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8-- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep«t-Pomeroy, 0., Aug. 28, 1~72

Deputies
League
M
Volunteer Service
Schedules First Activities

Making the most of the threeweek recess , Congressman

Clarence Miller continues his
busy schedule this Wednesday
evening, August 30, wfth an
appearance at the annual Blue
Ribbon Farm Family Banquet,
to be held in Colwnbus at the
Rhodes ·center on the Ohio
State Fairgrounds .
On Thursday, August 31,
Miller, the only Ohio member .
of the House Agric ulture
Committee, will be in
Colwnbus to attend the 7th
anniversary celebration of the
Alpha Zeta Fraternity. The
frate rni ty is the oldest
professional
Agrirul tural
•crvice organlzaHon in thP.
rounty. The Cong,·essman will
join Secretary of Agriculture ,
Earl L. Butz, at ,1Je luncheon
meeting which is to be held at
noon at the Ohio lltale Union.
On Thursday afternoon from
:&gt;-$ p. m., Miller will be at his
Dlstrkt O!!ic~ in Lancaster,
where he will conduct

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MASON DRIVE-IN
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TONIGHT
AND TUESDAY
Aug. 28·29

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scheduled appointments for
a rea residents.
On Friday, September I , the
Lancaster lawmaker has a full
day of open door sessions.
From 9-10 a. m. the Cong re~sman will be in Hocking
County where .he will hold a
sesssion in the civil service
room at the Logan Post Office.
From 2-3 p. m., he will be in
Athens, where he will conduct
a similar session at the Athens
Post Office.
Friday evening Miller will
travel to Caldwell to be at his
mobile office on the Noble
County Fairgrounds.
On Saturday, September 2,
the Congressman will be in
Marietta to participate in the
opening day ceremonies of the
Washingwn County Fair. After
taking part in the parade,
Miller will be at his mobile
office on the grounds during
most of the afternoon.
On Labpr Day, Monday,
September 4, Miller will be
back in Fairfield County to
participate in the annual Labor
Day activities in Pickeringto.t,
which begin with a parade at 10

program guidelines, has met at
the medical center twice the
past month to plan the overall
role of the service league .
Members of , the steering
committee are Elmer Caldwell , Thebna Elliott, Barbat·a
Epling: Susie Frazee, Martha
MacKenzie, Ellabelle MeDonald, Earl Neff, .Malcolm
Orebaugh, Miriam Persinger
and Mary Jean Walker.
. Both men and women are '
encouraged to participate in
the volunteer program, as
considerable interest has been
reported throughout the
community to become involved
in such service. In future
months, there wiU be serveral
areas throughout the medical
center where the league will
become active. These include
escort service for patients,
mail delivery, sundry and book

The new Holzer Medical
Center Volunteer Service
League conducted its first
orientation of members
Thursday in the French 500
Room at the new center. There
were 21 persons a I the two-hour
session starling at 1 p. m.
The Volunteer Service
League, under the direction of
Marianne B. Campbell, Vice
President of Development at
the medical center, Is being
established to assist the
hospit.ll staff in patient service
areas. Betty Plymale, R. N .,
Nursing Services Coordinator,
and Sam Neal, Director of ·
Communications, assisted
Mrs. Campbell in the
orientation.
Initially, two functions will
be performed by the volun·
leers. They will help staff the
information desk in the front
foyer and the information desk
at the emergency entrance.
Red Cross Volunteer Gray
Ladies will continue to have an
adtve role in Holzer Medical
Center 's overall volunteer
a. m.
Late that afternoon, Miller service.
will return to Washington for
A community "steering
the reconvening of Congress on committee,"
whi~h
is
the•5th.
developing the volunteer

News.

55,228 Employed
By Ohio in July

MEIGS THEATRE

The state of Ohio employed vices with 4,05~.
55,228 persons at an average
However, only the Departmonth
salary
of
$631.12
during
ment
of Mental Health and
Walt Disney's
July,
Slate
Auditor
Joseph
T.
Ret.lrdation pays Its employes
NOW YOUSE E HIM,
Ferguson said today. Salary out of the state's general
NOW YOU DON'T
Technicolor
expenditures for the month r~venue fund . Salaries for
Kurl Russell
totaled $34,655,567.~1. the employes in the Department of
Cesar Romero
auditor said.
Highways are paid from
(G)
The largest number of 5Ulte gasoline mxes and Bureau of
ALSO
BEAR COUNTRY
employes, 15,5~3, was found in Employment Services salaries
the Department of Mental are paid from federal funds.
COLOR CARTOON:
Health
and Retardation,
July employment and salary
Double Dribble
fotlowed
by
the
Department
of
figures
for the seven mator
Admission : st.SO Adulls
Highways with 11,205, and the divisions of state government
Children : 75c
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Bureau of Employment Ser- were :
Judicial, 48 employes,
$436,875.24 in salaries;
Legislative, 328 employes,
$270,305.40 In salaries; Elected
By the Popular Success of Our Noon
Officials, 1,234 employes,
$914,660.11 in salaries;
Buffet ...
Executive, 50,565 employes,
$31,173,214.94 in salaries;
Education, ~06 employes,
$692 , 675.6~
in salartes ;
Regulatory Boards and
Commissions, 1,526 employes,
$!180,282.45 · in salaries; and
Special Agencies, 621 employes
and $387,353.88 in salaries. ·

TUESDAY EVENING ONLY

5to9:lG-$2. 50 all you can eat, (or AI a Cartel

Drinks and

Wide Menu

Dessert Extra .

Choice

Order our regular menu every night 5 to 10.

Have You Heard?

HAPPY HOUR
MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
PRETZELS&amp; PEANUTS ON BAR .
You' ll be happy when you come here.

The MEIGS INN
POMEROY

PH. 992-3629

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CLUB TO MEET
The Tuppers Plains Community Club will hold a special
meeting at the clubhouse alB p.
m. Wednesday. Money-making
projects will be discussed. All
members are asked to be
present.

DURING OUR 9TH ANNIVERSARY SALEI
ENTER
TODIIY
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ENTRY BLANK

NAME

AD DRESS
CITY
STATE
ALL PERSONS MUST BE 16 OR OLDER TO
ENTER NO EMPLOYE OR MEMBER OF
i FAMILY MAY ENTER .

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DEPOSIT
AI
OUR

ONE ' PRIZETOAFAMILY

DRAWINGSAT. NIGHTSEPT.2AT8P.M.
You Do Nol Have to be Presenllo Win
M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER ·

STORE

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Three persons were bound
over to the grand jury, 21 bonds
were forfeited · and four
. defendants fined In Judge
Robert S. Betz's Gallipolis
Municipal Court today.
Bound over to the grand jury
were John Armstrong and
Judy Ar.mstrong, both for
assault and battery, with bonds
setat$200each. Their trial was
set for Sept. 12.
David H. Smith was bound
over to the grand jury on three
charges 0{ had checks. Bond
was set at $2,500 on each count.
Fined were Turley E.
George, bad check, $50 and
costs; Robert E. Metzger, 20,
Route 1, Cheshire, stop sign,
$10 and costs ; Edith E.
Stwnbo, 32, West Mansfield,
Ohio, left of center, $20 and
costs, and Ralph E. Bush,
intoxication, $20 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Roger
Johnson, bad check, $61.50;·
William White, intoxication,.
$38.50; Barbara J. Bryce, 40,
Middleport, driving while
intoxicated, $306; Michael
Eugene Northup, 26, Route 2,
Gallipotis, speed, $28; Stanley
H. Doss, Route I, Middleport,
speed, $18; Garold Lee
Provens, 24, Route I, Northup,
driving while intoxicated, $308;
Eddie Glover, Jr., 44, Sharon,
W. Va ., $308; Lonnie L.
Drummond, Route I, Bidwell,
driving while intoxicated, $308;
William R. Kiser, 24, Troy,
driving while intoxicated, $308;
Shirley E. Hawkins, 30, Troy,
intoxication, $28; Rex Ray
Schirm, 24, S. Solon. unsafe
vehicle , $16 ; Darrell H.
Morrison, 24, Leon, W. Va .,·
fictitious registration, $56:
James L. Mink, 36, Route I,
Bidwell, speed, $28; Belinda
Bowling, 19, Middleport, speed,
$28; Richard G. Abels, 52, Long
Bottom, failure to stop within
an assw:ed clear distance, $28;
Ronald L. Adrian, Gallipolis,
speed, $28; Frances L. Shaffer,

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FOODLINER, Middleport, Ohio
Register for Free G-ifts

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Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDA V ADMISSIONS
- Joyce Hall, Pomeroy;
Romona Yonker, Racine ;
Ronald Grady, Racine; Orville
Gaul, Racin e; Adrienne
Hubbard, Syracuse; Wayne
Gibbeaul, Point Pleasant, and
Joseph Quivey, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Michael Martin, Donna
Jones, Phyllis Spears, Joyce
Hall and Rex Argabrite .
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Tammy J o Lander~. Pomeroy;
Dennis Wolfe, Racine; Patsy
While, Racine ; George Cundiff, Minrsville, and Harriet
Hyatt, Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Richard Freeman , Darin
Roa ch, Donald Mac~lr,
Kenneth Collins , Randy
Grinstead, Avery Romine, ahd
Vernon Roush.

carl, patten! care service such
as feeding, visits, tray favors,
etc., floor service, pediatric
activities and chaplaincy
service.
Following
Thursday 's
orient.llion It was decided to
schedule staffing of the information desk at the
emergency room immediately
and set Selpember 17 as the
date to begin we ekend
assignments at the desk in the
front foyer at the main entrance,
Everyone inte rested in
vo lunteer work at Holzer ·
Medical Center is invited to
notify a member of th e
Volunteer Service LeaJlue's
community steering commit tee for further information. A
second orientation will be
scheduled sometime in late
September, the date to be
announced .

in Briefs

3 Bound Over
To Grand Jury

Tonighi,.Tues.
Augusl28·29

AN EVENING
BUFFET

I

(Continued from Page I )
the establishment of an aU-volunteer army in less than a year.
Nixon planned to discuss both topics today with Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird, White House aides reported.
White House aides said Mr. Nixon would announce Tuesday
or Wednesday a further cut to be achieved after Sept. 1, when the
U. S. force level will be down to 3~,000. The elimination of the
draft and reliance solely on enlistments was expected to be a
major political boon for Nixon among the newly enfranchized 18to-25 year-old voteers.

Double Feature

"BEAST OF THE
YELLOW NIGHT"
PLUS
"CREATURE WITH
THE BLUE HAND"

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•••••·•·

23, Gallipolis, speed, $18 ;
Brenda A. Harrison, 22,
Gallipolis, speed, $18; Forest
R. Ru ssell, 22, Gallipolis,
speed, $18; Eve M. Harris, 21,
Gallipolis, speed, $18, and
Garnard Ghrist, assault and
battery , $58.

Fair
(Continued from Page I)
Rhode Island Red cockerel of
Jim St.luffer of Apple Creek
took the grand champion Bantam award.
The grand champion waterfowl award went to the Colored
Rouen shown by Dan M. Aultman, Xenia.
Minday Skinner, 13, Lancaster. won a "twirl-off" in the
baton twirler championships
and Mrs. William Brown, Bucyrus, won first place In a
dessert contest for her eclairs,
lemon mrlets veronique,
ribbon jewel cakes, Persian
party cakes and cornicopias.
In senior citizen competition,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beato of
Westlake won the dance con·
test while Anna Brown of
Cleveland, Amelia Nagy of
Mayfield Heights and Martha
Yoder of Columbus took top
honors in cookie baking.
Mrs. Thodosia Sochasky of
Cleveland, Mrs. Ina Post of
Medina and Joseph Engram of
Cleveland won prominent
senior citizen awards and
senior citizen volunteer awards
went to Mr. and Mrs. James
Palocsay of Parma and Mrs.
Grace Jenny of Medina.

C&amp;SOE Driver
Is Retiring
SYRACUSE - Lawrence 0.
Douglas, who joined the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in 1936 as a
groundman in the Middleport
District, Is retiring this month.
He took a leave of absence to
serve in the U. s. Army and
returned to Middleport's
h...............,..'"
Construction and Maintenance
~~ew~- c...... ..,. h•
Deparbn~nt. Since then he has
of hla .... •~• to, '•14oy."
held positions of Truck
The long LABOR DAY
Operator B, Line Truck Driver
weekend , (If you ' re net
and Truck Hetper. Mr. and planning a lrlp) would be a
Mrs. Douglas have a married good lime lo do thai job
daughter and live on Hogan St., you've been going lo do all
here.
summer .
Visit
the
" FRIENDLY ONES" ol !he
Pomeroy Cemenl Block Co.
Nairobi, Kenya's mile-high for the tools and the
capital of 350,000 population, materials
is one of Africa's biggest
cities.
Flying foxes are the largest of the bats , measuring
about one fool in length with
a wingspread of five feet.

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r'i~m
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Miller to Attend
Columbus Dinner

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Gallja County sherifl's
deputies were continuing
search today for a man
possibly named Ronald P;~rker
sought for questioning in
connection with the theft of
$139 from the Save More
Service Station at ·Kanauga.
According to the sheriff's
department, Parker, described

Oara Caldwell
Died on Sunday
Mrs. Clara Belle Caldwell,
70, Huntington, a native of
Gallia Counly, died Sunday in a
Huntington nursing home.
Born July 21, 1902 in Ohio,
she was a retired employe of
the Peoples Company in
Huntington and a member of
the Baptist Temple there.
Surviving are her husband,
James Nelson Caldwell; two
daughters, Mrs. Lois Johnson
of Louisville, Ky., and Mrs .
Rita Lillie of Dayton, Ohio; a
sister, Mrs. Betty Jackson of
Middleport, and five grandchildren.
Funeral servic'es will be alii
a. m. Tuesday at Chapman's
Mortuary in Pt. Pleasant, with
Rev. Paul Mullens officiating.
Burial will be in Ridgelawn
Cemetery at Mercerville .
Calling hours will be held at the
mortuary after 2 p. m. today.

Want Parker

Sid Spencer, Pomeroy Horseman, Tops for 100-199 Starts zn '71

as 6-1, 210 pounds, )legan Patriot Rd. Grate reported
working at the station Sa.tur- someone cut his fence ·In two
day morning. He gave the places.
name of Ronald Parker, but
the station manager did not
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Pleasant Valley Hospital
check his identilication or
DISCHARGES - Worthy
social security nwnber at that
time. Parker left the station Siders, Jr., Henderson; Jane
about 3 p. m~ and was last seen Leary, Leon; Philip Kin~el, MI.
walking north on Rt. 7 wward Alto; Mrs . Larry , Jeffers,
his car which was parked Southside; Mrs. Raynoldo
approximately a quarter of a Sotomyer, Lakin; Mrs. Albert
Holt, Sr., Gallipol!s Ferry;
mile away .
The money was discovered Mrs. Nancy Barr, Leon; Mrs.
missing shortly afterwards. It Reba Darnell, Huntington;
is not known if Parker was the Pameta Powell, Ashtori;
Charles Carr, Tuppers Plains;
man's real name.
Deputies also investigated an Kenneth Thorne, Franklin
act of vandalism at the Charles Smith, Mrs. Norma Williams,
Grate farm on the Cadmus- all of Point Pleasant.

By BOll HOEFLICH
Meigs County t'air harness
horse racing fans this month
again watched Pomeroy's
· Sidney Spencer bring in a
wlnner in several races.
What they didn't realize,
howev er, was that their nei ghbor and friend is the nati on's
leader in the Universal Driver
Rating System for 100 to 199
st.lrts in 1971.
Featured on the cover of a
recent issue of "The Buckeye
Harness Horseman," with
"Painted Doll" , one of the

SID SPENCER, FORMER
mayor ol Pomeroy, the nalion',s
leader in the 100 to 199 harness
horse racing starts in . 1971, with
" Pain ted Doll."
'

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy
..

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Shop Weekdays 9:30 to Sp.m.
Open Both Friday'8nd Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

•••••••••••••••••

'l· -.

The 1972 Big Bend Regatta
We ekend staged by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce in June operated "in the
black. "
This was the report of Bill
Grue ser , chairman, to the
chamber meeting for a noon
luncheon at the Meigs Inn
Monday.
While an exact figure is not
available, Since there are some
small recetpts and bills outst.lnding, Grueser said that to
date the regatm shows a profit
of $263.85 and he expects it to

.,.

TONI
TODD
artfully shaped
school-girl look

Probe
(Continued from Page I)
The GAO findings were referred to the Justice Depart·
ment. Stans said the GAO had
been pressured by "McGovern
campaign operatives" into
rushing into print what he
called an Incomplete, loosely
drawn report.
"The only point in the report
which under a strained construction ... might indicate a
teclmical violation was the
expenditure of a $2,500 expense
in cashing certain checks,"
Stans said. "Without conceding
a violation, the committee is
promptly amending its June 10
report to include this $2,500
expenditure.''
Four Nixon campaign checks
worth ~.000 were drawn on a
Mexico City bank and
deposited In Barker's account,
the GAO report !aid. The other
$25,000 that found its way to
Barker's account was a campaign gift from a wealthy
Minneapolis inves tor, the
repor t added.
SUPPER PLANNED
Acovered dish supper will be
held at6:30p. m. Wednesday at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ
after which election of church
officers will be held . There also
will be a prayer meeting and
Bible study.

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reach "about $300."
So far , total receipts have
been $4, 128.39. and expenditure
$3,8(i4 .54.
Grueser furth er reported a
balance of over $500 in the
regatta account from last yea r
to br ing the current balance in
the fund to $849.80. Heceipts
were dow n thi s yea r and expenses were up, Gruese r
reported.
Mee ting with the chamber
Monday was Pat Meeker of
Surveys Unlimited, Cable,
Ohio, the planning firm of the

en tine

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area
VOL XXV NO. 95

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ass ociation takes pride in
satutiJ1g Sid for th~ outstanding
driver record he established
last year. We predict dozens of
drivers will be out to break hat
reco rd - but none will 1e
working harder than Sid w
brclik his own record ''.
Spence r is a former mayor of
Pomeroy and opera ted a
grocery store for a number of
years before leaving that
business to devote fult-time to
training and racing harness
horses .

une Regaua ·Made
Money in Pomeroy

.•

'(of

successful Spe n ccr- Trotting Assn . from two county
Weinberger horses, Spencer fairs upparenlly were in error.
unly reco nlly was awarded the Final review indicated Spencer
honor. This eame after an had one less st.lrland one more
official re-check of the re.cords win than previo usly anof the U. S. Tr ott ing noun ced.
Association.
The correct Universal Driver
Rating System percent.lge for
Spencer, a member of the Spencer indica tes .520 for 118
Ohio Harn ess Horse man 's starts on 43 victori es, 21
Association Board of Direc- seconds and 23 thirds. Cheney
to rs, edged past fellow Ohioan t·ecorded 106 starts, 40 vicRobert Cheney to become the tories, 23 seconds and 6 thirds
national leader.
fur a URDS perce ntage of .511.
According to the ma gazi ne,
The magazine concludes:
reports sent tu the U. S.
"Ohio Harness Horseman's

TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Mei~s

Cou nty Plannin g
Commisston. Meeker said his
company has worked out a
surv ey on Pomeroy pertaining
to housing, the central business
di strict, and land use. "This
survey should be supported by
businessmen ," Meeker said ,
pointmg out that the plan is to
ma in ~tin Pomeroy and Mid·
dl eporl as commercial ce nte rs.
ra ther than develop business
near the site of the mining
operations in the western part
of the county.
" The survey Meeker said,
" poin ts up th e va lue of
beautification of the cen tra l
busi ness district m Pomeroy
and the possibilities in some
building sites. "
Also discussed with Meeker
was the recent smle proposal
agai nst the further d~ velop­
ment of housing in areas where
septic lank sewage treatment
faci lities will be necessary .
Ja ck Kerr,
chamber
president, said representatives
1"

from the Pomeroy group had
mel in Jackson recently with
representatives from other
chambers of commerce of the
area. The gr oup meets
regularly to discuss mutual
problems and interests, Kerr
said.
Theodore T. Reed , Jr .,
pointed ou t that the mee tings
arc informal and benefit every
community, since problems
are similar . Kerr announced
that the group wit! meet in
Pomeroy on Nov. 15.
On oth er matters, Kerr
reported that Charles (Chuck)
Bartels is preparing signs for
the exterior of the chamber
office in the courthouse; that
batlots on the new directors
have not yet been mbulated,
and he announced his intentions of co ntacting the
Middlepor t y hamber of
Commerce to disc uss the
possibility of uniting Pomeroy
and Middleport chambers into
(Continued on page 6)

Council Plans Hauling O..arge
As l efn on the DuPont TV shaw
"Wha t Every Woma n Wa ntl to K"ow "

Plaid squares away into the new seown with a bodys~aped top, a flippy sk ir t, o waist cinching belt. Col -

lared and cuffed in spanking white with a satin bow
at the neckline. Woven Dacron"· polyester, machine
washable / dryabl e. Gre en/white or navy / white. 6-16.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SHOPPING HEADQUARTERS

In Great Britain, Guy
Fawkes Day, Nov . 5, com.
memorales the date in 1605
when reb e Is under Guy
Fawkes attempted to blow
up Parliament.

ONE OF THE MANY FINE FRIGIDAIRE APPLI.lNCES.

I

SAIGON -NAVY JETS AND SURFACE warships sank two
North Vietnamese wrpedo boats Sundsy in an air-6Ca battle that
ranged to within two miles of the blockaded North Vietnamese
port of Haiphong, U.S. spokesmen said today. No U.S. losses
were reported. But shells from North Vietnamese shore batteries
exploding within 30 feet of the destroyer Robison showered the
lx'idge with shrapnel.
U. S. jets new around tropical storm Cora Monday and
bom)led a supply depot 35 miles north of Hanoi and missile sites
(Continued on page 8)

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BAKER FURNITURE
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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_..

L..., fulw" 1 lllllilp .,.., a1111i
dtytf tl'llulcl hl\11: 2·59ttd w.nhtr hu
"-cvltr Dlll10ei(Ctflllthnl Or )'It n..

hauled by the village.
It was stressed that the
village will do no hauling of
garbage . The fees noted above
are to cover expenses involved
in hauling away other waste.
Garbage collectors in the
community will not accept
refuS£ other than that which
will go into the regular garbage
cans, it was reported, and
hence the charge by the ,·ill age
for haulin g away other
material too large for garbage
cans .
Ohlinger also recommended
that legtslation be enacted to
empower the village to direct

that old houses which are
hazardous fr om a safety
standpoint either are razed or
repaired. It was agreed that
Clerk-Treasurer Grate will
confer with Solicitor Bernard
Fultz on steps which can be
t.lken.
Councilman Ohlinger also
suggested legislation against
permitting business houses to
use the sidewalks for uncrating
merchandise and for using
large spaces to display merchandise on the sidewalks. No
action was taken, however.
Councilman
William
Walters, a businessman, said

The Meigs County Com·
missioners today requested a
hearing on the proposed orders
of the Ohio Water Pollution
Control Board which would ban
sewer connections in 12 areas
of the state, including the
Leading Creek Conservancy
District involving Meigs and
Vinton Counties.
Meeting with the county
commissioners in regard wthe
sewer ban were Jack Crisp and
Charles Russell of the conservancy dis~ict ; Frank W.
Porter, local attorney; John
Reece, Ohio Power Company;
Judge John C. Bacon, and the
Rev. Wilbur Perrin.
A ban on sewer cou·
uectlons atops add!Uoaal
burden of the existing sewer
systems by prohibiting any
new sewer line cooslruclion
or connections Into thai
system.
In areas wlthoul anrerage
and wastewater trodmenl

facilities , the ban prevents the
further approval of individual
on lot sewage systems such as
septic tanks.
It was suggested that rather
than let industry and growth of
Meigs Coun ly go down the
drain; the commissioners
somehow find funds to hire an
inspector.
Jack Crisp said there was
more to it than an inspector.
Commissioner Bob Clark
stated that the sub-division
regulations, of which the
county engineer Is respon·
alble for sewerage In·
spedlon, has nothing to do
with the fulure of Meigs
County and that the subdlvllilon regulations covers
systems.
Judge John C. Bacon stated
that he has for sometime urged
the commissioners to adopt a
building code and if one had
been adopted this problem

that such legislation would
drive business out of the wwn
particularly so in his case. H~
staled that other nearby
businesses also gain from the
customers which visit his
establishment.
M. and Mrs. Terry Beechler
who reside in the village-owned
apartment and dispatches fire
and emergency vehicles
discussed recent legislation
entitling village "employes" to
si x holidays each year. They
were told that the holidays
never had applied to employment such as the
(Continued on page 8)

M.an Pinned, Dies
Orville Landers, 33, Laurel
St. , Pomeroy, apparently was
killed instantly early today
when his auto went out of
control on Middleport Hill and
struck guard railing. His body
was pinned in the vehicle two
hours.
Landers became the first
traffic fat.l .ity recorded in
Middleport this year.
According to Middleport
Police Chief J . J. Cremeans
Landers' car was proceeding'
up Middleport Hill when it went
out of control, crossed the road
and ran into the lower end of
railing thai guards a sharp

curve and extends farther up
the hill.
The railing entered the left
side of the car, shoving Mr.
Landers into the back seal. He
died as a result of extensive
body injuries, believed to have
been
,. instantly .
On the scene with the police
chief were Meigs County
Prosecutor Bernard Fultz,
Coroner Dr. R. R. Pickens,
Sherilf Robert Harten bach and
both the Middleport and
Pomeroy E-R squads. The "
squads worked two hours to
free the body.
Middleport Pollee were first

Commission Asks for Hearing

lklift like this ...

[ 1

.
B
.
t~ ~
ews •• zn rze1 s~t

....-,;::~:::.:::::::~:=~:::::::: ::::~.y,::::::::::~::.::&gt;.&gt;.::::~*:~:::::::::::::::::::::~::~:.::.-:::::-.::::&gt;.&gt;&gt;.::::

By United Press International
SAIGON- CAPT. RICHARDS. RITCHIE of Reidsville, N.
C., shot down a ·North Vietnamese MIG21 defending Hanoi
Monday to become the first U.S. Air Force ace of the Indochina
war, the U.S. command said today.
Ritchie, based in Thailand, made his fifth kill of a Communist plane with an air-to-air missile about 30 miles west of theNorth Vietnamese capital. Military spokesmen said Ritchie and
his co-pilot, Capt. Charles D. De Bellevue of Lafayette, La ., were
Dying protection for other planes bombing North Vietnam. De
Bellevue is credited with three other kills.

Frig

L...:.

prepare spec ifica lions and
submit them to ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate to include In the advertisement.
It was Councilman David
Ohlinger who urged approval
of an ordinance providing
charges for hauling services
being provided for residents.
Under the ordinance approved
in its first of three readings, the
village will charge $10 for a
load on the I 1 , ton truck; $5 a
load for use of a pickup truck ,
and '$1 for each 20 gallon can

,y

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Skinny

Middleport Village Council
voted to advertise for bids on a
used pickup truck and approved the first reading of an
ordinance providing for fees
for hauling of refuse - other
than garbage - at a regular
meeting Monday night .
On behalf of the Middleport
Board of Public Affairs,
member Richard Gress asked·
council to advertise for bids on
a used pickup truck. Gress and
Harold Chase , maintenance
supervisor , were asked to

would not exist.
Ctark said a building code
makes regulations too stricl
and would eliminate low income housing projects. He did,
however, announce that the
county would require building
permits .
When II was pointed out
inspectors had to be certified,
it was suggested that person
could be trained through the
Leadhig Creek Conservancy
District.
Charles R. Karr, commissioner, said this would be
the duty ol the Meigs County
Health Department lo hire a
health inspector.
The Water Pollution Control
Board July II found that the
Meigs County Commissioners
had not submitted an application for a water pollution
control board permit. That
action should have been taken
under Section 611.03 of the Ohio
Revised Code, the board said.

Each subdivision has 3{) days
from the date of the letter to
request a board hearing where
they can present their cases in
person.
The Meigs County Commissioners by order of the
board were authorized to
prepare a report and general
plan lor county-wide sewerage
and wastewater treatment
facilities by July I, 1973. The
board also directed that there
be no approval by the local
health department of individual oewage systems In
Meigs County until the Meigs
County Health Department
shall submit for review ·and
obt.lin approval from the Ohio
Departinenl of Health, division
of engineering, revised home
sewage ~isposal regulations
and a plan lor the hn·
plemenlation
or
the
regulation•.

swnmoned to the scene at 4:53
a.m. by a motorist, Gerald
Hart, who passed the wreckage
and went on to town hall w
notify police . The body was
taken to the Ewing Funeral
Home .
Mr . Landers is survived by
his wife, Judy Reynolds
Landers, Pomeroy ; three sons,
Orville Keith, Robert Eugene,
and Charles Andrew, all at
home ; a daughter, Tammy
Joe, at home ; two brothers
Jack, of California, and Bill of'
Columbus; three sisters, Mrs.
Wanda Adams and Mrs.
Delores Justice, both of
Pomeroy, and Sally Landers,
Wadsworth; his mother, Mrs.
Evelyn Landers, Pomeroy , and
a nwnber of' nieces, nephews,
uncles and aunts.
Preceding Mr. Landers in
death were his father, William
H. Landers; a brother, Robert,
and a sister, Jane.
Funeral services will be held
at I p.m. Thursday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call anytime .
Burial will be in the Meigs
Memory Gardens.

ROBIN GAINER'S Hereford steer, reserve champion of the 4-H Division at the Ohlo Stale
Fa~, w":'l judged the grand champion steer of the 1972 Ohio State Fair in open class Monday.
Robm, nghl, was assisted by her sister, Jennifer, who also participated in the fair. The girls
are the daughlers of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Gainer, Pomeroy, RD. There were 369 entries in the
open class division. It is believed that it Is the first lime anyone from Meigs CoWlty ever enter~d this type of competition .

CLASSROOM ROUNDUP:

Meigs Local Count Off 86
Enrollment in the Meigs
Loca l School Di strict on
opening day of the 1972-73
school year was down 66
students compared to last
year, Supt. George Hargraves
reported today .
Opening day enrollm ents at
the schools of the district this
year were Bradbury, 125;
Harrisonville, 116; Midllleporl,
285 ; Pomeroy, 373; Rutland,
233; Salem Ce nter, 11 7; Salisb'!fy, 172; Meigs High School,
988, and Meigs Junior High
School, 526.
The total enrolbnenl this
year on opening day was 2,935
while last year's was 3,021.
EASTERN DISTRICT
Enrolbnent in the schools of

the Eastern Local School
District was up 30 students at
the close of classes on Monday
when the 1972-73 schoot year
started.

Bean Plant in
Big Production

Can Meigs County gardeners top this?
·
Dwight Spencer, Meigs
County farmer and prnduce
.salesman, has reported an
oulslandlng harvest from a
green bean plant at his West
Shade farm, three -miles
northwest of Chester.
Spencer picked 30 eatingsize pods of beans from the
plant and left 43 others to
continue to develop. In ad·
dillon, the plant has a
slop sign violation. The four number of blossoms from
were cited to court by Police which more beans m'ay
come.
Chief Milton Varian .

2 Draw Fines In Town Court
Two defendants were !(ned
and two others forfeited bonds
in Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's Court Monday night.
Fined were Ralph William
Shain, 26, and Thomas Bradley
Stepp, 24, both of Syracuse, $5
and i:osts each for stop sign
1
violations.
Forfeiting bonds were Klek
E. wnaams, 20, Pomeroy, SJO
bond, unsafe operation of a
motor vehicle, and Dennis L.
Cornell, 21, Bolivar, Ohio, $10,

·••••••••••••••
••• ' ••••• !·~
•,•,•,•,•,•:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:!~&amp;:~:::::=:~::~~=::::::::::::::::::::

Weather
MATTRESS BURNED
The Middlepor t Fire Dept.
answered a call at 1:13 p.m.
Mqnday ,lo ·an apartment over
the Meigs-Gallia Grocerv
below Hobson on Rt. 7 when
mattress was on fire. There
was no other damage .

a

Sunny today and Wednesday
with high temperatures both
days in the upper 70. 'in lhe
north and tht mid 80s in the
central and south portions of
the stale. Clear and cool
tonight with lows in the uppe~
50s to the low 60s.

Enrolbnent In the various
schools includes 324 including
kindergarten at the Chester
Elementary School, 1~4 at the
Riverview School, 231 a t
Tuppers Plains, and 299 at the
high school for a total of 1,036.
On August 30 last year,
en rollmen t in the district stood
at 1,008.
Board of Education members, administrators, all
leaching and non-leaching
employes of the Eastern Local
· School District joined by their
husbands or wives will have an
outing at 6 p.m. Thursday. A
potluck dinner is planned at
Forked Run Lake. In case ol
inclement weather, the
gathering will be at the high
school .
REMINDER GIVEN
Sgt. David ProffiH of the
Gallla-Meigs Post Slate
Highway Patrol, today
Issued a remlader to all area
motorists that school Is now
In session, Molorltits were
caulloned to be espedaUy
careful while driving along
highways. When buses are
discharging or plcklDJ up
passengen, aU traffic mullt
stop at leasi!O lett from Ute

bu.
::::::::~~=···"•,

.,. .............. .

�""

z- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooleroy, 0 , Aug. 29, 1m

More Viet Withdrawals Hinted
•

SAN CLEMEN'l)l: , Calif
(UP! )-President N1xon,
followmg up h1s proJected
abohtlon of the draft, was
ready to announce today a
further U S troop withdrawal
from Vietnam -probably the
last until there ts a settlement
m the war

'
N1xon also planned to hold ments
were expected to come
today a post-eonvenhon separately, No lime was an"pohttcal'' news conference nounced for etther, but
The news conference was reporters were asked to be at
prom1sed by N1xon a month the Wlil;tern White House at I
ago and w11l g1ve h1m a chance prn fOT
N1xon announced Monday,
to ouUme hiS campalgn plans
The news conference and the after meetmg w1th Defense
troop Withdrawal announce- Secretary Melvm R La~rd,
that the draft wtll be abolished
as of next July, and the nat1on
wtll revert to an all-volunteer
Army for the ftrst tnue m a
Donation was made on the new generallon
Ntxon several months ago set
p1cmc tables and plans were
that
as the target date to fulfill
made for the reumon to be held
on the thrrd Sunday of August, his 1968 campatgn prom1se to
do away wtth the draft The
1~73, at the Temple Church
move
appeared sure to strengGrove Relatives are urged to
then Nnron's appeal to the 25
plan to attend
nulhon
voters aged 18-to-21
Relatives here have learned
ehg1ble
to
vote ma pres1denl1al
of the birth of a daughter,
Paula Jane, on July 26 to Mr eleellon for the ftrst tnue this
and Mrs John Kimes (Jane year.
Latrd S81d there are two
Caldwell) Thls lS thelf f~rst
condtllons
to achlevmg an end
child. Maternal grandmother
IS Amy Perry Caldwell, who to conscnptwn which he 1s
also hvesm Columbus now, but confident Congress Will apwas born and reared m this prove -a special mcenllve to
commumty and IS a stster of mcrease enlistments of
physiCians, and extensiOn of
Lucy Perry Thomas, local
Mr.andMrs . Walter Jordan, the acllve-duty enlistment
Cincmnatt, spent from Friday bonus to reservtsts and the
unlll Sunday here w:th thetr
parents, Mr and Mrs Clinton
Gtlkey, Albany, and Mr and
KELTONS UNITED
Mrs Mendal Jordan, local
For the ftrst lime m seven
They also called on other
years the famlly of Mr and
relatives m the area
M1 s Aaron Kelton gathered
recently at the Kelton home m
Mmersv1lle Attendmg were
INFANT BAPTIZED
Dt and Mrs Gerald Loz1er,
lmh Elizabeth AustlO , Jay and Joan of Pnnceton, N
daughter of Mr and Mrs John J Mr and Mrs John Aushn
Austm of RIChmond, Va , was Julie, Mary and !m," Richbapttzed Aug 16 at the Varma mond , Va , Mr and Mrs
Eptscopal Pansh Mrs Austin Harry Alexander and grandts the former Kaaron Kelton of children of Toledo , Mr and
Pomeroy Godparents are Mr Mrs George Sh1veler, Jr and
and Mrs Richard Rue of RICh- daughter, Jayne, Cmcmnatl
mond, Va and Mr and Mrs Jommg them for a dmner party
Delmar Canaday of Pomeroy on Fnday eve mng was Mrs
The Canadays are also god- Delmar Canaday godmother
parents of Mrs Austm
of Ins Austm

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Nelson and Sara, Mrs T L
Brookhart and Barbara, and
Mr and Mrs Steve Booth and
Rama Sue, have returned from
a vacatiOn tnp to Florida They
viSited Mr and Mrs John
Rawlmgs at Orange Park,
F1onda, and VISited pomts of
Interest mcludmg Marme
Land , Cypress Gardens,
Disney World, Dayuma Beach
and others enroute
Mrs. Stanton Dalley, sons,
Charles, David and Thomas,
grandchildren, Ronald and
Melinda, Berne, Ind., Anna
Parker, Cleveland , Mrs
Roberta Parker, Mr and Mrs
Tommy Parker and Stacy of
Strasburg, Robbie, Ney and
Cindy Parker of Middleport, all
VISited With Mr and Mrs Ney
Carpenter and Martha Mays
Reunion
Descendants of the Townsend and Dalley fam1hes held
their annual reumon at the
Temple Church Grove on
Sunday, August 20, with about
50 relatives attendmg Mrs
Stanton Dalley and family,
Berne, Indiana, traveled the
farthest to attend Murl Dalley
Galaway had the largest
number of her family m attendance Off1cers elected
were
Leon
Woodrum,
president, McArthur, Guy
Moore, Cuyahoga Falls, v1ce
president, and Martha Mays,
local, secretary-treasurer

Nat1oroal Goi!rd
Latrd told reporters Ntxon
was already ahead of h1s ow11
tnuetable for truer reductwns
In VtetnalD The Umted States
currently has about 37,000
troops there, Larrd S81d, more
than meetmg the goal announ ced earher of cuttmg
troop strength to 39,000by Sept
I

Ntxon w1ll depart Wednesday
for Hawaii for a two-day
surnmtt sesswn wtth Japan's
new Prnue Muuster Kakue1
Tanaka Press Secretary Ronald L Ziegler disclosed that
NlXOn summoned Ellsworth
Bunker, U S ambassador to
Satgon, to fly to Honolulu to
report on the political situation
m South V1etnam
On the .military Side, Larrd
Sald the bombmg, wh1ch has
become a touchy issue m the
re-electton campatgn, wUl continue until there ts a negotiated
settlement or the North Vietnamese return north of the DMZ.

OFFICERS ELECTED
Off1cers were elected at a
recent meetmg of the Happy
Hustlers Class of the Wesleyan
Methodist Church Elected
were Mrs Grace Krtder,
president
Mrs Dorothy
McKenzie, VICe president, and
Mrs Ann Coe , first vtce
president A program on
children and youth was
pt esented and Mrs Gomer
Lew1s, class teacher, gave
devotwns Mrs Ed1th Hayman
gave the secretary and
tr easurer s report Others
present were Mrs Bertha
Spencer, Mrs Mathe Ctrcle,
Mrs l.tlhan J1v1den, and Mrs
L1lhan Lee Mrs Lav m1a
Simpson and Mrs Owen
Watson \\ere reported 11!

Spitz, King Have Gold Medals
MUNICH (UPI) - Mark
the world's best swunmer, and Micki King, the
happiest Air Force captam,
own new gold medals today
that have almost as much
rubber in them as gold.
The medals are erasmg the
mghlmarish recollecllons the
~~ pa1r had of the 1968 Olymp1cs
~itz, 22, of Canmchael,
Calif., won two golds in two
tries in less than an hour
Monday night and set world
records at both f1msh linessurgmg to VIctory m the 200meter butterfly m 2:00 7 and
anchoring the 400meter freestyle relay learn to VIctory m
3:26 42.
He had the old fly record,
2:015,butwasnotamemberof
the U S. relay team which held
the old mark, 3 26 8, set m 1970.
~ltz was favored to win the
200 fly in MeXIco 'City in the
1968 OlympiCS, but finished
eighth to start off a disastrous
games lor hun He never won
an mdiVIdual gold although he
was supposed to wm three
"Pflycbed Up"
He attributed h1s ftrst day
success to bemg ''psyched up"
and he indicated th1s Olympics
~ltz,

wtll be as good as the 1968 was
bad He has a chance for seven
gold medals th1s year, meluding another tonight m the
21II!:IDeter freestyle, where he
also holds the world record.
Spttz,. who never has been
able to overcome the sttgma of
" the 1968 ftasco-no matier how
many world records, kn&lt;&gt;Ws
he 's still on the spot.
..
"I'm sure I'll start off
sleeping well tomght," he said
after acceptmg the two got~
"But I'U wake up at 3 a.m. and
tell myself, 'Well, I've got to do
11 agam "'
That's what Miss King told
herself in Mextco City after she
suffered a broken left arm on
her next to last dive and
flmshed m fourth in the
sprmgboard competition. She
was leading at the time of the
mJury, caused by htttmg the
board
But she was 24, compared to
~ttz ' youthfuliBln 1968, and 11
took more sacrifice for her to
keep m condition to go after
th1s gold But she did it
Enters in Third Place
MISS King, of Pontiac, M1ch ,
entered the last three d1ves m
th1rd place Then she took the

lead on the first dive and made
the last two perfectly to wm
wtth 450 03 pomts
Ulr1ka Knape, 17, of Sweden,
the leader entenng the !mal
three d1ves, fmtshed second
With 434 19 pomts and Marma
Jamcke of East Germany was
th1rd 'j'lth 430.92 Janet Ely of
' 'AJ6Jcjue~que, 'N.l'll:, was fourth
426.00 and 1Cynthlll POtter of
Houston was seventh w1th
413 58
The men swept the 200-meter
butterfly With Gary Hall of
Garden Grove, Calif., second to
~1\z m 2 02 9 and Robm
Backhaus of Redlands, Calif
thtrd m 2 OJ 2
The Uruted States took the
lead m the medal standmgs
With e1ght, mcluding the most
golds-three The Amertcans
also have two Silvers and three
bronze, all won Monday.
The other silver was a surpnse by Vtctor Auer, 35, a
teleVIsion scnpt wr1ter from
North Hollywood, CalU , m the
small bore rtfle shootmg, prone
poslllon
Other Bronzes
The other two bronzes went
to Jam1e McEwan. 19. of Silver

Boston Haunted by Andrews
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Mtke Andrews was dlsappomted when the Red Sox
traded him to Chtcago several
years ago but 1t was Boston
which probably had the regrets
Monday mght
The former Boston mftelder
drove in ftve runs wtth a threerun homer and a double as the
White Sox topped the Red Sox,
6-1 The vtctory kept Chicago a
half-game m front of Oakland
m the Amertcan League 's
Western d!VIson
Andrews snapped a sco reless
tie in the fourth mmng by lmmg
his seventh home run of the
aea!IOn mto the left f1eld screen
with Dick Allen and Carlos
May aboard.
Andrews, enjoying his best
game at the plate thiS season,
helped the White Sox to a 5-l
lead In the sixth mnmg With a
double to left-center that
scored Buddy Bradford and
Allen Rich Morales smgled
home another run before the
Inning was out m the
Mtlonally-televised contest.
A lJ11le Downhearted
"I was a little downhearted
when they traded me, " Andrews sa1d. "Who wants to
lellve Boston' There aren't any
better fans in the world You
don't have to get up for a game,
they get you up "
In other games Baltimore
blanked Minnesota, U, and
Olkland edged Oeveland, 5-4,
in tile other Amencan League
pmes scheduled.

In the National League
Pittsburgh defeated San Diego,
5-3, St. Lou1s downed San
Francisco, 4-2, and Cincmnall
whtpped New York, 5-2, m the
only games scheduled
Jun Palmer scattered five
hits for his 18th v1ctory as
Baltnuore blanked the Twms
The trmmph moved the Onoles
to wlthm one game of the 1dle
first-place Detroit Tigers In the
Amer1can League East Don
Baylor's mnth homer of the
season leading off the fifth
mmng gave Baltimore 1ts first
run
W1lhe Stargell drove m four
With hlS 29th and 30th homers
to power Pittsburgh past the
Padres Bob Moose allowed
only five htts over the f~rst
etght lnrungs but was tagged
for back-to-back nmth IMmg
homers by Leron Lee and Nate
Colbert Ramon Hernandez
came In to record the final two
outs and preserve Moose's lOth
VICtory of the season.
Homer Climaxes lnlllng
Bobby Tolan's seventh
homer , commg w1th two
aboard , clunaxed a four-run
s1xth mmng that camed
Cincmnati over New York.
Gary Nolan, making his first
start smce being s1delined w1th
arm trouble on August 2nd,
gained the victory when he
llmlled the Mets to one htt
while reeling off slx scoreless
Innings.
Angel Mangual's three-run
pmch-llit homer m the sewnth
lnmng capped a lave-run

outburst to hft Oakland over
the lnd1ans . The A's had
collected but one htt mthe first
stx mmngs off Cleveland
starter and loser Steve Dunmug, :1-2 Darold Knowles, m
relief of A's starter V1da Blue,
picked up the vtctory, his
fourth m fiVe dec1s1ons
Don Durham patched a threehitter and Lou Brock and LUIS
Melendez gave hun all the runs
he needed with a homer and a
two-run double as St Lows
downed the G1ants Brock's
leadoff homer-&lt;Jnly hts thrrd
of the y~ar-came on the
second p1tch of the mght by
starter and loser Juan
Mancha!, whose record
dropped to 5-15

Dai~

The

Sentinel

DEVOTED TD THE
INTEREST DF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Edrtor
PublrSt1ed dally exce pt
5a tur day bY The Oh rO Va lley

Publ rsh ng

Court
4S 7C9

St .

Company

Pomeroy

111

OhtO

Busrnes!!. Olfr cr P•ronp

991 2156 Eclr torut l PhOne Y91

1157

Second ctau oostageo pa rd at

P'om e ro y Ohro
Nat rona! ftdvertt~r

repreosent at rv e

ng

Bot r nellr

Ga llagher . Inc 12 East 42nd
St , New Yo r k. Crty New York
Subscr lpt ron rat(' S De

lr\lered b y c arr i er wl'tere
avllt lat&gt; le 50 cen ts per W ee ~
B"Y Motor Route whe"e carrrer
serv ic e rot ava ilable One
month Sl 75 Sy ma 11 In Oh 10
and W VlJ , One vea r $14 00

511( 1"(1onths

months Sc SO

S7 25

Thn~e

Subscr1p1 1on
pri ce mcludes Sunctav T1mes

Sent1ne1

Sprmg, Md , m the Canadian
smgles canoemg event and to
Lynn V1dah, 20, of San FranCISCO m the 200-&lt;neter md!vtdual medley swurumng.
Shane Gould, Australia 's super swunmer, overtook Miss
Vtdah m the last 20 yards to
wm In a world record time of
. ~dWl7, brea~in!l -the •2 23.5 se~
by Claudia Kolb of the U S four
years ago
Other Amencan successes
Monday came m basketball,
water polo, box1ng and
freestyle wrestlmg .
~=:;:;:-~: :-:·&gt;:·:·:·:::::-:::. •

~

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~j Sport

&amp; TN INIJ.S

~~

, Today's
~

3-'nle DIIUy Selilnel, Mlddleport-Pweoy, 0 ., Aug . 21, 1117Z

..:-:-:-.. .~:~::::o-;=-:::"'-:s:;:: -:. .&gt;~::&amp;*-..~~~

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Parade
-

j

:~

BY PAUL CRABTREE

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
!·:;
It's fairly easy to travel from Ohio to West Virgmla, ancl.vice
UPI ~orts Editor
versa, here in the Melgs-Gallia-Mason area (provided the'sl\adle
MUNICH (UP! )- Bruce Bradley lS the early sensation of the
and-oc U. S.33bridges aren't closed, In whole II" in part).
Olympic Games . and who cares that he used to be on "The
Which liBds us to some mighty interesting speculation ab'out
List "
a law pusect by the tm West Virgtnla Legislature. Simply put,
"The Black List," laughs the btg, blond 25-year-&lt;Jid Long
Beach, Calif , res1dent and backbone of the Uruted States' so far It's this:
At age 11, a West Vlrgltila youth becomes a full-fledged
all-eonquermg water polo team "That's not what we really call
adult. In Ohio, he's still a minor unW age 21 (although he has the
1!, but you get the general tdea."
right to vote.)
The U.S water polo team 1s battmg 1.000
Now, let's consider the case of Bob anq.Qarol and Ted and
It has gone into the pool twtce now and won both matches,
Allee. Bob and Carol are each 18, and llve in West VIrginia. Ted
beatmg Cuba, 7~. Monday when Bruce Bradley rammed In three
and Allee are also 18, and Uve m Ohio.
goals, and Romama, 4-3, Sunday when he pumped in a pair.
Let's say that Bob and Carol fall in love, as young people
Cuba was tougher than Romania.
occasionally still do, I'm told, and get married. In Ohio, Ted and
Wtth 2: 18left, Gerardo Rodriguez brought the Cubans to Within
Allee do the same thing - but they come to West Vlrglnla and
5-4 wtth h1s goal after wh1ch Bradley scored his second one of the
live here just long enough to establish residence before
match to make 11 6-1.
marrying, then move back to Ohio.
The Cubans weren 'I finished yet.
Now Bob and Carol are certainly legally married. But what
Suppor!en Moan
A free throw by Carlos Sanches drew Cuba within~ with I :53 about Ted and Allee'
Ted and Allee bought a house while they Uved he,e in Weal
left and U.S. supporters up m the stands moaned when Pete Asch
Vlrglnli.. Oil rellli1llng to Ohio, Ted loses hlS job and Cll" 't meet
of Berkeley, Calif., was "excluded," sent out of the pool, with 42
the rnorll!age payments The bank tries to collect - and Ted
seconds left because that practically assured Cuba a tie. But
clalma that be is oow a resident of Ohio, and ·thus Ia not responeven though the U s was one man short, Bradley swam In from
sible for his debts, because he Is a minor in the State ,-bere he
out of nowhere and muscled tbe ball into the net with 29 seconds
oow Uves.
left to sew 11 up.
Ted, down on his luck, comes to West VIrginia, buys a jug at
"Yahoo 1" hollered Jnu Slatton, the U S goalie from El
the State-operated pop shop and gets snookered Bob, traveling
Segundo, Calif, at the other endofthepool.
DaVId Rodrtguez, the youngest player in the pool at 17, added a on business the same day In Ohio, finds he'sstilla kid and has to
final goal for the Cubans when Gary Sheerer of Menlo Park, settle for 3.2 beer.
So Ted, alttle bttstoned, goes to see his old girl friend, Carol,
Calif , and Barry Wettzenberg of Campbell, CalU., both of whom
and
she refuses to admit him to the Utile love nest she and Bob
bad played brilhantly until then, somehow missed connections on share.
Whereupon, he goes on a rampage and tears tbe house
the play
apart, trealdng windows and so forth.
It didn't matter.
Carol is very upset, but she doesn't want Ted arrested. She
Bruce Bradley had done hls handiwork
just
wants him to pay for his destruction. So she and Bob file a
Someone who hadn't been counting asked him how many goals
he scored as he came out of the pool and walked toward his locker ctvil ault against him m West Vrrglnla, seeking dalllll!tes. Ted, by
oow sobered up, tells them to go Oy a kite, because he Is just an
to towel himself off
Infant of tender years, living in Ohio.
"Gee, 1 dunno," he smd.
Bob gets concerned about all this, and goes to talk thinp
It was obVIous he couldn't care less
over with Allee, in hope of bringing Ted to his senses. Dirvlng the
"! don't even keep track," he satd "! don't pay very much
car he owrm and very uptight, he creams Ted's new car sitting in
attention We won; that's all! really care about "
Water polo, or ''wasserball" as It's caUed herem Germany, IS the driveway. Ted then seeks damages from Bob, because after
a form ollegal1zed mayhem m water It's a rough game Stamp all, Bob Is an adult under West Virginia law - and that's where
Bob bought, financed and registered his vehicle. Can he collect'
collectors or art collectors aren't adVISed to apply
Meanwhile, Alice gets fed up with Ted's misconduct and files
"You don't have to he crazy to play water polo, but 1t helps,"
says John Felix of Cupertmo, Calif., who once played and now lS for divorce, a~mg that she ts ent!Ued to spilt with Ted- even
though she's a minor as a resident of Ohio, because she was•
an Olymptc referee
The game cornbmes some of the elements of hockey, soccer legally marrted under West Virgllllll law.
And on .. and on. and on ...
and basketball Most of the rougher elements
I'm sure an hour's conversation wtth a lawyer would gtve me
After you fimsh playmg a match, you look for a little relaxation
the
answers
to most of these dtlemmas, but frankly, tt's more fun
- and that's how Bruce Bradley got hunself on that list Team
offtcials, people hke Arthur Lambert and Kenneth "Monty" asking the questions
The idea ought to make a fine televlSton soap opera, and I
N1tzkowskt, who are the coaches of the U S water polo team,
hereby offer it free to any producer If It ever htts the tube,
generally keep the hst
though, they'll probably call 11 "Search for Maturity", "The
Getsoo Ust
"I guess I or1glnally got on 1! when we were m a bttle town m Secret Adolescent," "All My ChUdren (unW age 18, or maybe
Holland, called Amersfoort, durmg the Natmnal Champ1onsh1ps 21)" or some such thing as that
They'd never use a stupid title like "Bob and Carol and Ted
m 1967," Bradley says
and
Alice," I'm sure.
"We bad won a few and lost a few and after the matches were
all over, thts other fellow, who 's no longer with the team, and I
ON TilE TV DIAL Olympics, three hours plus, at 7.30,
thought t!nughtnot be a bad tdea to go down to the town hall and
WHTN-TV . A Boots Randolph special, 9:30 p m (some good
s1ng songs This was at !o'clock m the morning
guest
stars on this one) . Specl81 on teen mass-ldller Carol
"That wasn 'I so bad, but when we got back to the hotel where
we were staying we were shoutmg and yelllng a btt, and we had Fugate, who was a headline ftgure in 1958, 8:30, WSAZ-TV
to wake up someone to get m, He turned Dli\);Q01le ooe of the
Olympic Colli!IVtte~ heaciS. We were t:i"elty 1Qijjj and obnoxious
about 11, and that's how !landed on thiS .. black Ust
"You can get on it pretty easily if you get caught out late With a
gwl or if you get caught drinking."
Programs for Tonight
Bruce Bradley needn't worry anymore.
He can come home oow. AlliS forg1ven.
and Tomorrow
In case he doesn't know It, he 's no longer on the list.
-~

Television· tog

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i Voice along Br'Way
By JACK O'BRIAN
Sl&lt;k Llst1s lncreasi~g- Rabtdly
NEW YORK (KFS)- First Tony Downev,
oow Robert Redford's bemg treated for rabies
A bat btl hun .. "21" (the restaurant) closed
until after Labor Day so Tony Berns, son of "21"
founder (Jack &amp;l Charlie Berns, decided to
sumrner-6hutter his unconnected Umcorn spot
the same day
The Jeswt-pnest role in the "Exorist" flick
will be ~yed by Father Btll O'Malley, a Jeswt
pr1est from exotic Buffalo . ScUt author Anthony Burgess sold the "Clockwork Orange "
f1lm rights for a paltry $500. Warners expects 11
to hit $50 million worldwide, so Tony's reward lS
fame plus a fortune from the paperback reVIval
which has sold 2,000,000 this year . Other
cinematic bargatns. ''The Godfather" pmd AI
Pacmo $5,000, but bet he's gettmg ten or more
times that for "Scarecrow," starnng also
another new htgh-fee (smce "The French
Connection") star, Gene Hackman.
Rosemary Murphy, who bves r1ght across
the street from us, lS a !me actress and an uppah
clawss broad her dad lS Robert Murphy, our
former ambassador to France and other high
diplomatic posts: so very social Rosemary's
role m Bmg Crosby's production of "Walking
Tall" - lS a notonous, tough madam ... Sen.
John March1, who lost the last mayoralty to
Jawn Lindsay, just mtght beat Bojangles next
time the customers at Quo Vadls urged hnu to
nm - hard
The VIolent suspense film "Super Fly" was
made wtth virtually sp1t and Scotch Tape :
producer Slg Shore had the Idea and oo money.
Actor Ron O'Neal couldn't get a salary- worked
on a percentage He'll make a fortune. Producer
Shore couldn't even afford an actor to play a
crooked cop m a final sequence. ProductiOn
often halted because no film was left But It's a
super-htt, and anyone takmg percentages will
get rich
No money lravall for Rob'! Redford's
"Jererruah Johnson" (on which set the bat bit
Bob) - exec producer (meaning he got up the
dough) was Roland Getty, zillionarre Jean
Paul's son . Mickey Mantle's sojourn In the
Yankees' broadcasting booth with old pal Phil
Rizzuto should have been rated "X": the
semantically polluted air even had Phil holycowing, "Boy! We'll be off the a1r soon'"
Sounded like a trailer for a pornopera.
N. Y. plans to bring back doubledecker
buses : Wily not' Everything else has doubled ,. .
Multnuilliona1re Brlllllher Sir Charles Clore !old
pals he's proposed to the Marchioness of Milford

...

.. . ..

TUESDAY, AUGUST29
DO-News 3, 4,6,8 lli, 15. 8, I Dream of Jeann ie 13 , Truth or
~onseq 6 , Hathayoga 33
6 31)-News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10 15; Love Tennis 33
7 DO-News 6, 10 What's My Line 8 Elec Co :!il, Green Acres
3, Former's Daughter 13, Andy Gr iffith 15, Dick Van Dyke 4,
Insight 33
7 JI)-Masterplece Theatre 33 , Ponderosa 3, 4, 15 , Summer
Olymplcs6, 13, John Byner Comedy Hour 10, 8
8 30-Hawall Five 0 8, 10 , Evening at Pops 33, Movie 6, 13,
Death Valley Days15, NBC News Speclal3. 4, 15.
9 31)-Star Spangled Boots 3, 4, 15 Cannon 8, 10, Doctor,
Lawyer, Indian Chief 33
10 DO-Firing Line 33
10 JI)-WSAZ TV Comment 3, Probe 4 , Arthur Smith 8,
American Lifestyle 10, Death Valley Days 13
11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 JI)-Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movie "Black
Noon" 8, " The Sloryon Page One" 10. "The Mudlark" 13
1 DO-Your Health 4
1 JI)-News, Weather 4, Local News 13
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30,1972
6 DO-Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15-Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13,
6 25-Paul Harvey 13
6 30-Cofumbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Urban League 13
Rocky and Bullwlnkle 13
'
7 DO-Todoy3,4, 15, CBS News8, 10 News6
7 -Sieef.y Jeffers 8, Romper Room6, Underdog 13
8 DO-Cap. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 6, 13 , Sesame St 33
Friendly Junction 10.
'
8 31)-Jack LaLanne 13, Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 DO-Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15. Lucl's Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 , Romper Room 8, Mr Rogers 33. What
Every Woman Wants to KnowJ, Timmy &amp; Lassie6
9 31)-Truth or Conseq 3, Electric Co 33, Mike Douglas 6 One
Life to Live 13
'
10 DO-Dinah Shore, 15 , Lucille Ball 10, Dick Van Dyke 13 In
School Instruction 33
'
10 3D-Concentration 3, IS, Amateur's Guide to Love 10; Split
Second 13 , Beverly Hillbillies 8. My Three Sons 10· Love
American Style 6
'
'
11 DO-Family Affair 8, 10; Love American Style 13 , Sale of
Century 3, 15, Communique 6
11 ~tHollywood Squares 4, 1S, Love of Life 8, 10, Bewitched 6,
6

Haven .. Dtonne Warwtcke was eating-for-two
at the Top of the Park Her second baby's due
early next sprmg
DaVId Ben-Gurlon and
Golda MelT agree Moshe Dayan should be the
next Israeli head. But Ben-Gurlon has advised
Moshe he's best marry his longplay romance
Rachel Koren because the public there likes a
proper famUy Image.
Sir John Glelgud's brother Val's finished a
second book about felines, "My Cats and
Myself" .. WNEW's longrun "Milkman's
Matinee" wlll be mlcrophoned next by Bill
Hickok. The hours gave all earner mUkmen
bottle fatigue ... Long..ago milkman Art Ford's
now managing editor of Huntington Hartford's
"Show" mag . Tom Jones Is headed lor throat
surgery. Nodes . Early TV used two cameras
(we've heard of them usmg one back In '3!1 when we watched Manhattan play St.
Bonaventure Wlth Joey Gallagher the star; he
later played with the Yankees, Browno and
sodaed-and~ndwiched himself out of baseball
shape; actually, mto a glant-baaeball shape);
but today the marveloua play-repeUtiona which
make TV.games better than In.person are taped
on three cameras just for the replays ... Duke
Ellington's newellt melody wUl have a lyric by
Allison Assante, a blonde beauty wed to a New 12 DO-Jeopardy J. 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's so so Club 4
News 13; Contact 8, News 10
'
Jersey doctor
12•31)-Spflt
Second
6,
Search
for
Tomorrow
8
10
Who
What
CBS.TV newsmen Bernard and Marvin
Where 3, 15
' '
'
'
Kalb are l"llShing out a book about Henry l.DO-News, Weather, Sports J. Ail My Children 6, 13, Divorce
Court 8; Flippo at the Fair 10
Klssmger ... Unusual to hear Kissinger speak on
I
21)-Lucllle
3
TV: sounds like Dr. Strangelove .. Sean Con- 1·31)-Three onRivers
a Match 3, 4, IS , Let's Make A Deal6, 13 As t~e
nery's James Bond mUUons are backing the
World Turns 8, 10.
2
DO-Days
of Our Lives J. 4, 15, N' lywed Game 13, Virginia
plush new Woolston Hall Country Club near
Graham 6, Love Splendored Thing 8, 10
London ... American Airlines prea. George 2 30-0.tlng GamelJ, Guiding Llght8, 10 , Doctors IS 4
Warde's daughter Valerie is a stewardell8 - lor 3 DO-Another World, 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6 lJ Secret
Storm B, 10.
' '
Pan-Am. Not for long: Val wUl wed Harry
3 30-0ne Life to LIOe 6; Edge of Night 8, 10, Jeff's Collie 1•
Schult (he's a CPA) m Nov ..Aside to Val: th£
Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 1s
Y'
meek wUl oot inherit the earth -lawyers and 4 DO-Mr Cartoon J, Sornerset4, IS, Fllntstones13· Sesame St
33; Huckleberry Hound6, Batman 8, Movie "At~na" 10
·
auditors will
• 25-Sports Club 6
Jack Benny headed the celeb-violinist Ust at 4 JI)-Merv Griffin 4, l Love Lucy6, Password 13.,0eath Valley
Days 8. Andy Grofllth IS; Green Acres 3
a bash honoring Isaac Stern at the Plaza. Jack
S
DO-Wagon
Train 3, Mr Rogers 33, Dick Van Dyke IS · Big
recalled Stern asking Benny to do a concert lor
Valley 6 Merv Griffin a, Tarzan 13
'
the San Franctsco Symphony. '1t's your S. 30-Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33 ·
hometown - why don't you do it younelf?" 6 oo-J Truth or Consoq. 6; News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, t Dream of
eaMie 13, Hatheyoga 33.
•
Jack countered. "BecaUJe," Stern becauaed, 6 JO-News3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; Brldge33.
"I'm a concertvlollnl.st and! can get only $10.11 7 DO-Dick Van Dyku, Newa6, ID, What's My Line s1 Elee eo.
20, Milestones of Progreu 33, Green Acres 3· Andy G lffltakes sollleone who playa as badly as YOII to get
15, Maalc Circue 13
'
r "'
$100 a ticket."
7 31)-To fell the Truth 6; Dregntt a; The JUdge 10, EpiSOde
Action 33, LaaslelS; Oral Robert. In London 3 1 •
Steve Ross! integrated his Manhattan pent8
DO-C Adam-12 4: A Public Affair 33; Summer Olympics 6 13;
house-leased 11 to Aretha Franklin ... There's
BS Report. 8, 10
'
a "Godfather Boutique" in Greenwich VIllage; 8:30-McMlllan and Wife 3, 4, 15; Movie, "The Last Laugh" 33
·
saw II on ~Sunday and Its shades were drawn, 9 DO-Medical Center a, 10
10 DO-Mannl• a, 10; Soul33, Night Gallery 3, 4
window ~overed completely with Marlon 11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13, 15.
Brando pictures. What do they peddle? Sales 11 30-Johnnr, Carson 3, 1, 15; Dick Covttt 6; Movie "The Llttt
Hut" I. 'The Fighting S.1b111" 10· Niagara"' 13
a
you can't refuse' ... No gal has caqht George 1 DO-Newa
1.
'
•
Hamlltm yet. Hll Alana Colllna idyl Idled.
1 30-Ntwl 13.

Goud Fast Ball
the mound feelmg more than a
"Y ,
d Anderson m rehttle apprehensive about his • ply
qu':hon, "I still would
own pitching ab1hty.
have taken Gary out even 1f he
"Truthfully," sa1d Gary, "I
had a no-hitter going "
was shakmg m my boots when I
Nolan's pre-game apprehen-

u:'!'

went out there "

No Embarrassment

It was Nolan's first start

smce arm mtser1es put hun on
the Sldelmes Aug 2
"We've heen gettmg real
good pltchmg lately,, pomted
out Gary, "And I didn't want to
embarrass myself or the team
"Actually,"headded, "!was
more womed about walkmg
batters than g1vmg up htts."
With Houston 1dle, the Reds
moved to 8Ik galDes ahead of
the Astros in the National
League West
As 11 turned out, Nolan had
no cause to worry about anythmg. He blanked the Mets
wtth one hit before hfted for a
pmch-ll1tter m the bottom of
the Sixth
Taking Nolan out after SIX
had been Red Manager Sparky
Anderson 's pre-game plan

s1on disappeared after " I
threw a good, low fastball to
Wayne Garrett 10 the first
mnmg''
"That Is when I told myself
that I had 1t I really extended
myself. I had my fast ball, a
rtsmg one Mayhe 1! wasn't a
Tom Seaver fast ball but I was
happy wtth lt "
So was Anderson
"Our p!tchin~ IS getting better all the tune now," satd
~arky "It's just the opposite
of 1970. Don Gullet Its back, so
Is Nolan and we're working
With Wayne Sunpson and hope
by the end of the season he'll be
.m good shape "
When the Reds began World
Series play after the 1970 penuant-wlnmng season, Nolan
was the only able-bodied
starter

Falcons Show Promise
By RANDY CLARK
MASON, W Va - The new
1972 Wh1te Falcon football
squad wtll lake the fteld
Fnday, September I, mal kmg
the begmnmg of a new and
prom1smg season
Although the Falcons are
expected to have one of the1r
fmest squads th1s year, unlortunately, thm compelltwn
should he much better than
average
The quesllon concermng
Wahama 's new head coach
Grant Barnette 1s whether h1s
team can mature sufflclenlly
to compete aga mst expertenced oppos1hon
An over-all evaluatiOn ranks
Waharna's defense as one of
the most promtsmg m the
state Wahama gave up less
than one-half the pomts they
have scored and have
averaged g!Vlng'Up less than 10
pomts per game the last hve

seasons
Three backf1eld pos ltwns
have been vacated and are
literally a toss-up between
some promlSmg young runnmg
backs The offensive and
defensive hoes should be a
!right spot this year with such

returmng lettermen as Don
Mach1r, Aud1e McFarland,
Tun Roush, Mark Mitchell,
David Roush and Vernon
Roush
Inexperience at the quarte rba ckin g pos11lon and
mexpenenced pass defense,
w11l be two key problems
TOUGH SCHEDULE
Last year's Falcon record of
7-1 2 saw no less than f1ve
games dectded by one touchdown or less
The 1972 verswn of Wahama
f

football IS left With the task of
f1lhng 14 of 22 startmg
poslllons In fact the eleven
semors accounted for e1ght of
the eleven starting offenstve
poslllons, mcludmg three
backfield starters and both end
poslllons The Whtte Falcons
also lost six of II positions on a
defenstve un1t that allowed
only 8 6 pomts per game last
year
The W1rt County Tigers, who
battled Wahama to a very close
13-6 score last year, wtll have
both enllre startmg umts
ret urning as they lost no
graduatmg se mors . Kyger
Creek lost only four starters

after a &lt;Hi deadlock last year
and Ravenswood only three
starling players w1th an
tdentical score Ravenswood
will have the~r entire offenstve
and defens1ve hnes relurmng
To add to the Wh1te Falcon
woes, Southern, Buffalo and
Federal Hockmg are enjoymg
one of the1r most experienced
returnmg squads ever
Parkersburg Cathohc and
Spencer are expected to both
be a much 1mproved team th1s
year
A NEW ADDITION
Wahama's w1dest margm of
victory last year was a 57-24
declslon over the Van Bulldogs
Th1s year Van does not appear
on the Wh1te Falcon schedule
Instead, Wahama wlll take on
the Wmlleld Generals, a team
that has ..c~atect a football
dynasty 'Unvef Mad" ~oach
Leon McCo1' 'Wmfleld has went
undefeated for the1r last four
seasons running the1r wmmng
strmg to 46 consecutive games
Wmf1eld m1ssed the state AA
playoffs last year only because
they failed to schedule enough
AA schools

Property

Transfers
Ahce Elhott, Mmnes Elltott,
Dorothy
F1elds Hall, Charles
(, 111)1'/'\'' "!
I
Hall, Lillian Richards, Vtrgll
R1chards , Dante! Crtshp,
1
Lou1se Cr1shp, Wilham Cr1shp,
I
/f ' / 11 ',i/t/)1! 'I
• Arlene Cmhp, Carolyn Crislip
to Margaret Raguel, 50 A. ,
I
Obve
I
Consohdallon Coal Co to
\ COLUMBU ' l AND !-lOUlHU-l N OHI O t U CT R!C CO MPANY
Richards
&amp; Sons Inc , Ease ,
'~-------~-~-Letart
Helen Ruth Atkms, Leroy
Rusche!, Frank1e Rusche!,
V1rgll Pohng, Shirley L Poling
- - -..~~'!!111!!!•'!!!1"'1!"11!'!"'!'!!!!!!!11.. Pomeroy
to Elien J Rought, Lot,
Vmlet B MtUhone to Manne
D Chapman, 10.59 A., Orange.
Maxine D Chapman to
LATEX
NO
William H Chapman, Patrtcia
Ann Olapman, 3.15 A.,
Orange
Glona Jean Cross to Ancll B.
Cross, Lot, Middleport.
Clara Elizabeth Hemes to
!CHICAGO)
James R. Andrews, Constance
R Andrews, Parcels, Bedford.
Wtlliam H Tracewell to
Gould E. Riffe, Delores Riffe,
Parcels, Orange

The Electric (:limate
----·····

HOUSE

1

---------- - - j

A~INT

----llllllil
CHIEF

SaF ·PRIMING
PAINT FOR Ali.
SURFACES-CLEAN
BRUSHES WITH WATER

CHIEF (Chicago)
PORCH AND FLOOR
QUICK DRY

'659

ENAMEL

GAL

NEW BKB COACH
CHEYNEY, Pa (UP!)
John Chayney, a Phlladelphla
high school basketball coach
aM former player In the
Eastern Pro Basketball
League, was named Monday as
head basketball coach at
Cheyney State College

Ma 1or League Standings
By Umted Press lnternaloon•l
National Lc•gue
Ea~t 1 pet 9 b
Poltsburgh
75 46 620
Choca$o
65 57 533 lO';'

~~ewlo~orsk

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONI 99J..2141
I

~ ~; ~~!

:;

Montreal
55 65 45B 19'1•
Pholadelph oa •• 76 367 30'r'
West
wipclgb
Cinconnah
77 45 631
Houslon
69 54 561 811&gt;
Los Angeles 65 55 542 11
Allanta
57 67 460 21
San Franmco 54 70 435 24
San Doego
46 76 377 31
Monday's Results
P' tt sburg h 5 San D'ego 3
S! Louos 4 San Fran 2
Conconnat1s New York 2
IOnly games sc heduled !
Today's Probable Pttchers
I All Times EDTl
New York !McAndrew 9 Slat
Cu\cmnaf1 {81 llmgham 10 10 ),
8 05 p m
San Doego !Caldwell 6 61 at
Pottsburgh (Bla ss 1461 8OS
P San Francosco !Barr 5 7) at
St Loui s (Cleveland 13 101 9
pm

.

,

COLUMBUS (UP[) _ Ohlo about ll]e day's two workouts
State football coach Woody ~ "We'Vt got a better-condiHayes opened fall practice , ttoned teAm that we've had m
Monday for the team, one he awhile," he sa1d "A good
sald "truly e}lltomtzes the gen- many of the players beat the
eratwn "ap"
Slx-mmllte rrule, but we'll let a
"Alm;.t every player was few others try agam because
born after! started coaching at we don't want to cheat anyOhto State," he satd "That body
truly epltomtzes the generation
"I know thts," he added,
gap "
however "If a boy doesn't run
Hayes was enthuslashc 1t, he 's not likely to be m the

'

I #

over '72 Bucks

starting lmeup ''
R1ck Seifert, a safety from
Cuyahoga Falls startmg his
th1rd year as a regular, dtd an
eyeiJOppmg 5 02, which he
says 1sn't unusual for hun
"I ran 11 m 5 06 last year I've always run well," Seifert
said "Heck, I set a nahonal
high school record m the half
m1le m h1gh school "

Bengals Rally to

•

wm•

Linebacker Randy Grandishar went the distance m 5 20
even thuugh he has p1cked up
14 pounds smce last season
Hayes pomted out he ha'
hopes for sophqmore offens!Vl
halfback Tun Holycross, frorr
Bedford He1ghts
"He has enonnous abilillesgood s1ze , a good rece1ver, fme
speed," the coach satd "I
think he'd get ahttle faster tf
he'd get a btUe shorter ha~rcut

I ftnd nowadays that 's the way
to approach these things "
·
Faced wtth a maJor rebuUd'
mg job, Hayes satd he Isn't
PHILADELPillA (UP!) _ desptte 'lllJ"urtes
The Bengals dell the Eagles worried about the competition
"We'll outwork other teams
1 to thelf linebackA veteran who dtd not play, another bow
With the biggest squad CUt- that's the only way to outdownofthe seasonlessthan24 although he 15 healthy , was mg crew, already thmned by
Zabel an d smart the other teams, Just
hours away, v1ctory was a runnmg
back
Tom 1eg mturtes to St.eve
b
d li
outwork them," he satd
forgotten brtde for the Woodeshtck, who S81d later he Adnan Young, Y Sl e mng
Phlladelphta Eagles and doesn't "expect to see my backup nuddle linebacker Ike
ThiS Week's Special
Cmcmnah Bengals Monday name on a locker" after the Kelley With a knee lOJUry 00
ki k ff
mght
cutdown He has played the openmg c o
Cincmnall, after tfallmg 14- , i'l!gulafly for the past nme
"Our defense was the worst
VALLIE
3, eventually danuetl thepnze years, but had been slowed by smce our loss to Cincmnatl m
FIATI!!D
34-20 but the game fed fuel to UIJurles m recent seasons
the season opener last year,"
the argument that In pre
"We felt 1t was the last tnue Khayat admttted
season galDes 11 ts not who we could play a lot of the other
The men who made the
USED CARS
Montreal (Moore 56) at
wmsbut
who
playsthat
prospects
and
have
another
defense
look
that
way
were
Atlanta !Reed 11 12) 8 05 p m
look at some of those before the runmng backs Paul Robmson,
Pholadeiphoa IBrandon 5 5) at counts
Houston (Wil son 10 9) 8 30
Bengal Coach Palil Brown big cut,'' Khayat satd
who rushed for touchdowns of
pm
threw
:;:;
players
miD
the
fray
The
i\:agles'
performance
SIX
and two yards, and Essex
Los Angeles (Smger 5 12) at
Chi cago (Pappas 10 7), 2 30 The Eagles' Ed Khayat, who reflected the absence of the Johnson, who earned II times
pm
used 48, kept some of his fegulars, With the BeJlgals for 65 yards, and quarterbacks
Wednesday' s Games
toughest soldiers on the s1de- . pthng up 415 total yards, Ken Anderson (12 passes for
San D1ego at P1tts, ntghl
hoes nursmg mm~ mjurles ; l:!&gt;nverting etght consecutive 155 yards) and V1rgll Carter
Los Ang eles at Ch1cago
V 8 .e ng me automat1c
that would not have mattered thtrd-down plays mto first (eight for 82)ards and a three
San Fran at St Louts, n1ght
trans Real buy at
Montreal at At lanta ntght
durmg regular season play
downs at one stretch m the yatd touchdown to Steve
New York at Ctncl ntght
Khayat
listed
Rtchard
HarriS
second
half and turnmg two Kingman.)
Phda at Houst on ntght
and Gary Pettigrew and safety pass mtercepllons and a
Brown had pratse for AnderLeroy Keyes as key defense- ftimble recovery mto touch- son, and Robmson for Johnson.
Amencan League
men who could have played downs
"This kid has everything to
Easl
be a star quarterback," Brown
"YQu' ll Loke Our Quality
w I pet g b
Way of Doing Bus1 ness"
Detrot t
67 55 549 Sald.
GMAC FINANCING
Balttm ore
66 56 S41
Robinson satd of Johnson
New York
992 5342
,Pomeroy
63 58 521 j,
Sthat"everybodytrtestobelike
&amp; ston
62 5B 517
Ope~ Evemngs 'TIIB 00
Clev eland
58 64 475 9
Essex He's great He lnsplres
Ttl 5 P.M Sat ,
48 73 397 18'1' By United Presslll\eroatlonal Philadelphia Eagles 10 a the whole -ball club."
M1lwau kee
West
The pressure was on and so Natwnal Football League prew I pet g b
Chocago
71 50 587
was V1rgil Carter
season game.
Oakland
17 51 5B2 'h
The
Cmcmnah
Bengals'
,
Running back Paul Robmson
Mmneso ta
60 59 504 10
search
for
a
starting
quarterscored
oh third quarter touchKansas Coty 5B 62 483 12
Caltfornta
54 67 446 161f2 back between Ken Anderson
down pl\lhges of SIX and two
Te xas
4B 73 397 22 1/ 2 and Carter added another page yards within a span of 3 09,
Monday's Results
Monday mght as Carter threw br!ngmgthe Bengals from a 17Balt1more 2 M1nnesota 0
a touchdown pass and directed 10 halftune deftcit to a 24-17
Chtcago 6 Boston 4
Oakland 5 Cleveland 4
the Bengals to a 3+-20 come- lead.
(Only games scheduled }
from-behmd
v1ctory over the
Carter natled down the
Today's Probable Ptlchers
victory
m the fourth quarter
(All Ttmes EDT)
Texas IBosman 6 8) and
when he passed three yards for
Stan house 2 4) at New York
a touchdown to rookte receiver
IKion e 14 5and Keko ch 10 12), 2
Steve Kingman and then led
5pm
SEVEN TO CUBS
Cleveland (Todrow 12 lll at CHICAGO (UP! ) - Seven the Bengals on a drt ve which
Oakland (Hunter 16 71. 11 p m
consumed the !mal eight
Detroot ILoilch 19 10) at players, fiVe of them on ophon, mmutes and ended with a IllCal olornoa (May 5 101, 11 p m wtll JOin the Chtcago Cubs after
Ballo more ICuellar 13 101 at Sept I when the player roster yard field goal by Horst
Mon nesota (Biyleven 10 15),
can be mcreased to 40 Called Muhlmann.
8 30 p m
The WID was a plus m CarKansas Ctty ( Nel son 7 4) at up on optlon from WIChita of the ter's favor m the battle for the
Mtlwaukee (Ryerson 361, 8 30 Amencan Association were
STI HL has more than 40 valu able years or
pm
ftrst baseman , Pal Bourque, : starting quarterback position
Chocago !Bradley 13 10 ) at
expenence 1n th e des rgn and producf1on of
ou tfielder Gene Hiser and smce Anderson directed
Boston (Toant 8 41, 7 30 p m
power charn saws gu1de bars and saw cham
p1tchers Larry Gura and Joe , Cincmnati to a pa1r of TDs
Wednesday's Games
All of STIHL s saws have the same degree of
Cleve al Oakland , noght
Decker as well as lilt-banded • .Cter Mill!nl had wrapped up a
exce lle nc e and of un1fo rm1ty 1n destgn and
Detro1t at Cal li mght
convlnCft vtctory last week
manufactu
re In conJun clton wllh these STI HL's
Baltimore at Moon night
rehever Chnt Comf!ton from
Elsewh~e in pro football,
own bars and cham operate so eff1c1ently and
Kan Coty at Molw, noght
Midland, Tex Purchase_d from the Los Angeles Rams anTexas at New York, noght
well thai th ey have earned world ·w1de
Midland
and
Wlchtta, nounced that Ken Geddes, a
Ch 1cago at Bos ton
recogn1 tton for oursrandmg performance Wllh
respectively, were outfielder second-year linebacker from
mrn1mal mam lenance
Peter Lacock and mftelder Nebraska, wtll be lost for at
David Rosello
least eight weeks with a lroken
SEE IT AT
right arm.
Mator League Results
The Pittsburgh Steelers ,cut
By United Press International
their prHeason roster to 55
GAULT CLAIMED
National League
players
when sophomore quarNew York 000 000 on - 2 4 o IRVINE, Cahf. (UP!)
Ctncl
000 004 lOx- 5 8 0 Quarterback Don Gault, a terback Bob Leahy and four
Strom, Rauch 181 and Dyer ,
Nolan , Hall (7) and Plummer reser ve quarterback w1th rookies were placed on
WP- Noian (14 31 LP- Strom Cleveland for the past three walvera, setting up a backup
(0 2) HRs- Tolan (7th I. Menke years, was clatmed on wa1vers quarterback battle between
18th ), Molner (13th)
Monday by the San Otego veteran±Terry llailratty and
rookie JOe GllllaJn.
San Doego 000 100 002- 3 9 2 Chargers
Pills
000 212 OOx- 5 6 0
Caldwell, Acosla (61. Severin
sen (8) and Kendall, Moose

'68 DODGE
CHARGER 2 DR.
HARDTOP

'1395
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

/' Carter p aces Benga}

CHAIN SAWS

The Saw That Won The Cutting
Contest At The Meigs County Fair

Linescores

Hernandez (9) and Sangu11ten

WP- Moose (10 8) LP- Caid
well (6 7) HRs- Stargeli, 2
(29th 8. 30th), Lee (8thl
Colbert (36th)
Son Fran
100 000 001- 2 3 3
StLouiS
30100000x- 4 91
Mancha! , McDowell 13), Mol
htt (7) and Rader , Durham 12
61 and Slmn'lons LP- Manchal
IS IS) HR- Brock (3rd)

YOUR

(Only games scheduled )
American League

Baltomore 000 010 011)- 2 7 0
Minnesota 000 000 OtJO- 0 52
Palmer 118 6l and Oates ,
Woodson, Strickland (9) and
Borgmann LP- Woodson 111·
12) HR- Baylor (9th)

HOU$E

'

can provide more than a
roof over your head ....•.

Chicago
000 303 OtJO- 6 S 2
Boston
000 013 ooo- 4 B 2
Lemonds, Gossagell!. Fisher
(6), Drabowsky (7), Forster (8)
and Herrmann, Siebert, Peters
161. Newhauser (6) , Lee (7) ,
Bolon (81 and FISk WPGOssage (4 O) LP- S1ebert 110
1!) HRs- Andrews (7th), Kos
co (8th)

It can provtdB you w1th money for the things you want
and need.
JDBopiB who are ,buymg a house can arrange for a
second mortgage loan w1th The City Loan Company.
Amounts ranging up to $15,000 are available. Our
eitlended terms and reasonable rates are especially
attractive to home owners.

Cleveland 000 002 002- 4 6 2
Oaklnd
000 000 SOx- 5 5 0
Dunmng, Ktlkenny (7), Far
mer 17) and Fosse , Blue,
Knowles (7) , Hamollon (8) ,
Locker 191. Fingers (9) and
Tenace WP- Knowles (4-1) LP
- Dunning 13 2) HRs- Footer
l3rdl. Mangual (5th) , Nettles
!12th)

Phone or stop in We will give you all the Information
you w'i\t. That·s what we're here for. When money Is
tile question . . .. .

(Only gamto scheduled)
•

"

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MOORE'S

' ,

~BASEBALL Woody ~nth used

Reds' Rally Gives ...__
STANDINGS
....._
Nolan Fourteenth
CINCINNATI (UPI) "' There was never any doubt m
Gary Nolan's mmd
"The guys all of them who
were gomg to hit that ummg .
told me they were gomg to win
the game for me," satd Nolan
And, true to !herr prom1se,
Nolan's teammates staged a
four-run uprlSmg m the Sixth
IMmg Monday mght to proVIde
Gary with hiS 14th VICtory
agalnst three losses as the Cmcmnah Reds knocked off the
New York Mets 5-1 m the opener of a three-game series
Jack B1llmgham, wmner of
six of ljis 1!181 seven dectswns,
goes agamst the Mets tonight.
George Foster, pinch-hitlmg
for Nolan, touched off the rally
Wlth a double Joe Morgan
broke the scoreless tie, drtvmg
home Foster after a walk to
Pete Rose Bobby Tolan added
the chncher, a three-run homer
off Mets rook1e lefthander
Brent Strom
While Nolan d1dn 't have any
doubts about the run-scormg of
his teammates, he d1d walk to

.. .

.

MIDD,J.E PORT, O.

i$ the all$wer

INSURANCE • BONDS
,MUTUAL FUNDS

992·2171

'

••

MailS Count;s OIW and largest

lnsaftance ~ '

--

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125 E. MAIN

)t~ LOANS OVER
to . .

POMEROY, 0.

$2000 ... THE CITY LOAN COMPANY

· ~:•·· ~

• lletlngl Co.• l'lllllntlnt

01111 , ...... IInce 1112

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I

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�""

z- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooleroy, 0 , Aug. 29, 1m

More Viet Withdrawals Hinted
•

SAN CLEMEN'l)l: , Calif
(UP! )-President N1xon,
followmg up h1s proJected
abohtlon of the draft, was
ready to announce today a
further U S troop withdrawal
from Vietnam -probably the
last until there ts a settlement
m the war

'
N1xon also planned to hold ments
were expected to come
today a post-eonvenhon separately, No lime was an"pohttcal'' news conference nounced for etther, but
The news conference was reporters were asked to be at
prom1sed by N1xon a month the Wlil;tern White House at I
ago and w11l g1ve h1m a chance prn fOT
N1xon announced Monday,
to ouUme hiS campalgn plans
The news conference and the after meetmg w1th Defense
troop Withdrawal announce- Secretary Melvm R La~rd,
that the draft wtll be abolished
as of next July, and the nat1on
wtll revert to an all-volunteer
Army for the ftrst tnue m a
Donation was made on the new generallon
Ntxon several months ago set
p1cmc tables and plans were
that
as the target date to fulfill
made for the reumon to be held
on the thrrd Sunday of August, his 1968 campatgn prom1se to
do away wtth the draft The
1~73, at the Temple Church
move
appeared sure to strengGrove Relatives are urged to
then Nnron's appeal to the 25
plan to attend
nulhon
voters aged 18-to-21
Relatives here have learned
ehg1ble
to
vote ma pres1denl1al
of the birth of a daughter,
Paula Jane, on July 26 to Mr eleellon for the ftrst tnue this
and Mrs John Kimes (Jane year.
Latrd S81d there are two
Caldwell) Thls lS thelf f~rst
condtllons
to achlevmg an end
child. Maternal grandmother
IS Amy Perry Caldwell, who to conscnptwn which he 1s
also hvesm Columbus now, but confident Congress Will apwas born and reared m this prove -a special mcenllve to
commumty and IS a stster of mcrease enlistments of
physiCians, and extensiOn of
Lucy Perry Thomas, local
Mr.andMrs . Walter Jordan, the acllve-duty enlistment
Cincmnatt, spent from Friday bonus to reservtsts and the
unlll Sunday here w:th thetr
parents, Mr and Mrs Clinton
Gtlkey, Albany, and Mr and
KELTONS UNITED
Mrs Mendal Jordan, local
For the ftrst lime m seven
They also called on other
years the famlly of Mr and
relatives m the area
M1 s Aaron Kelton gathered
recently at the Kelton home m
Mmersv1lle Attendmg were
INFANT BAPTIZED
Dt and Mrs Gerald Loz1er,
lmh Elizabeth AustlO , Jay and Joan of Pnnceton, N
daughter of Mr and Mrs John J Mr and Mrs John Aushn
Austm of RIChmond, Va , was Julie, Mary and !m," Richbapttzed Aug 16 at the Varma mond , Va , Mr and Mrs
Eptscopal Pansh Mrs Austin Harry Alexander and grandts the former Kaaron Kelton of children of Toledo , Mr and
Pomeroy Godparents are Mr Mrs George Sh1veler, Jr and
and Mrs Richard Rue of RICh- daughter, Jayne, Cmcmnatl
mond, Va and Mr and Mrs Jommg them for a dmner party
Delmar Canaday of Pomeroy on Fnday eve mng was Mrs
The Canadays are also god- Delmar Canaday godmother
parents of Mrs Austm
of Ins Austm

Carpenter News, Event
Mr and Mrs. Raymond
Nelson and Sara, Mrs T L
Brookhart and Barbara, and
Mr and Mrs Steve Booth and
Rama Sue, have returned from
a vacatiOn tnp to Florida They
viSited Mr and Mrs John
Rawlmgs at Orange Park,
F1onda, and VISited pomts of
Interest mcludmg Marme
Land , Cypress Gardens,
Disney World, Dayuma Beach
and others enroute
Mrs. Stanton Dalley, sons,
Charles, David and Thomas,
grandchildren, Ronald and
Melinda, Berne, Ind., Anna
Parker, Cleveland , Mrs
Roberta Parker, Mr and Mrs
Tommy Parker and Stacy of
Strasburg, Robbie, Ney and
Cindy Parker of Middleport, all
VISited With Mr and Mrs Ney
Carpenter and Martha Mays
Reunion
Descendants of the Townsend and Dalley fam1hes held
their annual reumon at the
Temple Church Grove on
Sunday, August 20, with about
50 relatives attendmg Mrs
Stanton Dalley and family,
Berne, Indiana, traveled the
farthest to attend Murl Dalley
Galaway had the largest
number of her family m attendance Off1cers elected
were
Leon
Woodrum,
president, McArthur, Guy
Moore, Cuyahoga Falls, v1ce
president, and Martha Mays,
local, secretary-treasurer

Nat1oroal Goi!rd
Latrd told reporters Ntxon
was already ahead of h1s ow11
tnuetable for truer reductwns
In VtetnalD The Umted States
currently has about 37,000
troops there, Larrd S81d, more
than meetmg the goal announ ced earher of cuttmg
troop strength to 39,000by Sept
I

Ntxon w1ll depart Wednesday
for Hawaii for a two-day
surnmtt sesswn wtth Japan's
new Prnue Muuster Kakue1
Tanaka Press Secretary Ronald L Ziegler disclosed that
NlXOn summoned Ellsworth
Bunker, U S ambassador to
Satgon, to fly to Honolulu to
report on the political situation
m South V1etnam
On the .military Side, Larrd
Sald the bombmg, wh1ch has
become a touchy issue m the
re-electton campatgn, wUl continue until there ts a negotiated
settlement or the North Vietnamese return north of the DMZ.

OFFICERS ELECTED
Off1cers were elected at a
recent meetmg of the Happy
Hustlers Class of the Wesleyan
Methodist Church Elected
were Mrs Grace Krtder,
president
Mrs Dorothy
McKenzie, VICe president, and
Mrs Ann Coe , first vtce
president A program on
children and youth was
pt esented and Mrs Gomer
Lew1s, class teacher, gave
devotwns Mrs Ed1th Hayman
gave the secretary and
tr easurer s report Others
present were Mrs Bertha
Spencer, Mrs Mathe Ctrcle,
Mrs l.tlhan J1v1den, and Mrs
L1lhan Lee Mrs Lav m1a
Simpson and Mrs Owen
Watson \\ere reported 11!

Spitz, King Have Gold Medals
MUNICH (UPI) - Mark
the world's best swunmer, and Micki King, the
happiest Air Force captam,
own new gold medals today
that have almost as much
rubber in them as gold.
The medals are erasmg the
mghlmarish recollecllons the
~~ pa1r had of the 1968 Olymp1cs
~itz, 22, of Canmchael,
Calif., won two golds in two
tries in less than an hour
Monday night and set world
records at both f1msh linessurgmg to VIctory m the 200meter butterfly m 2:00 7 and
anchoring the 400meter freestyle relay learn to VIctory m
3:26 42.
He had the old fly record,
2:015,butwasnotamemberof
the U S. relay team which held
the old mark, 3 26 8, set m 1970.
~ltz was favored to win the
200 fly in MeXIco 'City in the
1968 OlympiCS, but finished
eighth to start off a disastrous
games lor hun He never won
an mdiVIdual gold although he
was supposed to wm three
"Pflycbed Up"
He attributed h1s ftrst day
success to bemg ''psyched up"
and he indicated th1s Olympics
~ltz,

wtll be as good as the 1968 was
bad He has a chance for seven
gold medals th1s year, meluding another tonight m the
21II!:IDeter freestyle, where he
also holds the world record.
Spttz,. who never has been
able to overcome the sttgma of
" the 1968 ftasco-no matier how
many world records, kn&lt;&gt;Ws
he 's still on the spot.
..
"I'm sure I'll start off
sleeping well tomght," he said
after acceptmg the two got~
"But I'U wake up at 3 a.m. and
tell myself, 'Well, I've got to do
11 agam "'
That's what Miss King told
herself in Mextco City after she
suffered a broken left arm on
her next to last dive and
flmshed m fourth in the
sprmgboard competition. She
was leading at the time of the
mJury, caused by htttmg the
board
But she was 24, compared to
~ttz ' youthfuliBln 1968, and 11
took more sacrifice for her to
keep m condition to go after
th1s gold But she did it
Enters in Third Place
MISS King, of Pontiac, M1ch ,
entered the last three d1ves m
th1rd place Then she took the

lead on the first dive and made
the last two perfectly to wm
wtth 450 03 pomts
Ulr1ka Knape, 17, of Sweden,
the leader entenng the !mal
three d1ves, fmtshed second
With 434 19 pomts and Marma
Jamcke of East Germany was
th1rd 'j'lth 430.92 Janet Ely of
' 'AJ6Jcjue~que, 'N.l'll:, was fourth
426.00 and 1Cynthlll POtter of
Houston was seventh w1th
413 58
The men swept the 200-meter
butterfly With Gary Hall of
Garden Grove, Calif., second to
~1\z m 2 02 9 and Robm
Backhaus of Redlands, Calif
thtrd m 2 OJ 2
The Uruted States took the
lead m the medal standmgs
With e1ght, mcluding the most
golds-three The Amertcans
also have two Silvers and three
bronze, all won Monday.
The other silver was a surpnse by Vtctor Auer, 35, a
teleVIsion scnpt wr1ter from
North Hollywood, CalU , m the
small bore rtfle shootmg, prone
poslllon
Other Bronzes
The other two bronzes went
to Jam1e McEwan. 19. of Silver

Boston Haunted by Andrews
By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Mtke Andrews was dlsappomted when the Red Sox
traded him to Chtcago several
years ago but 1t was Boston
which probably had the regrets
Monday mght
The former Boston mftelder
drove in ftve runs wtth a threerun homer and a double as the
White Sox topped the Red Sox,
6-1 The vtctory kept Chicago a
half-game m front of Oakland
m the Amertcan League 's
Western d!VIson
Andrews snapped a sco reless
tie in the fourth mmng by lmmg
his seventh home run of the
aea!IOn mto the left f1eld screen
with Dick Allen and Carlos
May aboard.
Andrews, enjoying his best
game at the plate thiS season,
helped the White Sox to a 5-l
lead In the sixth mnmg With a
double to left-center that
scored Buddy Bradford and
Allen Rich Morales smgled
home another run before the
Inning was out m the
Mtlonally-televised contest.
A lJ11le Downhearted
"I was a little downhearted
when they traded me, " Andrews sa1d. "Who wants to
lellve Boston' There aren't any
better fans in the world You
don't have to get up for a game,
they get you up "
In other games Baltimore
blanked Minnesota, U, and
Olkland edged Oeveland, 5-4,
in tile other Amencan League
pmes scheduled.

In the National League
Pittsburgh defeated San Diego,
5-3, St. Lou1s downed San
Francisco, 4-2, and Cincmnall
whtpped New York, 5-2, m the
only games scheduled
Jun Palmer scattered five
hits for his 18th v1ctory as
Baltnuore blanked the Twms
The trmmph moved the Onoles
to wlthm one game of the 1dle
first-place Detroit Tigers In the
Amer1can League East Don
Baylor's mnth homer of the
season leading off the fifth
mmng gave Baltimore 1ts first
run
W1lhe Stargell drove m four
With hlS 29th and 30th homers
to power Pittsburgh past the
Padres Bob Moose allowed
only five htts over the f~rst
etght lnrungs but was tagged
for back-to-back nmth IMmg
homers by Leron Lee and Nate
Colbert Ramon Hernandez
came In to record the final two
outs and preserve Moose's lOth
VICtory of the season.
Homer Climaxes lnlllng
Bobby Tolan's seventh
homer , commg w1th two
aboard , clunaxed a four-run
s1xth mmng that camed
Cincmnati over New York.
Gary Nolan, making his first
start smce being s1delined w1th
arm trouble on August 2nd,
gained the victory when he
llmlled the Mets to one htt
while reeling off slx scoreless
Innings.
Angel Mangual's three-run
pmch-llit homer m the sewnth
lnmng capped a lave-run

outburst to hft Oakland over
the lnd1ans . The A's had
collected but one htt mthe first
stx mmngs off Cleveland
starter and loser Steve Dunmug, :1-2 Darold Knowles, m
relief of A's starter V1da Blue,
picked up the vtctory, his
fourth m fiVe dec1s1ons
Don Durham patched a threehitter and Lou Brock and LUIS
Melendez gave hun all the runs
he needed with a homer and a
two-run double as St Lows
downed the G1ants Brock's
leadoff homer-&lt;Jnly hts thrrd
of the y~ar-came on the
second p1tch of the mght by
starter and loser Juan
Mancha!, whose record
dropped to 5-15

Dai~

The

Sentinel

DEVOTED TD THE
INTEREST DF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exec Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctty Edrtor
PublrSt1ed dally exce pt
5a tur day bY The Oh rO Va lley

Publ rsh ng

Court
4S 7C9

St .

Company

Pomeroy

111

OhtO

Busrnes!!. Olfr cr P•ronp

991 2156 Eclr torut l PhOne Y91

1157

Second ctau oostageo pa rd at

P'om e ro y Ohro
Nat rona! ftdvertt~r

repreosent at rv e

ng

Bot r nellr

Ga llagher . Inc 12 East 42nd
St , New Yo r k. Crty New York
Subscr lpt ron rat(' S De

lr\lered b y c arr i er wl'tere
avllt lat&gt; le 50 cen ts per W ee ~
B"Y Motor Route whe"e carrrer
serv ic e rot ava ilable One
month Sl 75 Sy ma 11 In Oh 10
and W VlJ , One vea r $14 00

511( 1"(1onths

months Sc SO

S7 25

Thn~e

Subscr1p1 1on
pri ce mcludes Sunctav T1mes

Sent1ne1

Sprmg, Md , m the Canadian
smgles canoemg event and to
Lynn V1dah, 20, of San FranCISCO m the 200-&lt;neter md!vtdual medley swurumng.
Shane Gould, Australia 's super swunmer, overtook Miss
Vtdah m the last 20 yards to
wm In a world record time of
. ~dWl7, brea~in!l -the •2 23.5 se~
by Claudia Kolb of the U S four
years ago
Other Amencan successes
Monday came m basketball,
water polo, box1ng and
freestyle wrestlmg .
~=:;:;:-~: :-:·&gt;:·:·:·:::::-:::. •

~

.
~

y

~j Sport

&amp; TN INIJ.S

~~

, Today's
~

3-'nle DIIUy Selilnel, Mlddleport-Pweoy, 0 ., Aug . 21, 1117Z

..:-:-:-.. .~:~::::o-;=-:::"'-:s:;:: -:. .&gt;~::&amp;*-..~~~

·.·:-x·=-~~:·:·~

Parade
-

j

:~

BY PAUL CRABTREE

~

By MILTON RICHMAN
!·:;
It's fairly easy to travel from Ohio to West Virgmla, ancl.vice
UPI ~orts Editor
versa, here in the Melgs-Gallia-Mason area (provided the'sl\adle
MUNICH (UP! )- Bruce Bradley lS the early sensation of the
and-oc U. S.33bridges aren't closed, In whole II" in part).
Olympic Games . and who cares that he used to be on "The
Which liBds us to some mighty interesting speculation ab'out
List "
a law pusect by the tm West Virgtnla Legislature. Simply put,
"The Black List," laughs the btg, blond 25-year-&lt;Jid Long
Beach, Calif , res1dent and backbone of the Uruted States' so far It's this:
At age 11, a West Vlrgltila youth becomes a full-fledged
all-eonquermg water polo team "That's not what we really call
adult. In Ohio, he's still a minor unW age 21 (although he has the
1!, but you get the general tdea."
right to vote.)
The U.S water polo team 1s battmg 1.000
Now, let's consider the case of Bob anq.Qarol and Ted and
It has gone into the pool twtce now and won both matches,
Allee. Bob and Carol are each 18, and llve in West VIrginia. Ted
beatmg Cuba, 7~. Monday when Bruce Bradley rammed In three
and Allee are also 18, and Uve m Ohio.
goals, and Romama, 4-3, Sunday when he pumped in a pair.
Let's say that Bob and Carol fall in love, as young people
Cuba was tougher than Romania.
occasionally still do, I'm told, and get married. In Ohio, Ted and
Wtth 2: 18left, Gerardo Rodriguez brought the Cubans to Within
Allee do the same thing - but they come to West Vlrglnla and
5-4 wtth h1s goal after wh1ch Bradley scored his second one of the
live here just long enough to establish residence before
match to make 11 6-1.
marrying, then move back to Ohio.
The Cubans weren 'I finished yet.
Now Bob and Carol are certainly legally married. But what
Suppor!en Moan
A free throw by Carlos Sanches drew Cuba within~ with I :53 about Ted and Allee'
Ted and Allee bought a house while they Uved he,e in Weal
left and U.S. supporters up m the stands moaned when Pete Asch
Vlrglnli.. Oil rellli1llng to Ohio, Ted loses hlS job and Cll" 't meet
of Berkeley, Calif., was "excluded," sent out of the pool, with 42
the rnorll!age payments The bank tries to collect - and Ted
seconds left because that practically assured Cuba a tie. But
clalma that be is oow a resident of Ohio, and ·thus Ia not responeven though the U s was one man short, Bradley swam In from
sible for his debts, because he Is a minor in the State ,-bere he
out of nowhere and muscled tbe ball into the net with 29 seconds
oow Uves.
left to sew 11 up.
Ted, down on his luck, comes to West VIrginia, buys a jug at
"Yahoo 1" hollered Jnu Slatton, the U S goalie from El
the State-operated pop shop and gets snookered Bob, traveling
Segundo, Calif, at the other endofthepool.
DaVId Rodrtguez, the youngest player in the pool at 17, added a on business the same day In Ohio, finds he'sstilla kid and has to
final goal for the Cubans when Gary Sheerer of Menlo Park, settle for 3.2 beer.
So Ted, alttle bttstoned, goes to see his old girl friend, Carol,
Calif , and Barry Wettzenberg of Campbell, CalU., both of whom
and
she refuses to admit him to the Utile love nest she and Bob
bad played brilhantly until then, somehow missed connections on share.
Whereupon, he goes on a rampage and tears tbe house
the play
apart, trealdng windows and so forth.
It didn't matter.
Carol is very upset, but she doesn't want Ted arrested. She
Bruce Bradley had done hls handiwork
just
wants him to pay for his destruction. So she and Bob file a
Someone who hadn't been counting asked him how many goals
he scored as he came out of the pool and walked toward his locker ctvil ault against him m West Vrrglnla, seeking dalllll!tes. Ted, by
oow sobered up, tells them to go Oy a kite, because he Is just an
to towel himself off
Infant of tender years, living in Ohio.
"Gee, 1 dunno," he smd.
Bob gets concerned about all this, and goes to talk thinp
It was obVIous he couldn't care less
over with Allee, in hope of bringing Ted to his senses. Dirvlng the
"! don't even keep track," he satd "! don't pay very much
car he owrm and very uptight, he creams Ted's new car sitting in
attention We won; that's all! really care about "
Water polo, or ''wasserball" as It's caUed herem Germany, IS the driveway. Ted then seeks damages from Bob, because after
a form ollegal1zed mayhem m water It's a rough game Stamp all, Bob Is an adult under West Virginia law - and that's where
Bob bought, financed and registered his vehicle. Can he collect'
collectors or art collectors aren't adVISed to apply
Meanwhile, Alice gets fed up with Ted's misconduct and files
"You don't have to he crazy to play water polo, but 1t helps,"
says John Felix of Cupertmo, Calif., who once played and now lS for divorce, a~mg that she ts ent!Ued to spilt with Ted- even
though she's a minor as a resident of Ohio, because she was•
an Olymptc referee
The game cornbmes some of the elements of hockey, soccer legally marrted under West Virgllllll law.
And on .. and on. and on ...
and basketball Most of the rougher elements
I'm sure an hour's conversation wtth a lawyer would gtve me
After you fimsh playmg a match, you look for a little relaxation
the
answers
to most of these dtlemmas, but frankly, tt's more fun
- and that's how Bruce Bradley got hunself on that list Team
offtcials, people hke Arthur Lambert and Kenneth "Monty" asking the questions
The idea ought to make a fine televlSton soap opera, and I
N1tzkowskt, who are the coaches of the U S water polo team,
hereby offer it free to any producer If It ever htts the tube,
generally keep the hst
though, they'll probably call 11 "Search for Maturity", "The
Getsoo Ust
"I guess I or1glnally got on 1! when we were m a bttle town m Secret Adolescent," "All My ChUdren (unW age 18, or maybe
Holland, called Amersfoort, durmg the Natmnal Champ1onsh1ps 21)" or some such thing as that
They'd never use a stupid title like "Bob and Carol and Ted
m 1967," Bradley says
and
Alice," I'm sure.
"We bad won a few and lost a few and after the matches were
all over, thts other fellow, who 's no longer with the team, and I
ON TilE TV DIAL Olympics, three hours plus, at 7.30,
thought t!nughtnot be a bad tdea to go down to the town hall and
WHTN-TV . A Boots Randolph special, 9:30 p m (some good
s1ng songs This was at !o'clock m the morning
guest
stars on this one) . Specl81 on teen mass-ldller Carol
"That wasn 'I so bad, but when we got back to the hotel where
we were staying we were shoutmg and yelllng a btt, and we had Fugate, who was a headline ftgure in 1958, 8:30, WSAZ-TV
to wake up someone to get m, He turned Dli\);Q01le ooe of the
Olympic Colli!IVtte~ heaciS. We were t:i"elty 1Qijjj and obnoxious
about 11, and that's how !landed on thiS .. black Ust
"You can get on it pretty easily if you get caught out late With a
gwl or if you get caught drinking."
Programs for Tonight
Bruce Bradley needn't worry anymore.
He can come home oow. AlliS forg1ven.
and Tomorrow
In case he doesn't know It, he 's no longer on the list.
-~

Television· tog

:: ••:::::'-:·:::··. ,;x::::::~~:!"»%-::~:·::;.x::·K«.-::~Wk»..~~:m:·~-~1:0£0:11::.~u.l :bbP:&lt;IJUP:&lt;IU~lll'Ul!:!ll!lll

i Voice along Br'Way
By JACK O'BRIAN
Sl&lt;k Llst1s lncreasi~g- Rabtdly
NEW YORK (KFS)- First Tony Downev,
oow Robert Redford's bemg treated for rabies
A bat btl hun .. "21" (the restaurant) closed
until after Labor Day so Tony Berns, son of "21"
founder (Jack &amp;l Charlie Berns, decided to
sumrner-6hutter his unconnected Umcorn spot
the same day
The Jeswt-pnest role in the "Exorist" flick
will be ~yed by Father Btll O'Malley, a Jeswt
pr1est from exotic Buffalo . ScUt author Anthony Burgess sold the "Clockwork Orange "
f1lm rights for a paltry $500. Warners expects 11
to hit $50 million worldwide, so Tony's reward lS
fame plus a fortune from the paperback reVIval
which has sold 2,000,000 this year . Other
cinematic bargatns. ''The Godfather" pmd AI
Pacmo $5,000, but bet he's gettmg ten or more
times that for "Scarecrow," starnng also
another new htgh-fee (smce "The French
Connection") star, Gene Hackman.
Rosemary Murphy, who bves r1ght across
the street from us, lS a !me actress and an uppah
clawss broad her dad lS Robert Murphy, our
former ambassador to France and other high
diplomatic posts: so very social Rosemary's
role m Bmg Crosby's production of "Walking
Tall" - lS a notonous, tough madam ... Sen.
John March1, who lost the last mayoralty to
Jawn Lindsay, just mtght beat Bojangles next
time the customers at Quo Vadls urged hnu to
nm - hard
The VIolent suspense film "Super Fly" was
made wtth virtually sp1t and Scotch Tape :
producer Slg Shore had the Idea and oo money.
Actor Ron O'Neal couldn't get a salary- worked
on a percentage He'll make a fortune. Producer
Shore couldn't even afford an actor to play a
crooked cop m a final sequence. ProductiOn
often halted because no film was left But It's a
super-htt, and anyone takmg percentages will
get rich
No money lravall for Rob'! Redford's
"Jererruah Johnson" (on which set the bat bit
Bob) - exec producer (meaning he got up the
dough) was Roland Getty, zillionarre Jean
Paul's son . Mickey Mantle's sojourn In the
Yankees' broadcasting booth with old pal Phil
Rizzuto should have been rated "X": the
semantically polluted air even had Phil holycowing, "Boy! We'll be off the a1r soon'"
Sounded like a trailer for a pornopera.
N. Y. plans to bring back doubledecker
buses : Wily not' Everything else has doubled ,. .
Multnuilliona1re Brlllllher Sir Charles Clore !old
pals he's proposed to the Marchioness of Milford

...

.. . ..

TUESDAY, AUGUST29
DO-News 3, 4,6,8 lli, 15. 8, I Dream of Jeann ie 13 , Truth or
~onseq 6 , Hathayoga 33
6 31)-News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10 15; Love Tennis 33
7 DO-News 6, 10 What's My Line 8 Elec Co :!il, Green Acres
3, Former's Daughter 13, Andy Gr iffith 15, Dick Van Dyke 4,
Insight 33
7 JI)-Masterplece Theatre 33 , Ponderosa 3, 4, 15 , Summer
Olymplcs6, 13, John Byner Comedy Hour 10, 8
8 30-Hawall Five 0 8, 10 , Evening at Pops 33, Movie 6, 13,
Death Valley Days15, NBC News Speclal3. 4, 15.
9 31)-Star Spangled Boots 3, 4, 15 Cannon 8, 10, Doctor,
Lawyer, Indian Chief 33
10 DO-Firing Line 33
10 JI)-WSAZ TV Comment 3, Probe 4 , Arthur Smith 8,
American Lifestyle 10, Death Valley Days 13
11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15
11 JI)-Dick Cavett 6, Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movie "Black
Noon" 8, " The Sloryon Page One" 10. "The Mudlark" 13
1 DO-Your Health 4
1 JI)-News, Weather 4, Local News 13
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30,1972
6 DO-Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Heart 10
6 15-Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13,
6 25-Paul Harvey 13
6 30-Cofumbus Today 4, Bible Answers 8, Urban League 13
Rocky and Bullwlnkle 13
'
7 DO-Todoy3,4, 15, CBS News8, 10 News6
7 -Sieef.y Jeffers 8, Romper Room6, Underdog 13
8 DO-Cap. Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 6, 13 , Sesame St 33
Friendly Junction 10.
'
8 31)-Jack LaLanne 13, Tennessee Tuxedo 6
9 DO-Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15. Lucl's Toyshop 10
Peyton Place 13 , Romper Room 8, Mr Rogers 33. What
Every Woman Wants to KnowJ, Timmy &amp; Lassie6
9 31)-Truth or Conseq 3, Electric Co 33, Mike Douglas 6 One
Life to Live 13
'
10 DO-Dinah Shore, 15 , Lucille Ball 10, Dick Van Dyke 13 In
School Instruction 33
'
10 3D-Concentration 3, IS, Amateur's Guide to Love 10; Split
Second 13 , Beverly Hillbillies 8. My Three Sons 10· Love
American Style 6
'
'
11 DO-Family Affair 8, 10; Love American Style 13 , Sale of
Century 3, 15, Communique 6
11 ~tHollywood Squares 4, 1S, Love of Life 8, 10, Bewitched 6,
6

Haven .. Dtonne Warwtcke was eating-for-two
at the Top of the Park Her second baby's due
early next sprmg
DaVId Ben-Gurlon and
Golda MelT agree Moshe Dayan should be the
next Israeli head. But Ben-Gurlon has advised
Moshe he's best marry his longplay romance
Rachel Koren because the public there likes a
proper famUy Image.
Sir John Glelgud's brother Val's finished a
second book about felines, "My Cats and
Myself" .. WNEW's longrun "Milkman's
Matinee" wlll be mlcrophoned next by Bill
Hickok. The hours gave all earner mUkmen
bottle fatigue ... Long..ago milkman Art Ford's
now managing editor of Huntington Hartford's
"Show" mag . Tom Jones Is headed lor throat
surgery. Nodes . Early TV used two cameras
(we've heard of them usmg one back In '3!1 when we watched Manhattan play St.
Bonaventure Wlth Joey Gallagher the star; he
later played with the Yankees, Browno and
sodaed-and~ndwiched himself out of baseball
shape; actually, mto a glant-baaeball shape);
but today the marveloua play-repeUtiona which
make TV.games better than In.person are taped
on three cameras just for the replays ... Duke
Ellington's newellt melody wUl have a lyric by
Allison Assante, a blonde beauty wed to a New 12 DO-Jeopardy J. 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's so so Club 4
News 13; Contact 8, News 10
'
Jersey doctor
12•31)-Spflt
Second
6,
Search
for
Tomorrow
8
10
Who
What
CBS.TV newsmen Bernard and Marvin
Where 3, 15
' '
'
'
Kalb are l"llShing out a book about Henry l.DO-News, Weather, Sports J. Ail My Children 6, 13, Divorce
Court 8; Flippo at the Fair 10
Klssmger ... Unusual to hear Kissinger speak on
I
21)-Lucllle
3
TV: sounds like Dr. Strangelove .. Sean Con- 1·31)-Three onRivers
a Match 3, 4, IS , Let's Make A Deal6, 13 As t~e
nery's James Bond mUUons are backing the
World Turns 8, 10.
2
DO-Days
of Our Lives J. 4, 15, N' lywed Game 13, Virginia
plush new Woolston Hall Country Club near
Graham 6, Love Splendored Thing 8, 10
London ... American Airlines prea. George 2 30-0.tlng GamelJ, Guiding Llght8, 10 , Doctors IS 4
Warde's daughter Valerie is a stewardell8 - lor 3 DO-Another World, 3, 4, 15, General Hospital 6 lJ Secret
Storm B, 10.
' '
Pan-Am. Not for long: Val wUl wed Harry
3 30-0ne Life to LIOe 6; Edge of Night 8, 10, Jeff's Collie 1•
Schult (he's a CPA) m Nov ..Aside to Val: th£
Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 1s
Y'
meek wUl oot inherit the earth -lawyers and 4 DO-Mr Cartoon J, Sornerset4, IS, Fllntstones13· Sesame St
33; Huckleberry Hound6, Batman 8, Movie "At~na" 10
·
auditors will
• 25-Sports Club 6
Jack Benny headed the celeb-violinist Ust at 4 JI)-Merv Griffin 4, l Love Lucy6, Password 13.,0eath Valley
Days 8. Andy Grofllth IS; Green Acres 3
a bash honoring Isaac Stern at the Plaza. Jack
S
DO-Wagon
Train 3, Mr Rogers 33, Dick Van Dyke IS · Big
recalled Stern asking Benny to do a concert lor
Valley 6 Merv Griffin a, Tarzan 13
'
the San Franctsco Symphony. '1t's your S. 30-Marshall Dillon 15, Elec Co 33 ·
hometown - why don't you do it younelf?" 6 oo-J Truth or Consoq. 6; News 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, t Dream of
eaMie 13, Hatheyoga 33.
•
Jack countered. "BecaUJe," Stern becauaed, 6 JO-News3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; Brldge33.
"I'm a concertvlollnl.st and! can get only $10.11 7 DO-Dick Van Dyku, Newa6, ID, What's My Line s1 Elee eo.
20, Milestones of Progreu 33, Green Acres 3· Andy G lffltakes sollleone who playa as badly as YOII to get
15, Maalc Circue 13
'
r "'
$100 a ticket."
7 31)-To fell the Truth 6; Dregntt a; The JUdge 10, EpiSOde
Action 33, LaaslelS; Oral Robert. In London 3 1 •
Steve Ross! integrated his Manhattan pent8
DO-C Adam-12 4: A Public Affair 33; Summer Olympics 6 13;
house-leased 11 to Aretha Franklin ... There's
BS Report. 8, 10
'
a "Godfather Boutique" in Greenwich VIllage; 8:30-McMlllan and Wife 3, 4, 15; Movie, "The Last Laugh" 33
·
saw II on ~Sunday and Its shades were drawn, 9 DO-Medical Center a, 10
10 DO-Mannl• a, 10; Soul33, Night Gallery 3, 4
window ~overed completely with Marlon 11 DO-News 3, 4, 6, a, 10, 13, 15.
Brando pictures. What do they peddle? Sales 11 30-Johnnr, Carson 3, 1, 15; Dick Covttt 6; Movie "The Llttt
Hut" I. 'The Fighting S.1b111" 10· Niagara"' 13
a
you can't refuse' ... No gal has caqht George 1 DO-Newa
1.
'
•
Hamlltm yet. Hll Alana Colllna idyl Idled.
1 30-Ntwl 13.

Goud Fast Ball
the mound feelmg more than a
"Y ,
d Anderson m rehttle apprehensive about his • ply
qu':hon, "I still would
own pitching ab1hty.
have taken Gary out even 1f he
"Truthfully," sa1d Gary, "I
had a no-hitter going "
was shakmg m my boots when I
Nolan's pre-game apprehen-

u:'!'

went out there "

No Embarrassment

It was Nolan's first start

smce arm mtser1es put hun on
the Sldelmes Aug 2
"We've heen gettmg real
good pltchmg lately,, pomted
out Gary, "And I didn't want to
embarrass myself or the team
"Actually,"headded, "!was
more womed about walkmg
batters than g1vmg up htts."
With Houston 1dle, the Reds
moved to 8Ik galDes ahead of
the Astros in the National
League West
As 11 turned out, Nolan had
no cause to worry about anythmg. He blanked the Mets
wtth one hit before hfted for a
pmch-ll1tter m the bottom of
the Sixth
Taking Nolan out after SIX
had been Red Manager Sparky
Anderson 's pre-game plan

s1on disappeared after " I
threw a good, low fastball to
Wayne Garrett 10 the first
mnmg''
"That Is when I told myself
that I had 1t I really extended
myself. I had my fast ball, a
rtsmg one Mayhe 1! wasn't a
Tom Seaver fast ball but I was
happy wtth lt "
So was Anderson
"Our p!tchin~ IS getting better all the tune now," satd
~arky "It's just the opposite
of 1970. Don Gullet Its back, so
Is Nolan and we're working
With Wayne Sunpson and hope
by the end of the season he'll be
.m good shape "
When the Reds began World
Series play after the 1970 penuant-wlnmng season, Nolan
was the only able-bodied
starter

Falcons Show Promise
By RANDY CLARK
MASON, W Va - The new
1972 Wh1te Falcon football
squad wtll lake the fteld
Fnday, September I, mal kmg
the begmnmg of a new and
prom1smg season
Although the Falcons are
expected to have one of the1r
fmest squads th1s year, unlortunately, thm compelltwn
should he much better than
average
The quesllon concermng
Wahama 's new head coach
Grant Barnette 1s whether h1s
team can mature sufflclenlly
to compete aga mst expertenced oppos1hon
An over-all evaluatiOn ranks
Waharna's defense as one of
the most promtsmg m the
state Wahama gave up less
than one-half the pomts they
have scored and have
averaged g!Vlng'Up less than 10
pomts per game the last hve

seasons
Three backf1eld pos ltwns
have been vacated and are
literally a toss-up between
some promlSmg young runnmg
backs The offensive and
defensive hoes should be a
!right spot this year with such

returmng lettermen as Don
Mach1r, Aud1e McFarland,
Tun Roush, Mark Mitchell,
David Roush and Vernon
Roush
Inexperience at the quarte rba ckin g pos11lon and
mexpenenced pass defense,
w11l be two key problems
TOUGH SCHEDULE
Last year's Falcon record of
7-1 2 saw no less than f1ve
games dectded by one touchdown or less
The 1972 verswn of Wahama
f

football IS left With the task of
f1lhng 14 of 22 startmg
poslllons In fact the eleven
semors accounted for e1ght of
the eleven starting offenstve
poslllons, mcludmg three
backfield starters and both end
poslllons The Whtte Falcons
also lost six of II positions on a
defenstve un1t that allowed
only 8 6 pomts per game last
year
The W1rt County Tigers, who
battled Wahama to a very close
13-6 score last year, wtll have
both enllre startmg umts
ret urning as they lost no
graduatmg se mors . Kyger
Creek lost only four starters

after a &lt;Hi deadlock last year
and Ravenswood only three
starling players w1th an
tdentical score Ravenswood
will have the~r entire offenstve
and defens1ve hnes relurmng
To add to the Wh1te Falcon
woes, Southern, Buffalo and
Federal Hockmg are enjoymg
one of the1r most experienced
returnmg squads ever
Parkersburg Cathohc and
Spencer are expected to both
be a much 1mproved team th1s
year
A NEW ADDITION
Wahama's w1dest margm of
victory last year was a 57-24
declslon over the Van Bulldogs
Th1s year Van does not appear
on the Wh1te Falcon schedule
Instead, Wahama wlll take on
the Wmlleld Generals, a team
that has ..c~atect a football
dynasty 'Unvef Mad" ~oach
Leon McCo1' 'Wmfleld has went
undefeated for the1r last four
seasons running the1r wmmng
strmg to 46 consecutive games
Wmf1eld m1ssed the state AA
playoffs last year only because
they failed to schedule enough
AA schools

Property

Transfers
Ahce Elhott, Mmnes Elltott,
Dorothy
F1elds Hall, Charles
(, 111)1'/'\'' "!
I
Hall, Lillian Richards, Vtrgll
R1chards , Dante! Crtshp,
1
Lou1se Cr1shp, Wilham Cr1shp,
I
/f ' / 11 ',i/t/)1! 'I
• Arlene Cmhp, Carolyn Crislip
to Margaret Raguel, 50 A. ,
I
Obve
I
Consohdallon Coal Co to
\ COLUMBU ' l AND !-lOUlHU-l N OHI O t U CT R!C CO MPANY
Richards
&amp; Sons Inc , Ease ,
'~-------~-~-Letart
Helen Ruth Atkms, Leroy
Rusche!, Frank1e Rusche!,
V1rgll Pohng, Shirley L Poling
- - -..~~'!!111!!!•'!!!1"'1!"11!'!"'!'!!!!!!!11.. Pomeroy
to Elien J Rought, Lot,
Vmlet B MtUhone to Manne
D Chapman, 10.59 A., Orange.
Maxine D Chapman to
LATEX
NO
William H Chapman, Patrtcia
Ann Olapman, 3.15 A.,
Orange
Glona Jean Cross to Ancll B.
Cross, Lot, Middleport.
Clara Elizabeth Hemes to
!CHICAGO)
James R. Andrews, Constance
R Andrews, Parcels, Bedford.
Wtlliam H Tracewell to
Gould E. Riffe, Delores Riffe,
Parcels, Orange

The Electric (:limate
----·····

HOUSE

1

---------- - - j

A~INT

----llllllil
CHIEF

SaF ·PRIMING
PAINT FOR Ali.
SURFACES-CLEAN
BRUSHES WITH WATER

CHIEF (Chicago)
PORCH AND FLOOR
QUICK DRY

'659

ENAMEL

GAL

NEW BKB COACH
CHEYNEY, Pa (UP!)
John Chayney, a Phlladelphla
high school basketball coach
aM former player In the
Eastern Pro Basketball
League, was named Monday as
head basketball coach at
Cheyney State College

Ma 1or League Standings
By Umted Press lnternaloon•l
National Lc•gue
Ea~t 1 pet 9 b
Poltsburgh
75 46 620
Choca$o
65 57 533 lO';'

~~ewlo~orsk

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONI 99J..2141
I

~ ~; ~~!

:;

Montreal
55 65 45B 19'1•
Pholadelph oa •• 76 367 30'r'
West
wipclgb
Cinconnah
77 45 631
Houslon
69 54 561 811&gt;
Los Angeles 65 55 542 11
Allanta
57 67 460 21
San Franmco 54 70 435 24
San Doego
46 76 377 31
Monday's Results
P' tt sburg h 5 San D'ego 3
S! Louos 4 San Fran 2
Conconnat1s New York 2
IOnly games sc heduled !
Today's Probable Pttchers
I All Times EDTl
New York !McAndrew 9 Slat
Cu\cmnaf1 {81 llmgham 10 10 ),
8 05 p m
San Doego !Caldwell 6 61 at
Pottsburgh (Bla ss 1461 8OS
P San Francosco !Barr 5 7) at
St Loui s (Cleveland 13 101 9
pm

.

,

COLUMBUS (UP[) _ Ohlo about ll]e day's two workouts
State football coach Woody ~ "We'Vt got a better-condiHayes opened fall practice , ttoned teAm that we've had m
Monday for the team, one he awhile," he sa1d "A good
sald "truly e}lltomtzes the gen- many of the players beat the
eratwn "ap"
Slx-mmllte rrule, but we'll let a
"Alm;.t every player was few others try agam because
born after! started coaching at we don't want to cheat anyOhto State," he satd "That body
truly epltomtzes the generation
"I know thts," he added,
gap "
however "If a boy doesn't run
Hayes was enthuslashc 1t, he 's not likely to be m the

'

I #

over '72 Bucks

starting lmeup ''
R1ck Seifert, a safety from
Cuyahoga Falls startmg his
th1rd year as a regular, dtd an
eyeiJOppmg 5 02, which he
says 1sn't unusual for hun
"I ran 11 m 5 06 last year I've always run well," Seifert
said "Heck, I set a nahonal
high school record m the half
m1le m h1gh school "

Bengals Rally to

•

wm•

Linebacker Randy Grandishar went the distance m 5 20
even thuugh he has p1cked up
14 pounds smce last season
Hayes pomted out he ha'
hopes for sophqmore offens!Vl
halfback Tun Holycross, frorr
Bedford He1ghts
"He has enonnous abilillesgood s1ze , a good rece1ver, fme
speed," the coach satd "I
think he'd get ahttle faster tf
he'd get a btUe shorter ha~rcut

I ftnd nowadays that 's the way
to approach these things "
·
Faced wtth a maJor rebuUd'
mg job, Hayes satd he Isn't
PHILADELPillA (UP!) _ desptte 'lllJ"urtes
The Bengals dell the Eagles worried about the competition
"We'll outwork other teams
1 to thelf linebackA veteran who dtd not play, another bow
With the biggest squad CUt- that's the only way to outdownofthe seasonlessthan24 although he 15 healthy , was mg crew, already thmned by
Zabel an d smart the other teams, Just
hours away, v1ctory was a runnmg
back
Tom 1eg mturtes to St.eve
b
d li
outwork them," he satd
forgotten brtde for the Woodeshtck, who S81d later he Adnan Young, Y Sl e mng
Phlladelphta Eagles and doesn't "expect to see my backup nuddle linebacker Ike
ThiS Week's Special
Cmcmnah Bengals Monday name on a locker" after the Kelley With a knee lOJUry 00
ki k ff
mght
cutdown He has played the openmg c o
Cincmnall, after tfallmg 14- , i'l!gulafly for the past nme
"Our defense was the worst
VALLIE
3, eventually danuetl thepnze years, but had been slowed by smce our loss to Cincmnatl m
FIATI!!D
34-20 but the game fed fuel to UIJurles m recent seasons
the season opener last year,"
the argument that In pre
"We felt 1t was the last tnue Khayat admttted
season galDes 11 ts not who we could play a lot of the other
The men who made the
USED CARS
Montreal (Moore 56) at
wmsbut
who
playsthat
prospects
and
have
another
defense
look
that
way
were
Atlanta !Reed 11 12) 8 05 p m
look at some of those before the runmng backs Paul Robmson,
Pholadeiphoa IBrandon 5 5) at counts
Houston (Wil son 10 9) 8 30
Bengal Coach Palil Brown big cut,'' Khayat satd
who rushed for touchdowns of
pm
threw
:;:;
players
miD
the
fray
The
i\:agles'
performance
SIX
and two yards, and Essex
Los Angeles (Smger 5 12) at
Chi cago (Pappas 10 7), 2 30 The Eagles' Ed Khayat, who reflected the absence of the Johnson, who earned II times
pm
used 48, kept some of his fegulars, With the BeJlgals for 65 yards, and quarterbacks
Wednesday' s Games
toughest soldiers on the s1de- . pthng up 415 total yards, Ken Anderson (12 passes for
San D1ego at P1tts, ntghl
hoes nursmg mm~ mjurles ; l:!&gt;nverting etght consecutive 155 yards) and V1rgll Carter
Los Ang eles at Ch1cago
V 8 .e ng me automat1c
that would not have mattered thtrd-down plays mto first (eight for 82)ards and a three
San Fran at St Louts, n1ght
trans Real buy at
Montreal at At lanta ntght
durmg regular season play
downs at one stretch m the yatd touchdown to Steve
New York at Ctncl ntght
Khayat
listed
Rtchard
HarriS
second
half and turnmg two Kingman.)
Phda at Houst on ntght
and Gary Pettigrew and safety pass mtercepllons and a
Brown had pratse for AnderLeroy Keyes as key defense- ftimble recovery mto touch- son, and Robmson for Johnson.
Amencan League
men who could have played downs
"This kid has everything to
Easl
be a star quarterback," Brown
"YQu' ll Loke Our Quality
w I pet g b
Way of Doing Bus1 ness"
Detrot t
67 55 549 Sald.
GMAC FINANCING
Balttm ore
66 56 S41
Robinson satd of Johnson
New York
992 5342
,Pomeroy
63 58 521 j,
Sthat"everybodytrtestobelike
&amp; ston
62 5B 517
Ope~ Evemngs 'TIIB 00
Clev eland
58 64 475 9
Essex He's great He lnsplres
Ttl 5 P.M Sat ,
48 73 397 18'1' By United Presslll\eroatlonal Philadelphia Eagles 10 a the whole -ball club."
M1lwau kee
West
The pressure was on and so Natwnal Football League prew I pet g b
Chocago
71 50 587
was V1rgil Carter
season game.
Oakland
17 51 5B2 'h
The
Cmcmnah
Bengals'
,
Running back Paul Robmson
Mmneso ta
60 59 504 10
search
for
a
starting
quarterscored
oh third quarter touchKansas Coty 5B 62 483 12
Caltfornta
54 67 446 161f2 back between Ken Anderson
down pl\lhges of SIX and two
Te xas
4B 73 397 22 1/ 2 and Carter added another page yards within a span of 3 09,
Monday's Results
Monday mght as Carter threw br!ngmgthe Bengals from a 17Balt1more 2 M1nnesota 0
a touchdown pass and directed 10 halftune deftcit to a 24-17
Chtcago 6 Boston 4
Oakland 5 Cleveland 4
the Bengals to a 3+-20 come- lead.
(Only games scheduled }
from-behmd
v1ctory over the
Carter natled down the
Today's Probable Ptlchers
victory
m the fourth quarter
(All Ttmes EDT)
Texas IBosman 6 8) and
when he passed three yards for
Stan house 2 4) at New York
a touchdown to rookte receiver
IKion e 14 5and Keko ch 10 12), 2
Steve Kingman and then led
5pm
SEVEN TO CUBS
Cleveland (Todrow 12 lll at CHICAGO (UP! ) - Seven the Bengals on a drt ve which
Oakland (Hunter 16 71. 11 p m
consumed the !mal eight
Detroot ILoilch 19 10) at players, fiVe of them on ophon, mmutes and ended with a IllCal olornoa (May 5 101, 11 p m wtll JOin the Chtcago Cubs after
Ballo more ICuellar 13 101 at Sept I when the player roster yard field goal by Horst
Mon nesota (Biyleven 10 15),
can be mcreased to 40 Called Muhlmann.
8 30 p m
The WID was a plus m CarKansas Ctty ( Nel son 7 4) at up on optlon from WIChita of the ter's favor m the battle for the
Mtlwaukee (Ryerson 361, 8 30 Amencan Association were
STI HL has more than 40 valu able years or
pm
ftrst baseman , Pal Bourque, : starting quarterback position
Chocago !Bradley 13 10 ) at
expenence 1n th e des rgn and producf1on of
ou tfielder Gene Hiser and smce Anderson directed
Boston (Toant 8 41, 7 30 p m
power charn saws gu1de bars and saw cham
p1tchers Larry Gura and Joe , Cincmnati to a pa1r of TDs
Wednesday's Games
All of STIHL s saws have the same degree of
Cleve al Oakland , noght
Decker as well as lilt-banded • .Cter Mill!nl had wrapped up a
exce lle nc e and of un1fo rm1ty 1n destgn and
Detro1t at Cal li mght
convlnCft vtctory last week
manufactu
re In conJun clton wllh these STI HL's
Baltimore at Moon night
rehever Chnt Comf!ton from
Elsewh~e in pro football,
own bars and cham operate so eff1c1ently and
Kan Coty at Molw, noght
Midland, Tex Purchase_d from the Los Angeles Rams anTexas at New York, noght
well thai th ey have earned world ·w1de
Midland
and
Wlchtta, nounced that Ken Geddes, a
Ch 1cago at Bos ton
recogn1 tton for oursrandmg performance Wllh
respectively, were outfielder second-year linebacker from
mrn1mal mam lenance
Peter Lacock and mftelder Nebraska, wtll be lost for at
David Rosello
least eight weeks with a lroken
SEE IT AT
right arm.
Mator League Results
The Pittsburgh Steelers ,cut
By United Press International
their prHeason roster to 55
GAULT CLAIMED
National League
players
when sophomore quarNew York 000 000 on - 2 4 o IRVINE, Cahf. (UP!)
Ctncl
000 004 lOx- 5 8 0 Quarterback Don Gault, a terback Bob Leahy and four
Strom, Rauch 181 and Dyer ,
Nolan , Hall (7) and Plummer reser ve quarterback w1th rookies were placed on
WP- Noian (14 31 LP- Strom Cleveland for the past three walvera, setting up a backup
(0 2) HRs- Tolan (7th I. Menke years, was clatmed on wa1vers quarterback battle between
18th ), Molner (13th)
Monday by the San Otego veteran±Terry llailratty and
rookie JOe GllllaJn.
San Doego 000 100 002- 3 9 2 Chargers
Pills
000 212 OOx- 5 6 0
Caldwell, Acosla (61. Severin
sen (8) and Kendall, Moose

'68 DODGE
CHARGER 2 DR.
HARDTOP

'1395
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

/' Carter p aces Benga}

CHAIN SAWS

The Saw That Won The Cutting
Contest At The Meigs County Fair

Linescores

Hernandez (9) and Sangu11ten

WP- Moose (10 8) LP- Caid
well (6 7) HRs- Stargeli, 2
(29th 8. 30th), Lee (8thl
Colbert (36th)
Son Fran
100 000 001- 2 3 3
StLouiS
30100000x- 4 91
Mancha! , McDowell 13), Mol
htt (7) and Rader , Durham 12
61 and Slmn'lons LP- Manchal
IS IS) HR- Brock (3rd)

YOUR

(Only games scheduled )
American League

Baltomore 000 010 011)- 2 7 0
Minnesota 000 000 OtJO- 0 52
Palmer 118 6l and Oates ,
Woodson, Strickland (9) and
Borgmann LP- Woodson 111·
12) HR- Baylor (9th)

HOU$E

'

can provide more than a
roof over your head ....•.

Chicago
000 303 OtJO- 6 S 2
Boston
000 013 ooo- 4 B 2
Lemonds, Gossagell!. Fisher
(6), Drabowsky (7), Forster (8)
and Herrmann, Siebert, Peters
161. Newhauser (6) , Lee (7) ,
Bolon (81 and FISk WPGOssage (4 O) LP- S1ebert 110
1!) HRs- Andrews (7th), Kos
co (8th)

It can provtdB you w1th money for the things you want
and need.
JDBopiB who are ,buymg a house can arrange for a
second mortgage loan w1th The City Loan Company.
Amounts ranging up to $15,000 are available. Our
eitlended terms and reasonable rates are especially
attractive to home owners.

Cleveland 000 002 002- 4 6 2
Oaklnd
000 000 SOx- 5 5 0
Dunmng, Ktlkenny (7), Far
mer 17) and Fosse , Blue,
Knowles (7) , Hamollon (8) ,
Locker 191. Fingers (9) and
Tenace WP- Knowles (4-1) LP
- Dunning 13 2) HRs- Footer
l3rdl. Mangual (5th) , Nettles
!12th)

Phone or stop in We will give you all the Information
you w'i\t. That·s what we're here for. When money Is
tile question . . .. .

(Only gamto scheduled)
•

"

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MOORE'S

' ,

~BASEBALL Woody ~nth used

Reds' Rally Gives ...__
STANDINGS
....._
Nolan Fourteenth
CINCINNATI (UPI) "' There was never any doubt m
Gary Nolan's mmd
"The guys all of them who
were gomg to hit that ummg .
told me they were gomg to win
the game for me," satd Nolan
And, true to !herr prom1se,
Nolan's teammates staged a
four-run uprlSmg m the Sixth
IMmg Monday mght to proVIde
Gary with hiS 14th VICtory
agalnst three losses as the Cmcmnah Reds knocked off the
New York Mets 5-1 m the opener of a three-game series
Jack B1llmgham, wmner of
six of ljis 1!181 seven dectswns,
goes agamst the Mets tonight.
George Foster, pinch-hitlmg
for Nolan, touched off the rally
Wlth a double Joe Morgan
broke the scoreless tie, drtvmg
home Foster after a walk to
Pete Rose Bobby Tolan added
the chncher, a three-run homer
off Mets rook1e lefthander
Brent Strom
While Nolan d1dn 't have any
doubts about the run-scormg of
his teammates, he d1d walk to

.. .

.

MIDD,J.E PORT, O.

i$ the all$wer

INSURANCE • BONDS
,MUTUAL FUNDS

992·2171

'

••

MailS Count;s OIW and largest

lnsaftance ~ '

--

. '.

•''

Loa,.

125 E. MAIN

)t~ LOANS OVER
to . .

POMEROY, 0.

$2000 ... THE CITY LOAN COMPANY

· ~:•·· ~

• lletlngl Co.• l'lllllntlnt

01111 , ...... IInce 1112

l
I

I

�4 The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Aug. 29, 1972

u
er l
RUttencutt.er-1100V
··'
Marriage Was Sunday~

-;-;.-;,~$~:'?-W;~(:~.y;:~:::;."-;~:::::::.:1-::::::::

:'0::

~~:

Miss Jo Ann Ruttencutter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
I, Beaver, Monroe, and
granddaughter of Mrs. John W.
Kincaid, Middleport, and Mr.
Richard L. Hoover, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar jioover.
Columbus, were united in
marriage at 2:30 p.m. on
Sunday, Aug . 'J:J at the Church
of the Ascension, Middleport
The Rev. Joseph C. Harvey
officiated at the ceremony
performed before an altar
with
white
decorated
chrysanthemums and gladioli.
Music was by Mrs. John Glenn,
organist, and Mr. Earl Jones,
soloist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a gown of white organza. lt was
fashioned with a Bertha collar
of Venice lace at the empire
waisted bodice, and had full
bishop sleeves with a lace cuff.
The full A-line skirt ended with
lace and a wide flounce as did
the chapel length removable
train. The bride's headpiece
was a contour plateau of
Venice lace in a leaf pattern
and held the bouffant elbow
length veil of illusion. Sh~
carried

a

cascade

arrangement of white car·
nations and pale pink gladioli
Ued with white satin ribbons.
Miss Deborah Roberts of
Charlestort, W. Va. was the
maid of honor and the
bridemaids were Miss Patricia
Ruttencutter, sister of the
bride, and Miss Babs Meyers of
Lebonan. The bridesmaid wore
gowns of cotton voile. The
white bodice featured rows of
ruffles in a bibbed effect and
short puffed sleeves. The
lavender A·line skirts had wide
ruffled flounces, and the
empire waist was decorated
with wide ribbon. The gown
worn by the maid of honor was
identifical in style but was of a
pale turquoise c·oJor. All of the
attendants wore large brim·
med 'picture hats.
The attendants carried hand

Ribbons Awarckd
Ribbons and premiums for
project work at the Meigs
Coyn\! Fair were presented by
Mra. ·Earl Th:ima, advisor, to
mem!M!rs' of the Naylor's Run
Jeta 4-H Club at a picnic and
swimming party held Thurs·
day at Forked Run Park.
Mark Norton, David Lewis,
Kelly Thoma and Todd Norton
received the premium awards,
blue ribbons for project book
work, and champion rosette
ribbons on their project, "Let's
Explore the Outdoors". The
club received a grade of "B"
on the soil demonstration.
Guests for the picnic and
swimming party were Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Mrs. liarold
Norton, Suzan Thoma, and
Brill Norton.

bouquets of mixed flowers
including pink carnations,
yellow daisy porn pons, red
sweetheart roses, purple
statice, and baby 's breath.
Mr. Michael Havron of
Lebanon was be~t man and the
lishers were Mr. John Molle of
Charleston, W. Va . and Mr.
Otis Flinchpaugh oN3tncinnati.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Beaver wore a yellow
embroidered organdy dress
and a corsage of a single white
gardenia surrounded by white
stephanotis. Mrs. Hoover was
in a light blue ensemble and
also wore a gardenia corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the
Congress Inn , Monroe. The
bride's table featured a three
tiered cake topped with satin
wedding bells. Miss Deborah
West and Miss Robyn West
were the hostesses. Mrs.
Robert C. Bowling presided at
the guest book.
For her wedding trip to San
Francisco, the bride changed
Into an orange knit dress
trimmed in white and .vore the
white carnation corsage from
her bridal bouquet. The
rehearsal dinner was hosted by
the groom's parents at the
Congress Inn .
The newlyweds will reside at
9 Gary Court, Mucnie, Ind.
The bride is a graduate of
Dunbar High School, and at·
tended Marshall University in
Huntington, Miami University
at Oxford, and the Institute for
American Universities at Aix·
en-Provence, France. She is
currently a student at the
Middletown Branch campus of
Miami University.
The bridegroom is a
graduate of Coshocton High
School in Coshocton and -at·
tended Ohio State University.
He is employed as trainmaster
for .Penn Central Trans·
porta lion Co. in Muncie, Ind. ,

3-Day Sale Set
Plans were made for a
rummage sale on Sept. 7, 8 and
9 at the American Legion hall
in Middleport when the Junior
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 met recently at the
hail.
'
The group also decided to
have a layette •hower for Mrs.
Patty Might. It was reported
that ali junior dues have heen
paid. The group donated 150
candy bars for resale with
proceeds to go to the muscular
distrophy fund. Homemade ice
cream was served. Attending
were Cheryl Barnhart, Kim
Roush, Lois Roush, Becky
Roush, Christi Smith, Sandra
Might, Kenda Mohler, Angela
Dailey, Paula Cunningham,
Melinda Thomas, Judy Gilkey,
Patty Might, Velsie Roush,
Bonnie Dailey and Shaula
Roush.

HELD OVER ANOTHER WEEK
BY POPULAR DEMAND
Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star

LYN CAMPBELL

'

Pomeroy . . . ::i
:~;:
Personal Notes .,

Mrs. Barbara sargen::
Chester, and Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Gaul and son, Michael,
Vincent, spent the weekend in
Flint, Mlch.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne Lee, have returned
from a several days' visit in
Colwnbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hammer and Kim, and
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Rice of
Washingt\)ll, D. C. arrived
Saturday for a vacation with
Mrs. Rice!s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Young, and Miss
Lydia L. Davis. Another guest
of Mr. and Mrs. Young and
Miss Davis is Dr. Hugh H.
Davis of Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelton
returned home recently from a
month's vacation : They
traveled 6,700 miles through
the western states, going the
northern route and returning
the southern route.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Weese,
Miss Marcia Karr, and Mrs.
Alice Capehart, spent Monday
at Williamstown, w. Va. They
visited the Fenton Glass Co.
and enroute home stopped at
the Grand Central Mall in
north Parkersburg, W. Va.
Roy Grueser and Sharon
Roush visited the Ohio State
Fair Sunday .
Mr.andMrs . J. C. Russell of
Massillon spent the weekend
here visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Truman Russell ."Mr.
Russell is the pharmacist at
Family Drugs in Wadsworth,
and Mrs. Russell is employed
as a speech and hearing
therapist at the Canton Local
&amp;hools.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling
and son, Jay, spent a day at the
Ohio State Fair.
Mrs. William Sheridan ac·
companied her son-in~aw and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Des and sons, Don and Doug, of
Galion, on a llklay camping
trip. Highlights of their trip
included visits to Luray
Caverns, Niagara Falls, and
the Ford Museum.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosen·
baum and family have
returned home to Altoona, Pa.
after spending 10 days here
with his mother. Mrs. Fred
Rosenbaum, and his brother,
Richard Rosenbaum, and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hawk,
son, Mike, Mrs. Ruth Zirkle
and DwJght Burton spent the
weekend In Michigan. While
there they attended the stock
car races at Michigan's In·
ternationai Speedway,

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mr , and Mrs. Earl McKinley
entertained Saturday af·
ternoon with a party in observance of the fifth birthday
of their son, &amp;ott. Games were
played with prizes going to
Becky Long , Amy Erwin,
Mindy and Mary Beth Long. A
circus theme was carried out in
the cake decorations. Cake and
ice cream were served. Guests
at the party hesides those
named were Megan Long,
Parker Long, Ricky Long,
Terri Sprouse, and Beverly
Long . Sending gifts were Mrs.
Lena McKinley and Mrs .
William Mattox.

Also Starring The Popular

GEO. HALL
Tonight Thru Sept. 2nd

THE KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, o.

$1 .00 Cover Charge Sal . Nlghl, Sept. 2

':=:;;::;::;::;::;:::;:;;:;;:;;:;;::::::::::::::
I

OFFER RUMMAGE
The Happy Harvesters Class
or the Trinity Church will hold
a rummage sale Thursday,
Friday and Saturday in the
church basement. Both
children and teenagers'
clothing will be available. Mrs.
Dale Smith and Mrs. Ben
Neutzling are chairmen of the
sale. Pr\)Ceeds will go to a
special fund for redecorating
the church sanctuary. The sale
will conclude Saturday at noon.

Committees Named
'

Committees for the 1972·73
year of · the Pomeroy
Elementary School PTA ha·;e
been announced by Mrs. Earl
Thoma, president.
,
Other officers of the unit
which will have its first
meeting at 7:30p.m. on Sept. 11
are Mrs. Jerry Fields, vice
president; Mrs. Ray Jewell,
second vice president; Mrs.
Bill McDaniel, secretary; Mrs.
Gene Mitch, treasurer; Mrs.
Robert Lewis, corresponding
secretary; and Mrs. Pearl
Williams, pariimentarian.
"Communications: The Link
that JOins'Generations" is the
theme of the PTA.
Named as delegates to the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers were
Mrs. James Wmsiey, Mrs.
Charles Gloeckner, Mrs.
Kenneth McCullough, Mrs.
William Anderson, and Mrs.
Clarence Hawley. The alter·
nates are Mrs . Richard
Rosenbaum, Mrs. Jerry
Fields, Mrs. Louis Osborne.
Committees appointed in·

Fami/11
Reunited
'./
The family of the late Perry
and Laura Rupe or Kyger met
Sunday at the Swisher cabin
near Morning Star for a
reunion. A basket dinner was
held at noon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
James Brea~ale, Washington,
D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bradbury, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Swisher,
Timothy and Paul II, Ttom·
ville; Mrs. Robert Bali of
Rodney; Mrs. Ralph Isaacs,
Graceville, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Tripp, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. David Swisher, Coium·
bus; Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. James
Bradbury, J. D. and Michael,
Mrs. Bion Bradbury, Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Rupe, Kyger;
Burdell Bradbury, Bruce and
Brent, Mrs. Virginia Townsley,
Urbana ;

Perry

Rupe,

Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bali, Jr ., Sue Ellen and Debra
Kay, Gallipolis; Mrs. Esta
Heines, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Dr. and
Mrs. Keith Riggs, Andrea and
Nicky, Pomeroy.
COMMITIEE NAMED
A committee to investigate
the purchase of new pews for
the sanctuary of the Syracuse
· Asbury United Methodist
Church was appointed at a
meeting of the Eagles Cla~
held at the roadside park.
Named to the committee were
Mrs. Vera Van Meter, Mrs.
Opal Kioes, and Bill
Winebrenner. Miss Marcia
Karr, teacher, opened the
meeting with prayer. Mrs.
lielen Teaford gave devotions
using scripture and a
meditation. Fund raising
projects were discussed. Miss
Karr and Mrs. John Sauvage
were hostesses for the meeting.
SON BORN ,\UG. ZS
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller of
Logan are announcing the birth
of a six pound, 14 ounce son,
Thomas Brian, born Aug. 25.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Thomas Miller of Pomeroy and
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Withem of
Glouster. Mrs. Maudie Kin·
nison of Murray City is the
greai·grandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. Miller also have a son,
Joseph Michael, 3.

. SHIRt
:FINISHING

•'

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At s
'use Our Free Parkl~g Lot
'

Robinson!s

'

aeane.s

216 E: 2nd, Pomeroy

elude Mrs. Fields, Mrs.
Thomas Smith, Mrs . Osborne,
Mrs . Mitch, Mrs . Thoma,
program ; Mrs. Gertrude
Casto. Mrs. Sam McKinney,
Mrs. Larry Baker, Mrs . Jerry
Colmer,
Mrs .
William
Stephenson, Mrs . Patrick
Duffy, Mrs. Carl Roach, Mrs.
.Osborne, Mrs. James Hensley,
Mrs. Wamsley. Mr. Joseph
Fields, ways and means.
Mrs. Simon Johnson, Mrs.
Clarence Andrews, Mrs .
Samuel Fry, health; Mrs .
Patrick Wood, Mrs. Baker,
magazines.;
Mrs.
Paul
Eichinger, Mrs. Tom Grueser,
Mrs. Clifford Kennedy , Mrs.
Danny Zirkle, and Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle, membership; Mrs.
Orval Wiles, Mrs. Larry
Thomas, Mrs. Goldie Fridley,
Mrs. William Barnhart, child
welfare; Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. George
Nash, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Seth, Mrs. Annette Boyd, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Rife and Mr. and
Mrs.
John
Manley,
playground.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, school
patrol chairman, to be assisted
by parents; Mrs. Keith Riggs,
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Mrs. John
Beaver, Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mrs. Kale Jarrell, Mrs. Roger
Kovalchick, cultural arts
committee; Mrs. Patrick
Duffy, historian; Mrs. Richard
Rupe, legislative chairman;
and Mrs. Charles Gloeckner,
reading.

a

. o . ., . . ..,. ,.

~

IG~~c~~~rl

REVIVAL SET
· A weekend revival will be
held Friday through Sunday at
7:30 each evening at the
Graham Chapel Church, three
miles northeast of Shade off
county road 25 on Township
Road 90. Homecoming will he
Sunday with a basket dinner at
noon followed by arternoon
services at 1:30 p.m. Music will
be by the Bissell Brothers and
little George Lewis . The
evangelist is the Rev. Jesse
Fyffe of Webbville, Ky., who is
employed as a state trooper.
The Rev. John Elswick, pastor,
extends an invitation to the
public .

DAUGHTER BORN
Captain and Mrs. Greg Wight
of Cincinnati are annoum:;lng
the birth of a six pound, four
ounce daughter, Kathleen
Ellen, born Thursday, Aug. 24,
at the Jewish Hospital.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs.
Richard
Finiaw.
Pomeroy, and Mrs. William
Wight, Milford, Conn. Mr. and
Mrs . Frank Grueser of
Pomeroy, Route 3, are great·
grandparenta.

WEDNESDAY
THE WEDNESDAY Mor·
ning Early Bird League of the
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes will
begin their howling season on
Wednesday, AugustJO, at 9:30
a.m . Ail memhers are to be at
the ailey at 9 a. m. for a rules
meetin~ .

COVERED dish supper, 6:30
p.m. Wednesday. Pomeroy
Church of Christ. Election of
officers, prayer meeting and
Bible study to follow.
SPECIAL meeting, Tuppers
Plains Community Club, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at clubhouse to
discuss money-making
projects. All members urged to
attend.
TO OBSERVE 63rd
Herman and Mildred Wolfe
will observe their 63rd wedding
anniversary on Friday, Sept. 1,
at their home in Racine. Mr.
and Mrs. Wolfe were married
on Sept. I, 1909 in Portland.
They have a daughter, Mrs.
Daisy Sayre, who resides next
door to her parents in Racine.

f\cif\g;

j\f\f\

0~

Bolen Reunion Held Retently
The .eleventh annual Bolen
reunion of Ule descendants of
the late Ernest and Mary Bolen
was held at the home of Mrs. C.
E. Stout of Albany.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Bolen, Mrs. Keith
Weaver and Carl and Dee,
· Columbus; Mr.andMrs. Roger
Bolen and John, Londonderry;

VISIT CONCLUDED
David Robert Yates, Sr.,
Cambridge, and Mrs. Geneva
Yates, Middleport,. have
returned from Strasburg, Va .
where they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Yates and Kay,
Mrs. Lena Fisher, Mrs. Edna
Holsinger, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Jones, Angela and
Keith, and Mr . and Mrs .
Russell Ritemour. While there
Uley attended the' Yates
reunion .

Chopped Sirloin

Mr. and Mrs. Max . Bolen,
Rickey, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
an&lt;! Mrs. Jim Nelaon, Steve
~ Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Stout ' Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs.
.
Jack Bolen and Gregory,' Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Bolen and
Kenneth,Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald''llolen, Lisa, and Mr. ·
and Mrs. Bernard Allen,
Bonnie, Judy, Boyd ·and Bruce,
of Albany, and the hostess,
Mrs. C. E. Stout.

··~AT

.

BRANDED MEATS

By Priscilla

Diamonds

-- -- ,
--

- SlNG ON SATURDAY
MASON - An aU-night hymn
sing will be held at the First
Baptist Church in Mason
beginning at 7:30 p.m .
Saturday. Taking part will be
the Duncan Family of Tampa,
Fla.; Dan Hayman and the
Country Hymn Timers and the
Joint Airs . Stan Craig, Jr., the
pastor, extends an invitation to
the public.

---

FABRICS

for NOW sewing

--

.,;

.... '

-

Pris~illa®

Regular
Only
Dozen

. -···

~-~

j

115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy, 0 .

IIIUitrallons Ef111r9ed

,•J J

~AIW~t.

lb.

99¢

'b·69e

COCA-COLA

8

REGULAR

16 oz.

89'

16 oz. bots.

bois.

69~8

•

WITH A13.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

Every hrs 'n her home needs a couple of phones. For her. our remember·when
CANDLESTICK Phone wil l exlen d the tun , conven ience and securr ty of the
moment. while conJurrng vrs1ons of an unforgettable past. It's styled rrght
out of the roari ng tw ent1es rn Blac k Bottom Bla ck, Wh iffenpool White .
and Razzamatazz Red. So ma ke it an old fr iend lor her, and .

20c OFF LABEL

p

,.. ,.. u:~

i\.1 \!.'-l

:.:•\ 1}/i

' PI\ lVI

'" ' ''

... 'IVORY '' ...

• • ,'

jumbo
rolls

pak

LIQUID

·'" 'NESCAFE ;; ·"
10 oz,
Jar

gg~

w;'th '
coupon

Good Only at Mark V
limit I Coupon
Per Customer-

scot Lad Crackers

Crisco Shortening
3 lb. can
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICE!

l-Ib.

WITH LEMON

bxs.

4

CoHee-mafe

Dan Dee Potato Chips

Dill Slices
Durkee's
Hamburger

Regular

oz.

Jar
Good AI

Mark V Only

EXPIRES: Saturdiiy.

NON-DAIRY CREAMER

a new one for him.
A CHESTPHONE. A real man· type Decorator telephone for hrs spec ral
room, corner. desk or tabl e. A modern styl ized instrum en t
handsomely set in a black leather chesl with walnut
trim . . . or in carved wa lnut ... or even with a
sardonyx stone hunting scene
insel on the lid' What ever your laste or
decor. !here 's a
fascinating selec·
tion of styles,
colors, and
special-purpose
telephones in
• General
Telephone's
Extension
Extravaganza.

. .., ··''

II l1,

_

~

an old friend for her

j

. -I

GOESSLER'S
Courl St .. Pomeroy

Boneless

RC

Vietti Hot Dog Sauce Northern.T owels
cans

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

SALT
FISH

STEW
MEAT

l

Summer Fabrics On Sale

JEWELRY STORE

49e

Kerr Qt. Ja.rs

• Brushed Denim

Many Ideal f!lr School Sewing

lb. 99e

~

....__

cans

~ew arui ~ave!

lb.

-...__ ----- .--

~,........

GROUND
CHUCK

BOLOGNA

Corduroy

• Cotton Knits
• Body SuH Material

SUPERIORS
SLICED

I

Jerzee Milk ·

11 OZ.
~I

59~

package

quart

MARK
... ... .........v... c:TriD

SAV£ 8()1 WHEN YOU BUY A

FROZEN

10

oz.

jar

of

INSTANJ FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRmALS

-

JOY DISH

SPECIAl Pllltl

SEALTEST

79~

BANQUET

NORTH STAR

BUFFET SUPPERS

ICE MILK BARS
6 pak

m3

29t

32 OZ. pkg.
8 Varieties

ggt

22 oz.
bol.

WrrK TMI&lt; r.DIIPON

REAMES

' '

39~

EGG NOODLES
12 oz.
pkg.

39~

BANANAS

GEOERAL'ELEPHDOE

9 to 9 Daily-8unday 1·9

69¢

• ·Po~ester and Cotton

By

1.29

lb.

.5 9
WIENERS ........... ~~.
lb.

SAUSAGE

Fabrics are what you
make them. Whip up
some smart fashions
for the family from
our big group for Fall
and back·to·school.
For best buys, shop
now.

• Polyester Knils

Beautiful diamond
engagement and wedding
ring sets. For your
comfort and protection
they Interlock, so they
don't lwl st ~!';

CUBE
STEAK

SUPERIORS AU MEAT

SUPERIORS POLISH

lh gal.
trl

700 W. Main • Pomeroy

'I

c

lb.

ICE CREAM

FOR BIG
DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
'

Pork or Beef liver

·Sliced Bacon

• Washable AcJYiics

and up

USDA CHOICE BEEF

ARMOUR'S "COLUMBIA"

' '"' '7"'·- ' ""'·-

'

FRENCH CITY

-SUPERIORS, ARMOUR, FRENOi CITY

ANEW
LINE AT
GOESSLER'S

BUDGET PRICES!

lb.

Choice
BTYLELIHE• · telephone wil l pul ev·
erything · right in the palm of her

hand ... handsel, dial and recall
bullon. She can make call after call
without selling down the phone.

Comes in white , turQuo ise, pink.
ivory, beige, blue , yellow,
black.

and jet

••
••
•

••
••
•

••

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•
STAALITE III telephone is pra ctical
ltJxury for "her room ." Dainty high ·
style wilh dial lhat glows . Ideal lor
night table or vanity ror after-dark
dialing. or as a friend ly, adjustablebrighlness nrghllighl. E1ghl decorator colors .

••
•

.•
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•

c

Golden

0'

••• •
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•

BTVLELINEt
WALL PHONE
beauUiul. convenient
s t e p - sav~ r

lor her
k(tchen , laundry room
. . for any place
where 1t's hard 10 hnd
counter or table-top

. Ripe'

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\

I

t

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. ·
We accept .f''ederal fOOd ::}Lumps

lb.

space , Comes in
choice of elgru deli·

.

'

'

Comer Mill and Second

·

Sts.

·

PHONE: ~2·3480

"Wt~ Reserve The

Right To Limit Quantit;es"

ttQDLEPORT, 0.

\

�4 The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Aug. 29, 1972

u
er l
RUttencutt.er-1100V
··'
Marriage Was Sunday~

-;-;.-;,~$~:'?-W;~(:~.y;:~:::;."-;~:::::::.:1-::::::::

:'0::

~~:

Miss Jo Ann Ruttencutter,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
I, Beaver, Monroe, and
granddaughter of Mrs. John W.
Kincaid, Middleport, and Mr.
Richard L. Hoover, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Delmar jioover.
Columbus, were united in
marriage at 2:30 p.m. on
Sunday, Aug . 'J:J at the Church
of the Ascension, Middleport
The Rev. Joseph C. Harvey
officiated at the ceremony
performed before an altar
with
white
decorated
chrysanthemums and gladioli.
Music was by Mrs. John Glenn,
organist, and Mr. Earl Jones,
soloist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a gown of white organza. lt was
fashioned with a Bertha collar
of Venice lace at the empire
waisted bodice, and had full
bishop sleeves with a lace cuff.
The full A-line skirt ended with
lace and a wide flounce as did
the chapel length removable
train. The bride's headpiece
was a contour plateau of
Venice lace in a leaf pattern
and held the bouffant elbow
length veil of illusion. Sh~
carried

a

cascade

arrangement of white car·
nations and pale pink gladioli
Ued with white satin ribbons.
Miss Deborah Roberts of
Charlestort, W. Va. was the
maid of honor and the
bridemaids were Miss Patricia
Ruttencutter, sister of the
bride, and Miss Babs Meyers of
Lebonan. The bridesmaid wore
gowns of cotton voile. The
white bodice featured rows of
ruffles in a bibbed effect and
short puffed sleeves. The
lavender A·line skirts had wide
ruffled flounces, and the
empire waist was decorated
with wide ribbon. The gown
worn by the maid of honor was
identifical in style but was of a
pale turquoise c·oJor. All of the
attendants wore large brim·
med 'picture hats.
The attendants carried hand

Ribbons Awarckd
Ribbons and premiums for
project work at the Meigs
Coyn\! Fair were presented by
Mra. ·Earl Th:ima, advisor, to
mem!M!rs' of the Naylor's Run
Jeta 4-H Club at a picnic and
swimming party held Thurs·
day at Forked Run Park.
Mark Norton, David Lewis,
Kelly Thoma and Todd Norton
received the premium awards,
blue ribbons for project book
work, and champion rosette
ribbons on their project, "Let's
Explore the Outdoors". The
club received a grade of "B"
on the soil demonstration.
Guests for the picnic and
swimming party were Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Mrs. liarold
Norton, Suzan Thoma, and
Brill Norton.

bouquets of mixed flowers
including pink carnations,
yellow daisy porn pons, red
sweetheart roses, purple
statice, and baby 's breath.
Mr. Michael Havron of
Lebanon was be~t man and the
lishers were Mr. John Molle of
Charleston, W. Va . and Mr.
Otis Flinchpaugh oN3tncinnati.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Beaver wore a yellow
embroidered organdy dress
and a corsage of a single white
gardenia surrounded by white
stephanotis. Mrs. Hoover was
in a light blue ensemble and
also wore a gardenia corsage.
A reception honoring the
couple was held at the
Congress Inn , Monroe. The
bride's table featured a three
tiered cake topped with satin
wedding bells. Miss Deborah
West and Miss Robyn West
were the hostesses. Mrs.
Robert C. Bowling presided at
the guest book.
For her wedding trip to San
Francisco, the bride changed
Into an orange knit dress
trimmed in white and .vore the
white carnation corsage from
her bridal bouquet. The
rehearsal dinner was hosted by
the groom's parents at the
Congress Inn .
The newlyweds will reside at
9 Gary Court, Mucnie, Ind.
The bride is a graduate of
Dunbar High School, and at·
tended Marshall University in
Huntington, Miami University
at Oxford, and the Institute for
American Universities at Aix·
en-Provence, France. She is
currently a student at the
Middletown Branch campus of
Miami University.
The bridegroom is a
graduate of Coshocton High
School in Coshocton and -at·
tended Ohio State University.
He is employed as trainmaster
for .Penn Central Trans·
porta lion Co. in Muncie, Ind. ,

3-Day Sale Set
Plans were made for a
rummage sale on Sept. 7, 8 and
9 at the American Legion hall
in Middleport when the Junior
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 met recently at the
hail.
'
The group also decided to
have a layette •hower for Mrs.
Patty Might. It was reported
that ali junior dues have heen
paid. The group donated 150
candy bars for resale with
proceeds to go to the muscular
distrophy fund. Homemade ice
cream was served. Attending
were Cheryl Barnhart, Kim
Roush, Lois Roush, Becky
Roush, Christi Smith, Sandra
Might, Kenda Mohler, Angela
Dailey, Paula Cunningham,
Melinda Thomas, Judy Gilkey,
Patty Might, Velsie Roush,
Bonnie Dailey and Shaula
Roush.

HELD OVER ANOTHER WEEK
BY POPULAR DEMAND
Nashville's Newest Up-Coming Star

LYN CAMPBELL

'

Pomeroy . . . ::i
:~;:
Personal Notes .,

Mrs. Barbara sargen::
Chester, and Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney Gaul and son, Michael,
Vincent, spent the weekend in
Flint, Mlch.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich
and Jayne Lee, have returned
from a several days' visit in
Colwnbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hammer and Kim, and
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Rice of
Washingt\)ll, D. C. arrived
Saturday for a vacation with
Mrs. Rice!s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Young, and Miss
Lydia L. Davis. Another guest
of Mr. and Mrs. Young and
Miss Davis is Dr. Hugh H.
Davis of Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Kelton
returned home recently from a
month's vacation : They
traveled 6,700 miles through
the western states, going the
northern route and returning
the southern route.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Weese,
Miss Marcia Karr, and Mrs.
Alice Capehart, spent Monday
at Williamstown, w. Va. They
visited the Fenton Glass Co.
and enroute home stopped at
the Grand Central Mall in
north Parkersburg, W. Va.
Roy Grueser and Sharon
Roush visited the Ohio State
Fair Sunday .
Mr.andMrs . J. C. Russell of
Massillon spent the weekend
here visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Truman Russell ."Mr.
Russell is the pharmacist at
Family Drugs in Wadsworth,
and Mrs. Russell is employed
as a speech and hearing
therapist at the Canton Local
&amp;hools.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Neutzling
and son, Jay, spent a day at the
Ohio State Fair.
Mrs. William Sheridan ac·
companied her son-in~aw and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Des and sons, Don and Doug, of
Galion, on a llklay camping
trip. Highlights of their trip
included visits to Luray
Caverns, Niagara Falls, and
the Ford Museum.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosen·
baum and family have
returned home to Altoona, Pa.
after spending 10 days here
with his mother. Mrs. Fred
Rosenbaum, and his brother,
Richard Rosenbaum, and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hawk,
son, Mike, Mrs. Ruth Zirkle
and DwJght Burton spent the
weekend In Michigan. While
there they attended the stock
car races at Michigan's In·
ternationai Speedway,

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Mr , and Mrs. Earl McKinley
entertained Saturday af·
ternoon with a party in observance of the fifth birthday
of their son, &amp;ott. Games were
played with prizes going to
Becky Long , Amy Erwin,
Mindy and Mary Beth Long. A
circus theme was carried out in
the cake decorations. Cake and
ice cream were served. Guests
at the party hesides those
named were Megan Long,
Parker Long, Ricky Long,
Terri Sprouse, and Beverly
Long . Sending gifts were Mrs.
Lena McKinley and Mrs .
William Mattox.

Also Starring The Popular

GEO. HALL
Tonight Thru Sept. 2nd

THE KINGS ARMS NITE CLUB
On Rt. 7 Below Middleport, o.

$1 .00 Cover Charge Sal . Nlghl, Sept. 2

':=:;;::;::;::;::;:::;:;;:;;:;;:;;::::::::::::::
I

OFFER RUMMAGE
The Happy Harvesters Class
or the Trinity Church will hold
a rummage sale Thursday,
Friday and Saturday in the
church basement. Both
children and teenagers'
clothing will be available. Mrs.
Dale Smith and Mrs. Ben
Neutzling are chairmen of the
sale. Pr\)Ceeds will go to a
special fund for redecorating
the church sanctuary. The sale
will conclude Saturday at noon.

Committees Named
'

Committees for the 1972·73
year of · the Pomeroy
Elementary School PTA ha·;e
been announced by Mrs. Earl
Thoma, president.
,
Other officers of the unit
which will have its first
meeting at 7:30p.m. on Sept. 11
are Mrs. Jerry Fields, vice
president; Mrs. Ray Jewell,
second vice president; Mrs.
Bill McDaniel, secretary; Mrs.
Gene Mitch, treasurer; Mrs.
Robert Lewis, corresponding
secretary; and Mrs. Pearl
Williams, pariimentarian.
"Communications: The Link
that JOins'Generations" is the
theme of the PTA.
Named as delegates to the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers were
Mrs. James Wmsiey, Mrs.
Charles Gloeckner, Mrs.
Kenneth McCullough, Mrs.
William Anderson, and Mrs.
Clarence Hawley. The alter·
nates are Mrs . Richard
Rosenbaum, Mrs. Jerry
Fields, Mrs. Louis Osborne.
Committees appointed in·

Fami/11
Reunited
'./
The family of the late Perry
and Laura Rupe or Kyger met
Sunday at the Swisher cabin
near Morning Star for a
reunion. A basket dinner was
held at noon.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
James Brea~ale, Washington,
D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bradbury, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Swisher,
Timothy and Paul II, Ttom·
ville; Mrs. Robert Bali of
Rodney; Mrs. Ralph Isaacs,
Graceville, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Tripp, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. David Swisher, Coium·
bus; Mr . and Mrs. Paul
Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. James
Bradbury, J. D. and Michael,
Mrs. Bion Bradbury, Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Rupe, Kyger;
Burdell Bradbury, Bruce and
Brent, Mrs. Virginia Townsley,
Urbana ;

Perry

Rupe,

Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bali, Jr ., Sue Ellen and Debra
Kay, Gallipolis; Mrs. Esta
Heines, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Swisher, Dr. and
Mrs. Keith Riggs, Andrea and
Nicky, Pomeroy.
COMMITIEE NAMED
A committee to investigate
the purchase of new pews for
the sanctuary of the Syracuse
· Asbury United Methodist
Church was appointed at a
meeting of the Eagles Cla~
held at the roadside park.
Named to the committee were
Mrs. Vera Van Meter, Mrs.
Opal Kioes, and Bill
Winebrenner. Miss Marcia
Karr, teacher, opened the
meeting with prayer. Mrs.
lielen Teaford gave devotions
using scripture and a
meditation. Fund raising
projects were discussed. Miss
Karr and Mrs. John Sauvage
were hostesses for the meeting.
SON BORN ,\UG. ZS
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller of
Logan are announcing the birth
of a six pound, 14 ounce son,
Thomas Brian, born Aug. 25.
Grandparents are Mrs .
Thomas Miller of Pomeroy and
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Withem of
Glouster. Mrs. Maudie Kin·
nison of Murray City is the
greai·grandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. Miller also have a son,
Joseph Michael, 3.

. SHIRt
:FINISHING

•'

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At s
'use Our Free Parkl~g Lot
'

Robinson!s

'

aeane.s

216 E: 2nd, Pomeroy

elude Mrs. Fields, Mrs.
Thomas Smith, Mrs . Osborne,
Mrs . Mitch, Mrs . Thoma,
program ; Mrs. Gertrude
Casto. Mrs. Sam McKinney,
Mrs. Larry Baker, Mrs . Jerry
Colmer,
Mrs .
William
Stephenson, Mrs . Patrick
Duffy, Mrs. Carl Roach, Mrs.
.Osborne, Mrs. James Hensley,
Mrs. Wamsley. Mr. Joseph
Fields, ways and means.
Mrs. Simon Johnson, Mrs.
Clarence Andrews, Mrs .
Samuel Fry, health; Mrs .
Patrick Wood, Mrs. Baker,
magazines.;
Mrs.
Paul
Eichinger, Mrs. Tom Grueser,
Mrs. Clifford Kennedy , Mrs.
Danny Zirkle, and Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle, membership; Mrs.
Orval Wiles, Mrs. Larry
Thomas, Mrs. Goldie Fridley,
Mrs. William Barnhart, child
welfare; Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. George
Nash, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Seth, Mrs. Annette Boyd, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Rife and Mr. and
Mrs.
John
Manley,
playground.
Mrs. Marlene Fisher, school
patrol chairman, to be assisted
by parents; Mrs. Keith Riggs,
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Mrs. John
Beaver, Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mrs. Kale Jarrell, Mrs. Roger
Kovalchick, cultural arts
committee; Mrs. Patrick
Duffy, historian; Mrs. Richard
Rupe, legislative chairman;
and Mrs. Charles Gloeckner,
reading.

a

. o . ., . . ..,. ,.

~

IG~~c~~~rl

REVIVAL SET
· A weekend revival will be
held Friday through Sunday at
7:30 each evening at the
Graham Chapel Church, three
miles northeast of Shade off
county road 25 on Township
Road 90. Homecoming will he
Sunday with a basket dinner at
noon followed by arternoon
services at 1:30 p.m. Music will
be by the Bissell Brothers and
little George Lewis . The
evangelist is the Rev. Jesse
Fyffe of Webbville, Ky., who is
employed as a state trooper.
The Rev. John Elswick, pastor,
extends an invitation to the
public .

DAUGHTER BORN
Captain and Mrs. Greg Wight
of Cincinnati are annoum:;lng
the birth of a six pound, four
ounce daughter, Kathleen
Ellen, born Thursday, Aug. 24,
at the Jewish Hospital.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs.
Richard
Finiaw.
Pomeroy, and Mrs. William
Wight, Milford, Conn. Mr. and
Mrs . Frank Grueser of
Pomeroy, Route 3, are great·
grandparenta.

WEDNESDAY
THE WEDNESDAY Mor·
ning Early Bird League of the
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes will
begin their howling season on
Wednesday, AugustJO, at 9:30
a.m . Ail memhers are to be at
the ailey at 9 a. m. for a rules
meetin~ .

COVERED dish supper, 6:30
p.m. Wednesday. Pomeroy
Church of Christ. Election of
officers, prayer meeting and
Bible study to follow.
SPECIAL meeting, Tuppers
Plains Community Club, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at clubhouse to
discuss money-making
projects. All members urged to
attend.
TO OBSERVE 63rd
Herman and Mildred Wolfe
will observe their 63rd wedding
anniversary on Friday, Sept. 1,
at their home in Racine. Mr.
and Mrs. Wolfe were married
on Sept. I, 1909 in Portland.
They have a daughter, Mrs.
Daisy Sayre, who resides next
door to her parents in Racine.

f\cif\g;

j\f\f\

0~

Bolen Reunion Held Retently
The .eleventh annual Bolen
reunion of Ule descendants of
the late Ernest and Mary Bolen
was held at the home of Mrs. C.
E. Stout of Albany.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Bolen, Mrs. Keith
Weaver and Carl and Dee,
· Columbus; Mr.andMrs. Roger
Bolen and John, Londonderry;

VISIT CONCLUDED
David Robert Yates, Sr.,
Cambridge, and Mrs. Geneva
Yates, Middleport,. have
returned from Strasburg, Va .
where they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Yates and Kay,
Mrs. Lena Fisher, Mrs. Edna
Holsinger, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Jones, Angela and
Keith, and Mr . and Mrs .
Russell Ritemour. While there
Uley attended the' Yates
reunion .

Chopped Sirloin

Mr. and Mrs. Max . Bolen,
Rickey, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
an&lt;! Mrs. Jim Nelaon, Steve
~ Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Stout ' Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs.
.
Jack Bolen and Gregory,' Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Bolen and
Kenneth,Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald''llolen, Lisa, and Mr. ·
and Mrs. Bernard Allen,
Bonnie, Judy, Boyd ·and Bruce,
of Albany, and the hostess,
Mrs. C. E. Stout.

··~AT

.

BRANDED MEATS

By Priscilla

Diamonds

-- -- ,
--

- SlNG ON SATURDAY
MASON - An aU-night hymn
sing will be held at the First
Baptist Church in Mason
beginning at 7:30 p.m .
Saturday. Taking part will be
the Duncan Family of Tampa,
Fla.; Dan Hayman and the
Country Hymn Timers and the
Joint Airs . Stan Craig, Jr., the
pastor, extends an invitation to
the public.

---

FABRICS

for NOW sewing

--

.,;

.... '

-

Pris~illa®

Regular
Only
Dozen

. -···

~-~

j

115 W. Second
992-2284
Pomeroy, 0 .

IIIUitrallons Ef111r9ed

,•J J

~AIW~t.

lb.

99¢

'b·69e

COCA-COLA

8

REGULAR

16 oz.

89'

16 oz. bots.

bois.

69~8

•

WITH A13.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

Every hrs 'n her home needs a couple of phones. For her. our remember·when
CANDLESTICK Phone wil l exlen d the tun , conven ience and securr ty of the
moment. while conJurrng vrs1ons of an unforgettable past. It's styled rrght
out of the roari ng tw ent1es rn Blac k Bottom Bla ck, Wh iffenpool White .
and Razzamatazz Red. So ma ke it an old fr iend lor her, and .

20c OFF LABEL

p

,.. ,.. u:~

i\.1 \!.'-l

:.:•\ 1}/i

' PI\ lVI

'" ' ''

... 'IVORY '' ...

• • ,'

jumbo
rolls

pak

LIQUID

·'" 'NESCAFE ;; ·"
10 oz,
Jar

gg~

w;'th '
coupon

Good Only at Mark V
limit I Coupon
Per Customer-

scot Lad Crackers

Crisco Shortening
3 lb. can
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICE!

l-Ib.

WITH LEMON

bxs.

4

CoHee-mafe

Dan Dee Potato Chips

Dill Slices
Durkee's
Hamburger

Regular

oz.

Jar
Good AI

Mark V Only

EXPIRES: Saturdiiy.

NON-DAIRY CREAMER

a new one for him.
A CHESTPHONE. A real man· type Decorator telephone for hrs spec ral
room, corner. desk or tabl e. A modern styl ized instrum en t
handsomely set in a black leather chesl with walnut
trim . . . or in carved wa lnut ... or even with a
sardonyx stone hunting scene
insel on the lid' What ever your laste or
decor. !here 's a
fascinating selec·
tion of styles,
colors, and
special-purpose
telephones in
• General
Telephone's
Extension
Extravaganza.

. .., ··''

II l1,

_

~

an old friend for her

j

. -I

GOESSLER'S
Courl St .. Pomeroy

Boneless

RC

Vietti Hot Dog Sauce Northern.T owels
cans

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

SALT
FISH

STEW
MEAT

l

Summer Fabrics On Sale

JEWELRY STORE

49e

Kerr Qt. Ja.rs

• Brushed Denim

Many Ideal f!lr School Sewing

lb. 99e

~

....__

cans

~ew arui ~ave!

lb.

-...__ ----- .--

~,........

GROUND
CHUCK

BOLOGNA

Corduroy

• Cotton Knits
• Body SuH Material

SUPERIORS
SLICED

I

Jerzee Milk ·

11 OZ.
~I

59~

package

quart

MARK
... ... .........v... c:TriD

SAV£ 8()1 WHEN YOU BUY A

FROZEN

10

oz.

jar

of

INSTANJ FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRmALS

-

JOY DISH

SPECIAl Pllltl

SEALTEST

79~

BANQUET

NORTH STAR

BUFFET SUPPERS

ICE MILK BARS
6 pak

m3

29t

32 OZ. pkg.
8 Varieties

ggt

22 oz.
bol.

WrrK TMI&lt; r.DIIPON

REAMES

' '

39~

EGG NOODLES
12 oz.
pkg.

39~

BANANAS

GEOERAL'ELEPHDOE

9 to 9 Daily-8unday 1·9

69¢

• ·Po~ester and Cotton

By

1.29

lb.

.5 9
WIENERS ........... ~~.
lb.

SAUSAGE

Fabrics are what you
make them. Whip up
some smart fashions
for the family from
our big group for Fall
and back·to·school.
For best buys, shop
now.

• Polyester Knils

Beautiful diamond
engagement and wedding
ring sets. For your
comfort and protection
they Interlock, so they
don't lwl st ~!';

CUBE
STEAK

SUPERIORS AU MEAT

SUPERIORS POLISH

lh gal.
trl

700 W. Main • Pomeroy

'I

c

lb.

ICE CREAM

FOR BIG
DISCOUNT SAVINGS!
'

Pork or Beef liver

·Sliced Bacon

• Washable AcJYiics

and up

USDA CHOICE BEEF

ARMOUR'S "COLUMBIA"

' '"' '7"'·- ' ""'·-

'

FRENCH CITY

-SUPERIORS, ARMOUR, FRENOi CITY

ANEW
LINE AT
GOESSLER'S

BUDGET PRICES!

lb.

Choice
BTYLELIHE• · telephone wil l pul ev·
erything · right in the palm of her

hand ... handsel, dial and recall
bullon. She can make call after call
without selling down the phone.

Comes in white , turQuo ise, pink.
ivory, beige, blue , yellow,
black.

and jet

••
••
•

••
••
•

••

••
•
STAALITE III telephone is pra ctical
ltJxury for "her room ." Dainty high ·
style wilh dial lhat glows . Ideal lor
night table or vanity ror after-dark
dialing. or as a friend ly, adjustablebrighlness nrghllighl. E1ghl decorator colors .

••
•

.•
••

••
•

c

Golden

0'

••• •
••
•

BTVLELINEt
WALL PHONE
beauUiul. convenient
s t e p - sav~ r

lor her
k(tchen , laundry room
. . for any place
where 1t's hard 10 hnd
counter or table-top

. Ripe'

cioLis colore .

\

I

t

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. ·
We accept .f''ederal fOOd ::}Lumps

lb.

space , Comes in
choice of elgru deli·

.

'

'

Comer Mill and Second

·

Sts.

·

PHONE: ~2·3480

"Wt~ Reserve The

Right To Limit Quantit;es"

ttQDLEPORT, 0.

\

�'

'

... ...

, ,; ,.

.....

,. ,,

, . r "I

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Milkleport.Pomeroy, o., Aug. 29,1972 .

Sentinel Classifieds Get Ac.tion! Sentinel .Classifieds Get Results.
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
, , DEADt.INES
YARD $ALE, Wednesday, KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
} P.M . D•v Befort Publlc8tiol1.
Thursday &amp; Friday, 10 a.m . to
wigs; more new products
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
8 p.m., 894 Pear St., Mid·
coming soon. For free
C•ncelhltion - Corrections
demonstration , phone 992Will bf ecceptea until9a .m . ,for. dleport .
8·29 ·3fc
5113.
Day of Publication
- 8- 17 ·11~
REGULATIONS
Thl Publisher reser\les the YARD SALE, Thursday &amp;
right to eel it or reject any ads_,
F_riday, 9 a .m., 297 Mill St., PIANO &amp; organ lessons by
deemed objectionaL
Tl'le
M iddleport .
graduate
of
Cinc innati
ftublish~ will not be respon\lb le,
8-29-Jtp
Conservatory of Music with 23
~~~er'TI~n . than one -Incorrect - - - -- - - - years teaching experience:
" RATES
SPECIAL- Thursday , Friday &amp;
phone 992·3825 .
~ For Wan' Ad Service
Saturday . W ith a fill -up of
8-2J -1 2tc
5 cents per Word one insert;on
gas, oil change and.filfer - a -- ---- - - - - -···
free grea se job . Free pickup YARD SALE, Monday, Tuesday
Minimum Charge 7Sc
12
cents
per
word
three
and
der1very. n..
'
p enn - an d w~dnesd ay . St t sat 9 a .
~een s
consecutive insert loris.
18 cents per ·word sr:x oonzoil, North Second Ave .,
m . Watch for sign, Eagle
secutlve Insertions .,
Middleport ; phone 992-9913.
Ridge-Bas han Rd . Some
75 Per Cent Oiscolml on paid .
8-29-.tltc
antiques, odds and ends.
ads and ads pa id within 10 days. - - -- - - - - 8-27-Jtp
CARD OF THANKS
REDUCE sa le &amp; lasl with
&amp; OBITUARY
GoBese Tablets &amp; E · Vap
Sl .SO for SO worel minimum .
" water pills" , Nelson Drug
. .
Each add;tional word 2c .
8-29-2flp
Have Yo" Had A
BLIND R.DS
Additional 75c Ctlarge · per . -==========.~
Advertisement .
·
t
OFFICE HOIIR~. '
Why Nof stop In ana let Miele.
' 8: 30a .m_. to S:OO,p.m, Daily,
and Fred cut and style your
6 : 30 a .m. to 17: 00 Noon
hair for neater and better
Saturday .
controlled flair.

ar

Razor Cut?

••HEll"

Game Could've

POUR DOWN!!

NOTICE

Notice

WIN AT BRIDGE

Motor Co.

1910 Dodge
$19PS
Polara, factory air condllioning , V·8 engine, automatic
transmission, power steering, power brakes,, good white
sidewalls, many more extras. White finish, black vinyl
roof: Priced to move :
1970 Ford

51795
G~laxie SOO hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission~ p~wer ste~ing &amp; brakes, white finish, black
vinyl top, vmyllntenor. White-wall tires, like new, radio.
1970 Ford Pinlo2 Dr.
$1850
Locall owner car, green finish, clean interior , good tires.
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~PMEROY,

OHIO

KARR'S

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

BARBER
SttDP
Lynn Sl.
Pomeroy
Ph . 992 ·2367

Lost

eiWOFING .
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
·~POU'.i.lNG

•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550
TUNE-UPS, brake jobs and
other auto work . Very
reasonable rates . Waines
Auto Service, school trained.
Route1 , Shade, Ohio 992·6547,
next to Whaley 's Paint Shop.
8·20·12fc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

.2

Window ,
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Help Wanted

•or Sale

-

For Sale

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

soum

Real Estate For Sale

CARRIERS
WANTED

.

(

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiatw to the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
~-~

EARTH MOVING
Oo2er &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, land scaping . We have 2 si21
dozers , 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
11
Free · Estimates. We also
haul fill dirl, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low-bOy far hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
.Pomeroy . Phone P92 .Jl2l
aiter 7 p.m. or phone , 9t2."
5232 .

Most

THAN K'l FER
RtMIIIJD!N' ME.
·. HONEVPOT

Cart

WELLtniESE OFFICEI&lt;G

-GUAAANTEEJ&gt;-.
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho!n•., ·&amp; Auto
Open 8Tii 5
Mondav thru Saturday
606 E. Main, .PomortY•. ~-

WAN 10 K~W HOW
'IOU GOT IT.

IS T~IS A ~COR~
o;: 'lOUR STOCIC.

T~ESE NAMES
~AVE P~EFERR/if)
ANO CCIIriMoN LISTE~

TRANSACTIONS ~

AGAINST T~EM

WILL CUT or ·i ·r;m tree
reasonable ; also clean o
basements,
attics
ar
cel lars : phone 949·3221 .
8-29-30

ECOI'I
426

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF
ApPOINTMENT
case No. 20,7
Estate of - Harold E . Sml
Deceased .
Noti ce Is hereby given th. ·
Alma
Evelyn
Smith
•
Syracuse, M eigs County, Ohl
has b!en duly appo inte
Executrix of the Estate •
Harold E . Sm lth , deceased, lei
of Syracuse , Meigs Count ·
.
··; Ohio .
SEWING MACHINES . Repair;
Creditors are required lo fl 1
service, all makes. 992-228.4 . the ir ,claims w ith said flduclar
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . with in four months .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Daled lh l• ll!h day of Augu•
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .' l972.
3-29·ffc ,
s - Manning 0 . W~bsle
· --------~
Judg
Co urt ot Common PIU!
PRICE CONSTRUCTION,
Probate 01\1/s io
roofing, porCh repair and
electrical; phone 742·4286.
1B) 15 , 22, 79 , Jtc

AH MU5TA PICKED UP

TH'WRON6 &amp;uNDLE,
e.ACK AT TH'CAVE..~'

\
(\

I STI/.L THifoJI(
T~EV

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

Hartford, W. Va.

The Daily Sentinel

-----Mobile Homes For Sale

•

SHOULD
IN
A LITTI.E
AWOUND

Ele TAKEN

-------

WINNIE WINKLE

iHE

"THAT OUGHT)&gt;.
TAKE CARE OF
"THINGS FO~

WAIST!

.... MY IN ABOUT

Glti\NDPA 1 COULD

2"1 HOliK~
OR 50??

YOU WAKfMEA

LITTLE LATER ....

AWHILE!

.,

"
.,

,.

..,'

"' .

' .

.' .-

•2

.

. ·. ,· oow,iF vr.'.
II AD"'[ f(l)p·hll-·rij C:/!.5
YV IJ'i" J'l
,

.

~ :~ ;::, ,;
'' I ~ ,-,. .

/,--0'
/. ·/
-

I

/

,

,

./

1

•1

~I ~

1

I

AOO HITUI~D ARlr.€ WITH Nil;;, NlD r
HA00 TOFFgRw lV ~~ 'iOv BNi.
TOA MS SfAIDf.\,1 l).)CQOIJ'r
1

HA1/E. RUIJ QIT Cf rcA'&gt; ~D I'D
a; HOMB NOJJ!

For Sale

Generation Rap

YetlerdiJ'a Cryplofluoie: LET US BELIEVE NEITHER
HALF OF THE GOOD PEOPLE TELI; US OF OURSEL~l
NOR HALF TBE EVIL THEY SAY OF OTHEIIS.-lOiift
PETIT-sENN
.

Real Estate For Sale

By Helen and Sue Bottel

(0 nn Kine J'eatum Syndl&lt;AIIe,lno.)

CLELAND
REALTY

ACJt()SS
1. Give

tbe
once·
over
s.strung
together

MILLER

For Rent

11, Firat

DICK TRACY

victim
r.~i'T:;:!e:S:PP:ce'Cou'Pel u.homlolde
Injudl·

NEW HOMES

Real Estate For Sale

claus
13. Clock
beat
u; Snooze
time
In ·
Tabasco
15, Taro

3 BEDROOMS

-------

.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Business Opportunities

root

16, Hat (sl)

U. Coal
scuttle
18. Kind of
library
%1. NotaZL Boat

liket~

Z6.

I.

fellow

10. Mullle

18. Fat

31. Purport

l~Syeophant

S2. 1Jinerlck

6.01dahoma

23. Tidied up

export
35. Mooth
after

7. Daunt

:15. Decorous

5. With
diligence
city

I. Blabbed
(3 wds,)

zo. Promote.
u. Appraise
28. Postal

clerk

WCOT

1 eiatle

REEMIP

Avril
36. Wahine's
garland

ll'ORRAL

V 'I

J

WEN"T 10 CHINA-

ENDED UP WliH

rI J

A c:.AME.

J

Now ari'ance the eircltd !etten
to form the surpriH &amp;Nwtr, as

~f&gt;.:::A=:==:=:::::::::;-~~·;u~ll;e~•t;ed;:_;;;by~the above cartoon.

I

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

I [ I 1 I XH I I D
(Auwen

Jumbte.o KNIPE GAVEL
Yetlrr-••1'•

Reduce
to pulp

lcnnorr~wJ

STOOGE IEAGLE

Annrefl Sound• lUte lrou•r,..-lwnd,.J ,1uw11jrom

parent lo ehild-GINIS

witness
tightly

3Z. Extend

33. Stamping
device
U. Soulless
• creature

38. Mortgage
S7. Card com·
blnatlon
SUPP0$1! I
CH!CI&lt; WITH lHI!
POLICE,.., ~I TO

WOO! lltJIQI HI!"~
NOT A fllll'tTI VI!!
f'IQI ..tllf1'1C81

OI&lt;AY-· GOOD
IOI!!A,OIJCEYI I:lol
TO~
NIECI!
AND THe IJIW)'P.
TON16Hn

"*

COU~P

VOOR

IJNCLI!! HAVe

WANTiti"IO

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.- Here'• how t• work It: .....
. --.
-·· .;..
· =· ·;;..·.....-..-.._.:.~::1
AXYDLBA .AXR
Ia . LONGFELLOW

PISAPP!i'AR,
M~H~

1

.. ,

•
I

(2 wdl.)

t "Benevolent"

Yesterday's Alllwer
e. Iron
it. Lone
Curtain
attack
country
on

31. Drop
the bait

MASON
FUINRURE

~

choice

each

!8. Bear

Authorize.d Dealer

____

DOWN
).-to
(spoil)
2. Tolerate
3. Gourm•nd's

UIIKI'alllble th... four Jumbleo,
one letter to
oquart, lo
form · four ordinary words.

!7. Slippery

LA-Z-BOV

·-···-.:......_

I •V ~~~NIH IH!NOl [) •""' !I OU l f£

of Ovid's
time

curia's
tribunal
Z5. Tobouan

~YOUR DIAL

-----Auto Sales

~1!11WIDY; IJ.J ..,.,.,~,,.-J ~

4t. Highway

country

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CHAIRS

19. Sharper

U.Papal

WMP0/1390

Wanted To Buy

II. Therefore

,.___;;;.....__, az. Chief
None eod
aa. African

We' talk to JOU

•

(

l

'

. EX_PERl
.~ l.liP,ment
15.55
On
Amoric~n

Clifton and

1.

•'

Business Services

·Po,meroy

Z.SIGIS
Of
IUALITY

LADIES' black clulch billfold in CANNING
tomatoes
and
Middleport Friday morning .
mangoes. Geraldine Cleland,
Bank deposit slip with name .
Racine, Ohio.
400·AFL.CIO
Reward. Ann Boso, Portland,
8·16.1fc
Ohio . Phone 843·2439.
8·27 ·3fp
COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E .. Main St. ,
NORTH (0)
Z9
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891.
SEWING Mach ine Service,
BABYSITTER in my home 5
• KJS
4·12·ffc
clean, oil, adivst, 5399, in your
days a week ; references;
AKC registered miniature - - -- - -- - - ¥AJ6
home; phone 992·5331.
phone 992·5608.
Schnauzers. Ph . 446-2497 .
• KQ4
8-11 ·30fc
8·29·3fp
puppies
,
Sliver
Toy,
POODLE
8·22·12fc
o!oA842
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
HAVE- immediate open ing for
WEST
EAST
WILL DO light hauling in a f.
5443
·
petroleum truck dri\ler - HOT POINT self ·delrosting
.A 763
8. 15.1fc
lernoon•. Phone 992-3903.
992 -2448
relrtgerator, very
good - -- - - - - - salesman. Experience in
¥Q 1042
¥95
.
8·27-6tc
Pomeroy.
condll ion: phone 992·3061.
SUMMER 1
f
It
truck driving r1ecessary .
• Jl09
.A7653
8·27 -6tc
c e~rance o pa ern
Please write Bo&gt;c 729-0, c-o
o!oQ9
.KJ1063
~~~=c:-:---~-,-,books and 1mported yarns.
The Daily Senlinel, Pomeroy: REGULATION size pool table,
REWARD, lor shopping at
Needlecrall Shop, Rt . 124
giving age, experience and
Showalter's Wet P•t Shop,
.QI0954
l ike new ; phone 992 -2234 after
East, Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7
8·16·301c - - - - - - - - references.
Chester, Ohio : 10 per cent of
p.m . daily excepl Sunday .
¥K813
5 p .m.
8·29·31&lt;
your
total
purc;hase
may
be
RACINE
10
room
house:•
8·IO·IIc
H2
DOZER and back hoe work,
8-29·4fc
NOTiCE OF
applied lo the purchase of any
bath, basement, garage, two
ponds and septic tanks ; B g I&lt;
.15
APPOINTMENT
ceramic items .
.l ots . Phone 949-4313,
·
Cue No. 2075
EJ&lt;cavating, Phone 992 -5367,
BABYSITTER lor 3 children in I SIEGLER fuel oil oil healer
Both vulnerable
4-5-tfp.
8· 2·301p
Estate of
v~rnon
Oars
Dick
Karr
,
Jr.
my
home
:
phone
992-3645
with
blower,
l
ike
new
;
1
West North East South
~--------..,
after 8:30 p.m. or before 11
5·21·11C Deceased .
Warm M orni ng coal heater ;
IDEAL 5AC RE RANCH. Lake
Not ice is hereby given the
I N.T Pass 2.
a.m.
phone 992·3513 .
·
··
El l ison Darst of 6625 Statt Lin•
Conchas, New Mexico. S2 ,975 .
Pass
4•
Pass Pass
East promptly pointed out
8·29·31p
8·23·61c
No Down. No Interest . $25 mo . StE US FOR : Awnings, iforrii , Road . East Ridge , Tennm••
Pass
that West could have beaten
doors and windows, carPorts, . has been duly appolnttc
for 119 mos . Vacation
DUE TO a fractured hip, I am
marquees , aluminum 'siding
EJ&lt;ecutor of lhe Estate o
Opening lead- • J
the contract if he had taken
Paradise. Free Brochure .
and railing . A Jacob, sales ' Vernon Darst , deceased , late o
selling a new 5 h.p. Wizzard
the second trump and led a
Ranchos
Lake
Conchas
:
Box
Buy 2 Pairs and
representative . For free,' M iddleport, Meigs County
garden tiller al S50 oil
2001 DO, Alameda, Californ ia
Ohio .
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby third round, but that South
Western Auto retail pric~ ; a
Get 1 PAIR FREE
estimates , phone Charles ,
Creditors are reQuired to flit
94501.
would have had a cinch if he
bargain for someone for $139.
When both sides lead the had just led one round of
Usle, Syracuse, V. V. their cla ims w ith said t i duc i ar~
8·6·30ip
All kinds, all sizes for men,
Lowell Winge tt , Rt.
4,
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
within four months .
IN
same suit, the odds that one trumps.
women, young men, boys 6 ROOM HOUSE , bath, 2 car
Pomeroy ; phone 992-2922 .
3-2-tfll
Dated th is .11th day of Augull
side is making a mistake are
8-29·3fc and girls. Hurry to
" 1972
East's
analysis
was
corgarage,
enclosed
porch,
94-100
overwhelming.
rect but we can't really fault
acre land, Rt. l, Racine, Ohio. AlJ I OMOBI LE insurance ~n
s - Manning D . Webster•
LeBLANC clarinet , B flat , very
South found himself in a either South or West. South
••
POMEROY
Phone 949.4785.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Probate Judge
good
condition.
phone
667four·spade contract after didn't know that trumps
6il Jack W. Corsey, Mgr.
operator 's license? Call 992·
8·24-6lc
of said Countv
3511 or 667·3400.
Phone
992-2181 _ __j
2966. .
typical rubber bridge bid- were going to break 4-1;
(8l 15, 27, 79, Jtc
8·29·6fc .__ _
..;.,;,;.,;.:.:....::_:.:;_
CHESHIRE , 5 rooms &amp; bath,
6·15·11C
ding. His two-spade bid was West couldn't know that
---------SEVERAL varieties of top
basement, 1II• Acre, 10 - · - PHONE992-2156
a sign-off but North looked South held four hearts in adKENNEBEC potatoes, $5 for
qual1ly , tree npened, canni ng
minutes from Gavin ; storm SE:r·· ,,,.__ •dnks cleaned. M il ler
Stterlff's S11e of
at his 18 points and bid game dition to his five spades.
1001b.,· see John Pape, Rac ine
peaches; now ava i lable
windows
,
newly
remodel
ed;
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Pn.
Chittel
Property
anyway.
or phone 949·3025.
through early September;
c_a~ peted dining area, large
662-3035.
Carl Platter
(H!WSI'.t.f'EI. ENTERPAISE ASSN.)
8-29·61c
Bob's Market, Mason, w. Va .,
West .opened the jack of
llvmg room; ca ll after 5: 30
.
2-12-tfi
v!t
Case No. 1,063
above
the Pomeroy--IV!ason
weekda-,.s ,
Saturday
&amp;
James Rowley
diamonds. Dummy's queen
ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
utility Seoul Trailer,
Sunday , 367·7114.
··eACKHbi: AN"O DOZER work"\'
In omuance to an Execution
Br idge : phone 773·5308.
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th . 2·WHEEL
was topped by East's ace
1'2'X6' with good fires ; spare
4
8-1
8-lOtc
Septic
tanks
installed
.
Georqe
from
fht County Court of Meigs
8·15-tfc
Last chance to hop aboard the
and a d1amond was led back.
County , Pomeroy , Ohto on the
tire mounted . 1-large storage
PLAYHOUSE
The
bidding
has
been:
TOY
lrain
to
-'Bill)
Pullins
.
Phone
992·2411
.'
Wh
day
of August , 1972 and lo
Dummy's king won and
bin with hinged cover- 5100 ;
success.
We're
selling
toys
in
Long
Bottom,
phone
_
_
_
_
·
_
_
_
_
4·25-ttc
'
me
directed
In the case abOve
HOUSE
West
North
East
South
South proceeded to play the
8'x8' umbrella tent with inand booking parties, having
985-3529.
named , I wlll expose for salt at
I
•
Dble
Pass
king and jack of trumps.
ter ior telescoping poles; 6 foot
fun and getting paid. As a
6·11 ·1fc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
oubtlc auction at lhe lront door
3•
Pass
height inside; needs minor 50x10 MOBILE HOME, 51700 . -::-::-':c::--;-.Y,.,-..,.-..,---,REASONABL~
t ,_,_ Ph ~ ~\
... S Ohlor
ot 1~e tMeJQs
. Cqvrl ,-county
House. on
Pomeroy
,
demo I have no delivering, no
West allowed them to hold, Pass
Call
Cheslec
985·3379.
_
.
.
-.
ra
the 9th
repa irs and door screening.
You, South, hold:
collection , and I do not need
whereupon South led a heart
6
ROOM
hou~
;
balh
,
large
lot,
~782,
Gallipolis,
JOhn
Russell,,
day
of
Sptember,
1972
al
10
:00
8·24-6fp
Completely
waterproofed1
+AK943 ,fo762
any experience. I get free
to his king; a second heart • 8743
gas and electric , Rt. 1.
Owner &amp; Operator .
.
· o'c lockA .M . thefollowlnggoOds.
125:
call
992
·5815
aller
5
p.m
.
training
.
Final
deadline
for
What
do
you
do
now?
. Phone '992-2602.
5-12-tfc
and chattels to -wit :
Midd
leport
'7
1
65x12
moblle
home.
l
1f2
to dummy 's jack and then
8·29·31c
hiring
is
Sept
.
25,
call
me
now
,
B-27-Stp
--------~
1- 1965 Mercury Comer , 2
bath
,
phone
992
·3903.
A--Just bid four spades. Your
dummy's ace, East showed
don't wait, Margaret Fortune,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
door nardtop , red in color
partner
hi
showing
a
very
good
NEW
DELUXE
ZIG
·
ZAG
8·27·3fc
out but this didn't worry
Complete Service
Serial No . SH2JA537885 . v.8
949·5414 or Barbara Lamberl ,
6 ROOM house , bath , aluminum
hand but you have too mueh in
sew ing
machine.
This - - - - - - - - - Motor.
South.
446·3411.
siding, garage. carpe t ing and
T ak.en as property of James
Phone 949-3821
yuur opponent's bid suit to warmachine makes buttonholes , ·cAS~ paid lor all makes ana
8·22 ·11&lt;
panel ing; natural qas, clentv
He .ruffed dummy's last rant slam exploration.
Racine, Ohio
Rowtey to satisfy an Exetvtion
darns and embroideries ; all
models of mob I ie homes,
of water. 1 'mile south of
'Critt Bradford
in favor of Carl Pill Her .
diamond; r u If e d his last
without attachments; phone
Ph011e area code 614-423 -9531.
TODAY"S QUESTION
Middleport. Phone 992·6902 .
Terms : Cash in hand on day
5· 1·fiC
heart; cashed dummy's ace
99n331.
4-13-lfc
of sale .
Instead
of
bidding
three
8·27·3fp
...
of clubs for his ninth trick
8·29·ffc
ROBERT C. HARTEN BACH,
your partner has bid
CONCRETE
1971 KAWASAKI 100, like new,
and was still sure of a trump spades,
FOR THE BEST deal In a new - - - - - - -- - READY ·MIX
MEI GS COUNTY SHERIFF
two diamonds over your one
5
ROOMS
&amp;
bath
,
2
story
block
dellv~red
right
to
}'Our
8
TRACK
STEREO
8-79 -He
5300. Phone 949·3915.
trick for his contract.
or
used
mobile
home,
try
spade. What do you do now?
house ; gas forced air furnace .
proiec1. Fast and easy . Free
Repossessed, looks l ike new ;
8·27·51p
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
''• acre lot, Rt . 7 &amp; Old Chester
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
beautiful hand rubbed Walnut
Kanauga, Ohio.
Rd .. $5,500 :· phone 992 ·3874 .
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co .•
cabinet ; take over payments
LARGE selection of beautiful
7·16·3otc
Notice of Filing ol
8·29.1fc
Middleport, 011io.
of Sl.50 per week or pay
mahogany dining suites:
Inventory .1nd Appraisement
6·30.Ifc
~~~~~~~-·~~~~~~
SI01.47 : phone 992.533 1.
bedroom ovtfits ; also , usual
Proba1e Court
OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 5·
stock of other clean used
8·29.flc
The Stare ot Ohio , Me lga
•
Air
Conditioners
ACRE
RANCH.
Lake
Con
·
County.
furniture , appliances at
chas , New Mex ico. $2975 . No
To tl1e AdministratriJ&lt; of tht
•Awnings
KUHL 's BARGAIN CEN · 1970 HONDA CL70 Scrambler ,
down . No interest. 125 per mo . , . - , - - - - - - - - - - . estate ; to such of the following
exce l lent co ndition ; phone
TER , " at caution light," Rt .
• Underpinning
as are residents of I he State of
for
119 mos . Vacation
985 ·3816 .
7, Tuppers Plains , Ohio .
Ohio , viz : - the
surviving
Paradise
.
Free
Brochure
.
8·2l·61p
Closed Mondays .
spouse, the next of kin the
"
c
omplete
mobile
home
Ranchos
Lake
Conhas
:
BoJ&lt;
Slaog: Alive and Well- aud How!
8·27-61c
beneficiar ies under ttle 'will;
service - plus g i gantic
2001 DO, Alameda , Californ ia
1973
CAM
PER
S
and
low
profile
and
to the attorney or attorneys
~:
94501.
represent ing any ot the
Trav el Trai lers i n stock, "display of mobile homes
DELUXE
8
lrack
Sterec
in
608
E.
Moln
Reading yoW' colunm on outdated slang compelled me to
8·29·3Dfp
aforementioned persons :
lowest pr ice in Tri -State area ; always availllble at ...
Walnut Console ; will sell for
Pomeroy, Ohio
No . 20679 Paul
Zirkle,
write, You asked for new samples, since the ladeout of the drug
1972 trailers, huge discount :
balance due of $88.21 or pay
Deceased , Pomeroy , Oh io
Camp Conley ~tarcrall Sales,
LOTS ON Wr ighl Street,
Salisbury Townsh ip,
'
and hippie goodies.
56.10 a month ; cal l 992·5331.
According to Its Old English
Pomeroy : phone 742·5930 .
Rl . 62 , N. of Pl. Pleasant
MOBILE
HOMES
You are hereby notif ied lhat
8·2J.6tc
Those things were done to death, so we made some adaptions
behi nd Red Carpet Inn.
derivation, lhe word HOUSE
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
8·29· 121c
pralsement of the estate of the
to "cosmic" worda,like Groovy iB now ''Gravy-baby"; far out Is
8-25·7fc
1220 Washington Bl•d.
means a place to hide.
aforemenrloned, deceasect , tate
--------42J.7521
BELPRE,O,
WHATEVER A HOUSE
''fann out''; outasite: ''out--a--E~tate,'' off the wall," ''inside out,''
of ~aid County, was filed in this
STEREO·radioConsole, 4speed L-----~~--..J
MEANS TO YOU, WE'LL
Cour t . " aid Inventory and
"out in the diBtance"; knock it off: "narc it arf"; right on: "left TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
inlermixe.d changer-, dual .
Appraisement witt be for
FINO
ONE
TO
MEET
Park . Phone 992·3324 .
vol ume control , 4 speaker
arm."
hearing before this Court on the
YOUR
NEEDS!
CALL
8·24-6tc
sound system, beautiful hand
14th dey of September, 1972, 11
Anyone can do it. Instead of saying "Make like a nut and
TODAY.
rubbed
Walnut
finish.
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
3 ROOM apartment, un·
NICE LEVEL LOT
boll," or "Make like a tree and leave," I wiU now make like a
Balance 566 .34 . Use our
Any person desiring to file
I BUILDING lots, 95' x 200'
furnished.
408
Spring
Ave.,
1
story3
bedrooms
.
Bath
.
thereto must file
exceptions
budgel
lerms.
Call
992·7085
.
banana and split. - M,M.G.
each: phone 992·5786 .
Pomeroy .
them at lease five days pr ior to
,Dining R. Utility space .
8-25-btc
2 New Homes. all electric , J
the date set for hearing
B·25·6fc
8·1Q.Ifc
Paneling. Porches. A good
bedrooms,
lull
basement
and
Given under my hand and
BLACK Diamond tinament : - - - - - - - - Helen and Sue:
neighborhood. JUST $9,800.
seal of said Court , this 26th da-,.
lake
frontage
:
garage
,
with
.3 AND 4 ROUM furnished arl'd
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
call or write F. M. Guthrie, CONVENIENT but sec luded
of August , 1977.
Here nre some new slang words we're using in the west:
at Five Points area .
unfur"ished
apartments.
Alhens, Ohio 45701 , 592 ·2158.
4 bedrooms. Bath. Modern
building
lots
at
Rock
Springs
,
Mann ino 0 . Webster
Crunchy: great
'hone 992-5434.
•
8·27 ·31p
Judge and ex -offi cio
kitc hen . Storm Doors &amp;
close to High School &amp; Fair
4·12-lfc
Bum: to improvise
Clerk of said Court
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte ,
Windows. Storage buildings.
By Ann B. Watson . Deputy
'1'12·2789 atler 5 p .m . week 1'1' ACRE of ground . CLOSE
Dig up: listen
Cterk
FURN I SHED
2 bedroom
days.
IN $16,900.
IB) 2B (9) 5, 21c
Tuft tooUe : too bad
apartment, adults on l y,
POMEROY
'
M iddleport ; phooe 992·3874 .
Bad: really sharp
EXCELLENT- 2 bedroom
8·29·3fp
home with walk·ln closets .
... But I don't think "cool" will ever go out of style.
Large ll•lng room with
F IR ST FLOOR, 2 room fur ·
JEANNIE
fireplace . Modern kitchen
nished
apartment
in
Cl
and dining . Utility. 2 car
Pomeroy: phone 992 ·3028 .
Dear Rap:
garage . Porches . JUST
8·29·31p
112,900.
When we'd rather say a word that would get us in !rouble
110 Mechanic Street
WE HAVE THE CON ·
with big~ red parents, we say things like "Oh, peanut butter!",
TACTS, USE THEM FOR
8·23·1
2tp
"Fudgecycle!" "Son of a Pickle!" "Oh, ShH-e-nnan!" etc.
THE SALE OF YOUR
Fun, and beUer than getting your mouth washed out with SERV ICE Stalion tor lease . ZIG · ZAG sewing machine , this
PROPERTY .
JUST
A
Excell ent location . Paid
PHONE CALL AWAY.
soap. - BARB
mach
ine
is
dressmaker
THE
LATEST
NEW
LISTING
tra ining . Phone 992-5221.
HENRY E . CLELAND Sr.
model. this machine makes
RENOVATED - Lo•ely 2 bedrooms. large living, nice
8·24-6fc
REALTOR
buttonholes. darns, em k1lchen and gas forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
RAP :
broideries ;
ta ke
over
H2-l259
lo wall carpeting . Partial basement on large lot. Asking
payments ot $5 .10 or pay S6 a
If no lnS"(0[ ..992·2568
Samples of new slang? Some of us have taken to using the
only 511,500.00.
third person, referring to oneself as "she" or "he," and to each 2 or 3 ACRES of land . monlh : call 992·5331. 8·2J.6tc
MIDDLEPORT
Preferably in Flatwoods area
other, instead of "yout'' as "he," "she/' u they", uthem".
'BEDROOMS - 2 baths, nice kilchen with bar and cook
or on good hard surfaced MAPLE Slereo -radio com Believe us, it's a trip!
units. Garage and den In full basement. Covered patio on
road . Phone 992·6147 .
binalion , AM-FM radio, 4
back
of h011••· Asking 124.000.00.
.
Many of our statem.ents end with "or what." Referring to
8·27 ·3tc
speaker sound system, 4
myself ,I'd uy, "She's tired, or what." (Not "I'm tired,")
speed automatic changer,
'OLD Furniture . Qak tables ,
separate controls. Balan Ce
LEVEL LOT
''oof,''''Doof,'' ''Skidoop," areklndofsighs, or what.
organs, dishes . clocks, brass
$78 .29 . Use our budget terms.
CORNER- With a lourroom house, has gas , city water,
Then there are always the old faithfuls,llke ''funky," "for
beds , or complete households .
Call 992-7085 .
and electric. Asking only $2,500.00 .
·
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
8·25-61c
r011l" (he agrees), "baddest" (tbe best), "~u ch, man, much"
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
LOTS - LOTS- LOTS
(what of It'), etc,
6·28·11c 1912 ZIG ·ZAG sewing machine
1
ACRE
Ntce
laying on high ground. Chester water
We're re.;lly trying to retire "you know," but it's, you know,
lell in layaway. Beautiful
Now yo" can buy that ·
ava1iable. 11 lots In all.
pastel color, full size model.
hard,
comfortable
La-Z-Boy
All buiil ·in to bullonhole, do
chair
you've
always
Welp, (got that from you Sue), there are more, but I've gotta
stre tch sewing and fancy
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
'69
PLYMOUTh
GT
440,
4
speed,
dreamed
of
at
our
low
roll, -C,P,
stilching. Pay just $48.75 cash
l BEDROOMS - Near downtown shopping, nice kitchen
electric
windows.
good
prices
.
or terms available. Trade-ins
with dOuble sink. 2 porches and full basement. A good buy
GANG :
cQndition. Phone 992-7624 or .
,,.cepled . Phone 992·5641.
al only $7 ,500,00.
see Nick Coales , Pomeroy .
, Around here a new thing iB "speUing It out," and always
B·25-6tc
8·27·3fp
wrtllll· AI In: "Be qulck~-w-l~~dc." Qo "II!mOll pukedLOOK FOR THE REO, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN THEN
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
JMI'~~." 01' "That'a cool-1!:-u-l-aJOI." ()&lt; "You're
YOU'LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE . IUY FROM• YOUR
model. Complete wilh all
WILL SACRIFICE '72 Olds
LOCAL BROKER: IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
dum~l~wnb."-Sue
clean:ng
lools.
Small
paint
Della 18, •inyl roof, air ,
TH~ ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'll~ TRYING
dAmage in shipping . Will take
power
steering,
power
FOR A BIGGER At~D BETIER YEAR .
S27 cash or budget plan
brak•s, l~w mileage. Phone
NOTE FROM HELEN :-Aa U "~pellng tecllrs" dldn'l already
Available . Phdne 991 ·5641.
367·7530.
HEL~N L. TEAFORb, ASSOCIAtE
~~~~ enoqll trouble 1
i ·2Hic
1·2Htc

Been Beaten

LOOKV '/ONDER, PAW··
IT'S FIXIN' TO

f

r-

INCIDENTAU.l(, ftlW CCME I

HEAR '1tlU 51N6

AH{~

�'

'

... ...

, ,; ,.

.....

,. ,,

, . r "I

.

6- The Daily Sentinel, Milkleport.Pomeroy, o., Aug. 29,1972 .

Sentinel Classifieds Get Ac.tion! Sentinel .Classifieds Get Results.
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
, , DEADt.INES
YARD $ALE, Wednesday, KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
} P.M . D•v Befort Publlc8tiol1.
Thursday &amp; Friday, 10 a.m . to
wigs; more new products
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
8 p.m., 894 Pear St., Mid·
coming soon. For free
C•ncelhltion - Corrections
demonstration , phone 992Will bf ecceptea until9a .m . ,for. dleport .
8·29 ·3fc
5113.
Day of Publication
- 8- 17 ·11~
REGULATIONS
Thl Publisher reser\les the YARD SALE, Thursday &amp;
right to eel it or reject any ads_,
F_riday, 9 a .m., 297 Mill St., PIANO &amp; organ lessons by
deemed objectionaL
Tl'le
M iddleport .
graduate
of
Cinc innati
ftublish~ will not be respon\lb le,
8-29-Jtp
Conservatory of Music with 23
~~~er'TI~n . than one -Incorrect - - - -- - - - years teaching experience:
" RATES
SPECIAL- Thursday , Friday &amp;
phone 992·3825 .
~ For Wan' Ad Service
Saturday . W ith a fill -up of
8-2J -1 2tc
5 cents per Word one insert;on
gas, oil change and.filfer - a -- ---- - - - - -···
free grea se job . Free pickup YARD SALE, Monday, Tuesday
Minimum Charge 7Sc
12
cents
per
word
three
and
der1very. n..
'
p enn - an d w~dnesd ay . St t sat 9 a .
~een s
consecutive insert loris.
18 cents per ·word sr:x oonzoil, North Second Ave .,
m . Watch for sign, Eagle
secutlve Insertions .,
Middleport ; phone 992-9913.
Ridge-Bas han Rd . Some
75 Per Cent Oiscolml on paid .
8-29-.tltc
antiques, odds and ends.
ads and ads pa id within 10 days. - - -- - - - - 8-27-Jtp
CARD OF THANKS
REDUCE sa le &amp; lasl with
&amp; OBITUARY
GoBese Tablets &amp; E · Vap
Sl .SO for SO worel minimum .
" water pills" , Nelson Drug
. .
Each add;tional word 2c .
8-29-2flp
Have Yo" Had A
BLIND R.DS
Additional 75c Ctlarge · per . -==========.~
Advertisement .
·
t
OFFICE HOIIR~. '
Why Nof stop In ana let Miele.
' 8: 30a .m_. to S:OO,p.m, Daily,
and Fred cut and style your
6 : 30 a .m. to 17: 00 Noon
hair for neater and better
Saturday .
controlled flair.

ar

Razor Cut?

••HEll"

Game Could've

POUR DOWN!!

NOTICE

Notice

WIN AT BRIDGE

Motor Co.

1910 Dodge
$19PS
Polara, factory air condllioning , V·8 engine, automatic
transmission, power steering, power brakes,, good white
sidewalls, many more extras. White finish, black vinyl
roof: Priced to move :
1970 Ford

51795
G~laxie SOO hardtop coupe, V-8 engine, automatic transmission~ p~wer ste~ing &amp; brakes, white finish, black
vinyl top, vmyllntenor. White-wall tires, like new, radio.
1970 Ford Pinlo2 Dr.
$1850
Locall owner car, green finish, clean interior , good tires.
2000cc engine, radio, 4-speed trans .

Pomeroy Motor Co.
~PMEROY,

OHIO

KARR'S

HEATING &amp;
COOLING .

BARBER
SttDP
Lynn Sl.
Pomeroy
Ph . 992 ·2367

Lost

eiWOFING .
eHEATING
•PLUMBING
•CARPENTRY
·~POU'.i.lNG

•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992-2550
TUNE-UPS, brake jobs and
other auto work . Very
reasonable rates . Waines
Auto Service, school trained.
Route1 , Shade, Ohio 992·6547,
next to Whaley 's Paint Shop.
8·20·12fc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.

.2

Window ,
Air Conditioners
Hot Water Healers
Plumbing
Electrical Work

Help Wanted

•or Sale

-

For Sale

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

soum

Real Estate For Sale

CARRIERS
WANTED

.

(

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiatw to the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . 992-2174
Pomeroy
~-~

EARTH MOVING
Oo2er &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, land scaping . We have 2 si21
dozers , 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
11
Free · Estimates. We also
haul fill dirl, lop soil. Dump
trucks and low-bOy far hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
.Pomeroy . Phone P92 .Jl2l
aiter 7 p.m. or phone , 9t2."
5232 .

Most

THAN K'l FER
RtMIIIJD!N' ME.
·. HONEVPOT

Cart

WELLtniESE OFFICEI&lt;G

-GUAAANTEEJ&gt;-.
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Ho!n•., ·&amp; Auto
Open 8Tii 5
Mondav thru Saturday
606 E. Main, .PomortY•. ~-

WAN 10 K~W HOW
'IOU GOT IT.

IS T~IS A ~COR~
o;: 'lOUR STOCIC.

T~ESE NAMES
~AVE P~EFERR/if)
ANO CCIIriMoN LISTE~

TRANSACTIONS ~

AGAINST T~EM

WILL CUT or ·i ·r;m tree
reasonable ; also clean o
basements,
attics
ar
cel lars : phone 949·3221 .
8-29-30

ECOI'I
426

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF
ApPOINTMENT
case No. 20,7
Estate of - Harold E . Sml
Deceased .
Noti ce Is hereby given th. ·
Alma
Evelyn
Smith
•
Syracuse, M eigs County, Ohl
has b!en duly appo inte
Executrix of the Estate •
Harold E . Sm lth , deceased, lei
of Syracuse , Meigs Count ·
.
··; Ohio .
SEWING MACHINES . Repair;
Creditors are required lo fl 1
service, all makes. 992-228.4 . the ir ,claims w ith said flduclar
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . with in four months .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Daled lh l• ll!h day of Augu•
Service. We Sharpen Scissors .' l972.
3-29·ffc ,
s - Manning 0 . W~bsle
· --------~
Judg
Co urt ot Common PIU!
PRICE CONSTRUCTION,
Probate 01\1/s io
roofing, porCh repair and
electrical; phone 742·4286.
1B) 15 , 22, 79 , Jtc

AH MU5TA PICKED UP

TH'WRON6 &amp;uNDLE,
e.ACK AT TH'CAVE..~'

\
(\

I STI/.L THifoJI(
T~EV

School Special!
PANTS &amp; JEANS
SALE I

Hartford, W. Va.

The Daily Sentinel

-----Mobile Homes For Sale

•

SHOULD
IN
A LITTI.E
AWOUND

Ele TAKEN

-------

WINNIE WINKLE

iHE

"THAT OUGHT)&gt;.
TAKE CARE OF
"THINGS FO~

WAIST!

.... MY IN ABOUT

Glti\NDPA 1 COULD

2"1 HOliK~
OR 50??

YOU WAKfMEA

LITTLE LATER ....

AWHILE!

.,

"
.,

,.

..,'

"' .

' .

.' .-

•2

.

. ·. ,· oow,iF vr.'.
II AD"'[ f(l)p·hll-·rij C:/!.5
YV IJ'i" J'l
,

.

~ :~ ;::, ,;
'' I ~ ,-,. .

/,--0'
/. ·/
-

I

/

,

,

./

1

•1

~I ~

1

I

AOO HITUI~D ARlr.€ WITH Nil;;, NlD r
HA00 TOFFgRw lV ~~ 'iOv BNi.
TOA MS SfAIDf.\,1 l).)CQOIJ'r
1

HA1/E. RUIJ QIT Cf rcA'&gt; ~D I'D
a; HOMB NOJJ!

For Sale

Generation Rap

YetlerdiJ'a Cryplofluoie: LET US BELIEVE NEITHER
HALF OF THE GOOD PEOPLE TELI; US OF OURSEL~l
NOR HALF TBE EVIL THEY SAY OF OTHEIIS.-lOiift
PETIT-sENN
.

Real Estate For Sale

By Helen and Sue Bottel

(0 nn Kine J'eatum Syndl&lt;AIIe,lno.)

CLELAND
REALTY

ACJt()SS
1. Give

tbe
once·
over
s.strung
together

MILLER

For Rent

11, Firat

DICK TRACY

victim
r.~i'T:;:!e:S:PP:ce'Cou'Pel u.homlolde
Injudl·

NEW HOMES

Real Estate For Sale

claus
13. Clock
beat
u; Snooze
time
In ·
Tabasco
15, Taro

3 BEDROOMS

-------

.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker

Business Opportunities

root

16, Hat (sl)

U. Coal
scuttle
18. Kind of
library
%1. NotaZL Boat

liket~

Z6.

I.

fellow

10. Mullle

18. Fat

31. Purport

l~Syeophant

S2. 1Jinerlck

6.01dahoma

23. Tidied up

export
35. Mooth
after

7. Daunt

:15. Decorous

5. With
diligence
city

I. Blabbed
(3 wds,)

zo. Promote.
u. Appraise
28. Postal

clerk

WCOT

1 eiatle

REEMIP

Avril
36. Wahine's
garland

ll'ORRAL

V 'I

J

WEN"T 10 CHINA-

ENDED UP WliH

rI J

A c:.AME.

J

Now ari'ance the eircltd !etten
to form the surpriH &amp;Nwtr, as

~f&gt;.:::A=:==:=:::::::::;-~~·;u~ll;e~•t;ed;:_;;;by~the above cartoon.

I

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

I [ I 1 I XH I I D
(Auwen

Jumbte.o KNIPE GAVEL
Yetlrr-••1'•

Reduce
to pulp

lcnnorr~wJ

STOOGE IEAGLE

Annrefl Sound• lUte lrou•r,..-lwnd,.J ,1uw11jrom

parent lo ehild-GINIS

witness
tightly

3Z. Extend

33. Stamping
device
U. Soulless
• creature

38. Mortgage
S7. Card com·
blnatlon
SUPP0$1! I
CH!CI&lt; WITH lHI!
POLICE,.., ~I TO

WOO! lltJIQI HI!"~
NOT A fllll'tTI VI!!
f'IQI ..tllf1'1C81

OI&lt;AY-· GOOD
IOI!!A,OIJCEYI I:lol
TO~
NIECI!
AND THe IJIW)'P.
TON16Hn

"*

COU~P

VOOR

IJNCLI!! HAVe

WANTiti"IO

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.- Here'• how t• work It: .....
. --.
-·· .;..
· =· ·;;..·.....-..-.._.:.~::1
AXYDLBA .AXR
Ia . LONGFELLOW

PISAPP!i'AR,
M~H~

1

.. ,

•
I

(2 wdl.)

t "Benevolent"

Yesterday's Alllwer
e. Iron
it. Lone
Curtain
attack
country
on

31. Drop
the bait

MASON
FUINRURE

~

choice

each

!8. Bear

Authorize.d Dealer

____

DOWN
).-to
(spoil)
2. Tolerate
3. Gourm•nd's

UIIKI'alllble th... four Jumbleo,
one letter to
oquart, lo
form · four ordinary words.

!7. Slippery

LA-Z-BOV

·-···-.:......_

I •V ~~~NIH IH!NOl [) •""' !I OU l f£

of Ovid's
time

curia's
tribunal
Z5. Tobouan

~YOUR DIAL

-----Auto Sales

~1!11WIDY; IJ.J ..,.,.,~,,.-J ~

4t. Highway

country

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CHAIRS

19. Sharper

U.Papal

WMP0/1390

Wanted To Buy

II. Therefore

,.___;;;.....__, az. Chief
None eod
aa. African

We' talk to JOU

•

(

l

'

. EX_PERl
.~ l.liP,ment
15.55
On
Amoric~n

Clifton and

1.

•'

Business Services

·Po,meroy

Z.SIGIS
Of
IUALITY

LADIES' black clulch billfold in CANNING
tomatoes
and
Middleport Friday morning .
mangoes. Geraldine Cleland,
Bank deposit slip with name .
Racine, Ohio.
400·AFL.CIO
Reward. Ann Boso, Portland,
8·16.1fc
Ohio . Phone 843·2439.
8·27 ·3fp
COAL, Limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E .. Main St. ,
NORTH (0)
Z9
Pomeroy, Phone 992·3891.
SEWING Mach ine Service,
BABYSITTER in my home 5
• KJS
4·12·ffc
clean, oil, adivst, 5399, in your
days a week ; references;
AKC registered miniature - - -- - -- - - ¥AJ6
home; phone 992·5331.
phone 992·5608.
Schnauzers. Ph . 446-2497 .
• KQ4
8-11 ·30fc
8·29·3fp
puppies
,
Sliver
Toy,
POODLE
8·22·12fc
o!oA842
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
HAVE- immediate open ing for
WEST
EAST
WILL DO light hauling in a f.
5443
·
petroleum truck dri\ler - HOT POINT self ·delrosting
.A 763
8. 15.1fc
lernoon•. Phone 992-3903.
992 -2448
relrtgerator, very
good - -- - - - - - salesman. Experience in
¥Q 1042
¥95
.
8·27-6tc
Pomeroy.
condll ion: phone 992·3061.
SUMMER 1
f
It
truck driving r1ecessary .
• Jl09
.A7653
8·27 -6tc
c e~rance o pa ern
Please write Bo&gt;c 729-0, c-o
o!oQ9
.KJ1063
~~~=c:-:---~-,-,books and 1mported yarns.
The Daily Senlinel, Pomeroy: REGULATION size pool table,
REWARD, lor shopping at
Needlecrall Shop, Rt . 124
giving age, experience and
Showalter's Wet P•t Shop,
.QI0954
l ike new ; phone 992 -2234 after
East, Syracuse. 10 a.m. to 7
8·16·301c - - - - - - - - references.
Chester, Ohio : 10 per cent of
p.m . daily excepl Sunday .
¥K813
5 p .m.
8·29·31&lt;
your
total
purc;hase
may
be
RACINE
10
room
house:•
8·IO·IIc
H2
DOZER and back hoe work,
8-29·4fc
NOTiCE OF
applied lo the purchase of any
bath, basement, garage, two
ponds and septic tanks ; B g I&lt;
.15
APPOINTMENT
ceramic items .
.l ots . Phone 949-4313,
·
Cue No. 2075
EJ&lt;cavating, Phone 992 -5367,
BABYSITTER lor 3 children in I SIEGLER fuel oil oil healer
Both vulnerable
4-5-tfp.
8· 2·301p
Estate of
v~rnon
Oars
Dick
Karr
,
Jr.
my
home
:
phone
992-3645
with
blower,
l
ike
new
;
1
West North East South
~--------..,
after 8:30 p.m. or before 11
5·21·11C Deceased .
Warm M orni ng coal heater ;
IDEAL 5AC RE RANCH. Lake
Not ice is hereby given the
I N.T Pass 2.
a.m.
phone 992·3513 .
·
··
El l ison Darst of 6625 Statt Lin•
Conchas, New Mexico. S2 ,975 .
Pass
4•
Pass Pass
East promptly pointed out
8·29·31p
8·23·61c
No Down. No Interest . $25 mo . StE US FOR : Awnings, iforrii , Road . East Ridge , Tennm••
Pass
that West could have beaten
doors and windows, carPorts, . has been duly appolnttc
for 119 mos . Vacation
DUE TO a fractured hip, I am
marquees , aluminum 'siding
EJ&lt;ecutor of lhe Estate o
Opening lead- • J
the contract if he had taken
Paradise. Free Brochure .
and railing . A Jacob, sales ' Vernon Darst , deceased , late o
selling a new 5 h.p. Wizzard
the second trump and led a
Ranchos
Lake
Conchas
:
Box
Buy 2 Pairs and
representative . For free,' M iddleport, Meigs County
garden tiller al S50 oil
2001 DO, Alameda, Californ ia
Ohio .
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby third round, but that South
Western Auto retail pric~ ; a
Get 1 PAIR FREE
estimates , phone Charles ,
Creditors are reQuired to flit
94501.
would have had a cinch if he
bargain for someone for $139.
When both sides lead the had just led one round of
Usle, Syracuse, V. V. their cla ims w ith said t i duc i ar~
8·6·30ip
All kinds, all sizes for men,
Lowell Winge tt , Rt.
4,
Johnson and Son, Inc. ·
within four months .
IN
same suit, the odds that one trumps.
women, young men, boys 6 ROOM HOUSE , bath, 2 car
Pomeroy ; phone 992-2922 .
3-2-tfll
Dated th is .11th day of Augull
side is making a mistake are
8-29·3fc and girls. Hurry to
" 1972
East's
analysis
was
corgarage,
enclosed
porch,
94-100
overwhelming.
rect but we can't really fault
acre land, Rt. l, Racine, Ohio. AlJ I OMOBI LE insurance ~n
s - Manning D . Webster•
LeBLANC clarinet , B flat , very
South found himself in a either South or West. South
••
POMEROY
Phone 949.4785.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Probate Judge
good
condition.
phone
667four·spade contract after didn't know that trumps
6il Jack W. Corsey, Mgr.
operator 's license? Call 992·
8·24-6lc
of said Countv
3511 or 667·3400.
Phone
992-2181 _ __j
2966. .
typical rubber bridge bid- were going to break 4-1;
(8l 15, 27, 79, Jtc
8·29·6fc .__ _
..;.,;,;.,;.:.:....::_:.:;_
CHESHIRE , 5 rooms &amp; bath,
6·15·11C
ding. His two-spade bid was West couldn't know that
---------SEVERAL varieties of top
basement, 1II• Acre, 10 - · - PHONE992-2156
a sign-off but North looked South held four hearts in adKENNEBEC potatoes, $5 for
qual1ly , tree npened, canni ng
minutes from Gavin ; storm SE:r·· ,,,.__ •dnks cleaned. M il ler
Stterlff's S11e of
at his 18 points and bid game dition to his five spades.
1001b.,· see John Pape, Rac ine
peaches; now ava i lable
windows
,
newly
remodel
ed;
Sanitation,
Stewart,
Ohio.
Pn.
Chittel
Property
anyway.
or phone 949·3025.
through early September;
c_a~ peted dining area, large
662-3035.
Carl Platter
(H!WSI'.t.f'EI. ENTERPAISE ASSN.)
8-29·61c
Bob's Market, Mason, w. Va .,
West .opened the jack of
llvmg room; ca ll after 5: 30
.
2-12-tfi
v!t
Case No. 1,063
above
the Pomeroy--IV!ason
weekda-,.s ,
Saturday
&amp;
James Rowley
diamonds. Dummy's queen
ALL ABOARD HOUSEWIVES,
utility Seoul Trailer,
Sunday , 367·7114.
··eACKHbi: AN"O DOZER work"\'
In omuance to an Execution
Br idge : phone 773·5308.
ENROLL BY SEPT. 25th . 2·WHEEL
was topped by East's ace
1'2'X6' with good fires ; spare
4
8-1
8-lOtc
Septic
tanks
installed
.
Georqe
from
fht County Court of Meigs
8·15-tfc
Last chance to hop aboard the
and a d1amond was led back.
County , Pomeroy , Ohto on the
tire mounted . 1-large storage
PLAYHOUSE
The
bidding
has
been:
TOY
lrain
to
-'Bill)
Pullins
.
Phone
992·2411
.'
Wh
day
of August , 1972 and lo
Dummy's king won and
bin with hinged cover- 5100 ;
success.
We're
selling
toys
in
Long
Bottom,
phone
_
_
_
_
·
_
_
_
_
4·25-ttc
'
me
directed
In the case abOve
HOUSE
West
North
East
South
South proceeded to play the
8'x8' umbrella tent with inand booking parties, having
985-3529.
named , I wlll expose for salt at
I
•
Dble
Pass
king and jack of trumps.
ter ior telescoping poles; 6 foot
fun and getting paid. As a
6·11 ·1fc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
oubtlc auction at lhe lront door
3•
Pass
height inside; needs minor 50x10 MOBILE HOME, 51700 . -::-::-':c::--;-.Y,.,-..,.-..,---,REASONABL~
t ,_,_ Ph ~ ~\
... S Ohlor
ot 1~e tMeJQs
. Cqvrl ,-county
House. on
Pomeroy
,
demo I have no delivering, no
West allowed them to hold, Pass
Call
Cheslec
985·3379.
_
.
.
-.
ra
the 9th
repa irs and door screening.
You, South, hold:
collection , and I do not need
whereupon South led a heart
6
ROOM
hou~
;
balh
,
large
lot,
~782,
Gallipolis,
JOhn
Russell,,
day
of
Sptember,
1972
al
10
:00
8·24-6fp
Completely
waterproofed1
+AK943 ,fo762
any experience. I get free
to his king; a second heart • 8743
gas and electric , Rt. 1.
Owner &amp; Operator .
.
· o'c lockA .M . thefollowlnggoOds.
125:
call
992
·5815
aller
5
p.m
.
training
.
Final
deadline
for
What
do
you
do
now?
. Phone '992-2602.
5-12-tfc
and chattels to -wit :
Midd
leport
'7
1
65x12
moblle
home.
l
1f2
to dummy 's jack and then
8·29·31c
hiring
is
Sept
.
25,
call
me
now
,
B-27-Stp
--------~
1- 1965 Mercury Comer , 2
bath
,
phone
992
·3903.
A--Just bid four spades. Your
dummy's ace, East showed
don't wait, Margaret Fortune,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
door nardtop , red in color
partner
hi
showing
a
very
good
NEW
DELUXE
ZIG
·
ZAG
8·27·3fc
out but this didn't worry
Complete Service
Serial No . SH2JA537885 . v.8
949·5414 or Barbara Lamberl ,
6 ROOM house , bath , aluminum
hand but you have too mueh in
sew ing
machine.
This - - - - - - - - - Motor.
South.
446·3411.
siding, garage. carpe t ing and
T ak.en as property of James
Phone 949-3821
yuur opponent's bid suit to warmachine makes buttonholes , ·cAS~ paid lor all makes ana
8·22 ·11&lt;
panel ing; natural qas, clentv
He .ruffed dummy's last rant slam exploration.
Racine, Ohio
Rowtey to satisfy an Exetvtion
darns and embroideries ; all
models of mob I ie homes,
of water. 1 'mile south of
'Critt Bradford
in favor of Carl Pill Her .
diamond; r u If e d his last
without attachments; phone
Ph011e area code 614-423 -9531.
TODAY"S QUESTION
Middleport. Phone 992·6902 .
Terms : Cash in hand on day
5· 1·fiC
heart; cashed dummy's ace
99n331.
4-13-lfc
of sale .
Instead
of
bidding
three
8·27·3fp
...
of clubs for his ninth trick
8·29·ffc
ROBERT C. HARTEN BACH,
your partner has bid
CONCRETE
1971 KAWASAKI 100, like new,
and was still sure of a trump spades,
FOR THE BEST deal In a new - - - - - - -- - READY ·MIX
MEI GS COUNTY SHERIFF
two diamonds over your one
5
ROOMS
&amp;
bath
,
2
story
block
dellv~red
right
to
}'Our
8
TRACK
STEREO
8-79 -He
5300. Phone 949·3915.
trick for his contract.
or
used
mobile
home,
try
spade. What do you do now?
house ; gas forced air furnace .
proiec1. Fast and easy . Free
Repossessed, looks l ike new ;
8·27·51p
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
''• acre lot, Rt . 7 &amp; Old Chester
estimates . Phone 992-3284.
beautiful hand rubbed Walnut
Kanauga, Ohio.
Rd .. $5,500 :· phone 992 ·3874 .
Goeglein Ready ·Mix Co .•
cabinet ; take over payments
LARGE selection of beautiful
7·16·3otc
Notice of Filing ol
8·29.1fc
Middleport, 011io.
of Sl.50 per week or pay
mahogany dining suites:
Inventory .1nd Appraisement
6·30.Ifc
~~~~~~~-·~~~~~~
SI01.47 : phone 992.533 1.
bedroom ovtfits ; also , usual
Proba1e Court
OUT OF STATE . IDEAL 5·
stock of other clean used
8·29.flc
The Stare ot Ohio , Me lga
•
Air
Conditioners
ACRE
RANCH.
Lake
Con
·
County.
furniture , appliances at
chas , New Mex ico. $2975 . No
To tl1e AdministratriJ&lt; of tht
•Awnings
KUHL 's BARGAIN CEN · 1970 HONDA CL70 Scrambler ,
down . No interest. 125 per mo . , . - , - - - - - - - - - - . estate ; to such of the following
exce l lent co ndition ; phone
TER , " at caution light," Rt .
• Underpinning
as are residents of I he State of
for
119 mos . Vacation
985 ·3816 .
7, Tuppers Plains , Ohio .
Ohio , viz : - the
surviving
Paradise
.
Free
Brochure
.
8·2l·61p
Closed Mondays .
spouse, the next of kin the
"
c
omplete
mobile
home
Ranchos
Lake
Conhas
:
BoJ&lt;
Slaog: Alive and Well- aud How!
8·27-61c
beneficiar ies under ttle 'will;
service - plus g i gantic
2001 DO, Alameda , Californ ia
1973
CAM
PER
S
and
low
profile
and
to the attorney or attorneys
~:
94501.
represent ing any ot the
Trav el Trai lers i n stock, "display of mobile homes
DELUXE
8
lrack
Sterec
in
608
E.
Moln
Reading yoW' colunm on outdated slang compelled me to
8·29·3Dfp
aforementioned persons :
lowest pr ice in Tri -State area ; always availllble at ...
Walnut Console ; will sell for
Pomeroy, Ohio
No . 20679 Paul
Zirkle,
write, You asked for new samples, since the ladeout of the drug
1972 trailers, huge discount :
balance due of $88.21 or pay
Deceased , Pomeroy , Oh io
Camp Conley ~tarcrall Sales,
LOTS ON Wr ighl Street,
Salisbury Townsh ip,
'
and hippie goodies.
56.10 a month ; cal l 992·5331.
According to Its Old English
Pomeroy : phone 742·5930 .
Rl . 62 , N. of Pl. Pleasant
MOBILE
HOMES
You are hereby notif ied lhat
8·2J.6tc
Those things were done to death, so we made some adaptions
behi nd Red Carpet Inn.
derivation, lhe word HOUSE
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
8·29· 121c
pralsement of the estate of the
to "cosmic" worda,like Groovy iB now ''Gravy-baby"; far out Is
8-25·7fc
1220 Washington Bl•d.
means a place to hide.
aforemenrloned, deceasect , tate
--------42J.7521
BELPRE,O,
WHATEVER A HOUSE
''fann out''; outasite: ''out--a--E~tate,'' off the wall," ''inside out,''
of ~aid County, was filed in this
STEREO·radioConsole, 4speed L-----~~--..J
MEANS TO YOU, WE'LL
Cour t . " aid Inventory and
"out in the diBtance"; knock it off: "narc it arf"; right on: "left TRAILER, Brown's Trailer
inlermixe.d changer-, dual .
Appraisement witt be for
FINO
ONE
TO
MEET
Park . Phone 992·3324 .
vol ume control , 4 speaker
arm."
hearing before this Court on the
YOUR
NEEDS!
CALL
8·24-6tc
sound system, beautiful hand
14th dey of September, 1972, 11
Anyone can do it. Instead of saying "Make like a nut and
TODAY.
rubbed
Walnut
finish.
10 :00 o'clock A.M .
3 ROOM apartment, un·
NICE LEVEL LOT
boll," or "Make like a tree and leave," I wiU now make like a
Balance 566 .34 . Use our
Any person desiring to file
I BUILDING lots, 95' x 200'
furnished.
408
Spring
Ave.,
1
story3
bedrooms
.
Bath
.
thereto must file
exceptions
budgel
lerms.
Call
992·7085
.
banana and split. - M,M.G.
each: phone 992·5786 .
Pomeroy .
them at lease five days pr ior to
,Dining R. Utility space .
8-25-btc
2 New Homes. all electric , J
the date set for hearing
B·25·6fc
8·1Q.Ifc
Paneling. Porches. A good
bedrooms,
lull
basement
and
Given under my hand and
BLACK Diamond tinament : - - - - - - - - Helen and Sue:
neighborhood. JUST $9,800.
seal of said Court , this 26th da-,.
lake
frontage
:
garage
,
with
.3 AND 4 ROUM furnished arl'd
JUST 4 YEARS OLD
call or write F. M. Guthrie, CONVENIENT but sec luded
of August , 1977.
Here nre some new slang words we're using in the west:
at Five Points area .
unfur"ished
apartments.
Alhens, Ohio 45701 , 592 ·2158.
4 bedrooms. Bath. Modern
building
lots
at
Rock
Springs
,
Mann ino 0 . Webster
Crunchy: great
'hone 992-5434.
•
8·27 ·31p
Judge and ex -offi cio
kitc hen . Storm Doors &amp;
close to High School &amp; Fair
4·12-lfc
Bum: to improvise
Clerk of said Court
Ground ; call or see Bill Witte ,
Windows. Storage buildings.
By Ann B. Watson . Deputy
'1'12·2789 atler 5 p .m . week 1'1' ACRE of ground . CLOSE
Dig up: listen
Cterk
FURN I SHED
2 bedroom
days.
IN $16,900.
IB) 2B (9) 5, 21c
Tuft tooUe : too bad
apartment, adults on l y,
POMEROY
'
M iddleport ; phooe 992·3874 .
Bad: really sharp
EXCELLENT- 2 bedroom
8·29·3fp
home with walk·ln closets .
... But I don't think "cool" will ever go out of style.
Large ll•lng room with
F IR ST FLOOR, 2 room fur ·
JEANNIE
fireplace . Modern kitchen
nished
apartment
in
Cl
and dining . Utility. 2 car
Pomeroy: phone 992 ·3028 .
Dear Rap:
garage . Porches . JUST
8·29·31p
112,900.
When we'd rather say a word that would get us in !rouble
110 Mechanic Street
WE HAVE THE CON ·
with big~ red parents, we say things like "Oh, peanut butter!",
TACTS, USE THEM FOR
8·23·1
2tp
"Fudgecycle!" "Son of a Pickle!" "Oh, ShH-e-nnan!" etc.
THE SALE OF YOUR
Fun, and beUer than getting your mouth washed out with SERV ICE Stalion tor lease . ZIG · ZAG sewing machine , this
PROPERTY .
JUST
A
Excell ent location . Paid
PHONE CALL AWAY.
soap. - BARB
mach
ine
is
dressmaker
THE
LATEST
NEW
LISTING
tra ining . Phone 992-5221.
HENRY E . CLELAND Sr.
model. this machine makes
RENOVATED - Lo•ely 2 bedrooms. large living, nice
8·24-6fc
REALTOR
buttonholes. darns, em k1lchen and gas forced air furnace. Has modern bath, wall
RAP :
broideries ;
ta ke
over
H2-l259
lo wall carpeting . Partial basement on large lot. Asking
payments ot $5 .10 or pay S6 a
If no lnS"(0[ ..992·2568
Samples of new slang? Some of us have taken to using the
only 511,500.00.
third person, referring to oneself as "she" or "he," and to each 2 or 3 ACRES of land . monlh : call 992·5331. 8·2J.6tc
MIDDLEPORT
Preferably in Flatwoods area
other, instead of "yout'' as "he," "she/' u they", uthem".
'BEDROOMS - 2 baths, nice kilchen with bar and cook
or on good hard surfaced MAPLE Slereo -radio com Believe us, it's a trip!
units. Garage and den In full basement. Covered patio on
road . Phone 992·6147 .
binalion , AM-FM radio, 4
back
of h011••· Asking 124.000.00.
.
Many of our statem.ents end with "or what." Referring to
8·27 ·3tc
speaker sound system, 4
myself ,I'd uy, "She's tired, or what." (Not "I'm tired,")
speed automatic changer,
'OLD Furniture . Qak tables ,
separate controls. Balan Ce
LEVEL LOT
''oof,''''Doof,'' ''Skidoop," areklndofsighs, or what.
organs, dishes . clocks, brass
$78 .29 . Use our budget terms.
CORNER- With a lourroom house, has gas , city water,
Then there are always the old faithfuls,llke ''funky," "for
beds , or complete households .
Call 992-7085 .
and electric. Asking only $2,500.00 .
·
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . 4,
8·25-61c
r011l" (he agrees), "baddest" (tbe best), "~u ch, man, much"
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
LOTS - LOTS- LOTS
(what of It'), etc,
6·28·11c 1912 ZIG ·ZAG sewing machine
1
ACRE
Ntce
laying on high ground. Chester water
We're re.;lly trying to retire "you know," but it's, you know,
lell in layaway. Beautiful
Now yo" can buy that ·
ava1iable. 11 lots In all.
pastel color, full size model.
hard,
comfortable
La-Z-Boy
All buiil ·in to bullonhole, do
chair
you've
always
Welp, (got that from you Sue), there are more, but I've gotta
stre tch sewing and fancy
WORKMAN'S SPECIAL
'69
PLYMOUTh
GT
440,
4
speed,
dreamed
of
at
our
low
roll, -C,P,
stilching. Pay just $48.75 cash
l BEDROOMS - Near downtown shopping, nice kitchen
electric
windows.
good
prices
.
or terms available. Trade-ins
with dOuble sink. 2 porches and full basement. A good buy
GANG :
cQndition. Phone 992-7624 or .
,,.cepled . Phone 992·5641.
al only $7 ,500,00.
see Nick Coales , Pomeroy .
, Around here a new thing iB "speUing It out," and always
B·25-6tc
8·27·3fp
wrtllll· AI In: "Be qulck~-w-l~~dc." Qo "II!mOll pukedLOOK FOR THE REO, WHITE AND BLUE SIGN THEN
VACUUM Cleaner new 1972
JMI'~~." 01' "That'a cool-1!:-u-l-aJOI." ()&lt; "You're
YOU'LL KNOW IT'S FOR SALE . IUY FROM• YOUR
model. Complete wilh all
WILL SACRIFICE '72 Olds
LOCAL BROKER: IT'S GOOD BUSINESS AND FOR
dum~l~wnb."-Sue
clean:ng
lools.
Small
paint
Della 18, •inyl roof, air ,
TH~ ECONOMY OF MEIGS COUNTY. WE'll~ TRYING
dAmage in shipping . Will take
power
steering,
power
FOR A BIGGER At~D BETIER YEAR .
S27 cash or budget plan
brak•s, l~w mileage. Phone
NOTE FROM HELEN :-Aa U "~pellng tecllrs" dldn'l already
Available . Phdne 991 ·5641.
367·7530.
HEL~N L. TEAFORb, ASSOCIAtE
~~~~ enoqll trouble 1
i ·2Hic
1·2Htc

Been Beaten

LOOKV '/ONDER, PAW··
IT'S FIXIN' TO

f

r-

INCIDENTAU.l(, ftlW CCME I

HEAR '1tlU 51N6

AH{~

�•
8 _The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aug. 29, 1972 ,

I&gt;

Plans for Recreation in
Bend Area are Reviewed
PT. PLEASANT - Two bend developing recrea tion in that
area groups, seeking to acquire community.
recrea tional facilities in their
Mr. Dingey, spokesll)an,
communities, Monday evenin g cited existing facilities and
asked the Mason County Court discussed the Alex Quillen
for a5sistan ce.
Park and an area proposed for
A group from New Haven recreation on Haven Heights.
comprised of Marion Dingey, The delegation asked for
Mary Roush and Charles support f:om the county in
Zerkle, discussed the New deve loping these programs
Haven Park and Recrea tion through federal funds .
Committee's plans for
Another group, the Mason
Recreation Foundation, Inc.,
included Charles A. Stanley.
Jack E. Smith and Jack H.
Smith and J. C. Cook, a
property owner.
TONIGHT
The Recreation Foundation,
Aug. 29
as it was explained , originally
Walt Disney's
acquired 6.48 acres fromJ. C.
NOW YOU SEE HIM,
Cook and a parcel cons1stmg of
NOW YOU DON' T
a right of way to this acreage
Technicolor
from the town of Mason to be
Kurt Russell
Cesar Romero
developed as a recreational

MEIGS THEATRE

This action has been taken by
the court. The court now will
apply for federal funds to
develop the site into a baseball
park and other outdoor
recreational activities.
One of the first steps in
preparing the site is to level the
plot of ground. Work with a
bulldozer is expected to get
underway soon. Once the
rolling land is level, seeding
will be done this fall. The land
is a part of the J. C. Cook farm
and is located parallel with the
Ohio River between the river
and B&amp;O Railroad tracks.
The Court group was comprised of Lawrence Gerlach
Jr ., Clarence Adkins, Elvin E.
Wedge, commissioners and L.
w. Getty, Clerk of the Court.

IG)

ALSO
BEAR COUNTRY

area.
But in order to obtain federal
funds a

COLO'RCARTOON :

Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Aug. 30-31

MASON DRIVE-IN
' ' '

"

,',

J I

, t ,, •1 N!qlill,

TONIGHT

August29
Double Feature
"BEAST OF THE
YELLOW NIGHT"
PLUS
"CREATURE WITH
THE BLUE HAND"
WED.·THUR.-FRI.
August JO-Sept. 1
Doubl~

was

Regatta ·

NOT OPEN

1\ (

~~ negotiator"

needed and to progress with
plans, this group asked the
County Court to purchase the
plot.

Double Dribble
Admission : $1 .SO Adults
Children: ?Sc
SHOW STARTS? P.M.

Feature

"FRIENDS"

(Technlcolor)
R

PLUS
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS

!Color)
IR)

.

(Conticued from Page 1)
one group.
He further suggested getting
participating in a "county
chamber" from Racine, Rutland and oher communities.
Kerr stated that progress is
being made to establish a
coffee house in ,the Stark
Building, Pomeroy, for yoUJtg
people and suggested that
perhaps the chamber could
help in some way. A member of
the committee is expected to
meet with the chamber in the
near future .
Attending were Kerr,
Grueser, Meeker, Reed, Tom
Cassell, Bob Ja cobs, Bob
Miller, Dennis Keney, Richard
Poulin, Joyce,Bunch, chamber
secretary; Jack Carsey, C. E.
Blakeslee and Walter Grueser.

IF

·cHECKING
ACCOUNT
OPEN ONE TODAY
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

Council
(Continued from Page 1)
Beechlers have,and the matter
was dropped .
A routine form requested by
th e Meigs County Budget
Commission providing for
distribution of money on the
basis of need was approved for
completion. Ohlinger brought
up the need for legislation
providing tile mowing by the
village of lots which are
neglected with the property
owner to be billed. Chief of
Police J . J. Cremeans was
named to make immediate
contacts with several property
owners to instruct them to have
lots mowed.
A complaint on the marking
of a no parking curbing on
South Third Ave . was
reviewed, but no action taken.
The discussion brought out that
the no parking area, yellow
lined, had been reduced from
two car spaces to one car space
on both sides of the street at the
corner of Lincoln and South
Third near the residences of
Miss Frieda Faehnle and Dr.
R. R. Pickens.
Council, however, suggested
that a change can be made if
necessary after further study.
It was the consensus that the
present arrangement is
satisfactory for the time being.
It was agreed to cut down a
sewer for better water flow on
Headley St., at the request of
Councilman Lawrence
Stewart. Mayor John Zerkle
said he and Chase will attend a
meeting at tile State Highway
Garage Thursday to discuss
planned improvements to Page
St. The improvements have
long been in the planning stage
and are a part of the work
being done under stale bond
issue funds.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Zerkle, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate, Councilmen Stewart,
Fred Hoffman, Walters and
Ohlinger ; Chief Cremeans,
Chase, Gress, and Mr. and
Mrs. Beechler.
CELEBRATE MONDAY
The annual Labor Day
celebration of tile Chester Fire
Department will be held
Monday. Barbecued chicken,
spareribs and homemade ice
cream will be available. A
parade will be held at I :30 p.m.
Anyone wishing to take part in
the parade should be at the
fire house by 1:30.

News.

•

I •

in Briefs Cars Collide On Route7

DETROIT - GENERALMOTORS CORP., alter months of
speculation, annoWlced MondHy that buyers of 1975 Chevrolet
.Vegas are expected to have the Wankel rotary engine as an
option .
GM Olairman Richard C. Gerstanberg said work on the
much-heralded rotary engine "has proceeded to the point where
a commitment, will be made to limited manufacturing facilities
and tools."

.

COLUMBUS -THE SECRETARY OF STATE'S office
reports tiKi state income tax repeal referendum is well Short of
signatures needed to get lhe issue on tile Noverpber ballot . Only
four of Ohio's 88 coWlly election boards have not reported on
petitions..
.
Officials Jaid 20.6 per cenl of the signatures examined by tile
county election boards so far have been invalidated, with 248,746
signatures were ruled valid. At least 318,414 are needed to place
the repeal question on the baUot.
Opponents of the Income tax will have 10 days to get tile
necessary signatures. C&lt;tunties still Wlreported were Stark,
Adams, Fairfield and Lake.
COLUMBUS - A SECOND HERD OF PIGS that
were exposed to the highly contagious hog cholera
were destroyed on an Ohio farm today and Gov. John J. Gilligan
signed an executive order banning the importation of all swine.
from Kentucky. Veterinarians used "Oxygen reducing" drugs
Monday to kill 248 hogs on the farm of Richard Sander of
Greenville in west central Ohio.
Today they went to the northwest Ohio farm of David Myers,
near Wren in Van Wert County, to destroy 400more. Hog Ololera
is fatal to swine, but not harmful to humans.

Report Coming On AEP Land
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Of. land.
ficials of American Electric However' 31 former owners
Power Co. here said Monday of the land along Sandusky Bay
"an announcement can be have received ev1chon nohces
expec ted soo n On en - · saymg they must be out of thetr
vironmental studies" for 2,000 homes by Sept. 30 ·
acres of land the utility owns in
American Electric Power
Sandusky County, Ohio .
Co.
is the parent firm of Ohio
Officials refused to comment
on reports they plan to build a Power Co., headquartered in
nuclear power plant on the Canton .

Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday.
Warm through the period
with a chance of showers
Saturday. High
tern·
peratures will be In the mid
to upper 80s, and nighttime
lows generally in the 60s .
AHEAD OF RUSSIANS
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI )
- Prof. Thomas E. Cheatham
Jr ., director of the Center for
Research in Computing
Technology at Harvard, was
part of a group of computer
experts who totired China tills
summer. They found that
Chinese computers are far
more advanced than American
experts had thought. "This
really shocked us," he said. " II
puts them ahead of the
Russians in this technology ."

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a complaint
Sunday by Phyliss Cline, Route
7, near Eastern High School, of
damage .to her property .
Donald Craig Griffin,
Parkersburg, driving a garbage truck, was said to have
backed over the edge of the
Cline's driveway. On Sunday,
Griffin got a wr ~c&lt;e r to
remove the truck, but the
wrecker got in her.orchard and
tore up about 25 feet of sod and"

....C.CIHCINNATt

MIDDLEPORT

l.lHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

ASKS DIVORCE
Charolette K. Rood, Reedsville, has filed suit for divorce
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Jack B.
Rood, Reedsville, charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruel ty .

miles north of County Road 30
in Meigs County.
Elonzo F :· · Johnson , . 36,
Morgantown, W. Va., was
northbound passing a car
driven by Emlla Martin, 57,
Charleston, W. Va ., and an
unidentified auto. Martin
changed lanes and struck the
right side of Johnson's vehicle.
Therew8S'lightdamage. There
was no citation.

Now You Know
'

Devored To The lnteresu OJ The

VOL XXIV

SAIGON I UP I)-So uth Viet·
namese forces employing battle-tested U.S. tactics have
stopped a Communist push on
Saigon, military sources said
today.
But fighting stepped up
around the ca pital.
Government forces los t six
men clearing a Communist
roadblock 23 miles from Saigon
Tuesdav whilE'&lt;othcr militiamen
repa ired a bridge blown up on
national Hi ghway 1, the road to
Cambodia , only 13 miles from
the capital.
Near Khiem Hanh, 35 miles

Redmon Clothes.Hampers

PT. PLEASANT - Meeting
nearly three hours Monday
afternoon, officials of the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company and Local 644 apparently failed to reach an
agreement, but did reschedule
another meeting.
Daniel Christian, president
of Local644, The Rubber, Cork,
Linoleum and Plastic Workers
of America, AFL-CIO said the
two groups met with Howard
Steele, Federal Mediator, but
"there is nothing to report".
Talks wereheld in the Blue
Fountain Motel in Gallipolis, 0 .
Additional talks have been
se t for 7 p.m. September 5,
Christian disclosed . Company
officials could not be reached
for comment this morning due
to telephone failure within the
county.

_g rass, in addition to making a
large hole along the drive, the
complainant said. No charge
was filed.
Meanwhile, a 1963 Mercury
Comet belonging to Lawrence
Harrison, Middleport, was
stolen while parked at King's
Arms Sunday at approximately 9:30p .m.
The car has been recovered
in Circleville and two suspects
will be picked up today by tile
County Sheriff's Dept.

northwest of Saigon, three

THE REV. MISS MARTHAN ANN MATI'NER, Rolf
Stangel, center, and Rot!er Hooker, three adult members of
tile coffee bouse committee, compile a llst of items needed

PHONE 992·2 156

for tile setting up of a coffee house lor young people of Meigs
County. Contributions are being asked from residents and
businessmen to help with the project.

militia platoons- about 100 men
-fought a force of about the
same size and reported killing
42 guerrillas. Eleven militiamen
were killed and 22 wounded,
military spokesmen said.
In the fight to recapture
Quang Tri City, 400 miles north
of Sa1gon, U.S. Air Force , Navy
and Marine jet fighter-bombers
new 244 strikes Tuesday, the

most since May 3 when they sour ces said more than 1,600 operated in the Saigon area in
flew 320, U.S. spokesmen said. Communist troops poised 40 the la te 1960's,. a military
Lt. (jg) Craig Woodard of miles north of the capital source reported .
Wi chii&lt;J, Kan., and his wing- rece ntly began moving south The mobile force of comman, flyin g A4 Skyhawks from with the objective of hitting bined infantry, ran ger and
the carrier Hancock, reported Saigon before the American armored cavalry regiments
si&lt;Jrllng one la rge and 10 small presidential elections.
was drawn from the South
Vietnamese
forces involved in
seconda•·y explosions when they But South Vietnamese comdestroy ed two storage areas manders in the capital's tile fivemonth-{)id battle along
protected with ea rthworks 15 military region put togethe~ a highway 13 from Chon Thanh
mi les west of Qua ng Tri City. 20,000-man "spec1al mob1le 40 miles north of Saigon, to tile
North Vietnamese forces, who force" which struck this week , besieged provincial capital of
still hold the Quang Tri Citadel, boxing the Communists into an An Loc, 20 miles farther north.
bombarded South Vietnamese area northwest of Lai Khe, 30
"We have re lieved about 70
marines in and near the city miles north of Saigon.
with about 1,000 rounds of The strike force idea was per cent of the threat to Saigon
130mm artillery and 82mm borrowed from the U.S. 199th in the last 48 hours," one of·
artillery and· mortar fire Infantry Brigade, which ficer said.
Tuesday, Saigon spokesmen
sa id .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:;:;::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::
In the air war aga ins t North
Vicutam, the U.S. command
sa id U.S. jets flew 200 strikes,
abo ut two-th irds the usual
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov. John J. Gllligan has always
number, on Tuesday while
been considered to be quite candid. And he did nothing to
tropical storm Cora was
change that Image at the Ohio Slate Fair Tuesday night.
mov ing across the Red River
Gilligan was asked by an announcer at a h~al radio
Delta.
slation which had a booth at the fair just what he planned to
In the Saigon area, military
do at the fair.
"I'm going to the sheep shearing," said Gilligan.
"Are yuu going to shear a sheep?" asked the announcer.
"No, I shear taxpayers, nol sheep," replied Gilligan.

Candid? That He Is

Tax Repeal
In Trouble

ELBERFELDS
·IN POMEROY

MANY HANDS MAKE LIGHT WORK and !belli! y~ people are among the voiWlteers
doing cleaning and painting at the new coffee bouse being prepared for Meigs County young
people. From the left are Aimee Huston, Mathew Johnson, Renee Hooker, Tom Scally, John
Tiemeyer, David Hooker, John Moore and Kathy Hams, seated.

The role of ad ul t volunteers,
who will be trained by personn el from Ohio University ,
Athens, will be to help main·
tain order, to enforce the no
drug and no alcohul rule and to
be ava ilable for counseling on
all manner of business.
Overall, the intent of the
cofl ee hou se is to help
eliminate the use of drugs in
the comm unity and to offer a
voice for the young people of
Meigs County, the committee
points out.
The exterior of the Stark
building where the new coffee
house is to be loca ted is to be
redecorated by the owne r.
However, the interior cleanup
and painting will be left to the
committee and vo lunteer
he lpers. Furnishings also are a
concern of th e co mmitte e
wh ic k is seeking tables,
cha irs, lamps, recreational
equipment and maintenance
supplies. Jus t about anything is
accepl&lt;! ble - paint, brushes,
brooms, linoleum - and any
business man or residen t
ha ving something he ca n
donate is asked to contact
Stangel at 992-5355 or the Rev .
Miss Martha Mattner, 949·2902.
Pickup of contributions can be
arranged.
Steps are now bei ng taken to
incorporate the coffee house as
a non-profit organiza tion and
the official name of the social
spot will be selected through· a
contest conducted among the
young people. Some con·
tri bution s hav e been forth
comin g
a stove, a
refrigerator and other itemsbut these are only a drop in the
coffee cup, at the moment.
Rooms of the Stark building ,
last occupied by a physician,
will be designated for different
ac tivities planned for the
coffee house . Even the
basement may be used for
craft activities.
Adults are ask ed to help not
only with the setting up of the
establishment but also with the
counseling duties which will
come with the opening. Anyone
(Continued on page 10)

Coffee House
Opening Could
2 Fined
'da
C
F
Ome
On
rl
Y
F0 r DWI

Paper 8 Mate
Flair Pen

REUNION PLANNED
The annual Swartz Family ·
reunion will be Sunday in Wood
Grove at Alfred . The reunion is
open to family and friends.

s 1. 29 value

Idea l for school lunches

39 C value

12 coiOI S tough
nylon pomt .
each one a 49 ¢ va lue

10(:

60¢

4for$1.00

YEARBOOKS HERE
The Meigs High School 1972
yearbooks may be picked up at
anytime starting Wednesday at
the high school .

Amplon
Panty Hose

.;:;: 4880 Gulf Totem
Sandwich Bags

limit 1
per person

~~ Listerine Antiseptic
Mouthwash and gargle
32 oz $2.49 va lue plus 6 oz . free'

$1.15

40 Regular or Super

Soft &amp; Dri
Anti-Perspirant

Rag. or Extro·Hold

Scented
or

7 oz . $ 1.4 9 va lue pl us 2 oz . lree!

90¢

for38oz .

99¢

Gillette
THE DRY LOOK

Pearl Drops
Tooth Polish

Unscented

lor9oz

1 5 Ol

s 1. 09 value

8 oz. $1 .85 value plus
2 oz. free \

$1.25

79¢

for10 oz.

FOR SALE

•,

Desenex
Aerosol

Genuine Thermos
Lunch Kit with Vacuum Bottle

6 oz. size

$1 .98 value

Choose your Child' s favorite:

$3 .50 value

$1.99

Pe anuts, Harl em Globctrolters.

Road Runner. Hot Whee ls. Hee Haw ,

S!uters. Barbie. Yosemite Sam.
Par1ridge F.amily, Lance l ink

$1.29

TEN CEN, S

-.......toppe

Select your favorite size. type a~d
color clothes hamper now. Hampers tn
today's bold colors-Flower brig~t.
Early American and solid colors w1th
gold mylar trim. Housewares Dept. 1st
floor.

w

REDUCED to sell, registered
Toy Fox Terrier puppies.
Heallhy, have had shots, $25
each. Papers turnlshed .
Phone 742-5625.

WEDNESDA(AUGUST 30, 1972

Just ReceiVed Another
Big Shipment

No Agreement
At Goodyear

Area

THESE YOUNG PEOPLE SURVEY one of tile rooms of the coffee house to be located in
the Stark building on Pomeroy's East Second St. All of them are members of the planning
committee for the coffee house which may be opened by Sept. I . From the left are Jon
Freeman, George Wright, an adult counselor and committee member; Jeff Hysell, Cathy
Rayburn, Angie Hubbard, David Mitchell and Dana Snouffer .
. ·

CLOTHING OFFERED
Free Clothing Day will be
held at the Salvation Army HQ,
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
from 10 a.m. noon Thursday .
Anyone in need of clothing is
welcome.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES :
Mrs . .
Thomas Wit..on, Leon ; Mrs.
Johnny Endicott, Gallipolis
Ferry.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meig~·Mason

ttac

JUST ANOTHER PASTIME
LEICESTER, England
(UPI) - Thousands of sports ·
fans wondered why radio
cricket commentator Don
Mosey's voice went off the air
in mid-sentence. Today they
found out it was due to another
British pasttime. A gatekeeper
at the ground unplugged the
transmission power line to plug
in an electric kettle to make a
pot or tea.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Tuesday was 75 degrees under
sunny skies.

NO. 96

~unny and warm is on tap
today and Thursday, high both
days in the mid to upper 80s.
Tonight dear and cool, low
near 60. Probability of
precipitation near zero through
tonight.

en tine

a1

'

IN POMEROY

The second mishap occurred
at 5:10p.m. one and one tenth

Weather

•

Abraham Lincoln won tile
1860 presidentiol race over
three opponents, who polled a
total of 123 electoral votes .to
Lincoln's 180.

ELBERFELDS

of center.

Alleged Damage Investigated

PITTSBURGH

l.iibens /iational 8 hk

No injuries were reported in
two two-car accidents on State
Route 7 Monday the G~llia­
Mc,igs Stale Highway Patrol
reported Tuesday morning .
The first occurred .at 3 p.m.
about 150 feet ·north of the
Gallipolis Corporation line
when James R. Pierce, 26,
Route I Gallipolis, northbound,
swerved !ell of center while
braking to avoid hitting the
rear of an unknown vehicle
that was slowing down to his
front . Mter going into tile left
lane, Pierce's auto was struck
by a southbound vehicle driven
by . Earl F. Abbott , 50,
Gallipolis.
There
was
moderate damage to both cars.
Pierce was cited for being left

(Continued from 'Page I)
within 35 miles of China, spokesmen said today. The raids were
the second in a row near Ute North Vietnamese capital.

. MEMOIUAL

VB'l'PJIAN$
.
HOSPITAL
Admllled - Mildred Bissell,
Tuppers Plains; Inez Hoschar,
Evans, W. Va,; · .Fannie
Aleshire, Pomeroy: Kenneth
Kearns, Letart, W. Va.: Mae
Brewer • Racine; Maxine
Brumley, Pomeroy; Grace
Gumph, Chester; Isabelle
Lewis, Racine, and Betty
Gilkey, Middleport. ·
Discharged · Leora
ZwilUng, Adrian Hubbard and
Maggie Gilmore.

By United Press International
MUNICH - JOHN WRITER, who had to settle for the silver
medal four years ago in Mexico City, fired two world records
Ten defendants were fined today to give the United States the gold medal in small bore rifle, two on conviction of driving
while intoxicated - and one
three positions, in the Olympic Games.
.
..
Writer's performance, with a 381 score in standing position forfeited bond Tuesday in
, and a 1,166 total - both erasing world records held by Oleg · Middle port Mayor John
Lapkln of the Soviet Union, capped early performances on a day Zerkle's court.
Fined $100 and costs and
that saw U.S. swimmers set the stage for more recorda .
given three day jail sen tences
on
the DWI charge were Ray
A NEWCOMER TO STATEWIDE politics defeated Sen.
Garlinger,
47, Gallipolis, and
David Gambrell in Georgia's Democratic primary Tuesday and
another relative unknown won the right to challenge Sen. Strom Ralph Darst, 60, Middlepor t. N.
Thurmond in South Carolina. Gambrell, who was appointed by Kovach, no age or address
Gov. Jimmy Carter to fill the vacancy caused by the death of listed, forfeited a $200 bond
posted on the same charge.
Sen. Richard Russell, D-Ga ., 19 months ago, was unsea~ by
Others fined included Jerry
State Rep. S&lt;tm Nunn, a 33-year-{)ld legislator whn had received D. Swartz, 19, Middleport,
an 11th-hour endorsement from Lt. Gov. Lester Maddox. .
$10 and costs;
in South Carolina, State Sen. Eugene N. Zeigler, conducting speeding,
Douglas A. Burns, Pomeroy,
a personal appearance campaign ''without the use of the .mass $10 and costs, profanity to a
medl~, " beat attorney John Boll CUlbertson, a veteran liberal- police
officer;
Michael
from Greenville.
Gravely, 21, Columbus, $10 and
costs, disturbing the peace ;
SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN'S revised economic. program Jenny Black, Middleport, $10
·drew generaUy unenthnsiastic reviews from econom1sts, Wall and costs , intoxication ; Robert
Street analysts and the stock market. Dr. Paul Samuelso~, Nobel G. McDaniel, 45, Pomeroy, $10
Prize winner economist from tile Massachusetts Instit~te of and costs, intoxication; Bar·
Technology, was one of the few to welcome McGovern's Tuesday bara K. Haney, 33, Kent, $25
proposal. Samuelson called It "a tremendous improvement over and costs, reckless operation
the present system. It's a much more practical package than was and squealing tires; Bonnie
Neville, 28, Middleport, $10 and
earlier coming out of McGovern headquarters."
.
costs,
disturbing the peace.
McGov~rn proposed a new welfare program and the clostng
Garlinger
was also fined $10
of $22 billion per year in tax loopholes. Dr. Joh~ Stockton, an
economist at the University of Texas, felt that busmess would be and costs for disturbing the
hu t by McGovern's proposal to increase tile tax on capital galllS. peace.
"~ost people think these lax loopholes are unfair, but they are ::_::;:~~;'SiW:!(&amp;;&amp;:;:,m:,;,:c:~:&lt;:::::::::::::::
NEXT WEDNESDAY
available to anyone who can use them," Stockton said.
The annual fall meeting of
the Southern Valley Athlellc
CHICAGO - AMERICAN AIRLINES AND Trans World
Conference will be held
Airlines announced Tuesday they have been searching the carryWednesday, Sept. 5 at lhe
·011 luggage of all passengers at each terminal in an effort to
office ol Gallla County ·
event hijacktngs. Aspokesman for American said the_ firm ha~
School Superintendent
pr
1 ted the past weeks on "72'/s and on larger atrcralts.
Clarence E. Thompson.
concen
ra A. Warde, president of American, ordere d th e "100
Qeorge
· ,
Business will include an
per cent check," saying "the total screening of all Americans
elecllon of officers, re•lew of
boarding pawngera was being Undertaken at this time to
schedules and plans for lbe
ovlde complete prolectlon for lhem." Both airlines.said most
annual basketball preview.
pr
(Continued on page 10) .

ByBOBHOEFLICH

II takes a heap of living to

make a home. By the same
token, it's goi ng to take a heap
of work - and contributions to make a coffee house .
A coffee house - as planned
for Meigs County young people
- is th e counterpar t of
yesterday's youth center and
although "the worst is yet to
.come", strides have already
been made toward the
establishment of such a social
spot for young people here .
A committee composed of
adults and young people has
secured a building owned by
Mrs. Margaret Stark on
Pomeroy's East Second St. and
plans are going full steam
ahead for the opening of the
coffee house, p'ossibly as soon
as Sept. I.
It's been said that many
hands make light work and if
that adage proves true the
Sept. 1 opening could be very
realistic. Adult leaders and
young people are quite en·
thusiastic about their coffee
house project and turned out in
numbers Tuesday night to "get
the ball rolling".
Starting from scratch on
such an ambitious project
creates quite a challenge.
Those involved in setting up the
coffee house indicate that
almost everythingls needed from cleaning supplies through
furniture. However, they're·not
. short on confidence and en·
thusiasm.
Rolf Slangel, adult
coordinator of the project,
said the coffee house will •
provide a common meeting
place where youq people

can share experiences,
create projects and follow
them through, and enjoy
group
planning
and
fellowship. The coffee house,
as planned, will provide the
young people a place where
they can assume the
responsibility of leadership,
the re sponsibility
of
management and witness
self-achievement, Stangel
points out.
The committee in charge of
the project believes that the
coffee house will be a great
asse t in com bating any drug,
alcohol and vandalism
problems that exist.
The committee plans to start
slowly, with a management of
young people and adult
courtselors with the first duties
being to create a warm and
youth orientated environment
providing inexpensive food and
beverages and a program of
arts, crafts and music. The
committee hopes to rely on
talented senior citizens to meet
with the young people and pass
on their "know how" in arts
and crafts.
And :- there will be rulos!
From the beginning, there will
be no drugs or intoxicants of
any kind allowed on the
premises and the possession of
drugs will be dealt with in a
cool but very firm manner
decided upon by the adults and
sponsors, the committee
reports .
It is the plan that the coffee
house will be self supporting
through the sale of refresh·
ments , articles made by the
young people and through
entertainment.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Secre·
tary of State Ted W. Brown
said today in his view enough of
the signatures on ·the antitax
petitions have been ruled invalid to stop it lrom being
placed on the November' ballot
but he aaked the attorney general's office w.Iiat action he
llhould take.
In a letter to Ohio Attorney
General William J. Brown, tile
secretary of state said the entire L"Sue has been complicated
by several cases which have
already been filed .
In addition, I have been adCOUNTDOWN
Enrollment
in
the
Southern Local School
District for the 1972-73 school
year is down about 20 under
last year, Superintendent
Ralph Sayre reports.
The total enrollment for
the district as of Tuesday
was 1,032 compared to 1052
for · the past school year.
Schools of the district In·
elude the elementary schools
of Portland, Letart Falls,
Syracuse and Racine and the
junior and senior high
schools located at Racine.

Syracuse Joins
'Sewer District
SYRACUSE - An ordinance
was approved in its firs t
reading, a resolution was
· adopted, and 90 percent of the
money due on the new
Syracuse Fire Station and
Municipal Building was paid
by the town council Tuesday
night.
The ordinance would accept
a roadway on real estate owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Archie Lee,
Rustic Hills Division. Its three
required readings under
emergency measures could not
be approved because less than
five of the coWlcil members
were present.
Council passed a resolution
to become a part of a regional
sewer district in order to
construct such sanitary sewers
and a waste water treatment
plant of sufficient size to
adequately dispose of the
waste situation \Jj?the villages
of Racine and ~tacuse and In
the area around and between
the two villages.
Council agreed to accept the
preliminary plans of the new
town hall and fire station
building and made payment to
Carter and Evans In the
amount of $26,650, or 90 percent
of the amount owing on the
structure. The balanc:e Ia to be

•

'·

I

I

L

vised by the...ppponents and
proponents That additional
protests will be flied in varia~
other counties/' Brown satd.
Brown said with petitions in
from 80 coWltles, th~ signature
drive w!U !aU 31,969 signatures
short ol the 318,4U needed to
put the issue on tbe ballot.
"II is, therefore, my view
that the petition can no longer
be presumed to be su!ficJent
and that I will have the duty,"
under a section of state law,
Brown said "of notifying the
commillee in charge of the
ci rculation as to th e in·
suffi ciency of the petition and
the extent of such in·
sufficiency."
Brown posed the following
questions to the attorney gen·
eral :
- "May I now notify the
committee as to the insufficiency of the petition or
must I wait all of the protests
have been resolved so that I
can determine the full extent of
the insufficiency?
- If at tile time of the first
public!ltion of the advertising
as required by state law the
signatures on the petition are
still proven insufficient am I
(Continued on page 10)

paid on final acceptance of the
plans.
In other business, council
authorized Mayo r Herman
London to purchase insurance
on the new building and its
contents, excluding the fire
department truck, emergency
unit, and equipment on the two
trucks.
It was noted that the mayor
now has license forms for
livestock. Residents who own
livestock have 20 days to make
written application for a
license. After an application is
received it is rev iewed lor
approval by the chairmen of
the sa nitation and safety
committee and a member of
council at-large . If residents
who have livestock fail to make
written application for a
license they wiU be cited into
court. Council intends t~ en·
force the ordinance.
Council also accepted an
agreement for mutual aid for
additional fire protection with
Pomeroy.
Attending were Mayor
Loncton, Robe ~t Wingett, Troy
Zwilling, AI Upscomb and Ed
Neutzllng, council members ;
-George Holman, treasurer;
Kathryn Crow , clerk, and
Milton Varian, polic:e chief.

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