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                  <text>.. 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 "

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receiVed from village officials,

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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.

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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
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f,

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011
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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!

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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.

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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

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

Swingy Little
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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.

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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."
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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)

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1972

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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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 .

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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

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IN OUR READY-TO-WEAR

MILEAGE,
STRENGTH,
TRACTION,
SMOOTH RIDE
and

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~

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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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2-.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerqy,O., Aug. 9,1972

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. 3- The D,llily Senlllltl,Middleport·PIDHl'lly, 0., Aug. 9,1972

·M cGovern ·Ticket
In Stutter Start

WASHINGTON ( UPI ) George S. McGovern and
Sargent Shriver, the Democratic party's newly-formed
national ticket, began their
presidential campaign Wday
fully aware they are off to a
"bad start' ' .in their assign·
men! to depose President
Nixon.
Despite a show of party
harmony and happiness, the
McGovern.Shriver team sets
out with the handicap of a
three-week delay and the
domping of Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton as the vice presidential candidate.
Shriver, 56, former director
ol the Peace Corps and the
antipoverty program and a
Kennedy brother~n-law, was
elected Tuesday night by the
Democratic National Commit·
tee to replace Eagleton.
Hand-picked by McGovern,
after six others had turned his
offer down, Shriver received
2,936 votes, 80 short of
unanimous.
Eagleton, although not
placed in nomination, received

EXPRESS YOUR
DEEPEST SENTIMENT
WITH

FLOWERS BY
Dudley's Aorist .
59 N. Second Sl.
992-5560
Middleport, 0.

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tance speech.
They included Sens. Edward
M. Kennedy, Hubert H. Humphrey, Henry M. Jackson,
former Democratic National
Chairman Lawrence . F.
O'Brien, labor leaders and
governors.
Ea gleton, introducing his
successor, said McGovern and
Shriver would be "not only a
good ti cket and a great ticket
but a winning ticket."
Intr odu cing McGovern,
. of
Hump hrey sa1'd "th e pr1ce
disunity is defeat... We learned
that sad lesson in 1968 and
tonight Richard Nixon is in the
White House."
But Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield cut
through the happy haze and
told Democrats "we are, in all
bluntness, off to a bad start.
Let us face it. Let us
ackn owledge it honestly and let
us go on from there. "

the 73 votes of his home state,
Missouri, and .former Sen.
Wayne Morse received four
fro'l' his home state of Oregon.
Guam did not cast its three
votes.
The national committee
turned toda)' Jo..a resolution
which would create a special
commission to find a new
method of selecting vice
presidential candidates.
Burned by the failure of
Eagleton
to
disclose
psychiatric treatment he
received in the 1960s, the
national committee appeared
certain ro approve a resolution
creating the committee.
Although the proposed
·resolution carried no specific
suggestions, it said that "the
nomination for vice president
should be made only after
careful study by the certified
delegates" at the quadrennial
convention. Such a rule would
do away with the traditional
acceptance of the presidential
candidate's . recommendation
without question.
Taking advantage of the
national committee's presence
in the capital, McGovern and
Shriver planned to meet with
several caucuses and appear at
a unity IWJcheon.
In contrast to -the turbulent
convention last month at
Miami Beach, the mini con·
vention in a hotel ballroom
Tuesday went smoothly. It was
marked by party harmony and
unity.
Major party leaders lined the
platform as McGovern spoke
and Shriver made his aecep.

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·Paris is the cleanest big European city we've
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building construction startling ' in ·SCQpe and
frequency ... · The new and sparkling Hotel
Meridien has lovely views from . Its windows
shortly to be complicated by a vast project- a
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,Sent inel .

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'

I

REYKJAVIK (UP I) _
Russian grandmaster Isaac
Boleslavsky , one of world
champion Boris Spassky's four
seconds, spread out his hands
and looked .to the ceiling in the
corridor outside the dark
exhibition halL
"Please don't ask me," he
pleaded "but if you insist I vote
for a draw."
Denmark's Bent Larsen, one
of !he world 's top five chess
aces, nodded and said "it's
even-Steven after Bobby
Fischer made up for a couple of

mistakes earlier in the game."
The Yugoslav grandmaster
ticket was split with Sverozar
GUgoric going for a draw while
Dragoljub Jenosevik stuck out
his chin and said "a draw but
with microscopic chances for
Fischer."
Even German arbiter Lothar
Schmid came out of his neutral
shell and .said "they'll split
down the middle."
U. S. grandmaster Robert
Byrne smiled and said "who
am I to disagree with the ex·
perts . It wasn't one of the finer
~~~;;.;;. games,
but very interesting. I
think Bobby played il safe after
his defeat last Sunday."
That was the scene shorUy
after Fischer, the tern·
peramental
29-year-old
American challenger, signed
his 41st move under the wooden
table and adjourned the 12th
game against Spassky.
Larsen, who has lost ro both
players in world championship
qualification, matches, was the
first ro come out with "an
educated guess" on Fischer's
secret move on which the
challenger spent 18 minutes in
his $470 swivel chair.
"The white queen to bishop.(;
is my choice but I doubt if
Bobby can turn this game inro

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Tuesday's Results
Chicago 6 Montreal 5

Atlanta 8 Houston 4
Pill 4 Phil 2
CineI 2 L.A. 1 ,19 inns,
St. Louis 6 New York 5
San Fran 15 San Diego 4 ,1st.
San Francisco 7 San Diego 3
2nd
·
·
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT!
Montreal (Morton 5-101 at
Chicago (Jenkins 14-101. 2:30
p.m.
San Diego !Caldwell 5-41 at
San Fran IMarlchal 4-12) 4

American League

East

Detro it

Ball

w. I. pet. g.b.

57 46
56 47
53 48
52 50
48 56
41 63
West

.553
.544
.525
.510
.462
.394

Thursday's Games

Montreal at Chicago ·
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Houston at Atlanta

Nervous Joe Hague Swallows Tobacco,
Th~n Delivers· Winning Hit In 19th

1
3
4'1'

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Joe
New Yor k
Hague said he was so IJI!rvous
Bos ton
pacing
up and down in the
Cl eve
9'12
Milwa
16'/2 Cincinnati Reds dugout that he
swallowed some tobacco he
w. I, pet. g.b . was chewing.
Oakland
62 43 .590
The free-swinging pinch·
Chicag o
59 44 .573 2
Minn
54 47 .535 6
hitter was signaled ro bat for
K.C.
49 54 .476 12
the
Reds in the bottom of the
Calif
47 57 .452 l4lh
19th
inning early today with
Te xas
41 64 .390 21
Tuesday's Results
two men on base and no one out
New York 4 Detroit 2
against
the Los Angeles Dodg·
Bos ton 4 Cleveland 1
Baltimore 4M ilwaukee 2

Kansas City 4 Oakland 3

Minnesota 6 Texas s ·, 10 inns.
Chicago 4 Cal iforn ia 3
.

Today'! Probable Pitchers

(All Times EDT)
Texas ISianhouse t-2) at
Minn (Wood son 9-9) , 2: 15p.m.
Cleveland !Perry 18~ 9 ) at
Boston ITia nt 5-41. 1:30 p.m.
Detroi t 1Fryman 0-0 and
Slayback 4·5) at New York
!Gardner 3-0 and Stoillemyre
ll -12l,doubleheader, 2 p.m.
'" p.m .
Bali imore !McNally JO. JO) at
New York I McAndrew 7-3) at Milwaukee
IBretl 5-9), 8:30
St. Louis I Durham 0-4) , 9 p.m. p.m .
.
L.A.s (Singer 4-10) at Cinci Oakland I Blue 4 ~61 at K.C.
(Hall 4-1) , 8 p.m.
3-51. 8: JO p.m.
Philadelphia (Carlton 17-61 at I Hedlund
Ch icago !Wood 18-11) at
Pillsburgh Blass 12-5) , 8 p.m. Cal iforn ia (Messer smith 2-5). 11
Houston I Reuss 8-81 at p.m.
Atlanta !Schueler 4-61. 8 p.m
Thursday's Games
Bal ti more at Milwaukee

Ch icago at Oa kland
Minnesota at Calif

Oelroll at New York

ers.

Hague fouled off the first
pitch Pete Mikkelsen threw.
The next pitch was a ball and
then Hague fouled off another
pitch while attempting to bunt.
"I don't know how I missed
bunting that pitch," Hague
said.
On the next pitch, Hague
singled to center ro bring home
the winning rWl and end the
marathon game at 2·1.
"All I can say is I'm sure
glad he got it," sighed Reds'
Manager Sparky Anderson. "!
didn't think that game was
ever going to end ."
Tie Strikeout Mark
Hague was asked if he was
nervous at the plate .

Dale Browning, owner of two
consecutive no-hitters in All
Star competition, came in to
pitch in the sixth inning with no
outs and put down an uprising
by South Webster as Pomeroy
continued its tournament
winning ways with a !I-ll win in
, . the opening round of th e
Jackson Little league All.Star
Tournament Tuesday.
Pomeroy , winner of the

a win," said Larsen .
The game is to resume at I
p.m. (EDT) IOOay when arbiter Schmid, a 41-year-old
German grandmaster and
book collector, opens the brown
envelope and plays Fischer's
move. The challenger has a 6.5
to 4.5 point lead but needs
anbther Silt' jJO!rits ro win the
tiUe from~assky .
There was a marked lack of
tension in the hot and humid
hall after Sunday•s- dramatic
lith game, where Spassky
climbed back from five defeats
and three draws in eight
games, to shatter the
American in 31 moves.
Not even when Spassky left
the brighUy llghled stage only
ro come back for his pen with
Fischer rocking in his chair,
did the 2,000 spectators react.
"I think the Fischer myth is
being exposed now that
Spassky .has pulled himself
together and got his nervous
system back in order,'' Larsen
said. "It was the first time
Spassky played this variation
and he did a fine job .. You
wouldn 'I believe this was the
same men who made these
incredible mistakes earlier in

the series."

Opposition Begun
To Strip Project

Wellston Tourney Monday . !rom Greg Smith in the fifth
night, led 9-4 going inro the and Browning in the sixth.
linal fram e when South Hamilton fanned eight and
Webster, whi ch lost to walked seven, Smith fanned
Pomeroy 4.1) in the Wellston one and walked four, and
round-robin las! week, scored Browning fanned one and
lour runs, but couldn't tie it up . walked none.
Hamilton was also the
Brian Hamilton started on leading hitter in the game as he
the hill for Pomeroy and banged out two singles and a
received credit for the win double . Smith also had a big
although he needed relief help night at the plate with a single
.and home run . Doug Browning
had a home run, Dale
Browning two singles, and Bob
McClure, Randy Marshall, and
the District Eight champions to Tim Hood each one single.
the win in the first game
against Troy . Robinson was
• backed by a 12-hil attack .
In the second game, Danny
Hall, 6-0, hurled ail the way,
scattering 10 hi ts.
Athen s, now 23•3, was
wailing today to see whether it
plays .roctay. If Budde won this
mooning,. Athens will ,not play, By Uolt~ , fl:!¥1 8 Interoatiooal·
Celerino . S&amp;'nchez' ' basesbut if Budde's opponent, Troy,
loaded sacrifice fly in the
won, Athens will play , unless a
eighth
inning drove Thurman
bye is drawn.
Munson
borne with the winning
First Game
run in New York's 4-2 vicrory
Athens
201 100 141- 10 12 1
over Detroit and enabled the
Troy
110 000 000- 2 6 2
Robin son and Champlin . Yankees ro pull to three games
behind the Tigers in the
Walker (LP ), Newmun (8) and
American
League East.
Fry.
After Sanchez' sacrifice fly,
Second Game
Ron Swoboda singled home an
Marion
OliO 001 002- 3 10 3
insurance run to pin an eighth
Athens
010 101 Olx-4 9 2 defeat on Mickey Lolich, who
Clapham and Wilkenson .
!ailed for the second time ro
Hall and Champlin.
win No. 19.
Sparky Lyle worked the final
Q- Wha! is the meaning
three
innings in relief of starter
t he name Jason?
Fritz
Peterson and picked up
A- Of Gr ee k origin, it
his fourth victory atld second is
means "healer."
as many games ro go with his
Runs Balled In
24 saves.
National League : Stargell.
In other American League
P11189 ; Colbert. SO 84 : Bench.
· on , Baltimore defeated
Cin 79 ; Williams. Chi 73 : Nlay, a~
Hou 72.
Mil aukee 4-2, Bosron topped
Am@rican League : Allen , Chi Cle and 4-1, Minnesota eked
82 ; Mur cer , NY 64 ; Jackson ,
Oak 61 ; Scott, Mil 60 ; Darw in, past Texas .lh1 in 10 innings,
Minn 58.
·
Kansas City edged Oakland 4-3
Pitching
and Chicago beat California 4National League : Carlton ,
3.
Phil · 17-6: Jenkins . Chi 15-10:
Fred Patek singled home
Nolan, Cln 13-3; Sulton , LA lJ.
6: five lied . with 12 victories. Steve Hovley with the winning
American League : lolich ,
Del 18-8; Perry, Clev 18-9; run in the ninth inning as
Wood , Chi 18·11 ; Palmer, Ball Kansas City beat Oakland.
15-4; Bahnsen , Ch i 15-11 .
Richie Scheinblum led off the
ninth with a single and was
replaced by pinch..-wmer Hov·
ley, who advanced to second on
an infield hil. Lou PinieUa was
walked intentionally before
Patek delivered his game·
winning hit.
Boog PoweU drove in all four
runs as Baltimore defeated
Miljlraukee. Don Buford
singled and PaUl Blair v:alked .
•
before Powpll unloaded hJS 15th
home run .in the third inning.
Powell also drove in the
Orioles' first run in the first

Athens is Undefeated
The Athens American legion
baseball team advanced in the
undefeated winner's bracket
with Steubenville, Cincinnati
.. Budde, and Findlay as they
·•. defeated Troy 10.2 and Marion
. 4-3 in Tuesday's action at the
" State American Legion
Tournament in Ashland.
'"''' 9~uck ~obffi.son••. 6-0, ,hurled

.,,

Mlior League 'Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batter&gt;
., .
National League
g. ab. r. h. pet .
Cdn , Hou 91 367 77 129 .351
Wllams, Chi
103 ~ 1 65 136 ·339
:· · · Mota . LA eo 261
42 88 .337
Snglln. Pill
·.·
96 369 ~2 118 .320
.·
Alou, St.L 93 362 ~2 116 .320
Garr ,.Atl 96 392 61 125 .319
Strgll , Pitt 95 337 55 101 .318
Baker , AII 79 262 30 a. .317
·•·
Brock, St.L
.
102 ~35 5~ 137 .315
Lee. SO 68 251 35 79 .315
American League
g. ab. r. h. pet.

Rudi , Oak 101 411 70 134 .326
-:• Schnblm, KC
.•
88 297 40 94 .316
Carw, Mlnn

"Naw." he said in his Texas
drawl. "I was more nervous
walking up and down in that
dugout during those first 18
innings. I even swallowed some
tobacco.''
Denis Menke had opened the
19th with a double. Ted
Uhlaender came in to run for
Menke · and Hague brought
Uhlaender home after Mikkelsen intentionally _passed Ce·
sar Geronimo ..
Dodger starter Tommy John
pitched the first nine innings,
yielding only one run, walking
four and striking out 13. The
strikeouts were among 22 the
Dodger pitchers racked up,
tying a National league record
for an extra inning game.
"I set the record/' Reds
relief pitcher · Pedro Borbon
said. He struck out in the 17th
inning.
Borbon went on to pick up his
fifth victory in seven decisions
by blanking the Dodgers with'
two hits the last five innings .
Third Longest
Ross Grimsley pitched the
first 10 innings for the Reds,
giving up seven hits, walking

92 348 41 108 .31 0

"1' .

"•' Alln. Chi 103
Brry. Cal 75
Otis, KC 97
. •r Fisk, Bos 8~
, , Pnll , KC 101
May, Chi 101
·: • Krkplrck. KC

349 68 107 .307
265 32 81 .306
368 ~9 112 .304
289 53 88 .304
384 52 116 .302
356 65 106 .298

78 252 34

74 .294

Homf Runs

National League: Colbert, SO
·' · 31 ; Stargell, Pitt 27; Bench, Cin
' 25 : May, Hou 24 ; Williams, Chi
and Kln9man, SF 23.
·
·. ••· Amerocan League : Allen, Chi
.' , 28 ; Cash, Del and Jackson . Oak
21: Killebrew, Mlnn 19; Fisk,
Bos. Murcer. NY and Epstein,
Oak 18.
•'

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inning with a single following
singles by Blair a
Bobby
Grieb.
Bosron exploded ~or three
runs in the eighth inning to top
the Indians. Rick Miller opened
the inning with a double,
moved to third on a sacrifice
and scored ro snap a 1·1 lie
when Doug Griffin singled.
Carl Yastrzemski lined a
sacrifice fly for a run and jlico
Petrocelli singled home the
final run.
Danny Monzon singled home
Steve Braun with the bases
loaded and two out in tbe loth
inning as Minnesota defeated
Texas. Braun opened the
Twins' loth with a single and
went ro second on a single by
Bobby
Darwin .
Glenn
Borgmann followed with an
infield single ro load the hases.
Monzon, plnchhitting, then
singled off reliever Paul
Undblad.
Jay Johnstone ripped a solo
bomer in the third inning and
Chicago added three WJearned
runs in the eighth as the White
Sox beat California.
With the bases loaded in the
Chicago eighth, Carlos Ma¥ hit
a sharp grounder ro second
haseman Sandy Alomar who
flipped to shortstop Leo Cardenas at the bag. Cardenas threw
ro first baseman Bob Oliver ro
apparently end the inning. But
second base umpire Merle
Anthony ruled that Cardenas
missed the base and two runs
streaked home when Oliver
nonchalantly tossed the ball ro
the pitcher's mound thinking
the inning was over. The third
White Sox run came home
when Ed Spiezio doubled.

'

HURRY............... WHILE THEY LAST ...

..

Queen, who hurled for S.
Webster, fanned three and did
not walk a batter. Jordon and
Clayton were !he top hitters
with a single and double each.
Pomeroy will play Oak Hill
Thursday at 7:30p.m. in the
second round of the 12-team
tournament. Oak Hill defeated
Zaleski to advance lo the
second round. Both Jackson
teams have been defeated.
S. Webster
010 124-11 )0
Pomeroy
301 41x- 9 12
Queen and Ross. Hamilton
(WP ), Smith (5), Browning
(6), and McClure.

Yanks Top Tigers,

or

992-9981

· Pomeroy,

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giving way to Borbon .
The Reds tied the score in the
botrom of the sixth when John,
experiencing a temporary
control lapse, walked Pete
Rose and Joe Morgan. Bobby
Tolan followed with a runproducing single.
The game lasted four hours

AB R H
B 0 0

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
University Coach Bill Hess set
the tone for the upcoming Mid·
American Conference foothall
race at Tuesday's annual pre·
season press preview.
"Its very much wide open
since we've got Toledo back ro
normal," said Hess, starting
his 15th year at the helm of the
Bobcats. " At least I hope we
have got Toledo back ro normal. I'd hate to go through
another year of that."
Toledo, unbeaten in its last
three seasons and the owner of
a 35-game winning streak
going into its first game Sept. 9
at Tampa, wasn't picked ro
finish in the first division by
either the coaches or news
media in polls conducted
during the meeting.
Miami, which has had 29 con·
secutive winning seasons but
hasn't won the MAC title outright since 1958, was the slim
choice of the news media to win
this year, and lied with OU in
the coaches' balloting.
The Redskins of Coach Bill
Mallory, who last year had an
"up and down and upu year,
polled 14 first place votes and
146 points from the 28 voting
newsmen . Bowling Green
finished with 131 &gt;,&lt;., points with
seven first place votes, while
OU got 125¥, points and also
seven first.
Toledo received fourth nod
by the media with 81 points,
followed by Western Michigan
with 72 and Kent State with 29.
Coaches Vote Tte
The coaches voted a tie be·
tween Miami and the Bobcats,
each getting two first place
votes and 37 points. Bowling
Green also got two first place
votes but only 35 points to fmish
third. Western Michigan was
the coaches' fourth choice, fol·
lowed by Toledo and Kent
State.
The Broncos and Rockets got
one first place vote each from
the eight coaches, including
Dan Boisture of Eastern
Michigan and Roy Kramer of
Central Michigan, the con·
ference's two newest members
who do not begin football
participation until the 1975
season.
Miami has nine of its 11 of·
fensive starters hack this season, including running sen·
sation Bob Hitchens who
gained 1,192 yards and scored
13 touchdowns, as a
sophomore, two other powerful
runners in Joe Booker and Ken
Watson at fullback, and two
experienced quarterbacks in
Steve Williams and Stu !bo·
walter.
Last year's Miami team
started with four straight wins
then lost a 3.1) heartbreaker to
OU, the first of three · straight
losses, all in the conference,
and woWJd up with three wins
at the end of the season for a 7-3
mark.
"I think our good 1971 finish
carried over to spril)g prac-

lice, " said Mallory, who expressed some concern about
several injuries in the spring
which prompted him ro cancel
one of the two intra..squad
games he had scheduled.
Mallory called Hitchens, a :;.
10, 200 poWJder, "the big man
in our offense," and also had
praise for Booker, who he said
had a "very impressive
spring." Booker is &amp;-1 and 210.
Teams Spread Out
The Redskins' always tough
defense returns seven starters,
led by linebacker Bow
Williams, "as fine a linebacker
as we've had at Miami, 11 and
tackle Steve Kovacs.
Mallory also likes the Red·
skins' schedule better this year
"because we have the MAC
teams spread out." Miami
opens with Dayton Sept . 16 and
also meets Xavier, Marshall,
South Carolina and Cincinnati
in addition to its five con·
ference games.
Hess goes into the season
with "hope and optimism/'
although much of both ride on
the progress of sophomore
quarterback Rich Bevly of
Youngstown.
Hess thinks so much of
Bevly's ability that he moved
Dave Juenger, last year 's
signal caller and "the finest,
versatile athlete I've ever been
around," to tight end.
And when Hess says his team
will be throwing more this
year, you better believe him .
"We're not going ro put Ju.
enger at tight end and not use
him/' Hess. said.
Gary Top Back
Another of Bevly's pass targets will be his high school
teammate Cleveland Moutry,
another sophomore .
"Bevly to Moutry, I hope you
get as tired of hearing that·as
you did (Chuck) Ealey ro
(Don) Fair the last three
years," Hess said, referring to
Toledo's outstanding passing
combination.
Hess has one of the confer·
ence's rop running backs in Bill
Gary, who gained over 1,000
yards his sophomore season
but missed much of last year
due to injuries. "I'll match Bill
against any back In the confer.

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0

2

0
0
0

2

0

0

0

0

0

1

l

0

'

0

0

0

W ills Ph
Bre w er p

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

J

B uc kner ph
Ri c he rt p
Cr aw ford ph
Pe r ranosk p
G r avey ph

0

1

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I
M ik kelsen p
0
Total s
64
Cinc inn ati
AB
Ro~ If
6
M orga n 2b
5
To lan cf
7
B en ch c
4

0

0

0

0
0

2
0

1

Per ez I b

6

0

3

Chan ey ss
Me n ke 1b
Uh la ender ph
Fo!.terr f

2

0

0

8

1

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

9

I

R H Bl
I
0 0

o
o
0
0

o o

0

7
0
0
0
0
o
o
0
Con cepcion ss
6 0 0 0
Bor bonp
1 o o o
Hagueph
1
o 1 1
G r im sl ey p
3 0
0
0
MeR ae Ph
I
0
n
Carr ol l p
1 0
0
Ja\/Te r Jb
2 o o o
Totals
60
7
8
2
Non e out when w inn ing ru n
scored
Los Ange les
Ge roni mo ph

8

000 001 000 000 000 000 0-- 1

Ci n c in na t i

000 001 000 000 000 000 I 2
E - Va len t ine, Concepcl on,Ja v i er , Yeager 2, Borbon ,
Lacv . OP - Los Angeles 2,
f 1 n ri nnt~ f i
I LOB Los
An51e les 10 , Cinci nnati 15.
28 - M enke. SB To la n.
Bench . S - W ills , Morgan .
IP. H R . ER. 88 SO
Jo hn
9 3
l
l
.4 l3
Brew er J
1 0 0
1 6
Ri c h er t 7
2 o o
o
1
P er r an osk i
3
0
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Mikkelso n L 3-5

Car r oll

Bor bon

1

0

I

J

2

0

0

2

0

3

1

2

10

7
0

I

.4

0

5

2

0

0

Gr im sley

w 5·2

In Majors

M i k kel sen p itch ed tO t hree
batte r s in 19th.
HBP - By Br ewer (Rose ). T
- 4: 17 . A - 24,453 .

Proposed

International League

Standings

United Press lnternationa I

W. L. Pet. GB
Louisville
65 48 .575
Charleston 62 50 .554 ' "'
T idewater
63 53 .543 3112
Toledo
59 56 .51 3 1
Rochester
57 58 .496 9
Richmond
53 61 .465 12'h
Syracuse
53 67,. .461 13
Peninsul a
44 6ti ..393 20'12
Tuesday 's Results
Louisville 5 Charl eston 2 (lsi)
Loui sville 9 Charl eston 2 (2nd)
R&lt;chmond 3 Rochester 2 llsl)
Rochester 1 Ri chmond 0 (2nd)
Peninsula 4 Syracuse 1

Tidewater 4 Toledo 3 (1st)
Tldewoter 1 Toledo 0 (2nd)

6

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KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

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3

81

Yeager c

J ohn p

much bouncing his team can do
as BG opens the season Sept. 16
agaihst Purdue, one of the top
choices for the Bi£ Ten title.
Nine Starters Back
The Falcons have the 'talent,
with nine starters back from a
potent offense of a year ago
which averaged 29 points per
game. Among the returnees is
Paul Miles, one of the nation's
rop running backs last year as
a sophomore.
Miles, a 6-foot, 190-pounder,
rushed for 1,237 yards and
seven rouchdowns and a 4.3
yards per carry average. "We
think he's as good as anyone,"
Nehlen said.

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The Reds plan to send
Tommy Hall against Bill
Singer in the second game of
the three-game series tonight.

KANSASCITY , Mo. (UP!) Major league baseball owners
and general managers will
convene here today to discuss
realignment of the National
and American leagues, among
other things.
Nothing concrete is expected
to be decided here, although if
support develops, a vote could
be taken at the winter meetings
in Hawaii.
Two proposals for realignment are on the agenda for
discussion at the Alameda
Plaza Hotel. O~e calls for three
leagues composed of eight
learns each. Such a realign.
ment might look like this;
Eastern - Mets, Yankees,
Boston,
Baltimore,
Philadelphia, aeveland, Pittsburgh and Montreal.
Central - Cubs, White Sox,
St. Louis, Minnesota, Detroit,
Milwaukee, Atlanta and
Cincinnati.
Western - Kansas City,
Texas, Houston, Los Angeles,
California, Oakland, San
Francisco and San Diego.
The second proposal calls for
four divisions of six teams
each. It might look like this :
Eastern - Mets, Yanks,
ence/' Hess said.
Boston,
Philadelphia,
To win the championship, the Baltimore and MontreaL
Bobcat defense must he better
Mideastern - Pittsburgh,
than a year·ago, according ro Cleveland, AUanta, Cincinnati,
Hess.
Detroit and Minnesota .
"I said that same thing last
Central - Kansas City, St.
year," Hess said. "We didn 't Louis,
Cubs, White Sox, Texas
hnprove and we didn't win the and Milwaukee.
championship.
Western - Los Angeles,
Five of last year's defensive California , Oakland, San
starters are back led by safety Francisco, San Diego and
Bery Dampier. "We think he's Housron .
a fine defensiv.e safety," said
The second proposal is ex·
Hess.
pected to draw the inost supBowling Green must bounce port.
back from a dismal 1971 finish
which saw the Falcons drop
three of their final four games
after losing only unbeaten
Toledo in their first five .
And it won 'I take Coach Don
Nehlen long to find out how

. ot '"'~

REAL SHARP ·

Dav is cf
Mo ta If

anq. 17 minutes and was the
third longest in Reds' history.
There was a 43-rninute r.ain·
caused delay.

Hess Believes '72 MAC
Grid Race Wide Open

$1 595

Plus 52. t: to 12.~9 Fed. Ex. Tax and
old lire.

E. Main St.

three and striking out two. A
walk and singles by Wes
Parker and Frank Robinson in
the rop of the sixth aecuunted
for the only run olf the young
lefty.
Clay Carroll followed Grimsley ro the moWJd and reeled
off four hitless innings before

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\

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
C1ty Ed•lor

AT

By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
Pill,
65 Jl! .631
New York
55 47 .539 9'12
Ch icago
55 50 .524 11
St. Loui s
51 51 .500 13'/2
Montreal
45 56 .446 19
Phil
-~ "
39 64 .349 26
West
w. I. pet. g b
63 39 .618 · ·
'·"0'· Cinci
Houston
58 47 .552 6'12
L.A.
53 A9 .520 10
Atlanta
48 58 .453 11
San Fran
48 59 .449 17'12
San Diego
41 63 .394 23
.,.. '

No solution can be found for pedestrians to
cross the l'Eroile, so the city solons just buill a
tunnel under the Arch of Triumph ... Still, the
thrill of the chase sends innumerable
pedestrians dashing among the Citroens and
Renaults in a daring, reckless game of Parisian
Roulette ... There are new roads everywhere,
many being built, giant bypasses under con.
struction and many more contemplated, a new
big hotel financed by the Rothschilds and - the
subway is clean!
Last year when we visited Paris, the Louvre
guards were on strike, and that staid edifice was
closed; this year it was back to normalcy;
seemed to us an encouraging preponderance of
its visirors were American yoWJgsters, many
bearded and blue-jeaned and raffishly attired
Veterans Memorial Hospital
AD MITT ED
Homer but the rota! effect was a clearier
Goeglein, Pomeroy ; John A. bedragglement than of yore ... Bumped inro N.
Hunnell, Pomeroy; Marie Di Y. gallery owner Vicror Hammer in the lobby ol
Vi eiro , Pomeroy; Maxine the Plaza Athenee which seemed a cynosure ol
Har t, Pomeroy, and Rhonda Manhattan types - judge Samuel Di Falco, his
son Tony, Bill Rappleye - editor of the
Snider, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Rose American Banker, only banking daily paper Deem, Gilbert Sellers , Mildred fihn producer Raphael Hakim of El Morocco
Moore, Nellie Russell, Greg and P. J . Clarke's, financier Harry Gould's
Collins, Richard Bearhs, Flora widow, Pat, and John McCulloch of the English
Kinch, Keith Hayman and Speaking Union set , etc.
Mabel Rumbaugh.
Tried four familiar restaurants on a Sunday
evening, and all were closed, took a chance on
Joe Allen's new P. J. Clarke's-like hamburger &amp;
grog emporium in the ancient Les Hailes secror,
The Dai~ Sentinel
and it was open for business and bustling- with

.

~- EAGLES PICNIC~~

BY JACK O'BlUA'II

&amp;xScore
Of Marathon
Encounter

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
Middlepolt, 0.

�..

•

' .

2-.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerqy,O., Aug. 9,1972

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. 3- The D,llily Senlllltl,Middleport·PIDHl'lly, 0., Aug. 9,1972

·M cGovern ·Ticket
In Stutter Start

WASHINGTON ( UPI ) George S. McGovern and
Sargent Shriver, the Democratic party's newly-formed
national ticket, began their
presidential campaign Wday
fully aware they are off to a
"bad start' ' .in their assign·
men! to depose President
Nixon.
Despite a show of party
harmony and happiness, the
McGovern.Shriver team sets
out with the handicap of a
three-week delay and the
domping of Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton as the vice presidential candidate.
Shriver, 56, former director
ol the Peace Corps and the
antipoverty program and a
Kennedy brother~n-law, was
elected Tuesday night by the
Democratic National Commit·
tee to replace Eagleton.
Hand-picked by McGovern,
after six others had turned his
offer down, Shriver received
2,936 votes, 80 short of
unanimous.
Eagleton, although not
placed in nomination, received

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tance speech.
They included Sens. Edward
M. Kennedy, Hubert H. Humphrey, Henry M. Jackson,
former Democratic National
Chairman Lawrence . F.
O'Brien, labor leaders and
governors.
Ea gleton, introducing his
successor, said McGovern and
Shriver would be "not only a
good ti cket and a great ticket
but a winning ticket."
Intr odu cing McGovern,
. of
Hump hrey sa1'd "th e pr1ce
disunity is defeat... We learned
that sad lesson in 1968 and
tonight Richard Nixon is in the
White House."
But Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield cut
through the happy haze and
told Democrats "we are, in all
bluntness, off to a bad start.
Let us face it. Let us
ackn owledge it honestly and let
us go on from there. "

the 73 votes of his home state,
Missouri, and .former Sen.
Wayne Morse received four
fro'l' his home state of Oregon.
Guam did not cast its three
votes.
The national committee
turned toda)' Jo..a resolution
which would create a special
commission to find a new
method of selecting vice
presidential candidates.
Burned by the failure of
Eagleton
to
disclose
psychiatric treatment he
received in the 1960s, the
national committee appeared
certain ro approve a resolution
creating the committee.
Although the proposed
·resolution carried no specific
suggestions, it said that "the
nomination for vice president
should be made only after
careful study by the certified
delegates" at the quadrennial
convention. Such a rule would
do away with the traditional
acceptance of the presidential
candidate's . recommendation
without question.
Taking advantage of the
national committee's presence
in the capital, McGovern and
Shriver planned to meet with
several caucuses and appear at
a unity IWJcheon.
In contrast to -the turbulent
convention last month at
Miami Beach, the mini con·
vention in a hotel ballroom
Tuesday went smoothly. It was
marked by party harmony and
unity.
Major party leaders lined the
platform as McGovern spoke
and Shriver made his aecep.

~

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WTS OF PARIS
GOES TO WAIST
. NEW YORK (KFS)- Europe at Random:
·Paris is the cleanest big European city we've
· seen, streets and buildings inunaculate, new
building construction startling ' in ·SCQpe and
frequency ... · The new and sparkling Hotel
Meridien has lovely views from . Its windows
shortly to be complicated by a vast project- a
convention center several blocks in size containing everything from a large. theatre to
facilities that will dwarf Madisoo Square
Garden and theN. Y. Coliseum and is a cinch to
complete Paris traffic even further ... Which
traffic is the maddest in the world except for
Tokyo,

no t a va ilable :· One

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and W . Va .. One yea r ~ 1 4 . 00
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pr rce in c l udes Sunoav Time!.

,Sent inel .

r

'

I

REYKJAVIK (UP I) _
Russian grandmaster Isaac
Boleslavsky , one of world
champion Boris Spassky's four
seconds, spread out his hands
and looked .to the ceiling in the
corridor outside the dark
exhibition halL
"Please don't ask me," he
pleaded "but if you insist I vote
for a draw."
Denmark's Bent Larsen, one
of !he world 's top five chess
aces, nodded and said "it's
even-Steven after Bobby
Fischer made up for a couple of

mistakes earlier in the game."
The Yugoslav grandmaster
ticket was split with Sverozar
GUgoric going for a draw while
Dragoljub Jenosevik stuck out
his chin and said "a draw but
with microscopic chances for
Fischer."
Even German arbiter Lothar
Schmid came out of his neutral
shell and .said "they'll split
down the middle."
U. S. grandmaster Robert
Byrne smiled and said "who
am I to disagree with the ex·
perts . It wasn't one of the finer
~~~;;.;;. games,
but very interesting. I
think Bobby played il safe after
his defeat last Sunday."
That was the scene shorUy
after Fischer, the tern·
peramental
29-year-old
American challenger, signed
his 41st move under the wooden
table and adjourned the 12th
game against Spassky.
Larsen, who has lost ro both
players in world championship
qualification, matches, was the
first ro come out with "an
educated guess" on Fischer's
secret move on which the
challenger spent 18 minutes in
his $470 swivel chair.
"The white queen to bishop.(;
is my choice but I doubt if
Bobby can turn this game inro

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Tuesday's Results
Chicago 6 Montreal 5

Atlanta 8 Houston 4
Pill 4 Phil 2
CineI 2 L.A. 1 ,19 inns,
St. Louis 6 New York 5
San Fran 15 San Diego 4 ,1st.
San Francisco 7 San Diego 3
2nd
·
·
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT!
Montreal (Morton 5-101 at
Chicago (Jenkins 14-101. 2:30
p.m.
San Diego !Caldwell 5-41 at
San Fran IMarlchal 4-12) 4

American League

East

Detro it

Ball

w. I. pet. g.b.

57 46
56 47
53 48
52 50
48 56
41 63
West

.553
.544
.525
.510
.462
.394

Thursday's Games

Montreal at Chicago ·
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Houston at Atlanta

Nervous Joe Hague Swallows Tobacco,
Th~n Delivers· Winning Hit In 19th

1
3
4'1'

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Joe
New Yor k
Hague said he was so IJI!rvous
Bos ton
pacing
up and down in the
Cl eve
9'12
Milwa
16'/2 Cincinnati Reds dugout that he
swallowed some tobacco he
w. I, pet. g.b . was chewing.
Oakland
62 43 .590
The free-swinging pinch·
Chicag o
59 44 .573 2
Minn
54 47 .535 6
hitter was signaled ro bat for
K.C.
49 54 .476 12
the
Reds in the bottom of the
Calif
47 57 .452 l4lh
19th
inning early today with
Te xas
41 64 .390 21
Tuesday's Results
two men on base and no one out
New York 4 Detroit 2
against
the Los Angeles Dodg·
Bos ton 4 Cleveland 1
Baltimore 4M ilwaukee 2

Kansas City 4 Oakland 3

Minnesota 6 Texas s ·, 10 inns.
Chicago 4 Cal iforn ia 3
.

Today'! Probable Pitchers

(All Times EDT)
Texas ISianhouse t-2) at
Minn (Wood son 9-9) , 2: 15p.m.
Cleveland !Perry 18~ 9 ) at
Boston ITia nt 5-41. 1:30 p.m.
Detroi t 1Fryman 0-0 and
Slayback 4·5) at New York
!Gardner 3-0 and Stoillemyre
ll -12l,doubleheader, 2 p.m.
'" p.m .
Bali imore !McNally JO. JO) at
New York I McAndrew 7-3) at Milwaukee
IBretl 5-9), 8:30
St. Louis I Durham 0-4) , 9 p.m. p.m .
.
L.A.s (Singer 4-10) at Cinci Oakland I Blue 4 ~61 at K.C.
(Hall 4-1) , 8 p.m.
3-51. 8: JO p.m.
Philadelphia (Carlton 17-61 at I Hedlund
Ch icago !Wood 18-11) at
Pillsburgh Blass 12-5) , 8 p.m. Cal iforn ia (Messer smith 2-5). 11
Houston I Reuss 8-81 at p.m.
Atlanta !Schueler 4-61. 8 p.m
Thursday's Games
Bal ti more at Milwaukee

Ch icago at Oa kland
Minnesota at Calif

Oelroll at New York

ers.

Hague fouled off the first
pitch Pete Mikkelsen threw.
The next pitch was a ball and
then Hague fouled off another
pitch while attempting to bunt.
"I don't know how I missed
bunting that pitch," Hague
said.
On the next pitch, Hague
singled to center ro bring home
the winning rWl and end the
marathon game at 2·1.
"All I can say is I'm sure
glad he got it," sighed Reds'
Manager Sparky Anderson. "!
didn't think that game was
ever going to end ."
Tie Strikeout Mark
Hague was asked if he was
nervous at the plate .

Dale Browning, owner of two
consecutive no-hitters in All
Star competition, came in to
pitch in the sixth inning with no
outs and put down an uprising
by South Webster as Pomeroy
continued its tournament
winning ways with a !I-ll win in
, . the opening round of th e
Jackson Little league All.Star
Tournament Tuesday.
Pomeroy , winner of the

a win," said Larsen .
The game is to resume at I
p.m. (EDT) IOOay when arbiter Schmid, a 41-year-old
German grandmaster and
book collector, opens the brown
envelope and plays Fischer's
move. The challenger has a 6.5
to 4.5 point lead but needs
anbther Silt' jJO!rits ro win the
tiUe from~assky .
There was a marked lack of
tension in the hot and humid
hall after Sunday•s- dramatic
lith game, where Spassky
climbed back from five defeats
and three draws in eight
games, to shatter the
American in 31 moves.
Not even when Spassky left
the brighUy llghled stage only
ro come back for his pen with
Fischer rocking in his chair,
did the 2,000 spectators react.
"I think the Fischer myth is
being exposed now that
Spassky .has pulled himself
together and got his nervous
system back in order,'' Larsen
said. "It was the first time
Spassky played this variation
and he did a fine job .. You
wouldn 'I believe this was the
same men who made these
incredible mistakes earlier in

the series."

Opposition Begun
To Strip Project

Wellston Tourney Monday . !rom Greg Smith in the fifth
night, led 9-4 going inro the and Browning in the sixth.
linal fram e when South Hamilton fanned eight and
Webster, whi ch lost to walked seven, Smith fanned
Pomeroy 4.1) in the Wellston one and walked four, and
round-robin las! week, scored Browning fanned one and
lour runs, but couldn't tie it up . walked none.
Hamilton was also the
Brian Hamilton started on leading hitter in the game as he
the hill for Pomeroy and banged out two singles and a
received credit for the win double . Smith also had a big
although he needed relief help night at the plate with a single
.and home run . Doug Browning
had a home run, Dale
Browning two singles, and Bob
McClure, Randy Marshall, and
the District Eight champions to Tim Hood each one single.
the win in the first game
against Troy . Robinson was
• backed by a 12-hil attack .
In the second game, Danny
Hall, 6-0, hurled ail the way,
scattering 10 hi ts.
Athen s, now 23•3, was
wailing today to see whether it
plays .roctay. If Budde won this
mooning,. Athens will ,not play, By Uolt~ , fl:!¥1 8 Interoatiooal·
Celerino . S&amp;'nchez' ' basesbut if Budde's opponent, Troy,
loaded sacrifice fly in the
won, Athens will play , unless a
eighth
inning drove Thurman
bye is drawn.
Munson
borne with the winning
First Game
run in New York's 4-2 vicrory
Athens
201 100 141- 10 12 1
over Detroit and enabled the
Troy
110 000 000- 2 6 2
Robin son and Champlin . Yankees ro pull to three games
behind the Tigers in the
Walker (LP ), Newmun (8) and
American
League East.
Fry.
After Sanchez' sacrifice fly,
Second Game
Ron Swoboda singled home an
Marion
OliO 001 002- 3 10 3
insurance run to pin an eighth
Athens
010 101 Olx-4 9 2 defeat on Mickey Lolich, who
Clapham and Wilkenson .
!ailed for the second time ro
Hall and Champlin.
win No. 19.
Sparky Lyle worked the final
Q- Wha! is the meaning
three
innings in relief of starter
t he name Jason?
Fritz
Peterson and picked up
A- Of Gr ee k origin, it
his fourth victory atld second is
means "healer."
as many games ro go with his
Runs Balled In
24 saves.
National League : Stargell.
In other American League
P11189 ; Colbert. SO 84 : Bench.
· on , Baltimore defeated
Cin 79 ; Williams. Chi 73 : Nlay, a~
Hou 72.
Mil aukee 4-2, Bosron topped
Am@rican League : Allen , Chi Cle and 4-1, Minnesota eked
82 ; Mur cer , NY 64 ; Jackson ,
Oak 61 ; Scott, Mil 60 ; Darw in, past Texas .lh1 in 10 innings,
Minn 58.
·
Kansas City edged Oakland 4-3
Pitching
and Chicago beat California 4National League : Carlton ,
3.
Phil · 17-6: Jenkins . Chi 15-10:
Fred Patek singled home
Nolan, Cln 13-3; Sulton , LA lJ.
6: five lied . with 12 victories. Steve Hovley with the winning
American League : lolich ,
Del 18-8; Perry, Clev 18-9; run in the ninth inning as
Wood , Chi 18·11 ; Palmer, Ball Kansas City beat Oakland.
15-4; Bahnsen , Ch i 15-11 .
Richie Scheinblum led off the
ninth with a single and was
replaced by pinch..-wmer Hov·
ley, who advanced to second on
an infield hil. Lou PinieUa was
walked intentionally before
Patek delivered his game·
winning hit.
Boog PoweU drove in all four
runs as Baltimore defeated
Miljlraukee. Don Buford
singled and PaUl Blair v:alked .
•
before Powpll unloaded hJS 15th
home run .in the third inning.
Powell also drove in the
Orioles' first run in the first

Athens is Undefeated
The Athens American legion
baseball team advanced in the
undefeated winner's bracket
with Steubenville, Cincinnati
.. Budde, and Findlay as they
·•. defeated Troy 10.2 and Marion
. 4-3 in Tuesday's action at the
" State American Legion
Tournament in Ashland.
'"''' 9~uck ~obffi.son••. 6-0, ,hurled

.,,

Mlior League 'Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batter&gt;
., .
National League
g. ab. r. h. pet .
Cdn , Hou 91 367 77 129 .351
Wllams, Chi
103 ~ 1 65 136 ·339
:· · · Mota . LA eo 261
42 88 .337
Snglln. Pill
·.·
96 369 ~2 118 .320
.·
Alou, St.L 93 362 ~2 116 .320
Garr ,.Atl 96 392 61 125 .319
Strgll , Pitt 95 337 55 101 .318
Baker , AII 79 262 30 a. .317
·•·
Brock, St.L
.
102 ~35 5~ 137 .315
Lee. SO 68 251 35 79 .315
American League
g. ab. r. h. pet.

Rudi , Oak 101 411 70 134 .326
-:• Schnblm, KC
.•
88 297 40 94 .316
Carw, Mlnn

"Naw." he said in his Texas
drawl. "I was more nervous
walking up and down in that
dugout during those first 18
innings. I even swallowed some
tobacco.''
Denis Menke had opened the
19th with a double. Ted
Uhlaender came in to run for
Menke · and Hague brought
Uhlaender home after Mikkelsen intentionally _passed Ce·
sar Geronimo ..
Dodger starter Tommy John
pitched the first nine innings,
yielding only one run, walking
four and striking out 13. The
strikeouts were among 22 the
Dodger pitchers racked up,
tying a National league record
for an extra inning game.
"I set the record/' Reds
relief pitcher · Pedro Borbon
said. He struck out in the 17th
inning.
Borbon went on to pick up his
fifth victory in seven decisions
by blanking the Dodgers with'
two hits the last five innings .
Third Longest
Ross Grimsley pitched the
first 10 innings for the Reds,
giving up seven hits, walking

92 348 41 108 .31 0

"1' .

"•' Alln. Chi 103
Brry. Cal 75
Otis, KC 97
. •r Fisk, Bos 8~
, , Pnll , KC 101
May, Chi 101
·: • Krkplrck. KC

349 68 107 .307
265 32 81 .306
368 ~9 112 .304
289 53 88 .304
384 52 116 .302
356 65 106 .298

78 252 34

74 .294

Homf Runs

National League: Colbert, SO
·' · 31 ; Stargell, Pitt 27; Bench, Cin
' 25 : May, Hou 24 ; Williams, Chi
and Kln9man, SF 23.
·
·. ••· Amerocan League : Allen, Chi
.' , 28 ; Cash, Del and Jackson . Oak
21: Killebrew, Mlnn 19; Fisk,
Bos. Murcer. NY and Epstein,
Oak 18.
•'

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..
'.
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~38

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'

inning with a single following
singles by Blair a
Bobby
Grieb.
Bosron exploded ~or three
runs in the eighth inning to top
the Indians. Rick Miller opened
the inning with a double,
moved to third on a sacrifice
and scored ro snap a 1·1 lie
when Doug Griffin singled.
Carl Yastrzemski lined a
sacrifice fly for a run and jlico
Petrocelli singled home the
final run.
Danny Monzon singled home
Steve Braun with the bases
loaded and two out in tbe loth
inning as Minnesota defeated
Texas. Braun opened the
Twins' loth with a single and
went ro second on a single by
Bobby
Darwin .
Glenn
Borgmann followed with an
infield single ro load the hases.
Monzon, plnchhitting, then
singled off reliever Paul
Undblad.
Jay Johnstone ripped a solo
bomer in the third inning and
Chicago added three WJearned
runs in the eighth as the White
Sox beat California.
With the bases loaded in the
Chicago eighth, Carlos Ma¥ hit
a sharp grounder ro second
haseman Sandy Alomar who
flipped to shortstop Leo Cardenas at the bag. Cardenas threw
ro first baseman Bob Oliver ro
apparently end the inning. But
second base umpire Merle
Anthony ruled that Cardenas
missed the base and two runs
streaked home when Oliver
nonchalantly tossed the ball ro
the pitcher's mound thinking
the inning was over. The third
White Sox run came home
when Ed Spiezio doubled.

'

HURRY............... WHILE THEY LAST ...

..

Queen, who hurled for S.
Webster, fanned three and did
not walk a batter. Jordon and
Clayton were !he top hitters
with a single and double each.
Pomeroy will play Oak Hill
Thursday at 7:30p.m. in the
second round of the 12-team
tournament. Oak Hill defeated
Zaleski to advance lo the
second round. Both Jackson
teams have been defeated.
S. Webster
010 124-11 )0
Pomeroy
301 41x- 9 12
Queen and Ross. Hamilton
(WP ), Smith (5), Browning
(6), and McClure.

Yanks Top Tigers,

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giving way to Borbon .
The Reds tied the score in the
botrom of the sixth when John,
experiencing a temporary
control lapse, walked Pete
Rose and Joe Morgan. Bobby
Tolan followed with a runproducing single.
The game lasted four hours

AB R H
B 0 0

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
University Coach Bill Hess set
the tone for the upcoming Mid·
American Conference foothall
race at Tuesday's annual pre·
season press preview.
"Its very much wide open
since we've got Toledo back ro
normal," said Hess, starting
his 15th year at the helm of the
Bobcats. " At least I hope we
have got Toledo back ro normal. I'd hate to go through
another year of that."
Toledo, unbeaten in its last
three seasons and the owner of
a 35-game winning streak
going into its first game Sept. 9
at Tampa, wasn't picked ro
finish in the first division by
either the coaches or news
media in polls conducted
during the meeting.
Miami, which has had 29 con·
secutive winning seasons but
hasn't won the MAC title outright since 1958, was the slim
choice of the news media to win
this year, and lied with OU in
the coaches' balloting.
The Redskins of Coach Bill
Mallory, who last year had an
"up and down and upu year,
polled 14 first place votes and
146 points from the 28 voting
newsmen . Bowling Green
finished with 131 &gt;,&lt;., points with
seven first place votes, while
OU got 125¥, points and also
seven first.
Toledo received fourth nod
by the media with 81 points,
followed by Western Michigan
with 72 and Kent State with 29.
Coaches Vote Tte
The coaches voted a tie be·
tween Miami and the Bobcats,
each getting two first place
votes and 37 points. Bowling
Green also got two first place
votes but only 35 points to fmish
third. Western Michigan was
the coaches' fourth choice, fol·
lowed by Toledo and Kent
State.
The Broncos and Rockets got
one first place vote each from
the eight coaches, including
Dan Boisture of Eastern
Michigan and Roy Kramer of
Central Michigan, the con·
ference's two newest members
who do not begin football
participation until the 1975
season.
Miami has nine of its 11 of·
fensive starters hack this season, including running sen·
sation Bob Hitchens who
gained 1,192 yards and scored
13 touchdowns, as a
sophomore, two other powerful
runners in Joe Booker and Ken
Watson at fullback, and two
experienced quarterbacks in
Steve Williams and Stu !bo·
walter.
Last year's Miami team
started with four straight wins
then lost a 3.1) heartbreaker to
OU, the first of three · straight
losses, all in the conference,
and woWJd up with three wins
at the end of the season for a 7-3
mark.
"I think our good 1971 finish
carried over to spril)g prac-

lice, " said Mallory, who expressed some concern about
several injuries in the spring
which prompted him ro cancel
one of the two intra..squad
games he had scheduled.
Mallory called Hitchens, a :;.
10, 200 poWJder, "the big man
in our offense," and also had
praise for Booker, who he said
had a "very impressive
spring." Booker is &amp;-1 and 210.
Teams Spread Out
The Redskins' always tough
defense returns seven starters,
led by linebacker Bow
Williams, "as fine a linebacker
as we've had at Miami, 11 and
tackle Steve Kovacs.
Mallory also likes the Red·
skins' schedule better this year
"because we have the MAC
teams spread out." Miami
opens with Dayton Sept . 16 and
also meets Xavier, Marshall,
South Carolina and Cincinnati
in addition to its five con·
ference games.
Hess goes into the season
with "hope and optimism/'
although much of both ride on
the progress of sophomore
quarterback Rich Bevly of
Youngstown.
Hess thinks so much of
Bevly's ability that he moved
Dave Juenger, last year 's
signal caller and "the finest,
versatile athlete I've ever been
around," to tight end.
And when Hess says his team
will be throwing more this
year, you better believe him .
"We're not going ro put Ju.
enger at tight end and not use
him/' Hess. said.
Gary Top Back
Another of Bevly's pass targets will be his high school
teammate Cleveland Moutry,
another sophomore .
"Bevly to Moutry, I hope you
get as tired of hearing that·as
you did (Chuck) Ealey ro
(Don) Fair the last three
years," Hess said, referring to
Toledo's outstanding passing
combination.
Hess has one of the confer·
ence's rop running backs in Bill
Gary, who gained over 1,000
yards his sophomore season
but missed much of last year
due to injuries. "I'll match Bill
against any back In the confer.

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0

2

0
0
0

2

0

0

0

0

0

1

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0

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0

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W ills Ph
Bre w er p

0
0

0
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0
0

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0

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Ri c he rt p
Cr aw ford ph
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0
Total s
64
Cinc inn ati
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6
M orga n 2b
5
To lan cf
7
B en ch c
4

0

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0

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6

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Me n ke 1b
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Fo!.terr f

2

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8

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0
0

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0

7
0
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Con cepcion ss
6 0 0 0
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1
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3 0
0
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Totals
60
7
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Non e out when w inn ing ru n
scored
Los Ange les
Ge roni mo ph

8

000 001 000 000 000 000 0-- 1

Ci n c in na t i

000 001 000 000 000 000 I 2
E - Va len t ine, Concepcl on,Ja v i er , Yeager 2, Borbon ,
Lacv . OP - Los Angeles 2,
f 1 n ri nnt~ f i
I LOB Los
An51e les 10 , Cinci nnati 15.
28 - M enke. SB To la n.
Bench . S - W ills , Morgan .
IP. H R . ER. 88 SO
Jo hn
9 3
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Brew er J
1 0 0
1 6
Ri c h er t 7
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P er r an osk i
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Mikkelso n L 3-5

Car r oll

Bor bon

1

0

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2

0

0

2

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3

1

2

10

7
0

I

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5

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Gr im sley

w 5·2

In Majors

M i k kel sen p itch ed tO t hree
batte r s in 19th.
HBP - By Br ewer (Rose ). T
- 4: 17 . A - 24,453 .

Proposed

International League

Standings

United Press lnternationa I

W. L. Pet. GB
Louisville
65 48 .575
Charleston 62 50 .554 ' "'
T idewater
63 53 .543 3112
Toledo
59 56 .51 3 1
Rochester
57 58 .496 9
Richmond
53 61 .465 12'h
Syracuse
53 67,. .461 13
Peninsul a
44 6ti ..393 20'12
Tuesday 's Results
Louisville 5 Charl eston 2 (lsi)
Loui sville 9 Charl eston 2 (2nd)
R&lt;chmond 3 Rochester 2 llsl)
Rochester 1 Ri chmond 0 (2nd)
Peninsula 4 Syracuse 1

Tidewater 4 Toledo 3 (1st)
Tldewoter 1 Toledo 0 (2nd)

6

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All Accounts Insured To
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KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

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much bouncing his team can do
as BG opens the season Sept. 16
agaihst Purdue, one of the top
choices for the Bi£ Ten title.
Nine Starters Back
The Falcons have the 'talent,
with nine starters back from a
potent offense of a year ago
which averaged 29 points per
game. Among the returnees is
Paul Miles, one of the nation's
rop running backs last year as
a sophomore.
Miles, a 6-foot, 190-pounder,
rushed for 1,237 yards and
seven rouchdowns and a 4.3
yards per carry average. "We
think he's as good as anyone,"
Nehlen said.

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Together

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The Reds plan to send
Tommy Hall against Bill
Singer in the second game of
the three-game series tonight.

KANSASCITY , Mo. (UP!) Major league baseball owners
and general managers will
convene here today to discuss
realignment of the National
and American leagues, among
other things.
Nothing concrete is expected
to be decided here, although if
support develops, a vote could
be taken at the winter meetings
in Hawaii.
Two proposals for realignment are on the agenda for
discussion at the Alameda
Plaza Hotel. O~e calls for three
leagues composed of eight
learns each. Such a realign.
ment might look like this;
Eastern - Mets, Yankees,
Boston,
Baltimore,
Philadelphia, aeveland, Pittsburgh and Montreal.
Central - Cubs, White Sox,
St. Louis, Minnesota, Detroit,
Milwaukee, Atlanta and
Cincinnati.
Western - Kansas City,
Texas, Houston, Los Angeles,
California, Oakland, San
Francisco and San Diego.
The second proposal calls for
four divisions of six teams
each. It might look like this :
Eastern - Mets, Yanks,
ence/' Hess said.
Boston,
Philadelphia,
To win the championship, the Baltimore and MontreaL
Bobcat defense must he better
Mideastern - Pittsburgh,
than a year·ago, according ro Cleveland, AUanta, Cincinnati,
Hess.
Detroit and Minnesota .
"I said that same thing last
Central - Kansas City, St.
year," Hess said. "We didn 't Louis,
Cubs, White Sox, Texas
hnprove and we didn't win the and Milwaukee.
championship.
Western - Los Angeles,
Five of last year's defensive California , Oakland, San
starters are back led by safety Francisco, San Diego and
Bery Dampier. "We think he's Housron .
a fine defensiv.e safety," said
The second proposal is ex·
Hess.
pected to draw the inost supBowling Green must bounce port.
back from a dismal 1971 finish
which saw the Falcons drop
three of their final four games
after losing only unbeaten
Toledo in their first five .
And it won 'I take Coach Don
Nehlen long to find out how

. ot '"'~

REAL SHARP ·

Dav is cf
Mo ta If

anq. 17 minutes and was the
third longest in Reds' history.
There was a 43-rninute r.ain·
caused delay.

Hess Believes '72 MAC
Grid Race Wide Open

$1 595

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three and striking out two. A
walk and singles by Wes
Parker and Frank Robinson in
the rop of the sixth aecuunted
for the only run olf the young
lefty.
Clay Carroll followed Grimsley ro the moWJd and reeled
off four hitless innings before

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ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
C1ty Ed•lor

AT

By United Press International
National League
East
w. I. pet. g.b.
Pill,
65 Jl! .631
New York
55 47 .539 9'12
Ch icago
55 50 .524 11
St. Loui s
51 51 .500 13'/2
Montreal
45 56 .446 19
Phil
-~ "
39 64 .349 26
West
w. I. pet. g b
63 39 .618 · ·
'·"0'· Cinci
Houston
58 47 .552 6'12
L.A.
53 A9 .520 10
Atlanta
48 58 .453 11
San Fran
48 59 .449 17'12
San Diego
41 63 .394 23
.,.. '

No solution can be found for pedestrians to
cross the l'Eroile, so the city solons just buill a
tunnel under the Arch of Triumph ... Still, the
thrill of the chase sends innumerable
pedestrians dashing among the Citroens and
Renaults in a daring, reckless game of Parisian
Roulette ... There are new roads everywhere,
many being built, giant bypasses under con.
struction and many more contemplated, a new
big hotel financed by the Rothschilds and - the
subway is clean!
Last year when we visited Paris, the Louvre
guards were on strike, and that staid edifice was
closed; this year it was back to normalcy;
seemed to us an encouraging preponderance of
its visirors were American yoWJgsters, many
bearded and blue-jeaned and raffishly attired
Veterans Memorial Hospital
AD MITT ED
Homer but the rota! effect was a clearier
Goeglein, Pomeroy ; John A. bedragglement than of yore ... Bumped inro N.
Hunnell, Pomeroy; Marie Di Y. gallery owner Vicror Hammer in the lobby ol
Vi eiro , Pomeroy; Maxine the Plaza Athenee which seemed a cynosure ol
Har t, Pomeroy, and Rhonda Manhattan types - judge Samuel Di Falco, his
son Tony, Bill Rappleye - editor of the
Snider, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Rose American Banker, only banking daily paper Deem, Gilbert Sellers , Mildred fihn producer Raphael Hakim of El Morocco
Moore, Nellie Russell, Greg and P. J . Clarke's, financier Harry Gould's
Collins, Richard Bearhs, Flora widow, Pat, and John McCulloch of the English
Kinch, Keith Hayman and Speaking Union set , etc.
Mabel Rumbaugh.
Tried four familiar restaurants on a Sunday
evening, and all were closed, took a chance on
Joe Allen's new P. J. Clarke's-like hamburger &amp;
grog emporium in the ancient Les Hailes secror,
The Dai~ Sentinel
and it was open for business and bustling- with

.

~- EAGLES PICNIC~~

BY JACK O'BlUA'II

&amp;xScore
Of Marathon
Encounter

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
Middlepolt, 0.

�!
Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9, 1972

\)

~ -.The oauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9,1972

Syracuse News, Society
By ADA SLACK
Mrs.
Richard Harris, Mike and Sue,
and Mrs. Ronnie Dohn , Mike,
Mathew and Mary of Mission
Viejo, Calif., visited here with
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Harris and
other relatives.

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Mr. and Mrs . Paul Hoback
and daughter of Jacksonville,
Fla .. visited here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hoback and otner relatives.
They also visited in Colwnbus
and Cadiz.
Miss Marie Houdashelt is
spending a two weeks vacation
with her parents, [!lr. and Mrs.
William HoudasKelt. She is
employed in Athens.
Mrs. Vera . Tannehill and
grandson of Parma is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs . C. H.
Williams and other relatives.
Mrs. Oma Hysell visited her
son, Bill, in Colwnbus and
attended the Nazarene Camp
Meeting,
Mr. and Mrs. David Ferrell
and family of Huntsville, Ala.,
.are _visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Damon Ferrell.
Mr. and Mrs. Date Hubbard
and daughter, Stephanie, of
Haymarket, Va., visited here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Hubbard, and brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Hubbar.d and Donna.
Tracey Houdashelt of Grove
City visited her grandparents,
Mr . and Mrs. William
Houdashelt.
Mrs. Betty Talar of Oakdale,
Conn., visited with her brother
and-sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Cottrill, Craig, Bruce and
Sharon . ..
Mrs. Oma Hysell, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Gordon of Columbus ,
attended a family reunion ·at
Beaver ,Falls, Pa. They visited
Mr. and Mrs. William Peterson
and baby and were overnight
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Cowie and Mrs. Thomas
Turnbull.
Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
GENE NUTTER

ANb'l''JHE' MIXER$
4 pc. band from Parker~burg, W.Va. .
Fridays and Saturday nights
1QTll 2

SUMMER
CLEARANCE
PRICES
On
All Bolens

TRACTORS
See Us Today

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161
Middleport, 0.

and family of New Matamoras
visited a day with friends here.
-Mr . and Mrs. William
Whitluck . and family of
Jacksonville, Fla., visited here
;.ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Cart Hubbard .
Tammy and Cheryl Johnson
of Wolf Pen spent WedneSday
night and Thursday with their
gra ndmot~ er , Mrs. Ada Slack.

Apple Grove
News, Events

HOMECOMING SET
Homecoming and ali-day
services will be held at the
Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
Knobs, Sunday. Sunday School
. at 9:30a.m. wiU be ·followed by
a basket dinner at noon. AI·
ternoon services will begin at
1:30 p.m. with the Rev. 0 . G.
McKinney, Charleston,.W. Va.
as speaker . The Bissell
Brothers and other special
singers will be present and are
invited to participate. The
public is invited.
PICNIC PLANNED
The August meeting of the
Meigs Chapter, Disabled
American Veterans, has been
cancelled. In lieu of it, a picnic
for members and wives will be
held at the Middleport
American Legion Post, next to
the Post ,Oifice, at 6:30 p.m.
Monday,

PetitiQns ·carried in Armored Truck
COLUMBUS (UP!) - R•p.
Robert Netzley, R-Laura,.
plans to arrive at the secretary
of state's office this afternoon
in an armored truck holding
enough petitions to put a state
income tax repealer on the
November ballot.
Netzley, a leader of Citizens
for Repeal of the State Income
Tax, said Tuesday he inay
have as many as 350,000,names
on petitions to deliver to
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown. The issue needs 318,41~
valid signatures of voters- to
gain baUot status.

Otampions

Netzley said the drive for
names went over the top Tues·
day when 10,000 signatures '
came in: The names come from
60 counties, he said.
He plannert the dramatic
presentation to Brown, In the
armored truck, to forestall the
chance that a traffic jam would
keep the petitions from being
filed by the de!idline. ·
The Republican · legislator
sees no prolilems from qow on
in getting the issue · on the·
ballot.
"We know we're going to
have some (names) knocked
off," Netzley:sai!l, but pointed
out that even H this should drop
the valid nwnber below the
318,414 needed, his _group still
could gel 10 extra days to make
up the dHference.
Ohio voters would be asked
either to keep or repeal the onehalf to 3¥.. per cent personal
income tax and 4 to 8 per cent

corporate . net income. tax
which went into effect Jan. l.If
.they voted aga\nsl the taxes,
they would stop being collected
as of Jan. 1, 1973.
Gov. John J. Gilligan, who
poshed the taxes through the
Ohio General Assembly last
year, is among opponents of
the repeal along with the Ohio
Education Association and the
Ohio., Council of Retail Mer-

Eight Fined By Mayor
Eight defendants have been
fined in the court of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle.
Fined were Harley C. Saylor,
62, Middleport, $10 and costs,
intoxication; Joseph A. Mc·
Carty, · 241 Cheshire, $10 and
costs, squealing tires; Jennie
Molihan, 22, Ewington, $5 and
costs, running a red light;

Response is Excellent

New Haven Social Events

Mr•

Died Wednesday

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CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

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Homer Smith, 26, Middleport,
$15 and costs, intoxication ;
Fred Older, 23, Racine, $15 and
costs, intoxication; Richard
Hogg, 45, Point Pleasant, $15

Carriers Taking Outmg'

.....•'

Ec·onomic and Community
Development, called the
Irrepealer
"totally
responsible" Tuesday.
"Not one ol the supporters of
the repeal movement can provide Ohioans with a ,more acceptable alternative to the
state income tax," Sweet uld,
''They refuse to believe the
facts - and the facta clearly
point out that Ohio needs additional revenue to deliver slate
services to its citizeQS," he
said.

By Mrs . Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields
and Mrs. Bertha Robinson
(Continued from page I)
visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Hysell, Sleven Stanley; Room
Robinson at Flatwoods, W. Va.,
and costs, intoxication;
assistants,
Jean Wood, Mrs. W.
Sunday afternoon. Mrs .
Woodrow Hall, 19, Racine, $15
DAMAGE MINOR
. R. llayes, Nancy Collins, Mrs.
Robinson underwent open
and
costs, intoxication, and
Minor damage was reported Earl Thoma, Mrs. Barbara
heart surgery recently.
Jan
Durst,
35, Middleport, $10
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Roush to a car driven by Randy Hensley, Mrs. Patsy Chapman,
and costs, intoxication.
'
and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stewart Snider, 16, Pomeroy, at 4:30 Mrs. Carolyn Tripp, Mrs. Joan
of Letart, W.Va., Route visited p.m. Tuesday . Snider was Smith, Mrs. Virgil Windon,
pulling from Osborne St. onto Doris Barnhart, Mrs. Rachel
Mrs. Eula Wolfe.
Richard
Sargent
of Butternut Ave. when he failed Downie, and work-study
Colwnbus spent a weekend to make the turn and hit a assistants, Doris Barnhart ,
utility pole. He was no injured, Suzie Teaford and Dean
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. and
no charge was filed .
Weber.
. Subscri~s oo The Daily Sentinel are responding well to a new carrier service contest through
Jack Sargent at Racine.
which they can help send their carriers on a trip to the fabulous new Kings Island.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rvush
.
All the subscriber has to do to participate in the contest is to complete the accompanying form
of Mansfield visited Mrs .
judging
his carrier on personality, promptness and neatness.
Gladys Shields and other
The completed form is to be mailed to The Sentinel, P. 0 . Box 729, Pome~:oy, Ohio 45769 before
relatives.
The Esther Circle of the Mason . Maternal great- Aug. 18.
.
St. Clair Hill spent a few days
Lutheran Church met Tuesday grandmother is Mrs. G.Orge
with his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Carriers with smaUer routes have an equal opportunity to win the trips. Two carriers from Midevening
in
the
social
room
of
Bwngardner
of
Mason.
Harold Grimm at Colwnbus.
dleport, two from Pomeroy, one from the Racine-&lt;;yracuse area and one from the Mason area will be
the church, with Mrs. Velma
CIRCLE MEETS
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm
selected to make the trips on the basis of the voting by their customers.
Roush as hostess. Mrs. David
The Rebecca Circle of the
and sons spent a weekend at
Fill out the form and mail it today! Help send your Sentinel carrier to Kings Island.
Roush ted the discussion on the Lutheran Church Women held
their farm on Bashan Road and
topic, "The Resurrection That their August meeti11g Wedvisited Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
Has Been."
nesday afternoon in the social
and Lorna.
During
the
business
session,
room or the church with Mrs.
Mrs. Doris Hensler of Racine
several
projects
were
Kenneth
Thompson as hostess.
SEND YOUR SENTINEL CARRIER TO KINGS ISLAND CONTEST
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
discussed,
and
the
group
also
During
the
business
session,
Hill Sunday and attended
~-~ Ot OUT.11•------------------------~--------------services at the Letart Falls decided to order new study tile group discussed various
books to be used at their projects, and the orie selected
Poor C=:J
United Brethren Church
monthly meetings.
to
start
on
in
the
near
future
is
Sunday evening.
PJ'OlllptDOIII
l!Zo6llont CJ
PooP c::::J
Refreshmen Is were served to tile purchase of more carpet
Rev . Freeland Norris is
Mrs.
David
Roush,
Mrs.
for
the
church.
They
also
pastor of the Letart Falls
lleatnu11
l!Zoollent C::J
Poop z:::::7
Herman Layne, Miss Lelah discussed the new study books
United Brethern Church and
Jane Powell, Mrs. Lloyd which they are going to use for .
extends a welcome to all. A
Mq o\bll' OO!IIIIlllltll _______________________________
large crowd attended services Roush, Miss Kay Roush and future meetings.
the hostess .
Attending were Mrs. William
Sunday evening. Mr. Norris is
BfRTH ANNOUNCED
Powell,
Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs.
a former school teacher and a
Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Riley Edna Burris, Mrs . Bethel
retired minister of the United
are
announcing the birth of Vance, Mrs. John Fry, Mrs.
Methodist Church.
Youl' JIM and A4druo,_______________________________
tlleir first child, a son, Monday, Donald Bwngardner and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent the weekend July 31, at the Holzer Medical Kenneth Thompson.
Center . He weighed seven
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
at their home.
pounds, 14 ounces and has been
A swimming party was h~ld
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Arnott of
named
Benjamin
E•rl.
at
the New Haven Swururung
Beaver Falls, Pa., spent a few
Maternal grandparents are Pool, Thursday evening,
days with his falher, Ott Ar·
Carriers of The Daily SenMr. and Mrs . Donald August 3, honoring the 18th
Carriers of Middleport are to
noll.
Bwngardner of New Haven, birthday of J(athy Roush of tinel will be guests at a wiener meet at the home of Mrs. Fay
Mr.. and-Mrs. Hom'er Warner and
paternal grandparenls are Mason, Jiine · · 1Punkin) roast and outing at Forest Manley no later than 6 p.m.
spent a weekend at Shady Rest
Mr.
and
Mrs. Earl W. Riley of Haymaker, and Linda Roush of Acres Park Monday evening. while Pomeroy, Mason ,
(LIMITED SUPPLY)
Park at Rutland.
The outing is being hosted by Syracuse and Racine carriers
New
Haven.
Mrs. Edith Gilkey of
Refreshments were served the newspaper. Games will be will meet at the Pomeroy office
Gallipolis and Roland Dill of
played and prizes awarded. of The Daily Sentinel by 6 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Beegle and music was provided by
Pomeroy spent Sunday afThe young newspaper business Following the outing, the
.ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. have purchased a mobile home "Freedom." Those playing in
people will also he permitted to carriers will be returned to
the
group
were
Chester
Young,
Jack Ables and family . Mrs. and have moved it onto Mark's
fish
in the lake at the park.
their homes.
Alice Balser of Letart was a grandm other 's £arin , Mrs. Gary Burdette, Gary Arnold
Sunday dinner guest of the Edna Shields at Letart Falls. and Steve Morris.
Season to End
Those enjoying the evening
(;apl~ ..... ~er
Jef£ Miller and Gary Norris
Ables'.
1.1.1~'
In T
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell of are employed at the Jones were Curtis Roush, Mike
White
Randy
Clark
Chester
oumament
MODEL 2823
Newark spent the weekend Boys Store in Pomeroy.
The Meigs Junior Girls '
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis, Rous_h, Handy C~awford,
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
Softball League concludes its
Mrs . Paul Davis Sr . of Debb!e Gtlland, B~uce Adams,
David.
Dudley P. Caplinger, 88, season with a tournament this
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Parkersburg visited Sunday Kandt Sayre, Bnan Russell,
Winebrenner and children of with Mrs. Ada Norris and Mr. Mtke Howard, Sharon Wallace, retired Athens farmer, died evening at the Racine Junior
805 lb. FOOD CAPACITY
Keith Sayre, Maria Mitchell, Wednesday morning at the High field .
Cheshire spent Sunday with and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner .
In the opening game at 5::W
Mr. and Mrs. Cash Canaday John Jones, . Paul Sayre, Joe Syracuse Nursing Home.
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
Joh~son,
Ketth
Powell,
Duke
Mr.
Caplinger
was
preceded
p.m.,
league champion
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman of Gallipolis visited Sunday
and children of Westerville with Mrs. Delphia Hayman. Cubmglon, and Jun Campbell. in death by his wile, Iva Syracuse, 7·2, will battle
Also Gregg Gibbs, Jeff Frances Caplinger.
. Pomeroy, 0-9, and in the second
Mr . and Mrs. Erwin
spent the weekend with Mr .
Haymaker
,
Rtck
Hesson
,
Surviving
are
two
daughters,
game runner-up Racine 6-3
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and Gloeckner took their grandKeith . Kimmie and Terri daughter, Christi Badgely, to Gregg Clayton, Danny Work- Mrs. Velma Brown, Athens, will meet Forest Run ~ t
' 'a
Hayman remained for two her home in Fairfax, Va. , man, Milton Tennant, Bobby and Mrs. Zelma Norris , about 7 p.m.
Dye,
Joy
Kautz,
Carol
Sargent,
Dayton;
a
sister,
Mrs.
Dora
The
championship
game
beweeks vacation with t~eir Friday and returned home
Roger Keefer, Ronme Zerkle, Bowers of Springfield; six tween tlie two winners is
grandparents. Beth Ann Hart Sunday.
Timmy
Ohlmger, Rodney Sch- grandchildren, several great- scheduled for 8·15 p m
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
C.
M.
Rogers
of Racine spent the weekend
MODEL J049
wartz,
Bobby Roush, Gary grandchildren, and several
· · ·
(Margaret Donohew) of
with the Haymans.
668 lb. food capacity, 2 adjustable full width shelves, sl ideMr. and Mrs. Charles Blake Cotwnbus visited Sunday with Rood, Kevin Roush, Tom nieces and nephews.
out basket. door lock &amp; defrost drain .
Haymaker,
and
David
Rose.
Graveside
services
will
be
.
and Mrs. Lillian Duffy of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
1
PERSONAlS
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Syracuse visited Sunday af- and called at the Ewing
(Continued from page I)
Mr. and Mrs. John Thorne West Union Cemetery in
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Funeral Home to pay respect
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Athens. Friends may call at the 4-H Advisory Committee and is
to Mrs. Vana Teaford.
Lester Roush.
Mrs. Phyllis Young and two
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller Harold Rose and children of Ewing Funeral Home anytime currently serving as president
sons, Steve and Kenny, Mrs. were shopping in Parkersburg New Haven and Mr. and Mrs. today and all day Thursday. of the Meigs County Junior
Max Eichinger of Pomeroy
Fair Board.
Gloria Whitlach and Derric, on Saturday.
spent
the weekend at Kings
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eich
Mrs. Mindy Davis and son,
Last year his project was
Island,
Cincinnati.
"We Service What We Sell"
,
(newlyweds)
of
Canton
are
PRACTICE
CALLED
•
selected
as the State Fair
Aaron spent Wednesday with
Ph. 985-3307
Chester, Ohio
Ray Mulford is a medical
The Meigs ~gh School Band winner in the Electricity V
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman spending some time at their
patient
at
Holzer
Medical
home. They will leave Sunday
will practice at 6 p.m. Thurs- class. He is a member of the
and Keith.
See Jim for the Best Buys In the Big Bend
day at the high school. The Harrisonville Boys 4-H Club.
for a two weeks visit with Mrs . Center.
Area.
Johnny Roush is a surgical band will play at the Meigs
Eich's twin sister, Mrs. Lewis
Berry and Mr . Berry at patient at Pleasant Valley County Fair at 3 o.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 19.
Clearwater, Florida . Mrs . Hospital .
Mrs.
Neva
Zerkle
and
Mr.
&amp;rry wishes to thank all who
sent her cards during her and Mrs. Charles Zerkle and Festival. While his parents are
recent hospitalization. She is in family are vacationing in in Canada, their son, Charles,
need of a little cheering with Canada. Mrs. Neva Zerkle will visit his grandparents at
more cards or letters since she became ill and will be Proctorville, Ohio.
recently suffered a stroke. Her hospitalized for a week before
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rldao
For
home address is Mrs. Lewis returning home.
and children from Indiana are
(96) 3 lb. ROUND STEAK
The
Rev. and Mrs. John Haeberle visiting Mr. and Mrs. William
Berry, 1465 Normandy Park
3 lb. CHUCK' ROAST
Freezer
Dr ., Clearwater , Florida, are spending a week's vacalton Oye and other relatives in this
3
lb. PORK CHOPS
at Ontario, Canada, where they area. Mrs. Dye is the mother of
33576, Apt. 5.
3 lb. SLICED BACON
will attend the Shakespearean Mrs. Ridao ..
4 lb.
NO BEEF

PARK RESERVED SATURDAY, AUGUST 12TH

'

chants.
,
Aprominent Republican also
is against it. Rep. W. W. Lamp.
son, of Jefferson, chairman of
the House Ways and Means
Conunlttee, has warned the issue could divide t1le party in
the stale 1111d hurt President
Nixon's re:Oiection efforts
here.
David C. Sweet, director of
the state Department of

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•

IN METAL
CASE

.66

�!
Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9, 1972

\)

~ -.The oauy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9,1972

Syracuse News, Society
By ADA SLACK
Mrs.
Richard Harris, Mike and Sue,
and Mrs. Ronnie Dohn , Mike,
Mathew and Mary of Mission
Viejo, Calif., visited here with
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Harris and
other relatives.

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Mr. and Mrs . Paul Hoback
and daughter of Jacksonville,
Fla .. visited here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hoback and otner relatives.
They also visited in Colwnbus
and Cadiz.
Miss Marie Houdashelt is
spending a two weeks vacation
with her parents, [!lr. and Mrs.
William HoudasKelt. She is
employed in Athens.
Mrs. Vera . Tannehill and
grandson of Parma is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs . C. H.
Williams and other relatives.
Mrs. Oma Hysell visited her
son, Bill, in Colwnbus and
attended the Nazarene Camp
Meeting,
Mr. and Mrs. David Ferrell
and family of Huntsville, Ala.,
.are _visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Damon Ferrell.
Mr. and Mrs. Date Hubbard
and daughter, Stephanie, of
Haymarket, Va., visited here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Hubbard, and brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Hubbar.d and Donna.
Tracey Houdashelt of Grove
City visited her grandparents,
Mr . and Mrs. William
Houdashelt.
Mrs. Betty Talar of Oakdale,
Conn., visited with her brother
and-sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Cottrill, Craig, Bruce and
Sharon . ..
Mrs. Oma Hysell, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Gordon of Columbus ,
attended a family reunion ·at
Beaver ,Falls, Pa. They visited
Mr. and Mrs. William Peterson
and baby and were overnight
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Cowie and Mrs. Thomas
Turnbull.
Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy

DANCE
WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
GENE NUTTER

ANb'l''JHE' MIXER$
4 pc. band from Parker~burg, W.Va. .
Fridays and Saturday nights
1QTll 2

SUMMER
CLEARANCE
PRICES
On
All Bolens

TRACTORS
See Us Today

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161
Middleport, 0.

and family of New Matamoras
visited a day with friends here.
-Mr . and Mrs. William
Whitluck . and family of
Jacksonville, Fla., visited here
;.ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Cart Hubbard .
Tammy and Cheryl Johnson
of Wolf Pen spent WedneSday
night and Thursday with their
gra ndmot~ er , Mrs. Ada Slack.

Apple Grove
News, Events

HOMECOMING SET
Homecoming and ali-day
services will be held at the
Freedom Gospel Mission, Bald
Knobs, Sunday. Sunday School
. at 9:30a.m. wiU be ·followed by
a basket dinner at noon. AI·
ternoon services will begin at
1:30 p.m. with the Rev. 0 . G.
McKinney, Charleston,.W. Va.
as speaker . The Bissell
Brothers and other special
singers will be present and are
invited to participate. The
public is invited.
PICNIC PLANNED
The August meeting of the
Meigs Chapter, Disabled
American Veterans, has been
cancelled. In lieu of it, a picnic
for members and wives will be
held at the Middleport
American Legion Post, next to
the Post ,Oifice, at 6:30 p.m.
Monday,

PetitiQns ·carried in Armored Truck
COLUMBUS (UP!) - R•p.
Robert Netzley, R-Laura,.
plans to arrive at the secretary
of state's office this afternoon
in an armored truck holding
enough petitions to put a state
income tax repealer on the
November ballot.
Netzley, a leader of Citizens
for Repeal of the State Income
Tax, said Tuesday he inay
have as many as 350,000,names
on petitions to deliver to
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown. The issue needs 318,41~
valid signatures of voters- to
gain baUot status.

Otampions

Netzley said the drive for
names went over the top Tues·
day when 10,000 signatures '
came in: The names come from
60 counties, he said.
He plannert the dramatic
presentation to Brown, In the
armored truck, to forestall the
chance that a traffic jam would
keep the petitions from being
filed by the de!idline. ·
The Republican · legislator
sees no prolilems from qow on
in getting the issue · on the·
ballot.
"We know we're going to
have some (names) knocked
off," Netzley:sai!l, but pointed
out that even H this should drop
the valid nwnber below the
318,414 needed, his _group still
could gel 10 extra days to make
up the dHference.
Ohio voters would be asked
either to keep or repeal the onehalf to 3¥.. per cent personal
income tax and 4 to 8 per cent

corporate . net income. tax
which went into effect Jan. l.If
.they voted aga\nsl the taxes,
they would stop being collected
as of Jan. 1, 1973.
Gov. John J. Gilligan, who
poshed the taxes through the
Ohio General Assembly last
year, is among opponents of
the repeal along with the Ohio
Education Association and the
Ohio., Council of Retail Mer-

Eight Fined By Mayor
Eight defendants have been
fined in the court of Middleport
Mayor John Zerkle.
Fined were Harley C. Saylor,
62, Middleport, $10 and costs,
intoxication; Joseph A. Mc·
Carty, · 241 Cheshire, $10 and
costs, squealing tires; Jennie
Molihan, 22, Ewington, $5 and
costs, running a red light;

Response is Excellent

New Haven Social Events

Mr•

Died Wednesday

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Homer Smith, 26, Middleport,
$15 and costs, intoxication ;
Fred Older, 23, Racine, $15 and
costs, intoxication; Richard
Hogg, 45, Point Pleasant, $15

Carriers Taking Outmg'

.....•'

Ec·onomic and Community
Development, called the
Irrepealer
"totally
responsible" Tuesday.
"Not one ol the supporters of
the repeal movement can provide Ohioans with a ,more acceptable alternative to the
state income tax," Sweet uld,
''They refuse to believe the
facts - and the facta clearly
point out that Ohio needs additional revenue to deliver slate
services to its citizeQS," he
said.

By Mrs . Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields
and Mrs. Bertha Robinson
(Continued from page I)
visited Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Hysell, Sleven Stanley; Room
Robinson at Flatwoods, W. Va.,
and costs, intoxication;
assistants,
Jean Wood, Mrs. W.
Sunday afternoon. Mrs .
Woodrow Hall, 19, Racine, $15
DAMAGE MINOR
. R. llayes, Nancy Collins, Mrs.
Robinson underwent open
and
costs, intoxication, and
Minor damage was reported Earl Thoma, Mrs. Barbara
heart surgery recently.
Jan
Durst,
35, Middleport, $10
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Roush to a car driven by Randy Hensley, Mrs. Patsy Chapman,
and costs, intoxication.
'
and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stewart Snider, 16, Pomeroy, at 4:30 Mrs. Carolyn Tripp, Mrs. Joan
of Letart, W.Va., Route visited p.m. Tuesday . Snider was Smith, Mrs. Virgil Windon,
pulling from Osborne St. onto Doris Barnhart, Mrs. Rachel
Mrs. Eula Wolfe.
Richard
Sargent
of Butternut Ave. when he failed Downie, and work-study
Colwnbus spent a weekend to make the turn and hit a assistants, Doris Barnhart ,
utility pole. He was no injured, Suzie Teaford and Dean
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. and
no charge was filed .
Weber.
. Subscri~s oo The Daily Sentinel are responding well to a new carrier service contest through
Jack Sargent at Racine.
which they can help send their carriers on a trip to the fabulous new Kings Island.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rvush
.
All the subscriber has to do to participate in the contest is to complete the accompanying form
of Mansfield visited Mrs .
judging
his carrier on personality, promptness and neatness.
Gladys Shields and other
The completed form is to be mailed to The Sentinel, P. 0 . Box 729, Pome~:oy, Ohio 45769 before
relatives.
The Esther Circle of the Mason . Maternal great- Aug. 18.
.
St. Clair Hill spent a few days
Lutheran Church met Tuesday grandmother is Mrs. G.Orge
with his sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Carriers with smaUer routes have an equal opportunity to win the trips. Two carriers from Midevening
in
the
social
room
of
Bwngardner
of
Mason.
Harold Grimm at Colwnbus.
dleport, two from Pomeroy, one from the Racine-&lt;;yracuse area and one from the Mason area will be
the church, with Mrs. Velma
CIRCLE MEETS
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm
selected to make the trips on the basis of the voting by their customers.
Roush as hostess. Mrs. David
The Rebecca Circle of the
and sons spent a weekend at
Fill out the form and mail it today! Help send your Sentinel carrier to Kings Island.
Roush ted the discussion on the Lutheran Church Women held
their farm on Bashan Road and
topic, "The Resurrection That their August meeti11g Wedvisited Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
Has Been."
nesday afternoon in the social
and Lorna.
During
the
business
session,
room or the church with Mrs.
Mrs. Doris Hensler of Racine
several
projects
were
Kenneth
Thompson as hostess.
SEND YOUR SENTINEL CARRIER TO KINGS ISLAND CONTEST
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
discussed,
and
the
group
also
During
the
business
session,
Hill Sunday and attended
~-~ Ot OUT.11•------------------------~--------------services at the Letart Falls decided to order new study tile group discussed various
books to be used at their projects, and the orie selected
Poor C=:J
United Brethren Church
monthly meetings.
to
start
on
in
the
near
future
is
Sunday evening.
PJ'OlllptDOIII
l!Zo6llont CJ
PooP c::::J
Refreshmen Is were served to tile purchase of more carpet
Rev . Freeland Norris is
Mrs.
David
Roush,
Mrs.
for
the
church.
They
also
pastor of the Letart Falls
lleatnu11
l!Zoollent C::J
Poop z:::::7
Herman Layne, Miss Lelah discussed the new study books
United Brethern Church and
Jane Powell, Mrs. Lloyd which they are going to use for .
extends a welcome to all. A
Mq o\bll' OO!IIIIlllltll _______________________________
large crowd attended services Roush, Miss Kay Roush and future meetings.
the hostess .
Attending were Mrs. William
Sunday evening. Mr. Norris is
BfRTH ANNOUNCED
Powell,
Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs.
a former school teacher and a
Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Riley Edna Burris, Mrs . Bethel
retired minister of the United
are
announcing the birth of Vance, Mrs. John Fry, Mrs.
Methodist Church.
Youl' JIM and A4druo,_______________________________
tlleir first child, a son, Monday, Donald Bwngardner and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnott of
Clarksburg spent the weekend July 31, at the Holzer Medical Kenneth Thompson.
Center . He weighed seven
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
at their home.
pounds, 14 ounces and has been
A swimming party was h~ld
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Arnott of
named
Benjamin
E•rl.
at
the New Haven Swururung
Beaver Falls, Pa., spent a few
Maternal grandparents are Pool, Thursday evening,
days with his falher, Ott Ar·
Carriers of The Daily SenMr. and Mrs . Donald August 3, honoring the 18th
Carriers of Middleport are to
noll.
Bwngardner of New Haven, birthday of J(athy Roush of tinel will be guests at a wiener meet at the home of Mrs. Fay
Mr.. and-Mrs. Hom'er Warner and
paternal grandparenls are Mason, Jiine · · 1Punkin) roast and outing at Forest Manley no later than 6 p.m.
spent a weekend at Shady Rest
Mr.
and
Mrs. Earl W. Riley of Haymaker, and Linda Roush of Acres Park Monday evening. while Pomeroy, Mason ,
(LIMITED SUPPLY)
Park at Rutland.
The outing is being hosted by Syracuse and Racine carriers
New
Haven.
Mrs. Edith Gilkey of
Refreshments were served the newspaper. Games will be will meet at the Pomeroy office
Gallipolis and Roland Dill of
played and prizes awarded. of The Daily Sentinel by 6 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Beegle and music was provided by
Pomeroy spent Sunday afThe young newspaper business Following the outing, the
.ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. have purchased a mobile home "Freedom." Those playing in
people will also he permitted to carriers will be returned to
the
group
were
Chester
Young,
Jack Ables and family . Mrs. and have moved it onto Mark's
fish
in the lake at the park.
their homes.
Alice Balser of Letart was a grandm other 's £arin , Mrs. Gary Burdette, Gary Arnold
Sunday dinner guest of the Edna Shields at Letart Falls. and Steve Morris.
Season to End
Those enjoying the evening
(;apl~ ..... ~er
Jef£ Miller and Gary Norris
Ables'.
1.1.1~'
In T
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell of are employed at the Jones were Curtis Roush, Mike
White
Randy
Clark
Chester
oumament
MODEL 2823
Newark spent the weekend Boys Store in Pomeroy.
The Meigs Junior Girls '
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Davis, Rous_h, Handy C~awford,
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
Softball League concludes its
Mrs . Paul Davis Sr . of Debb!e Gtlland, B~uce Adams,
David.
Dudley P. Caplinger, 88, season with a tournament this
Mr . and Mrs . Charles Parkersburg visited Sunday Kandt Sayre, Bnan Russell,
Winebrenner and children of with Mrs. Ada Norris and Mr. Mtke Howard, Sharon Wallace, retired Athens farmer, died evening at the Racine Junior
805 lb. FOOD CAPACITY
Keith Sayre, Maria Mitchell, Wednesday morning at the High field .
Cheshire spent Sunday with and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner .
In the opening game at 5::W
Mr. and Mrs. Cash Canaday John Jones, . Paul Sayre, Joe Syracuse Nursing Home.
Mr . and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
Joh~son,
Ketth
Powell,
Duke
Mr.
Caplinger
was
preceded
p.m.,
league champion
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman of Gallipolis visited Sunday
and children of Westerville with Mrs. Delphia Hayman. Cubmglon, and Jun Campbell. in death by his wile, Iva Syracuse, 7·2, will battle
Also Gregg Gibbs, Jeff Frances Caplinger.
. Pomeroy, 0-9, and in the second
Mr . and Mrs. Erwin
spent the weekend with Mr .
Haymaker
,
Rtck
Hesson
,
Surviving
are
two
daughters,
game runner-up Racine 6-3
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and Gloeckner took their grandKeith . Kimmie and Terri daughter, Christi Badgely, to Gregg Clayton, Danny Work- Mrs. Velma Brown, Athens, will meet Forest Run ~ t
' 'a
Hayman remained for two her home in Fairfax, Va. , man, Milton Tennant, Bobby and Mrs. Zelma Norris , about 7 p.m.
Dye,
Joy
Kautz,
Carol
Sargent,
Dayton;
a
sister,
Mrs.
Dora
The
championship
game
beweeks vacation with t~eir Friday and returned home
Roger Keefer, Ronme Zerkle, Bowers of Springfield; six tween tlie two winners is
grandparents. Beth Ann Hart Sunday.
Timmy
Ohlmger, Rodney Sch- grandchildren, several great- scheduled for 8·15 p m
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
C.
M.
Rogers
of Racine spent the weekend
MODEL J049
wartz,
Bobby Roush, Gary grandchildren, and several
· · ·
(Margaret Donohew) of
with the Haymans.
668 lb. food capacity, 2 adjustable full width shelves, sl ideMr. and Mrs. Charles Blake Cotwnbus visited Sunday with Rood, Kevin Roush, Tom nieces and nephews.
out basket. door lock &amp; defrost drain .
Haymaker,
and
David
Rose.
Graveside
services
will
be
.
and Mrs. Lillian Duffy of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donohew
1
PERSONAlS
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Syracuse visited Sunday af- and called at the Ewing
(Continued from page I)
Mr. and Mrs. John Thorne West Union Cemetery in
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Funeral Home to pay respect
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Athens. Friends may call at the 4-H Advisory Committee and is
to Mrs. Vana Teaford.
Lester Roush.
Mrs. Phyllis Young and two
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Miller Harold Rose and children of Ewing Funeral Home anytime currently serving as president
sons, Steve and Kenny, Mrs. were shopping in Parkersburg New Haven and Mr. and Mrs. today and all day Thursday. of the Meigs County Junior
Max Eichinger of Pomeroy
Fair Board.
Gloria Whitlach and Derric, on Saturday.
spent
the weekend at Kings
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eich
Mrs. Mindy Davis and son,
Last year his project was
Island,
Cincinnati.
"We Service What We Sell"
,
(newlyweds)
of
Canton
are
PRACTICE
CALLED
•
selected
as the State Fair
Aaron spent Wednesday with
Ph. 985-3307
Chester, Ohio
Ray Mulford is a medical
The Meigs ~gh School Band winner in the Electricity V
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman spending some time at their
patient
at
Holzer
Medical
home. They will leave Sunday
will practice at 6 p.m. Thurs- class. He is a member of the
and Keith.
See Jim for the Best Buys In the Big Bend
day at the high school. The Harrisonville Boys 4-H Club.
for a two weeks visit with Mrs . Center.
Area.
Johnny Roush is a surgical band will play at the Meigs
Eich's twin sister, Mrs. Lewis
Berry and Mr . Berry at patient at Pleasant Valley County Fair at 3 o.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 19.
Clearwater, Florida . Mrs . Hospital .
Mrs.
Neva
Zerkle
and
Mr.
&amp;rry wishes to thank all who
sent her cards during her and Mrs. Charles Zerkle and Festival. While his parents are
recent hospitalization. She is in family are vacationing in in Canada, their son, Charles,
need of a little cheering with Canada. Mrs. Neva Zerkle will visit his grandparents at
more cards or letters since she became ill and will be Proctorville, Ohio.
recently suffered a stroke. Her hospitalized for a week before
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rldao
For
home address is Mrs. Lewis returning home.
and children from Indiana are
(96) 3 lb. ROUND STEAK
The
Rev. and Mrs. John Haeberle visiting Mr. and Mrs. William
Berry, 1465 Normandy Park
3 lb. CHUCK' ROAST
Freezer
Dr ., Clearwater , Florida, are spending a week's vacalton Oye and other relatives in this
3
lb. PORK CHOPS
at Ontario, Canada, where they area. Mrs. Dye is the mother of
33576, Apt. 5.
3 lb. SLICED BACON
will attend the Shakespearean Mrs. Ridao ..
4 lb.
NO BEEF

PARK RESERVED SATURDAY, AUGUST 12TH

'

chants.
,
Aprominent Republican also
is against it. Rep. W. W. Lamp.
son, of Jefferson, chairman of
the House Ways and Means
Conunlttee, has warned the issue could divide t1le party in
the stale 1111d hurt President
Nixon's re:Oiection efforts
here.
David C. Sweet, director of
the state Department of

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IN METAL
CASE

.66

�. . ,.,.......
.9,1972

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9', 1972 .

Matlack Descendants in Third Reunion··

Pastora1 Family-Honored with Picnic·
The R•v. Robert Buckley,
new pastor of the Laurel Cliff

Recent Reun;ion

The annual Hayes reunion
was held recently at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hayes,
Don and Joyce, Middleport,
Route 1.
'
,
Attending were Mike Hysell,
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
l!fiddleport Route I ; Mrs .
The eighth birthday anjlvyn Warner, Mr. and Mrs. niversary of Brian Lee George,
pu-t Boswell and children, Mr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
'! 'Jd Mrs. Don Stewart and George, Gallipolis, was obchildren, Leon, W. Va .; Mr. served Tuesday evening with a
:«nd Mrs. Bill Barnett and Ron, party at the home of his
~altiinore ; Mr . and Mrs . grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L.
l'rank Barnett, Kirksville; Mr. W. McComas. Gifts were
.lind Mrs . .Gary Warner and presented to Brian Lee and
f!unily, Apple Grove, W. Va. ; Mrs . McComas gave pencils
;¥~"- and Mrs. Tom Walls and
for favors . The decorated cake
Connie Nitro, W. Va.; Mr. was served with ice cream.
and Mrs. Norris Pettry, and Attending were Mrs. Archie
Mickey, Ohley, W. Va. ; Mr. "Rinehart and grandchildren,
Mrs . Dempsey Pettry and Lydia and Eddie Johnson, Mrs.
children, Winiferd, W. Va.; Mt. Eloise Wilson, Bob Wilson and
and Mrs. Simon Hayes and son,Anthony,andBrent,David
family, Arbuckle, W.Va.; Mrs. and Christopher George.
Effie Tucker, Buffalo, W. Va.,
Q- From what direction
and the Gospel Singing do trade winds blow?
Travelers Trio of Graham
A-From the northeast
Landing, W. Va.
and southeast.

"'"
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Free Methodist Church, and
his family were honored
Saturday night with a picnic at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Crace was given by'the new
minister and games were ·
played during the evening.

.

'

CHIEF
(CHICAGO)

saF · PRIMING
PAINT FOR AU.
SURFACES-CLEAN
BRUSHES WITH WATER

CHIEF {Chicago)
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PORCH AND FLOOR
QUICK DRY

ENAMEL

'659
GAL

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE ft2-2848

·Attending were Mr. and Mr.s.
Jack Ro\linsori, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
Eblin · and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Clark and family, Harold"
Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Eblin and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore ' and family,
Mr. and ·Mrs. Ernest Powell,
Mr. and Mrs tLarry Jacoba and
Terri, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl'
Jacobs, Mr. and MrS. Otto
.Lohn, Mr. and 'Mrs. Richatd
Friend and l~mily, Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Klein and family ,
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, Charles

Diehl, Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mr.
and Mrs, Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
Esta Wist , Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Tracy. .
.
Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit,
Mrs. Laura Schafer, Wayne
Leifheit, Mrs. J. R. Tracy and
Steven, Mrs. Oscar Smith and
family, Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Powell, Lawrence Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Bailey and
family, Mr . and Mrs. Clifford'
Jacobs, Diane Lewis,. Mrs.
Gerald P!lllins and Gary, Jean
Windon, Tom Souls by, Tom
Lewis, Betty Will, Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Barton and family.

CALL FROM KAWAU
Mr. .and Mn. Harold C.
Will of 2 Hill St., Pomeroy,
received
a surprise. The third annual reunion of
telephone call early Tuesday the Matlack desceJidants was
.aorning fnim iheir son, held on July 30 at tile .Rising
t:hief Warrant Officer 2 Sun Park, Lancaster.
Robel'! E. WID, .who.ls on a
At the reWiion were Mr. and
rest and recuperation leave Mrs. Everett Matlack, Sr.,
in Hawaii. He Ill stationed at . Marion ; Mr. and Mrs. Everett
DeNa~g, , Vletwim. ·
An amiy helicopter am·
bulance pilot, he bas bad 13
yean In the service and Is on
his second tour of, duty In
Descendants of Mr. and Mrs.
Vietnam. He also served iii · Jake Van Meter met at the
Korea. In Hawaii he was Portland Park Sunday for a
joined by his wife, Barbara, reunion.
who resides .with their four
Attending were Mr. and Mrs,children In San Antonio, Donald Breweo· and Tiril, Mr.
Texas. Cblel Warrant Of- and Mrs. Russell Van Meter,
fleer Will expects to return to Margaret Donahue, Mrs. Ada
the States In October.
Van Meter, Missy Van Meter,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans,
Alicia' Cindy, and Ryan, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Lawrence,
Brenda and Bryan, Portland;
Mrs. Susie Cooley, Louis E.
Cooley, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Cooley and family, Steuben·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Final day for applying for a
Curtis and Cindy of Charleston,
badge which .will admit
W. Va. ; Forrest Van Meter,
residents 60 years of age or
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
over into the Meigs County
Van Meter, Mrs. Richard Van
Fair on Senior Citizens Day
Meter and family of Beverly;
Thursday, Aug . 17, for half
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis,
price is Thursday, Mrs.
Tammy and Tim, Terri and
Eleanor Thomas, director of
Mary Pierce, Long Bottom;
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, advises.
Residents who have not
already requested a badge
TOURED EAST
may do so by telephoning 99:1Mr. and Mrs. Norman
7400 not later than Thursday. Yeauger and son, Kevin, and
Those who have &amp;!)!)lied and Mrs. Reva Beach vacationed
do not receive their badge by recently at Melbourne, Fla.
Friday are also asked to The family visited Disneyland
contact the office . Badges to and toured Cape Kennedy.
approximately 500 Meigs They also spent several days at
County senior citizens were put Pike Stem Park in West
into the mail today.
Virginia.

Reunion at Portland Park

Teaford Family in
Last Day for
3rd Annual Reunion Badges Noted .
SYRACVSE - The third
annual Teaford reunion was
held Sunday, Aug. 6, at the
state park on Route 33. A
basket lunch was served at
noon .
During the afternoon session
Morris Teaford was elected
vic~-president. Retained for
the coming year were the
president, Virgil Teaford;
secretary, Sharon Teaford, and
treasurer, Carroll Teaford .
Committees appointed were,
registration, James Teaford
and Helen Teaford ; entertainment , Jean Hall,
Dorothy Bentz and Bruce
Teaford, and gifts, Ben and
Jannine Petrel.
Two marriages, four births
and two deaths were recorded
for the famil y tree.
Gifts were made to the oldest
lady, Edith Teaford ; oldest
man, James Teaford; youngest
girl, Darlene See; youngest
boy, Scott Gear; traveling the
longest distance, AI and Lucille
White of Mesa, Arizona, and to
Mrs. Edith Teaford, for the
largest family In attendance.
After the business meeting,
games were played under the
dire ction of Duke Bentz.
Winnin g prizes were Janice
Lawson, Edith Teaford,
Richard Teaford and Darcey
Feaster. Dennis Manuel and
Buddy Hendricks furn ished the
entertainment for the afternoon. The 1973 reunion will
be held at the 8ame place the
•first Sunday; in August.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Teaford, Forrest,
Cloist and Suzanne and Edith
and Cecil Teaford, Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Duke Bentz,
Eric and Timothy, Ben and
Jannine Petrel, Jack, Betty,
Teresa and Timmy Teaford,

Fritz Teaford, Thelma Walton,
Buddy Hendricks, Nancy and
Carla Jean Aeiker , Bert
Teaford, Delbert, Jr., Marvin
and Brenda Teaford, Lenna
Brinker and Dennis Manuel,
Racine.
Cecil, Kathy, Danelle and
Darlene See, Barbara· Marshall, Richard, Mildred and
Rodney Karr, Harold and Ina
Teaford and Melvin and Connie
Swisher, Middleport.
Dave and Cindy Donachie,
Pam and Scottie Gear, Luanne
Davis and Don Ellashek,
Youngstown.
Janice and David Lawson,
Virgil, Helen and April
Teaford, Sue . and Veronica
Provo , James and Jane
Teafo rd, Christena Grimm,
Sampson and Jean Hall, Kay,
Monica, Melinda Hill, Fred and
M'I!'Y Lou Wolfe, Syracuse.
Bruce, Becky and Sherry
Teaford and John, Carolyn,
Brian and Beth Teaford,
Pomeroy.
Carroll, Eva and Charlotte
Teaford, Marmet, W. Va.;
Morris , Mattie,

Mr . and Mrs. John Newell, Jeff
and Scottie of Columbus; Miss
Alberta Van Meter and son,
Mr. and Mrs, Delbert jlissell
and children, Colwnbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Delbert Holter,
Kendra and Melanie of Malta ;
Mr.and Mrs . Melvin Lawrem;e
and Jeremy, Poflland; ~­
and Mrs. Millard Van Meter,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Newell, . Elmer and
Shelia, Chester.
VACATION CONCLUQ!j:D
Mr . and ·Mrs. Richard
f1ckens and grandson, Brent
Hauck of Columbus, have
returned from a trip through
the New England States. They
visited in Binghamton, N. Y.
with Mrs . Cressa Webb
Cummings and in Torrington,
Conn . with Mr. and Mrs. Guido
DeAngelis. Highllghts of their
trip included tours of Old Stir
Bridge Village in Massachusetts, · Plymouth, Cape
Cod; Bar Harbour, Maine,
and the Acadia National Park.

Sa·le. Starts

and Lon, Newark; Mr, and
Mrs. John Hasen, Rebecca an4
Sterling, BelleviUe, Mich.; Mr.
and Mra. w. ·w. Robinson;
Woodstock, Va.; Mrs. Martin
Slavin; Mike and David, Ric~
mond, Va .
Mrs. Josephine McGhee,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Leah Hawkins,
Mrs. Uly Lee Shultz, Donna
and Douglas, Robert Minton,
Mike and Mack, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Matlack,
Sq Stewart; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Matlack, Carla, Vickie
and Fandy, Frost; Mr. and
Mrs. Foster Bean, Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. John ArbaiJgn,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Brooks, Mansfield; M.
L. Brooks, Reynoldsburg, and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Campbell,
Guysville.
The Rising Sun Park was set
as the regular meeting place
for the reunion to be held on the
last Sunct'ay of July each year.

PANTY
HOSE

Klddles'
TOTE 8ACS

~~olil:--.4

Super stretch yarn.
Three fashion-fit sizes.
Popular colors and
shades.

ONLV

87~

·2-HOUR
C.LEANING

Hand v carry-a ll l or

2PR.9~9~

. the youngs t ers .
Br1gh l v1nyl wl!h
choice of app11qued
des1gns 12x 13- ln

(Upon Request)

Onward·

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

KNEE SOCKS

TYPING PAPER

WRITE BROS.
PENS
.,

.,

Ask
Aboul Our

...

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LAY-AWAY
PLAN

6e-p1gt1

CQnrtnltn r Slzt

SALE

I

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alllh ose necessary sew1n9 r!emsrn
one place. Morre dtS•9rl piastre .

PORK LOIN ROA
,

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1.95

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lb.

FRESH AND TENDER

·CARROTS

RADISHES

PKG.

1oc

BEEF STEW MEAT
lb.

89C

(MANGOES)
HOME GROWN

0
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EA.

OHIO VAllEY

SLICED BACON
lb. .

75c

DAIRY BUY!

FAIRMONT

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•

USDA CHOICE BEEF

1oe
'

Bat

'

CHOC. MILK

3: '1
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FACIAL
TISSUES

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lor Women
5'6" and over.

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99
FOR

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BARREL
0' PASTE

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671
11

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EANS

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plat iJC w•th cob·
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ply ol ct.an while
p11le In 11!1 pill·

L'-BELT'-PE

NOW ONLY

•
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27~

Be arga niEtd, label•
tYtrvlhlngt

REG. 87c

.

,

REG. 39c

stu rdy con1tr~.tc ·
lion. IIIJ· \ D· IIIt.

Vw~ l

No-Iron

~·~

' IW· Or. Sluf

.._cctssories

Con1ams

'"'144

.,

for easy ac cessibil1tyt

CORDUR01 BINDERS
ALL
,.,

.·:•.

REG. 2.99

f!t b1nder . 100 sheets of

Filled wlrh

... .

J

,'

LC . plate

"•llro" ltbel gun,

I

,''

247

150-Sheets , 5-Subject,
Inde xe d Theme boo~ . . . ...... 771

tic " barrel."

wi de

Reg. $1.00

held.

Wil)ll elaan.

Yo u ge t tw o
medtum p o tnl ·'
a nd one axlta· ,
tme poml ball •

pens . at this '
lower than e ~ e r •

I

p t~ce •

·&amp;: $1

PACKS OF
24 PENCILS

Holda to 12JI·In.
l llllhltll .

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
40 ot$ .
cans ...
You, WE LIKE"
303
cans

2''

.

ru led pape r Choice of cove r co lo rs

lI

EACH

Olhc1al Sll &amp; ano

44
THEMEBOOICS
Punched to

'

::; 77t

Boyo' 7-1~ ; 9-11

Western ·style . sh m or
reg~JI IIr cut )tans of
durable. rugged potr ·

'"&lt;I

uter
cotton . Royal
blue. liQh! cho~o lale
or b•ngundv

IY WESTAI

1''

All·ln-one ... clipboard. binder. fo lder and filet
Ideal for school, business, home. Has six
po ckels in side and accommodates 11 ~t8YI·i n .
paper. Practically a file boK in fotde r·size.

~- ~
-·
-

.. .

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Tiny , powtrl ul AM.
Be ige with ctuomt ·
llktlrlm. Solid 11#111.

Reg. i. 99
Atoll
...
SN,I'I

."__

-. .· -. _

"·tz• ···Sit
Yll

Washable!

Pkg. ott

AREA ,RUCS
REPORT

REG. , ~11

CLOSED SUNDAYS

4.99

conas

~

67~

w.ii1Nr~l Ne" WorMf

t1C:TIOIIAR1

Clear plulic. protec ts
important

tor tvef)'dly

paper~ .

.··_,~ ;:: 21~
SCHOOL ,Of
BOXES ...... ... '""
n111

d11k,

•

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REG. 1.19

CRA10lA•
C:RA10NS

NOW
ONLY

67~

Bo,; 0 164 d1lltren1 CCIIorl. BIJ•II·
1n penc1IS hitr P1ner.

LIMIT

"

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lotkllool

or Homt

ElMER'S
OlUE

loeller l CIOI1

jn r)ch so li d colort .

1.00

REG.
CHOICl

42~

IJ-Ol . piUIIC IQ\l"ll I&gt;O!Ue.

lor your ntmt, tool

Glut-all or Sc hool glut.

REG. 25.c

\\-pl. Y'feiiUM lotrft

AI•CIIn
The "Room Met•" c..

LUNCH KITS

_

:...............
._. .....-tr....,._..,
.
.,. ___

pendeblt at.um. An ·
1iqut whltl CIN , 3~b

"'''' · REG. 3.79

REG. 2.H

-·- ·
-_ ----_,_...... ..-·
. - ...
-.........._"'. ..."-·-eo.-..
..... .........

olr_

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Fun dttigns ... Atchil ,

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297

Olsnev ch•racttn ,

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. RACK

Dl.,...., REG . 1.17

Ptr;g. ot.t

ltlmSTAINUSS

IAZOIIWtt

17¥1ll1&amp;~x7\lr.ln ,
Wtlnlit finis h
htrdwood.

Con·

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stytt . At..mb ltl
withOUt 10011.

97t

DoYble ·pocket. built -In
QUINt. l hi(IVJ.rn . t ile.

........""

MWttt

REG. 2.l9

RALL'S MIDDLEPORT STORE
SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY -

Camplet~ with acrtw1 .
mounllno . 1-yr.

167

morel \o'l - pinl botlle.

...,,•.

247

PORTFOLIOS

Eight me&lt;l lum ~01 1'1 1

2J7

(.,......... _ _ , _ _

.__""··---~-

••

PAK

New! Tri-Wing ORCANIZER

, ...,, Rulo

Choo" h t·plle sh1g1 m
mu!ti· oolor or JO ii d colors .
or hi·IO eut el"'d loop pile

COLA
16 or. BaltJes.

an d more!

, 2&amp; panc•ts In b11gh t.
co lorfu l package Enough
10 lnt ro1.1 a long t•me •

Mon'o10-13

4"7i .63i

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

sens lll~ity

Reg. UI

8

Monday Thru Friday

protect• and looka great'
l ots qJ patterns , .. ecology.

Boya' Slm II-til

Orion' acrylic
stretch ny lon ,
bulky knll. long·waaring and com·
fort able. Black and many colors.

Prices Effective Aug. 9-16

bxs.

Tul Gard' poly I older ,.

CREW

.

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

42ood$1

44t

Men's
and Boys'

Right reserved to limit quantities

.

TWIN POCKET
FOLDERS

.... ·

FOLGER'S .~-~~~~;-~.~.~~~~...........~.~~;.~~. . 239
OUART JARS . ~~~............'h...~~.... 1•9
PI NT JARS ...~~~-. ~.......:.................~~.:":.12•··
BABY FOO_
D.~.~~.~~~:~.~~~~~~.........~~. .10' '••
·:MACARON 1..~~. ~.~~~~.~~~:.....~~~.~~.19' t'
ROYAL CROWN
., .
. ,.

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One Size
lor Women
4'10" to 5'5•.

Onward"
W i r e~o unp

~I

Tables For Sale

'5.00

carr~ - a11

ol nuvy ga1.1ge plas ·
I•C 8"911 1 colors

--·----·--·---- _______,..._____
_
.;

3
6
$1
TOMATOES
H~ Kl~3 sl
DRINKS . ~:
PORK &amp;
BEANS

anCI s tt e t ch ny lon
Fash ron cotors

97

MINI SEWINC CHEST

..·'

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Reg , 99c pr,

1. 39

.BIG DOLlAR SAVINGS

HANOVER

a~ rvhc

One Size
lor Girls'
Agea 7to 14.

~

"' Cle llghtlu l

!

CHOICE

Ht·bulk Orion

;'

REDI WHITE! and BLUE!

Quitting Business

RACINE
DEPARTMENT STORE

PEAS

Y

~

Reg , 89c pr.

'·.

Check Quality
t/ Check Values

--

Mlues' 9· 11

rl

.•

t/

AND TENDER USDA CHOICE
PORK
.

1.0077_.

REG,

1 - i r;~ .

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~ YOUNG

Girls ' 6·9Va.

58,.

S7t

129 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

YARD GOODS so~ Yd.
VALUES TO S3.98

JOAN OF ARC

REG. 79c

si ze sheets. F1ne quality .
whtte unruled paper. Stock- up 10
the seme ster • .. now while price d

61f2)(1

210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421

10 \ii d ·itl.

___.. . ALL GREATLY REDUCED II

USDA

Shee r sl retcn nylon
with e1u1rc top One
Si te l1ts 8"1-11 Fash oon sh11des

2SO·S heef Package

'"'

Swimwear, Men &amp; Boys' Pants, Shorts
for entire family, etc.

Toledo; Don, Martha, Teresa,

Pkg. ol10
Sc Candies

Choose package ot
1D.
Baby Auth s,
Butterfingers, Cara·
mats or Circlets ...
bet ter vat. gel lots ot
al14 kinds !

........
...

SPORTSWEAR

Cheryl, Kevin and Steven
Teaford, Portland ; Brian ,
Sharon and Soni a Kearns,

.

36~

Selling Out to Bare Walls!

.

I

CANDIES

B 'E N FRAN.KLIIN .

COM~LETE
.

Sale Starts

lor savmgs!

C.LEARANCE
ON ALL SUMMER

Friday, August 11 At
Ben Franklin Store, Pomeroy

You Can't &amp;at Ben Franklin's Day-ln.and Day.{)ut Bargains!

U ll

Ric hard ,

Jimmy, Tammy and Tanya
Meadows, Long Bottom ;
George, Hildred , Jackie,
Tammy and Tracy Grafton,
Blaine, Unda, Brent and Brian
Baldasare, Dan Hysell,
Ravenna; il.lfred and Lucille
White, Mesa, Arizona; Roger
Wade, Frazeysburg ; Howard
and Maudie Teaford, Dave,
Peggy, Christi, Howie, Gayla
and Darcey Feaster, of
Granville, and William,
Sharon, Skip and Dori Teaford,
and Bob, Carol Fae, Brett and
Teresa Wines, of Columbus.

Matlack, Jr ., Kevin .and Kyle,
Warren; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Barkle,' Charles, Leslie, .. and
· William, Ciricinnati; ·Mr. and
Mrs~ Gary Ta~lor , Kenneth,
Elizabeth, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. liruce Humphrer, Alisa

Wednesday, (Today), At
Rail's Ben Franklin, Middleport

tor

mrg·a gultlnlft. Colors.

REG. 1.59

127 ..

POMEROY

ES
I

· · ~· · :&amp;'II

l

. ~

•

'•

'

�. . ,.,.......
.9,1972

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9', 1972 .

Matlack Descendants in Third Reunion··

Pastora1 Family-Honored with Picnic·
The R•v. Robert Buckley,
new pastor of the Laurel Cliff

Recent Reun;ion

The annual Hayes reunion
was held recently at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hayes,
Don and Joyce, Middleport,
Route 1.
'
,
Attending were Mike Hysell,
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
l!fiddleport Route I ; Mrs .
The eighth birthday anjlvyn Warner, Mr. and Mrs. niversary of Brian Lee George,
pu-t Boswell and children, Mr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
'! 'Jd Mrs. Don Stewart and George, Gallipolis, was obchildren, Leon, W. Va .; Mr. served Tuesday evening with a
:«nd Mrs. Bill Barnett and Ron, party at the home of his
~altiinore ; Mr . and Mrs . grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L.
l'rank Barnett, Kirksville; Mr. W. McComas. Gifts were
.lind Mrs . .Gary Warner and presented to Brian Lee and
f!unily, Apple Grove, W. Va. ; Mrs . McComas gave pencils
;¥~"- and Mrs. Tom Walls and
for favors . The decorated cake
Connie Nitro, W. Va.; Mr. was served with ice cream.
and Mrs. Norris Pettry, and Attending were Mrs. Archie
Mickey, Ohley, W. Va. ; Mr. "Rinehart and grandchildren,
Mrs . Dempsey Pettry and Lydia and Eddie Johnson, Mrs.
children, Winiferd, W. Va.; Mt. Eloise Wilson, Bob Wilson and
and Mrs. Simon Hayes and son,Anthony,andBrent,David
family, Arbuckle, W.Va.; Mrs. and Christopher George.
Effie Tucker, Buffalo, W. Va.,
Q- From what direction
and the Gospel Singing do trade winds blow?
Travelers Trio of Graham
A-From the northeast
Landing, W. Va.
and southeast.

"'"
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Free Methodist Church, and
his family were honored
Saturday night with a picnic at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Crace was given by'the new
minister and games were ·
played during the evening.

.

'

CHIEF
(CHICAGO)

saF · PRIMING
PAINT FOR AU.
SURFACES-CLEAN
BRUSHES WITH WATER

CHIEF {Chicago)
'
.
PORCH AND FLOOR
QUICK DRY

ENAMEL

'659
GAL

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE ft2-2848

·Attending were Mr. and Mr.s.
Jack Ro\linsori, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence
Eblin · and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Clark and family, Harold"
Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Eblin and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore ' and family,
Mr. and ·Mrs. Ernest Powell,
Mr. and Mrs tLarry Jacoba and
Terri, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Pearl'
Jacobs, Mr. and MrS. Otto
.Lohn, Mr. and 'Mrs. Richatd
Friend and l~mily, Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Klein and family ,
Mrs. Georgia Diehl, Charles

Diehl, Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mr.
and Mrs, Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
Esta Wist , Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Tracy. .
.
Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit,
Mrs. Laura Schafer, Wayne
Leifheit, Mrs. J. R. Tracy and
Steven, Mrs. Oscar Smith and
family, Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Powell, Lawrence Smith, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Bailey and
family, Mr . and Mrs. Clifford'
Jacobs, Diane Lewis,. Mrs.
Gerald P!lllins and Gary, Jean
Windon, Tom Souls by, Tom
Lewis, Betty Will, Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Barton and family.

CALL FROM KAWAU
Mr. .and Mn. Harold C.
Will of 2 Hill St., Pomeroy,
received
a surprise. The third annual reunion of
telephone call early Tuesday the Matlack desceJidants was
.aorning fnim iheir son, held on July 30 at tile .Rising
t:hief Warrant Officer 2 Sun Park, Lancaster.
Robel'! E. WID, .who.ls on a
At the reWiion were Mr. and
rest and recuperation leave Mrs. Everett Matlack, Sr.,
in Hawaii. He Ill stationed at . Marion ; Mr. and Mrs. Everett
DeNa~g, , Vletwim. ·
An amiy helicopter am·
bulance pilot, he bas bad 13
yean In the service and Is on
his second tour of, duty In
Descendants of Mr. and Mrs.
Vietnam. He also served iii · Jake Van Meter met at the
Korea. In Hawaii he was Portland Park Sunday for a
joined by his wife, Barbara, reunion.
who resides .with their four
Attending were Mr. and Mrs,children In San Antonio, Donald Breweo· and Tiril, Mr.
Texas. Cblel Warrant Of- and Mrs. Russell Van Meter,
fleer Will expects to return to Margaret Donahue, Mrs. Ada
the States In October.
Van Meter, Missy Van Meter,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans,
Alicia' Cindy, and Ryan, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Lawrence,
Brenda and Bryan, Portland;
Mrs. Susie Cooley, Louis E.
Cooley, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Cooley and family, Steuben·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Final day for applying for a
Curtis and Cindy of Charleston,
badge which .will admit
W. Va. ; Forrest Van Meter,
residents 60 years of age or
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
over into the Meigs County
Van Meter, Mrs. Richard Van
Fair on Senior Citizens Day
Meter and family of Beverly;
Thursday, Aug . 17, for half
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curtis,
price is Thursday, Mrs.
Tammy and Tim, Terri and
Eleanor Thomas, director of
Mary Pierce, Long Bottom;
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, advises.
Residents who have not
already requested a badge
TOURED EAST
may do so by telephoning 99:1Mr. and Mrs. Norman
7400 not later than Thursday. Yeauger and son, Kevin, and
Those who have &amp;!)!)lied and Mrs. Reva Beach vacationed
do not receive their badge by recently at Melbourne, Fla.
Friday are also asked to The family visited Disneyland
contact the office . Badges to and toured Cape Kennedy.
approximately 500 Meigs They also spent several days at
County senior citizens were put Pike Stem Park in West
into the mail today.
Virginia.

Reunion at Portland Park

Teaford Family in
Last Day for
3rd Annual Reunion Badges Noted .
SYRACVSE - The third
annual Teaford reunion was
held Sunday, Aug. 6, at the
state park on Route 33. A
basket lunch was served at
noon .
During the afternoon session
Morris Teaford was elected
vic~-president. Retained for
the coming year were the
president, Virgil Teaford;
secretary, Sharon Teaford, and
treasurer, Carroll Teaford .
Committees appointed were,
registration, James Teaford
and Helen Teaford ; entertainment , Jean Hall,
Dorothy Bentz and Bruce
Teaford, and gifts, Ben and
Jannine Petrel.
Two marriages, four births
and two deaths were recorded
for the famil y tree.
Gifts were made to the oldest
lady, Edith Teaford ; oldest
man, James Teaford; youngest
girl, Darlene See; youngest
boy, Scott Gear; traveling the
longest distance, AI and Lucille
White of Mesa, Arizona, and to
Mrs. Edith Teaford, for the
largest family In attendance.
After the business meeting,
games were played under the
dire ction of Duke Bentz.
Winnin g prizes were Janice
Lawson, Edith Teaford,
Richard Teaford and Darcey
Feaster. Dennis Manuel and
Buddy Hendricks furn ished the
entertainment for the afternoon. The 1973 reunion will
be held at the 8ame place the
•first Sunday; in August.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Teaford, Forrest,
Cloist and Suzanne and Edith
and Cecil Teaford, Minersville.
Mr. and Mrs. Duke Bentz,
Eric and Timothy, Ben and
Jannine Petrel, Jack, Betty,
Teresa and Timmy Teaford,

Fritz Teaford, Thelma Walton,
Buddy Hendricks, Nancy and
Carla Jean Aeiker , Bert
Teaford, Delbert, Jr., Marvin
and Brenda Teaford, Lenna
Brinker and Dennis Manuel,
Racine.
Cecil, Kathy, Danelle and
Darlene See, Barbara· Marshall, Richard, Mildred and
Rodney Karr, Harold and Ina
Teaford and Melvin and Connie
Swisher, Middleport.
Dave and Cindy Donachie,
Pam and Scottie Gear, Luanne
Davis and Don Ellashek,
Youngstown.
Janice and David Lawson,
Virgil, Helen and April
Teaford, Sue . and Veronica
Provo , James and Jane
Teafo rd, Christena Grimm,
Sampson and Jean Hall, Kay,
Monica, Melinda Hill, Fred and
M'I!'Y Lou Wolfe, Syracuse.
Bruce, Becky and Sherry
Teaford and John, Carolyn,
Brian and Beth Teaford,
Pomeroy.
Carroll, Eva and Charlotte
Teaford, Marmet, W. Va.;
Morris , Mattie,

Mr . and Mrs. John Newell, Jeff
and Scottie of Columbus; Miss
Alberta Van Meter and son,
Mr. and Mrs, Delbert jlissell
and children, Colwnbus; Mr.
and Mrs . Delbert Holter,
Kendra and Melanie of Malta ;
Mr.and Mrs . Melvin Lawrem;e
and Jeremy, Poflland; ~­
and Mrs. Millard Van Meter,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Newell, . Elmer and
Shelia, Chester.
VACATION CONCLUQ!j:D
Mr . and ·Mrs. Richard
f1ckens and grandson, Brent
Hauck of Columbus, have
returned from a trip through
the New England States. They
visited in Binghamton, N. Y.
with Mrs . Cressa Webb
Cummings and in Torrington,
Conn . with Mr. and Mrs. Guido
DeAngelis. Highllghts of their
trip included tours of Old Stir
Bridge Village in Massachusetts, · Plymouth, Cape
Cod; Bar Harbour, Maine,
and the Acadia National Park.

Sa·le. Starts

and Lon, Newark; Mr, and
Mrs. John Hasen, Rebecca an4
Sterling, BelleviUe, Mich.; Mr.
and Mra. w. ·w. Robinson;
Woodstock, Va.; Mrs. Martin
Slavin; Mike and David, Ric~
mond, Va .
Mrs. Josephine McGhee,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Leah Hawkins,
Mrs. Uly Lee Shultz, Donna
and Douglas, Robert Minton,
Mike and Mack, Colwnbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Matlack,
Sq Stewart; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Matlack, Carla, Vickie
and Fandy, Frost; Mr. and
Mrs. Foster Bean, Guysville;
Mr. and Mrs. John ArbaiJgn,
Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Brooks, Mansfield; M.
L. Brooks, Reynoldsburg, and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Campbell,
Guysville.
The Rising Sun Park was set
as the regular meeting place
for the reunion to be held on the
last Sunct'ay of July each year.

PANTY
HOSE

Klddles'
TOTE 8ACS

~~olil:--.4

Super stretch yarn.
Three fashion-fit sizes.
Popular colors and
shades.

ONLV

87~

·2-HOUR
C.LEANING

Hand v carry-a ll l or

2PR.9~9~

. the youngs t ers .
Br1gh l v1nyl wl!h
choice of app11qued
des1gns 12x 13- ln

(Upon Request)

Onward·

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

KNEE SOCKS

TYPING PAPER

WRITE BROS.
PENS
.,

.,

Ask
Aboul Our

...

·",,,

LAY-AWAY
PLAN

6e-p1gt1

CQnrtnltn r Slzt

SALE

I

'

1

Keep yourself m good repa" Put
alllh ose necessary sew1n9 r!emsrn
one place. Morre dtS•9rl piastre .

PORK LOIN ROA
,

..•

~

~

~

STD. BRAND

n

••
~

~

u

..
·~
w

nb.
..,•

•.

•
v

NO.RTHERN

USDA CHOICE BEEF

.GROUND ROUND

1.95

2
...
'SWEET PEPPERS
lb.

FRESH AND TENDER

·CARROTS

RADISHES

PKG.

1oc

BEEF STEW MEAT
lb.

89C

(MANGOES)
HOME GROWN

0
1 e

EA.

OHIO VAllEY

SLICED BACON
lb. .

75c

DAIRY BUY!

FAIRMONT

'

FRESH GOLDEN

•

USDA CHOICE BEEF

1oe
'

Bat

'

CHOC. MILK

3: '1
.r

FACIAL
TISSUES

•,

.,'·
'•
,,
l,

,.

_Reg. 99c Pr.

.,

-·:
·'

'·

One Size
lor Women
5'6" and over.

~

~.•
~

•,-.
:';

•'••

::

weq~ t\1 Fabrrc

b all l nl lat•ng
va twe. need le 1nc1

16·1n vonyl Vlri·

etlf of usu&lt; Top
, zip and t;ar~dl ll .

10

"c"'""' "'"'"
tOe Plr.g
IMu

29c Pkg Frller Pape-r

i•

S®CJ

PENS

99
FOR

Relere r~ ~ e

BARREL
0' PASTE

~

u-n Roll•

671
11

I

EANS

•
'

l

., 11

Co lols

plat iJC w•th cob·
bl•r po c kal. Sllpl

11SIIy o n

o ~ er

.
'

Long•lltllng I UP•
ply ol ct.an while
p11le In 11!1 pill·

L'-BELT'-PE

NOW ONLY

•
,'

27~

Be arga niEtd, label•
tYtrvlhlngt

REG. 87c

.

,

REG. 39c

stu rdy con1tr~.tc ·
lion. IIIJ· \ D· IIIt.

Vw~ l

No-Iron

~·~

' IW· Or. Sluf

.._cctssories

Con1ams

'"'144

.,

for easy ac cessibil1tyt

CORDUR01 BINDERS
ALL
,.,

.·:•.

REG. 2.99

f!t b1nder . 100 sheets of

Filled wlrh

... .

J

,'

LC . plate

"•llro" ltbel gun,

I

,''

247

150-Sheets , 5-Subject,
Inde xe d Theme boo~ . . . ...... 771

tic " barrel."

wi de

Reg. $1.00

held.

Wil)ll elaan.

Yo u ge t tw o
medtum p o tnl ·'
a nd one axlta· ,
tme poml ball •

pens . at this '
lower than e ~ e r •

I

p t~ce •

·&amp;: $1

PACKS OF
24 PENCILS

Holda to 12JI·In.
l llllhltll .

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With A Heart,
40 ot$ .
cans ...
You, WE LIKE"
303
cans

2''

.

ru led pape r Choice of cove r co lo rs

lI

EACH

Olhc1al Sll &amp; ano

44
THEMEBOOICS
Punched to

'

::; 77t

Boyo' 7-1~ ; 9-11

Western ·style . sh m or
reg~JI IIr cut )tans of
durable. rugged potr ·

'"&lt;I

uter
cotton . Royal
blue. liQh! cho~o lale
or b•ngundv

IY WESTAI

1''

All·ln-one ... clipboard. binder. fo lder and filet
Ideal for school, business, home. Has six
po ckels in side and accommodates 11 ~t8YI·i n .
paper. Practically a file boK in fotde r·size.

~- ~
-·
-

.. .

~

.

Tiny , powtrl ul AM.
Be ige with ctuomt ·
llktlrlm. Solid 11#111.

Reg. i. 99
Atoll
...
SN,I'I

."__

-. .· -. _

"·tz• ···Sit
Yll

Washable!

Pkg. ott

AREA ,RUCS
REPORT

REG. , ~11

CLOSED SUNDAYS

4.99

conas

~

67~

w.ii1Nr~l Ne" WorMf

t1C:TIOIIAR1

Clear plulic. protec ts
important

tor tvef)'dly

paper~ .

.··_,~ ;:: 21~
SCHOOL ,Of
BOXES ...... ... '""
n111

d11k,

•

•lor•ge ln

REG. 1.19

CRA10lA•
C:RA10NS

NOW
ONLY

67~

Bo,; 0 164 d1lltren1 CCIIorl. BIJ•II·
1n penc1IS hitr P1ner.

LIMIT

"

•ll

lotkllool

or Homt

ElMER'S
OlUE

loeller l CIOI1

jn r)ch so li d colort .

1.00

REG.
CHOICl

42~

IJ-Ol . piUIIC IQ\l"ll I&gt;O!Ue.

lor your ntmt, tool

Glut-all or Sc hool glut.

REG. 25.c

\\-pl. Y'feiiUM lotrft

AI•CIIn
The "Room Met•" c..

LUNCH KITS

_

:...............
._. .....-tr....,._..,
.
.,. ___

pendeblt at.um. An ·
1iqut whltl CIN , 3~b

"'''' · REG. 3.79

REG. 2.H

-·- ·
-_ ----_,_...... ..-·
. - ...
-.........._"'. ..."-·-eo.-..
..... .........

olr_

..

....,

Fun dttigns ... Atchil ,

..
.......

297

Olsnev ch•racttn ,

~

~

be ll oens.MOIICOIOtl .

•

lOOK
. RACK

Dl.,...., REG . 1.17

Ptr;g. ot.t

ltlmSTAINUSS

IAZOIIWtt

17¥1ll1&amp;~x7\lr.ln ,
Wtlnlit finis h
htrdwood.

Con·

""'-"' II• and

stytt . At..mb ltl
withOUt 10011.

97t

DoYble ·pocket. built -In
QUINt. l hi(IVJ.rn . t ile.

........""

MWttt

REG. 2.l9

RALL'S MIDDLEPORT STORE
SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY -

Camplet~ with acrtw1 .
mounllno . 1-yr.

167

morel \o'l - pinl botlle.

...,,•.

247

PORTFOLIOS

Eight me&lt;l lum ~01 1'1 1

2J7

(.,......... _ _ , _ _

.__""··---~-

••

PAK

New! Tri-Wing ORCANIZER

, ...,, Rulo

Choo" h t·plle sh1g1 m
mu!ti· oolor or JO ii d colors .
or hi·IO eut el"'d loop pile

COLA
16 or. BaltJes.

an d more!

, 2&amp; panc•ts In b11gh t.
co lorfu l package Enough
10 lnt ro1.1 a long t•me •

Mon'o10-13

4"7i .63i

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

sens lll~ity

Reg. UI

8

Monday Thru Friday

protect• and looka great'
l ots qJ patterns , .. ecology.

Boya' Slm II-til

Orion' acrylic
stretch ny lon ,
bulky knll. long·waaring and com·
fort able. Black and many colors.

Prices Effective Aug. 9-16

bxs.

Tul Gard' poly I older ,.

CREW

.

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

42ood$1

44t

Men's
and Boys'

Right reserved to limit quantities

.

TWIN POCKET
FOLDERS

.... ·

FOLGER'S .~-~~~~;-~.~.~~~~...........~.~~;.~~. . 239
OUART JARS . ~~~............'h...~~.... 1•9
PI NT JARS ...~~~-. ~.......:.................~~.:":.12•··
BABY FOO_
D.~.~~.~~~:~.~~~~~~.........~~. .10' '••
·:MACARON 1..~~. ~.~~~~.~~~:.....~~~.~~.19' t'
ROYAL CROWN
., .
. ,.

-·:

One Size
lor Women
4'10" to 5'5•.

Onward"
W i r e~o unp

~I

Tables For Sale

'5.00

carr~ - a11

ol nuvy ga1.1ge plas ·
I•C 8"911 1 colors

--·----·--·---- _______,..._____
_
.;

3
6
$1
TOMATOES
H~ Kl~3 sl
DRINKS . ~:
PORK &amp;
BEANS

anCI s tt e t ch ny lon
Fash ron cotors

97

MINI SEWINC CHEST

..·'

.••'

Reg , 99c pr,

1. 39

.BIG DOLlAR SAVINGS

HANOVER

a~ rvhc

One Size
lor Girls'
Agea 7to 14.

~

"' Cle llghtlu l

!

CHOICE

Ht·bulk Orion

;'

REDI WHITE! and BLUE!

Quitting Business

RACINE
DEPARTMENT STORE

PEAS

Y

~

Reg , 89c pr.

'·.

Check Quality
t/ Check Values

--

Mlues' 9· 11

rl

.•

t/

AND TENDER USDA CHOICE
PORK
.

1.0077_.

REG,

1 - i r;~ .

Y

..,'

••
'•
',••

l

~ YOUNG

Girls ' 6·9Va.

58,.

S7t

129 MILL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

YARD GOODS so~ Yd.
VALUES TO S3.98

JOAN OF ARC

REG. 79c

si ze sheets. F1ne quality .
whtte unruled paper. Stock- up 10
the seme ster • .. now while price d

61f2)(1

210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421

10 \ii d ·itl.

___.. . ALL GREATLY REDUCED II

USDA

Shee r sl retcn nylon
with e1u1rc top One
Si te l1ts 8"1-11 Fash oon sh11des

2SO·S heef Package

'"'

Swimwear, Men &amp; Boys' Pants, Shorts
for entire family, etc.

Toledo; Don, Martha, Teresa,

Pkg. ol10
Sc Candies

Choose package ot
1D.
Baby Auth s,
Butterfingers, Cara·
mats or Circlets ...
bet ter vat. gel lots ot
al14 kinds !

........
...

SPORTSWEAR

Cheryl, Kevin and Steven
Teaford, Portland ; Brian ,
Sharon and Soni a Kearns,

.

36~

Selling Out to Bare Walls!

.

I

CANDIES

B 'E N FRAN.KLIIN .

COM~LETE
.

Sale Starts

lor savmgs!

C.LEARANCE
ON ALL SUMMER

Friday, August 11 At
Ben Franklin Store, Pomeroy

You Can't &amp;at Ben Franklin's Day-ln.and Day.{)ut Bargains!

U ll

Ric hard ,

Jimmy, Tammy and Tanya
Meadows, Long Bottom ;
George, Hildred , Jackie,
Tammy and Tracy Grafton,
Blaine, Unda, Brent and Brian
Baldasare, Dan Hysell,
Ravenna; il.lfred and Lucille
White, Mesa, Arizona; Roger
Wade, Frazeysburg ; Howard
and Maudie Teaford, Dave,
Peggy, Christi, Howie, Gayla
and Darcey Feaster, of
Granville, and William,
Sharon, Skip and Dori Teaford,
and Bob, Carol Fae, Brett and
Teresa Wines, of Columbus.

Matlack, Jr ., Kevin .and Kyle,
Warren; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Barkle,' Charles, Leslie, .. and
· William, Ciricinnati; ·Mr. and
Mrs~ Gary Ta~lor , Kenneth,
Elizabeth, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. liruce Humphrer, Alisa

Wednesday, (Today), At
Rail's Ben Franklin, Middleport

tor

mrg·a gultlnlft. Colors.

REG. 1.59

127 ..

POMEROY

ES
I

· · ~· · :&amp;'II

l

. ~

•

'•

'

�.I

'

8 ~ Tbe Dill'"~-

-

• - Tbe n.tJ,y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o•• Aug.ll, 1972

''l!el, MlddlepOrt·Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9,1972

Picnic at Anthonys
.

· Mr. ami Mrs. Willis. Anthony
· were hosts Monday evening to
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
SOciety of the Middleport First
BapUst Church for a picnic at
their Cherry Ridge !ann.
The 32 members and guests
attending were seated at tables
outside. Mrs. John Werner
opened with prayer and Mrs.
Dana Hamm gave devotions
using a sermon by Peter
Marshall entitled "Medltationof
Jesus." Mrs. Fred · Hoffman ,
Mrs. Bert Bodlmer and Mrs.
Leora Sigman were appointed
to the budget committee. Plans
were made for the September
meeting which will be Sept. 5at
the church with the DQrcas
Circle to have devotions and

WHERE EC.ONOMY ORIGINATES
. Prites ~od Thru Sat., Aug. 12th"

,FUD~e. B~RS ,g,R

TwiMI
$100
on 4-lb. "Super-Right"
A&amp;P FRESH

.Juiee
64·01.69¢
Jug

California·Honeydews
Louisiana Yaii'!S
.
Red Ripe Watermelons
'·'.
Fresh Peaches
Fresh Carrots
I

I

I

I

I

I

I
,.., \,

'IJ

I

ggc

j "

10. $100

I.iJ '•3 llekt,

I

I

I

lb.19c

1

I

'""'

60

RIGHT''

12-az.

59

¢

pkg,

"""',I

•

CHUNK

Starkist Tuna • • • 6 ~.:·· 43¢
0
87c
Butter
• • • •
Breakfast Drink • • • '41.·•··$1 09
Cheese Spread • •
67~
Domino Sugar • • •
I

LAND

LAKE

t-tb.

I

•

pkr.

•

BORDEN

• btl.

DARI COUNTRY

FINE GRANULATED

6-lb.

•

boJ

SUNSHINE

Hydrox Cookies •
BuHermilk Biscuits
White Bread • • •
Sta-Puff •
•
Pineapple In Juice
I

o

U~-oL53C
bos

PILLSBURY

JANE PARKER

Orange, Grape, Fruit Punch

FABRIC SOFTENER

I

•

•

DEL MONTE

SHORTENING

~

f.&lt;RS fllBE~T \ ,T C•

Fluffo . . . . . • ·.:',·,

~

Margarine . . . .

~

,'.~:

¢

64·bl.
Jug

l'a

Supremo

Itand

A&amp;P
Minute Maid Froton

On.GM§e
..Juiee

6·01 •

can

Duncan Hines Layer

eo.e,·

MiJxea.

33
39¢

¢.

18-az.
pkg.

$ 39

~Kill

- - - " " " ' - : - , k g - .- -

e~ae
~
:.

Just Wonderful Or

~Ufll Net
Htw~~ S
a
¢

13-oz.

Can ·

All seven sons and the
daughter of the late Molt and
Ruby Yeauger were present
for the second annual reunion
held at Royal Oak Park Sunday. A basket dinner was held
at noon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Yeauger, Ft. White, Fla.;
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Yeauger,
Michael and John David,
Sheila Miller, South Point;
Mrs . Viola Yeauger, Columd Mr M ·
bus Mr
· an
s. arvm
;
Yeauger, Chris and Teresa of
Cheshire Mr and Mrs Ray
· Ray, Jr.,· An·
;
Smith, Tina,
thony, Laura , Gary and
Matthew of Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Barry Yeauger and Barry
Al
Ch hir Mr d Mr
an, es e;
· an
s.
Mike Parker and Suzy •
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Yeauger
and Edward from Malta ; Mr.

Ret,.."''l

Pkg.l
of

I

Dl ~nned
r IU

The Women's Retreat to be
held at Hidden Hollow, Oct. 1314 was announced when the
Women's Missionary Society of
the Laurel Cliff ~e Methodist
Church met recently in the
church basement.
Mrs .
Lloyd
Wright,
president, opened the meeting
with scripture from Second
Timothy, fourth chapter, and
prayer was given by Mrs .
James Gilmore. Mrs. Richard
Friend read "The Clever
TurUe. " It was voted to send a
contribution of money to Gary
Homes. Arrangements were
made to provide ice cream for
a church picnic and members
signed a round robin card for
Merle Diehl, hospitalized in
Spokane, Wash.
Prayer to close the meeting
was given by Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs. Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Harry E. Clark, Mrs.
Marugerite Leifheit, Mrs .
Laura Schafer, Mrs . Esta
Wise, Mrs. Bob Barton, Mrs.
Robert Buckley, Scottie
Barton, !4rs. Cannan Evans,
Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs, and Mrs .
Ernest Powell.

SPECIAL
7-oz.
Can

Tri-Co Clinic Opened

Social Calendar

the Electa Circle to handle
refreshments. At that meeting
WEDNESDAY
reports of ' the Women's ConPROGRAM COMMITTEE of
terence held at GranYille in
Jun ..
be presented. Women Chester PTA, 7:30 p.m .
of the Mount Moriah Baptist Wednesday at school.· Anyone
Church will be. invited guests. wishing named a room mother
Mrs. Charles Simons had the or on a special collllpittee,
love gift dedication bsing "The please contact an officer before
Mrs. Charle&amp;
Story of the Love Gift" as her meeting,
Goeglein,
president.
theme. She was assisted by
WHITE ROSE Lodge, annual
Mrs. Bodlmer, Mrs. Hoffman
picnic,
'Wednesday, Legion
and Mrs: Arland King, Mrs.
Park
shelter
house. Take
Elizabeth Searles gave a brief
report 'On the Women's Con- covered dish and own table
service, chlldren invited.
terence.
'
Attending . the picnic were
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
eight members from the Lions Club luncheon, . WedDQrcas Circle, eight ·from the nesday noon at Meigs Inn : All
EJecta Circle, six from the club members asked to be
Love Joy Circle, and 10 guests. present.
ANNUAL SUMMER picnic
of winding Trail Garden Club
tonight, 6:30 p.m. at camp of
Mrs. Charles Hayes. Members
John Gagloridi, Charleston, w. take supplies for workshop .
Va .
SWIMMING PARTY and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard picnic, 6 p.m. Wednesday,
Vaughan and Zandra, Mid- Middleport Park, All Job 's
dleport; Max Yeauger, Pen· , Daugh ters and families and
nlngton Gap, va. ; Lawrence ' DeMo 1ay members and
Yealiger, Cheshire; Mr . and families as guests.
Mrs. William Mayo, Colum·
THURSDAY
bus; Gina Walburn, Mr. and
PAST COUNCILORS Clhub,
Mrs. Virgil Dill, Pomeroy.
Theodorus Council, Daug ters
of America, cookout, 6:30p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs.
Reunion in Mason
Charles Cohen, Bulternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
The Boyd family reunion was
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
held recently at the home of F'-"' ""' d
8
t
""""' wurs ay' p.m. a
Mr. andW Mrs.
Jphn Bond, hall. Refreshments . All Master
'M
V
ason, . a.
Masons invited .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
HOUSEWARES par ty,
John C. Bond and children, Junior American Legion,
Cwnberland, Md.; Mr. and Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
Mrs . Bob McDermitt and p.m. Public invited.
children, West Columbia, W.
LLING W RKERS Cl
WI
0
ass,
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Enterprise United Methodist
McKinney and children, Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Marshall King home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.
and sons, Rutland; Mr. and
Mr Ard Smith B ffal W
FRIDAY
s.
en
' u 0• •
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shrine of Jerusalem, family
Smith and children, Eleanor,
picnic, Twin City Shrjne Club
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.! J~es Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Noffsinger • and
ami Y' Friday.
Eleanor, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. • .
Lester Cocbran, LaRue, Oliio;
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Crites, La
Rue; Mr . and Mrs. Isaac Bond,
Columbus; Bernard Bond,
Marion ; Mrs . Okey Wood,
Youth of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
d .
h S d
Mrs . David Wood and children, assiste w1th 1 e un ay
Norwalk; Mr. and Mrs. Ben evening service. Miss Vicki
Wood and children, Lincoln, Clark presided with Mrs. Cathy
Neb. and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Pullins at the piano .
Bond and children Marion.
Barbara Klein was the song
'
leader with selections by the
•
·
co'hgre·i gtion including
PICNIC ENJOYED
"Victory in Jesus" and "Joy
NEW ,HAVEN - The Haven Unspeakable." Prayer was by
Homemakers met Aug. 1at the Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. Mrs . Pat
New Haven Park for their Tracy gave the offertory
picnic . The September 5 prayer and the ushers were
meeting will be held at the Rlck and Terry Clark, Charles
home of Mrs . Lewis Johnson. Diehl, Robin Buckley. Mrs.
Attending the picnic were Mrs. P'ulllns played "All That
Sadie Warth, Mrs . Doris Thrills My Soul," and she was
Vickers and Matthew, Mrs. joined by Mrs. Harry E. Clark
David Zerkle and Debbie , to sing "One More Valley ."
Terrie, Brenda; Mrs. Russell Miss Klein's selection "I Was
Maynard and Samantha, Mrs. Born to Serve the Lord"
Roberta Maynard, Mrs. Lewis · concluded the youth program
Johnson, Mrs. Emory Hart, preceding the evening message
Mrs . Dennis Briles and Corenia by the Rev. Robert Buckley.
and· Paul, Mrs. Ira Capehart
and Mrs. James Wise.

will

SATURDAY
ANNUAL Herbert and He(en
Miller Family
Reunion
Saturday at Forest Acres Park
on New Lima Road with dinner
beginning at 5 p.m. All family
and friends invited.
SUNDAY
E IGHTH DISTRICT
American Legion picnic,
Sunday, Wilkesville; dinner at
3 p.m.
CARMEL CHURCH annual
homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School at 10 a.m., basket
dinner at noon, prog ram at
1:30. Rev. Borden, Gallipolis,
guest speaker, everyone
welcome.

Mrs. Maxine S. Plummer, . pointments fr oin Gallia and
Executive Director of the Tri- Meigs counties and patients
C:c,.nty Community Mental are being seen on emergency
Health and Mental Retardation basis priority. Appointments
Board, announced the opening are to be made for the clinic by
of a Mental Health Clinic in calling 446-4950 G;illipolis, or
Gallipolis.
write Comm unity Mental
Mrs . Plummer said at Health and Mental Retardation
present, the cline will be Board, 16 State St., Gallipolis.
conducted on a part-time basis
The Mental Health Clinic will
with a professional staff on be in full operation by the first
of the year localed in .Gallipolis
han d.
The staff includes a with satellite clinics in JS:ckson
psychiatrist, two mental health and Meigs CoWJties.
te chn olo gy students and a
Funding of the clinics will be
receptionist. Presently, the from the tax levy that passed
clinic is being held at the Grace last May in the counties with
United Methodist Ch urch, the stale matching the local
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
funds.
Mrs. Plummer stated that
Applicants are being inlhere is a waiting list for aP· terv iewed for th e clinic

$1J9

aN'~

CO UPON

891t
3

On A 4-lb. Super-Right Boneless

H~

C..U.eJ, HIUIII

Good Thru Sat. Aug. 12th AI All A&amp;P WEO Stores

l

iumbo
ralls

1 •

'r

2 14-oz.4 9¢

WITH
THIS
COUPON

btls,

Good Thru Sat. Aug. 12th At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
'n'iTfn'f'\
ro

Thru Sat. Aug. 12th At AU A&amp;P WEO Staros

.· ·
· · .~
·~ ·.

PLAN BAKE SALE
Job 's Daughters will hold a
bake sale beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday on East Main St. in
front of the Elberfeld
Department Store.

Agencies in

:!:! GOOII

i!!!

•

Each·
.

!·'•

;t::::~.::::::::~:=:t-.:_M_Wj_.,_

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS TIL 9

D

0
··'...

,.

:·:·

AT STIFFLER'S IN DOWNTOWN POMEROY THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY

·:

.:·:

,•

- Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sGIRLS PRETTY NEW
BACK-TO-SCHOOL

- Save A Bushel60" Inch Polyester

Girls back to school dresses In
solid colors, plaid6 and prints.
Sizes 3 to 6X and 7 to 14.
·

~:~ -

:

PRICED FROM

$ 99

•'

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sMEN'S FANCY PERMANENT PRESS

SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SH1RTS

....

Men's famoua brand periii:W~
short al-e ipu't llblr1a In
fancies and stripes. Slles S.M-LXL.

100
Double Knit Fabrics in an
array of fas hi on co l ors.
Choos e
from
tw o- t one
ja cquard patterns or jacquard
an d crepe sti tch solids.

$288EACH

8
$2 ~RD

Each
:;·

..::·

Double-Knit
FABRIC
pel. Textured Polyester

DRESSES

..

.::

•'•.

•

;:;

- Save A BushelMEN 'S COTTON

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sBOY'S ASSORTED PERMANENT PRES~

- Save A BushelValues To 11.00

Blue Chambray

SHORT SLEEVE

SPORTS

·:·

ORK SHIRT , FABRICS

SPORT SHIRTS

Men's 100 percent cotton blue ·
Chambray work shirts in sizes : Great assortmenf of 4S
inch Sport Fabrics in
14'1.! to 17. Long wearing.
· popular
prints and

Boy's short sleeve permanent press
sport shirts in assorted plain and
fancy colors. Sizes 8 to 18.

colors. Sew your way
ba ck to school and save.

2 $ 00

49

FOR

44 ~""

Each
::

::

In Conference

"COMFY" BED PILLO

-Save A Bushel-

ATHENS - Representatives

SNEAKERS

$ 00

¢
Each

Pair
.:::

-Save, A BushelBEACON "SUSSEX"

-. Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sMEN'S·BOY'S·YOUTHS LACE-TO-TOE

CHILDREN'S SPORT

Big, plwnp non aUergenic : American made moulded
shredded foam filled bed : sport sneakers with ~~;~ [
pillows with pretty pr~ inner soles. Long wearing. Sizes
to 10•

of involved public agencies

·:·

- Save A Bushel81h' X 1172'

ROOM SIZE

RUGS
The Rug for every room in
your house . 90 pet . Viscose

Rayon and 10 J&gt;Ct. Nylon Pile
for d~rabllily . No pad needed.

I

'~TENNIS

$ 99

All
SIZES

Pair

-Save A BushelLADIES' MOULDED
SOLE SPORT

-S~ve

A Bushel At Stifflers-

-Save A Bushei-

OHAIIVK "TASTEMAKE~'

CHILDRENS
BffiER

WHITE MUSLIN

SHEETS.
Wtit oottlitt IIIUIIin lbeeia iliat

FOOTWEAR

...., tbru lnmdredl of wultlnca.
Mollnk "TIItemabr" Brlnd.
72ic 101, Twin ·
S}7~

Fitted, 81x99

. Close out !I(Oup of Boys' and
Girls'1 SuMmer · FootWear.

Stock up now for school.

Values to $3.99.

...

S}9~...
42X36

- Save ABushel:....
GIRL'S ITALIAN
SUMMER

SNEAKERS .SANDALS
.....,

: Ladin American made : a.ruce
ca nY8a ueaken with
cuslaonln-loleundmoulded
oullr lilies.

ii !
-_
Save

~

poll

•m....,. • ...,.lulillltlll
3. !Jan tllla Tbllllda:r,
Friday and ~-

$ 00

Pair

EACH

OXFORDS

Long warinc moulded ICIIe, ._to
toe style leru!l.l olfordll in black Cl'
white. American 11111de.

$ 59

Textured Vinyl Asbeslos 1ile

9~68

I

POMEROy, OHIO

KENTILE

box
(45 sq. ft)

$1 00

:::: assorted colors.

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sBIG SHREDDED FOAM FILLED

FACfORY WAXED

Uiteilt of lOop -

!!!! shag area accent 1'1181 In

Serving Aging

began discussions here last
Friday leading to future
cooperation
and planning in
REUNION AUG. 13
TUPPERS PLA.INS - The connection with the problems
37th Parker Family Reunion of aging in Southeastern Ohio.
By arranging channels of
will be held Sunday, Aug. 13 at
the elementary school here. A communication and identifying
basket dinner will begin at services and resources, the
noon . All relatives and their group began to assign
responsibilities of the separate
friend6 are welcome.
agencies in meeting the
problems of the elderly persons.
Meeting at the Athens
Mental Health Center were
Mrs. Dee (George) Kennedy,
Administrator of AMHC
Geriatric Unit; Mrs. Helen
(Clark) Daily, Executive
Director of Athens • Vinton Hocking Counties 648 Com·
miUiity Mental Health Board;
Mrs . Maxine ( Einon) Plum·
mer, Executive Director of
Jackson • Gallla • Meigs 848
Board; David Thompkins,
Executive
Director
of
Musklngwn • Coshocton - Guernaey • Nobl~ • Perry •
Morgan 648 Board ; Jerry
Ramsey, Director of·Areawide
Model Project on Aging, Rio
Grande College; James Myers,
Ohio Diviaion of Mental Health
Region XI Director; Mrs.
Esther (William) Kuhre,
AMaC Geriatric Unit Chief
Nurse, and Harry Chovnick,
M,P., AMHC Superintendent.
'l1le group toured the new
Qtriatric Center which is
under con•truction at the
Au- llfeniiJ Bllltb Center.
, . , wiD - t ICiln October
3, ill the Baird Roam of Rio

;:::"~~.

AREA
RUGS
aiovl

j[j[

:·

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

.
. ~-

~-loOUI',,

....

1

r~~~
COUPON

PICTURES NEEDED
Meigs High School seniors
are asked to make appointments immediately at
Grover Studio in Middleport
for senior class pictures. The
pictures will be taken Aug. 23
lhrough Aug . 26.

f~ LOOP AND SHAli

Youth Take Part

HOME AGAIN
Mrs . Laura Watson was
returned to her home at Racine
Tuesday from the Pleasant
Valley Hospital where she has
been confined since July 30.

MOTHER HONORED
Mr , and Mrs . Richard
Pickens entertained Sunday
with a dinner party in observance of the 83th birthday
anniversary of her mother,
Mrs. Eloda Webb, Middleport.
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served following the
dinner atrended by Mr. and
Mrs. Jan Hauck, Brent and
Brenda, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Evans, Jeff and Scott,
Columbus, and Mrs. Marie Van
Cooney, Middleport

it - Save A Bushel-

FLOOR

'f~W

FAMILY MOVING
Mr. and Mrs. Harold George
and sons of Gallipolis will move
this weekend into !heir home
on .Grant St., Middleport,
formerly occupi ed by the
Queen family.

::::::~:::::;~:~::~:~

TILE

. $ ...... $1oo

director and his staff.
Dr . Bernard F. Nlehm is
acting chairman of the Community Mental Health and
Mental -Retardation Board.

Yeauaer
Families Reunited
0'

and Mrs . Lester Yeauger,
Beth, Randy, Jimmy, . Janie
and Madeline, Columbus; Mrs.
• Ri
Mal'· Mr
d
Anna
ggs,
... ;
· an
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, and
Kevin, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, MinersvIll e; Mr. an d Mrs. Don
Yeauger, Gary and Pam,
Groveport; Mr. and. Mrs.EGene
Yeauger an d Palge, non ;
Mrs. Delma Hailey, Cheshire;
Mr. and Mrs. William Halley
PI .
and Miss y of Tuppers ams ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley,
Steven and Alpy, Cheshire ;
Mr. and Mrs. J~hn Carsey and
Ryan, The Plam~; Mrs. Betty
?oJcljltosh, Chesll,lrJ ; Mr. aDd
Mrs. Pearl 1'ellligi!r, Marllyh '
and Wayne, Tamara Crabtree ,

I

1

I

"SUPER·

!

RE'I1JRN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Logan,
Anniston, Ala ., have returned
home after visiting here with
Mr. Logan's fathef, Wilbur
Logan, and brother, Howard
Logan. Returning with them to ·
Anniston was the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Logan.

Pair

~

tsusr1e1
LADIES
SPftllfll AND SUMMER
A_

FOOTWEAR
Ladles' Spring ~nd Summer Fodfweer. Grouped
tor final clearance: Large ·
selection of styles and
colors.

Values

994

To '10.99

Grllldt CoUece.

•

1,.

�.I

'

8 ~ Tbe Dill'"~-

-

• - Tbe n.tJ,y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o•• Aug.ll, 1972

''l!el, MlddlepOrt·Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 9,1972

Picnic at Anthonys
.

· Mr. ami Mrs. Willis. Anthony
· were hosts Monday evening to
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
SOciety of the Middleport First
BapUst Church for a picnic at
their Cherry Ridge !ann.
The 32 members and guests
attending were seated at tables
outside. Mrs. John Werner
opened with prayer and Mrs.
Dana Hamm gave devotions
using a sermon by Peter
Marshall entitled "Medltationof
Jesus." Mrs. Fred · Hoffman ,
Mrs. Bert Bodlmer and Mrs.
Leora Sigman were appointed
to the budget committee. Plans
were made for the September
meeting which will be Sept. 5at
the church with the DQrcas
Circle to have devotions and

WHERE EC.ONOMY ORIGINATES
. Prites ~od Thru Sat., Aug. 12th"

,FUD~e. B~RS ,g,R

TwiMI
$100
on 4-lb. "Super-Right"
A&amp;P FRESH

.Juiee
64·01.69¢
Jug

California·Honeydews
Louisiana Yaii'!S
.
Red Ripe Watermelons
'·'.
Fresh Peaches
Fresh Carrots
I

I

I

I

I

I

I
,.., \,

'IJ

I

ggc

j "

10. $100

I.iJ '•3 llekt,

I

I

I

lb.19c

1

I

'""'

60

RIGHT''

12-az.

59

¢

pkg,

"""',I

•

CHUNK

Starkist Tuna • • • 6 ~.:·· 43¢
0
87c
Butter
• • • •
Breakfast Drink • • • '41.·•··$1 09
Cheese Spread • •
67~
Domino Sugar • • •
I

LAND

LAKE

t-tb.

I

•

pkr.

•

BORDEN

• btl.

DARI COUNTRY

FINE GRANULATED

6-lb.

•

boJ

SUNSHINE

Hydrox Cookies •
BuHermilk Biscuits
White Bread • • •
Sta-Puff •
•
Pineapple In Juice
I

o

U~-oL53C
bos

PILLSBURY

JANE PARKER

Orange, Grape, Fruit Punch

FABRIC SOFTENER

I

•

•

DEL MONTE

SHORTENING

~

f.&lt;RS fllBE~T \ ,T C•

Fluffo . . . . . • ·.:',·,

~

Margarine . . . .

~

,'.~:

¢

64·bl.
Jug

l'a

Supremo

Itand

A&amp;P
Minute Maid Froton

On.GM§e
..Juiee

6·01 •

can

Duncan Hines Layer

eo.e,·

MiJxea.

33
39¢

¢.

18-az.
pkg.

$ 39

~Kill

- - - " " " ' - : - , k g - .- -

e~ae
~
:.

Just Wonderful Or

~Ufll Net
Htw~~ S
a
¢

13-oz.

Can ·

All seven sons and the
daughter of the late Molt and
Ruby Yeauger were present
for the second annual reunion
held at Royal Oak Park Sunday. A basket dinner was held
at noon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Yeauger, Ft. White, Fla.;
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Yeauger,
Michael and John David,
Sheila Miller, South Point;
Mrs . Viola Yeauger, Columd Mr M ·
bus Mr
· an
s. arvm
;
Yeauger, Chris and Teresa of
Cheshire Mr and Mrs Ray
· Ray, Jr.,· An·
;
Smith, Tina,
thony, Laura , Gary and
Matthew of Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Barry Yeauger and Barry
Al
Ch hir Mr d Mr
an, es e;
· an
s.
Mike Parker and Suzy •
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Yeauger
and Edward from Malta ; Mr.

Ret,.."''l

Pkg.l
of

I

Dl ~nned
r IU

The Women's Retreat to be
held at Hidden Hollow, Oct. 1314 was announced when the
Women's Missionary Society of
the Laurel Cliff ~e Methodist
Church met recently in the
church basement.
Mrs .
Lloyd
Wright,
president, opened the meeting
with scripture from Second
Timothy, fourth chapter, and
prayer was given by Mrs .
James Gilmore. Mrs. Richard
Friend read "The Clever
TurUe. " It was voted to send a
contribution of money to Gary
Homes. Arrangements were
made to provide ice cream for
a church picnic and members
signed a round robin card for
Merle Diehl, hospitalized in
Spokane, Wash.
Prayer to close the meeting
was given by Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs. Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Harry E. Clark, Mrs.
Marugerite Leifheit, Mrs .
Laura Schafer, Mrs . Esta
Wise, Mrs. Bob Barton, Mrs.
Robert Buckley, Scottie
Barton, !4rs. Cannan Evans,
Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs, and Mrs .
Ernest Powell.

SPECIAL
7-oz.
Can

Tri-Co Clinic Opened

Social Calendar

the Electa Circle to handle
refreshments. At that meeting
WEDNESDAY
reports of ' the Women's ConPROGRAM COMMITTEE of
terence held at GranYille in
Jun ..
be presented. Women Chester PTA, 7:30 p.m .
of the Mount Moriah Baptist Wednesday at school.· Anyone
Church will be. invited guests. wishing named a room mother
Mrs. Charles Simons had the or on a special collllpittee,
love gift dedication bsing "The please contact an officer before
Mrs. Charle&amp;
Story of the Love Gift" as her meeting,
Goeglein,
president.
theme. She was assisted by
WHITE ROSE Lodge, annual
Mrs. Bodlmer, Mrs. Hoffman
picnic,
'Wednesday, Legion
and Mrs: Arland King, Mrs.
Park
shelter
house. Take
Elizabeth Searles gave a brief
report 'On the Women's Con- covered dish and own table
service, chlldren invited.
terence.
'
Attending . the picnic were
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
eight members from the Lions Club luncheon, . WedDQrcas Circle, eight ·from the nesday noon at Meigs Inn : All
EJecta Circle, six from the club members asked to be
Love Joy Circle, and 10 guests. present.
ANNUAL SUMMER picnic
of winding Trail Garden Club
tonight, 6:30 p.m. at camp of
Mrs. Charles Hayes. Members
John Gagloridi, Charleston, w. take supplies for workshop .
Va .
SWIMMING PARTY and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard picnic, 6 p.m. Wednesday,
Vaughan and Zandra, Mid- Middleport Park, All Job 's
dleport; Max Yeauger, Pen· , Daugh ters and families and
nlngton Gap, va. ; Lawrence ' DeMo 1ay members and
Yealiger, Cheshire; Mr . and families as guests.
Mrs. William Mayo, Colum·
THURSDAY
bus; Gina Walburn, Mr. and
PAST COUNCILORS Clhub,
Mrs. Virgil Dill, Pomeroy.
Theodorus Council, Daug ters
of America, cookout, 6:30p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs.
Reunion in Mason
Charles Cohen, Bulternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
The Boyd family reunion was
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
held recently at the home of F'-"' ""' d
8
t
""""' wurs ay' p.m. a
Mr. andW Mrs.
Jphn Bond, hall. Refreshments . All Master
'M
V
ason, . a.
Masons invited .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
HOUSEWARES par ty,
John C. Bond and children, Junior American Legion,
Cwnberland, Md.; Mr. and Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30
Mrs . Bob McDermitt and p.m. Public invited.
children, West Columbia, W.
LLING W RKERS Cl
WI
0
ass,
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Enterprise United Methodist
McKinney and children, Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Marshall King home of Mrs. Helen Milhoan.
and sons, Rutland; Mr. and
Mr Ard Smith B ffal W
FRIDAY
s.
en
' u 0• •
MARY SHRINE 37, White
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shrine of Jerusalem, family
Smith and children, Eleanor,
picnic, Twin City Shrjne Club
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.! J~es Park at Racine, 6:30 p.m.
Noffsinger • and
ami Y' Friday.
Eleanor, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. • .
Lester Cocbran, LaRue, Oliio;
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Crites, La
Rue; Mr . and Mrs. Isaac Bond,
Columbus; Bernard Bond,
Marion ; Mrs . Okey Wood,
Youth of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
d .
h S d
Mrs . David Wood and children, assiste w1th 1 e un ay
Norwalk; Mr. and Mrs. Ben evening service. Miss Vicki
Wood and children, Lincoln, Clark presided with Mrs. Cathy
Neb. and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Pullins at the piano .
Bond and children Marion.
Barbara Klein was the song
'
leader with selections by the
•
·
co'hgre·i gtion including
PICNIC ENJOYED
"Victory in Jesus" and "Joy
NEW ,HAVEN - The Haven Unspeakable." Prayer was by
Homemakers met Aug. 1at the Mrs. Clifford Jacobs. Mrs . Pat
New Haven Park for their Tracy gave the offertory
picnic . The September 5 prayer and the ushers were
meeting will be held at the Rlck and Terry Clark, Charles
home of Mrs . Lewis Johnson. Diehl, Robin Buckley. Mrs.
Attending the picnic were Mrs. P'ulllns played "All That
Sadie Warth, Mrs . Doris Thrills My Soul," and she was
Vickers and Matthew, Mrs. joined by Mrs. Harry E. Clark
David Zerkle and Debbie , to sing "One More Valley ."
Terrie, Brenda; Mrs. Russell Miss Klein's selection "I Was
Maynard and Samantha, Mrs. Born to Serve the Lord"
Roberta Maynard, Mrs. Lewis · concluded the youth program
Johnson, Mrs. Emory Hart, preceding the evening message
Mrs . Dennis Briles and Corenia by the Rev. Robert Buckley.
and· Paul, Mrs. Ira Capehart
and Mrs. James Wise.

will

SATURDAY
ANNUAL Herbert and He(en
Miller Family
Reunion
Saturday at Forest Acres Park
on New Lima Road with dinner
beginning at 5 p.m. All family
and friends invited.
SUNDAY
E IGHTH DISTRICT
American Legion picnic,
Sunday, Wilkesville; dinner at
3 p.m.
CARMEL CHURCH annual
homecoming Sunday. Sunday
School at 10 a.m., basket
dinner at noon, prog ram at
1:30. Rev. Borden, Gallipolis,
guest speaker, everyone
welcome.

Mrs. Maxine S. Plummer, . pointments fr oin Gallia and
Executive Director of the Tri- Meigs counties and patients
C:c,.nty Community Mental are being seen on emergency
Health and Mental Retardation basis priority. Appointments
Board, announced the opening are to be made for the clinic by
of a Mental Health Clinic in calling 446-4950 G;illipolis, or
Gallipolis.
write Comm unity Mental
Mrs . Plummer said at Health and Mental Retardation
present, the cline will be Board, 16 State St., Gallipolis.
conducted on a part-time basis
The Mental Health Clinic will
with a professional staff on be in full operation by the first
of the year localed in .Gallipolis
han d.
The staff includes a with satellite clinics in JS:ckson
psychiatrist, two mental health and Meigs CoWJties.
te chn olo gy students and a
Funding of the clinics will be
receptionist. Presently, the from the tax levy that passed
clinic is being held at the Grace last May in the counties with
United Methodist Ch urch, the stale matching the local
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
funds.
Mrs. Plummer stated that
Applicants are being inlhere is a waiting list for aP· terv iewed for th e clinic

$1J9

aN'~

CO UPON

891t
3

On A 4-lb. Super-Right Boneless

H~

C..U.eJ, HIUIII

Good Thru Sat. Aug. 12th AI All A&amp;P WEO Stores

l

iumbo
ralls

1 •

'r

2 14-oz.4 9¢

WITH
THIS
COUPON

btls,

Good Thru Sat. Aug. 12th At All A&amp;P WEO Stores
'n'iTfn'f'\
ro

Thru Sat. Aug. 12th At AU A&amp;P WEO Staros

.· ·
· · .~
·~ ·.

PLAN BAKE SALE
Job 's Daughters will hold a
bake sale beginning at 9 a.m.
Saturday on East Main St. in
front of the Elberfeld
Department Store.

Agencies in

:!:! GOOII

i!!!

•

Each·
.

!·'•

;t::::~.::::::::~:=:t-.:_M_Wj_.,_

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS TIL 9

D

0
··'...

,.

:·:·

AT STIFFLER'S IN DOWNTOWN POMEROY THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY

·:

.:·:

,•

- Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sGIRLS PRETTY NEW
BACK-TO-SCHOOL

- Save A Bushel60" Inch Polyester

Girls back to school dresses In
solid colors, plaid6 and prints.
Sizes 3 to 6X and 7 to 14.
·

~:~ -

:

PRICED FROM

$ 99

•'

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sMEN'S FANCY PERMANENT PRESS

SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SH1RTS

....

Men's famoua brand periii:W~
short al-e ipu't llblr1a In
fancies and stripes. Slles S.M-LXL.

100
Double Knit Fabrics in an
array of fas hi on co l ors.
Choos e
from
tw o- t one
ja cquard patterns or jacquard
an d crepe sti tch solids.

$288EACH

8
$2 ~RD

Each
:;·

..::·

Double-Knit
FABRIC
pel. Textured Polyester

DRESSES

..

.::

•'•.

•

;:;

- Save A BushelMEN 'S COTTON

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sBOY'S ASSORTED PERMANENT PRES~

- Save A BushelValues To 11.00

Blue Chambray

SHORT SLEEVE

SPORTS

·:·

ORK SHIRT , FABRICS

SPORT SHIRTS

Men's 100 percent cotton blue ·
Chambray work shirts in sizes : Great assortmenf of 4S
inch Sport Fabrics in
14'1.! to 17. Long wearing.
· popular
prints and

Boy's short sleeve permanent press
sport shirts in assorted plain and
fancy colors. Sizes 8 to 18.

colors. Sew your way
ba ck to school and save.

2 $ 00

49

FOR

44 ~""

Each
::

::

In Conference

"COMFY" BED PILLO

-Save A Bushel-

ATHENS - Representatives

SNEAKERS

$ 00

¢
Each

Pair
.:::

-Save, A BushelBEACON "SUSSEX"

-. Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sMEN'S·BOY'S·YOUTHS LACE-TO-TOE

CHILDREN'S SPORT

Big, plwnp non aUergenic : American made moulded
shredded foam filled bed : sport sneakers with ~~;~ [
pillows with pretty pr~ inner soles. Long wearing. Sizes
to 10•

of involved public agencies

·:·

- Save A Bushel81h' X 1172'

ROOM SIZE

RUGS
The Rug for every room in
your house . 90 pet . Viscose

Rayon and 10 J&gt;Ct. Nylon Pile
for d~rabllily . No pad needed.

I

'~TENNIS

$ 99

All
SIZES

Pair

-Save A BushelLADIES' MOULDED
SOLE SPORT

-S~ve

A Bushel At Stifflers-

-Save A Bushei-

OHAIIVK "TASTEMAKE~'

CHILDRENS
BffiER

WHITE MUSLIN

SHEETS.
Wtit oottlitt IIIUIIin lbeeia iliat

FOOTWEAR

...., tbru lnmdredl of wultlnca.
Mollnk "TIItemabr" Brlnd.
72ic 101, Twin ·
S}7~

Fitted, 81x99

. Close out !I(Oup of Boys' and
Girls'1 SuMmer · FootWear.

Stock up now for school.

Values to $3.99.

...

S}9~...
42X36

- Save ABushel:....
GIRL'S ITALIAN
SUMMER

SNEAKERS .SANDALS
.....,

: Ladin American made : a.ruce
ca nY8a ueaken with
cuslaonln-loleundmoulded
oullr lilies.

ii !
-_
Save

~

poll

•m....,. • ...,.lulillltlll
3. !Jan tllla Tbllllda:r,
Friday and ~-

$ 00

Pair

EACH

OXFORDS

Long warinc moulded ICIIe, ._to
toe style leru!l.l olfordll in black Cl'
white. American 11111de.

$ 59

Textured Vinyl Asbeslos 1ile

9~68

I

POMEROy, OHIO

KENTILE

box
(45 sq. ft)

$1 00

:::: assorted colors.

-Save A Bushel At Stiffler'sBIG SHREDDED FOAM FILLED

FACfORY WAXED

Uiteilt of lOop -

!!!! shag area accent 1'1181 In

Serving Aging

began discussions here last
Friday leading to future
cooperation
and planning in
REUNION AUG. 13
TUPPERS PLA.INS - The connection with the problems
37th Parker Family Reunion of aging in Southeastern Ohio.
By arranging channels of
will be held Sunday, Aug. 13 at
the elementary school here. A communication and identifying
basket dinner will begin at services and resources, the
noon . All relatives and their group began to assign
responsibilities of the separate
friend6 are welcome.
agencies in meeting the
problems of the elderly persons.
Meeting at the Athens
Mental Health Center were
Mrs. Dee (George) Kennedy,
Administrator of AMHC
Geriatric Unit; Mrs. Helen
(Clark) Daily, Executive
Director of Athens • Vinton Hocking Counties 648 Com·
miUiity Mental Health Board;
Mrs . Maxine ( Einon) Plum·
mer, Executive Director of
Jackson • Gallla • Meigs 848
Board; David Thompkins,
Executive
Director
of
Musklngwn • Coshocton - Guernaey • Nobl~ • Perry •
Morgan 648 Board ; Jerry
Ramsey, Director of·Areawide
Model Project on Aging, Rio
Grande College; James Myers,
Ohio Diviaion of Mental Health
Region XI Director; Mrs.
Esther (William) Kuhre,
AMaC Geriatric Unit Chief
Nurse, and Harry Chovnick,
M,P., AMHC Superintendent.
'l1le group toured the new
Qtriatric Center which is
under con•truction at the
Au- llfeniiJ Bllltb Center.
, . , wiD - t ICiln October
3, ill the Baird Roam of Rio

;:::"~~.

AREA
RUGS
aiovl

j[j[

:·

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

.
. ~-

~-loOUI',,

....

1

r~~~
COUPON

PICTURES NEEDED
Meigs High School seniors
are asked to make appointments immediately at
Grover Studio in Middleport
for senior class pictures. The
pictures will be taken Aug. 23
lhrough Aug . 26.

f~ LOOP AND SHAli

Youth Take Part

HOME AGAIN
Mrs . Laura Watson was
returned to her home at Racine
Tuesday from the Pleasant
Valley Hospital where she has
been confined since July 30.

MOTHER HONORED
Mr , and Mrs . Richard
Pickens entertained Sunday
with a dinner party in observance of the 83th birthday
anniversary of her mother,
Mrs. Eloda Webb, Middleport.
Homemade ice cream and
cake were served following the
dinner atrended by Mr. and
Mrs. Jan Hauck, Brent and
Brenda, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Evans, Jeff and Scott,
Columbus, and Mrs. Marie Van
Cooney, Middleport

it - Save A Bushel-

FLOOR

'f~W

FAMILY MOVING
Mr. and Mrs. Harold George
and sons of Gallipolis will move
this weekend into !heir home
on .Grant St., Middleport,
formerly occupi ed by the
Queen family.

::::::~:::::;~:~::~:~

TILE

. $ ...... $1oo

director and his staff.
Dr . Bernard F. Nlehm is
acting chairman of the Community Mental Health and
Mental -Retardation Board.

Yeauaer
Families Reunited
0'

and Mrs . Lester Yeauger,
Beth, Randy, Jimmy, . Janie
and Madeline, Columbus; Mrs.
• Ri
Mal'· Mr
d
Anna
ggs,
... ;
· an
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, and
Kevin, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Yeauger, MinersvIll e; Mr. an d Mrs. Don
Yeauger, Gary and Pam,
Groveport; Mr. and. Mrs.EGene
Yeauger an d Palge, non ;
Mrs. Delma Hailey, Cheshire;
Mr. and Mrs. William Halley
PI .
and Miss y of Tuppers ams ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley,
Steven and Alpy, Cheshire ;
Mr. and Mrs. J~hn Carsey and
Ryan, The Plam~; Mrs. Betty
?oJcljltosh, Chesll,lrJ ; Mr. aDd
Mrs. Pearl 1'ellligi!r, Marllyh '
and Wayne, Tamara Crabtree ,

I

1

I

"SUPER·

!

RE'I1JRN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Logan,
Anniston, Ala ., have returned
home after visiting here with
Mr. Logan's fathef, Wilbur
Logan, and brother, Howard
Logan. Returning with them to ·
Anniston was the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Logan.

Pair

~

tsusr1e1
LADIES
SPftllfll AND SUMMER
A_

FOOTWEAR
Ladles' Spring ~nd Summer Fodfweer. Grouped
tor final clearance: Large ·
selection of styles and
colors.

Values

994

To '10.99

Grllldt CoUece.

•

1,.

�( 171 ( ,: I

..

f I ,. ( ( ,

~

,.

r /r r r' r:' ( 'I' ' r ( ' r r I r r ( ,. I

I

•

': ...:~

-·
..,
.......

.. ' ...
":...

:.'

.'
,;
''

'

'
'.
' .

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

Z SICIIS
Of
IIUAUTY

&lt;

LOVE HER, LOVE HER SEGJ'?
Dear Helen : '
I've been excommunicated from a religious sect in which my
prospective bride has become engrossedly Involved. She decided
to dedicate her life to this senice. I had doubts about some ofthe
. motives and aims and I showed my indecision, so they
"banished" me.
I still want to marry my girl but I guess they have more of a
hold over her than I do.
How do I proceed ' - SO-CALLED JJNDESffiABLE PERSON

SALE I
Buy 2 Pairs and
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All kinds, all sizes for men.
women , young men, b~ys
and girls. Hurry to ...

guMds, power brak es , radio.

$2895

Local 1 owner with less than 11,000 miles, factqry air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua bOdy, blk . knit inter ior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power steer ing, &amp; disc brak es, white-wall
tires, l ike new. A ni ce luxury car.

1970 DODGE

,

rot.'

.

'

Polara , factory air conditioning, v.a engine, au tom atic
transmi ssion, power steering, power brakes, good white
side-walls, many more e)(fras. White fin ish, black viny l

;Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

POMEROY
,
lit
Jack W~ Carsey, Mgr .~
.... ... · Phone992 -2181
.

$2195

roof . Priced to move!

Business Services

Price 8ma~h!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

. 1971 CHEVROLET
$3295
M!'libu ho1rdlop coupe, low milc~qt· . new car I i tie, ~.. 1n
datwood finis h, w ith brown vinyl roof. vin~l s.ad dle in
tcrior , ot season r1i r condit ioning , turbohydramalic. power
steering. while-wa ll tires. rall y wheels, front &amp; rear

1970 MONTE CARLO

MOP IS WORE TO
A FRA21.LE··•
CAN I GIT
ME A NEW
ONE?

For Sale

WALN UT Ster eo-com bination,
4 speaker . sound system , 4
volume
con tro
speed
dualS68.J2
Ba la nce
. Use
ourl.

:1

budget term s. Cal l 992-7085.

Stereo~::&lt;

-

•ROOFING
'
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•
eSPOU'!ING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

EARn! MOVING

'

.

Dozer &amp; End loader work·,
ponds. base.ment, land· ·
scaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 'Z size loaders. Work
done .by hour or contract.,.
Fret · Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump
lr~cks and low.boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jtffers,
Porn eroy. Phone 9J2 . 3525
,a iter 7 p.m. or phone . 992:
5232.

..-

~

~PERT
Wh~ AIJfl!rflent·

$5.55

- -- - --

:;+:

...

•

'

r.

.

0(, fi'\OID?

.

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,'
vinyl •nd ~teel st.dl~.g (
fiberglas, brick and stone;
complete line of r'ffiaiilllal
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling.
building.
suspended cel!tngs, Interior
and exterior painting;
complete lineo of Masonry
work . Ali work guaranteed lo
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992·

tfl '

-

CLATI'ER
~IS~iiiS

.,

8efN MV KIN~
OF D/I.V J

..

' , 1,

..' '

OUI!. PRES!f&gt;ENTIAI.
SEARCII BOAR.b ~EC I DEC&gt;
NOT TO RECOMMENC&gt; T~E

DEAN FOR. THE CO!.LEGE
.
PRESIDENCY

..' .

HAD

WHEN HE
10
DIR£Cf RI.ISH HOLI~

POO~ PEW+-IURST.
HE'S FKCD HEAVII...'i
AI?MED KILLER$ ".

AND, I GOT TO TELL I-IlM,
• ~ON'T CALL US, WE\ .L
CALL VOU~"

-mAFFIC.

'

..

HE\; DISARMED
60MS!&gt;AND
5A'I6D CHILDREN

6tlf HE
CR\'oCKE.D lHE
FIR51"11ME

FROM~IN::&gt;

OUT...

Fl~ ...

.

Tt!ATI&gt;
ADO't-6-

.&gt;

U'LABNER
IT BROKE ITS
BLACKMAIL IN'
LI'L NECKl'.'

Hom·.

._

I

l Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

PAPER hanging ; Inter ior and
: ' EARLY American
exterior pa inting ; Arthur
Dear Person :
OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
•
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, 4 · Musser, phone 742·5223.
3918.
'·
I read between the lines that you consider your girl a
fPMEROY,
OHIO
s peaker soun d sys tem .
ALLSIDE BUILD~RS &amp;
7·18·30tp
'. "
Balan
ce
$73
.56.
Use
our
"willing"
prisoner
and
your
real
question
is
"How
can
I
get
her
,.
budget terms . Call 992.7085 . SE.PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
out of this mess?" You could have a point: a sect which
WAN'r ADS
....... r ;'.
8·4·6tc
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
Notice
INFORMATION
"banishes'' anyone who questions it may have something to hide.
662-3035.
i .. &amp;J
• DEADLINES
Why not .discuss the situation with a clergyman you trust ? fi P.M. Day Berore Publ ;catiort S PECIAL for Augu st - CLOSE out"" 1971 full size zig·
2·12-Hc'
On Most 1\meri~~n Cau,
,:.a,_
,', t ..~-zag sewing machine. For
Monday Oeaqtine 9 a .m .
·
Stanley's Cus tom Body Shop,
Perhaps the combined efforts of several knowledgeable persons
~~---,.----=-::
GUAAANTE
Eo-:
sewing stretch fabrics,
Cancellation - Corrections
rear quarter panels ap
us FOR : Awnings, sliirm
Phone 992-2094.
can persuade your fiancee that all "religious" groups aren't
buttonholes. fancy designs, SEE
Will be accepted until 9 a .m. for. proxi mately 40pc t. off ; phone
doors Mid windows, carPorts •.
etc. P;~int slightly blemished.
Day of Pllblication
949-2789.
truly Christian. - H.
marquees , alum inum siding
Pome""'
.,.&amp; A·u· to
REGULATIONS
'
Choice of carrying case or
and railing . A Jacob, sales.
, ... .'-::'1
• ~ ·
+++
. Tho Publ istler reserves the
8·6·6tc
sewing stand . S-49.80 cash or
,• .
representatl11e . For free:
o • Tll5
ngh t to ect it or reject any ad s
,
Dear Helen :
lr..:..
terms available. Phon e 992· ·esti
mates,
phone
Charles~.
pen •
dee'!'ed ob iectionat . The' ETH~N S law_n mower &amp; sma ll
Mondar lhru Saturday
l .IS 1e, syracuse , V. V.j
I used to go to "X-rated" movies about once a month, weU, PUbliSher will not be respons ible eng me repa1r ; phone 949·2789. 5641.
··~
8+6tc
m.o~. than one . incorrect
8-6·6fc
L...:6_06_E
_._M_a_i_n,.;.._P_•_ma.;,·,_r•.:;Y.;..'..:,..;..J5,
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
maybe oftener. Whenever my wife had an evening ineeting, I ~~r
msertron
From the largest
·~
3-2·Ho1
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delu xe
went down to the adult theater. Told her it wris better than a
t'-YARD Sale, Thursday. Friday
, --:::-:-:::----,.,.---~ • SEWING MACHINES. Repair; Bulldozer Rad ia,jor to !he
·For Wa~f~~SService
ii'tf
1
model. Complete with all ;:
topless bar.
Smallest Heater Core.
5
cen
ts
per
word
one
In
sertion
and
Satu
rda
y
on
Lct
rk
in
CONCRETE • service, all makes. 992 ·228~ .
•
c leaning attachmen ts and READY. MIX
I ·· • "
Nathan Biggs
Minimum
Cha
rge
7Sc
~
Street,
Rutland
.
delivered right to ~ur i The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
The other night I found my wife in the audience. I'd thought
uses paper bags. Slightly used
12 cents per .word three
8·9·3tc
R1di1tor
Specialist
proiect.
Fast
and
easy.
Free.
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
but clean s and looks like new.
she was at a bingo party .
- - - - -- - -consecutive insertion's.
estimates
.
Phone
992
·3284.'
'
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.·
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
- ~-~
18 ce nts per · word sl&gt;&lt; con -1 YARD Sale at Kenneth Ebl in
When I confronted her, she said we had equal rights and,
G~eglein Rea.dy -Mix Co.,; 1
3·29-tfc
terms available. Phone 992·
secufive insert ion s .~
residence on Harr isonville
Mtddleport,
Ohto.
·
,
·from now on, we'd go where we pleased, and maybe I'd learn
5641.
,. ·'
25 Per Cent piscount on paid
Rd . August 11 and 12 9 an,
1' I "
ads
and
ads
pa
rd
within
10
days·
6·30-tfc
INTERIOR,
exlerior
pain
ting ,
•
'
·
·
something after a while.
8·4-61c
10 3 p.m.
CARD OF THANKS
'
Ph . 992·2174
Pomeroy
:::D:::O:::Z:::
E-:~'"'·,...an d- ,_b-a-c"',_h- oe-wor' k,
rem ode Iin g, bu ild ing ; contact
''"'
&amp; OBITUARY
8.9-Jic
I don 't like the idea of my wife going to X-movies without me,
K
Ernest
Deeter,
Bashan
.
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy·.
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
8·f&gt;.6tc
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum · - - -- -- - - or even with me. What did she mean by that remark? Pa rkll iew Kennels, Phone 992·
,
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
Each
addjl
lonal
word
2c
.
·
lost
O-bELL WHEEL'alignmenl
..
5443.
Dick Karr, Jr .
BOTHERED HUSBAND
.
BLIND ADS
-'
,.
tocaled at Cro$sroads. Rt . 124.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
AUTOMOBILE insurance..
Complete
front end serv ice,
_
__
_
_
_
.,...:._
8
·_
1
5.Hc
i
-:
--,-=.
5·.:,:
21
·tfc
Advertisemenl.
LOST - Ge•man Shepherd dog. cancelled?
Lost
your
tune
up
and
brake service . .
. .
OFFICE HOU'R~. ,
Dear Husband :
black and si lver in vicin ity of
operator 's license? Call 99:z,.
Wheels
balan
ced elec. 8 .30 a.m. to 5:00pm Da lly
2966• •
Ches ter ; answers to name of Real Estate For Sale
Perhaps your wife meant, "This'll teach you! !"
tronically .
All
work
8 : 30 a .m·. to 12 :"oo ' Noo~
Real
Estate
For
Sale
'' '
General
;
call
collect
985-3954.
Sa turday ,
6·15·Hc
guaranteed
.
Rfl!,llc,nn,~~hl•
Why don 't you two compromise and start attending R-rated
_ _ _ __ __ _8_:·8-3tp
rates . Phone 742·3232 or
films together? - H.
BACKtiOE AND DOZER wor k
992·3213 .
l·ll·nc
..
Septic tan ks installed. Georae
+++
Card
~Jf
Thanks
Help
Wanted
...
LBHI I Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
Pear Helen:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
.. '
WE WISH to extend our sincere WANTED experienced head
·
··
4-25-Hc RE.(SONABLE raie•. Ph. 444'
thanks
to
Drs.
Telle.
Boonsue
bake
r;
reply
Box
374,
Alhens
.
Our daughter resented our rules so she ran away from home
110 Mechanic Street
••
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell .
and Pickens; the very kind
8·9-3tc
and stayed two weeks at a girl friend's house. She was amazed
Owner
&amp; Operator.
and
efficient
nurses,
blood
--Estate
... when we wouldn't finance her stay, and she finally returned donors and all who assisted in
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
5·12·11•
AP PLICATION S ·now be ing
the
care
of
our
son
and
''
when her father said he wouldn't send her back to private school
taken for kitchen help , cooks,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
brother. A spec ial than ks to
NEW LISTING
this fall if she stayed away.
waitres ses and car hops ,
Complete Service
the Rev. lloyd Grimm and
~YRACUSE - 3 bed room s, balh, gas forced air furna ce.
apply in person at Craw' s
Phooe 94'1·3821
She is not doing well in school. There have been brushes with
Rev . George Casto for the ir
... rty water . Front and ba ck porches. Wonde rful loca tion
Steak House.
Ract n.,, Ohio
REALTY
consoling words ; also our
on 124. As king $6500.00 .
drugs and other problems.
8-8-6tc
601 E. Moin
Critt Bradford
many friends and neighbors
Pomeroy, Ohio
The biggest problem that faces me now is that she started
5·1-Hc
for their prayers, flora l of·
NEAR POMEROY
fo live wi th elderly
.~----ferings and food . God Bless WOMAN
going steady while she 11&lt;as at her friend's house (where there is
ONE FLOOR PLAN - 3 bedrooms. bath. shower in rec .
lady, light housework, no
each of you.
.,.
room . Nice kitc hen with cook and bake units . Oinng area .
practically no supervision ). Now she Insists that I sign for her so
laundry.
Phone
992·5397
o•
IS MINUTES
Th e lam ily of Kenneth
Air conditioned. Nice carport and barbecue pit . All tor
'
991·3507
FROM
POMEROY
that
she
can
get
The
Pill
from
a
doctor
at
the
Community
Center.
Vining
onl y 517.500.00.
+
3.05 acre estate. I story. 3
8-8-6t c
She isn't quite 16, so a parent's okay is required. But she says, -~------=B--·9 · 1tp
bedrooms with closets, bath,
NOTICE OF
OUT
util ity room, kitchen ha s ni ce
"Don't tell Dad, he wouldn't understand!"
APPOINTMENT
SMALL - 1 bedtooms , 2 wells on country road. Stove and
cabinets and d is hwasher,
Can No . 20741
I know it's better for a determined girl to be safe than Notice
SENTINEl
refngerator . Good for a weekend outing. Ohio Power.
Estate of HA TTIE F. SMITH ,
own water supply or Chester
Only
!4.000.00.
Oeceas&amp;d.
pregnant, but it's true, her father wouldn't understand. He's less
water, large garage and
NOII.ce Is t)trtbv given tn1t
CARRIERS
WANTED
RUTLAND
'l
'
storage
workshop
,
fruit
~ess inclined to pay for her private.. achool when he gets
Adatent
Flechtnll!rof ltll N . w.
2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City water. Nice bath .
bu ilding, fruit trees, berrles.
Btv~
.
.
COIUJT!bUS
, Ohio, tlas
·~- .... -nothing but insubordination. Should I keep this secret or share it
Garage and utility bu ild ing . Lot about 65x150.
grapes, and other. 4 years
IN
been duly appointed Executrix
;;:·.
with
him?MRS.
J
.
W.
.
,.
old . GREATEST BUY OF
of the Estate of Hatt ie F . Sm lth ,
WHISPERING PINES
DON ' T BE MI SLED BY THE OUTSIDE . OR THE
THE YEAR . S18,900.QO.
deceased . rate of Meigs County ,
MIDDLEPORT
Oh iO.
PRICE , LET US SHOW YOU THE IN SIDE . THAT'S
1
STORY
FRAME
Dear Mrs. W.:
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS.
Creditors are r~qui r ed to tile
In good co ndit io n. 2
NITE CLUB
the ir cla ims with said fiduciary
Phone Faye Manley
bedrooms, bath , modern
This latest problem isn't the "biggest." It's just another of
within four months .
HElEN l. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
k itchen , gas furnace ,
992 ·SS92
992·3325
the many indications that the three of you need family therapy.
Dated this '19th day of July
basement, Me igs Schoo l 1972.
In
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
By all means, discuss your daughter 's latest decision with
Dist. $7,000 . 00.
John C. Bacon
Pomeroy
From 10 ' til2
NEED STORAGE?
her father , but make it plain that threats and crackdowns (OR
Judge
Pomeroy, large building
Court of Common Pleas
For Sale
Phone 992-2156
8 ROOM house , balh . large lot,
Mama
's
protection!
)
~ren
'I
going
to
work
any
better
here
than
Flrobate Division
with 2 floors, se¥eral lots, In
!·
Music by- Gene NuHer &amp;
gas and electric, Rt. 1.
181 1. 9, 16, 31
COAL, Limestone , Ex celsior
they've worked in the past. Somehow you must get to the real
good
locat
ion.
present
in
Th~ MiJt:ers, 4 piece band.
Middleport, phone 992·2602.
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
,.'·
reasons for resenbnent (his as well as hers) . A professional
From Parkersburg, W. Va .
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:8:.::
·6-61p come. $8,200.00.
TOYS! Toys ! Toys! Sell
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891.
MIDDLEPORT
NOTICE OF
counselor iS your best hope. - H.
Pl ayhouse toys, Aug. to Dec.
4·11-tfc
3rd
St.
2 story brick, has 2
APPOINTMENT
-·
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . lake
Free
train
ing.
Good
com
.
e---apartments,
ba sement,
PI ANO &amp; Organ lessons by
Cue No. 2073'
Conc has , New .Mexico. $2,975.
.'
mission, No cash inves tment. AKC registered Wiem a raner
small
apartment
In the rear ,
Esta te of GR:ACE VAUGHN ,
qualifi ed graduate of CinNo Down . No Interes t. $25 mo.
No
delivery
.
No
collecting
.
S
pups
;
J
.
E.
Pape,
Box
265
,
Deceased.
ALLIN GOOD CONDITION.
cinnati Con servatory of
WIN AT BRIDGE
for 119 mos . Vacation
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Cal l
Syra cuse . Ohio 45779 ; phone
No tice is hereby given that
REDUCED TO SELL.
Music. Phone 992·3825.
Pa rad ise. Free Brochure .
Margare t Fortune 949 ·5414 or IX12 -3-420.
Nan cy Collins 01 Pomero y,
OWNER
LIVES
OUT
OF
8-3· 111c
Ranchos Lak e Conchas : Box
has been duly appo"inted
Barbara Lambert 446-3411.
7·28·12tc
TOW N. !PLEASE CALL I Ohio.
Admin
istratr ix Of the Estate of
200
100.
Alameda
,
Cal
iforn
ia
··.•
1· 26· 30fc
REWARD . fo, shopping at
WANT TO SELL? LIST
Grace vaughn , deceased , late
94501 .
1
970
HONDA
450,
phone
992Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
Of Meigs Coun ty , Otl lo.
WITH US. NO SALE, NO
_ __ _ _ _ _..:,8·_6·30tp
Ches ter , Ohio : 10 per cent of FUlL TIME ba• lender; apply 5951 '
Credito rs are requ ired to file
CHA RGE .
had been looking at ail the
in per son at the Meig s Inn .
1\'0KTII (D J
the
ir cla ims with sa id fi duciary
8·6·61p
your
total
purchase
may
be
ca 1·ds she would have let the
SMALL business doing big, big - HENRYE . CLELAND Sr.
wittlln four months .
. KJ964
8-6·11C
applied
to
the
purchase
of
any
jack ride.
bu si ness in the County Seat of
ZIG·ZAG Sewing mach ine ; th is
Dated th is 29th day o f July
---·-·---• 84
REAL TOR
ceramic items.
19 72 .
Meigs County. Business and
machine
is
dre
ss
maker
• Q4
Wheol West showed out , the
8·2·30tp Wanted To Buy
992-2259
books can be seen only by
John c . Bacon
model : this mach ine makes
4 AK ·! 05
If
no
answer
992·2568
gr and slam contract became
appointment.
Ca
n
be
partly
Judge
darns
,
em
.
buttonholes,
WEST
(2! 2, '· 16, 3t
EAST
WANTED good used waft .rype
a
rather poor one , but. Nancy
fina nced . Wr ite or ca ll Elme r
bro•derles
,
take
O\ler
• IO J
• Q87 2
gas furnace ; also new or used
F. Jones &amp; Associates , CONVENIENT but sec lud ed
st ill had a chance. She led
pa yments of $5.10 or pay $6 a
• J2
¥
97fi
build ing material any kind ;
Realtors , 227 Columbus Road,
b•ilding lots al Rock Spr ings,
month ; call 992·5331 .
'•
a
club
and
finessed
dnm
·
t KJ108:l2
phone 992 7494 .
NOTICE OF
• 96~
Alhens,
Ohio
;
ph
one
614·593close
to Hig h School &amp; Fair
8·9·6tc
my' s 10. This represe nted
': 4o QJ3
APPOINTMENT
. 7 1)2
8·9·61c
3292
.
';
Ground
;
cal
l
or
see
Bill
Witte,
I
only a 25 per ce nt chance.
No . 2072l
'
-----SOU Til
992·2789 after 5 p.m. week - Estate of Samuel C.ne
DE LU XE 8 track slereo in
8+6tc
Q . Barnhart,
hut a ny chance i.s bett er th an
day
s.
• A5
Wainur console. will se ll lor _R_A_C_I_N_E_ _1_o_ roo
_ m_ h-ouS&lt;!;•
8·6·301c Deceased .
OLD Furniture, oa k tables ,
none. a nd the 25 per cent
¥ AKQ!05 3
Not ice is hertby ginn that
or
gan
s,
di
shes.
clocks,
brass
balance
due
of
$88.21
or
pay
balh
b
----.:..:..
cha nce materialized for her .
Helen
E . Barnhart, Of R ot.~ te 1
t A7
$6.1
0
a
month
;
ca
ll
.
1.
'
asement,
garage.
two
••
992
533
.beds, or complete households.
Racine
. Oh io, has been du lY
tot•
Phone
949
4313
5
ROOM
house
and
balh,
",500
,·
•
98
4
8·9·61 c
,,
·
·
~
"
Wri le M. D. Miller, Rl . 4,
(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPIIISE ASSN .l
appo inted Executrl)( of the
Wrndow
4·5·tfp
phone
992·5786
.
'
Noue vulne rab l'=
Pomeroy. Ohio . Ca ll 992-6271.
Es tate Of Samuel Q . Ba rnha rt,
_,__
Air Conditioners
8·6·6tc deceastd, la te of Meigs County
Wesl Nur lh t:asl Soulh
6·28-tfc CANNI.NG PEACHES - A load
Oh io.
'
in l ong Bottom phone'
arrivi ng Wednesday. Be sure HOUSE
I•
Pass 3 ¥
Hot Water Heaters
985·3529.
•
75
ACRE
Farm
at
Harr
ison.
C_recm~rs
ar~
rtqu
lred
to
file
to bring your con tain ers. Ph .
Pass
3A
Pass 4 ¥
vi ll e, Oh io ; house , ou t. tl'letr cla rm!i w1fh sa id fiduciary
For Rent
Plumbing
992.2582 o• 992·2565. Midway
6·11 ·1fc
Tht! bidd ing has bt:e n .
Pass
5•
Pass 5 t
bu il din~s, qood farm land : within four mont hs.
Mar~et
.
Eieclrrcal Work
Pass
5¥
Pass 5 •
West
Nurth
East
3 BEDROOM furnished home.
Suu1b
Dated th is 28th day of Ju ly
mob ile
priced to sell . Phone 992 · 66~1. 1972
.
6 ,_
Pass 7 ¥
Pass
full basemen t, 7 mil es No•th _ _ _ __ __ __:8_:
·8·3fc AIR -CONDITIONED
I¥
Dble
P.HS!i
2¥
61
home
and
lot
;
53.500
;
phone
6-6·
C
Pass
Pass
Pa.!:ls
of Salem Center . I mi. off U.S.
Joh n C. Ba con
Pass
3•
P&lt;tss
:l.
992·5786.
F::O
-:
R-S:-A,-L_E_ b_y _o_w_n_e -r .-Y
- e- liow
.,
143, phone 698 -5457 ; must
Judge
Pass
3•
P&lt;iSS
Opening lead- ¥ J
Court of Com mon Pleas
have
references.
..
.le
Homes
for
Sale
________
8
__:
·6-6tc
frame
house,
six
rooms
and
Mobl
You , S out h, hold :
Proba te Division
'
8·9·61 c
_
bath . Large lot. Located In (81 2' 9. 16, Jt
·~143
¥
2
+
AK943
&lt;lo7fi
l
lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
RACINE - 6 room house. bath ' Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
1
1971 , 60 X 12. MOBILE home in
uti lity room . garag e, Slo,ooo ; house on left going north
What do yo u do now '.'
99/ 2~~8
Up to now United St ates
,
3 BE DROO M home , Mid
Tuppers
Plains,
on
100'
x
200'
;.hone
949-4195.
inside corporation line.
A-Bid just four ~pades. \' ou
dleporl ; phone 991·338 r or 992: lot : ready lo move into; see - -- ----.,-.....::3..:..·
w o r I d bridge c hampiOns hup
Pomeroy,
0
.
31
·tfc
7·27-H'
t' ) IIlii' p 11 rIner will bid
7440.
Dorsel Mill er at tra iler' in
have been largely restric led ag~:~in, but yuu don't want tu in Mbaugh Additi on.
to New York , Texas , Penn· \l ite a sl•m un your nwn.
GRA NO OPENING - Sew &amp; Go --=---- - -- - 8-·8·1fc
8-9·6fp
; sylva nia . Californ ia , lllmois
Shop in Alfred .,e~ ; bonded 3 ROOM house and balh, lur. - -- - -- --...:...
TODA l' 'S QUESTION
~ and Michigan.
acrylics. sweater knits and
nished : phone 991·5592.
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
You do bid tom spad ~ il l.d
With this yea r 's victory in yo ur pal'tner bids fi vt! hean, _ poly ester , $1.99 and up ;
8·8·tf c or used mobile heme, tr y
owner , Mrs. E. T. Cal away . - - -- -- - -Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
the mixed · by the tea m of Wha t do .vou do nu w~
8·8·31c 3 .&lt;\NO 4 R()(.JM furnished an'd Kanauga, Ohio.
Ans\'-·er tomorrow
James Jacoby , !lobby Gold ·
unf urnished. apartments .
1·16·JOIC
' man. Bobby and Ee lsy Wolff.
WHY not try cosmetics that are
i&gt;hone
992·5434.
•,
.
Nancy Alpaugh and Heidi
trul y
dlfferenl
and
4· !2. tfc l CAStj paid for all ma~es ana:
Nola nd , tw o ladies from Send l I lo, JACOBY MODERN book·
refreshing? The famous mink
----~-~-models of mobile homes .
to
;
"Win
at
Bridgt,"
(c
/
o
this
news.
~ : : Loui siana have j oined Ot\1'
oil base and now w&amp; have the
Phq&gt; e area code 614-~23-953 1. '
poPfr ), P.O. Bo:r 419, Radio City
lemon grove. Jusl th ink. 14 For Sale
+13-ttc;
Station , New Yotl , N.Y. 10019.
': , world cham pion group.
specials this month , some for
Auto Sales
Nancy
Alpaugh
's
three.
' '
men as well as women . It's CA NNIN G tomatoes , sweet
'
1966 4 DR . SEDAN, Galaxle soo.
; · i1ea rt bid was typical of her
corn ,
cucu mbers
"and
KOSCOT of course . Phone
v.a. 289 cu. in., cruisamati c
992·5113.
:: aggress ive bidd ing style .
mangoes ; Gera ld ine Cleland,
-.Air Conditioners
Big Copo&lt;lty
power steering, AM radio 2
Racine
,
0
.
Her· rebid to just four hearts
,.
1·9·Hc
•Awnings
speed
windshield
wiper
a'nd
Mavt•g
l-28·tfC
;. · was suffi cie nt in view of her
Autam1tics
~asher , 7 .x 75 white side wall
·Underpinning
• previo us action .
2 speed operation .
ltres, seal bells front and
Lafe Cogar , Edith Cogar to TOMATOES ,
potatoes ,
Cho ice of water
'••
rear
,
clean
interior,
perfect
Bob by Goldman is aggres·
AlvaJ. Coates, Mary J . Coates ,
cucu mbers and
beans , 'c omplete mobile hame'
temps .
Auto .
running motor. good paint
, · , sive too and could be deservice -.. plus gigant ic
Cl~rence Proffi l, Portland.
Parcels, Chester.
water
le v el beige
with
white
roof,
no
hole~
,. pended on to lake further ac·
Ollto ; phone 8 43· 225~ .
'display of mobile homes
control .
lint
in body , new battery, 1 owner,
Hallie Cross to Ralph Swan,
lion with any excuse. He
Fllttr
or
Power
always a vailable at ... '
1·19-tfc
pri ced to sell ; Phone Paula L.
Lucretia H. Werry to Guy E. Jr., I Acre, Salem.
FIn Ag ltator.
•. , went to live club s. From
Sa.yre. Portland, 8.43·22116, 1
Ptrmi -Preu
Guinther,
Lyndia
L.
Guinther,
MILLE.
R
Wilma
M.
Stobart
to
Herbert
CHINA cabinet. credenza, dish·
; ~ then on the bidding pro·
mr . below Ravenswood
Moytog
Parcel,
Olive.
,
washer
.
coffee
table.
fire
landing on Ohio Route 338.
V. Dixon, Mary Agnes Dixon,
,.'.' ceeded in a series of l'tk
Halo
of Hut
screen , lawn chair, bedroom . MOBILE HOMES .
bids unliJ Nan' c y fin ally
Otis K. Casto, Tilitha Casto '\1, Acre, Salisbury.
Drv•rs
- -- -- - -=8
·8·3fc
suite, desk and chair , mat1220 Wuhington Blvd.
Surround' clOthes
':'• jumped to seven hearts.
to Laura J . Fields, Gay Fields,
Denver Kapple, Marjorie
tress and springs,· dr~sser ; 423.7521
With Gentle, even
BELPRE, O.
1965
MUSTANG
,
V-8,
4
speOd
,
o il 992·3381 or 992·7440.
Kapple to Elladene M. Watson,
:~
Nancy drew !rumps with .20 Acre, Olive.
heat . No hot spots,
1965 Comet, V.8, automatic;
8·8·tfc
no ovtrdry ing .
" " three Jeads a nd went after
Green Hill Homes Inc. to 100 Acre Lot, Sutton.
both
1n
real
good
condition
;
::--------.:
Fine Mnh Lint
phone 992·6196.
" ' spades. She cashed the king Harry W. Pickens , Jr., Janel
Ross W. Cleland, Erma 0 . TWO horse tandem trailer , A
Filter.
uto
Sales
&amp;
·9-Jtc
and ace and continued with K. Pickens, Lot, Syracuse .
electr ic brakes and lights,
Cleland to Ross W. Cleland,
Wt Sptclallzoln
;l~ dummy 's jack . E;as t ducked
good condition ; also double 1970 PATROL Plymouth, 4 dr .. ~,9=7.=-=.D-:-U:::ST::-E::-R::-.,--cy-ll-nd_e_r~
. new
MAYTAG
0
Raymond Krider, Freda Erma 0. Cleland, Parcels,
38J, 4 bar reL new tires, good
t
· buckstit ched , s ilver laced
and after long study Nancy Krider to Dale C. Teaford, Chesler.
condition ; white, full power,
Ires, good condition, 5 year
Wes tern Plea sure sa ddle ;
'.' ruffed. This play was correct.
avl omatic, ·air -conditioner. warranty, must sell ; Phone
L.
Teaford
,
Lot
,
Wanda
phone
992·3742.
Charley
King,
Ida
King
to
mathematically , but if she
992·5287 ·
SI ,SOO. Call 992·5310.
Syracuse.
8-8·61c
Myrtle King, 1.18 Acre, Scipio.
741 -4211
8·9·3tp
Arnold Gr1ft
--- - - - -- - - -8-·Htc - - - - - Rut11nc1

.

I i

llfl'{ IS rr THoiiT :r
CJWT FIJJO 'TilE RIGHT
1NW fOI'. MVSElf',

PAW-- THIS 0~'

.

f { '

WHUTA

WASTE!!

NOT
NECESSARIL'f,
50N-8ET IT'LL
FRY UP REAL
uUIC'f -

fACX:U:!..

/JI"'\A.J"""' , ,

HO~u(rr
~ ··

- - -- - -

·-

-·
......,,
:;-·\•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

---,---- - -

,..

II

.......,,, ..,,_,....
I' ll ~,., ., ,., ,

I • I•

..

been

6REA.K IN
DOWN! WE NEfD
WATER AND F00/7/

..

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Real

For Sale

I'CLELAN~

- -- - - - -

•.-

.

LEGAL NOnCE

I

DANCE

I h ill I I
Ill,' lA 1

••

!?UT 1 lHOU"f\T 1\lE
OP5AATiotJ illf.,S
,r., -;;lJC(ESS l

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

..

..

THEY'RE LOADtH' THE STUFF 01t THfM
FIAT 01RS .... AN' PROB'BLY I'AULIN'
IT AWAY T' B. SMIIICH'S PRIVATE

··-

DoMPirl' &lt;;ROUNDS ...

The Final Chance Pays Off

...
--·
...

"HEll"

..

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

DICK TRACY
ANP GROOVY
ONTA.AGET,
A. OUFFEL.

___ __

- - -- -- -

..
....

KATTHEW ARNOLD

- -- - -- -

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

~;

Yemrdoy'a Cryptoqaote: THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION,
THEN, IS THE PtrRSUIT OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT,;...

eAG AND

UNO£R·
WORLO

REVENGE.

ZD. Time

long put
21. Oxford,
e.J.
Matronly
IItle .

zz.
u. Liaht-

- -- --- -

colored
Z5. Unproductive
H. Laundry
problem
for Mrs.
ClaUJ
27. Talk, current style
Z&amp;Dissemlnoted
st. Fuse abbrevlotlon
31. College
. In Iowa

We talk to JOU
like-~

--'-- - -- -

WMP0/1390'
ON YOUR

;::========:....~

ow ·

SZ. ''Perfect/'

In NASA
jarJon
Type of
fisherman
38.-oollar
37. Tooth
Sl. Unfispirated
consonant

u.

Property

,.. .

ACROSS
1. Pruriency
5.More
sapient
10. Dark
11. Corn ftour
13. Prison
(sl.)
1S,.Kind of
library
·If. Bolivian
export
15. Opposite
ofllt
18. Give whirl
(2 wds.)
17. Intertwine
11, Inseet

Transfers

- - ----

..

,,,

:l:

'I'

6

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~::.~~="

BPYUJ'IGP

•

1'

39. Point of
outlook
40. One's own

(C 1912 Klnr Featant• Syndicate, Inc.)

muter

~tY~~;;""'~=~...Jc.

DOWN'
1. Enu- ·

Unocramble th... four Jumbleo,
one letter to ear:h square, to
form four -ordinarr words.

mente

Z.Loo.oen

3.Swlmmlng
In the
buff .
(2wds.)
4. Son of
Odin
5, Surround;
storm

I. Girl's

name

7. Underwent
trouble
(•olloq.)
(4wds.)

I. Grooyy

Yemnloy'• ADiwer
1. Conaangulneous
lL Market

zs. Ancient
Syrian
(var.)

SELL/

~~!~~~ 5:~:U.
segment

11. Burden

u. ~~:~fruit

Zl.

L

I I t I IJ

i

~·!,d;.')ul :tPHEWEN I·

SL Body joint I
31. Nixie
,

1

"

r ~ v 'i I

zz. cherry.,.
Wild • ~.JSS.~N~o~th!ln~c:-, : ~;.J~~~~,&amp;~__~l~da_...I.
,.,.......,:--r:---rr' GUDEMS
feelln1

...
POINI5 10A

Ti N&lt;SLIN&amp; SEt6liTION.

--+-+-+H--1

I

J-w... DIUY HOIIT AI'A'niY ILUINe

H--l--+-1

'y.,_,r.,•o

- A rBII'I' ..... &lt;.,..•ft-THJ:.IIAII-IIIAlll

�( 171 ( ,: I

..

f I ,. ( ( ,

~

,.

r /r r r' r:' ( 'I' ' r ( ' r r I r r ( ,. I

I

•

': ...:~

-·
..,
.......

.. ' ...
":...

:.'

.'
,;
''

'

'
'.
' .

Pomeroy
•tor Co.

Z SICIIS
Of
IIUAUTY

&lt;

LOVE HER, LOVE HER SEGJ'?
Dear Helen : '
I've been excommunicated from a religious sect in which my
prospective bride has become engrossedly Involved. She decided
to dedicate her life to this senice. I had doubts about some ofthe
. motives and aims and I showed my indecision, so they
"banished" me.
I still want to marry my girl but I guess they have more of a
hold over her than I do.
How do I proceed ' - SO-CALLED JJNDESffiABLE PERSON

SALE I
Buy 2 Pairs and
GET 1 PAIR FREE
All kinds, all sizes for men.
women , young men, b~ys
and girls. Hurry to ...

guMds, power brak es , radio.

$2895

Local 1 owner with less than 11,000 miles, factqry air, blk .
vinyl roof &amp; aqua bOdy, blk . knit inter ior, radio, Turbo
Hydramatic power steer ing, &amp; disc brak es, white-wall
tires, l ike new. A ni ce luxury car.

1970 DODGE

,

rot.'

.

'

Polara , factory air conditioning, v.a engine, au tom atic
transmi ssion, power steering, power brakes, good white
side-walls, many more e)(fras. White fin ish, black viny l

;Pomeroy Motor Co.

'

POMEROY
,
lit
Jack W~ Carsey, Mgr .~
.... ... · Phone992 -2181
.

$2195

roof . Priced to move!

Business Services

Price 8ma~h!
PANTS &amp; JEANS

. 1971 CHEVROLET
$3295
M!'libu ho1rdlop coupe, low milc~qt· . new car I i tie, ~.. 1n
datwood finis h, w ith brown vinyl roof. vin~l s.ad dle in
tcrior , ot season r1i r condit ioning , turbohydramalic. power
steering. while-wa ll tires. rall y wheels, front &amp; rear

1970 MONTE CARLO

MOP IS WORE TO
A FRA21.LE··•
CAN I GIT
ME A NEW
ONE?

For Sale

WALN UT Ster eo-com bination,
4 speaker . sound system , 4
volume
con tro
speed
dualS68.J2
Ba la nce
. Use
ourl.

:1

budget term s. Cal l 992-7085.

Stereo~::&lt;

-

•ROOFING
'
•HEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
•
eSPOU'!ING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550

EARn! MOVING

'

.

Dozer &amp; End loader work·,
ponds. base.ment, land· ·
scaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 'Z size loaders. Work
done .by hour or contract.,.
Fret · Estimates. We also
haul fill dirt, top,soil. Dump
lr~cks and low.boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jtffers,
Porn eroy. Phone 9J2 . 3525
,a iter 7 p.m. or phone . 992:
5232.

..-

~

~PERT
Wh~ AIJfl!rflent·

$5.55

- -- - --

:;+:

...

•

'

r.

.

0(, fi'\OID?

.

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,'
vinyl •nd ~teel st.dl~.g (
fiberglas, brick and stone;
complete line of r'ffiaiilllal
and commercial ·roofing;
remodeling.
building.
suspended cel!tngs, Interior
and exterior painting;
complete lineo of Masonry
work . Ali work guaranteed lo
customer satisfaction. We
are fully Insured for your
protection . 32 N. 2nd. 992·

tfl '

-

CLATI'ER
~IS~iiiS

.,

8efN MV KIN~
OF D/I.V J

..

' , 1,

..' '

OUI!. PRES!f&gt;ENTIAI.
SEARCII BOAR.b ~EC I DEC&gt;
NOT TO RECOMMENC&gt; T~E

DEAN FOR. THE CO!.LEGE
.
PRESIDENCY

..' .

HAD

WHEN HE
10
DIR£Cf RI.ISH HOLI~

POO~ PEW+-IURST.
HE'S FKCD HEAVII...'i
AI?MED KILLER$ ".

AND, I GOT TO TELL I-IlM,
• ~ON'T CALL US, WE\ .L
CALL VOU~"

-mAFFIC.

'

..

HE\; DISARMED
60MS!&gt;AND
5A'I6D CHILDREN

6tlf HE
CR\'oCKE.D lHE
FIR51"11ME

FROM~IN::&gt;

OUT...

Fl~ ...

.

Tt!ATI&gt;
ADO't-6-

.&gt;

U'LABNER
IT BROKE ITS
BLACKMAIL IN'
LI'L NECKl'.'

Hom·.

._

I

l Bedroom home, with
brick front, 1 car
garage, carpeting.
Priced at ..

PAPER hanging ; Inter ior and
: ' EARLY American
exterior pa inting ; Arthur
Dear Person :
OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
•
FM rad io, 4 speed changer, 4 · Musser, phone 742·5223.
3918.
'·
I read between the lines that you consider your girl a
fPMEROY,
OHIO
s peaker soun d sys tem .
ALLSIDE BUILD~RS &amp;
7·18·30tp
'. "
Balan
ce
$73
.56.
Use
our
"willing"
prisoner
and
your
real
question
is
"How
can
I
get
her
,.
budget terms . Call 992.7085 . SE.PTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
out of this mess?" You could have a point: a sect which
WAN'r ADS
....... r ;'.
8·4·6tc
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Pn.
Notice
INFORMATION
"banishes'' anyone who questions it may have something to hide.
662-3035.
i .. &amp;J
• DEADLINES
Why not .discuss the situation with a clergyman you trust ? fi P.M. Day Berore Publ ;catiort S PECIAL for Augu st - CLOSE out"" 1971 full size zig·
2·12-Hc'
On Most 1\meri~~n Cau,
,:.a,_
,', t ..~-zag sewing machine. For
Monday Oeaqtine 9 a .m .
·
Stanley's Cus tom Body Shop,
Perhaps the combined efforts of several knowledgeable persons
~~---,.----=-::
GUAAANTE
Eo-:
sewing stretch fabrics,
Cancellation - Corrections
rear quarter panels ap
us FOR : Awnings, sliirm
Phone 992-2094.
can persuade your fiancee that all "religious" groups aren't
buttonholes. fancy designs, SEE
Will be accepted until 9 a .m. for. proxi mately 40pc t. off ; phone
doors Mid windows, carPorts •.
etc. P;~int slightly blemished.
Day of Pllblication
949-2789.
truly Christian. - H.
marquees , alum inum siding
Pome""'
.,.&amp; A·u· to
REGULATIONS
'
Choice of carrying case or
and railing . A Jacob, sales.
, ... .'-::'1
• ~ ·
+++
. Tho Publ istler reserves the
8·6·6tc
sewing stand . S-49.80 cash or
,• .
representatl11e . For free:
o • Tll5
ngh t to ect it or reject any ad s
,
Dear Helen :
lr..:..
terms available. Phon e 992· ·esti
mates,
phone
Charles~.
pen •
dee'!'ed ob iectionat . The' ETH~N S law_n mower &amp; sma ll
Mondar lhru Saturday
l .IS 1e, syracuse , V. V.j
I used to go to "X-rated" movies about once a month, weU, PUbliSher will not be respons ible eng me repa1r ; phone 949·2789. 5641.
··~
8+6tc
m.o~. than one . incorrect
8-6·6fc
L...:6_06_E
_._M_a_i_n,.;.._P_•_ma.;,·,_r•.:;Y.;..'..:,..;..J5,
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
maybe oftener. Whenever my wife had an evening ineeting, I ~~r
msertron
From the largest
·~
3-2·Ho1
ELECTROLUX Sweeper delu xe
went down to the adult theater. Told her it wris better than a
t'-YARD Sale, Thursday. Friday
, --:::-:-:::----,.,.---~ • SEWING MACHINES. Repair; Bulldozer Rad ia,jor to !he
·For Wa~f~~SService
ii'tf
1
model. Complete with all ;:
topless bar.
Smallest Heater Core.
5
cen
ts
per
word
one
In
sertion
and
Satu
rda
y
on
Lct
rk
in
CONCRETE • service, all makes. 992 ·228~ .
•
c leaning attachmen ts and READY. MIX
I ·· • "
Nathan Biggs
Minimum
Cha
rge
7Sc
~
Street,
Rutland
.
delivered right to ~ur i The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
The other night I found my wife in the audience. I'd thought
uses paper bags. Slightly used
12 cents per .word three
8·9·3tc
R1di1tor
Specialist
proiect.
Fast
and
easy.
Free.
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
but clean s and looks like new.
she was at a bingo party .
- - - - -- - -consecutive insertion's.
estimates
.
Phone
992
·3284.'
'
Service.
We
Sharpen
Scissors.·
Will sell for $37.25 cash or
- ~-~
18 ce nts per · word sl&gt;&lt; con -1 YARD Sale at Kenneth Ebl in
When I confronted her, she said we had equal rights and,
G~eglein Rea.dy -Mix Co.,; 1
3·29-tfc
terms available. Phone 992·
secufive insert ion s .~
residence on Harr isonville
Mtddleport,
Ohto.
·
,
·from now on, we'd go where we pleased, and maybe I'd learn
5641.
,. ·'
25 Per Cent piscount on paid
Rd . August 11 and 12 9 an,
1' I "
ads
and
ads
pa
rd
within
10
days·
6·30-tfc
INTERIOR,
exlerior
pain
ting ,
•
'
·
·
something after a while.
8·4-61c
10 3 p.m.
CARD OF THANKS
'
Ph . 992·2174
Pomeroy
:::D:::O:::Z:::
E-:~'"'·,...an d- ,_b-a-c"',_h- oe-wor' k,
rem ode Iin g, bu ild ing ; contact
''"'
&amp; OBITUARY
8.9-Jic
I don 't like the idea of my wife going to X-movies without me,
K
Ernest
Deeter,
Bashan
.
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy·.
ponds and septic tanks; B &amp; K
8·f&gt;.6tc
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum · - - -- -- - - or even with me. What did she mean by that remark? Pa rkll iew Kennels, Phone 992·
,
Excavating, Phone 992-5367,
Each
addjl
lonal
word
2c
.
·
lost
O-bELL WHEEL'alignmenl
..
5443.
Dick Karr, Jr .
BOTHERED HUSBAND
.
BLIND ADS
-'
,.
tocaled at Cro$sroads. Rt . 124.
Additional 2Sc Charge per
AUTOMOBILE insurance..
Complete
front end serv ice,
_
__
_
_
_
.,...:._
8
·_
1
5.Hc
i
-:
--,-=.
5·.:,:
21
·tfc
Advertisemenl.
LOST - Ge•man Shepherd dog. cancelled?
Lost
your
tune
up
and
brake service . .
. .
OFFICE HOU'R~. ,
Dear Husband :
black and si lver in vicin ity of
operator 's license? Call 99:z,.
Wheels
balan
ced elec. 8 .30 a.m. to 5:00pm Da lly
2966• •
Ches ter ; answers to name of Real Estate For Sale
Perhaps your wife meant, "This'll teach you! !"
tronically .
All
work
8 : 30 a .m·. to 12 :"oo ' Noo~
Real
Estate
For
Sale
'' '
General
;
call
collect
985-3954.
Sa turday ,
6·15·Hc
guaranteed
.
Rfl!,llc,nn,~~hl•
Why don 't you two compromise and start attending R-rated
_ _ _ __ __ _8_:·8-3tp
rates . Phone 742·3232 or
films together? - H.
BACKtiOE AND DOZER wor k
992·3213 .
l·ll·nc
..
Septic tan ks installed. Georae
+++
Card
~Jf
Thanks
Help
Wanted
...
LBHI I Pullins. Phone 992-2418.
Pear Helen:
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
.. '
WE WISH to extend our sincere WANTED experienced head
·
··
4-25-Hc RE.(SONABLE raie•. Ph. 444'
thanks
to
Drs.
Telle.
Boonsue
bake
r;
reply
Box
374,
Alhens
.
Our daughter resented our rules so she ran away from home
110 Mechanic Street
••
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell .
and Pickens; the very kind
8·9-3tc
and stayed two weeks at a girl friend's house. She was amazed
Owner
&amp; Operator.
and
efficient
nurses,
blood
--Estate
... when we wouldn't finance her stay, and she finally returned donors and all who assisted in
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
5·12·11•
AP PLICATION S ·now be ing
the
care
of
our
son
and
''
when her father said he wouldn't send her back to private school
taken for kitchen help , cooks,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
brother. A spec ial than ks to
NEW LISTING
this fall if she stayed away.
waitres ses and car hops ,
Complete Service
the Rev. lloyd Grimm and
~YRACUSE - 3 bed room s, balh, gas forced air furna ce.
apply in person at Craw' s
Phooe 94'1·3821
She is not doing well in school. There have been brushes with
Rev . George Casto for the ir
... rty water . Front and ba ck porches. Wonde rful loca tion
Steak House.
Ract n.,, Ohio
REALTY
consoling words ; also our
on 124. As king $6500.00 .
drugs and other problems.
8-8-6tc
601 E. Moin
Critt Bradford
many friends and neighbors
Pomeroy, Ohio
The biggest problem that faces me now is that she started
5·1-Hc
for their prayers, flora l of·
NEAR POMEROY
fo live wi th elderly
.~----ferings and food . God Bless WOMAN
going steady while she 11&lt;as at her friend's house (where there is
ONE FLOOR PLAN - 3 bedrooms. bath. shower in rec .
lady, light housework, no
each of you.
.,.
room . Nice kitc hen with cook and bake units . Oinng area .
practically no supervision ). Now she Insists that I sign for her so
laundry.
Phone
992·5397
o•
IS MINUTES
Th e lam ily of Kenneth
Air conditioned. Nice carport and barbecue pit . All tor
'
991·3507
FROM
POMEROY
that
she
can
get
The
Pill
from
a
doctor
at
the
Community
Center.
Vining
onl y 517.500.00.
+
3.05 acre estate. I story. 3
8-8-6t c
She isn't quite 16, so a parent's okay is required. But she says, -~------=B--·9 · 1tp
bedrooms with closets, bath,
NOTICE OF
OUT
util ity room, kitchen ha s ni ce
"Don't tell Dad, he wouldn't understand!"
APPOINTMENT
SMALL - 1 bedtooms , 2 wells on country road. Stove and
cabinets and d is hwasher,
Can No . 20741
I know it's better for a determined girl to be safe than Notice
SENTINEl
refngerator . Good for a weekend outing. Ohio Power.
Estate of HA TTIE F. SMITH ,
own water supply or Chester
Only
!4.000.00.
Oeceas&amp;d.
pregnant, but it's true, her father wouldn't understand. He's less
water, large garage and
NOII.ce Is t)trtbv given tn1t
CARRIERS
WANTED
RUTLAND
'l
'
storage
workshop
,
fruit
~ess inclined to pay for her private.. achool when he gets
Adatent
Flechtnll!rof ltll N . w.
2 bedrooms - Near grade school. City water. Nice bath .
bu ilding, fruit trees, berrles.
Btv~
.
.
COIUJT!bUS
, Ohio, tlas
·~- .... -nothing but insubordination. Should I keep this secret or share it
Garage and utility bu ild ing . Lot about 65x150.
grapes, and other. 4 years
IN
been duly appointed Executrix
;;:·.
with
him?MRS.
J
.
W.
.
,.
old . GREATEST BUY OF
of the Estate of Hatt ie F . Sm lth ,
WHISPERING PINES
DON ' T BE MI SLED BY THE OUTSIDE . OR THE
THE YEAR . S18,900.QO.
deceased . rate of Meigs County ,
MIDDLEPORT
Oh iO.
PRICE , LET US SHOW YOU THE IN SIDE . THAT'S
1
STORY
FRAME
Dear Mrs. W.:
WHERE THE VALUE LAYS.
Creditors are r~qui r ed to tile
In good co ndit io n. 2
NITE CLUB
the ir cla ims with said fiduciary
Phone Faye Manley
bedrooms, bath , modern
This latest problem isn't the "biggest." It's just another of
within four months .
HElEN l. TEAFORD. ASSOCIATE
k itchen , gas furnace ,
992 ·SS92
992·3325
the many indications that the three of you need family therapy.
Dated this '19th day of July
basement, Me igs Schoo l 1972.
In
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights
By all means, discuss your daughter 's latest decision with
Dist. $7,000 . 00.
John C. Bacon
Pomeroy
From 10 ' til2
NEED STORAGE?
her father , but make it plain that threats and crackdowns (OR
Judge
Pomeroy, large building
Court of Common Pleas
For Sale
Phone 992-2156
8 ROOM house , balh . large lot,
Mama
's
protection!
)
~ren
'I
going
to
work
any
better
here
than
Flrobate Division
with 2 floors, se¥eral lots, In
!·
Music by- Gene NuHer &amp;
gas and electric, Rt. 1.
181 1. 9, 16, 31
COAL, Limestone , Ex celsior
they've worked in the past. Somehow you must get to the real
good
locat
ion.
present
in
Th~ MiJt:ers, 4 piece band.
Middleport, phone 992·2602.
Salt Works. E. Main St.,
,.'·
reasons for resenbnent (his as well as hers) . A professional
From Parkersburg, W. Va .
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:8:.::
·6-61p come. $8,200.00.
TOYS! Toys ! Toys! Sell
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891.
MIDDLEPORT
NOTICE OF
counselor iS your best hope. - H.
Pl ayhouse toys, Aug. to Dec.
4·11-tfc
3rd
St.
2 story brick, has 2
APPOINTMENT
-·
IDEAL 5·ACRE RANCH . lake
Free
train
ing.
Good
com
.
e---apartments,
ba sement,
PI ANO &amp; Organ lessons by
Cue No. 2073'
Conc has , New .Mexico. $2,975.
.'
mission, No cash inves tment. AKC registered Wiem a raner
small
apartment
In the rear ,
Esta te of GR:ACE VAUGHN ,
qualifi ed graduate of CinNo Down . No Interes t. $25 mo.
No
delivery
.
No
collecting
.
S
pups
;
J
.
E.
Pape,
Box
265
,
Deceased.
ALLIN GOOD CONDITION.
cinnati Con servatory of
WIN AT BRIDGE
for 119 mos . Vacation
&amp; H Green Stamp bonus. Cal l
Syra cuse . Ohio 45779 ; phone
No tice is hereby given that
REDUCED TO SELL.
Music. Phone 992·3825.
Pa rad ise. Free Brochure .
Margare t Fortune 949 ·5414 or IX12 -3-420.
Nan cy Collins 01 Pomero y,
OWNER
LIVES
OUT
OF
8-3· 111c
Ranchos Lak e Conchas : Box
has been duly appo"inted
Barbara Lambert 446-3411.
7·28·12tc
TOW N. !PLEASE CALL I Ohio.
Admin
istratr ix Of the Estate of
200
100.
Alameda
,
Cal
iforn
ia
··.•
1· 26· 30fc
REWARD . fo, shopping at
WANT TO SELL? LIST
Grace vaughn , deceased , late
94501 .
1
970
HONDA
450,
phone
992Showalter's Wet Pet Shop,
Of Meigs Coun ty , Otl lo.
WITH US. NO SALE, NO
_ __ _ _ _ _..:,8·_6·30tp
Ches ter , Ohio : 10 per cent of FUlL TIME ba• lender; apply 5951 '
Credito rs are requ ired to file
CHA RGE .
had been looking at ail the
in per son at the Meig s Inn .
1\'0KTII (D J
the
ir cla ims with sa id fi duciary
8·6·61p
your
total
purchase
may
be
ca 1·ds she would have let the
SMALL business doing big, big - HENRYE . CLELAND Sr.
wittlln four months .
. KJ964
8-6·11C
applied
to
the
purchase
of
any
jack ride.
bu si ness in the County Seat of
ZIG·ZAG Sewing mach ine ; th is
Dated th is 29th day o f July
---·-·---• 84
REAL TOR
ceramic items.
19 72 .
Meigs County. Business and
machine
is
dre
ss
maker
• Q4
Wheol West showed out , the
8·2·30tp Wanted To Buy
992-2259
books can be seen only by
John c . Bacon
model : this mach ine makes
4 AK ·! 05
If
no
answer
992·2568
gr and slam contract became
appointment.
Ca
n
be
partly
Judge
darns
,
em
.
buttonholes,
WEST
(2! 2, '· 16, 3t
EAST
WANTED good used waft .rype
a
rather poor one , but. Nancy
fina nced . Wr ite or ca ll Elme r
bro•derles
,
take
O\ler
• IO J
• Q87 2
gas furnace ; also new or used
F. Jones &amp; Associates , CONVENIENT but sec lud ed
st ill had a chance. She led
pa yments of $5.10 or pay $6 a
• J2
¥
97fi
build ing material any kind ;
Realtors , 227 Columbus Road,
b•ilding lots al Rock Spr ings,
month ; call 992·5331 .
'•
a
club
and
finessed
dnm
·
t KJ108:l2
phone 992 7494 .
NOTICE OF
• 96~
Alhens,
Ohio
;
ph
one
614·593close
to Hig h School &amp; Fair
8·9·6tc
my' s 10. This represe nted
': 4o QJ3
APPOINTMENT
. 7 1)2
8·9·61c
3292
.
';
Ground
;
cal
l
or
see
Bill
Witte,
I
only a 25 per ce nt chance.
No . 2072l
'
-----SOU Til
992·2789 after 5 p.m. week - Estate of Samuel C.ne
DE LU XE 8 track slereo in
8+6tc
Q . Barnhart,
hut a ny chance i.s bett er th an
day
s.
• A5
Wainur console. will se ll lor _R_A_C_I_N_E_ _1_o_ roo
_ m_ h-ouS&lt;!;•
8·6·301c Deceased .
OLD Furniture, oa k tables ,
none. a nd the 25 per cent
¥ AKQ!05 3
Not ice is hertby ginn that
or
gan
s,
di
shes.
clocks,
brass
balance
due
of
$88.21
or
pay
balh
b
----.:..:..
cha nce materialized for her .
Helen
E . Barnhart, Of R ot.~ te 1
t A7
$6.1
0
a
month
;
ca
ll
.
1.
'
asement,
garage.
two
••
992
533
.beds, or complete households.
Racine
. Oh io, has been du lY
tot•
Phone
949
4313
5
ROOM
house
and
balh,
",500
,·
•
98
4
8·9·61 c
,,
·
·
~
"
Wri le M. D. Miller, Rl . 4,
(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPIIISE ASSN .l
appo inted Executrl)( of the
Wrndow
4·5·tfp
phone
992·5786
.
'
Noue vulne rab l'=
Pomeroy. Ohio . Ca ll 992-6271.
Es tate Of Samuel Q . Ba rnha rt,
_,__
Air Conditioners
8·6·6tc deceastd, la te of Meigs County
Wesl Nur lh t:asl Soulh
6·28-tfc CANNI.NG PEACHES - A load
Oh io.
'
in l ong Bottom phone'
arrivi ng Wednesday. Be sure HOUSE
I•
Pass 3 ¥
Hot Water Heaters
985·3529.
•
75
ACRE
Farm
at
Harr
ison.
C_recm~rs
ar~
rtqu
lred
to
file
to bring your con tain ers. Ph .
Pass
3A
Pass 4 ¥
vi ll e, Oh io ; house , ou t. tl'letr cla rm!i w1fh sa id fiduciary
For Rent
Plumbing
992.2582 o• 992·2565. Midway
6·11 ·1fc
Tht! bidd ing has bt:e n .
Pass
5•
Pass 5 t
bu il din~s, qood farm land : within four mont hs.
Mar~et
.
Eieclrrcal Work
Pass
5¥
Pass 5 •
West
Nurth
East
3 BEDROOM furnished home.
Suu1b
Dated th is 28th day of Ju ly
mob ile
priced to sell . Phone 992 · 66~1. 1972
.
6 ,_
Pass 7 ¥
Pass
full basemen t, 7 mil es No•th _ _ _ __ __ __:8_:
·8·3fc AIR -CONDITIONED
I¥
Dble
P.HS!i
2¥
61
home
and
lot
;
53.500
;
phone
6-6·
C
Pass
Pass
Pa.!:ls
of Salem Center . I mi. off U.S.
Joh n C. Ba con
Pass
3•
P&lt;tss
:l.
992·5786.
F::O
-:
R-S:-A,-L_E_ b_y _o_w_n_e -r .-Y
- e- liow
.,
143, phone 698 -5457 ; must
Judge
Pass
3•
P&lt;iSS
Opening lead- ¥ J
Court of Com mon Pleas
have
references.
..
.le
Homes
for
Sale
________
8
__:
·6-6tc
frame
house,
six
rooms
and
Mobl
You , S out h, hold :
Proba te Division
'
8·9·61 c
_
bath . Large lot. Located In (81 2' 9. 16, Jt
·~143
¥
2
+
AK943
&lt;lo7fi
l
lly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
RACINE - 6 room house. bath ' Syracuse on Rt. 124. Second
1
1971 , 60 X 12. MOBILE home in
uti lity room . garag e, Slo,ooo ; house on left going north
What do yo u do now '.'
99/ 2~~8
Up to now United St ates
,
3 BE DROO M home , Mid
Tuppers
Plains,
on
100'
x
200'
;.hone
949-4195.
inside corporation line.
A-Bid just four ~pades. \' ou
dleporl ; phone 991·338 r or 992: lot : ready lo move into; see - -- ----.,-.....::3..:..·
w o r I d bridge c hampiOns hup
Pomeroy,
0
.
31
·tfc
7·27-H'
t' ) IIlii' p 11 rIner will bid
7440.
Dorsel Mill er at tra iler' in
have been largely restric led ag~:~in, but yuu don't want tu in Mbaugh Additi on.
to New York , Texas , Penn· \l ite a sl•m un your nwn.
GRA NO OPENING - Sew &amp; Go --=---- - -- - 8-·8·1fc
8-9·6fp
; sylva nia . Californ ia , lllmois
Shop in Alfred .,e~ ; bonded 3 ROOM house and balh, lur. - -- - -- --...:...
TODA l' 'S QUESTION
~ and Michigan.
acrylics. sweater knits and
nished : phone 991·5592.
FOR THE BEST deal in a new
You do bid tom spad ~ il l.d
With this yea r 's victory in yo ur pal'tner bids fi vt! hean, _ poly ester , $1.99 and up ;
8·8·tf c or used mobile heme, tr y
owner , Mrs. E. T. Cal away . - - -- -- - -Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
the mixed · by the tea m of Wha t do .vou do nu w~
8·8·31c 3 .&lt;\NO 4 R()(.JM furnished an'd Kanauga, Ohio.
Ans\'-·er tomorrow
James Jacoby , !lobby Gold ·
unf urnished. apartments .
1·16·JOIC
' man. Bobby and Ee lsy Wolff.
WHY not try cosmetics that are
i&gt;hone
992·5434.
•,
.
Nancy Alpaugh and Heidi
trul y
dlfferenl
and
4· !2. tfc l CAStj paid for all ma~es ana:
Nola nd , tw o ladies from Send l I lo, JACOBY MODERN book·
refreshing? The famous mink
----~-~-models of mobile homes .
to
;
"Win
at
Bridgt,"
(c
/
o
this
news.
~ : : Loui siana have j oined Ot\1'
oil base and now w&amp; have the
Phq&gt; e area code 614-~23-953 1. '
poPfr ), P.O. Bo:r 419, Radio City
lemon grove. Jusl th ink. 14 For Sale
+13-ttc;
Station , New Yotl , N.Y. 10019.
': , world cham pion group.
specials this month , some for
Auto Sales
Nancy
Alpaugh
's
three.
' '
men as well as women . It's CA NNIN G tomatoes , sweet
'
1966 4 DR . SEDAN, Galaxle soo.
; · i1ea rt bid was typical of her
corn ,
cucu mbers
"and
KOSCOT of course . Phone
v.a. 289 cu. in., cruisamati c
992·5113.
:: aggress ive bidd ing style .
mangoes ; Gera ld ine Cleland,
-.Air Conditioners
Big Copo&lt;lty
power steering, AM radio 2
Racine
,
0
.
Her· rebid to just four hearts
,.
1·9·Hc
•Awnings
speed
windshield
wiper
a'nd
Mavt•g
l-28·tfC
;. · was suffi cie nt in view of her
Autam1tics
~asher , 7 .x 75 white side wall
·Underpinning
• previo us action .
2 speed operation .
ltres, seal bells front and
Lafe Cogar , Edith Cogar to TOMATOES ,
potatoes ,
Cho ice of water
'••
rear
,
clean
interior,
perfect
Bob by Goldman is aggres·
AlvaJ. Coates, Mary J . Coates ,
cucu mbers and
beans , 'c omplete mobile hame'
temps .
Auto .
running motor. good paint
, · , sive too and could be deservice -.. plus gigant ic
Cl~rence Proffi l, Portland.
Parcels, Chester.
water
le v el beige
with
white
roof,
no
hole~
,. pended on to lake further ac·
Ollto ; phone 8 43· 225~ .
'display of mobile homes
control .
lint
in body , new battery, 1 owner,
Hallie Cross to Ralph Swan,
lion with any excuse. He
Fllttr
or
Power
always a vailable at ... '
1·19-tfc
pri ced to sell ; Phone Paula L.
Lucretia H. Werry to Guy E. Jr., I Acre, Salem.
FIn Ag ltator.
•. , went to live club s. From
Sa.yre. Portland, 8.43·22116, 1
Ptrmi -Preu
Guinther,
Lyndia
L.
Guinther,
MILLE.
R
Wilma
M.
Stobart
to
Herbert
CHINA cabinet. credenza, dish·
; ~ then on the bidding pro·
mr . below Ravenswood
Moytog
Parcel,
Olive.
,
washer
.
coffee
table.
fire
landing on Ohio Route 338.
V. Dixon, Mary Agnes Dixon,
,.'.' ceeded in a series of l'tk
Halo
of Hut
screen , lawn chair, bedroom . MOBILE HOMES .
bids unliJ Nan' c y fin ally
Otis K. Casto, Tilitha Casto '\1, Acre, Salisbury.
Drv•rs
- -- -- - -=8
·8·3fc
suite, desk and chair , mat1220 Wuhington Blvd.
Surround' clOthes
':'• jumped to seven hearts.
to Laura J . Fields, Gay Fields,
Denver Kapple, Marjorie
tress and springs,· dr~sser ; 423.7521
With Gentle, even
BELPRE, O.
1965
MUSTANG
,
V-8,
4
speOd
,
o il 992·3381 or 992·7440.
Kapple to Elladene M. Watson,
:~
Nancy drew !rumps with .20 Acre, Olive.
heat . No hot spots,
1965 Comet, V.8, automatic;
8·8·tfc
no ovtrdry ing .
" " three Jeads a nd went after
Green Hill Homes Inc. to 100 Acre Lot, Sutton.
both
1n
real
good
condition
;
::--------.:
Fine Mnh Lint
phone 992·6196.
" ' spades. She cashed the king Harry W. Pickens , Jr., Janel
Ross W. Cleland, Erma 0 . TWO horse tandem trailer , A
Filter.
uto
Sales
&amp;
·9-Jtc
and ace and continued with K. Pickens, Lot, Syracuse .
electr ic brakes and lights,
Cleland to Ross W. Cleland,
Wt Sptclallzoln
;l~ dummy 's jack . E;as t ducked
good condition ; also double 1970 PATROL Plymouth, 4 dr .. ~,9=7.=-=.D-:-U:::ST::-E::-R::-.,--cy-ll-nd_e_r~
. new
MAYTAG
0
Raymond Krider, Freda Erma 0. Cleland, Parcels,
38J, 4 bar reL new tires, good
t
· buckstit ched , s ilver laced
and after long study Nancy Krider to Dale C. Teaford, Chesler.
condition ; white, full power,
Ires, good condition, 5 year
Wes tern Plea sure sa ddle ;
'.' ruffed. This play was correct.
avl omatic, ·air -conditioner. warranty, must sell ; Phone
L.
Teaford
,
Lot
,
Wanda
phone
992·3742.
Charley
King,
Ida
King
to
mathematically , but if she
992·5287 ·
SI ,SOO. Call 992·5310.
Syracuse.
8-8·61c
Myrtle King, 1.18 Acre, Scipio.
741 -4211
8·9·3tp
Arnold Gr1ft
--- - - - -- - - -8-·Htc - - - - - Rut11nc1

.

I i

llfl'{ IS rr THoiiT :r
CJWT FIJJO 'TilE RIGHT
1NW fOI'. MVSElf',

PAW-- THIS 0~'

.

f { '

WHUTA

WASTE!!

NOT
NECESSARIL'f,
50N-8ET IT'LL
FRY UP REAL
uUIC'f -

fACX:U:!..

/JI"'\A.J"""' , ,

HO~u(rr
~ ··

- - -- - -

·-

-·
......,,
:;-·\•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

---,---- - -

,..

II

.......,,, ..,,_,....
I' ll ~,., ., ,., ,

I • I•

..

been

6REA.K IN
DOWN! WE NEfD
WATER AND F00/7/

..

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Real

For Sale

I'CLELAN~

- -- - - - -

•.-

.

LEGAL NOnCE

I

DANCE

I h ill I I
Ill,' lA 1

••

!?UT 1 lHOU"f\T 1\lE
OP5AATiotJ illf.,S
,r., -;;lJC(ESS l

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

..

..

THEY'RE LOADtH' THE STUFF 01t THfM
FIAT 01RS .... AN' PROB'BLY I'AULIN'
IT AWAY T' B. SMIIICH'S PRIVATE

··-

DoMPirl' &lt;;ROUNDS ...

The Final Chance Pays Off

...
--·
...

"HEll"

..

ARNOLD
BROlHERS

DICK TRACY
ANP GROOVY
ONTA.AGET,
A. OUFFEL.

___ __

- - -- -- -

..
....

KATTHEW ARNOLD

- -- - -- -

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

~;

Yemrdoy'a Cryptoqaote: THE PURSUIT OF PERFECTION,
THEN, IS THE PtrRSUIT OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT,;...

eAG AND

UNO£R·
WORLO

REVENGE.

ZD. Time

long put
21. Oxford,
e.J.
Matronly
IItle .

zz.
u. Liaht-

- -- --- -

colored
Z5. Unproductive
H. Laundry
problem
for Mrs.
ClaUJ
27. Talk, current style
Z&amp;Dissemlnoted
st. Fuse abbrevlotlon
31. College
. In Iowa

We talk to JOU
like-~

--'-- - -- -

WMP0/1390'
ON YOUR

;::========:....~

ow ·

SZ. ''Perfect/'

In NASA
jarJon
Type of
fisherman
38.-oollar
37. Tooth
Sl. Unfispirated
consonant

u.

Property

,.. .

ACROSS
1. Pruriency
5.More
sapient
10. Dark
11. Corn ftour
13. Prison
(sl.)
1S,.Kind of
library
·If. Bolivian
export
15. Opposite
ofllt
18. Give whirl
(2 wds.)
17. Intertwine
11, Inseet

Transfers

- - ----

..

,,,

:l:

'I'

6

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~::.~~="

BPYUJ'IGP

•

1'

39. Point of
outlook
40. One's own

(C 1912 Klnr Featant• Syndicate, Inc.)

muter

~tY~~;;""'~=~...Jc.

DOWN'
1. Enu- ·

Unocramble th... four Jumbleo,
one letter to ear:h square, to
form four -ordinarr words.

mente

Z.Loo.oen

3.Swlmmlng
In the
buff .
(2wds.)
4. Son of
Odin
5, Surround;
storm

I. Girl's

name

7. Underwent
trouble
(•olloq.)
(4wds.)

I. Grooyy

Yemnloy'• ADiwer
1. Conaangulneous
lL Market

zs. Ancient
Syrian
(var.)

SELL/

~~!~~~ 5:~:U.
segment

11. Burden

u. ~~:~fruit

Zl.

L

I I t I IJ

i

~·!,d;.')ul :tPHEWEN I·

SL Body joint I
31. Nixie
,

1

"

r ~ v 'i I

zz. cherry.,.
Wild • ~.JSS.~N~o~th!ln~c:-, : ~;.J~~~~,&amp;~__~l~da_...I.
,.,.......,:--r:---rr' GUDEMS
feelln1

...
POINI5 10A

Ti N&lt;SLIN&amp; SEt6liTION.

--+-+-+H--1

I

J-w... DIUY HOIIT AI'A'niY ILUINe

H--l--+-1

'y.,_,r.,•o

- A rBII'I' ..... &lt;.,..•ft-THJ:.IIAII-IIIAlll

�'

12 ~ The Dally Sentinel, MldcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Aug, 9,1972

nNews ••• in Briefs
(Continued from page I i
two slots provided for jack insertion. The problem could cause a
car to drop from a raised posiUon, Ford said.
Aspokesman from Ford's customer service division said the
condi tion haS resulted in no' repo~ted injuries. Ford is providing
dealers with a special tool to enlarge the slot for the bumper jack.

... , .,,,.

~~::,.:o·:.~

Now Yod Know

Tax Issue in Courts Again

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Onllook ~
Friday through SUllday
Fair Friday, chance of
showers Saturday and
Sunday. High In the upper
70s and lower Ills Friday,
warming lo the middle and
upper 80s Sunday. Lows ID
the upper 50s Friday,
warming to tbe upper 60s by
Sunday.

COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
Ohio Supreme Couri ·ruled that
JI'Operly In Ohio must be taxed
llllformly, but the Ohio Gener·
II Assembly tOOk steps recently to delay any changes. Now
tile tax question is headed for
court again. ·
The slflte Board of Tax Appeals set the stage for another
.legal test of uniform evaluation
Ill real estate Tuesday by approving a ' I~ property tax
abstra!'l prepared under the
Gld formulas in Scioto County.
The issue first was raised io
)'ears ago by Park Investment
Co. of Cleveland which clatmed
II was discriminated against by
the widely varying taxes
..idby owners of property used
for different purposes.
The Supreme Couri ruled in
favor of Park Investment, say.
lng aU property in the state
must be assessed uniformly.
Park Investment attorney
John E. Forrester said the firm
was prepared to re-enter the
eouri fight now by filing for a
new mandamus decision from
tile high court or for contempt
charges against the Board of
Tilx Appeals for not complying
with
the court-ordered
uniformity.
.The legislature, seeking to
delay the effects that 35 per
cent uniform evaluation would
bave on tu revenues which go
to support schools, recently
. voted to delay the effect of the
ordered change.
The law gives county
auditors a reprieve until their
required six-year real estate
reappraisal is completed in the
normal cycle. Uniform
assessment, therefore, will not
be in effect statewide until
1977.
Until the Supreme Court reversal, local auditors for years
had applied higher assessment
to commercial and Industrial
property than to residential
land.
In the Scioto County action,
the three-member Board of
Tax Appeals conceded the tax
· duplicate did not satisfy the
uniformity order.
.But Chairman Edwin
Sawicki said the board was
bound by the delay set up by

Board member Nipo)fon
the legislature.
The board ruled the Scioto Bell Slid he wu' ccmcerned
County County abstract about the "great dllparlty" of
totaling $1Z2,131,UO Wll ."in Scioto County residential
substantial em~pllance with assessments, ranging from
the minimum requirements" 30.04 to 45.18 per cent, with
· highest uaeumenta falling on
of tate aaaesament law.
Residential and Industrial· homes valued under f7 ,500.
commercial ua n.mt rates
Bell aald II appeared 8111!111
both average 32.72 per cent of ment rates were lower loc
market
value ·' while more affluent homeowners
agriC)Ilbiral property averages outside the city of Portanoulh
24.84 per cent, based on than lor poorer families In tbe
"current use" rather than true city.
market value In some areu.

WASHINGTON- FEDERAL NO-FAULT AUTO insurance
is dead for "the rest of this year and maybe for two more years. A
Senate vote of 49-46 Tuesday night killed a bill which would have :::::~:::::::::;:::;~:;:;:;::::::::~:;:;~:;:~:~::::::::::::=-::::::.-!:*
put the insurance reform plan into effect nationwide within 18
months of enactment.
HOSPITAL NEWS
1'ectmicaUy, the vole merely sent the bill to the Senate
Births - Mrs. Allan Brown,
Judiciary committee for further study. Magndson and other
son, Wellston ; Mrs. Jerry
I.Jo ~k crs called the Judiciary Committee the bill's "graveyard."
Westmoreland, son, HavensConservatives dominate that panel.
wood, W. Va., and Mrs. Jerry
Custer, son, Middleport.
Discharges - French Casey,
Fred Shields of
Terry
Lewis,
Melinda
Mltrikov,
Mrs.
David
Penwell
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO,
_New Haven Dies
and
son,
Mrs.
Roger
Israel
and
Saturday, Augusts, 1972
NE W HAVEN - Fred l\.
daughter, Hache! Arthur, Mrs.
SALES REPORT OF
Shields, 8l, New Haven, died
Mark Mullen and daughter,
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Wednesday morning at the · HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 27.75 Barbara Wright, Harold
.Jar·kson General Hospital in to 28.10; 220 to 250 lbs. 28 to Taylor, Leah Jo Stout, Emily
WASHINGTON (UP!) - nominated, with represen·
Hiplcy. The son of the late 28.50; Light 2fi to 27.75; Fat Smith, Helen Roberts, LesUe
Admitting he was virtually talives of the women's caucus,
En'i ll and Nora Freeman Sows 21.50 to 25; Stags 20 Newcomb, David Nelson,
starting over in his presidential a coalition of women's groups.
Shields, he was born in Mason Down; Boars 18 to 22; Pigs 8.50 Donald Metheney, Mildred
S. Then a meeting With Latin·
campaign,
George
( \, WilY on July 31, 1888. Mr. to 29.50; Shoats 17.50 to 30.
Lambert and.Elenore Gordan.
McGovern and his new running American and SpanishSh ields was a retired farmer.
mate, Sargent Shriver, American representatives
CA TILE - Steers 34.50 to
SJJr vivi ng are his wife, 40; Heifers 25.50 to 33; Baby
campaigned together for the follow~ by a conference with
Myrite; a daughter, Mrs. Cecil Beef 38.50 to 45.50; Fat Cows 19
first lime today, wooing some Democratic governors
(Mary) Sayre, New Haven; a to 23.75; Canners 17.50 to 2fi.60;
mayors, congr,essmen, women who were here for tbe Nallonal
grandson , Paul, a.nd several Bulls 28lo 32.75; Milk Cows 200
and minorities.
Committee meeling.
nl fccs and nephews.
The South Dakota senator
to 345.
f•'uneral services will be held
said the past three weeks In·
VEAL CALVES (Several
at I :30 p.m. Friday at the Single Veal Calves 50 to 54 );
volving swllclling running
BUTZ TO SPEAK
Fng!esong FWleral Home with Tops 50.75; Seeonds 46.50 to 48;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters
mates had been "hard and
COLUMBUS
(UP!) - U. I.
t11c 1\ev. Wilbur Baxter of· Medium 45 to 47.75; Com. &amp; and children are vacationing at
painful" and conceded it was
ficiati ng. Burial will be in the Hvs. 46.50 to 52; Culls 45 Down. Myrtle Beach.
now like starling all over; but Secretary of Agriculture Earl
Butz Is scheduled to speak at
Hopewell Cemetery at Mt.
Belly Ault of Columbus
he said "I have a feeling this
BABY CALVES- 27.50 to 70.
Al to. Friends may call at the
visited over the weekend with
will draw us closer together. the American Soybean Con·
ference to be held here next
fuu ernl home anytime after 3
her mother, Mrs. Winnie
We're ready to go."
Tuesday. Butz also is expected
p.nt Thursday.
Holland .
·
McGovern and Shriver mel
PT. PLEASANT
Mrs. Thelma Henry along
first for two hours with aboul15 to discuss the Nixon ad·
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
MASON COUNTY FAIR QUEEN - Karen Froendt,
with her daughter and son·in·
mayors in a closed session on ministration's agricultural
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
right, of West Columbia was crowned queen of the 1972
BILL SPROUSE DIES
law, Mr ~ and Mrs. Don
Capitol Hill. The mayors were policies at a news conference
Saturday, August 5, 1972
Mason County Fair by Debbie Sturgeon, retiring queen.
Bill Sprouse, formerly of
primarily interested in the bere that day.
HOGS - 175 to 220 28.50 to Quisenberry and children, are
Point -Pleasant, died Tuesday
nominees'
support
for
eve11ing at Chester, W. Va. He 28.80; heavies 2fi to 27.20; vacationing in Florida.
Staff
Sgt.
Ronnie
Roush
of
legislation
to
funnel
more
than
OHIO SENATORS DIFFD
Lights
26
to
27;
Fat
Sows
22
to
was born at West Columbia,
Heidelberg,
Germany
came
to
$5
billion
a
year
of federal
23;
Boars
21
to
22.40;
Pigs
14lo
WASHINGTON (UP!) the son of the late Thomas and
attend the funeral of his sister,
revenues to state and local Ohio's two senators went .. .
Joan Sprouse, Surviving. are 20; Stock Shoats 25 to 28.
PT. PLEASANT - Queen for It was her talent for sewing
Mrs.
Chester
(Jennifer
)
Roush
governments.
They won "firm posite ways in the Senate
CATTLESteers
34
to
38;
his wi fe, Evaj three sons, and a
a day? No, queen for a year. that produced the gown she
Young,
who
was
killed
in
an
Heifers
25
to
27:60;
Fat
Cows
24
commitment"
of such supPort. which sent a national no-&amp;alt
d&lt;&gt; ug hter . Funeral
That's
the
fortune
of
Karen
The two then met in a closed insurance bill to a committee
wore. For the material she
arrangements are incomplete. to 26.50; Canners 22 to 24 ; Bulls automobile accident. Staff Sgt.
session with Democratic for study, probably postponing
30 to 35; Stock Cows and Calves Roush is stationed in the army Froendt after being crowned selected a pale green
Mason CoWlty's Fair Queen background accented with
senators - some of whom have acUon on the measure In this
275 to 415; Stock Steers 36lo 41; there.
during
special
festivities
on
the
· Stock Heifers 31 to 35; Stock
been less than enthusiastic session of Congress. Sen .
small figures and fashioned It
Mr. and Mrs . Landon Smith
SUIT FILED
about the McGovern can· William B. Saxbe, R.Qhio,
Steer Calves 37.75 to 46.25; visited on Sunday with his outdoor stage on opening night with long sleeves. She also
A partition of real estate Stock Heifer Calves 35 to 39.
didacy.
voted to send the bill to the
sister, Mrs. Griff Durbin, a or the lith annual Fair made most of the other gar·
uction on 'property in Orange
Tuesday.
Next came a session at the Judiciary Committee. Sen .
VEAL CALVES - Tops patient at Morris Memorial
ments she wore during the
Township has been filed in the 52.10; Seconds 51.25; Medium
She is the 18-year old Queen events over the past
Sheraton Park Hotel, site of Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhlo, voted
Meigs County Common Pleas 49.25 to 50.75; Common &amp; Rest Home at Milton, W. Va. daughter of Mrs. Mary Froendl several days.
Tuesday's extraordinary mini· against the motion which
Mrs. Paul Randolph, Letart,
Co urt by C. F. Betzing against Heavies 45to 48; Culls 40 to 45.
of
West
Columbia.
convention where Shriver was carried 4148.
has returned home .after
Archie Betzing, el al. The court
Tears fell from Karen's
BABY CALVES - 68 top visiting her daughter and
!Ins gra nted Sandra Lee average $51; Market strong,
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas cheeks as she exclaimed, "!
Swisher a divorce from Gerald higher on two way cattle.
King at Rl. 9, Joneboro, Tenn. am just so happy" while the
Lee Swisher on charges of
Mrs. King was recently crown was being placed by
gross neglect of duty and ex·
hospitalized . She also visited Debbie Sturgeon, the retiring
lreme cruelty. ·
· SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
her other daughter and queen.
WELL KNOWN BRANDS fURNITURE FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOM~
Other top contenders were
Cattle: Steers, Choice, 35.5(). husband, Mr. and Mrs. James
36 .30; Good, 33.40-34 .50 ; Krebs at Johnson City, Tenn . Michelle Holmes, daughter of
ON SALE ON THE 3rd FLOOR.
Standard, 29.~0-33; Heifers : Mrs. Randolph returned home Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd D. Holmes
DRIVE-IN
.
of 2618 Jefferson who was
Choice, 32.115-35.50; Good, 31.30: by plane.
..~' (,,,!I' •
:. I . •
named
first runner-up; Linda
32.75; Cows: Commercial,
Lee Shadle, daughter of Mr.
25.40-2fi.90; Utility, 23-24.75 ;
Thursday &amp; Friday
and Mrs. James Shadle of
Canners and Cutters, 18.75·
Aug. 10·11
Southside; second runner-up
22.70; Bulls: Commercial, 31·
Double Feature Program
and Tiny Lynn Collier,
32.90; Stockers and Feeders,
" PLAY MISTYFOR ME"
daughter of Ernest Collier of
Steer
Calves,
34.50-44.75;
. (Color)
Clint Eastwood
Heifer Calves, 31-41.50; Veal By United Press lnternationsl Ravenswood and Mrs. Ethel
Calves: Choice, 55.50; Good,
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 9, Collier of 2916 Spruce Avenue,
Plus
53.75.
the 222nd day of 1972 with 144 to Point Pleasant, who was third
" WHERE'S POPPA"
runner-up. Miss Carolyn Boles
George Segal
Lambs: Choice, 31.20.
follow.
Ruth Gordon
was named Miss Congeniality.
Hogs : 200-230, 28.90; No. 1,
The moon is new.
Rated I Rl
Queen contestants for the
29.15; 230-240, 26.65; Sows,
The morning stars are
24.10-25.05; Boars, 23.10.
Mercury, Venus and Saturn. past several days undec the
The evening stars are Mars direction of Mrs. Belva Farley
have been on a whirl wind of
GRANGE TO MEET
and Jupiter.
Ohio Valley Grange 2612 will
Those born on this date are activities highlighted with a
television appearance, lun- .
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the under the sign of Leo.
Tonight &amp; Thursday •
August 9-10
cheon
at the Red Carpet Inn,
hall in Letart Falls. Deputy
British writer lzaak Walton
·NOT OPEN
participation in the Fair
Virgil Atkins will be present for was born Aug. 9, 1593.
parade and then finally
Dn
this
day
in
history
:
inspection
and
potluck
refresh·
Friday thru Tuesday
Tuesday
night's special
ments will be served.
In 1831, the first train in the
Augusfll -15
SUMMER OF '42
.
.
.
United States to be powered by program.
IRI
LEGION TO MEET
The
nine
lovelies
radiating
.
steam
made
a
run
between
Cnrtoons:
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Albany and Schenectady, N.Y. youthful beauty while attired in
Berry Funnv
American
Legion, will meet in
Oscars Thinking Cap
their long gowns, were glowing
Adm ission : Adul ts, $1.50;
regular session at the hail in
as
they look their places on the
Marriage License
Cl1ildr en : SI.OO.
Middleport
at
7:30
this
James Eugene Watson, 21, stage. One by one they were
Show Starts 7 P.M.
evening. Refreshments will be Tuppers Plains, and Deborah called to the Iron t where their
served following the meeting . Joan Heaton, 16, Pomeroy biographical sketches were
read by Mrs. Farley who also
Route 3.
posed individual qestions to
each.
FBI MAKES ARRESTS
In addi lion to those
COLUMBUS (UPI) - FBI
agents arrested Gwendolyn previously named were four
Denise Alexander, 19, and other con tenders who were
Capp Spencer Anderson, 34, Carolyn Barnett, Clarissa
both or Columbus, Tuesday. Joyce Dalton, Becky Fry and
The woman was charged with Barbara Matheny.
Miss Froendt, sponsored by
perjury and held under $50,000
bond. Anderson was charged the Point Pleasant-Area
with obstruction or justice by Jaycees , is an active
assault on a federal witness 4-H'er
and
is
well
and was held under $25,000 known for many talents . ·
bond .
369.00 Sofas-2 pc. Suites
Sale 296.00
139.00 Rocking Love Seats · · - Sale 112.00
389.00 Sofas·2 pc. Suites
Sale 312.00
OHIO'S SHARE LESS
149.00 Rocking Love Seats . . . Sale 120.00
featuring world's fnest color TV picture!
398.00 2 pc. Suites . • . . ·
Sale 319.00
WASHINGTON (UPl)- The
219.00 Love Seats
419.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
.
.
•
.
Sale 334.00
(Continued from Page I)
federal revenue-6haring for·
·
2
pc.
Living
Room
Suite
.
.
.
.
Sale
176.00
439.00
Sofas
.
.
.
•
•
·
·
.
.
Sale 352.00
GENUINE
mula approved Tuesday by the Nixon, defeated challenges
229.00
2
pc.
Living
Room
Suite
.•.
Sale
184.00
449.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
Sale 360.00
WOOD
moderrate
Senate Banking Committee from
239.00 Love Seats · · . . . . . . Sale 192.00
479.00 2 pc. Suites ·
CABINET!
Sale 384.00
Republicans.
would give Ohio $185.4 million.
249.00
Love
Seats-Sofas
.
.
.
•
Sale
200.00
498.00
2
pc.
Suites
·
Sale 399.00
In a key race In a Detroit
Tht LAWRINC!
Ohio's share under that plan
269.00 2 pc. -~uits - Sofa - Love Seats Sale 216.00
519.00 2 pc. Suites •
ClSIIW
suburb
where
busing
was
an
Sale 416.00
would be $42 million less than
Contemporary llyllf
529.00
2
pc.
Suites
•
279.00
Love
Seats
.
.
•
.
.
.
.
Sale
224.00
Sale 424.00
compacl console.
under the revenue-sharing important issue Incumbent
549.00 2 pc. Suites · ·
Rep.
WUIIam
Broomfield
won
289.00
Sofas
Sale
232.00
Sale 440.00
6" Jl 3~ Twin·Cdne
measure which passed the
Speaker.
against
Jack
MacDonald
in
the
298.00
Sofas
·
.
.
.
•
·
Sale
239.00
568.00
Sectionals
·
•
•
.
•
•.
Sale 455.00
House.
Republican primary. Both ·ran
319.00 Sofas . . . . . .
Sale 256.00
617.00 2 pc. Suites •
Sale 494.00
strong anti-busing campalgm
339.00
Sofas-2
pc.
Suites
.
Sale
272.00
695.00
2
pc.
Suites
.
.
.
.
•
Sale 556.00
MCHS TO MEET
In the only statewide race,
The Meigs County Humane Republican Sen . Robert P.
Society. wlll discuss par· Griffin, the minority whip, and
ticipatlon in lbe Meigs County Democratic Attorney General
Fair and fund raising activities Frank J. Kelley, were unopPROMPT DELIVERY TO YOUR HOME - CONTINUOUS SERVICE
at il regular meeting to be held posed for their parties'
at 7:30 p.r.1. Thursday at the nominations for U.S. Senate.
BANK RATE FINANCING
AND .OUR OWN SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE
•
Meigs Inn .

Market Report

Mason Area

News., Notes

Queen Crowned

Candidates Open
Campaign in East·

'*

Elberfelds In Pomeroy August Furniture Sale
ot

MASON

.

I

• •

Today's
Almanac

MEIGS THEATRE

AUGUST SALE!

Living Room Sui~es
Sofas
Love Seats
Sectionals
KROEHLER, BROYHILl, BERKLINE, NATIONAl, MAPLES

STANDi)UTVALUE!

CH.?J'giant-screen console

Ingels Furniture
992-2635

Middleport

.

Large Selection of Colors and FabricsEarly American - Tr~clltlonal - ¥oclern •

•

at y

The word gun originally
came from mongonel, a large
catapult which hurled stones.

PLEASANT VALLEY '
LOCAL TEMP!i
DISCHARGES: Betty
The temperature in down· Johnson, Bidwell, 0.; Jeffery
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. CaJper, Henderson; Teresa
Wednesday was 71 degrees, Mitchell, Gallipolis; James A.
under cloudy skies.
Stewart, West Columbia.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
\

•

enttne

Sunny and a litUe warmer
today. High mostly in the 701!1.
Clear and cool tonight. Low in
L~e 50s. MosUy sunny and
warmer Friday, high in tbe 8011.

Devoted To The lntere813 OJ The Me~s-Mason Area
.

VOL.
XXIV
'

NO. 82

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The latest fabrics fashioned into at·
tractive garments by Meigs County
teenage girls will be featured at the Meigs
County Fair at 8 p.m. Wednesday when the
annual junior fair style revue is the
grandstand attraction.
Preparatory to the fair revue, girls
modeled their garments before judges In
the Eastern High School auditorium
Tuesday night for grading. Most of these
girls will be taking part in the revue at the
fair .
Modeling Tuesday night were :
Clothing From Top To Toe
Meg Am burger, Joyce Baker, Robin
Capehart, Sheri Colmer, Paula Cun·
. ningham, Tammy Curtis, Rebeeca Ed·
wards, Kim Follrod, Denise Hauber, Paige
Hayman , Robin Herald, Cheryl Johnson,
Tammy Johnson, Mary Lou Kauff, Laurie
Miller, Judy Mora, Kathy Parker, Patty
Parker, Kathy Pooler, Becky Pooler,
Donna Rice, Teresa Rice, Beth Ritchie,
Nancy Samos, Traci Sayer, Tammy
Snider. Timmy Starcher, Connie Stout,
Usa Thomas, Melinda Thomas, Rita
Vining, Denise White and Shari William.
Clothing Males
Brenda Ash, Melinda Dailey, Tammy
Davis, Opal Dyer, Alicia Evans, Christie
Evans, Pam Evans, Terri Guinther, Lori
Guinther, Jody Gureser, Rhonda Haning,
Beth Headley, Jerrie Jordan, Rebekah
Long , Teresa Meadows, Janet Middleswart, Debbie Miller, Rilla Rhoades,
Diane Smith, Tammy Smith, Nicki Dawn
VanMeter, Diana Ward, Kimberly Ward,
Debbie Waddle, Deborah Kay Woodyard
and Cynthia Pitzer.
Joyful Jumper
Cheryl Barnhart, Angela Dailey , Bar·
hara Douglas, Mary Sue Durst, Patty
Dyer, Kim Grueser, Pamela Harden,
Paula Hysell, Virginia Jordan, Sharon
Karr, Patty Lambert, Sandra Might, Mary
Mora, Margaret Province, Kathy Pullins,
Terri Pullins, Becky Roush, Debbie
llemoa, J111e Thomu, M.lbo .Thomu 8l1d
Sherr! Vining .
Clothes For School
Patricia Boston , Denise Dean, Paula
Eichinger , Tammy Fitch , Vanessa
Folmer, Rachel Hunter, Betty Jordan,
Pam Kautz, Cheryl Lawson, Beth
McKnight, Tami Milliron, Janet Mora,
Bonnie Morris, Kathy Newell, Tammy
Pitzer, Diana Pullins, Nancy Ridenour,
Sheri Shillz, Alberta Schultz, Diana
Thornton and Debbie Wipdon.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

0
\

..

PARIS (UP!) - The Viet
Cong, detailing for the first
lime its demands for a
coalition regime in South
Vietnam, said today the war
will. rage on and negotiations
remain deadlocked until the
Saigon government resigns.
Before the actual talks began
the Hanoi delegation used
statements by actress Jane
Fonda, Sen. Eward Kennedy,
former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark and U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim to
bsck its claims that the United
states was deliberately bombIng dikes in North Vietnam.
Madame Nguyen Thi Binh,
chief VietCong negotiator, said
at the 154th session of the
stalemated Vietnam Peace

~.
~I .
....
••
1) ,•... --:
'

'

•J
...

talks, "As long as that ad- U.S. Presidenttal adviser
ministration (or South Viet· Henry A. Kissinger as well ·as
namese President Nguyen Van to the weekly semipublic
Thieu ) exists, the war goes on sessions on Kleber Avenue.
and the negotiations remsin
Today'll session of the con·
deadlocked."
ference, despite recently exU.S. negotiator William J. pressed optimism of American
Porter said the Communists officials, had the same atmos·
refusal to accept a cease.fire phere of angry charges and
and then negotiate a political countercharges about alleged
settlement proved their "ob- U.S. bombing of dikes that
sessive pursuit" of a military marked last Thursday's
victory in order to seize power session.
in South Vietnam. He
North Vietnam told the
dismissed Hanoi's dike deadlocked session that U.S.
allegations
as
pure aircraft had attacked its
propaganda.
irrigation dikes and dams 177
Madame Binh did not specify times, increasing the figure of
whether
her
wotd 173 times that was used at last
"deadlocked" applied to the Thursday's stormy session.
backstage private talks bet- · The deputy chief negotiator
ween Hanoi's negotiators and for North Vietnam, Nguyen

The new Holzer Medical Advisory Committee, Blue
Center, one of the most modern Cross Advisory Committee,
rural medical centers in the and the Federal Price Com·
world, learned today from the mission. While the new rates
Price
Commission
in will enable Holzer Medical
Washington that its rate in· Center to finance the cost of
crease request has been ap· operation of the new facility,
proved.
they are still well below the
The new rates mean the cost average cost of hospital rooms
of a bed at the new facility will for modern insti tutions in
go up only $7 a day .
Retroactive to August I,
LOUNGING GARMENTS such as these colorful oulfits will be among the
semi-private
rooms will be $57
wide-range of clothing modeled at the junior fair style revue at 8 p.m. Wednesday
per day and private rooms $62
at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured from the left, in garments which lbey made in
FF A Planning
per
day
.
Previously
a
semi·
4-H club work are Ray anna Cole, Spinning Wheels Club; Marylu Mills, Five Point
private was $50 and a private
First Market
Star Stitchers, and Teresa Carr, Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls. Miss Mills was the
room $56.
grand prize winner in the class of ali ages participating .
The Southern High School
These increases have been
Future
Farmers of America
approved by the State Hospital
Lounging Clothes,
will hold what Is believed to
Stephanie Radford, Mandie Rose, Julia
be the first hog market at a
And Undergarments
Schultz, Kim Sebo, Jane Sisson, Becky
JUDGE UPHELD
Tere58 carr, Rayanna Cole ahd Mary Thomas, Cindy Lou Thomas, Donna
Meigs County lair this year.
In an unanimous opinion, the
Mills.
Some 10 to 15 animals will
Thornton, Lola Walker, June Ann Wams·
Sports Clothes
be shown Wednesday
ley, Barbara Well, Susan Wright, Avis court of appeals has affirmed a
decree of divorce and custody
morning and a trophy,
Marcia Carr (FHA); Debbie Birchfield, Bissell and Sue Kennedy .
award
of
a
two-year
Qld
child
to
provided by the Radne
Beverly Bishop, Brenda Bishop, Cathy
Dress Up Dress
Blaettnar, Mary Blaettnar, Niese! Duvall,
Home National Bank, will be
Betsy Amsbary, Debbie Boatright, Robert L. Reeves, granted
Dinah Erlewine, Cindy Garnes, Conni e Marcia Carr, Jenny Cline, Helen Cotterill, June 25, 1971 by Judge John C.
awarded. The hogs wtll be
Bacon
of
the
Meigs
Coun
ly
sold at 8 p.m. Friday.
Garnes. Julia Gheen, Joy Hayes, Ingrid Cindy Domigan, Brenda Donohue, Margie
Hawley, Usa Herald, Sharon Holter, Sue Jeffers, Jane Jordan , Linda Myers, Vicki Common Pleas Court in a
The committee of tbe FFA
Oberholzer,
Denise
Pullins,
Pat
Robson,
contested
divorce
action
in
Jones, Barbara Jordan, Sherri Kaufr,
In charge of the market
Kimberly Krautter, Sandra VanMeter, Bonnie Smith, Sheri Young, Connie Smith which Sheila Reeves was
Includes Rocky Hupp,
Connie Miller, Lisa Peerey, Faith Perrin, (FHA ), Jennifer Chapman.
· plaintiff.
chairman; Mike Salser, CoChairman; Bob Spurlock,
Don Hupp, Grover Salser,
Jr., and Any Cross, Advisor.

classroom and half time in the
Title I remedial reading
program . Twenty-seven new
staff members, mostly
replacements, have been
employed for the new school
year.
Meetinf in an adjourned
session Monday night th~
district's Board of Education
employed several teachers .

They were:
Sheila Black, elementary , a
June graduate of Ohio
University who did her student
teacher work at the Bradbury
School.
Samuel Crow, to teach
educable mentally retarded; a
March graduate of Ohio
University in history and
government; a native of
Bellaire with three years

military service. He is now and French; has a bachelor of
completing work required for science degree from Northern
temporary EMR certification. Michigan and her MA from the
University of Michigan . Her
Gary Reed, a graduate of Rio mother.was a native of Wilkes·
Grande in History, English and ville; her grandparents resirle
Government, native of Reeds· in Wellston.
ville, has had two years of Mrs. Margaret Kinsey
military experience, and is Goodman, to teach in the OC·
completing work required for a cupational work experience
temporary EMR certificate. field; has a bachelor's degree
Miss Loujse Kahn, English from Eastern Nazarene
College; a few hours remain to
complete her work for a MA
Degree at Ohio Stale
University; has taught seven
years in vocal music, three in
The V. D. Edwards Insurance East Liverpool and four In
Co. also bid . Texaco won the Upper Arlington; her masters
gasoline contract on its bid of work is in journalism, and for
15 cents per galion for regular the past six months has worked
and 19 cents a gallon for high in public relations for the office
test. Ashland Refming also bid of the Ohio Attorney General.
for the gasc:1•• e contract.
She and her husband reside on
Texaco also received the a farm near Vinton. Her
contract for motor oil, at 24.4 husband will coordinate the
cents per quart, over Ashland. occupational work experience
Texaco received the contract program in Gallipolis.
for supplying multi-purpose
Rebecca L. Tate, elemen·
grease and Ashland will fur· tary, graduate of Hope College
nish anti-freeze.
in Holland, Mich ., and a niece
The board accepted the of Mrs. Claude Husted, teacher
resignation of Dwight ~~as a in the local high school; Miss
bus mechanic. He had been on Tate's home is In Lakewood.
a leave of absence and has
The board released Miss
accepted employment in in· Joyce Myers, a teacher who
(Continued on page 4i
had not begun her duties, here, ·
from her contract.

Davis and Sons Win Buses Bid
The Meigs Local School
District Board of Education
has accepted bids on four new
school buses and awarded
contracts on vehicular supplies, George Hargraves,
superintendent, said today.

Minh Vy, continuing Hanoi's
worldwide campaign against
the alleged deliberate bombing
of dikes, said U.S. planes had
"destroyed 58 portions of dikes
and
seven
floodgates,
devastated dmens of cities and
towns, damaged several
economic installations, struck
even at kindergartens, schools,
hospitals, churches and
pagodas ."
Porter called the dike char·
ges a flood of propaganda
designed to divert attention
from the actual peace negotla·
lions and said they were
~~unconvincing"

when com-

pared with North Vietnam's
"severity and harshness"
during its current military
offensive in South Vietnam.

Holzer Bed Rates Up $7 Daily

Teaching Staff near Complete
With one exception, the
teaching staff of ap·
proximately 140 persons in the
Meigs Local School District
has been completed for the
1972-73 school year,' George
Hargraves,. superintendent,
said today.
The single vacancy Is at the
Salem Center school where a
teacher is needed half time in a

TEN CENTS

Viet Cong says again:

Style Revue
Wednesday
Attraction

Awarded the contract to
supply the four bus bodies was
Edwin H. Davis and Sons,
Superior Bodies, Danville, at a
price of $3,590 each. The other
bidder was Reynolds True~
Bodies Co. with a bid of $3,565.

French Provincial • Mediterranean.

Trends

Weather

By United Preu!nteroatlonal
COLUMBUS-STATEHIGHWAYPATROLMANCharlesS.
Lauver, 32, of the Steubenville post, has received the patrol's
highest honor for vtllor for rescuing two men trapped In a bur·
nlng truck, It was aMounced today. Lauver and six civillans who
stopped to help were all burned .when tbe tmck exploded after
they pulled the men from the blazing vehicle, May 8, 1971.
"When he arrived on tbe scene of the aceident near
Steubenville, Patrolinan Lauver found the truck laying on its lop,
pinning the two occupants within," said patrol Superintendent
Robert M. Chiaramonte. ''The vehicle was burning and very
shortly thereafter the gas tank exploded."
, .

However, the Davis bid,
although slightly higher, was
accepted because of its
availability for service,
Hargraves said.
Awarded the bid for the
chassis of the new buses was
the Meigs Equipment Co., the
lower bidder, at $5,199 each,
with an additional $945 each for
an automatic transmission.
Other bidders were Smith·
Nelson Motors, Pomeroy ;
Pomeroy Motor Co., Keith
Goble Ford, Inc., and the R. H.
Rawlings Sons Co .
Tlie vehicle fleet insurance
coverage was awarded to the
Downing-Childs Agency, low
bidder, at a cost of $3,799.33.

Youth Wrecks Stolen ·Auto

A car believed to have been
stolen, driven by is.year old
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE HAS responded to the Chesapeake · yodth, was
assassination attempt agailllt Gov. Gecrge C. Wallace with a wrecked at the junction of
new firearms control bill aimed 't cheap little guns ~alled Routes 7 and 33 at the con·
"Saturday night specials." But, In three days of roll caD votes struction site Wednesday at
that produced paaaage !!fthe bill Wednesday, rnOJllbera a~ ~:30 a.m. In Meigs CoWlty
the til(ht of Aqlericiii\S to keep guna lor protection and once again ae~:ordlng to \he Gallia·Meigs
defeated overwhelmingly attempts to bsn possession of hl!nd· , State Highway Patrol this
~ or require their reglatrallon with tbe government.
' morning. '
•,
- The new. gun bill, apcjn,bred by Sen. Birch BByh, D-lnd.,
~ youth was northbound on
fa,ces an up~ struggle In the House, and President Nixon's 7 whe~ he started to e?ter 33
views on the measure are not known. Bit II cleared the Senate and crashed Into a ditch ~
with surprising ease on a 81 to 21 roll call vole preceded by Oilly a avoid colliding with a sem1 r1g
half-llearted attempt to &lt;lllute the meuure.
·
northbound on 33. The car -was
_.
)
moderately damaged.
(CIInllnulld on Jllll 12 ·
When the Investigating of·

a·

ficer, A. F. Casto, arrived at car for recognition of ap·
the 5cene, the youth said his prehension. Lt. Ernest
rather was driving and had Wigglesworth, post corn·
gone to get a wrecker, but mander, will present the
further investigation proved award.
this statement apparently
false. It was found later that
Another accident in Meigs
the car was owned by G!Uen County 200 feet above the
Ford Sales, Inc:, Chesapeake. Galila County line on Route 7·
The youth also l:llld stolen a set occurred at 4: to p.m. Wed·
oJ plates.
nesday. Ona E. Sheets, 30,
The youth was released to Gallipolis, was driving a truck
the
Chesapeake Police southbound when a northbound
Department for prosecution. auto flipped a stone Into the
The officer, Casto, wiD be ·windshield Qfthe truck causing
awarded a red lightning bolt minor damage. There were no
for the right door of his patrol· llljll'iea or arrests.

larger cities. In Columbus, for
example, semi-private rooms
comparable to those at Holzer
Medical Center could cost $67 a
day or $10 more thari the new
Holzer rate.
John W. Rafferty, executive
\·Ice president of Holzer
Medical Center said :
"There have been many
rumors that we will be
charging $100 and more per
room each day, and I welcome
this opportunity to point out
that even with this increase,

Students submitting exhibits
given a "superior" rating
receive a blue ribbon and $1.50;
those with " good" ratings
receive a red ribbon and $1 and /\
"average" exhibits gel a white
ribbon and 50 cents. No ribbons
or cash awards are given for
below average work .
Entries for the school display
close at 4 p.m. Saturday and
are confined to pupils enrolled
in the Meigs County school

WASH!NGTON (UPI) - Un·
derdog George s. McGovern
sets forth for the streeb · and
factories of New England today
to launch his · campaign to
depose President Nixon.
The Democratic presidential
candidate described the two·
day trip that would take him to
New Hampshire, Connecticut
and Rhode Island and end in
New York City Friday as a
"listening tour." He said he
intended to talk to voters and
find out what tbey want.
McGovern prepared for hi~
first full-6cale campaign trip

system during the past school
year. Exhibits muat represent
original work completed by
students In the Immediate
preceding . school year. They
must be in place by 4 p.m.
Tuesday and must not be with·
drawn before 4 p.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 19.
Exhibits will be judged upon
the basis of appearance, 20
pet.; workmanship, 40 pet.;
originality, 20 pet., and
educational value, 20 pet.
Science exhibits will be
directly related to topics in
health, conservation, earth
science, biology, botany,
physics or chemistry. Arts and
crafts exhibits migbl consist of
handcraft, Involving wood
work, metal work, leather
craft, weaving , knitting,
needlework, paintings, ·
drawlng,letlering or ceramics.
Robert Bowen, county
superintendent .of schools, is
superintendent of the depart·
ment.

Eyes for Needy Project

rates. "Where else," he said,
"could you move from an old,
overcrowded building, into a
new modern $21 million
structure with the latest up to
date equipment and services
for a mere $7 more a. day?"

Wednesday by mendinalencea
withHouae Democrata. Accom·
panied by Sargent Shriver, his·
new running mate, McGovern
spent an hour and a hall with
his party's congressmen,
posing for pictures and then
addressing the group.
He courted the congressmen
-some of whom have been less
than enthusiastic about his
candidacy-by telling them he
realized that congressmen run
better in their districts than the
party's presidential candidate.
"We need your advice, we

need your counsel, we need
your support," McGovern said.
Rep. Thomas · P. O'Neill,
chairman of the House Democratic Campaign Committee,
~id McGovern's appearance
had gone a long way toward
healing party differences, and
Rep. Ken Hechler, D-W.Va.,
called McGovern's approach
"a political masterstroke."
· ' McGovern scbeduled his first
steops today in New Hampshire. He planned to visit the J.
F. McElwain shoe factory at
Manchester, hold a news
conference, alld make a walk·
lng tour down Elm Street.,
McGovern also planned ca'll·
paign stops today in Hartford,
Conn. and was scheduled to
spend the night in Providence,
R.I., and make a walking tour
through the city Friday. He
ends the tour later ntday with.
a . press conference in New
York.
'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Oblo Ex1elided Onlloot Saturclay through MoJI!Iay:
Partly cloudy, warm and
humid with a chance of af.·
ternoon thunderabowers
each day. Highs ranging
from the lower Ills to the
lo,.~r 901J. Early mol'lliDI
lows from lhe upper 5811 to ·
the upper 1101.
. '

~-cc

f

~W.~~!.W.~

,.
AID GIVEN
The Middleport Emergency
Squsd answered a call on Rose
Hill at 10:26 p.m. Wednesday
.. .
for Mrs. Margaret Mullins who
recipient of club illd. Another wu Suffering severe stomach
case was approv(d and tbe
and chest pains. She wu taken
club will provide eyeglaslea.
to Veterans Memorial Hoepltal
where
lhe was treated andTom
repoi-ted on the
recent ho,i~-one golf contest released.
conduct~!~~· by the club at the
Rock Springs Falrgroun4s.
JOBS AVAILABLE
Preparat10111 were started for
The Leading Creek Connext year's promotion. The servancy District in Rutland
contest this year was con- baa employment openings for
sidered successful and 2$ men, 115 years of age or
proceeds will go for the li&amp;l\1 older. Thoae l!lterested should
saving progral!l; Wendell contact the olllce In Rutllnd.
Hoover, vice presidtnt, wuln PIIGae 7U4922, lor an ·~
polallllenl.
char&amp;e of lhe IDMIIDI·

Advanced by Lions a~
Plans for picking up used eye
glasses which have been
collected In several business
houses over the past lew weeks
were made when tbe Pomeroy •
Middleport Uons Club met lor
a luncheon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn.
The glasses will be packed at
7 p.m. .Monday and sent to
"New Eyes for the Needy" in
New Jersey.
N. W. Compton reported on
the club's sight program. He
said the club has received a
~tier of thanki from one

· One hospital officials said
today the patients served by
Holzer Medical Center are the
ones benefiting from these

Opinions Sought

Student Exhibits
Number 300 Plus
Over 300 exhibits will be
featured in the public schools
display to be featured at the
Meigs County Fair next week.
Each pupil is permitted only
one exhibit and it must be in
the field of either science or
arts and crafts. Classifications
for judging are broken down
into grades 1 and 2;. grades 4
through 6; grades 7 through 9
and grades 10 through 12. Each
exhibit will be judged on its
own merits rather than on a
competitive basis.

our rates will go up just $7 and
our highest rate will be only $62
per day."

ea.en

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