Mike Cuellar, who had completed eight of his last nine
starts, was knocked out in the
sixth but still managed to gain
his lith victory. Brooks Robinson had a . homer for the
Orioles.
The Royals unloaded for four
· run s in the fourth inning off
Jim Hunter and held on to
defeat the Athletics behind the
seven-hit pitching of Dick
Drago. Drago, who had been

hitless in 26 at bats, delivered a
run -scori ng single in the fourth
as did Cookie Rojas and Amos
Otis. Joe Rudi had a homer for
the A's, whose lead in the AL
West was reduced to three
games over Chicago.
Perry Pitches Two-Hitler
Jim Perry pitched a twohitter and Bobby Darwin
slammed a three-run homer as
the Twins blanked the Rangers.
Perry, who has won five games
in a row, also pulled off ·a
rarity for a pitcher-an unassisted double play- in the fifth
inning.
There were runners on first
and second when Bill Fahey· hit
as1Jor t pop between the moun d
' d wh'IC h fe11 to the
an d th II'
d p
· k d th hal
groun d. erry pte e t eth ' dI
up an ran over o · 1r ,
th'10k' h h d f
e a1 t a orce
H mg th
· out.
hd
owever • e P a e umpire. a
ll d ti . f' ld n
ca
e thte bmtt te t Y rule
m ki
· 1,
a ng e a er au oma1tea.
1
t
t th
·h
at nett er
pY ou . excep
F
erry nor ahey heard the call.
In the confusion Fahey wandered off the bag and was
tagged out by Pe
p· h h'tt J rry
h ·B h
me • t er o n ro amer
de1lvere
·
d a thr ee-run doubl e to
cap a four run 1'ghth · ·
·
e
mmng
that gave Clevelan d ·••
· t
I"' VIC ory
overBoston.GraigNettlesalso
dro~e in . two runs for the
Indtans ~t.th a pair of singles.
Ben OgilVIe had a homer for
.- ' •'4
.
.'
This Week's Spec.ial

Boston.

or 6 for

$4.50

Baltimore beat Milwaukee, 52, Kansas City downed Oakland,
4-2, Minnesota blanked Texas,
5..(1, and Cleveland defeated

·

Tourltament Set
Miss
Breck
Halrspray

one tournament championship
under their belts, piloted by
Herschel McClure and R. J .
Browning, now go to Jackson
this week for an all-star
tournament there.
Wellston
000 ()()()....j) 0 0
Pomeroy
000 12x--3 5 I
Hutchinson and Rupp.
Browning and McClure.

orth •s0 uth Tel
I t
schedu IedFri•d8ViJ I

•rl•

I

' \

Brown ing , Tim Hood, and
Ra~dy Marshall, who made the
finest catch of the tournament
in leftfield in the fifth inning,
each with one single .
Hutchinson, a lillie redhaired righthander with excellent control, fannetl three
and walked lwo for Wellston .
were Brian Hamilton, Dale ,
The Pomeroy Ali-Stars, with

borg. Linzy (7) and Rodriguez.
WP- Cueiiar (il-9). LP- LonLouisville
borg (10-6). HR - Robinson
Charleston
62 4B .564 V~
By BILL COOMBE
(7th) .
Sunday's Talladega 500 auto
Tidewaier
61 53 .535 . 4
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)
race
won
Bobby
Allison
the
Toledo
59 54 .522 5'12
Cleveland 000 000 141 - 6 8 0 second leg championship in the The New Orleans Saints surRochester
56 47 .496 8
Boston
001 000 001 - 2 10 o
·ved a ""mt'nute
chorus of
Sy ra cuse
53 61 .465 1J1i2
"""
Hilgendorf. Hennigan 17) and NASCAR Winston Cup point Vt
boos
and
a
broken
time
clock to
Richmond
52 60 .464 I P /2
Moses; McGlothen , Lee (8). standings, it was ·announced
Peninsu la
43 68 .387 20
Newhauser {8). Peter s (8) and Monday .
defeat the Philadelphia
Monday's Results
Fisk . WP- Hennigan (J. I). LP
Eagles' 13-10. Monday nt'ght
Richmond 1 Rochester 0
- McGlothen 15-4). HR- Ogiivie
behind the ki cking of an
Toledo 5 Tidewater 4 (l st,
16th) .
12 innings)
Austrian soccer star.
Tidewater 7 Toledo 6 (2 nd)
Texas
000 000 ooo-o 2 o
Rookie Toni Linhart, an
Charleston 3 Louisville 2 ( 11
020 000 03x- 5 6 I FOREMAN GETS SHOT
Minn
import making .,_
Austrian
Innings)
Paul , Panther 18) and Fahey ;
BOSTON (UPI ) - George
'""
!Only games scheduled)
· an Amert· ·
first appearance m
Perr y 111 -9) and Borgman . LP Foreman was promised
- Paul (4-4). HR - Darwin heavyweight title shot at Joe can football game. Won the
I15th l.
SETS RECORD
Frazier Monday if he gels by exhibition game for the Sat'nfs
IOnly games scheduled)
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Oscar Bonavena in a lf&gt;.round with a nine-yard field goal with
Nate Colbert of the San Diego RON CALLED UP
bout on Oct. 11 at the Boston only nine seconds left in the
Padres, who blasted five home
game.
ST. LOUIS ( UPI )-Ron Garden.
"nhart
had to wru't out a
runs and set a major league Allen, brother of the Chicago
"We think you are entitled to
'""
by Eagle fans
demonstration
record ,by knocking in 13 runs White Sox' Dick Allen, was a shot at the title," both
before
his
winning
kick. The
in a doubleheader, was named called up by the St. Louis Frazier and his manager,
Monday as the National Cardinals Monday from Tulsa Yank Durham, said in a fans booed for 20 minutes to
protest a personal foul.
League's player of the week. in the American Association. tlephone interview.
Saints' quarterback ArchieN
Manning tried~nd failed-12
times to call signals at the
Eagles 12-yard line . He sucW. L. Pet. GB
63 48 .568

WZWW:W:~W~::~::::::~&amp;W.:&amp;'.:?'M.*&gt;:·&gt;::;:"~-~·~·:m·~:re:.:::w-4

Japan has a lot of good ideas, like cheap ways to make
transistor radios and small cars.
But they also have a practice that America would do well to
follow -the custom of declaring thelr rilost learned and famous
men to be ''honored and valuable human resources." The poets,
artiats, scient!Sta and others so recognized are given special
recognition, have a comfortable income settled upon them so
they may pursue thelr work aad studies in security, and are
revered citizens of the nation.
I'd like to see America do the same thing- but with a twist.
I'd like to see younger, promising men declared "potentially
valuable human resources," and given stipends and honors for
worltlng in outof.the!way places where they are needed -in the
ghettoes, in Appalachia, Indian re~~erVatlons .
(Everyone knows America does honQr promising yoiDlg men
- by sending them abroad as Fulbright and Rhodes scholars.
I'm wanting to keep someofthesefolka at home.)
The thinking behind lhls whole subject Is prompted by the
fact that Galiia County Is going to have a real, honest-to-pete
"artist in residence" for the coming year.
He's 41-year-old John Spofforth, and he'll lie working with
both elementary and high lchool puplla, the French Art Colony
and the ongoing programa at Riverby Manalon.
We wish Spolforth well, and believe he'll enrich the Gallla
County area culturally.
But why shouldn't every county, or region, have a ' 'valuable
human resource" of lhls type .to wist in lrlnglng an appre.clatlon of esthetic values and cultural enrichment to
resource:poor lll'eBI?
Let'uaythat GaU!a CoiDlty has an artist (as It wlll), Mason
County had a writer-to-residence, and Melga County had an
asplrlng and upwardly-mobUe mllliclan.
&amp;lrely, Ill some point, lhtre COII1d be some b)terdlange
between the lbree, 10 thlilt all of the Melgs-Gallla-Mason area
would be touched by the lllenta of tlree of man'a noblest fOI'Ill.ll
of apr illl (Perhaps !hey could even rotate llllsJUDenta over
a three.,ear fellowlhlp or residency period.)
I'm 111n that none of us geta up .tlfl!ft"/ mornlng and ll&amp;lw,
''Gee,it'a terrible to live in a culturally· deprived area." It lan't
that bid - not with MWip8pll'l, TV and 111dlo lirlnli~W .. so
much that Ia &amp;ood, earlchlna and enlJ&amp;trtenlng,
But tbe fact ill that JIII'IOIUI1 eltpllrieoce cannot be rep~ _
and the 1011111 people (eapeclllly) of thla area jllll don't 1a1ow
what It is to ba able lo drift IIIIo a concert hall, or an art gallery,
or a
ollect~n~ on the areal nterature of this world, u
children in llllll)' large cltlel do.
So a warm welcome Ill In ordw for Gallla'a "artllt-ln·
reaidence," with tile hope that there'll be more 1o come.
&lt;l'i THE TV DIAL: IIIII bel thla ma1n1 Ia Nuhvllle
gullarllt 0111 Alkina In concert with the llaltGn 1'0]11 Ordultn,
at 8:30 on wotJB.TV. (I have an albaal of one of lbelt c:oDtttta,
and - eouliryfan or clullcal fan -It II pmdneiJ IJ"'t)
'I1Ie Plot of a fall adnntun 1erlel 111 ABC llllbO!m IOIIJ&amp;ht,
''KIIIg Fu," alllboul Urate and IIIC:b, 1:10 p.m., Wln'N·TV ...
OlapterlOoflheAppa(eth!'!'IDIPapll'l, ""' YnJof AIIMI,"
wallowa flklnlla ln4M ' 1 ~ 1111n IIJ!e, t:• p.m., WKtJI,
TV.

The Pomeroy ace was helped
lremendously by the play of his
cousin , Doug Browning, at
shor tstop who made some
plays that might turn Cincinnati's Darrell Chaney's face
red. Doug was the game's
leading hitter with two singles.
Other hitters for Pomeroy

In Debut, Reds Win 9-1

Saints Win
Tilt In Last
POINT STANDINGS
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. 9 Seconds
(UP! )-A third-place finish in

By Paul Crabtree
modes and manners we totally admire; and as
we've written before, when you pays your
money, you can tell the truth; and that's a
satisfied paying ·customer's fact we offer as we
proffer also tipa on good restaurants which we'll
package in a future column of advice on Roman
and Parisian grub.
We've been in Italy dozens of limes; in Rome
mostly because it combines both a 50 or 75 pet.
slower pace which is Ideal respite from
Manhattan's feveJ'll. And as we've noted
previously, the Italians a!moat alone in the world
(in Me:dco also) manage an unusual balance of
willing service. They are really delighted to
welcome visitors.
Unlike the French, Italians don't ridicule a
foreigner trying to speak the local language.
Italians are delighted anyone tries to inhale a
little of their local cultures, of speech, wines,
foods or just the general ambience. They are
friendly without the patronizing obsequiousness
or insolence of the French with their lns181enUy
open palms. The English are dlf(ldent but not
insulting. The Spanish are distant, detached,
phlegmatic- untU they know YIRl a while -a
long while. The Germans have the atlftly polite,
totally correct, social apartheid which deflates,
disturhs and discourages. The Irish are friendly
to a fault, the fault - over.frlendllness. In the
city, that is; in the country they are secretive,
furtive, unlikely to be of great help even If you
ask directions. The line still hold&amp; in the "tale of
the American who stopped to ask an old
Corkonian how to get to a certain town, The old
gent puHed his pipe, looked in ali directions
lncllllllng up and down at slry and earth, and
confided: "You can't get there from here."
Not so In Italy. Pollee are uniformly, ahem,
polite and helpful. The ones in mid-Rome speak
Engllsli. Or sOrt ·or can gii along in some
communicative vein. Best to speak Italian
yourself, course, or carry along someone who

ellston

Matthews Unsuccessful

Pitts at Mont , ppd ., rain ·

San Diego !Arlin 8-13 and Chicago (Bahnsen 14-11) al
Greif 5-11) at San Francisco (S. California I Ryan 12·9). 11 p.m.
Stone 4-7 and Reberger 2-11. 2.
Wednesday's Games
5:30 p.m .
Cleveland at Boston
Wednesday's Games
Detroit al New York. 2
Montreal at Chicago
Chicago at Cal if. night
and Kirkpatrick . LP- Hunter
San Diego at San Francisco
Oakland at Kan City, night
(14-S). HR- Rudi (14th) .
New ·York at St. Louis , night
•

throws hard but serves up a
curve every now and then with
great control, fanned 11 and
walked one. He fanned the side
in the first inning on nine
pitches and his first 12 pitcbes
of the game were strikes. The
only other baserunner got on
through an infield error in 'the
fourth.

Browning hurled a perfect
game, that is, he allowed no
base runners, against South
Webster Friday night. He had
another in the making last
night retiring the first eight
batters before walking the
number nine hitter on a close 32 pitch.

7

48 54 .471 13

11
Cal ifornla
47 56 . 456 141J2
18
Texas
41 63 .394 21
21'12
Monday's Results

Los Ang at Cincinnati , night

In

Amefican League

:'
BY JACK O'BRIAN

•

chief rival, the University of
Michigan .
Niehaus, at 6-5 and 265
pounds, is the biggest man in
the all-star game.
Tom Batta,'coach of the 1971
state football champion
Warren Harding Panthers, will
coach the North. Dave Hurst,
whose Cincinnati Sycamore
team was undefeated last year,
is coach of the South.
'The South leads the series
with 12 wins to the North's II .
Three games have ended in
ties. The North 'won last year
13-0.

Sand pine is the principal
tree of the Ocala Na tional
Forest in Florida.

·
VAU.IE
AATI!!D

..
USED CARS

1968 FORD F-100
PICKUP
6 cyl., std .

'1595
Karr &amp; Van Zan.dJ
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Way of Doing Business. •

GMAC FINANCING
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Til S p',M. Sat,

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About empty cans and trash littering our country·
side. About plants and trees dying in our forests. And
animals too. Who cares? Woodsy Owl, the Nation's
new battler for a clean environment cares. And so
should you. Join Woodsy in the fight against pollution.

�4-Tlle Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., August 8, tm

l

•

&lt;.:.
Alti&amp; · ._.._~·~:.:....~..Y-h.·.w.J~Y,.!b , ,•AJV,•,• .,.,.......v,•,•,•, , ,.,....~~···"·""~!\~•.'••vn··:.;···
(ii!'lil ~ il\IX~ •- ~v. o, oV.'oV~'l''H•..•'&gt;.,o;."A.•,, ,•• • ,•,•;&lt;;JQ.•,0~o;•~.•.•.J&gt;.•.•,._•...-.•,•,•.v.._._,,._v,•u•o , ,o;,

:

~

~ Today's

)ll

Snort
Parade
r

I

Five Enshrined in Baseball's Hall of Fame

~\~:: (UP!)
cooPERSTOWN, N.Y.
- The styles were dif.

t

ferent as the men made their
:·:· acceptance speeches. They
ranged from the suavity of
NEW YORK (UPI)-:'lt was a cheap shot. I repeat, a cheap Sandy Koufax to the Sancho
_ shot. The whole thing can he described .in one word-'horse- Panza quality of Yogi Berra,
radish '·'"
the flippancy of Lefty Gomez to
Charlie Finley is hot.
the flinty detennination of
Not lukewarm or well done, he's boiling.
Early Wynn.
"You want to know how Uj&gt;let lam ?" he says. "Grossly upset.
The styles were different.
There are 12 dozen in a gross ... 144 ... which means I feel144 The dream was the S81J1e. The
Urnes worse than simply upset."
Hall of Fame.
Charlie Finley managed to get the idea across to me he's
The four and Buck Leonard
unhappy.
of the old Negro League were
The man he's unhappy with is Bowie Kuhn, the baseball enshrined in baseball's
commissioner. I don't always agree with Charlie Finley, with Valhalla Monday, aloog with
how he thinks and what he says, but'in this case I agree with him three others who received the
completely. I think hfs on perlectly solid ground in regard to honor posthumously : Josh Glbwhat is making him s&lt;i unhappy and the commissioner, to iny son, the enduring and tragic
way of thinking, is not. What's more, I wooldn't be at all sur- legend of the Negro Leagues,
prisedif both men know it.
Ross Youngs of the pennantFor more than two months now, Bowie Kuhn has been sitting winning Nevi York Giant teams
on this earth-ahaking amouncement which he finally made last Of the 191JJ's and Wllilam
Saturday.
Harridge, former president of
He amounced the fact he had fined and reprimanded Charlie the American League.
The Brooklyn-born Koufax,
Finley, which really wasn't news.
at 36 the youngest man to ever
Both events actually took place several weeks ago and resulted be inducte"d into the Hall, was
from statements the Oakland· owner made about Kuhn's in- strong in his praise of Dodger
tervention in contract ·negotiations hetween Vida Blue and him pitching coach Joe Becker.
last spring.
"He pushed me, shoved me,
Taik Breaks OH
embarrassed me and made me
When talks broke off between Blue and Finley, Kuhn ordered work," said Koufax of his
Finleytokeepthe$63,000eontractonthe table.
mentor, "and I thank God for
That was rather high-handed, I thwght.
him."
Finley thought so, too. He objected, he did so openly and voiced
Koufax Joins D&lt;ldgers
the objection the S8llle way again following last Saturday's
The brilliant southpaw, once
annoWJCement by Kuhn.
a weak-hitting first baseman in
, "I thought it was improper for the commissioner to order that whom his high school coach
any specific salary offer be made or kept open," Finley said back saw no major league potential,
in April', and says' again now.
joined the Ebbets Field Dndg·
Butit'sthe$500fineandreprimandthatburnFinleymost.
ers in 1955. He had three
"I vehemently disagree with the action of the commissioner nondescript seasoJIS at Brook·
and with the propriety of his sitting in judgment on charges he lyn, winning nine and losing 10.
placed against me," says the Athletics' owner.
The firstthree seasons in Los
Last Aprl129, Kuhn issued an order with which Finley "vehe- !!e~~~ ;~~::::~~~
mently disagreed," says Charlie 0.
of six campaigns he had a
"Since his order was issued through the press without ex- journeyman 36-40 won~ost retending to me the courtesy 1.nd consideration of prior con·
sullatloo, I responded through the press that S8111e day. I ex· cor~~nning in 1961, Koufax
pressed my strong belief that the commlssiooer of baseball had launched a six-year campaign
exceeded his authority, and had acted improperly by his ar- against National League hitbltrary entry."
·
ters until his career was ended
Pulls Oul Book
after the 1966 season by an
Finley then pulls out the book, and from the looks of it, he has arthritic pitching ·arm.
the commissioner right by the specified paragraph.
The most memorable of
"Rule 22b of the Major League rules provides 'that Sandy Koufax' achievements
negotiations between player and club regarding the player's are his four no-bitters, one
compensation under his contract shall not be referrable to the every season from 1962 through
commlasloner,'" quotes Charlie.
1965.
The "cheap shot" he refers to is Kuhn's manner of announcing
The gnomish Berra, once
the fine and reprimand.
described by Larry MacPhail
Finleysaysaletterwashanddelivered to his Chicago office by as looking "like the bottom
me of Kuhn's assistants while he (Finley) was out, shortly after man on an unemployed
which the 'official announcement was made by Kuhn.
acrobatic team," combmed the
"I found .out about it by reading It in a newspaper," Finley dual roles of Mr. Clutch and
says. "I had just gotten off a plane from Memphis at 3:15 ·Mr. Malaprop during an 18Saturd~i!i'nl!ori, picked up a paper in the Chicago ilirport, year ~areer .in which he struck
and read'll!a!l been fined whlle riding to my office in a cab.
fear into the hearts of the
Kuhn never annoWICed the extent of the fine ; Finley did that. opposition and delight into
baseball fanS of every perHe figured why not?
suasion.
"I stlll would like to know what was his purpose of releasing it
Sincerity Impresses
to the press?" Finley asks. "It was a cheap shot."
But the man who once
Had Ills 1\eUOIIS
thanked his fans in St. LouisBowie Kuhn, of course, had his reasons.
who had accorded him a
The commlssioner's office operates on a yearly budget of $2.5special fete -"for making this
mtlllon and from time to time some owners have inquired about day necessary," impressed the
where all that IIUI!Iey is going to. Some also have inquired about 3,500 people assembled
what Bowie Kuhn has been doing to earn that multi-year near- yesterday in the courtyard of
Shrine Ubrary with the sin·
million dollar cootract of his.
eerily of his remarks.
The fining and reprimanding of Finley could have been what is
"I want to thank baseball "
known nowadays as "an affirmative action" on Bowie Kuhn's
'
part, but when I remember some of his other "affirmative ac- said 47-year-old Yogi. "It has
lion," such as he took in the cases of Ken Harrelson and Denny given me more than I could
ever hope for and I hope when I
Mclain, I think maybe the commissioner might be much better
leave the game I will put
off with less affirmative action rather than more.
something
back.
In any case, Bowie Kuhn has some other concerns now. Charlie
Finley for ooe.
In 1968, President Nixon won
"I shall do everything possible to uphold my right to speak the Republican nomination for
out,'' Finley says, "and shall lake all action available to me to president. He was elected in
overturn the conunissloner's disciplinary action against me." November, (defeating .Hubert
Exactly what does aU this mean,l asked Charlie Finley?
Humphrey and George
"No comment," he said.
Wallace ).
I came away with the distinct impression Charlie Finley still is
grossly Ul"'et."
By

~·)

MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor

Big Ed Nervous
In First Match
crNCJNNATl (UPI)-Eddle
Mathews was nervous, but you
couldn't blame him.
At 8:30a.m. Monday he got a
telephone call.
Three hours later he ·was
named to replace Luman
Harris aa manager of the
Atlanta Braves. That evening
he presided over a 9-1
shellacking his Braves took in
the finale of a series with the
Cir)cinnatl Reds.
1 was nervous, but I'm sure
I'll get over it," said the former
first baae coach, who socked
512 homers in his plavine
career, before departing
'

stantly Monday after the initial
call at dawn interrupted his
sleep.

I

seemed incongruous amidst
the · 'sqmber setting of the
Yanke'e Wrecking Machine.
But his winning habits were in
harmony wit~ those of. his
world champion t.earnrnates r •
The left-han,der from Rodeo,
Calif. had four ,20-vi~tory
seasons and compiled a 189-102
lifetime mark and a .649
winning percentage ov~r 14
season. Hil! 6-0 mark in World
Series competition is un·
matched.

Last 300-Game Winner ,
· The durable Wynn; the major
leagues' last 300-game winner,
compiled a :J00.244 record in 23
seasons with three different
American League clubs.
"I just wish I could have
been better than I was," said
Wynn. "Every time I played in
a game, I wanted to he an All·
Star, play ina World Series and
be elected to the Hall of
Fame ...and I have ."
Leonard, a teammate of
Gibson's . on the Homestead

Greys of the Negro National
League during a ~ireer .that
encompassed 18 years, said,
"We in the Negro Lelglles felt
we could have and should have
made the·majors, but it wash'!
to be. I never dreamed this
could happen either and so now
I offer thanks not for what I did
but for what somebody did for
me~ect me to the Hall of

Fame."
Gibson, who died in 1947, is
sort of the John Henry of
baseball, a man composed of

*·

the stuff ol. legend, a
mythical figure wl!o l.s said·to
have hit cloee to 800 home r11111
and once blasted a fair biD QJt
of Yankee Stadium.
Youngs, who died in OeceJn·
ber, 1927, had a . ~ a'OI!r..e
over a 111-year career and
played right field on Giant
championahip teams from
1921·1924.
Harrldge was head of the AL
from 1931·1~ and served as
chairman of the leagu~ , board
untll his death last year.'

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2-HOUR
CLEANING

1

Braves' President Bill
Bartholomay decided on the
oft-rumored switch
in
leadership after the club had
lost seven straight games
following the All.IJiar Game
break. It was Bartholomay
who had persuaded Mathews in
1970 to end his baseball
retirement by taking the
coaching ·job.
"I had gone down to AUenta
to J)ll'tlclpate in an Old Tlmers ·
pme," Mathews recalled.
He bid been out ol. bueball
tor lwo )'ell't prior to taking
llle Job. DllriDI thole lwo years
Ill IOld m&amp;mk:lpa1 bcltds in
Mllwlubl. "And," be aald, "I
rMIJ,y found out how much I ·
rm.ed bllleblll."

.

.
"My only regret.," the
current manager of the New
York Mets continued, "Is the
people who didn't live to see
thiS day. My mother and
father, who died a few years
ago, and my brother John,..and
Gil Hodges,'' said Yogi, his
voice cracking from the strain
of having to choke back tears.
Hodges, who suffered a fatal
heart attack on April I,
preceded Berra as field boss of
the Mets.
The 6:1-year-old Gomez, with

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�4-Tlle Daily SentiDel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., August 8, tm

l

•

&lt;.:.
Alti&amp; · ._.._~·~:.:....~..Y-h.·.w.J~Y,.!b , ,•AJV,•,• .,.,.......v,•,•,•, , ,.,....~~···"·""~!\~•.'••vn··:.;···
(ii!'lil ~ il\IX~ •- ~v. o, oV.'oV~'l''H•..•'&gt;.,o;."A.•,, ,•• • ,•,•;&lt;;JQ.•,0~o;•~.•.•.J&gt;.•.•,._•...-.•,•,•.v.._._,,._v,•u•o , ,o;,

:

~

~ Today's

)ll

Snort
Parade
r

I

Five Enshrined in Baseball's Hall of Fame

~\~:: (UP!)
cooPERSTOWN, N.Y.
- The styles were dif.

t

ferent as the men made their
:·:· acceptance speeches. They
ranged from the suavity of
NEW YORK (UPI)-:'lt was a cheap shot. I repeat, a cheap Sandy Koufax to the Sancho
_ shot. The whole thing can he described .in one word-'horse- Panza quality of Yogi Berra,
radish '·'"
the flippancy of Lefty Gomez to
Charlie Finley is hot.
the flinty detennination of
Not lukewarm or well done, he's boiling.
Early Wynn.
"You want to know how Uj&gt;let lam ?" he says. "Grossly upset.
The styles were different.
There are 12 dozen in a gross ... 144 ... which means I feel144 The dream was the S81J1e. The
Urnes worse than simply upset."
Hall of Fame.
Charlie Finley managed to get the idea across to me he's
The four and Buck Leonard
unhappy.
of the old Negro League were
The man he's unhappy with is Bowie Kuhn, the baseball enshrined in baseball's
commissioner. I don't always agree with Charlie Finley, with Valhalla Monday, aloog with
how he thinks and what he says, but'in this case I agree with him three others who received the
completely. I think hfs on perlectly solid ground in regard to honor posthumously : Josh Glbwhat is making him s&lt;i unhappy and the commissioner, to iny son, the enduring and tragic
way of thinking, is not. What's more, I wooldn't be at all sur- legend of the Negro Leagues,
prisedif both men know it.
Ross Youngs of the pennantFor more than two months now, Bowie Kuhn has been sitting winning Nevi York Giant teams
on this earth-ahaking amouncement which he finally made last Of the 191JJ's and Wllilam
Saturday.
Harridge, former president of
He amounced the fact he had fined and reprimanded Charlie the American League.
The Brooklyn-born Koufax,
Finley, which really wasn't news.
at 36 the youngest man to ever
Both events actually took place several weeks ago and resulted be inducte"d into the Hall, was
from statements the Oakland· owner made about Kuhn's in- strong in his praise of Dodger
tervention in contract ·negotiations hetween Vida Blue and him pitching coach Joe Becker.
last spring.
"He pushed me, shoved me,
Taik Breaks OH
embarrassed me and made me
When talks broke off between Blue and Finley, Kuhn ordered work," said Koufax of his
Finleytokeepthe$63,000eontractonthe table.
mentor, "and I thank God for
That was rather high-handed, I thwght.
him."
Finley thought so, too. He objected, he did so openly and voiced
Koufax Joins D&lt;ldgers
the objection the S8llle way again following last Saturday's
The brilliant southpaw, once
annoWJCement by Kuhn.
a weak-hitting first baseman in
, "I thought it was improper for the commissioner to order that whom his high school coach
any specific salary offer be made or kept open," Finley said back saw no major league potential,
in April', and says' again now.
joined the Ebbets Field Dndg·
Butit'sthe$500fineandreprimandthatburnFinleymost.
ers in 1955. He had three
"I vehemently disagree with the action of the commissioner nondescript seasoJIS at Brook·
and with the propriety of his sitting in judgment on charges he lyn, winning nine and losing 10.
placed against me," says the Athletics' owner.
The firstthree seasons in Los
Last Aprl129, Kuhn issued an order with which Finley "vehe- !!e~~~ ;~~::::~~~
mently disagreed," says Charlie 0.
of six campaigns he had a
"Since his order was issued through the press without ex- journeyman 36-40 won~ost retending to me the courtesy 1.nd consideration of prior con·
sullatloo, I responded through the press that S8111e day. I ex· cor~~nning in 1961, Koufax
pressed my strong belief that the commlssiooer of baseball had launched a six-year campaign
exceeded his authority, and had acted improperly by his ar- against National League hitbltrary entry."
·
ters until his career was ended
Pulls Oul Book
after the 1966 season by an
Finley then pulls out the book, and from the looks of it, he has arthritic pitching ·arm.
the commissioner right by the specified paragraph.
The most memorable of
"Rule 22b of the Major League rules provides 'that Sandy Koufax' achievements
negotiations between player and club regarding the player's are his four no-bitters, one
compensation under his contract shall not be referrable to the every season from 1962 through
commlasloner,'" quotes Charlie.
1965.
The "cheap shot" he refers to is Kuhn's manner of announcing
The gnomish Berra, once
the fine and reprimand.
described by Larry MacPhail
Finleysaysaletterwashanddelivered to his Chicago office by as looking "like the bottom
me of Kuhn's assistants while he (Finley) was out, shortly after man on an unemployed
which the 'official announcement was made by Kuhn.
acrobatic team," combmed the
"I found .out about it by reading It in a newspaper," Finley dual roles of Mr. Clutch and
says. "I had just gotten off a plane from Memphis at 3:15 ·Mr. Malaprop during an 18Saturd~i!i'nl!ori, picked up a paper in the Chicago ilirport, year ~areer .in which he struck
and read'll!a!l been fined whlle riding to my office in a cab.
fear into the hearts of the
Kuhn never annoWICed the extent of the fine ; Finley did that. opposition and delight into
baseball fanS of every perHe figured why not?
suasion.
"I stlll would like to know what was his purpose of releasing it
Sincerity Impresses
to the press?" Finley asks. "It was a cheap shot."
But the man who once
Had Ills 1\eUOIIS
thanked his fans in St. LouisBowie Kuhn, of course, had his reasons.
who had accorded him a
The commlssioner's office operates on a yearly budget of $2.5special fete -"for making this
mtlllon and from time to time some owners have inquired about day necessary," impressed the
where all that IIUI!Iey is going to. Some also have inquired about 3,500 people assembled
what Bowie Kuhn has been doing to earn that multi-year near- yesterday in the courtyard of
Shrine Ubrary with the sin·
million dollar cootract of his.
eerily of his remarks.
The fining and reprimanding of Finley could have been what is
"I want to thank baseball "
known nowadays as "an affirmative action" on Bowie Kuhn's
'
part, but when I remember some of his other "affirmative ac- said 47-year-old Yogi. "It has
lion," such as he took in the cases of Ken Harrelson and Denny given me more than I could
ever hope for and I hope when I
Mclain, I think maybe the commissioner might be much better
leave the game I will put
off with less affirmative action rather than more.
something
back.
In any case, Bowie Kuhn has some other concerns now. Charlie
Finley for ooe.
In 1968, President Nixon won
"I shall do everything possible to uphold my right to speak the Republican nomination for
out,'' Finley says, "and shall lake all action available to me to president. He was elected in
overturn the conunissloner's disciplinary action against me." November, (defeating .Hubert
Exactly what does aU this mean,l asked Charlie Finley?
Humphrey and George
"No comment," he said.
Wallace ).
I came away with the distinct impression Charlie Finley still is
grossly Ul"'et."
By

~·)

MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Editor

Big Ed Nervous
In First Match
crNCJNNATl (UPI)-Eddle
Mathews was nervous, but you
couldn't blame him.
At 8:30a.m. Monday he got a
telephone call.
Three hours later he ·was
named to replace Luman
Harris aa manager of the
Atlanta Braves. That evening
he presided over a 9-1
shellacking his Braves took in
the finale of a series with the
Cir)cinnatl Reds.
1 was nervous, but I'm sure
I'll get over it," said the former
first baae coach, who socked
512 homers in his plavine
career, before departing
'

stantly Monday after the initial
call at dawn interrupted his
sleep.

I

seemed incongruous amidst
the · 'sqmber setting of the
Yanke'e Wrecking Machine.
But his winning habits were in
harmony wit~ those of. his
world champion t.earnrnates r •
The left-han,der from Rodeo,
Calif. had four ,20-vi~tory
seasons and compiled a 189-102
lifetime mark and a .649
winning percentage ov~r 14
season. Hil! 6-0 mark in World
Series competition is un·
matched.

Last 300-Game Winner ,
· The durable Wynn; the major
leagues' last 300-game winner,
compiled a :J00.244 record in 23
seasons with three different
American League clubs.
"I just wish I could have
been better than I was," said
Wynn. "Every time I played in
a game, I wanted to he an All·
Star, play ina World Series and
be elected to the Hall of
Fame ...and I have ."
Leonard, a teammate of
Gibson's . on the Homestead

Greys of the Negro National
League during a ~ireer .that
encompassed 18 years, said,
"We in the Negro Lelglles felt
we could have and should have
made the·majors, but it wash'!
to be. I never dreamed this
could happen either and so now
I offer thanks not for what I did
but for what somebody did for
me~ect me to the Hall of

Fame."
Gibson, who died in 1947, is
sort of the John Henry of
baseball, a man composed of

*·

the stuff ol. legend, a
mythical figure wl!o l.s said·to
have hit cloee to 800 home r11111
and once blasted a fair biD QJt
of Yankee Stadium.
Youngs, who died in OeceJn·
ber, 1927, had a . ~ a'OI!r..e
over a 111-year career and
played right field on Giant
championahip teams from
1921·1924.
Harrldge was head of the AL
from 1931·1~ and served as
chairman of the leagu~ , board
untll his death last year.'

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
Pomeroy
Phone "2·5428

210 E. 2nd

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CHOICE

We Accept Federal Food ~lamp.~

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Get this tall, 16-ounce,
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Come in today and start colleoting
a set.

tbe

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(Upon Request)

Cincinnati.

Tile lelepbone ranJ con·

his quick wit and flip style

2-HOUR
CLEANING

1

Braves' President Bill
Bartholomay decided on the
oft-rumored switch
in
leadership after the club had
lost seven straight games
following the All.IJiar Game
break. It was Bartholomay
who had persuaded Mathews in
1970 to end his baseball
retirement by taking the
coaching ·job.
"I had gone down to AUenta
to J)ll'tlclpate in an Old Tlmers ·
pme," Mathews recalled.
He bid been out ol. bueball
tor lwo )'ell't prior to taking
llle Job. DllriDI thole lwo years
Ill IOld m&amp;mk:lpa1 bcltds in
Mllwlubl. "And," be aald, "I
rMIJ,y found out how much I ·
rm.ed bllleblll."

.

.
"My only regret.," the
current manager of the New
York Mets continued, "Is the
people who didn't live to see
thiS day. My mother and
father, who died a few years
ago, and my brother John,..and
Gil Hodges,'' said Yogi, his
voice cracking from the strain
of having to choke back tears.
Hodges, who suffered a fatal
heart attack on April I,
preceded Berra as field boss of
the Mets.
The 6:1-year-old Gomez, with

DOG MEAL
51b. bag

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DOG FOOD

59~

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bag

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2 unp~ 69¢ 3q51r $.1.00
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2% lb. bag
SCOT PRIDE TRAY PACK BREADED

CHUCK WAGON .•...}~.~~.~.~....69e
BOOTH .

NORTH STAR
TWIN POPS

(6 .Pack) '

REG. 39'
EACH

FISH STICKS ............~~-~~..~~:. 99e
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SHRIMP PIECES ..;... ~.~~:.~~......99e
QUEEN OF SCOT

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7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Augll8t 8,1972
&amp;-·The Doily Sentinel, Middltport.Pomeroy, 0 ., August I, 1972

'

Spassky Camp Revived
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-Boris Spassky, fresh from his
finest game, needs a victory
over Bobby Fischer today if he
Is to keep the $250,000 world
chess championship close
when it reaches the halfway
mark of 2Hilatch series.
The 12th game of the 24·
match series was scheduled for
1p.m. EDT today. Fischer was

playing the white pieces and
moving first.
Fischer, the U.S . challenger,
held a 61'.! to 41'.! advantage
over Spassky, the Soviet world
champion. A victory today
would give Fischer a threepoint lead with only 12 games
to play and a tie would ,keep his
lead at two points. Fischer
needs 121'.! points to become the

first American to win the chess
world championship, while
Spassky needs 12 to retain the
title .
Spassky's great 11th game
victory Sunday-he forced Fischer to resign on the 31st move,
having taken the challenger's

recovery.
Fischer h;ld won five and
drawn three of the previous
eight gJmes against a player
he hadl1't beaten before.
Grandmasters marvel; d
over the way Spassky trapp.:d
Fischer Sunday in a prepared
variation. For the opening 13
moves, the game followed the
same pattern as the seventh

By United Press International

Four states hold primary
elections today and national
attention focused on tile guber·
natorial race in Missouri where
voter disaffection over Sen.
Thomas Eagleton's resignation
may help the Republican ticket
this fall.
Michigan, Georgia and Idaho
also hold state primaries to
select candidates for state
offices and seats in both the
U.S. House and Senate.
In Missouri, Secretary of
state James Kirkpatrick anticipated a million-voter tur·
nout, the first in a primary
since 1936. Among the reasons
was the aroused interest of
voters who felt bitter because
of Eagleron's withdrawal from
the Democratic national ticket,
and also the fact that 17 candidates were vying for the
governor's nuinsion.
The gubernatorial can·
didates Include 10 Democrats,
five Republicans and two independents. Although Missouri
has had a Democratic
governor for 30 years, The
GOP is given a good chance
this time because unhap~:'
Democrats may cross party
lines to vote for a Republican.
Most Ukely to Benefit
!he Republican most likely
to benefit by this appears to he
Christopher "Kit" Bond,
elected two years ago as state
auditor . Four of the 10
Democrat contenders are

Mrs. Oldaker
Died Sunday

LETART, W. Va. - Mrs.
Ocie Mae Oldaker, age 52 of
Letart, W. Va. RFD, died
unexpectedly at her home on
Sunday evening, apparently of
a heart attack. She was born on
AprilS, 1920 at Letart RFD, the
daughter of the late Quincy L.
and Estella Graham King. She
was a member of the Broad
Run Lutheran Church.
Survivors include her
husband, Harry Oldaker ; t!Jree
sons,
Harry
Oldaker ,
Colwnbus; Quincy Oldaker, at
home, and Eldon King,
DeKalb, TIL ; one daughter,
Mrs. Ellen M. DeVault ,
Sycamore, Ill.; four grand·
children; four brothers,
Herbert King, John King,
Edwin King and Garland King,
all local, and a sister, Mrs.
Susan J. Edwards, New Haven.
The funeral will be held at
Broad Run Lutheran Church on
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with
the Rev. John Haeberle of·
ficiating . Burial will be in
Broad Run Cemetery.
The body will be taken to the
church to lie in state one hour
prior to the service. Friends
may
call at the Foglesong
(Continued from page 1)
Funeral Home from 5 to 9 p.m.
satisfactory condition, both
Tuesday
evening.
suffering lacerations and
abrasions.
The driver, James Finlinson,
suffered bruises while a third
passenger, lssabelle A.
'
Finlinson, 70, Huntington, W.
Va., had lacerations of the
face. They were not im·
mediately treated. James
JACKSON- Over 100 senior
Finlinson was cited for failing
golfers representing 15 country
to yield the right of way.
In other accidents in· clubs from southern Ohio,
vestigated by the patrol Kentucky and West Virginia
Monday, at 5:55p.m. on County will participate in the sixth
Road 40 at Lincoln Pike, seven annual Southern Ohio Seniors
and one tenth miles south of Golf Tournament to be held
Route 141, Mary F. Rose, 49, Tuesday, Aug. 22, at the
Rt. 1 Northup, was north· Fairgreens Country Club
bound when she crashed course between Jackson and
head-&lt;&gt;n in a sharp curve with Wellston.
an auto driven by Delbert
The golfers will compete,
Cisco, 18, Rt. I Northup.
There was moderate damage with handicaps, in the 18 hole
to both vehicles. No injuries or tournament over the rugged
hilly Fairgreens course. The
citations were reported.
At 8:50a.m. on County Road event will include luncheon,
42, the Vinton-Glenn Summitt dinner, golf carts, en·
Road, one and nine tenths tertainment, a fellowship hour
miles south of Vinton, John and prizes and awards .
Co-chairmen for the tourRoy Dandridge, 72, Route I
Vinton, hit the right front nament are Jack Stiffler, Sr.,
corner of a p&amp;oked county Jackson, and Ott Sharp,
garage truck when attempting McArthur, and Mrs. Lorraine
to pass the truck. There was Michael, Jackson, as executive
moderate damage to the
county truck and minor
damage to Dandridge's pick-up
truck. There were no injuries
or citations.
PHONE 992·2342
At 3 p.m. on Route 233 five
and seven tenths miles south of
Route 141, Johnnie Straight, 29,
Route 1 Patriot, tore down an
electric wire with the top of his
truck. The wire, which crossed
the road, was owned by Cecil
T. Miller, Rt. 2 Patriot. There
was minor damage to the
truck Straight was cited for
' "overheight.

·Foursome

"!ipassky could dictate the
terms of the 11th game. Today
Fischer haS the white pieces
and first crack at the ~board.
But what a great ·morale·
boOsting win (or BoriS. My
money is still on Fisch.er but
the match has certainly come
alive again just as it seemed
Fischer would walk away with
it."

Ivo Ney, one of ~·s
four seconds and the chiun·
. pion's tennis partner, said: ''Of
course we are delighted lxlt
Mr. Spasaky is not b41ng
kidded Into .bel{evlng anything.
Fischer has a two.point lead
and that Is a formidable hurdle
to pass againSt il player of his
caliber. But hliltory has shown
Uiat a three .point deficit ean be
overcome so wbo knows."

••

came at a lime he appeared to
he too far behind to make a

''
''•

1

Richard B. Russell, is expected
to survive the primary but is
almost certain to he forced into
a runoff.
His most likely runoff opponents on Aug. 29 will be
either former Gov. Ernest
Vandiver or state Rep. Sam
Nunn . U.S. Rep. Fletcher
Thompson has only token
opposition for the GOP
nomination.
In Idaho, a senate race plus a
hot three-way contest for a
congressional nomination is
expected to produce a record
turnout of 17&gt;,000 voters.
Idaho Races
Congressman James A. McClure is up against former Gov.
Robert E. Smylie, former
Congressman George V.
Hansen and former White
House staffer Glen Wagner for
the GOP senatorial nomination
for the seat of retiring Sen. lAm
B. Jordan, a Republican.
State Attorney General W.
Anthony Park, President William E. Davis of Idaho State
Universitty, Attorney Byron
Johnson and Women's liberation advocate Rose Bowman
seek the Democratic nomination.
Despite a variety of issues,
including busing, a light turnout was predicted in Michigan
where the top position at stake
is the U.S. Senate seat held by
incumbent Republican Robert
P. Griffin.
His seat is being sought by
Democrat Attorney General
Frank J . Kelley . Since neither
candidate has any opposition
within his own party, the
primary vote will show only
relative strengths.

,.•
'
I

'..
•

•'

••!

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

'~~·

.,.
'

GO TO THE FAIR!!!

•'•,

The Mason County Fair is this
week, and its now reg11rded as the
finest fair in W. Va . Visit us on
your way ..• save Cash!

A49cVALUE
HIGH IMPACT

PRETTY
PASTEL COLORS

Values To 75•

ENTIRE STOCK!

PAPER

BACK
BOOKS

We have just received a new
shipment of these fine coverless
books. Fiction titles galore,
biographies, how to books and
many other types. A must for
you who love to read ..

POUND

AT

BAKER
..

A yellow and white color
scheme was carried out for the
recent wedding shower
honoring Miss Debbie Heaton
and her fiance, Jim Watson,
held at the Lodwick's Market,
Tuppers Plains.

COMPLETENEW SELECTION

SIZES

--

I

,) /
'I

'

')

Kenny Ritchie, son of Joyce
Ritchie, Marilyn Robinson,
Susan Bauer, and Delores
Murphy. Attending the shower
besides those named were
Helen J. Heaton, Faye Watson
and Jimmy, Wilma Barth,
Donna Lantz, Pam Hoffman ;
Nancy Watson, Linda White,
Effie Watson, Hazel Hoffman,
Mia Deem, Diane Roush and
Jeff, Jeannie Watson, Janet
Heaton, Helen Heston, and
Carolyn Maxey.
Others presenting gifts to the
bride·dect were Mabel Hager,
Rose and Vendia Young, Rose
Carr, Ina Massar, Mrs. Lewis
Miller, Elizabeth Lyons, Hazel
BarnhiU, Barbara Tripp, Ethel
Arbaugh, Ida Boggs, Brenda
Weber , Evelyn Spencer ,
Juanita Spencer , Shirley
Balser, Kathryn Windon, Judy

I

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COVERS

' $3

COLORS
COMPLETE
WITH
FIITINGS

~

I

Mattress

TOILET
SEAT

~~.. $}99

FULL
BED
SIZE

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57¢

WE OFFER THISONL YTWICE EACH YEAR

WET MOP or BROOMS

SALE!

AJC JACK JACOBS

Select from corn broom or nylon tip
broom . 8 oz. yacht mop. HI. wood handles .

Top Man at Patrick

6Ft. X6 Ft.

FULL BED SIZE!

VINYL
EA.
SIJOWER
MATCHING PILLOW CASES CURTAIN
PRET!_YSTRIPES IN
COLOR COMBINATIONS
OF RED, BLUE, GOLD OR PINK

WilY PAY
MORE?
VISIT YOUR
SHOPPERS MART FIRST!

~

A wide variety of printe~ deslgnes
also available. Perfect quality.

~

FOR

6 COLORS!

he Little Store With Big Savings!
-LESS lliHT FW.

EA.

BUCKET OF

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7

~~y

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SPONGES

TWOSIZES--THEYFIT!!

WOMENS SEAMLESS

pANTY HOSE

USE IT ANYWHERE!!!
A practical solution for . added lighting for
your home without costly wiring. Fixture can
he used anywhere, or provides emergency
lighting when and where you . need tt.
Operated with two Dsize batteries. Mounts on
walls or ceillng,is 5%" Dia. x 3" high.

BOYS OR MENS

'(ENNIS
SHO:ES
LOW CUTS
BLACK$2·
OR
WHITE! .

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FORMER VALUES T0$3.99

NEW FALL
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FULL COLQR

BOYS .

MENS SHORT SLEEVE

FLARE LEG'

SPORT SHIRTS

PANTS

•

Includes dress
shirts, some sport
many jusl
!arriv•i and had to
reduced. A
wonderful sale

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2

$ 44
EA.

COMIC·BOOKS
.

5

and
slllll size In
falls newest
models. Sizes 8
to 18.

33~ ·.

5 Different title comic boob, poly
wrapped for cleaDifae11. u IIIey

COMPARE!!
Regular

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FOR

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PR

11

Airman

Jacobs displayed a sincere
desire in taking on this type of
assignment, and assumed the
responsibility of training for
that position upon himself. He
even enrolled in a typing class

QUART PLASTIC
•, PAILFILLER
..,.'

A1C Jack P. Jacobs, 655lst
•. Security Pollee Squadron, has
~n 'chosen sert!Ceman of the
Month at the Patrick Air Force
Base in Florida.
Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs of Pomeroy,
went to Patrick immediately
following completion of
security. police technical
training at the Lackland Air
Force Base in Texas in
February, 1971. Since that
time, he has performed duties
as a patrolman and more
recenUy as desk sergeant. He
Is now assigned to the pass and
'' identification section.
Desk sergeant duties require
an extensive knowledge of
•' police work, operational plans
and procedures combined wit!J
the ability to react quickly to a
variety of situations and in·
cidents. It is very unusual for
an ainnan with so relatively
;, little time In service as Airman
Jacobs to be entrusted with this
assignment, Air Force officials
said.
According to the Patrick
Base newspaper,

SfONGES

They are very diflerenl! Give your bath
or kitchen a new fragrance with one or
several of these novelty,mats.

••

Couple is Showered

---·

FITTED PLASTIC

MOULDED PLASTIC

TANK
TOPS

NEW! DELIGHTFUL SMELL

VAUJD

'

over are freeing the men!
No wonder people are taking handfuls of pills a day, ruining
what health and strength the Good Lord gave them, just trying to
cahn down.
No one expects life to be a bed' of roses all the way . But we
worry, then usually learn what we worried about never happens.
We should, instead, keep so busy doing our work, minding our
own business, and helping some one along the way, there's no
time left over.
If at the end of a long day we've done our best, trust and
leave to God the rest, our mind can be free and with a clean clear
conscience we've earned and get a good night's rest. That i• , if
we're not physically ill.
To keep busy chases away the boredom so many complain of.
There are so many hobbies we may indulge in. What would
Isenhower and Churchill and Johnson have done without
painting, writing and the piano?
People pollution is another stress problem. Happy and
fortunate are we who can he alone with our thoughts and do our
work in peace and quiet. At least, get away from it all for awhile.
These folk have no need of alcohol and other drugs; to see
things grow, hear the wild bird's call, see a line of clean clothes
drying in the breeze; to be alone with our memories, both happy
and sad, helps one on to another day, One more tomorrow.

Prizes were awarded to

SCENTED FOAM MAT

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Mr. and Mrs. James
Finlinson, Huntington, W. Va.,
were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport E-R squad Monday
afternoon. They were treated
for injuries received in auto
accident below Middleport and
released.

Olympir Basketball
Basketball became a part
of the Olympic Games in
1936, when 22 nations en·
tered teams. The U hit e d
States has won this event
every year since the sport
was included in the program.

-..

I see by yesterday's Sentinel the Russians are still backing
the smaller warring nations. WeU, they're sitting back watching
our r.ountry deteriorate, burying itself with all the internal
turmoil hy people In their homes, churches, and college students
on the streets.
And are the women helping by or~anizing in cities across the
land, publiahing picketing and threatening court suits? Con·
servatives go in for law suits and leaflets; the radicals burn their
bras and denounce marriage!
After aU, it's still a man's world. They could go to countries
where women wear the pants and fight the wars. Women taking

¢

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"IT'S TRUE"

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - There's a deep, dark, shadowy cloud over
America, the Land of Promise, shadowed by wings where God's
people are a peculiar people.
But how can murderers, arsonists, slackers, defectors, et a!
trying to overthrow the government of the U.S.A., and ignoring
moat of the laws of God and man, be counted God's people?
And considering .the laxity of our laws, permissiveness of
parents, corruption In high places, freeing the Angela Davises
our soft ways toward Sirham Sirham, Charles Manson and hi~
crazy murderous followers and all, what good are the laws we do
have?
·

'·'

DUST PAN

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
•

LODGE TO MEET
Shade River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the hall in
Chester. Refreshments will be
served. All master masons are
invited.

'

PLASTIC

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

.,·~

'I''&lt;
••

Senior Golfers to
Tee Off Aug. 22nd
secretary. Members of the
Fairgreens Ladies Golf
Association will assist in
registration and scoring duties.
Starters for the tournament
are Joe Thomas, Columbus,
Fairgreens
first
gold
professional, along with Ott
Sharp and Dr. D. E. Michael,
Jackson .
A second family car will be
awarded free for any hole in
one made by a senior golfer on
the 125-yard fifth hole.
Golfers over 50 will be
participating by age group
from the following clubs:
Gallipolis, Portsmouth, Hidden
Valley,
Pt.
Pleasant,
Fairgreens, Columbus Country
Club, Hocking Hills, Logan,
Zanesville, Pomeroy, Alliance,
Maysville, Ky. ; Xenia,
Parkersburg, Marietta,
Lancaster, London and Athens.

'.
•

''

A DiSCOUNT
DEPARTMtNT STOll

had co:vers, you would. pay .•,,.

.
PR.

I''"'"SQC'i3'i"'C3'jfi'ilda·~·"''"} PeeweeRedlegsEnjoy Picnic

America, Land that We ·Love?

queen seven moves earlier-

Four States Voting Today
considered cofavorites.
In Georgia 14 candidates are
challenging incumbent David
Gambrell for the Democratic
Senate nomination. Gambrell,
appointed last year after the
death of long-lime Sen.

game.

10 Bobby would .have cracked
the variation over the board,
lxlt this time he was caught
out. It was a perfect example of
Russian teamwork · and
Spassky did a beautiful job
carrying the ball."
Denmark's 11lent Larsen, one
of the world'' top five players
agreed but warned against
expecting too mueh of the 12th

game, when Spassky escaped
defeat hy'spentl!ng 63 minutes
over the board to find the single
move Fischer could not turn
into a victory.
'
But the Russian
had learned
his lesson and came up with a
new variation on the 14th
move.
U.S. grandmaster Robert
Byrne said: "!line times out of

Family Returns
From England

Guinther, Doris Koenig, Niese!
Weatherman , Richard Lod·
wick, Gaye Smalley, Betty
Roush.
Marlene Donovan, Dorothy
Robinson, Eunice Halsey, Opal
Wickham, Mary, Marjorie and
Debbie Gillilan, Helen Watson,
Cecila Murphy, Betty Gaul,
Vera Weber, Elizabeth Hayes,
Esther Ridenour. Ruth Ann
Millhone,
Mrs .
Alfred
Cashdollar, Robin Humphrey,
Sally Caldwell, Rubaf Cald·
well, Glenn Riebel, Jill Swain,
Mrs . Marvin Walker , Pat
Spencer, Catherine, Brenda
and Hyla Miller, and Betty
Hawk and daughters.

Crary Family
Reunion
The family of the late Mart
and Louise Crary met at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall
Sunday for their eighth
reunion .
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Fisher of Senecaville;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher,
Larry and Laura, Cambridge;
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith,
Marsha and Melissa, and Mr .
and Mrs. Donald Fink, Donnie,
Dannie , Dale,
Dreena,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Shumaker, Steven and Shawn,
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Robin·
son, Dean, Douglas and
Deanne, Somerset; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Shumaker, New
Lexington; Tina and Todd
Nibert, Gallipolis .
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Crary,
Reedsville ; Mr . and Mrs .
Gerald Wildermuth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Wamsley , June Ann
and .J . R., Pomeroy; Mr . and
Mrs. Donald Mora, Mark and
Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Route 3, Pomeroy.

11

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Mrs. Mary Martin of
Pomeroy, chapeau passe
departement.al d'Ohio Eight
and Forty, was an honored
guest at the 19th annual Ia
marche of Kentucky staged
Saturday at the President's
Motor Inn at Fort Mitchell, Ky.
Accompanying Mrs. Martin
to the meeting were Mrs.
Myrtle Walker , Racine ,
departemental le secretaire .
cassiere ; Mrs. Eunie Brinker,
Racine , departemental color
guard; and Mrs . Rhoda
Hackett, Middleport , newly
elected chapeau of the Meigs
County Salon 710.
Mrs. Martin extended
greetings from Ohio at the "
banquet on Saturday. Among
the other distinguished guests

Families at the event were
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Ohlinger, Mr.
and Mrs . Uoyd Hoffman, Mary
Ann Hoffman , Mr . and Mrs.
Biil McKinney, Jeff and Anna,
Mr . and Mrs . Harvey
Whitlatch, Barbara and
Belinda, Mr. and Mrs. John
Manley and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Jewell and Randy,
Mrs. Jim Hemsley and Karen,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul and
family, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Becky and Danny
Thomas, Kim Sebo, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Wamsley and June
Ann .

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Pomeroy, 0.

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first watch for boy or girl. It has a
precision jeweled mo11ement.
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It's a watch a kid can read . And
can't 'overwind . A very grown·up
watch at a youngster price .

$159S

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\

Mall Van Vranken, Tracy
Hysell, John Smith and J. R.
Wamsley. Ken McCullough and
Mike Whitlatch were unable to
allend.

!Watches •

Caravella 's " Student" Is a great

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

SON BORN AUG. 4
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J.
Werry, Fisher St., Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of a
six pound, 14 ounce son
Thomas Craig, on Aug. 4 at th~
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Mr.
and Mrs . Werry have a
daughter, Debra, four . Grandparents are Henry Werry, Mrs.
Eleanor Werry, and Mr. and
Mrs. Harlan Wehrung,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Ernest Rea
Harry Wehrung, and Herma~
Werry are greatgrandparents.

Wedding to be
Held Aug. 12th

Once they·~e learned to tell lime,
they deserve a real watch .
Caravella by Bulova.

Court St

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrme of Jerusalem, family
p1cmc, Twin City Shrine Club
Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Friday.

attending were Miss Dorothy
M. Dolle of Louisville, the
national chapeau ; and Mrs.
Nancy Adams, department
president of the American
Legion Auxiliary.
Trophies and awards were · .
presented with Covington
being selected as the outstanding salon in the state. II
was noted that in the United
States, five new salons had
been organized during the past
years - one in West Virginia,
one in Nevada, one in Kenlucky, and two in Ohio.
Decorations for the banquel
carried out the golden an·
niversary observance of the
National Eight and Forty with
gold horseshoes, red ribbons
and roses decorating ·the
tables.
·
New officers installed were
Mrs . Eva Kuckenbrod ,
chapeau;
Mrs .
Ruth
Waldenmeyer , ie demi
chapeau premiere ; Mary Ada
Heitz, le demi chapeau
The open church wedding of duexieme; Doris Denning, le
Miss Debbie Heaton and Mr. secretaire; Ellen Hamilton, le
Jim Watson will be held cass iere ; . Thelma Roberts,
Saturday,Aug.12,at2:30in the l'aumonier; Christine Shelton,
afternoon at the Silver Ridge le
archiviste;
Frieda
Methodist Church.
McLemore, le concierge; and
Mrs. Jeanne Blake will serve Gussie Hoffeld, le avocote.
as matron of honor and Mr.
Tom Watson will be best man
for his brother. Music will be
provided by Mrs. Jenny
Machie. The ceremony will be
performed by the Rev. Walter
A. Frost. An open reception
will be held immediately
following the ceremony on the
church lawn.

BULOVA

M~h,N. J.~.~~

entered the Army In July 1971
111d completed bulc lralninfl
at Ft. KnOll, Ky. He pdUited
from Wahama Hl&amp;b School tn
, 1917 and received a B.S. degree
from Weal VIrginia lnalilute of
Technology at Montlomery, in '

THURSDAY
HOUSEWARES party,
Junior American Legion,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
p.m. Public invited .
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
ChUrch, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.

Mrs. Martin Honored
At
Kentucky Marche

CAR~

WINS HONORS
LETART, W. Va. - Army
Specialist 4 Roy D. Cooke, son
of Mr. llld Mrs. Otmer R.
Cooke, Route 1, recently
ccmpleted with honors ·a 28-·
week tactical microwave ·
l)'llleml repainnan course at
the Army Signal School, Ft.

WEDNESDAY
"OMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT
Ljons Club luncheon, Wed• -··"JY noon at Meigs Inn. All
ch•' members asked to he
present.

WEDNESDAY
PROGRAM COMMITTEE of
Chester PTA , 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday at school. Anyone
wishing named a room mother
or on a special coml)'littee,
please contact an officer before
meeting , Mrs . Charles
Goeglein, president.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, annual
picnic , Wedn esday , Legion
Park shelter house . Take
covered dish and own table
service, children invited.

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Carl
to increase his skill as a desk Kearns and son, Chris, Mr. and
sergeant.
~rs. Wil)iatp Brown and
"According to Lt. Col. Henry .,daughter, KQ, all of Mason,
A. Curtin, squadron com- have returned by plane from a
mander , th e 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld visit with Mrs. Kearns ' parents
Jacobs, 'gets along well with in England.
others and his military
The Kearns left on June 17 to
bearing, behavior and personal visit her mother and stepappearance consl&lt;!ntly set an father, Mr. and Mrs. Charley
example for other first term James at Canvey Island, Eng.
airman.
On July 14th the Browns joined
Ainnan Jacobs has a very the Kearns in England and
positive attitude and is spent a week touring London.
seriously considering the The most impressive things
possibilities of making the U. S. they saw were Westminster
Air Force his career. He Abbey, Buckingham Palace,
believes in the importance of and the changing of the guard.
his personal contributions to They attended a worship
AITEND SHRINE
the local mission and in the service at St. Paul's Cathedral.
Mrs. Ferne Cheese brew,
position of the United States as
En route to England by plane district deputy, White Shrine of
a leader in establishing they were detained one hour in
Jerusalem, Mrs. Bernice Winn,
universal understanding and Philadelphia while passengers chairman of material ob·
world peace /"
were searched beforegetting jectives, Mrs. Helen Reynolds,
Airman Jacobs presently on the plane. A plane had been and Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
resides in central housing with hijacked earlier that morning. Mary Shrine 37, were in
his wife, Lena, and their
The Kearns and the Browns Huntington recently to attend a
FAMILY MOVES
month-&lt;&gt;ld-son , Sean Michael. were flown by Boeing 747 jet to meeting · of the Wescerkova
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hudson
Jacobs • is active with the Kennedy Airport and by a Shrine. Helen Johnson of
and daughter, Lori, have
squadron's intramural sports smaller plane to Pavkersburg
Balboa, Calif., the supreme moved from Condor St.,
program in off duty hours.
where they were met by Mrs. worthy high priestess, made a
Pomeroy, into their new home
Brown 's mother, Mrs . Eunice courtesy visit to the Shrine.
located on Route 7, Pomeroy.
HERE FROM GUAM
Hart and their son, Kevin
Recent guests of Mrs. Bertha Brown.
Lasher and Mrs. James Titus
were J. BiAgham Titus and
VISITING HERE
family of Guam, his brother,
NEW HAVEN - A1C
Robert Titus of Detroit, Mich ., Richard Abel, son of Mr. and
and their mother, Mrs. Mrs. Jess Abel, New Haven, is
Frances Bingham Titus, also of spending his leave with his
Detroit. J. Bingham Titus is a parents and sister, Dianna,
teacher in Guam and during after spending one year in
the swnmer has traveled to Thailand. Following his leave
Malaysia, Thlaland, and he will be stationed with the
Japan . Ro~ert Titus is .a hospital at Andrews Air Force
ACK·TO·SCHO
counselor m the Detrott ··Base, Maryland.
schools.
I
I
Apostle's Death
PATIENT VISITED
Saint Peter may have been
Mrs. Maude Betz and Mrs. killed during the persecu·
Pearl Reynolds were in tions of E m p e r o r Nero
Columbus Monday to visit around A.D. 64. According
Richard Reed who is now at to tradition, he was crucified
downward at his own
home following
recent head
request, probably in the Nehospitalization.
ronian Gardens .

BROTHER DIES
M,rs. Charles Searles has
returned home after two weeks
In Bessemer, Ala. where she
was called by the death of her
brother, Turner Giddens, 62.
While there she visited her
motller, Mrs. Lula Hamilton,
confined to a nursing home,
and another brother and sister·
In-law, Mr. and Mrs. James
Giddens. Joining Mrs. Searles
in Alabama last Thursday for a
weekend visit were her
huaband and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Becker, Lisa, Donnie ' and
•
Chris. All returned home
There are more than 220,Latin America and Africa
000 gasoline service stations together account lor 40 per
· Smday night.
in the United States.
cent of the world's forests .

1971.

TUESDAY
BOTH LETART ~' ails ball
teams meet at L&lt;'tart Falls
School, 6 p.m. Tuesday in
uniforms for pictures.
ANNUAL MEIGS Junior
Fair style revue , 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Eastern High School.
King and queen for 1972 fair
named following revue. Public
welcome.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday night, hall will be
vacated for the Meigs County
Fair.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work in
Master Mason Degree, one
candidate. Refreshments. All
Master Masons invited. Robert
Beegle, WM .

The Pomeroy Pee Wee
League Redlegs held a wiener
roast and picnic at the river·
SJde camp of Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Wamsier
A cake with a baseball
diamond decoration and in·
scribed "champs" was used as
a centerpiece . During the
evening a gift of appreciation
was presented to Bill Ohlinger,
manager of the team, for his
work with the boys during the
past season. A drawing for a
prize of a baseball was won by
Harvey Whitlatch.
Attending were team
members Steve Ohlinger,
Harvey Whitlatch , John
Hoffman, Chris and John
McKinney, Rodney Manley,
Tony Jewell , Joe Bob Hemsley,
Roger Gaul, Greg Thomas,

Pomeroy

I'II1EN YOU VI SIT. PARK FRff

l.ilbens 11alioNll
....C. CINCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Fedel'lll Depollt Iu~~noc:e Corponlita

~

�.

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Augll8t 8,1972
&amp;-·The Doily Sentinel, Middltport.Pomeroy, 0 ., August I, 1972

'

Spassky Camp Revived
REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP!)
-Boris Spassky, fresh from his
finest game, needs a victory
over Bobby Fischer today if he
Is to keep the $250,000 world
chess championship close
when it reaches the halfway
mark of 2Hilatch series.
The 12th game of the 24·
match series was scheduled for
1p.m. EDT today. Fischer was

playing the white pieces and
moving first.
Fischer, the U.S . challenger,
held a 61'.! to 41'.! advantage
over Spassky, the Soviet world
champion. A victory today
would give Fischer a threepoint lead with only 12 games
to play and a tie would ,keep his
lead at two points. Fischer
needs 121'.! points to become the

first American to win the chess
world championship, while
Spassky needs 12 to retain the
title .
Spassky's great 11th game
victory Sunday-he forced Fischer to resign on the 31st move,
having taken the challenger's

recovery.
Fischer h;ld won five and
drawn three of the previous
eight gJmes against a player
he hadl1't beaten before.
Grandmasters marvel; d
over the way Spassky trapp.:d
Fischer Sunday in a prepared
variation. For the opening 13
moves, the game followed the
same pattern as the seventh

By United Press International

Four states hold primary
elections today and national
attention focused on tile guber·
natorial race in Missouri where
voter disaffection over Sen.
Thomas Eagleton's resignation
may help the Republican ticket
this fall.
Michigan, Georgia and Idaho
also hold state primaries to
select candidates for state
offices and seats in both the
U.S. House and Senate.
In Missouri, Secretary of
state James Kirkpatrick anticipated a million-voter tur·
nout, the first in a primary
since 1936. Among the reasons
was the aroused interest of
voters who felt bitter because
of Eagleron's withdrawal from
the Democratic national ticket,
and also the fact that 17 candidates were vying for the
governor's nuinsion.
The gubernatorial can·
didates Include 10 Democrats,
five Republicans and two independents. Although Missouri
has had a Democratic
governor for 30 years, The
GOP is given a good chance
this time because unhap~:'
Democrats may cross party
lines to vote for a Republican.
Most Ukely to Benefit
!he Republican most likely
to benefit by this appears to he
Christopher "Kit" Bond,
elected two years ago as state
auditor . Four of the 10
Democrat contenders are

Mrs. Oldaker
Died Sunday

LETART, W. Va. - Mrs.
Ocie Mae Oldaker, age 52 of
Letart, W. Va. RFD, died
unexpectedly at her home on
Sunday evening, apparently of
a heart attack. She was born on
AprilS, 1920 at Letart RFD, the
daughter of the late Quincy L.
and Estella Graham King. She
was a member of the Broad
Run Lutheran Church.
Survivors include her
husband, Harry Oldaker ; t!Jree
sons,
Harry
Oldaker ,
Colwnbus; Quincy Oldaker, at
home, and Eldon King,
DeKalb, TIL ; one daughter,
Mrs. Ellen M. DeVault ,
Sycamore, Ill.; four grand·
children; four brothers,
Herbert King, John King,
Edwin King and Garland King,
all local, and a sister, Mrs.
Susan J. Edwards, New Haven.
The funeral will be held at
Broad Run Lutheran Church on
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with
the Rev. John Haeberle of·
ficiating . Burial will be in
Broad Run Cemetery.
The body will be taken to the
church to lie in state one hour
prior to the service. Friends
may
call at the Foglesong
(Continued from page 1)
Funeral Home from 5 to 9 p.m.
satisfactory condition, both
Tuesday
evening.
suffering lacerations and
abrasions.
The driver, James Finlinson,
suffered bruises while a third
passenger, lssabelle A.
'
Finlinson, 70, Huntington, W.
Va., had lacerations of the
face. They were not im·
mediately treated. James
JACKSON- Over 100 senior
Finlinson was cited for failing
golfers representing 15 country
to yield the right of way.
In other accidents in· clubs from southern Ohio,
vestigated by the patrol Kentucky and West Virginia
Monday, at 5:55p.m. on County will participate in the sixth
Road 40 at Lincoln Pike, seven annual Southern Ohio Seniors
and one tenth miles south of Golf Tournament to be held
Route 141, Mary F. Rose, 49, Tuesday, Aug. 22, at the
Rt. 1 Northup, was north· Fairgreens Country Club
bound when she crashed course between Jackson and
head-&lt;&gt;n in a sharp curve with Wellston.
an auto driven by Delbert
The golfers will compete,
Cisco, 18, Rt. I Northup.
There was moderate damage with handicaps, in the 18 hole
to both vehicles. No injuries or tournament over the rugged
hilly Fairgreens course. The
citations were reported.
At 8:50a.m. on County Road event will include luncheon,
42, the Vinton-Glenn Summitt dinner, golf carts, en·
Road, one and nine tenths tertainment, a fellowship hour
miles south of Vinton, John and prizes and awards .
Co-chairmen for the tourRoy Dandridge, 72, Route I
Vinton, hit the right front nament are Jack Stiffler, Sr.,
corner of a p&amp;oked county Jackson, and Ott Sharp,
garage truck when attempting McArthur, and Mrs. Lorraine
to pass the truck. There was Michael, Jackson, as executive
moderate damage to the
county truck and minor
damage to Dandridge's pick-up
truck. There were no injuries
or citations.
PHONE 992·2342
At 3 p.m. on Route 233 five
and seven tenths miles south of
Route 141, Johnnie Straight, 29,
Route 1 Patriot, tore down an
electric wire with the top of his
truck. The wire, which crossed
the road, was owned by Cecil
T. Miller, Rt. 2 Patriot. There
was minor damage to the
truck Straight was cited for
' "overheight.

·Foursome

"!ipassky could dictate the
terms of the 11th game. Today
Fischer haS the white pieces
and first crack at the ~board.
But what a great ·morale·
boOsting win (or BoriS. My
money is still on Fisch.er but
the match has certainly come
alive again just as it seemed
Fischer would walk away with
it."

Ivo Ney, one of ~·s
four seconds and the chiun·
. pion's tennis partner, said: ''Of
course we are delighted lxlt
Mr. Spasaky is not b41ng
kidded Into .bel{evlng anything.
Fischer has a two.point lead
and that Is a formidable hurdle
to pass againSt il player of his
caliber. But hliltory has shown
Uiat a three .point deficit ean be
overcome so wbo knows."

••

came at a lime he appeared to
he too far behind to make a

''
''•

1

Richard B. Russell, is expected
to survive the primary but is
almost certain to he forced into
a runoff.
His most likely runoff opponents on Aug. 29 will be
either former Gov. Ernest
Vandiver or state Rep. Sam
Nunn . U.S. Rep. Fletcher
Thompson has only token
opposition for the GOP
nomination.
In Idaho, a senate race plus a
hot three-way contest for a
congressional nomination is
expected to produce a record
turnout of 17&gt;,000 voters.
Idaho Races
Congressman James A. McClure is up against former Gov.
Robert E. Smylie, former
Congressman George V.
Hansen and former White
House staffer Glen Wagner for
the GOP senatorial nomination
for the seat of retiring Sen. lAm
B. Jordan, a Republican.
State Attorney General W.
Anthony Park, President William E. Davis of Idaho State
Universitty, Attorney Byron
Johnson and Women's liberation advocate Rose Bowman
seek the Democratic nomination.
Despite a variety of issues,
including busing, a light turnout was predicted in Michigan
where the top position at stake
is the U.S. Senate seat held by
incumbent Republican Robert
P. Griffin.
His seat is being sought by
Democrat Attorney General
Frank J . Kelley . Since neither
candidate has any opposition
within his own party, the
primary vote will show only
relative strengths.

,.•
'
I

'..
•

•'

••!

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

'~~·

.,.
'

GO TO THE FAIR!!!

•'•,

The Mason County Fair is this
week, and its now reg11rded as the
finest fair in W. Va . Visit us on
your way ..• save Cash!

A49cVALUE
HIGH IMPACT

PRETTY
PASTEL COLORS

Values To 75•

ENTIRE STOCK!

PAPER

BACK
BOOKS

We have just received a new
shipment of these fine coverless
books. Fiction titles galore,
biographies, how to books and
many other types. A must for
you who love to read ..

POUND

AT

BAKER
..

A yellow and white color
scheme was carried out for the
recent wedding shower
honoring Miss Debbie Heaton
and her fiance, Jim Watson,
held at the Lodwick's Market,
Tuppers Plains.

COMPLETENEW SELECTION

SIZES

--

I

,) /
'I

'

')

Kenny Ritchie, son of Joyce
Ritchie, Marilyn Robinson,
Susan Bauer, and Delores
Murphy. Attending the shower
besides those named were
Helen J. Heaton, Faye Watson
and Jimmy, Wilma Barth,
Donna Lantz, Pam Hoffman ;
Nancy Watson, Linda White,
Effie Watson, Hazel Hoffman,
Mia Deem, Diane Roush and
Jeff, Jeannie Watson, Janet
Heaton, Helen Heston, and
Carolyn Maxey.
Others presenting gifts to the
bride·dect were Mabel Hager,
Rose and Vendia Young, Rose
Carr, Ina Massar, Mrs. Lewis
Miller, Elizabeth Lyons, Hazel
BarnhiU, Barbara Tripp, Ethel
Arbaugh, Ida Boggs, Brenda
Weber , Evelyn Spencer ,
Juanita Spencer , Shirley
Balser, Kathryn Windon, Judy

I

'

COVERS

' $3

COLORS
COMPLETE
WITH
FIITINGS

~

I

Mattress

TOILET
SEAT

~~.. $}99

FULL
BED
SIZE

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57¢

WE OFFER THISONL YTWICE EACH YEAR

WET MOP or BROOMS

SALE!

AJC JACK JACOBS

Select from corn broom or nylon tip
broom . 8 oz. yacht mop. HI. wood handles .

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~

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also available. Perfect quality.

~

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he Little Store With Big Savings!
-LESS lliHT FW.

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WOMENS SEAMLESS

pANTY HOSE

USE IT ANYWHERE!!!
A practical solution for . added lighting for
your home without costly wiring. Fixture can
he used anywhere, or provides emergency
lighting when and where you . need tt.
Operated with two Dsize batteries. Mounts on
walls or ceillng,is 5%" Dia. x 3" high.

BOYS OR MENS

'(ENNIS
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LOW CUTS
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•

Includes dress
shirts, some sport
many jusl
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COMIC·BOOKS
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5

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models. Sizes 8
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11

Airman

Jacobs displayed a sincere
desire in taking on this type of
assignment, and assumed the
responsibility of training for
that position upon himself. He
even enrolled in a typing class

QUART PLASTIC
•, PAILFILLER
..,.'

A1C Jack P. Jacobs, 655lst
•. Security Pollee Squadron, has
~n 'chosen sert!Ceman of the
Month at the Patrick Air Force
Base in Florida.
Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs of Pomeroy,
went to Patrick immediately
following completion of
security. police technical
training at the Lackland Air
Force Base in Texas in
February, 1971. Since that
time, he has performed duties
as a patrolman and more
recenUy as desk sergeant. He
Is now assigned to the pass and
'' identification section.
Desk sergeant duties require
an extensive knowledge of
•' police work, operational plans
and procedures combined wit!J
the ability to react quickly to a
variety of situations and in·
cidents. It is very unusual for
an ainnan with so relatively
;, little time In service as Airman
Jacobs to be entrusted with this
assignment, Air Force officials
said.
According to the Patrick
Base newspaper,

SfONGES

They are very diflerenl! Give your bath
or kitchen a new fragrance with one or
several of these novelty,mats.

••

Couple is Showered

---·

FITTED PLASTIC

MOULDED PLASTIC

TANK
TOPS

NEW! DELIGHTFUL SMELL

VAUJD

'

over are freeing the men!
No wonder people are taking handfuls of pills a day, ruining
what health and strength the Good Lord gave them, just trying to
cahn down.
No one expects life to be a bed' of roses all the way . But we
worry, then usually learn what we worried about never happens.
We should, instead, keep so busy doing our work, minding our
own business, and helping some one along the way, there's no
time left over.
If at the end of a long day we've done our best, trust and
leave to God the rest, our mind can be free and with a clean clear
conscience we've earned and get a good night's rest. That i• , if
we're not physically ill.
To keep busy chases away the boredom so many complain of.
There are so many hobbies we may indulge in. What would
Isenhower and Churchill and Johnson have done without
painting, writing and the piano?
People pollution is another stress problem. Happy and
fortunate are we who can he alone with our thoughts and do our
work in peace and quiet. At least, get away from it all for awhile.
These folk have no need of alcohol and other drugs; to see
things grow, hear the wild bird's call, see a line of clean clothes
drying in the breeze; to be alone with our memories, both happy
and sad, helps one on to another day, One more tomorrow.

Prizes were awarded to

SCENTED FOAM MAT

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Mr. and Mrs. James
Finlinson, Huntington, W. Va.,
were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport E-R squad Monday
afternoon. They were treated
for injuries received in auto
accident below Middleport and
released.

Olympir Basketball
Basketball became a part
of the Olympic Games in
1936, when 22 nations en·
tered teams. The U hit e d
States has won this event
every year since the sport
was included in the program.

-..

I see by yesterday's Sentinel the Russians are still backing
the smaller warring nations. WeU, they're sitting back watching
our r.ountry deteriorate, burying itself with all the internal
turmoil hy people In their homes, churches, and college students
on the streets.
And are the women helping by or~anizing in cities across the
land, publiahing picketing and threatening court suits? Con·
servatives go in for law suits and leaflets; the radicals burn their
bras and denounce marriage!
After aU, it's still a man's world. They could go to countries
where women wear the pants and fight the wars. Women taking

¢

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"IT'S TRUE"

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - There's a deep, dark, shadowy cloud over
America, the Land of Promise, shadowed by wings where God's
people are a peculiar people.
But how can murderers, arsonists, slackers, defectors, et a!
trying to overthrow the government of the U.S.A., and ignoring
moat of the laws of God and man, be counted God's people?
And considering .the laxity of our laws, permissiveness of
parents, corruption In high places, freeing the Angela Davises
our soft ways toward Sirham Sirham, Charles Manson and hi~
crazy murderous followers and all, what good are the laws we do
have?
·

'·'

DUST PAN

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
•

LODGE TO MEET
Shade River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the hall in
Chester. Refreshments will be
served. All master masons are
invited.

'

PLASTIC

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

.,·~

'I''&lt;
••

Senior Golfers to
Tee Off Aug. 22nd
secretary. Members of the
Fairgreens Ladies Golf
Association will assist in
registration and scoring duties.
Starters for the tournament
are Joe Thomas, Columbus,
Fairgreens
first
gold
professional, along with Ott
Sharp and Dr. D. E. Michael,
Jackson .
A second family car will be
awarded free for any hole in
one made by a senior golfer on
the 125-yard fifth hole.
Golfers over 50 will be
participating by age group
from the following clubs:
Gallipolis, Portsmouth, Hidden
Valley,
Pt.
Pleasant,
Fairgreens, Columbus Country
Club, Hocking Hills, Logan,
Zanesville, Pomeroy, Alliance,
Maysville, Ky. ; Xenia,
Parkersburg, Marietta,
Lancaster, London and Athens.

'.
•

''

A DiSCOUNT
DEPARTMtNT STOll

had co:vers, you would. pay .•,,.

.
PR.

I''"'"SQC'i3'i"'C3'jfi'ilda·~·"''"} PeeweeRedlegsEnjoy Picnic

America, Land that We ·Love?

queen seven moves earlier-

Four States Voting Today
considered cofavorites.
In Georgia 14 candidates are
challenging incumbent David
Gambrell for the Democratic
Senate nomination. Gambrell,
appointed last year after the
death of long-lime Sen.

game.

10 Bobby would .have cracked
the variation over the board,
lxlt this time he was caught
out. It was a perfect example of
Russian teamwork · and
Spassky did a beautiful job
carrying the ball."
Denmark's 11lent Larsen, one
of the world'' top five players
agreed but warned against
expecting too mueh of the 12th

game, when Spassky escaped
defeat hy'spentl!ng 63 minutes
over the board to find the single
move Fischer could not turn
into a victory.
'
But the Russian
had learned
his lesson and came up with a
new variation on the 14th
move.
U.S. grandmaster Robert
Byrne said: "!line times out of

Family Returns
From England

Guinther, Doris Koenig, Niese!
Weatherman , Richard Lod·
wick, Gaye Smalley, Betty
Roush.
Marlene Donovan, Dorothy
Robinson, Eunice Halsey, Opal
Wickham, Mary, Marjorie and
Debbie Gillilan, Helen Watson,
Cecila Murphy, Betty Gaul,
Vera Weber, Elizabeth Hayes,
Esther Ridenour. Ruth Ann
Millhone,
Mrs .
Alfred
Cashdollar, Robin Humphrey,
Sally Caldwell, Rubaf Cald·
well, Glenn Riebel, Jill Swain,
Mrs . Marvin Walker , Pat
Spencer, Catherine, Brenda
and Hyla Miller, and Betty
Hawk and daughters.

Crary Family
Reunion
The family of the late Mart
and Louise Crary met at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall
Sunday for their eighth
reunion .
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Fisher of Senecaville;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher,
Larry and Laura, Cambridge;
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith,
Marsha and Melissa, and Mr .
and Mrs. Donald Fink, Donnie,
Dannie , Dale,
Dreena,
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Shumaker, Steven and Shawn,
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Robin·
son, Dean, Douglas and
Deanne, Somerset; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Shumaker, New
Lexington; Tina and Todd
Nibert, Gallipolis .
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Crary,
Reedsville ; Mr . and Mrs .
Gerald Wildermuth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Wamsley , June Ann
and .J . R., Pomeroy; Mr . and
Mrs. Donald Mora, Mark and
Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Mora, Route 3, Pomeroy.

11

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Mrs. Mary Martin of
Pomeroy, chapeau passe
departement.al d'Ohio Eight
and Forty, was an honored
guest at the 19th annual Ia
marche of Kentucky staged
Saturday at the President's
Motor Inn at Fort Mitchell, Ky.
Accompanying Mrs. Martin
to the meeting were Mrs.
Myrtle Walker , Racine ,
departemental le secretaire .
cassiere ; Mrs. Eunie Brinker,
Racine , departemental color
guard; and Mrs . Rhoda
Hackett, Middleport , newly
elected chapeau of the Meigs
County Salon 710.
Mrs. Martin extended
greetings from Ohio at the "
banquet on Saturday. Among
the other distinguished guests

Families at the event were
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Ohlinger, Mr.
and Mrs . Uoyd Hoffman, Mary
Ann Hoffman , Mr . and Mrs.
Biil McKinney, Jeff and Anna,
Mr . and Mrs . Harvey
Whitlatch, Barbara and
Belinda, Mr. and Mrs. John
Manley and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Jewell and Randy,
Mrs. Jim Hemsley and Karen,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul and
family, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Becky and Danny
Thomas, Kim Sebo, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Wamsley and June
Ann .

Special

Save~60

singer Zig-zag
Stretch Stitch
Sewing~~

Model
418· 574

with canying case
Regtiiariy-$259.95
See the Beautiful New
Fail Fabric Collection

SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
MtCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

115 W. Secorld
992·2~84 .
Pomeroy, 0.

~

YOUR MONEY
Is Our Business

WE KNOW
Our Business
So you know all yovr money
matters are safe in our hands.
Enjoy the dependability and

THEIR

convenience of Full Service

FIRST

Banking facilities ... checking

WATCH ... BUILT TO

and savings accounts, safety

LAST

deposit boxes, loans for any
legitimate purpose,

mght

deposits and traveler's checks.

first watch for boy or girl. It has a
precision jeweled mo11ement.
- --Uobreakable. mainspring. Full
numeral dial. A Y.Outhrslzed strap.
It's a watch a kid can read . And
can't 'overwind . A very grown·up
watch at a youngster price .

$159S

·· Goessl~r's Jewelry Store
\

Mall Van Vranken, Tracy
Hysell, John Smith and J. R.
Wamsley. Ken McCullough and
Mike Whitlatch were unable to
allend.

!Watches •

Caravella 's " Student" Is a great

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

SON BORN AUG. 4
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J.
Werry, Fisher St., Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth of a
six pound, 14 ounce son
Thomas Craig, on Aug. 4 at th~
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Mr.
and Mrs . Werry have a
daughter, Debra, four . Grandparents are Henry Werry, Mrs.
Eleanor Werry, and Mr. and
Mrs. Harlan Wehrung,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Ernest Rea
Harry Wehrung, and Herma~
Werry are greatgrandparents.

Wedding to be
Held Aug. 12th

Once they·~e learned to tell lime,
they deserve a real watch .
Caravella by Bulova.

Court St

FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Shrme of Jerusalem, family
p1cmc, Twin City Shrine Club
Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Friday.

attending were Miss Dorothy
M. Dolle of Louisville, the
national chapeau ; and Mrs.
Nancy Adams, department
president of the American
Legion Auxiliary.
Trophies and awards were · .
presented with Covington
being selected as the outstanding salon in the state. II
was noted that in the United
States, five new salons had
been organized during the past
years - one in West Virginia,
one in Nevada, one in Kenlucky, and two in Ohio.
Decorations for the banquel
carried out the golden an·
niversary observance of the
National Eight and Forty with
gold horseshoes, red ribbons
and roses decorating ·the
tables.
·
New officers installed were
Mrs . Eva Kuckenbrod ,
chapeau;
Mrs .
Ruth
Waldenmeyer , ie demi
chapeau premiere ; Mary Ada
Heitz, le demi chapeau
The open church wedding of duexieme; Doris Denning, le
Miss Debbie Heaton and Mr. secretaire; Ellen Hamilton, le
Jim Watson will be held cass iere ; . Thelma Roberts,
Saturday,Aug.12,at2:30in the l'aumonier; Christine Shelton,
afternoon at the Silver Ridge le
archiviste;
Frieda
Methodist Church.
McLemore, le concierge; and
Mrs. Jeanne Blake will serve Gussie Hoffeld, le avocote.
as matron of honor and Mr.
Tom Watson will be best man
for his brother. Music will be
provided by Mrs. Jenny
Machie. The ceremony will be
performed by the Rev. Walter
A. Frost. An open reception
will be held immediately
following the ceremony on the
church lawn.

BULOVA

M~h,N. J.~.~~

entered the Army In July 1971
111d completed bulc lralninfl
at Ft. KnOll, Ky. He pdUited
from Wahama Hl&amp;b School tn
, 1917 and received a B.S. degree
from Weal VIrginia lnalilute of
Technology at Montlomery, in '

THURSDAY
HOUSEWARES party,
Junior American Legion,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
p.m. Public invited .
WILLING WORKERS Class,
Enterprise United Methodist
ChUrch, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.

Mrs. Martin Honored
At
Kentucky Marche

CAR~

WINS HONORS
LETART, W. Va. - Army
Specialist 4 Roy D. Cooke, son
of Mr. llld Mrs. Otmer R.
Cooke, Route 1, recently
ccmpleted with honors ·a 28-·
week tactical microwave ·
l)'llleml repainnan course at
the Army Signal School, Ft.

WEDNESDAY
"OMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT
Ljons Club luncheon, Wed• -··"JY noon at Meigs Inn. All
ch•' members asked to he
present.

WEDNESDAY
PROGRAM COMMITTEE of
Chester PTA , 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday at school. Anyone
wishing named a room mother
or on a special coml)'littee,
please contact an officer before
meeting , Mrs . Charles
Goeglein, president.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, annual
picnic , Wedn esday , Legion
Park shelter house . Take
covered dish and own table
service, children invited.

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Carl
to increase his skill as a desk Kearns and son, Chris, Mr. and
sergeant.
~rs. Wil)iatp Brown and
"According to Lt. Col. Henry .,daughter, KQ, all of Mason,
A. Curtin, squadron com- have returned by plane from a
mander , th e 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld visit with Mrs. Kearns ' parents
Jacobs, 'gets along well with in England.
others and his military
The Kearns left on June 17 to
bearing, behavior and personal visit her mother and stepappearance consl&lt;!ntly set an father, Mr. and Mrs. Charley
example for other first term James at Canvey Island, Eng.
airman.
On July 14th the Browns joined
Ainnan Jacobs has a very the Kearns in England and
positive attitude and is spent a week touring London.
seriously considering the The most impressive things
possibilities of making the U. S. they saw were Westminster
Air Force his career. He Abbey, Buckingham Palace,
believes in the importance of and the changing of the guard.
his personal contributions to They attended a worship
AITEND SHRINE
the local mission and in the service at St. Paul's Cathedral.
Mrs. Ferne Cheese brew,
position of the United States as
En route to England by plane district deputy, White Shrine of
a leader in establishing they were detained one hour in
Jerusalem, Mrs. Bernice Winn,
universal understanding and Philadelphia while passengers chairman of material ob·
world peace /"
were searched beforegetting jectives, Mrs. Helen Reynolds,
Airman Jacobs presently on the plane. A plane had been and Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
resides in central housing with hijacked earlier that morning. Mary Shrine 37, were in
his wife, Lena, and their
The Kearns and the Browns Huntington recently to attend a
FAMILY MOVES
month-&lt;&gt;ld-son , Sean Michael. were flown by Boeing 747 jet to meeting · of the Wescerkova
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hudson
Jacobs • is active with the Kennedy Airport and by a Shrine. Helen Johnson of
and daughter, Lori, have
squadron's intramural sports smaller plane to Pavkersburg
Balboa, Calif., the supreme moved from Condor St.,
program in off duty hours.
where they were met by Mrs. worthy high priestess, made a
Pomeroy, into their new home
Brown 's mother, Mrs . Eunice courtesy visit to the Shrine.
located on Route 7, Pomeroy.
HERE FROM GUAM
Hart and their son, Kevin
Recent guests of Mrs. Bertha Brown.
Lasher and Mrs. James Titus
were J. BiAgham Titus and
VISITING HERE
family of Guam, his brother,
NEW HAVEN - A1C
Robert Titus of Detroit, Mich ., Richard Abel, son of Mr. and
and their mother, Mrs. Mrs. Jess Abel, New Haven, is
Frances Bingham Titus, also of spending his leave with his
Detroit. J. Bingham Titus is a parents and sister, Dianna,
teacher in Guam and during after spending one year in
the swnmer has traveled to Thailand. Following his leave
Malaysia, Thlaland, and he will be stationed with the
Japan . Ro~ert Titus is .a hospital at Andrews Air Force
ACK·TO·SCHO
counselor m the Detrott ··Base, Maryland.
schools.
I
I
Apostle's Death
PATIENT VISITED
Saint Peter may have been
Mrs. Maude Betz and Mrs. killed during the persecu·
Pearl Reynolds were in tions of E m p e r o r Nero
Columbus Monday to visit around A.D. 64. According
Richard Reed who is now at to tradition, he was crucified
downward at his own
home following
recent head
request, probably in the Nehospitalization.
ronian Gardens .

BROTHER DIES
M,rs. Charles Searles has
returned home after two weeks
In Bessemer, Ala. where she
was called by the death of her
brother, Turner Giddens, 62.
While there she visited her
motller, Mrs. Lula Hamilton,
confined to a nursing home,
and another brother and sister·
In-law, Mr. and Mrs. James
Giddens. Joining Mrs. Searles
in Alabama last Thursday for a
weekend visit were her
huaband and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Becker, Lisa, Donnie ' and
•
Chris. All returned home
There are more than 220,Latin America and Africa
000 gasoline service stations together account lor 40 per
· Smday night.
in the United States.
cent of the world's forests .

1971.

TUESDAY
BOTH LETART ~' ails ball
teams meet at L&lt;'tart Falls
School, 6 p.m. Tuesday in
uniforms for pictures.
ANNUAL MEIGS Junior
Fair style revue , 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Eastern High School.
King and queen for 1972 fair
named following revue. Public
welcome.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday night, hall will be
vacated for the Meigs County
Fair.
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work in
Master Mason Degree, one
candidate. Refreshments. All
Master Masons invited. Robert
Beegle, WM .

The Pomeroy Pee Wee
League Redlegs held a wiener
roast and picnic at the river·
SJde camp of Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Wamsier
A cake with a baseball
diamond decoration and in·
scribed "champs" was used as
a centerpiece . During the
evening a gift of appreciation
was presented to Bill Ohlinger,
manager of the team, for his
work with the boys during the
past season. A drawing for a
prize of a baseball was won by
Harvey Whitlatch.
Attending were team
members Steve Ohlinger,
Harvey Whitlatch , John
Hoffman, Chris and John
McKinney, Rodney Manley,
Tony Jewell , Joe Bob Hemsley,
Roger Gaul, Greg Thomas,

Pomeroy

I'II1EN YOU VI SIT. PARK FRff

l.ilbens 11alioNll
....C. CINCINNATI

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Fedel'lll Depollt Iu~~noc:e Corponlita

~

�r-

8 ~The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 1,1972

.

AUNT LOWEE!V
SAID TO COME TO

...............o)•....
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, .••.•.•.•.•;o;&lt;;.•;.t;oi;". "?"
o;o ;. &lt;: ~··))..

Generation Rap
•'

By Helen and Sue Bolte!

:-:~

$,~

t.o'·

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

I

~

:::

FAT'S NOT WHERE IT'SAT

..._.
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..

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Dear Rap :
I've got a pretty face, but guys won't date me because they'd
get teased, going out with a '1at girl."
Why is ''fat" the same as "poison" to people who aren't fat?
I've learned not to tak,e people for what they look like but what
they are, so how come if I'm good company, I sit home every
weekend?
I'm tired of listening to the radio and dreaming of the good
times I'll never have .
Don tell me to diet. I've tried them all and they don't work.
My mother overfed me when l was a baby and I grew up with too
many !at cells. Everybndy knows that fat little kids become fat
big people, so there 's no use trying, All! want to know is wh)
boys won't take a chance with overweight girls' - 220 POUNDi
and 5 FT. 5
Dear 2W-5-.&gt;:
Honest now: Would you accept a date with a fellow who
carried around 100 extra pounds and probably waddled when he
walked' Dam right you wouldn't, so why blame the boys? Looks
are important, not only in themselves but because they affect
one's personality. What girl is her sp~~st when she can't
bear to lace a mtrror - and she's env10ul&lt;gf the slim ones who

can?

"
-.=
••.....

My advice: Stop chewing the fat(those excuses!!!) and start
BURNING it! Off ! ! - HELEN

i''•• .-:·'•
.;....
",

Dear 220:
So you've 'tried all the diets and they doo't work!" how
LONG have you tried 'em? Most people don't begin to lose weight
until they've been dieting several days -and exercising also.
You'll never shed pounds until you change your attitudes,
including the one that puts food above all other pleasures ; so
start psyching yourseU.
But see a doctor first! After a thorough examination, he 'II
give you tbe proper diet and teach you now to count calories.
Good luck! - SUE
·

.'
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.
'

~

·-..
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Pomeroy
Motor Co.

~.·.

1970 FORD
$1995
Galaxie 500 hardtop coupe. V-8 eng ine. automatic trans·

mission, power steer ing &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl top, vinyl interior. White-wall tires. like new. radio .

'llrrFORD PINT02 DR .
$1850
Local I owner car, green finish, dean inter ior, good tires,
.JOOOt;e,..engine, radio, 4-speed trans.
1969CHEV. KINGSWOODST. WAGON
52295
v.a with automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes,
luggage rack, factory air, color white wi th green vinyl
interior , like new wh ite-wall tires. rad io.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
f'!)MEROY, OHIO

WAN'r ADS
INFORMATION
, . DEADliNES
.s P .M . Day Before Publication-.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
CarKellation - Corrections
Will be accepted un1il9 a.m . tor.
Day of Publ ication
REGULATIONS
Th~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or re ject any ads
deemed objectional. The1
publlsh~tr will not be respons ible
for moi'e than one incorrect
insertion .
.

RATES

Notice

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

.Business Services
___ __

AUCTION - Salurday, Augusl
12, al1 :00p.m.. 1'1&gt; mile N.E.
of Chester. Ohio on Route 7,

,;,_

we will sell the following : Two

'

'

bedroom suites, odd beds and
beddirig , dinette set , old
eKtension dining table and
chairs, threshers fable.

wicker rockers, odd tables
and cha irs. telechone stand.
blacksmith outfit {anviL
blower, efc.), ball mason jars,
stone jars, kitchen utensils,
dishes, picture frames, old
handmade trunk, mirror with
hat rack, .-10gat. milk cans,
ice cream fre ezer, platform
scales, shovel plow, wi"r11dow,
weights, broad axe. foot adz
and many other lfems. Ruth
Taylor and Victor Bahr,
owners. I. 0 . " Mac" McCoy,
Auctioneer.
8-6-3tc

$5.55
. -G U~RANTEEo-;

1

'

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
license?
Call
992·
operator's
1970 HONDA 450, phone 9922966 . .
5951.
6-15-ffc
8-6-6fp
-~==----AKC registered Wi emaran er boiE'R'" • and ba ck hoe" wofk,
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
pups; J . E. Pape, Box 265,
E&gt;ecavating, Phone 992-5367.
Syracuse, Ohio 45779; p~one
Dick Karr, Jr .
992-3420.
5-21 -tl c
COAL, Limestone , Excelsior BACKHOE AND DOZER work:
Septic tanks Installed. Geor~e
Sail Works, E. Main St ..
~Biil) Pullins. Phone 992 -2418 ,
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891 .
4-2S-tlc
4-12-tfc

.
Rea I Estate For Sale

Phon~ 992-2094

Pome~ Ho,!li~'"&amp;· Auto

..
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by _ hour or contr~ct. 11
Free · Estimates. We also ·
'haul fill dirl, lop~soil . Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
·after 7 p.m. or phone · 992-"
:5232 .
CONCRETE
delivered right to )'Our
protect. Fast and easy. Free
es timates . Phone 992 -328ot,
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

BALLS O'FIRE!!

Razor Cut?

ARNOlD
BROTHERS

....

12

$3.50

~-::--:----

- - - - --

THE KINGS ARMS
LYN·CAMPBEU

----------I,

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

IT,~! 1HI$
IS A FAMIL.Y .S~P•••

WA"'Vi

.YECH !..
oUlP.'-'IO'Ll FL'f TO TH'
'fOLI'D EIETTER

·ofo&gt;!-GET ME
·MORE OF THAT

TOP 0' TEE.TERIN' ROCK
-LAND ON IT--

.£~51VE.

~IRDSI:J'.D-

I LIKE IT!

6&gt;1 E WANTS SO I
CAME PREPARED!

WINNIE WINKLE

8-BUT

:;;o AHEAD

TH IS IS

PAINTING!

COLOR I

AND START TH ' FIRST

I KNOW...
ISN'T

THAT

LUCKY?

MIXED!

IIUT WHAT AllOUT

lHE OI.ITOIDE
PHONE: CALL

c. BRADFORD,

DEMIIND1
COMMISSIONER?

Aucl ioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
· Racine·, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc

NO WAY. WARDEN l
~ 1.5 IS $TiLL A '
PlrfSON!

PAPER hang1ng; Inferior and
ex terio r painting ; Arthur
Musser, phone 742 -5223.
7-18-lOip
Oi:JELL WHEEL alignment
locaoted at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced elec ·
tron ic ally .
All
work
guaranteed .
RP~~nn.ahtiD
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
992-3213 .
1-V -nc
SEPTIC tonks cleaned. Miller•
San itation , Stewarl, Ohio . Pn .
662 3035
2· 12-tf~

""'
sE"'
·w
" I'"N"'G"''"M
""'A"'
a:i
"'·r::;Flt
='S-::.-:::lfepalr
service, all makes. 992-228-4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors
1

~

Mobile Homes FCir Sale
HE'S DRAWlri' A PICTURE 0' A Lori(i
TUNNEL" ' SCADS OF 'EM ... AN' I

FOR THE BEST deal In a new
or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sates,
Kanauga, Ohio.
7-16-JOic

C.VE.S'3 TKAl'S s'POSED 1' BE MEI'I
DIGG ir1' ... At'f lOAO IIf RUCKS lri A
WAGON ... • ~EEP OON: DARWIN!

CASij paid for all mal&lt;es an11
models of mobile homes .
Ph&lt;¥1e area code 614-423"531'.

...

•

Yeaterdoy's Cryploquote: A PERSON IS NEVER HAPPY
2. Yearn
. EXCEPT AT THE PRICE OF SOME IGNORANCE-ANApainfully
TOLE FRANCE
,
danr:e
3.Hindu
6. Pick up
(C 1972 Kinr Feature• Syndieat.e, Inc.)
title
the tab
4. Wager
11. More
5. Noachlan
frosty
croft
IZ. Benedict's 6. Falsehood
path
7.Madden
Ut11Cramhle the~elour Jumbleo,
- ·-~~---~---.......1 L______..:::::lJ~~i__j 13.1've
8.Wlndlng
one
letter to euh oquare, to
Yeoterdoy'•
Auwer
had
part of a
form four ordinary wordo.
enough!
river
!1. Haltant
34. "The
(3 wds.)
t.Mobam·
ll)'lllblos
Goad
lb. Poetic ·
12. Doaier
Eorth"
med~
name
U.
Trust
heroine,
nlghtflll
I~.::=-~~~~~~7.c...::!~=r-~~~+J~J 16. Born
1t. VietH.- my
!5. Flock
(Fr.)
namese
word!
ss. Goodly
n. Moc:casin
holiday
ZS. Greet
number
1t. Preslden· lf. Move
v!etory
31. Ught
TO ISH
tlal
gr1duiiiY
goddess
bedote.td
nlekname U .Soprano,
26. Mournful Sl Boston
12. Inferior;
Lllyzt. United
Bruins star
1
(cbs.)
St.. Ingrid'•
unwanted 11. Ortentol
(sl.)
daughter
nurstmaid 3%. Iml(2 wds.)
1t. Eskimo
tated
40. Eecleslu·
TAPIIA.Y
dwelling
26. ltalian
ss.
Proof·
tical
A WHIFF TliAT COMES
20. 11-the
reading
vestment
city
F!roh\ THB/IAR.
1
faith"
Z1.Heaps
dlrecllon
n.- ereen
r:-r.:-'1r:-T:-T.:,....
28. Excited

~- 13- l~c

··

r-------~-..

I

rJJfYMID~;.u..J~=~=..J=·

'Complete

mobile hQme~
serviCe ........ plus gigantic I
'display of mobile homes .
always available at ...
'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

.

.

ACROSS
I. Brazilian

=--~-~-~

1220 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE, 0

·,I
'

I

AIR-CONDITIONED
mobi le
home and lot; $3,500; phone
992-5786.
8-4-61c

We talk-to you

II

r

I

tJ

rJ t J

•••

(sl.)
(3 wds.)

SO. Ottoman
olliclal

liket~

{~~~~~~~~jlji~~~~

WMP0/1390
tfN YOUR DIAL

reading
(abbr.)
31.Compass
!Z. "Artie"
author
34. Electrical
term
17. Pleaded
guilty

Yneerdar'•

J••biH• fLOUT IROIL SYMIOL INIOIN
Amwer1 llm:ator~ arro11 Jlat! oe,11

,.-'•Lim"

li'S A 1·1161-l FLI( 6ALL
TO SNOOP!( ....IF HE
CATCHES li, WE WIN !!

(sl.)
(3 wds.)

U. Window
style
(~.Memorize

«. Business

(5, Exchange

words

CHAIRS

DOWN
1. Location

r
OKAY....

Now you can buy thot ·
. Comfortable
Lo;Z-Boy
chair you've always
dreamed of at our tow
prices.
Authorized

AT '/OJ!-

~

------

23-7521

'{X) Qfl.l../11.)~

~ wLA~S!

INTERIOR, exterior paintin~
remodeling , bui lding ;· contac
Ernest Deeter. Bashan .
8-6-61c

• Air Conditioners
A
' Wnings
- Underpinninq

®D 'lOJ I'!ATHEiR ~IN; ~

liJt)R 1RCXIBLE IS 'to AA'IE 00
~ 5t~ Cf HUMOR I

3-29-tfc

HOPourt

DA~'rCrlYPTOQUOTE- H~re's how to work It:

IT IN '!MIIf

AXYDLIAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter oimply stands for another. In this Simple A Is.
uoed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stncle letters. ~~~.:..:,::_:./ ·-::::i~
1postrophes, the length and formation of the words Ire 111
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

ru. MOOR.
·•

=r

Dealer

MASON
FURND'URI
Hlr1111n Grlte
-~~~c ..~...--...........n7.-.un
....~~;;..~·w~·~V;•·~
~;

MEAGI.JREG1

MR. M4 )0,1?,

INVERSELY...

LA-Z-BOV

\

r,

Co-OPE!i'A'ft: W!7H 71-!E
CITY'!&gt; At.IGTEI?ITY ( ~;.,;:;"r

... AND, SO, THE BALANCE
OF PAYMENTS IS

- - - -- - -

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WHO UNDeRSTOOD TO~AV'S
OUTSI{)E REA~ING
ASSIGNMENT i

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASON_ABLE rates. Ph . 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
1
.i-12-tfc

~------

at

r

NOW 'IE WENT AN'
MADE ME LOSE COUNT

CAN'T 'iE SEE THAR'S·
A FREIGHT TRAIN
GOIN' BV?

PETUNIA NEVER C'N
DECIDE WHAT COLOR

...

Hall will

,.

ONLY $13,750

...
...

Yield to Husband a Winner

t

Ill!; [)() WANT 10

We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas , bri ck and stoiiei
complete "line of resiCell!ial
and commercial ·roofing ;
building,
_remodeling,
suspended ceirings, Interior
ond exterior painting ;
complete linG~ of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992 3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONHR. CO.

l

..

r • ,.

3 Bedroqm home. with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

· For Wan"t Ad Service
Scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c "
.
12 cents per word three Music by-Gene Nutter &amp;
110 Mechanic Street
consecutive insertloris.
18 cents per ·word six con- The Mixers, 14 piece band .
From Parkersburg, W. Va.
secutive inser ti ons. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
SEE US FOR: Awnongs , srorm
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
:I
ads
and
ads
paid
within
10
days
.·
doors and windows, cArPorts,
••
+++
SPEC IAL for August CARD OF THANKS
marquees, aluminum ·siding
NEW LISTING
Dear Helen and Sue :
Stan ley's Custom Body Shop,
&amp; OBITUARY
and
railing . ·A. Jacob, sales
s-:rRACUSE
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
forced
air
furnace
.
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
rear quarter panels ap I'm going to be married in three months and my problem is
represe
ntative . For free
C1ty
water
.
Front
and
back
porches.
Wonderful
location
Each additional word 2c .
proximately 40 pet. off ; phone
:J
·estimates,
phone Charles
my
two
sisters
and
my
mother.
They're
all
quite
a
bit
overon
124.
Asking
$6500.00.
BLIND
ADS
.
949-2789.
.,,,'I
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V
Additional 2Sc Charge pef
weight. My sisters are going to be bridesmaids .
8-6-61c
AdYertisement.
·
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
NEAR POMEROY
,.------ -Maybe this sounds mean. 'JUt I want to be proud ol my family
"
OFFICE HOU'R~ 1
3-2-tlt
ONE
FLOOR
PLAN
3
bedrooms,
bath,
shower
in
rec
.
·8:30a .m. to 5: 00p .m Daily ETHAN'S lawn mower &amp; small
and have my wedding perfec,. Am I wrong in planning alternates
~---,, .
r~m.
N
i~~
kitchen.
with
cook
and
bake
units.
Dinng
area
.
engine repair ; phone 949·2789.
8:30 a .m·. to 1'2 :00' Noon
A1r cond itioned. N1ce carport and barbecue pit. All for
and telling my sisters they'll be out of the wedding party unless Saturday.
8661c
·J
only $17,500.00.
they slim down? Of course I can't leave my mother out, but
Rea I Estate For Sa Ie
YARD Sale, August 9 &amp; 10, 9
maybe she'll get with it too, if my sisters do. - AFRAID OF Notice
OUT
a.m. to 7 p.m. at Norm an
SNICKERS
SM~LL - 2 bedrooms, 2 wells on coun try road. Stove and
Hysell residence on Eagle
CONVE NIEN T but sec luded
REWARD. for shopping at
retngerator. Good for a weekend outing. Ohio Power .
Ridge
Bashan
Road
;
turn
by
building lots at Rock Springs,
Showal ler 's Wei Pet Shop,
Only $&lt;.000.00.
Meigs Memory Gardens on
Dear ADS:
close to High School &amp; Fa ir
Chester, Ohio: 10 per cent of
RUTLAND
Rt. 1,906 miles and watch for
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte,
your total purchase may be
•2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City water. Nice bath.
I can understand how much you'd like your sisters and
sale s+gns.
992-2789 after 5 p.m. week ·
applied
to
the
purchase
of
any
Garage
and
util
ity
bui
ld
ing.
Lot
about
65&gt;el50.
mother looking their best, but if you asked them to diet especially
8-6-31p
ceramic Items.
days .
-for your wedding (with threats yet), they might think you were
8-6-301c
DON'T
BE
MISLED
BY
THE
OUTSIDE,
OR
THE
8-2-30ip
·
pretty
seUish.
They
're
probably
as
concerned
as
you
are
about
PRICE
.
LET
US
SHOW
YOU
THE
INSIDE
.
THAT'S
WHY not try cosmetics that are
"
5 ROOM house and bath, $6,500 ;
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS .
••
truly
different
and
their weight problems, so make them feel that losing is for their
phone 992 -5786 .
refreshing? The fam ous mink
benefit - not yo\D's. - SUE
",,
8-6-61c
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
oi l base and now we have the
992-3325
+++
'
lemon grove . .Just think, 14
75 ACRE Farm at Harrison "'"'
Dear Afraid :
specials this month. some for
'
vil le. Ohio ; ~ouse , out .
men as well as women. It's
U you Issued ultimatums about weight loss, you'd end up
''·
buildinQs , Qood farm land ;
GEORGE
HOBST
ETTER,
FOR
SALE
by
owner
.
Yellow
I&lt;OSCOT of course. Phone
with a far from "perfect" wedding!
.
pr
iced to sell. Phone 992-6641.
REAL ESTATE BROKER,
992-5113.
frame house, six rooms and
8·6·61c
Early shopping for bridesmaids' dresses might have more
RACINE,
OHIO.
bath
.
large
lot.
located
in
7-9-Hc
RACINE
Restaurant
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
effect. Perhaps your sisters and mother will aim for two sizes
bus iness in a pr ime location,
Window,
house on l~f.t going north
'•
Have Yo•• Had A
~' "----~~~.~ after they choose the style. - J-IJ;;LEN
doing
a very fine vol um e of
Inside corpofatlon line.
' Air Conditioners
business, stock and equip'"'
7-27-lf
. .,,"' .WIN AT BRIDGE
ment, price $5,000.
tCLELAND
Hot Water Heater~
8
ROOM
house,
J bedrooms,
Hilton
Wolfe,
Real
Estate
Why
Not
slop
in
and
let
Mick.
'
Plumbing
REALTY
recreation plus bar. garage ,
Salesman, Phone 949-3211.
and Fred cut and sty le you!
608 E. Main
.I1
Electrical Work
ha ir for neater anq bette
basement and large front
8-8-31c
_,:om.,oy,
Ohio..,.controlled hair .
porch . River View . Ap .
poinlment only. Call 992-5310.
KARR'S
For Sale
\
8-6-6tc
. 15 MINUTES
mend it including the result.
•',
-::-:c-::------- BARBER
FROM
POMEROY
PIANO
.
&amp;
Organ
lessons
by
NORTH
s
5 ROOM house, double lot , 2 car
••
Husband Bobby, who with
SHOP
3.05 acre estate, I story, 3
quallf+ed
graduate
of
Cin
.
.AQJ 10
garage , Anderson Street,
lynn 51 .
bedrooms with closets, bath,
c"innati Conservatory of
Jim Jacoby, constitutes the
¥J98 2
Mason , W. Va .; phone 773 - utility room. kitchen has nice
Mu
sic.
Phone
992
-3825.
.
Pomeroy
992-2448
pair
of
the
World's
anchor
• 102
5606.
,,'·
cabinets and dishwasher ,
8-3-12fc
~ Ph . 992 -2367 ,
champion D a II as Aces.
Pomeroy, 0.
oloJ7 5
8-6-61p
own
water supply or Chester
didn ' t have any chance to
Barbers' l oca l 400-AFL -CIO CANNING tomatoes, sweel
WEST
EAST
water, large garage .!lnd
",.
show great skill at three no- GRAND.OPE NING - Sew &amp; Go
. 5432
.7
workshop, fru it stol"age
co rn ,
cucumbers
and 8 ROOM house, balh, large lot,
"•
gas and electr ic, Rt . 1,
trump .
¥A
¥KQI05
3
buUding, fruit trees, berries,
Gera
ldine
Cleland,
mangoes;
Shop
in
Alfred
area;
bonded
'
Middlepor t, phone 992-2602.
tKJ74 3
tQ9 85
Racine, 0.
grapes , and other. 4 years
.,'
acrylics, sweater kn its and Lost
He simply won the dia8-6-61p
... 642
4108 3
old . GREATEST BUY OF
polyesler, $1 .99 and up; LOST - German Shepherd dog ,
7-28-ffc
••
mond lead and proceeded to
,,
THE YEAR. $18.1&gt;00.00.
::
R-:A-::
C-::1
N
"'E;o-:=-6
r_oo_m_h
_o
_
use
-,
-,bath.
owner,
Mrs.
E.
T.
Calawa(,.
SOUTH
(D)
,
black and silver in vicinity of ~:-:-::--:-:---rattle off hi s eight tricks in
1 STORY FRAME
TOMATOES,
potatoes,
• K986
8-8-3 c
Chester;
answers
to
name
of
ut ilit y room, garage. SIO.OOO ;
the
black
suits
to
chalk
up
In
good condition, 2
;
cucumbers
and
bean
s,
• 7 64
General; call collect 985·3954 .
r,hone 949-4195.
bedrooms , bath, modern
the no-trump game.
Clarence
Proffit,
Portland,
t A6
8-8-3fp
3-31-lfc
Help Wanted
kitche n, . gas furna ce,
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
oloAKQ9
- - -- -- The bidding was more sci~--=~--­
basement, Meigs School
9-lfc
~
7-1
,_
None vulnerable
HOUSE.in' long Bottom , phone'
entific at the other table .
Dist. $7,000.00.
Help Wanted
985-3529
West North East South
North used Stayman and
NEED STORAGE?
SHEEP rams : I Suf fo lk
APPLICA.TIONS now being
6-11-tfc
I N.T.
Pomeroy , large building
raised South to lour spades
MEN
NEEDED
registered,
I Corrieda le, 3
taken for kitchen help. cooks,
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
with 2 floors, several lots, In
spring ram s; phone 949 -2848 RACINE - 10 room hous~ :
afte r South bid two spades
wa it resses and car hops ,
Pass
or
949-3858.
good
location, present inin.response to the Stayman
apply in person at Craw's
bath, basement, garage , two
· DELIVERY
come . $8,200.00.
Opening lead- t 4
86-31c
two clubs.
Steak Hou se.
lots. Phone 949-4313.
MIDDLEPORT
8-8-61c
DRIVER
SALES
4-5-ttp:
Jrd
St.
2 story brick. has 2
Four
spades
is
a
mighty
CHINA cabinet, credenza, dish - ~----•' By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apartments,
basement.
washer,
good contract. It ca n only be
coffee
·
table,
fire
WOMAN lo live with elderly
sma
ll
apartment
in
the rear.
screen, lawn chair, bedr oom For Sale
Betsy Wolff is one of our beaten by a 4-1 or 5-0 break
lady, light housework. n·.l
AlliN GOOD CONDITION,
FULL
OR
PART
TIME
desk
and
chair,
su
ite,
mat.
top women bridge players in trumps but suits break
laundry . Phone 992-5397 or
REDUCED TO SEll,
tress and springs. dre sser; 1968 1 BANNER Travel Trailer .
992-3507.
but like most smart wives that way aboul32 per cent of
19
17
ft
.,
completely
self
OWNER
liVES OUT OF
cal l 992-3381 or 992-7440.
8-8-61c
she likes to let her husband the time and this was one or
contained ; sleeps 6 ; $1.800 or
TOWN . {PLEASE CALL)
8-S-tfc
best offer; phone 742-3128.
pI a y no-trump contracts those times. There was no
WANT TO SEll? liST
8-4-4tc
whenever she gets a chance way lor South to make more
TWO horse tandem Ira ller,
WITH US . NO SALE, NO
AN HOUR
CHARGE.
than nine tricks at spades
electric brakes and li ghts, WALNUT Stereo-combination,
to let him operate .
SENTINEL
good
cond
ition
;
also
do
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
.4 speaker sound system, 4
Her jump to three no- and the net profit or 700
No
experience
bucks titched, silver I uble
points
was
worth
12
IMPs
to
CARRIERS
WANTED
REAL TOR
speed dual volume control .
trump with the North hand
Western Pleasure sadadj:~
necessary . ~ust have
the
victorious
mixed
team
,
Balance
$68.32.
Use
our
would not be approved prophone 992-3742.
Y92-2259
IN
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
car and willing to learn
If no answer 992-2568
(NEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
' 8-8-61c
cedure in match points but
8-4-6tc
our business . Call for
at IMPs it has a' lot to com ;
-::--:-:-~--­
CANNING PEACHES - A toad
MIDDLEPORT
Personnel
~anager .
arriv_ing Wednesday. Be sure EARLY American Stereo, AM- IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . lake
FM radio, 4'Speed changer, 4 Conchas, New Mexico. $2;97S.
446-0694
to bnng your con tainers. Ph .
Phone Faye ~anley
s p·eaker sound system .
The bidding has been:
Tbe Almanac
No Down . No Interest. $2S mo.
992-2S82
or
992-2565.
Mid
way
992-5592
Balance $73.56 . Use our
for 119 mos . Vacation
Markel.
West North
East
South
United Press International
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
Paradise. Free Brochure .
In
Dble
Pass
2¥
8-8-3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
Tnday is Tuesday, Aug . 8, the I ¥
8-4-61c
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
Pass
3 ""
Pass
?
Pomeroy
22Jst day or 1972 with 145 to
~c-=--:---­
NOTICE OF DRAWING
2001 DO, Alameda, California
You, South, hOld :
Auto Sales
Phone 992-2156
CLOSE out on 1971 full size zigOF JURORS
94501 '
follow.
. 8743 ¥2 +AK9-13 ~762
Not ice is hereby given that a
d
zag sewing ma chine. For
8-6-Jotp
1970
PATROL
Plymouth,
4
The moon is approaching its
Public drawing of jurors will be
What do you do now?
383,
4
barrel,
new
l~res,
go:;;;
sewl
n~
stretch
fabrics.
-:-~------made on the 15th day of' August
new phase . ,
cond1f1on; whit~ , full power,
button oles, fancy designs, SMALL buslne;s doing big, big
A-This is easy. Bid three dia- 1972, at the office of the Com . TOYS! Toys! Toys! Sell
The morning stars are monds.
Playhouse toys , Aug . to Dec. automat1c, air-conditioner
etc. Paint slightly blemished.
business in the County Seat of
missioners of Jurors in the
Free
training
.
Good
com$1.500.
Call
992-5310.
'
Choice
of
carrying
C!ISe
or
Meigs
County . Business and
Court
HolJse
of
Meigs
County
Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
TODAY'S QUESTION
Oh io, for the September Term'
8-6-6tc
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
books can be seen only by
mission, No cash investment.
The evening stars are Mars
Your partner continues to 1972 of the Common Pleas Court
No delivery . No col lecting. S -:-:-::-:::-:-=:----- terms available. Phone 992appolntmenl. Can be partly
5641.
three spades. What do you do of Meigs County , Oh io. at 10:00
and Jupiter.
&amp;
H
Green
Stam
p
bonus.
Call
'65
CHEVY
Impa
la,
V-8,
financed
. Write or call Elmer
o'cloc k A.M.
Margarel Fortune 949-5414 or
aulomat1c, 4 door, $300, ~98 _______ _ _8_
-Htc
F. Jones J. 'Associates,
Those born on .this date are now?
Answer tomorrow
locust St., Middleport , phone
Realtors , 227 Columbus Road,
Barbara lambert 446-3411.
Freeland s. Norris
under the sign of Leo.
7-26-301c
992-2865.
ELECTROLUXSweeperdeluxe
Athens, Ohio; phone 614-S93Lauren
E . Hoffman
American editor Charles Dana Srnd II lo• JACOBY MOOERH hook CBI 8, II
8_6_31c_ model. Complete with all
3292.
,
-::--::-::-;:--:--:-- - cleaning attachments and
was born Aug. 8, 1819.
8-6-6fc
FULL TIME bartender ; apply ,
uses paper bags. Slightly used
to : "Wi" 'ot Bridg~." (r:/o tltis n~wJ ·
in person at the Meigs Inn. '61 GMCdump truck 4000; 14ft. but cleans and looks like new.
On this day In history :
poptr), . P.O. So• 489, Radio City
South Carolina's state
8-6-ffc
g~9~~~ 2 double rack . Phone Will sell for $37.25 cash or
In 1940, the German LuftStotio11, Ntw York, N.Y. 10019.
flower
is
the
yellow
jasmine,
-----:-----:----terms avollable. Phone 992waffe began a series of
41 .
- - - - - - - - - - according to Encyclopaedia For Rent
8
--6-31c
56
=--:-:-:::::--:-::::-:c-:--:-daylight air raids on the British
Britannica.
8-Htc
1966 4 DR. SEDAN, Gal ax le 500,
Isles that continued until Oct.
V-8, 289 c'u. in ., crulsamafic, · r------'---~_._,
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. 3 dleport;
phone 992-3381
992-- power steering, AM radio, 2
BEDROOM
home, orMid
31.
Price Smash!
7440.
\
. speed wondshl~fd wiper and
In 1945, President Truman
8-8-lfc
washer, 7 • 75 while side wall
PANTS &amp; JEANS
signed the ratification of the U.
-----:--:-:-:-:-- -- fires, seal bells front ond
3 ROOM house and bath, fur - rear, clean interior. perfect
N. charter. Also In 1945, Russia
nished; phone 992-5592.
running motor, good paint,
declared war on Japan, seven
Regrets That the Engagement of
SALEI
8-8-lfc be1ge with while roof, no holes
,,
days before Japan surren·
in body, new battery, 1 owner
Buy 2 P1lrs and
dered.
PASTURE, phone 992-6329.
priced to sell; Phone Paula l :
GET 1 PAIR FREE
In 19S3, the United States
8·2-61p
Sayre, Portland, 843·2286, 1 ,
::::-::-::---:-:-----,
mi.
below Ravenswood All kinds, all slz~s for men,
signed a mutual security pact
'j 'AND 4 ROoM furnfshect'a~
landing on Ohio Route 338.
1 WO!T'en, ' young men , boys
with the Republic of Korea.
·unfur•lshed,.
aportments.
8-8-31c
and girls . Hurry to ...
·
Has Been PostpOned Due to the Sudden ·
Phone 992- 5~4.
·;. · ,:;-'-:--:--::--:-----:•·
A thought for the day:
·
·
4-12-ttc Wanted To Buy
9. _Jack~~:;.:~~ Mgr
Hospitalization
of
Her
Mother.
However,
German novelist Thomas
J BEDROOM 'house, 1arg~
..Ml Phone99H181
basement, new gas furnace, OLD Furniture, oak tables, ,. . . .,. .' ·- ... ..... , . Mann said, " Time cools, lime
od
· hbo
organ;, dishes; clocks, bross POO
go ne1g
rhood, walking beds, or complete household•. · OLE puppies, Sliver Tej
c!Striflell. No mood can be
distance .to Elementary
W .1 M D
'
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone .w.'
George
be Playing the Organ Nightly.
School phone 992 311'
.
rl e
. . Miller, Rt. 4,
5"'
malnlllned .Wiallered through
.- .,.,.,.
..
'
· •·8
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 . ·
-·
the COUI'Ie of hours."
6
' ·Jip
6-28-tfc' .

·,
.,.

,. •

Pomeroy

,------~------~~--- · 'READY - MIX

Fri , &amp; Sat. Nights
From lO'til2

~

__,._,; ,-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
· 606
. E. Main,
:
-.Pomaroy,-· Q.·-,•

992·2550

, - - - -- , - - - - : -

SUPPER, UNK
SNUFFY'

From the largest
Bulldozer Radi~l&gt;r to the
Sma llest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

On ~Ost Ameri~a_g CatL.

For Free Estimate

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale ·

•

EXPERT .
Wheet Ali_&amp;!!menl

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU1ING
•PAINTING
PHON~

t , , , ,

----------

~~-

Auction

r f' ,

1

.

Senti.n el Classifieds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.::::.,.:

r ,

CJlYPTOQUOTES

LIT'!&gt; HOPI!

t:&gt;11AA LfTTU!

'

NIICA~N'T

lfl'AIIP U~ UP! .. , I
TOLP He~ TO
81!! WAiTINe
OUTSipeL

UAO

BRYTRPU

UAOL,

PT

DG

UAO

TIOOULOTT

EL;I;

BOYGOVUPDL,
BRYT ·RPU

-.

DG

IIPXAU .- SEUUAOI ·

EYLDMZ

I

)'

'

'

�r-

8 ~The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., August 1,1972

.

AUNT LOWEE!V
SAID TO COME TO

...............o)•....
v.._._
•......,...:&gt;,;.;··,;:-:;:.,.,o;,vn.-.•,y,•.•.•.•.-."'.
·•· .,.,.,.,..,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,•.•.•.•'"~X·'•'•'•'n;o.:•:Qo"-2
1" 'o;,;v;.o.;v.o.,
.·-:·v~._
· .w ,.,QO'xo-o"Q;;
.-........
...,._,..,
, .••.•.•.•.•;o;&lt;;.•;.t;oi;". "?"
o;o ;. &lt;: ~··))..

Generation Rap
•'

By Helen and Sue Bolte!

:-:~

$,~

t.o'·

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

I

~

:::

FAT'S NOT WHERE IT'SAT

..._.
"t l t'W ·

,..-:
o ~·

fI

l h '

··"I
'.,
I
•! '

..

' • 'I
''

0' I

It 1 1

lo ' '

'''' ' ''
! ', ,

,.
I''

'~:

...·:'.
1\ '

•\'

'

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u

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Dear Rap :
I've got a pretty face, but guys won't date me because they'd
get teased, going out with a '1at girl."
Why is ''fat" the same as "poison" to people who aren't fat?
I've learned not to tak,e people for what they look like but what
they are, so how come if I'm good company, I sit home every
weekend?
I'm tired of listening to the radio and dreaming of the good
times I'll never have .
Don tell me to diet. I've tried them all and they don't work.
My mother overfed me when l was a baby and I grew up with too
many !at cells. Everybndy knows that fat little kids become fat
big people, so there 's no use trying, All! want to know is wh)
boys won't take a chance with overweight girls' - 220 POUNDi
and 5 FT. 5
Dear 2W-5-.&gt;:
Honest now: Would you accept a date with a fellow who
carried around 100 extra pounds and probably waddled when he
walked' Dam right you wouldn't, so why blame the boys? Looks
are important, not only in themselves but because they affect
one's personality. What girl is her sp~~st when she can't
bear to lace a mtrror - and she's env10ul&lt;gf the slim ones who

can?

"
-.=
••.....

My advice: Stop chewing the fat(those excuses!!!) and start
BURNING it! Off ! ! - HELEN

i''•• .-:·'•
.;....
",

Dear 220:
So you've 'tried all the diets and they doo't work!" how
LONG have you tried 'em? Most people don't begin to lose weight
until they've been dieting several days -and exercising also.
You'll never shed pounds until you change your attitudes,
including the one that puts food above all other pleasures ; so
start psyching yourseU.
But see a doctor first! After a thorough examination, he 'II
give you tbe proper diet and teach you now to count calories.
Good luck! - SUE
·

.'
.

.
'

~

·-..
'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

~.·.

1970 FORD
$1995
Galaxie 500 hardtop coupe. V-8 eng ine. automatic trans·

mission, power steer ing &amp; brakes, white finish , black
vinyl top, vinyl interior. White-wall tires. like new. radio .

'llrrFORD PINT02 DR .
$1850
Local I owner car, green finish, dean inter ior, good tires,
.JOOOt;e,..engine, radio, 4-speed trans.
1969CHEV. KINGSWOODST. WAGON
52295
v.a with automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes,
luggage rack, factory air, color white wi th green vinyl
interior , like new wh ite-wall tires. rad io.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
f'!)MEROY, OHIO

WAN'r ADS
INFORMATION
, . DEADliNES
.s P .M . Day Before Publication-.
Monday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
CarKellation - Corrections
Will be accepted un1il9 a.m . tor.
Day of Publ ication
REGULATIONS
Th~ Publisher reserves the
right to edit or re ject any ads
deemed objectional. The1
publlsh~tr will not be respons ible
for moi'e than one incorrect
insertion .
.

RATES

Notice

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

.Business Services
___ __

AUCTION - Salurday, Augusl
12, al1 :00p.m.. 1'1&gt; mile N.E.
of Chester. Ohio on Route 7,

,;,_

we will sell the following : Two

'

'

bedroom suites, odd beds and
beddirig , dinette set , old
eKtension dining table and
chairs, threshers fable.

wicker rockers, odd tables
and cha irs. telechone stand.
blacksmith outfit {anviL
blower, efc.), ball mason jars,
stone jars, kitchen utensils,
dishes, picture frames, old
handmade trunk, mirror with
hat rack, .-10gat. milk cans,
ice cream fre ezer, platform
scales, shovel plow, wi"r11dow,
weights, broad axe. foot adz
and many other lfems. Ruth
Taylor and Victor Bahr,
owners. I. 0 . " Mac" McCoy,
Auctioneer.
8-6-3tc

$5.55
. -G U~RANTEEo-;

1

'

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
license?
Call
992·
operator's
1970 HONDA 450, phone 9922966 . .
5951.
6-15-ffc
8-6-6fp
-~==----AKC registered Wi emaran er boiE'R'" • and ba ck hoe" wofk,
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
pups; J . E. Pape, Box 265,
E&gt;ecavating, Phone 992-5367.
Syracuse, Ohio 45779; p~one
Dick Karr, Jr .
992-3420.
5-21 -tl c
COAL, Limestone , Excelsior BACKHOE AND DOZER work:
Septic tanks Installed. Geor~e
Sail Works, E. Main St ..
~Biil) Pullins. Phone 992 -2418 ,
Pomeroy , Phone 992-3891 .
4-2S-tlc
4-12-tfc

.
Rea I Estate For Sale

Phon~ 992-2094

Pome~ Ho,!li~'"&amp;· Auto

..
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by _ hour or contr~ct. 11
Free · Estimates. We also ·
'haul fill dirl, lop~soil . Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
·after 7 p.m. or phone · 992-"
:5232 .
CONCRETE
delivered right to )'Our
protect. Fast and easy. Free
es timates . Phone 992 -328ot,
Goegle in Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

BALLS O'FIRE!!

Razor Cut?

ARNOlD
BROTHERS

....

12

$3.50

~-::--:----

- - - - --

THE KINGS ARMS
LYN·CAMPBEU

----------I,

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

IT,~! 1HI$
IS A FAMIL.Y .S~P•••

WA"'Vi

.YECH !..
oUlP.'-'IO'Ll FL'f TO TH'
'fOLI'D EIETTER

·ofo&gt;!-GET ME
·MORE OF THAT

TOP 0' TEE.TERIN' ROCK
-LAND ON IT--

.£~51VE.

~IRDSI:J'.D-

I LIKE IT!

6&gt;1 E WANTS SO I
CAME PREPARED!

WINNIE WINKLE

8-BUT

:;;o AHEAD

TH IS IS

PAINTING!

COLOR I

AND START TH ' FIRST

I KNOW...
ISN'T

THAT

LUCKY?

MIXED!

IIUT WHAT AllOUT

lHE OI.ITOIDE
PHONE: CALL

c. BRADFORD,

DEMIIND1
COMMISSIONER?

Aucl ioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
· Racine·, Ohio
Crill Bradford
5-1-lfc

NO WAY. WARDEN l
~ 1.5 IS $TiLL A '
PlrfSON!

PAPER hang1ng; Inferior and
ex terio r painting ; Arthur
Musser, phone 742 -5223.
7-18-lOip
Oi:JELL WHEEL alignment
locaoted at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheels
balanced elec ·
tron ic ally .
All
work
guaranteed .
RP~~nn.ahtiD
rates . Phone 742 -3232 or
992-3213 .
1-V -nc
SEPTIC tonks cleaned. Miller•
San itation , Stewarl, Ohio . Pn .
662 3035
2· 12-tf~

""'
sE"'
·w
" I'"N"'G"''"M
""'A"'
a:i
"'·r::;Flt
='S-::.-:::lfepalr
service, all makes. 992-228-4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors
1

~

Mobile Homes FCir Sale
HE'S DRAWlri' A PICTURE 0' A Lori(i
TUNNEL" ' SCADS OF 'EM ... AN' I

FOR THE BEST deal In a new
or used mobile home, try
Kanauga Mobile Home Sates,
Kanauga, Ohio.
7-16-JOic

C.VE.S'3 TKAl'S s'POSED 1' BE MEI'I
DIGG ir1' ... At'f lOAO IIf RUCKS lri A
WAGON ... • ~EEP OON: DARWIN!

CASij paid for all mal&lt;es an11
models of mobile homes .
Ph&lt;¥1e area code 614-423"531'.

...

•

Yeaterdoy's Cryploquote: A PERSON IS NEVER HAPPY
2. Yearn
. EXCEPT AT THE PRICE OF SOME IGNORANCE-ANApainfully
TOLE FRANCE
,
danr:e
3.Hindu
6. Pick up
(C 1972 Kinr Feature• Syndieat.e, Inc.)
title
the tab
4. Wager
11. More
5. Noachlan
frosty
croft
IZ. Benedict's 6. Falsehood
path
7.Madden
Ut11Cramhle the~elour Jumbleo,
- ·-~~---~---.......1 L______..:::::lJ~~i__j 13.1've
8.Wlndlng
one
letter to euh oquare, to
Yeoterdoy'•
Auwer
had
part of a
form four ordinary wordo.
enough!
river
!1. Haltant
34. "The
(3 wds.)
t.Mobam·
ll)'lllblos
Goad
lb. Poetic ·
12. Doaier
Eorth"
med~
name
U.
Trust
heroine,
nlghtflll
I~.::=-~~~~~~7.c...::!~=r-~~~+J~J 16. Born
1t. VietH.- my
!5. Flock
(Fr.)
namese
word!
ss. Goodly
n. Moc:casin
holiday
ZS. Greet
number
1t. Preslden· lf. Move
v!etory
31. Ught
TO ISH
tlal
gr1duiiiY
goddess
bedote.td
nlekname U .Soprano,
26. Mournful Sl Boston
12. Inferior;
Lllyzt. United
Bruins star
1
(cbs.)
St.. Ingrid'•
unwanted 11. Ortentol
(sl.)
daughter
nurstmaid 3%. Iml(2 wds.)
1t. Eskimo
tated
40. Eecleslu·
TAPIIA.Y
dwelling
26. ltalian
ss.
Proof·
tical
A WHIFF TliAT COMES
20. 11-the
reading
vestment
city
F!roh\ THB/IAR.
1
faith"
Z1.Heaps
dlrecllon
n.- ereen
r:-r.:-'1r:-T:-T.:,....
28. Excited

~- 13- l~c

··

r-------~-..

I

rJJfYMID~;.u..J~=~=..J=·

'Complete

mobile hQme~
serviCe ........ plus gigantic I
'display of mobile homes .
always available at ...
'

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

.

.

ACROSS
I. Brazilian

=--~-~-~

1220 Washington Blvd.
BELPRE, 0

·,I
'

I

AIR-CONDITIONED
mobi le
home and lot; $3,500; phone
992-5786.
8-4-61c

We talk-to you

II

r

I

tJ

rJ t J

•••

(sl.)
(3 wds.)

SO. Ottoman
olliclal

liket~

{~~~~~~~~jlji~~~~

WMP0/1390
tfN YOUR DIAL

reading
(abbr.)
31.Compass
!Z. "Artie"
author
34. Electrical
term
17. Pleaded
guilty

Yneerdar'•

J••biH• fLOUT IROIL SYMIOL INIOIN
Amwer1 llm:ator~ arro11 Jlat! oe,11

,.-'•Lim"

li'S A 1·1161-l FLI( 6ALL
TO SNOOP!( ....IF HE
CATCHES li, WE WIN !!

(sl.)
(3 wds.)

U. Window
style
(~.Memorize

«. Business

(5, Exchange

words

CHAIRS

DOWN
1. Location

r
OKAY....

Now you can buy thot ·
. Comfortable
Lo;Z-Boy
chair you've always
dreamed of at our tow
prices.
Authorized

AT '/OJ!-

~

------

23-7521

'{X) Qfl.l../11.)~

~ wLA~S!

INTERIOR, exterior paintin~
remodeling , bui lding ;· contac
Ernest Deeter. Bashan .
8-6-61c

• Air Conditioners
A
' Wnings
- Underpinninq

®D 'lOJ I'!ATHEiR ~IN; ~

liJt)R 1RCXIBLE IS 'to AA'IE 00
~ 5t~ Cf HUMOR I

3-29-tfc

HOPourt

DA~'rCrlYPTOQUOTE- H~re's how to work It:

IT IN '!MIIf

AXYDLIAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter oimply stands for another. In this Simple A Is.
uoed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Stncle letters. ~~~.:..:,::_:./ ·-::::i~
1postrophes, the length and formation of the words Ire 111
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

ru. MOOR.
·•

=r

Dealer

MASON
FURND'URI
Hlr1111n Grlte
-~~~c ..~...--...........n7.-.un
....~~;;..~·w~·~V;•·~
~;

MEAGI.JREG1

MR. M4 )0,1?,

INVERSELY...

LA-Z-BOV

\

r,

Co-OPE!i'A'ft: W!7H 71-!E
CITY'!&gt; At.IGTEI?ITY ( ~;.,;:;"r

... AND, SO, THE BALANCE
OF PAYMENTS IS

- - - -- - -

"HEll"
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WHO UNDeRSTOOD TO~AV'S
OUTSI{)E REA~ING
ASSIGNMENT i

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASON_ABLE rates. Ph . 4464782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
1
.i-12-tfc

~------

at

r

NOW 'IE WENT AN'
MADE ME LOSE COUNT

CAN'T 'iE SEE THAR'S·
A FREIGHT TRAIN
GOIN' BV?

PETUNIA NEVER C'N
DECIDE WHAT COLOR

...

Hall will

,.

ONLY $13,750

...
...

Yield to Husband a Winner

t

Ill!; [)() WANT 10

We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas , bri ck and stoiiei
complete "line of resiCell!ial
and commercial ·roofing ;
building,
_remodeling,
suspended ceirings, Interior
ond exterior painting ;
complete linG~ of Masonry
work . All work guaranteed to
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992 3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONHR. CO.

l

..

r • ,.

3 Bedroqm home. with
brick f'ront, 1 car
garage,
carpeting.
Priced at ..

EARTH MOVING

· For Wan"t Ad Service
Scents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c "
.
12 cents per word three Music by-Gene Nutter &amp;
110 Mechanic Street
consecutive insertloris.
18 cents per ·word six con- The Mixers, 14 piece band .
From Parkersburg, W. Va.
secutive inser ti ons. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
SEE US FOR: Awnongs , srorm
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
:I
ads
and
ads
paid
within
10
days
.·
doors and windows, cArPorts,
••
+++
SPEC IAL for August CARD OF THANKS
marquees, aluminum ·siding
NEW LISTING
Dear Helen and Sue :
Stan ley's Custom Body Shop,
&amp; OBITUARY
and
railing . ·A. Jacob, sales
s-:rRACUSE
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
forced
air
furnace
.
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .
rear quarter panels ap I'm going to be married in three months and my problem is
represe
ntative . For free
C1ty
water
.
Front
and
back
porches.
Wonderful
location
Each additional word 2c .
proximately 40 pet. off ; phone
:J
·estimates,
phone Charles
my
two
sisters
and
my
mother.
They're
all
quite
a
bit
overon
124.
Asking
$6500.00.
BLIND
ADS
.
949-2789.
.,,,'I
Lisle , Syracuse, V. V
Additional 2Sc Charge pef
weight. My sisters are going to be bridesmaids .
8-6-61c
AdYertisement.
·
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
NEAR POMEROY
,.------ -Maybe this sounds mean. 'JUt I want to be proud ol my family
"
OFFICE HOU'R~ 1
3-2-tlt
ONE
FLOOR
PLAN
3
bedrooms,
bath,
shower
in
rec
.
·8:30a .m. to 5: 00p .m Daily ETHAN'S lawn mower &amp; small
and have my wedding perfec,. Am I wrong in planning alternates
~---,, .
r~m.
N
i~~
kitchen.
with
cook
and
bake
units.
Dinng
area
.
engine repair ; phone 949·2789.
8:30 a .m·. to 1'2 :00' Noon
A1r cond itioned. N1ce carport and barbecue pit. All for
and telling my sisters they'll be out of the wedding party unless Saturday.
8661c
·J
only $17,500.00.
they slim down? Of course I can't leave my mother out, but
Rea I Estate For Sa Ie
YARD Sale, August 9 &amp; 10, 9
maybe she'll get with it too, if my sisters do. - AFRAID OF Notice
OUT
a.m. to 7 p.m. at Norm an
SNICKERS
SM~LL - 2 bedrooms, 2 wells on coun try road. Stove and
Hysell residence on Eagle
CONVE NIEN T but sec luded
REWARD. for shopping at
retngerator. Good for a weekend outing. Ohio Power .
Ridge
Bashan
Road
;
turn
by
building lots at Rock Springs,
Showal ler 's Wei Pet Shop,
Only $&lt;.000.00.
Meigs Memory Gardens on
Dear ADS:
close to High School &amp; Fa ir
Chester, Ohio: 10 per cent of
RUTLAND
Rt. 1,906 miles and watch for
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte,
your total purchase may be
•2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City water. Nice bath.
I can understand how much you'd like your sisters and
sale s+gns.
992-2789 after 5 p.m. week ·
applied
to
the
purchase
of
any
Garage
and
util
ity
bui
ld
ing.
Lot
about
65&gt;el50.
mother looking their best, but if you asked them to diet especially
8-6-31p
ceramic Items.
days .
-for your wedding (with threats yet), they might think you were
8-6-301c
DON'T
BE
MISLED
BY
THE
OUTSIDE,
OR
THE
8-2-30ip
·
pretty
seUish.
They
're
probably
as
concerned
as
you
are
about
PRICE
.
LET
US
SHOW
YOU
THE
INSIDE
.
THAT'S
WHY not try cosmetics that are
"
5 ROOM house and bath, $6,500 ;
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS .
••
truly
different
and
their weight problems, so make them feel that losing is for their
phone 992 -5786 .
refreshing? The fam ous mink
benefit - not yo\D's. - SUE
",,
8-6-61c
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
oi l base and now we have the
992-3325
+++
'
lemon grove . .Just think, 14
75 ACRE Farm at Harrison "'"'
Dear Afraid :
specials this month. some for
'
vil le. Ohio ; ~ouse , out .
men as well as women. It's
U you Issued ultimatums about weight loss, you'd end up
''·
buildinQs , Qood farm land ;
GEORGE
HOBST
ETTER,
FOR
SALE
by
owner
.
Yellow
I&lt;OSCOT of course. Phone
with a far from "perfect" wedding!
.
pr
iced to sell. Phone 992-6641.
REAL ESTATE BROKER,
992-5113.
frame house, six rooms and
8·6·61c
Early shopping for bridesmaids' dresses might have more
RACINE,
OHIO.
bath
.
large
lot.
located
in
7-9-Hc
RACINE
Restaurant
Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
effect. Perhaps your sisters and mother will aim for two sizes
bus iness in a pr ime location,
Window,
house on l~f.t going north
'•
Have Yo•• Had A
~' "----~~~.~ after they choose the style. - J-IJ;;LEN
doing
a very fine vol um e of
Inside corpofatlon line.
' Air Conditioners
business, stock and equip'"'
7-27-lf
. .,,"' .WIN AT BRIDGE
ment, price $5,000.
tCLELAND
Hot Water Heater~
8
ROOM
house,
J bedrooms,
Hilton
Wolfe,
Real
Estate
Why
Not
slop
in
and
let
Mick.
'
Plumbing
REALTY
recreation plus bar. garage ,
Salesman, Phone 949-3211.
and Fred cut and sty le you!
608 E. Main
.I1
Electrical Work
ha ir for neater anq bette
basement and large front
8-8-31c
_,:om.,oy,
Ohio..,.controlled hair .
porch . River View . Ap .
poinlment only. Call 992-5310.
KARR'S
For Sale
\
8-6-6tc
. 15 MINUTES
mend it including the result.
•',
-::-:c-::------- BARBER
FROM
POMEROY
PIANO
.
&amp;
Organ
lessons
by
NORTH
s
5 ROOM house, double lot , 2 car
••
Husband Bobby, who with
SHOP
3.05 acre estate, I story, 3
quallf+ed
graduate
of
Cin
.
.AQJ 10
garage , Anderson Street,
lynn 51 .
bedrooms with closets, bath,
c"innati Conservatory of
Jim Jacoby, constitutes the
¥J98 2
Mason , W. Va .; phone 773 - utility room. kitchen has nice
Mu
sic.
Phone
992
-3825.
.
Pomeroy
992-2448
pair
of
the
World's
anchor
• 102
5606.
,,'·
cabinets and dishwasher ,
8-3-12fc
~ Ph . 992 -2367 ,
champion D a II as Aces.
Pomeroy, 0.
oloJ7 5
8-6-61p
own
water supply or Chester
didn ' t have any chance to
Barbers' l oca l 400-AFL -CIO CANNING tomatoes, sweel
WEST
EAST
water, large garage .!lnd
",.
show great skill at three no- GRAND.OPE NING - Sew &amp; Go
. 5432
.7
workshop, fru it stol"age
co rn ,
cucumbers
and 8 ROOM house, balh, large lot,
"•
gas and electr ic, Rt . 1,
trump .
¥A
¥KQI05
3
buUding, fruit trees, berries,
Gera
ldine
Cleland,
mangoes;
Shop
in
Alfred
area;
bonded
'
Middlepor t, phone 992-2602.
tKJ74 3
tQ9 85
Racine, 0.
grapes , and other. 4 years
.,'
acrylics, sweater kn its and Lost
He simply won the dia8-6-61p
... 642
4108 3
old . GREATEST BUY OF
polyesler, $1 .99 and up; LOST - German Shepherd dog ,
7-28-ffc
••
mond lead and proceeded to
,,
THE YEAR. $18.1&gt;00.00.
::
R-:A-::
C-::1
N
"'E;o-:=-6
r_oo_m_h
_o
_
use
-,
-,bath.
owner,
Mrs.
E.
T.
Calawa(,.
SOUTH
(D)
,
black and silver in vicinity of ~:-:-::--:-:---rattle off hi s eight tricks in
1 STORY FRAME
TOMATOES,
potatoes,
• K986
8-8-3 c
Chester;
answers
to
name
of
ut ilit y room, garage. SIO.OOO ;
the
black
suits
to
chalk
up
In
good condition, 2
;
cucumbers
and
bean
s,
• 7 64
General; call collect 985·3954 .
r,hone 949-4195.
bedrooms , bath, modern
the no-trump game.
Clarence
Proffit,
Portland,
t A6
8-8-3fp
3-31-lfc
Help Wanted
kitche n, . gas furna ce,
Ohio ; phone 843-2254.
oloAKQ9
- - -- -- The bidding was more sci~--=~--­
basement, Meigs School
9-lfc
~
7-1
,_
None vulnerable
HOUSE.in' long Bottom , phone'
entific at the other table .
Dist. $7,000.00.
Help Wanted
985-3529
West North East South
North used Stayman and
NEED STORAGE?
SHEEP rams : I Suf fo lk
APPLICA.TIONS now being
6-11-tfc
I N.T.
Pomeroy , large building
raised South to lour spades
MEN
NEEDED
registered,
I Corrieda le, 3
taken for kitchen help. cooks,
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
with 2 floors, several lots, In
spring ram s; phone 949 -2848 RACINE - 10 room hous~ :
afte r South bid two spades
wa it resses and car hops ,
Pass
or
949-3858.
good
location, present inin.response to the Stayman
apply in person at Craw's
bath, basement, garage , two
· DELIVERY
come . $8,200.00.
Opening lead- t 4
86-31c
two clubs.
Steak Hou se.
lots. Phone 949-4313.
MIDDLEPORT
8-8-61c
DRIVER
SALES
4-5-ttp:
Jrd
St.
2 story brick. has 2
Four
spades
is
a
mighty
CHINA cabinet, credenza, dish - ~----•' By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
apartments,
basement.
washer,
good contract. It ca n only be
coffee
·
table,
fire
WOMAN lo live with elderly
sma
ll
apartment
in
the rear.
screen, lawn chair, bedr oom For Sale
Betsy Wolff is one of our beaten by a 4-1 or 5-0 break
lady, light housework. n·.l
AlliN GOOD CONDITION,
FULL
OR
PART
TIME
desk
and
chair,
su
ite,
mat.
top women bridge players in trumps but suits break
laundry . Phone 992-5397 or
REDUCED TO SEll,
tress and springs. dre sser; 1968 1 BANNER Travel Trailer .
992-3507.
but like most smart wives that way aboul32 per cent of
19
17
ft
.,
completely
self
OWNER
liVES OUT OF
cal l 992-3381 or 992-7440.
8-8-61c
she likes to let her husband the time and this was one or
contained ; sleeps 6 ; $1.800 or
TOWN . {PLEASE CALL)
8-S-tfc
best offer; phone 742-3128.
pI a y no-trump contracts those times. There was no
WANT TO SEll? liST
8-4-4tc
whenever she gets a chance way lor South to make more
TWO horse tandem Ira ller,
WITH US . NO SALE, NO
AN HOUR
CHARGE.
than nine tricks at spades
electric brakes and li ghts, WALNUT Stereo-combination,
to let him operate .
SENTINEL
good
cond
ition
;
also
do
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
.4 speaker sound system, 4
Her jump to three no- and the net profit or 700
No
experience
bucks titched, silver I uble
points
was
worth
12
IMPs
to
CARRIERS
WANTED
REAL TOR
speed dual volume control .
trump with the North hand
Western Pleasure sadadj:~
necessary . ~ust have
the
victorious
mixed
team
,
Balance
$68.32.
Use
our
would not be approved prophone 992-3742.
Y92-2259
IN
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
car and willing to learn
If no answer 992-2568
(NEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
' 8-8-61c
cedure in match points but
8-4-6tc
our business . Call for
at IMPs it has a' lot to com ;
-::--:-:-~--­
CANNING PEACHES - A toad
MIDDLEPORT
Personnel
~anager .
arriv_ing Wednesday. Be sure EARLY American Stereo, AM- IDEAL 5-ACRE RANCH . lake
FM radio, 4'Speed changer, 4 Conchas, New Mexico. $2;97S.
446-0694
to bnng your con tainers. Ph .
Phone Faye ~anley
s p·eaker sound system .
The bidding has been:
Tbe Almanac
No Down . No Interest. $2S mo.
992-2S82
or
992-2565.
Mid
way
992-5592
Balance $73.56 . Use our
for 119 mos . Vacation
Markel.
West North
East
South
United Press International
budget lerms. Call 992-7085.
Paradise. Free Brochure .
In
Dble
Pass
2¥
8-8-3tc
LEGAL NOTICE
Tnday is Tuesday, Aug . 8, the I ¥
8-4-61c
Ranchos Lake Conchas: Box
Pass
3 ""
Pass
?
Pomeroy
22Jst day or 1972 with 145 to
~c-=--:---­
NOTICE OF DRAWING
2001 DO, Alameda, California
You, South, hOld :
Auto Sales
Phone 992-2156
CLOSE out on 1971 full size zigOF JURORS
94501 '
follow.
. 8743 ¥2 +AK9-13 ~762
Not ice is hereby given that a
d
zag sewing ma chine. For
8-6-Jotp
1970
PATROL
Plymouth,
4
The moon is approaching its
Public drawing of jurors will be
What do you do now?
383,
4
barrel,
new
l~res,
go:;;;
sewl
n~
stretch
fabrics.
-:-~------made on the 15th day of' August
new phase . ,
cond1f1on; whit~ , full power,
button oles, fancy designs, SMALL buslne;s doing big, big
A-This is easy. Bid three dia- 1972, at the office of the Com . TOYS! Toys! Toys! Sell
The morning stars are monds.
Playhouse toys , Aug . to Dec. automat1c, air-conditioner
etc. Paint slightly blemished.
business in the County Seat of
missioners of Jurors in the
Free
training
.
Good
com$1.500.
Call
992-5310.
'
Choice
of
carrying
C!ISe
or
Meigs
County . Business and
Court
HolJse
of
Meigs
County
Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
TODAY'S QUESTION
Oh io, for the September Term'
8-6-6tc
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
books can be seen only by
mission, No cash investment.
The evening stars are Mars
Your partner continues to 1972 of the Common Pleas Court
No delivery . No col lecting. S -:-:-::-:::-:-=:----- terms available. Phone 992appolntmenl. Can be partly
5641.
three spades. What do you do of Meigs County , Oh io. at 10:00
and Jupiter.
&amp;
H
Green
Stam
p
bonus.
Call
'65
CHEVY
Impa
la,
V-8,
financed
. Write or call Elmer
o'cloc k A.M.
Margarel Fortune 949-5414 or
aulomat1c, 4 door, $300, ~98 _______ _ _8_
-Htc
F. Jones J. 'Associates,
Those born on .this date are now?
Answer tomorrow
locust St., Middleport , phone
Realtors , 227 Columbus Road,
Barbara lambert 446-3411.
Freeland s. Norris
under the sign of Leo.
7-26-301c
992-2865.
ELECTROLUXSweeperdeluxe
Athens, Ohio; phone 614-S93Lauren
E . Hoffman
American editor Charles Dana Srnd II lo• JACOBY MOOERH hook CBI 8, II
8_6_31c_ model. Complete with all
3292.
,
-::--::-::-;:--:--:-- - cleaning attachments and
was born Aug. 8, 1819.
8-6-6fc
FULL TIME bartender ; apply ,
uses paper bags. Slightly used
to : "Wi" 'ot Bridg~." (r:/o tltis n~wJ ·
in person at the Meigs Inn. '61 GMCdump truck 4000; 14ft. but cleans and looks like new.
On this day In history :
poptr), . P.O. So• 489, Radio City
South Carolina's state
8-6-ffc
g~9~~~ 2 double rack . Phone Will sell for $37.25 cash or
In 1940, the German LuftStotio11, Ntw York, N.Y. 10019.
flower
is
the
yellow
jasmine,
-----:-----:----terms avollable. Phone 992waffe began a series of
41 .
- - - - - - - - - - according to Encyclopaedia For Rent
8
--6-31c
56
=--:-:-:::::--:-::::-:c-:--:-daylight air raids on the British
Britannica.
8-Htc
1966 4 DR. SEDAN, Gal ax le 500,
Isles that continued until Oct.
V-8, 289 c'u. in ., crulsamafic, · r------'---~_._,
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. 3 dleport;
phone 992-3381
992-- power steering, AM radio, 2
BEDROOM
home, orMid
31.
Price Smash!
7440.
\
. speed wondshl~fd wiper and
In 1945, President Truman
8-8-lfc
washer, 7 • 75 while side wall
PANTS &amp; JEANS
signed the ratification of the U.
-----:--:-:-:-:-- -- fires, seal bells front ond
3 ROOM house and bath, fur - rear, clean interior. perfect
N. charter. Also In 1945, Russia
nished; phone 992-5592.
running motor, good paint,
declared war on Japan, seven
Regrets That the Engagement of
SALEI
8-8-lfc be1ge with while roof, no holes
,,
days before Japan surren·
in body, new battery, 1 owner
Buy 2 P1lrs and
dered.
PASTURE, phone 992-6329.
priced to sell; Phone Paula l :
GET 1 PAIR FREE
In 19S3, the United States
8·2-61p
Sayre, Portland, 843·2286, 1 ,
::::-::-::---:-:-----,
mi.
below Ravenswood All kinds, all slz~s for men,
signed a mutual security pact
'j 'AND 4 ROoM furnfshect'a~
landing on Ohio Route 338.
1 WO!T'en, ' young men , boys
with the Republic of Korea.
·unfur•lshed,.
aportments.
8-8-31c
and girls . Hurry to ...
·
Has Been PostpOned Due to the Sudden ·
Phone 992- 5~4.
·;. · ,:;-'-:--:--::--:-----:•·
A thought for the day:
·
·
4-12-ttc Wanted To Buy
9. _Jack~~:;.:~~ Mgr
Hospitalization
of
Her
Mother.
However,
German novelist Thomas
J BEDROOM 'house, 1arg~
..Ml Phone99H181
basement, new gas furnace, OLD Furniture, oak tables, ,. . . .,. .' ·- ... ..... , . Mann said, " Time cools, lime
od
· hbo
organ;, dishes; clocks, bross POO
go ne1g
rhood, walking beds, or complete household•. · OLE puppies, Sliver Tej
c!Striflell. No mood can be
distance .to Elementary
W .1 M D
'
Parkvlew Kennels, Phone .w.'
George
be Playing the Organ Nightly.
School phone 992 311'
.
rl e
. . Miller, Rt. 4,
5"'
malnlllned .Wiallered through
.- .,.,.,.
..
'
· •·8
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 . ·
-·
the COUI'Ie of hours."
6
' ·Jip
6-28-tfc' .

·,
.,.

,. •

Pomeroy

,------~------~~--- · 'READY - MIX

Fri , &amp; Sat. Nights
From lO'til2

~

__,._,; ,-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
· 606
. E. Main,
:
-.Pomaroy,-· Q.·-,•

992·2550

, - - - -- , - - - - : -

SUPPER, UNK
SNUFFY'

From the largest
Bulldozer Radi~l&gt;r to the
Sma llest Heater Core .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

On ~Ost Ameri~a_g CatL.

For Free Estimate

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale ·

•

EXPERT .
Wheet Ali_&amp;!!menl

•ROOFING
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
eSPOU1ING
•PAINTING
PHON~

t , , , ,

----------

~~-

Auction

r f' ,

1

.

Senti.n el Classifieds Get Action/Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
.::::.,.:

r ,

CJlYPTOQUOTES

LIT'!&gt; HOPI!

t:&gt;11AA LfTTU!

'

NIICA~N'T

lfl'AIIP U~ UP! .. , I
TOLP He~ TO
81!! WAiTINe
OUTSipeL

UAO

BRYTRPU

UAOL,

PT

DG

UAO

TIOOULOTT

EL;I;

BOYGOVUPDL,
BRYT ·RPU

-.

DG

IIPXAU .- SEUUAOI ·

EYLDMZ

I

)'

'

'

�.. 111 .

10 - Tile Daily Sentlnel,Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Augusta, 1972

Council

Driver Pay

(Continued from Page 1)
know this, and their lots were
oot cut.
Coun cil received a legal
notice from the board of
commissioners that a hearing
on the re-location of Cpunty
Road 75or Hiland Church Road
would be beld Aug. 29 at 9:30
a.m. at the court house.
Chief Webster in his report
for July said his department
1had investigated 16 accidents,
made 41 arrests and issued 807
parking tickets.
Ralph Werry was appointed
acting clerk for the next
pay roll perwd in the absense of
the cl~rk, Jane Walton.
Cou neil

also

r ece ived

a
letter ' from
the
Jones Boys thanking it for
11
excellent coo peration "

1:

I'

,,

receiVed from village officials,

I'
oI

Chief Henry Werry and Chief
Jed Webster and members of
the fire department on their
recent opening.
Council adjourned to go into
executive session. Attending
were Mayor Baronick, Werry,
William Snouffer, Elma
Russell, Jim Mees and Don
Collins, council members, and
Jane Walton , clerk.

.."•:

I'

u
'

"
•'
•'

,.,
,.
•'!'

t

:~

..

•I

CLUB TO MEET
The Windin g Trail Garden
Cl ub wili meet at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the campsite of
Mrs. Charles Hayes for the
annu al summer picnic .
Members are to take supplies
for a workshop .

·~

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT
AUC)USToB
WALT DISNEY' S
· BEDNOBS &amp; BROOM·
STICKS

!Technicotorl

Angela Lan sbury

David Tomlinson

Disney Cartoon :
Symphony Hour
Admls.lon : Adults, $1.50 ;

Children, 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday

NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN
',' I

f,

I

'

011
I I

,j I

•'•
J II

Tonight,

'• llji,J 1

Aug. 8

DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
Will iam Smith
Kath y Baumann
Tony Young
M ichael Haynes

"HOT LEATHER"
COLOR
- PLUSEdgar Al len

(Cointinued from Page I)
traveling reading teacher;
Frank Dobbin~. Sunny~ide, and
William Buckley, teacher and
coach at Wahama High,
replacing Mr. Riggs.
Apparent controversy over
musical instruments reported
by Supt. Withers led the board
to adopt a new policy.
The teacher visits the classroom and demonstrates horns
and talks to children; he sends
a letter home to parents
sched ulin g a meeting; he
explains his programs to the
parents and discloses the kind
or instruments he prefers and
needs in his band; he also
provides a mimeographed
sheet showing the music
dealers in the area, their addresses, brands .of instruments
they have, and the rental plan
tl1ey offer, and he tells parents
the method book he plans to
use, when classes start, and
how soon pupils need their
instrwnents.
In other action the board :
- Accepted the low bid from
City Ice and Fuel, which was
one of two bids presented for
fuel oil. Gul£ was the other.
- Approved _payment of
salary to Minnie Burdette,
Mason ColUlty librarian in the
amount of $100 per month for
six months.
- Allowed $500 each to
libraries in New Haven and
Point Pleasant.
- Hea1·d a report from Supt.
Withers on the state depart·
menl's approval of budget on
the kindergar te n program .
From the total of $95,133.66 Mr.
Withers said from $5o,OOO to
$60,000 in county flUlds are
needed to subsidi ze the
program.
- Employed the following
non-teaching personnel : Karen
Rorrer, kindergarten aide at
Central at $225 per month;
Francis Lingerfelt, kindergarten aide at North Point
at $22o; Mildred Handley ,
kindergarten aide, at Mt.
Olive, $225 month; Sue Hughes,
custodian for Hannan at $300
per month; Mary Martha
Tilton, Title I teacher aide at
Mission at $225.
- Changed the status of
Brenda Fields from Hartford
kindergarten aide to Broad
Run kindergar ten aid e;
changed the effective date of
Leota Roush, custodian at New
Haven from August 28 to
August 1.
- Accepted the resignation
of Joyce Whiteh ead as
teacher 's aide at Mission, who
is to be replaced by Mrs.
Tilton . Also accepted the
resignation
of
Bernita
Meadows as teacher's aide at
Letart.
- Granted request for bus to
transport visiting mayors.

.

NEW HAVEN - Miss
Delphia M. Roush, 85. New
Haven, died Monday afternoon
at the Lakin State Hospital. She
was born March 7, 1897 at the
Broad Run community, the
daughter of the late Jerry and
Rosa Grimm Roush . Besides
her parents, she was preceded
in death by three sisters, Mrs.
Goldie Grimm, Mrs. Susie
Boston, and Miss Minnie

Former Resident
Of Pomeroy Dies

Roush . Several cousins survive ..
Miss Housh was a member Jl
the New Haven First Church of
God.
Funeral services will be held
at I :30 p.m. Thursday at the
New Haven First Church of
God with the Rev. David
Fields, Jr., officiating. Burial
will be in the Union Cemetery
near Letart. The body wlll be
taken to the church one hour
preceding the service. Friends
may call at the Foglesong
FlUleral Home any lime after 3
p.m. Wedn_esday.

Word has been received here
of the death of Los McKee
Stonemetz, Cuyahoga Falls,
formerly of Pomeroy .
Mrs.
Stonemetz
was
preceded in death by her
parents, Charles and Goldia
Hysell McKee; her husband,
Glenn Sto nemetz, and a
brother, Ralph McKee..
Slie is survived by two sons,
.James, of Cuyahoga Falls, and
Richard, of Akron ; a brother,
Capt. F. A. McKee, Claremont,
Calif.; seven grandchildren
and two aunts, Grace Gloeckner, Pomeroy, and Oma Hysell
of Syracuse.
FlUlerai services will be
conducted Wednesday at the
Prentiss Funeral Home ,
Kenmore Blvd., Akron .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mildred
Moore, Albany ; Eleanor
Faulk, Middleport ; Reid
Easterday, Racine; Iris Carr,
Coolville; Janet Jeffers,
Pomeroy ; Shari a Powell,
Guysville; Arthur Goodin,
Pomeroy; Richard Weaver,
Syracuse; Betty Roush,
Mason ; Delores Summers,
Charleston; Raymond Miller,
Pomeroy; Alice Russell,
Pomeroy, and Leora Zwilling,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Nan cy
Neutzling, Constance Shields,
Margaret Blankenship, Jamie
Anderson, Dorothy Greathouse , Monty Wolfe and
Delores Summers.

nn
WASHINGTON (UPI) , The House Educailon
Committee approved today
legislation to make court·
ordered busing a last resort
lor school desegregation·and
IG ban crosstown busing ,of
grade s~hool pupils.
The measure was ap·
proved by a U·l6 vole as.the
House Rules ComQllttee was
meeting w consider laking
from the , Judiciary Coin·
mitlee President Nixon's
measure to order 8
moi'atorl\)111 on n~w busing
orders.

·::::!:~:::::::::::::::::~~~:::::8*-=~8~::;:::::::;::-;~:;:~:::~ .
TAKEN TO VM
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to 126 Slate St.
at 7:50p.m . Monday for Leora
Zwilling who had suffered a
possible stroke at home. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admilled .
LODGE TO MEET
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the temple. The EA
Degree will be conferred on
one candidate. All master
masons are invited .
NOW YOU KNOW
More than 30,000 deaths are
estimated to occur yearly from
snakebites.

Chr istine Kaufmann

Wed ,-Thur .· Fri .
Augus19- 10-11

Double Feature Program

" PLAY MISTY FOR ME"
I Color I

COOKOUT PLANNED
Mrs. Charles Cohen will
entertain members of the Past
Coun cil ors Club, Th eodorus
Coun cil 17, IJ of A, with a
cooko ut at her Butternut Ave.,
home in Pomeroy at 6:30p.m.
Thursday .

Clint Eas1wood
Plus

iG Pl

" WHERE' S POPPA"
Georg e Sega l
Ruth Gordon
Rated I Rl

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Tuesday was 73 degrees under
partially cloudy skies.

0. K. RUBBER CO.
All-Wheel and Drive-Wheel Truck Tires for

PIOKUPS! VANS and DAMPERS!

•

'"'

· ·"".~. xr\ \•\
-~· . .·

.•·

The Kyger Creek Board of remainder of the season. A
Education Monday night ac- board spokesman said today
cepted the resignation of the pool needed extensive
.,
.
Loretta Ours, vocal music repairs.
The
spokesman
added
instructor, and employed Mrs.
Ed (Barbara ) Stewart, season ticket holders will be
Gallipolis, as her successor. reimbw-sed on a pro-rated
Mrs . Stewart has a BS basis. The lank was originally
degree in music from Marshall slated to close Aug. 23.
The board designated Deryl
~x~:;re~~~- h~1~e h~~r:~~~: Well
as an assistant football
and Gallipolis City School coach and discussed bus route
Districts.
,
The board also accepted the
resignation of Virginia Darst,
TO MEETWEDNESDAY
high school cook, and em·
The
Tenth
District
played Virginia Gardner as a Democratic Action Club will
cook in the district.
meet Wednesday at Boggs
Peggy Thomas was awarded Coffee Shop, 1422 South 3rd
a two-year bus driver 's con· Street, Ironton, Ohio . The
tract. Wiseman Agency was meeting will begin at 8, dinner
awarded an insurance contract may be ordered from the menu
for 14 district buses, two prior to the meeting.
Congressional candidate Bob
tractors and a truck.
Whealey,
Athens, and slate
Board clerk Doris Roush was
authorized to borrow $5,500 to legislatiye candidate John E.
meet current expenses. She Halliday, Gallipolis, will speak
was also authorized to make an briefly it was announced by
advance draw on anticipated club president Hanley Hackett,
lax monies.
Marietta. All southern Ohio
The board approved a motion Democrats are welcome to
to close the Kyger Creek attend the meeting and meet
Swimming Pool for the the candidates.

~ilt' i. UO- Iil $29.00

Sit. t• &lt;.!10-)(l S35. 90

Si1.t' i .IJO- Hi

$31.00

Jan and Alan Holler ,
children of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
. Holter, Pomeroy Route 3, were
named the 1972 Meigs ColUlty
Junior Fair Queen and King
Tuesday night at the annual
Meigs County Junior Fair style
revue in Eastern High School.
Jan and Alan Holter are the
first brother and sister to be
selected fo r the honors of
presiding over the Meigs
County Junior Fair. Records
indicate that a king and queen
were named to preside for the
first time over the junior fair in
!9os.
As king and queen, the
couple will be introduced to
county fair crowds preceding
the grandstand event each
evening during next week's
fair.

•

The FBI was founded in 1908
and was known as the Bureau
of Investigation . The word
"Federal" was added to the
name of the inves ti ga tiv e
agency in 193o.

a1 y
Devoted To The Interesfll Of The

NO. 81

·~\'
i(i 1
I

Mason Fair
Is Swinging
PT. PLEASANT - Aparade, outdoor stage. A square dance

Swingy Little
•
Dresses!
JUST RIGHT
FOR BACKTO-SCHOOL
YOU'LL FIND A COMPLETE
SELECTION OF NEW FALL DRESSES

CHILDREN 'S DEPARTMENT
ON THE SECOND FLOOR.

SHOP IN AIR.OONDITIONED COMFORT
WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5 PM
OPEN FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9:30 TO 9 PM ·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

the crowning of the queen,
judging and other contests
launched the opening of Mason
County's 11th annual Fair
Tuesday.
The crowd, above ex·
pectations and numbering in
the thousands, found ideal
weather as temperatures held
in the hi~ h 70s and then
dropped to the comfortable low
70s for evening events.

is set for 9 p.m.
This evening anoth er
highligh ting ki ddie event will
be that of the popular .Little
Miss and Li ttle Mister Contests.
Each day 's program consists
of entertainment for persons of
all age groups and in varied
fields . Hannan High's Wildcat
Band, under the direction of
Squire Parsons, will present a
concert at 6 p.m. this evening.
Persons visiting the Home
Arts and Culinary Arts section
are due for real treats with
more &lt;~items being exhibited
this year . than ever before .
Displays in the main fair
building and 4-H displays in the
Juni or Division which is
located on the opposite side of
the roadway are something to
see.

'.

~
1

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r

MRS. LUCILLE FA UL, left, mother of Mrs. Mickey
King, fair board secretary , accepts tbe entries of Mrs. Nancy
Collins of the Walk-In Ga rden Club in the two flower shows to
be staged next week as a part of the annual Meigs County
Fair. Tbe secretary's office on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.in. through Thursday to accept
senior fair entries. The deadline for sheep, swine, beef and
dairy catUe is 4 p.m. today with the deadline fo r all other
departments at 4 p.m. on Thursday.

Trends Hidden

By United Press International
Voters in Michigan, Georg ia,
Missouri and Idaho primaries
generally went along with
favorites Tuesday, producing
few clues to popular sentiment
which could affect the national
elections in November.
In Missouri where pundits
hoped to gauge the impact of
Sen. Thomas Eagleton's resignation from th e Democratic
Children were expected
national tick et, there was
today to make up most of the
nothing
conclusive in the
early day crowds since the
results.
Pretty Baby Contest was held
.Dexter Davis, whose brother
this morning. Special rates
.
True
Davis was the source of
were provided by Nolan Shows
the story, latter repudiated,
for children on the ca rnival
that alleged Eagleton had a
rides.
record
of drlUlken driving, ran
The Golfs, a. Gospel singing
·fourth in the . Democ ratic
group, was to sing at 2: 30p.m.
primary for nomination. to
.and again at 9 p.m. from an
Congress.
However, Davis never was
considered a front runner in
the race and the fourth-place
finish gave little indication
whether his his popularity had
waned becaUBe of his brother's
By United Prets International
WNDON - MASSED RANKS OF MORE than 500 role In tbe Eagleton matter.
· State auditor Christopher
policemen today confronted hundreds of striking longshoremen
outside a dock at Scunthorpe In eastern England. They searched
cars and buses and seized an annory of weapons including meat
cleavers, hammers and garden forks.
It was the second consecutive day pollee and longshoremen
pickets faced each other there. In running battles outside the
dock Tuesday 35 policemen w~e injured, five seriously, and 12
dockers arrested. The new confrontation built up In the 13th day
of a nationwide walkout by Britain's 42,000 longshoremen.

Runner-up for the junior fair
queen title was Margie Jeffers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Jeffers, Carpenter . Runner-up
for the king's title was Steve
Stanley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley, of Harrisonville .
TillS YEAR'S Junior Fair
Queen has been a member of 4·
Height years. She has carried
38 projects, including sewing,
cooki ng, conserva ti on, ga r·
dening , home furnishings and
dairy cattle.
She has attended Ohio 4-H
Club Congress, Na tional
Citizenship Short Course, and
recently was selected to the
Ohio Teen Council and as an
Ohio delegate to the National4H Club Congress in Chicago .
She is a member of the Five

Bond won the Missouri
Republican gubernatorial
nomination and will face
Edward L. Dowd, a former
FBI agent who won the
Democratic nomination.
Georgia voters picked in·
cumbent Sen. David Gambrell
and state Rep. Sam Nunn from
a..,crowded field IG meet in a
Democratic rnnoff election for
U.S. senator.
Gambrell was appointed last
year by Gov. Jimmy Carter· to
fill the term of the late Sen.
Richard Russell. On the
Republican side, Rep. Fletcher
Thompson was an easy winner.
The Rev. Hosea Wj!liams, a
black civil rights activist, was
a distant fourth and J .B.
Stoner, an avowed racist whose
ethnic sentiments aroused ire
in blacks and Jewish leaders,
was fifth.
In Michigan, incumbent Republican congressmen Charles
Chamberla'in and Edward
Hutchinson, both across-theboard sup~ters of President
(Continued on page 12)

Weather

enttne
Me~s-Mason

Area

SAIGON (UP!) - South
Vietn am began reinfor cing
Hue today in expectation . the
Communists would try to infiltrate the city in preparation
for a long-fea•·ed attack on the
old imperial capital. The move
came as the Communists
generally increased the tempo
of the fighting.
Soulli ~e~ame~ ~ oops
battled CommlUlist units only
17 miles from Saigon, and there
was hand-to-hand fighting on
the outskirts of the Cambodian·
town of Kompong Trabek on
Highway I which leads to
Saigon. Marines at Quang Tri
were heavily bombarded today
and four _rockets hit the city of
Hue.
The attack on Hue was
foreshadowed when the North
Vietnamese began infiltrating
troops through the A Shau
Valley into areas west of Hue
last spring. It became more of
a reality this week when the
Comm uni sts took seven
villages south of Hue in a probe
and then pulled back.
The chief North Vietnamese
Army unit arolUld Hue is the
324B Division - 10,000 strong.
Dawson said the division has
split up into small groups, none
larger than a company, for
small piece-meal attacks and
almost daily rocket attacks on
the city.

Conunission to
Survey Needs
William Witte discussed road
needs in a new housing area he
is developing near the new
Meigs High School with the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Tuesday .
The commissioners will visit
the area with Ted Beegle,
County Engineer, later in the
week to survey the needs. The
board' also discussed the need
of additional water Jines to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Charles Karr, Sr., Robert
Clark and Warden Ours,
commissioners, attended the
BeUion.

PHONE 992-2156

TEN ,CENTS

MRS. ZIBA MIDKIFF, left, secretary of the Meigs County Farm Bureau, presented
trophies donated by the Farm Bureau IG the top four girls In their respective classes at the
annual junior fair style revue Tuesday night. Receiving the awards from the left are Tammy
Fitch, clothes for school class ; Kim Krautter, sports class; Marylu Mills, lounging clothing
class, and Jane Jordan, dress-up clothing class.

Champions are
Given Trophies
Awarding of trophies to the
four top scorers as champions
in their classeS and the
selection of outstanding par·
ticipants in se wing and
modeling highlighted the
annual Meigs CclUlty Style
Revue Tuesday night at
Eastern High School.
· Selected as champions and
presented trophies by Mrs.
Ziba Midkiff, secretary of the
Meigs County Farm Bureau
which provided the awards,
were Tammy Fitch, clothes for
school .class;. Kim Krautter,
~ports attire; Marylu Mills,
lounging class, and Jane
Jordan, dress-up dress ..
Awarded large orange

commendation ribbons for
their modeling and sewing
were Cheryl Barnhart, Bar·
bara Douglas, Pam Harden,
Virginia Jordan, Mary Mora,
jumper class; Denise Dean,
Paula Eichinger, Tammy
Fitch,
Pam
Kautz,
Cheryl
Lawson ,
·Beth
McKnight, Bonnie Mor·
ris, clothes for schoo'
.Teresa Carr, Ray anna Cole,
Marylu Mills, lounging gar.
ment class; Margie Jeffers,
Jane Jordan, Denise Pullins,
Connie Smith, a member of the
Future Homemakers of
America and the only non 4-H
member in the revue, Jennie
Chapman, and Marcia Carr;
Jan Holler, tailoring; Joyce
Baker, Kim Follrod, Denise
Hauber, Robin Herald, Beth
Ritchie, Nancy Samoa, Connie
Stout, Lisa Thomas, Denise
While, clothing from top IG toe
dau; Christie Evarui, Pam

Evans, Terri Guinthf!r, Lori
Guinther, Rhonda Hanning,
Diane Smith, Tammy Smith,
Deborah Kay Woodyard,
clothing mates class.
Judging the many garments
which will be modeled during 4H night at the Meigs County
Fair next Wednesday evening
were Mrs. Bettie Clark, Gallia County extension agent, home
economics; Miss Patsy Glass,
area extension agent, home
economics ; Mrs . Darleen
Lambert, Jackson County
extension · agent, home
economics, and Miss Dale
Steck, Vinton County extenshn
agent, hOme economics.
Jean Whilebead of the Ohio 4H fashion board, was narrator
for the annual revue and
presiding was Mrs. JennHer
Sheets, Meigs County ex·
tension
agent,
home
economics.
Others helping with the
revue were , Style ~'~!vue
committee workers, Sharon
Holter, Marcia Carr, Tere!l8
Carr, Jane Jnrdan, Sue Jones,
Denise Pullins, Barbara
Jordan, Mrs. Janice Ritchie,
Mrs. Mae Jordan; Escorts,
Daniel Midkiff, Ed Cross, Lee
(Continued on page 4)

Petticoats Ahoy!

a tnln.
An army spokesman said some of the heaviest riotln&amp;
erupted outside an.army post In the Catholic Lower Falls &amp;Ill
~rea ol Be Hast. 'riler,e !larlng youtlul ~barded the l1811d-ba,ued
politlon with rocks and bomba packed with explosives and lialll.
A Brltilh anny spokesman called It "fierce rioting."
·

'
'
. t·

Partly cloudy south today, a
chance of thundershowers
extreme southeast. Clear and
cool tonight, lows in the 50s .
Mostly sunny and cool Thursday, high in the 70s.

t .J

BELFAST - HUNDREDS OF ROMAN CATIIOLIC
teenagers rampaged across Northern Ireland lpday, stoning
British army and police positions In outbreaks of street violence
marking the first anni~ersaey of tile policy of jailing IRA
suspects without· trial.
·
Tile youths, some only 10 years old, set buses and cal'!l afire
In the Catholic ghettoS of BeHast and Newry and tried to ram one
army outpost with a crane. Tiley also hurled Molotov•cocktallsat

DETROrr - '1'0110 110T0B CO. 18 recalling Ita entire
ll'oductiCIII rl 1972 FCII'II llallcia WIICI1I to correct a pc*ll*'
defect wblch could allow jaallllo lllp oat ot rear bumpen. Ford
TueldaY lllld that about 30 peL ot lllll lM,JN can infolfld In lbe
recall were supected of ~~~~ a bwbp61 IU}Ipo.t obllrctllc
(Continued on page 12)

Point Star Stitchers J.L.'s-4-H . 4-H for 10 years. Miss Jeffers
~lub and of the Meigs County
has been selected to attend 4-11
'Better Livestock Dairy Club. Club Congress, has been a
THE 1972 JUNIOR Fair King member of the 4-H Advisory
has been a member of 4-H for Com mittee, has attended
10 years.
Citizenship Short Course and
His projects have included was last year's Achievement
gardening, poultry, con- Award winner. She has
servation, tractor maintenance recently been selec ted to
and dairy cattle . He has served repreSE:nt Meigs ColUlty and
as a member of the Meigs Ohio as a delegate to the
County 4-H Advisory Com- National 4-H Club Congress in
mittee and the Meigs County . Chicago, Illinois. She is a
JlUlior Fair Bard. '
member of the Columbia Super
This year he was selected to Stars.
attend Slate Junior Leadership
THE FIRST RUNNER-UP
Camp and was also selected as for Junior Fair Kjng has been
one of the delegates to in 4-H for 10 years.
represent Ohio at the National
Stanley attended 4-H Club
Dairy Conference in Madison, Congress, Junior Leadership
·camp and Citizenship Short
Wisconsin.
FIRST RUNNER-UP for Course . He is a member of the
Junior Fair Queen has been in
(Continued on page 4)

•

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1972

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

GIRLS' ~x AND 7·14, JUNIORS AND PETITES
Sit.t• 7.UO · L'"I $34 ,78

Now You Know

t

tires featuring

s i,,,. ,;.ao-16 U4 .S6

queen and king who named this year's winnel'!l; Jan and Alan
Holter, named tbe 1972 junior fair queen and king, and
Margie Jeffers and Steve Stanley, first runners-up for this
year's titles .

•

... u .1. , _,.

127 .88

TWO FINED
Two defendants were fined in
Ra cine Mayor Charles pyles'
Court 'Monday evening. Terry
C. Proffitt, PorUand, Rt. 1, and
Harvev Eu2ene RosP.t..rrv
Long Bottom, Rt. I, were e.ach
fined $18.70 for reckless
operation. The arresting of·
ficer was deputy Jack Lyons.

TilE ROYAL COUPLE for the 1972 Meigs County Junior
Fair was' named at tbe Eastern High School Tuesday night
when the annual junior fair style revue was held. The group
includes from the left, Debbie Ohlinger and Don Midkiff, 191(

POMEROY

TRACTION
ALL SEASON '

S ir.1• IL'iU· lti

FELLER CRASHES
CHICAGO (UP!) -A single·
engined plane piloted by Bob
Feller, former star pitcher for'
the Cleveland · Indians, was
damaged on landing at Meigs
Field on Chicago's lake front
today. Feller was not injured,
and damage was light.

v

ELBERFELDS'

tires

Size 6.711-15

problems created by an influx
'of new students moving iniG the
district.
Supt . Comer Bradbury
reviewed the maintenance and
painting projects performed
throughout the dlatrict this
summer. Exterior projects will
be completed when a new paint
sprayer becomes available.

Hue in
Trouble

nnd come on in ... BUY 'EM HERE!

J rl l' ~ 'll'hr~l

Brother-Sister Royalty

VOL. XXIV

DEPARTMENT AND OUR

Picture your rig on

.

.

IN OUR READY-TO-WEAR

MILEAGE,
STRENGTH,
TRACTION,
SMOOTH RIDE
and

'

~

~

a first in 17 jrmior fairs

Mrs: Stewart Named
.
KC Music Instructor

Poe's

"M URDERS IN THE
RUE MORGUE "
Jason Robards

..

Delphia
. Roush Died on Monday

'11D8

AR'l'Jft•s OONCEPIION llbolq adtllllonl planned

for the 11:u1ern High School if a 2. 75 mill bond luue II apII'Oftd 11f 'fOia o1 the ~ t:Ac,l Dlltrict at a special
elecdcn on 'l'lallday, Alic. 16. 1be addiliooa wO\Ild provide for
a dlllla ld4lde Jllllklr bi1J1 ICbool procr1111, which would

')

relieve aowdetl c:mditionlln the elementary ldiODII ol ibe
dbtrlct, faclllties for handicapped cblldren, and more
adequate facilities for music classes. A totBI of eight
clasarooms, the new music facility and office space would be
II'Ovlded In the addition.

WASHINGTON (UPil
'Ibe Navy aalollllced
Tuesday that womllll wDl now be lllowed Ia apply for aea
duty in vlrtaally Ill DOOc:GIIIbll lbJpboard jobl.
A day liter ibe Army -waced pluiiG ..,able the
Women '1 Army Corpl (11'AC) llld IG allow womu to DJI
Ill bat the 111011 dlreelly eembll related polll, tile Navy
nld 'llllllien IIIlo~ 110ald beaeefortb lor the lint time be
lllowed 0111blpt olber ibU • aane1 ad clofton.
How about aacb jobl u lbl..' boiler noma, aome of
tbe 111011 rtaorou wert aboud lblp?
Adm. Elmo R. Zamnh Jr., clilef of navy operat!Gu
who . _..eed the •ew pulley, ~ tie&amp; escla I!UJIIfD
from.., lblp !till lltbol&amp;b be Aid Ill reply to • .-rrtlea,
"S.me joblll'e 10 _.IOU II II dllflc* lor 10111e to
perflrm tbem." ·,

.

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