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I

Now You Know

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11m than 100 flavors of ice
~ have been manufac-

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Weather

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Variable eloudillllt
with a chance t/1
detlbowera lOUth. 1f1e11 .. _ _
,,.,:
~ '1011 north to tile ....
south. Clearing tGalcbl LoW
,the low to mid 881. MGIIIJ...,
.Wednelday high In tbfl .._

tured.
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Devoted To 'l1ae lntere&amp;l3 OfThe Meigs-Maaon Area

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VOL XXIV. NO. 57 .

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.- POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
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TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1971

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Fair BO.oks
For MaiJio.gPremium books for the 108th
Meigs County Fair will go into
the mails this week, according
to plans made Monday night by
the Meigs County Fair Board at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
· The annual fair has been set
for Aug . 17 through Aug. 21. The
board also made plans to place
membership tickets on sale 'in
the near future. The tickets, to
cost $3, will admit entrance to
the fair for all five days and
nights for the purchasers and
their cars. Grandstand events
will be free of charge.
Plans were made to provide
fair passes for residents of the
county.. Infirmary and for
children over the age of 12 who

·~
.
PEGGY AND LOU ButtERWORm cl. Albany entertained several hours with ~ocal and ·
instrumental renditions at the Indpendence Day celebration.of the Rutland Fire Department
Monday afternoon.

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Other contestants were
Danny Stone, guitar and vocal,
"Fire and Rain" ; Beverly
.Wilcox of the Rutland area,
GAMES PROVED quite an attraction at the Monday celebration of the Rutland Fire
· vocal, "Put Your Hand in the
Department.
These small fry crowded to this booth operated by firemen.
. Hand"; Debbie Jeffers,
Eastern Meigs, a baton number
of · "Hawaii Five-0" · Donna
Weber and Jane Wear~, a piano
duet, "Comrades in Arms"; a
baton duet by Julie and Joyce
Hutchison; a vocal by Bruce POINT PLEASANT - The involving the death of the further investigatio1,1.
(Continued on Page 6)
murder of a Mason County girl Marshall University sophomore
Police said an eyewitness to
early Sunday apparently oc- at her Camp Conley home. · the I slaying is · the -victim's
curred after a· drug party at- Police said Whitlatch is sister, Debby, 15, who reportended by six males, according related by marriage to the wife tedly at.tempted to fight pff the
to Mason County authorities. of Eugene Williams, brother of assailant with the butt of a
Sheriff 'Troy Huffman said the victim. Drugs allegedly shotgun.
the party at a trailer home near found in Whitlatch's possession
Swann was treated at a
the murder scene was attended will be analyzed by the State hospital for · cuts and an arm
liy ~teve Swann, 21, accused of Police Laboratory Tuesday.
injury, w~ich . appljrently
MORdANToWN, W. Va. the murder of Sall'dra Faye' ~ Names of ~'· ·four otller - l'esulted when-he broke thrOugh
(UPI)-ShorUy after Rep. Har· Williams, 19, and by William persons present at the party a swinging glass door,
ley 0. Staggers, D-W.Va., got Whitlatch , 21 , arrested for were not revealed, pending authorities said.
into a fetid with CBS over "The possession and sale of illegal
Selling of the Pentagon," about drugs.
25 residents here got tOgether Swann is being held without
and decided it was time for bond in county jail here on a
first-degree murder charge
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.
Staggers to be replaced.
But now, a professor at West
Virginia University says the so- ;:;:::::::~::::::::::::::::;~::::::::;;.;;::::::::::::;-~::::::::::::::::::
called Committee to Recall HarMoto-Cross Set
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - and jury tampering.
·
tin
t'
Teamsters
sources say the
Hoffa's successor as head of
Iey Staggers 1s was g une
and effort. ·
The Meigs Motorcycle Club . giant union plans to give the Teamsters, Frank E.
"The only way to expel a wll1 sponsor a Moto-Cross imprisoned former President Fitzsimmons, is expected to get
member of ·Congress is by a sunday at th e c1ub grounds J'unmy Hoff a a $75 ,000 year1Y a $25,000 raise to $125,000 a
vote from the respective cham- located · five miles north of pension and confer upon him year at the current Teamsters
ber,, noted William R. Ross, as- Pomtroy on R11 ute 33. the lifetime title of President- convention in Miami · Beach.
sociate professor political sci- Trophies will be awarded in Emeritus.
Fitzsimmons already is labor's
ence at the university.
all classes. There also will be
Thllre were reports, however, highest salaried union leader.
Ordinary citizens have only a junior class for riders age 15 that Hoffa has asked for a Secretary-Treasurer Thomas E.
one ouster weapon- the polls, and under riding 0.125 cc lump settlement of $1 million Flynn also will get a raise from
he was quick to add.
motorcycles.
instead of the annual -pension: $75,000 to $100;000 a year,
Staggerscameunderfireby
Practice will be from 11
Hoffa resigned ·au of his United Auto workers Presthe commitl!!e when he moved . a.m. to 1 p.m. with races union posts last month to !dent Leonard Woodcock called
to cite CBS and its president, starting at 1:30 p.m. Refresh· improve his chances for parole Monday for Hoffa's parole,
Frank-Stanton, for contempt of · ments will be available at the from the federal prison at terming him a "political
Congress, after the network re- club house.
Lewisburg, Pa., where he is prisoner" of the federal govern(C'ontinued on Page 12)
8;:;:;~:::;~~:::::~•:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::~:::::::::::::::;:. serving 13 years for mail fraud men!.
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Drug ·Party Ends in Murder.

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News ••• in Briefs ! Staggers
·.Targeted
·Cleansing Act, from Within

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By UDited Press International

NEWARit,N.J.-JERBEYCITYMayorThomasJ: Whelan
and seven other Hudson County political figures were convincted
Monday fl. extortlng thousands cl. dollars from contractors and
plotting to ext«t millions more ..The prosecutor said the verdicts
showed "you can fight City Hall - and win."
"'Ole forces of cornlption and venality in the public service, no '
.matter how powerful; can be overcome," said U; S. Attorney
Herbert Stein. ''Our system of government can be cleansed from
within." Seven of the defendants, including Whelan, were convicted on all29 counts of the indictments - 28 counts of extorting
$188,000from three companies and two counts of participating in a
$3.3 mlllion extortion conspiracy. All eight could receive $10,000
fines and years In prison for each extortion COW}t and· $5,000
20
fines and 10 years for each conspiracy count.
· All the defendants were part of the powerful political machine
led fcr 22 years by Johit V. Kenny, former Jersey City mayor and
Hudson Coun~mocratic leader. During the trial dozens of
witnesses described requests they had received for kickbacks
fr001 cl.ficials cl. Jersey City or Hudson County.

Steel Industry Has Warning

WASHINGTON-PRESIDENTNIXONcalledsteelindustry
management and labor representatives into his office today to
warn them that an inflationary wage increa'le could Jeopardize
both profits and jobs. The President then was scheduled to fly to
Kansas City, Mo. for a briefing of Midwest. newspaper and
troadcast executives and then on to the Western White House in
San Clemente, Calif. for a 12-day working visit .
The White House meeting with the steel industry representatives precedes Wednesday's reopening of negotiations on a
nationwide contract covering 450,000 steel workers. The.present
agreement expires Aug. 1. Administration officials said Nixon's
purpose in calling the White House meeting was to urge the
United Steelworkers cl. America to be. reasonable in its wage
·
· demands and to warn that a big pay boost could further erode the
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already weak position of American-made steel in world markets.

'ng H.as to Gl've
Somethl
NEWYORK -CH~FJUSTICEWarrenE. Burgerrejected

Monday the idea to expand the SuPfeme Court from its present
nine members, but suggested several measures to ease th~ ·
number cl. cases facing the overburdened court,
"EitherthequantityorthequaJ.ttyoftheworkoftheSupreme
Court must soon yield to the realities," Burger said in his second
ann~l "State of the Judiciary" message to the American Bar
· Association (ABA).
Burger· also -said the public must be protected from exploitation by a small minoritY of lawyers_and told the legal
profession to "sternly regulate itself from within:' if it wants to
avoid outside regulation.
•

Church Picnic J•1a:ed by Drr,us
• -e·
FARRAGUT STATE PARK, IDAHO .:... SCORES of young'
people wcrked into the night Monday to cle!ffi rubbish discarded
at 'the site cl. a three-day "church picnic" which included
marijuana smoking and nude swimming. A· crowd estimated at
_l2,000,Jamw..d this state park Sunday and did its t.hiJ)g unmolested by law enforcement agents at the Universal Life
Church's "Celebration Of Life."
Heavy drug use was reported in the park. Kootenai County ,
sheriff's deputies arrested eight persons on drug abuse charges
ouiBlde the park Sunday 11nd Monday. No serious incidents were
repcrted. Approximately to rock bands entertained the throng.
Many young people took advantage of the fine weather to bathe
rude in nearby ponds.
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H_ouse Swung Over for Pullout

WASHINGTQN - PJlESIDENT NIXON riaks losing his most
stalwart supporter of Vietnam policy - the House !If Represen·
tatives - If he •
down the latest Community peace offer, an
infii'Jil81 survey of well.placed coniU'essmen showed today.
(Continued on Pa~e 12)

Attending Monday night's
meeting were Wallace Brad·
ford ,' vice president, wbo
presided; Mrs. Marvin' ~. ·
~cretary; Fred Goegleib, Bill
Smith, Marvin King, 8111
Downie, Rex Shenefield, Danny '
Zirkle, Ben Slawter Oaude
Henderson, mem~; · c. E.- .
Blakeslee, and Mrs. Janet
Korn, public relations officer.

2 Charges Made

~, BestTalentShow in Years
PICTiiRES AND STORY · Lancaster.
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Taking first place prize
I. RUTLAND- One of the best .111oney, $25, was Ronald Hupp,
talent shows in recent years 22, Columbus, w_!lo presented a
highlighted the annual In· piano solo, "Alley Cat." Second
dependence Day celebration of place, a prize of $15, went to
the Rutland ·Fire Department Ubb Ann Watkins, .six, Mid·
Monday night.
dleport Route 1, who presented
Traditionally emceed by a twin baton act. Winning third
Vernop Weber ,last night~s show prize, $10 in cash, was Kim
cl.fere(\ not only local talent but Batey, 10, of Middleport, with
other performers from cities as her vocal, "I Hear Those
distant as Columbus ·' and Church Bells Ringing."

live at the county clllldren'•
home.
. Special grandstand shows
featuring out-of-county talent
this year will be Jim Ed Brown
on Aug. 19, and r.OOzo and Olear
and Helen, and Billy Scott, on
Aug. 21.

u0 ffiIJ Renszon
• set··

John .Homer Hobbs, 18,
Mason, was ci~to court on
two charges following two
accidents Sunday at Royal Oak
Park, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
At 8:10p.m. Hobbs, in pulling
from a parking area at Royal
Oak, struck a car driven by
Giles Lee Hysell, 15, Minersville. Hobbs failed to stop and
later was driving on Royal Oak
Road apparently at a high rate
c1. speed when trying to avoid a
pickup truck lost control and
'skidded hi~ auto into a
telephone pole barely mlsslng
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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Extended Outlook Tbur1 _,
day throu&amp;b Satarclay
IU&amp;h &amp;empenam ranllll
from 111e IIIW ... te .._ 1ft
BOund low• fnlm &amp;Ill mlil•
to the low '711. A ebpce o{
showers Friday and Saturday.

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10 Building8
Go ffi
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CLEVELAND (UPI) - Arson
was tentatively blamed for a
raging fire Monday that
engulfed an east side industrial
complex which Included 10
buildings. Five firemen were
injuredflghtlngtheblaze.
Cleveland Fire Chief .Wllllam
E. Barry said there was no
doubt the blaze, which waa out
cl. control for aeveral hours, was
set. He said the fire was started
in six different sppta on the

the pickup head-on .
Hobbs was cited Into CGUDty
court on charges cl.lea._ tbe
scene of an accident and
reckless operation. II.J!!!!~ ·
cl ted to juvenile court
charges of no operator'• ·
license.
Saturday at 8:to p.m. on SR
143, a single car accident waa
fe~X1'ted.

Jack Lee Goode, Rutland,
reported that as he rounded. a
curve he was unable fo steer bla
car.TbevehiclellklddedDifeet •
before hopping on ltl top.
The car was ctemollllbed.
Goode BUitalned a laceratiaa to
his left arm and left lllde but
waa not Immediately treated.
No citation wu -...s.

Arlene may
Stay at Sea
MIAMI (UPI)-Arlene, 1M
season's first tropiCal llaftll,
moved toward the vr r
chusetts coast with gaie.lclta
winds today but the Nau.al
Hurricane Center said indlcetions were that It w-- not
come 11shore.
"Slnce the storm la --·" ..S
should stay at sea, j)ll 1 1
Indications are that pill IIIII'
most of the rough _, llllf
swells will be confined to tbe
coaital aection m utleme
southeast Muucholettl and
possibly just to Nantacbt
llland," the hurricane teita
said In a midnight advlaory.
Arlene's polition at I &amp;IlL
EDT waa estimated at 11112 It
39.6 north and longl&amp;udl 71.1
west, or about 111 milellllllbsouthwest of Nantucket.

15'l RJU~
. ed ln Eiuht
u l'da y A u,o
, lr~lS
711' h
:::
b~~g~~c:~IH~ f~~':!ct~~
-e'
nO l
aps
the National Screw and
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Manuf
at least 15
15
. f t~tal ~f
~r:: were !Jle highway into a cree~. There motorcycle operated by Mike Wolfe, ~· Belpre, and Richard ~~~ ~clal estimate toward the northeaat, willa
m ured an on~ ha Y was was moderate damage to his Sheets, 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis. T. Frtley 36 Pomeroy ~ d
b tit
bell ed center
cl. 50

miles per ._.

recor ed in e1g t separate
tr ~f·
Ih
.
ti ted
a1 1c m s aps mves ga
• th J
·F th H0l'ds
1 Y
over e u1Y our
weekend by the Gallla-Meigs
PoThst Sftatel Hlghdway Patroled.
· e ata acci entoccurr at
11:30a.m. Saturday on Rt. 35,
west of Rio Grande where Paul
Raymond Boo~h, five-year old
son of Mrs. Louise Booth of
Thurman, died of injuries
suffered when their station
wagon was struck by another
vehicle. ,
The patrol arr~ted 37 persons, issued 65 warnings and
assisted 33 motorists.
Four persons were injured in
a two vehicle collision at 2:55
p.m. Tuesday on Rt. 21B, .three
and two tenths mlles from the
Gallla-Lawrence County line.
Officers said cars driven by
Dayton A. Wllliams, 52, Rt. 1,
Crown City, and Catblene G.
Wilks, til, Rt. 1, Chesapeake,
collided. Injure(~ were &amp;th
drivers and two passengek in
the Wilks ·auto, Louise Pruitt,
33, and Marsh•· Pruitt b!Jth
sustained minor lacerations.
M~s. Wilks was ~barged with
fa1lure to stop within the
assured clear dlatan~.
Three minor accidents were
investigated Sunday. The first
occurred at 1 a.m. on·Rt. 77!1,
three and one tenth Miles south
of Rt. 141 where Hann011 Barry 1
20, Patriot Star Rt., fAiled to
negotl81ie a cune,lost control c1.
his car, ran &lt;if the lllft side cl.

car. Apassenger, James Barr-y,
21, Ashland, Ky., suffered
mino~ injuries. ./
Amotorcyclist was injured in
a car-motorcycle accident at
1:45p.m.SundayonRt.l41,otte
tenth . of a mile west of
Gallipolis. The patrol said an
~uto driven by Vernon L.
W~demeyer_, 17, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, colUded with a
.~

Sh
.
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' Ul amages, u was
ev
eets complained of injuries co_llided. Friley was charged they would run into the .... __
b t
t ·
d' t
th DWI d istin
,..,,
u ·was no 1mme 1a e1Y WI
an res. . g arrest. dreds of thousands of dollars.
treated. Wedemeyer was
A rearend collision was In·
h
~~~ed with failure to signal a ~=~!irgdaa~d ona t th!: 20Bla~:: ::::::;.-c:~=~~;X;:::::::e::~::::~:::::::i8Y.:?.3!:m~;
NEWYORK(UPI)-Louil
A final Sunday accident oc- :~~ ~~r~·na:u=~~~ti: "Satchmo" Armatrong, the
curred at6:15 p.m. on Rt. 7, five Frank Queen, 21 , Eureka Star gravel-voiced s!Dger and jan
tenths of a mile south of Rt. 248 Rt., Gallipolis, struck the rear trumpeter, died today at bla
in J14eigs County. Officers of a car operated by Irvin J. home. He wa• 71.
reported cars driven by Gene Warren, 22, Rt. 2, Crown City.
ArmatrongwasbornJuly,,
11100, the soa of a bouemald
and a turpeatlne factory.
worker. He grew up oD
Perdido Street · Ia New
Orleans where jau waa bo111.

7

CHAPTER TO MEET
Meigs County's DAV Chapter
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
at the hall on Butternut Ave. In
Pomeroy. Refreshments will be
served. Veter1111 of all wari are
invited, M. L. Kelly, adjutant,
said.
·

Lincoln BeJildl. SheW...._
to Veterans '«nMlrial Hrt'Uil
where lbe • tnated fll' •
lllneu and . . . . .id. At •••
p.m. Moaclaf,llll .... wd
the Ben x...

z•
...,,....
Mlnersvllle, who N
1D
Veterans ~ - INIIl.
treated foi
releued.

NO QUORUM
Due 'to a lack &lt;i querum,
Pomeroy council did not mee.t
Monday night. :

TAKING FIRST PLACE honors 1ft the 4th &lt;i July parade in Racine wu the Baptist Church .
..- .....~See otherpicturel on Page 8 taken by 1Cat4e Crow.
•

Temperature In downtown pra~e • •
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m.
waa 78 degrees under partly
cloudy skies.
))I'Glllftlt
/

milel •

SQUAD CAJ.I.ED
The Pomeroy emersenq
squad anawenc1 a can at 11:•
p.m. SundaJ for Betty LlndiiJ,

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LOCAL TEMPS

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windl

h a-•- • -'-"· t. '"-d
our. ~orce w..... u ,._
100 milea from the center at
the widest point.
.
'l1te hirrlcane center aid
Arlene was e~pected to vw
slightly toward the. nor:bellt,
then turn later toward eutncrtbeast, maintalninl abaa&amp;
the same forward apeed and
paalng east c1. Nantucket
'd\ll'lng the day.
Gale .arn1ngs wete up from ~
Block bland, R.K., to Olatham,
Maas.,lncluding Nantucket.

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Give the. Hunter
. His Proper Due

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. Like a lot Of activities In this ~ologically minded time,
the lljl(lrt or pastime or profession of hunting has come in
for a lo~ of knocks.
.··
~wting Is .not . only barbaric and unnecessary, it is
cla_imed, but it has a detrimental effect on wildlife populations.
,
:•concerned over Increasing antihunting sentiment, The
Wildlife .Society has. gone on record in strong support of
huntin' m the United States," reports Fred G. Evenden,
executive ~tor of the conservation organization headquartered ~Washington, b.C.
, ··
More than anyone, he says, the~professional conserva- .
tionis! .is. aware that the hunter plays a vital role ilt
today • wildlife management programs. '
Hun!Qrs (&gt;BY more tllan ~ million for wildlife restoralion each year. Hunting license fees are the backbone of
50 s~te f1s~ and game departments. An excise tax on
hunting equipment provides over $40 million a year earlllarked solely for wildlife. No other group can ~atch
. these contributions.
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As to the morality of killing wild animals. many people
fall to comprehend tl)at these animals will die whether
~ey are hunted or not, and in ·nearly aU cases they will
die a much slower ahd (&gt;Binful death. If animals are
overprot~ , overpopulation results and starvation is the
inevitabl~ re.sult.
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: "Sport huntl!'g Is regulated to maintahi healthy bal·• .anees In wildlife populations," says Evenden. "Seasons
are o_pened only when there is a genuine abundance of
• wildlife an~ hunti!'g is neeaed to bring the popufation In
, b~e With available food. This regulated -hunting in; sures ~ealthy populations of wildlife for the future while
) providing recreation for 17 million Americans each year."
: He goe$ even · further and claims that "without the
: hunter tl!~re would be little, if any, wildlife left iri
• America.
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• For those who like to hunt, this 'Is a welcome pat on
; the back.
; For those who dis_!ike hunting, and hunters, and are con-.
.' cerned ~bout wildlife, It may at least allay their worst
; fears.
:: ~ ~enden, of . course, is talking about the responsible ·
_: nun_te~ w~o obeys the laws an.d who, happily; is in the
: maJority m the hunting fratermty.
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.. :; Carl.Alkire, who has been shearillg academic locks at
:· the umverslty since 1935, notes that more and more-stu•, dents are .h11ving their hair "cut moderately long but
:: neater and more often."
·
·
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:; "'Tbl:s rs··especially true of younger students, but grad:; uate students are also weariQg shorter iiiid neater hair
; Even more indicative, faculty members, · who know a~
;. Ideological bandwagon when they see one, are having
: their bair cut more often and to slightly shorter lengths.
~ "People seem to be taking greater pride In their ap;: pearance," says Alkire. "Men get their beards trimmed
:: DOW Instead of latting them grow wild."
.; This is only one school, an,d it is far too early to tell ·if
·•. the sc.roungy, scruffy era is really ending. For thousands
,:, of depressed barbers around the country, it must sound
~· too good to be true.
·
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~~ H;i;~--H;i}rU~l

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;~ 11
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By Helen Bottel ·

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:; YOlJTH ASKED FOR IT!
;~
'lbll column II fiJI' young people, their prOblems and
;:: plulures, their troubles and fun. Aa with the rest of Helen Help
:::U.lll welc«nes laughs but won't dodge a seriOUB question with a ·
~~ brulb-olf.
~
::Bend your teenage qUestions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
·: GIIWen Help Us! this newspaper.
:; PREGNANT BRIDE.
:: WANTS BIG WEDDING
i: Deer Helen:
:;
I'm not ashamed. My friends know I'm pregnant. Terry, my
:: fiance, and I are happy about it. OUr wedding is planiled for uezt
:: month, and II was to be the big, fancy celebration that my mother
,:; and I always wanted, my belng the only girl. I won't "show" by
:; then. So why not go ahead wiih the plans?
;:
But my parents say "No." They want us to get married right
:: away In a neighbOI'Ing state, then make the newspaper an·:: noancementadateless thing, Implying that we were really wed in
:: lhi ipring.
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:;
In these modern times, is It necessary to hide what doesn't
:; upaetyou 01' your.contemporariea? U I caved In and "ran away'.'
:: It would be to plesse a few of my folks' gossipy friends, for even
:: my mother and father aren't too unhappy or Slll'p'lsed. After all,
.;: they knew we roomed together at college.
:;l
Which ill it, Helen; lovelyweddlng, or elopement?- TERRY
;:: AND ME, (And BabY Makes Three)

•:• Dear HMeU:
;:;
Lel'sbepracUcal : you and Terryneedmoneyfordoctor bills,
;.:; a crib, layette, baby food, etc. much more than you need a laney
.:•: wedding. Perhaps your folks will apply the several thousand
·~ ;: ·dollan they save lila bigger prodUction -their grandchild.
';:;• Also pendulums swing. Who knows how "premature parents"
, :;: will be' viewed a decade or two !rem now? Perhaps you 'U
; :; IIOIIHlday be glad your wedding dale wasn't "fixed" with
; :: newap&amp;P.8f stories and the remembered "talk" that goes with aU&lt;: out atravaganzas. - H.
•::Deer Helen:
. ;: I read the letter about marriage contracts and really got
~::. deprell8ed. How about love? U you're going to inarry, you should ·
~:: be so much in love you KNOW it Will last. You shouldn't have to
':,•':learn or test love, leaving a wide-open door if you guessed wrong.
This iB a selfish, gimme-gimme kind of partnership. Why
..:~marry at aU? - IN LOVE FOREVER
.

..

~ ;:

Seems to me a "marriage contract with renewable options,"
~::u IIIGI!Ited by "Forward Thinker" would be aU in the men's
H a fellow is w.orking his way through coUeg.e and decides
:;:;he Willis a girl Ill share expenses, do his chores and sleep with
~~:blm -and llbe'a unwU!ingwithoulmarrlage - then aU he need do

•;!;rawr.

.:::11 Gifer • "contract." AI the ~nd of !he one-year

"change your
::::mllld"pl!riod, he could say "Getlostl" and find a new girl. .
~;: M far the seven-year "lake it or·lesve It" decialon, what
+-:41tppe,. to the children? And to the furniture, house; car, other
~!Pc.wedU~~?.Dissolution wouldn't be as simple as It sounds - but
~-1here might be many more break-ups because of the law.
:::- If you marr)i on these grounds, you won't tri as hard,
• wher .. 1 church wedding Implies lasting love and inspires a will
to dJIIIp and adjust to each other.
I ~!ape "F,T.'s" predlctlona neverccme true! - K.H.
Belen:
.
.
rmiiii!Dl' marriage contracts. Because I'd like to lreak"mine
1rJ apln.- BARNEY, AFTER FIVE YEARS
Jl,eadtn:
l'ldllcllllbly, those against ~a~e contracts were the very
•'lever i!larrleds." Those in favor were the older, "wish
types. llut lfM1 "anti-contract" people outnumbered
iiot.ol" lour · t~ one. ~ H .

1'-!.

\

1M' ·• ..._.etc,-

.,

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the Sports
Desk
•

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llleb. ia Dmcl". ........

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. Merrldi:'f!....... wltb wbaiiW!r critiC tlkel tbe
ll'sdlerrlc:k""" not only ~lilt IIIOfley
· · N, Y. 'f!mel dramupace tbi1 ,., llld It does fGullllllical (-DOOand ap; 'way!IJII) arplily
.IIIOYible poat. Mrrrict 1111 bJabt with &lt;•110,000 llkywardi) lor .-ra, 'lblll be llba
fiv~ TlniiUI,iiiC IInce 11roob AUdM!!ll, and 1111 II opel ty and dra~ ~ cruUve people
j1iat to kl!w IU IPieeo ID, W11b lll!iOried TV araund it.
.
1
crib; Iii fad, aD TV crltlel. .
Even with a ftop such as hi&amp; "Breakfut at
It II an blllarable ~ lbl8 billllng of 111fany'a" (teOO,OOO c.:. mart ~ down the
·JI'Oib!en ve. crib. It mn liu llbn 1111 dolla' drain) be tried a differeD~
' Oljniplan IIIPII:aucllaa when Ben Wt, In thnltoJIIII'Chto:whlllltlelllplttllltheroad;·
,.
II'~ of protlndnc a mlnclltla fllrkeJ. llfllr hi&amp; Merrick hired Eclward Albee, nolle! tor hi&amp;
~ Gl wrl~ eplaeby acriptl fat ibt J11aCt IG1llllypoomynepUvlainll)tryiDdpropup10
&lt;",FfOnt PIP" etc.) and !lima (•'Notldag . deiJchtfully trivilla ptopei ty a.i 'rruman Cepote
8&amp;!!'841" ele.), D1an11tiJ to atrichme of tbe Crlglaated. That ~ trick didn't
· 1Vint critlcalalluliin ibe b11torJ ~ !be ..,..; wwk as Its final foible, and Metrlek promptly
tuney. Ben rellllallid aa •-u bla 'diliptfully cloelid'lt Ill the road, a total lou,,art~~t~•· and
l18itY ~t wllb tbe acicl•111 111 that ertucJ are llnand•Dy.
•
"'lbe Jakel .Fimlly of JGUrlllllam." Now that'•
Merrick however does llid cJd lmow what to
tlaiis l Gooil abull96 di&amp;IIDcU111,
do With a PI'. . t7 to make It I BdWy lit. TGday,
' .David ,Meirlct In bia' latter,diy 1inssdntl)' Davld'laiOIOOwbat tired alinphotlllr morupt
litlllcb 111ce noted be woidd love to take drama to impart whole lhowa lnm pi'0¥111 LOnd1111
reparten- be berred NBC's Ed Newman Ill· runs; lllchas ''Midtummer NIJhl'a
lial.
tlrely "; lllll_cbue them~ llrol'uy with a 11ea11111 ~ "Rolencranllll Gulldenitern" a.few
B A It B S ; basebllU bat. We know one,wrlfllr wbo COllilteftd 11ea10111 earlier. Bec•!M they allo evidenced
. , By PHIL PASTORET
· Wlth,,"liJJ spot bini the ball .bat." 11ie cballen8e mcre esthetic poaaii)Uillel than portended adwy.
.
.
· . · ~aJn'f accepted f. Merrick doesn't accept ptpularlty, Merrick financed thelll with bli qwn
Academic standing ls wha,t ..a..n-es .,.,v lays tbem dowil without charity foundatilll which baa ·lrousht to the
a lot Of young folk are going , ..~'? · .o -v
··
·
·
L.~.
'
to be soon doing, while walt- f~ Ill'• • SUD, be alwa)'lllghlena a dUD llOIIl1lll lots Gl u1latlc lleJ:nl not geared to hts
ing 'in line .for books,_tqltion n 111111, evetllbe 1111t1 be contrlilllelto,.wiJtch noU0111 Of lheer pure ptJiiullr CIIIOCIII, unlike
receipta, clasl schedules ·' ·. liawbeen=areidlut.MetTlcklaagocidprotluCer "Cactus Flower," whlcb be u'w u IUf'e1IOP
• ' '
•. .. -~aereatonelf y1111 elate 1111 blatoryof boiDffi~ bait and backed entirely with hi&amp; own
. · Moat~ratur.fi1'.111J
.
· casb·er•o behauleddown100pct.oflllprollts
outgu~ckltpoperbacks
. ·. · 1•
,
: . .·"·
.
• .,. ,
use tripewriters;
• lq bil1ltll'ld IIWUb with .lhe 18 unions he lnsteadoflbeSOpct, a producer normally takes,
• • •
must deel with before •tardns a produclloo, with lelvlnfthe oth« half to hla becken.
Our favorite water!Dg spot tbe' trauma 11.· tryout trouping, the mer- ·
You see, David knon whereof he Infests.
has had toplesS waitresses d!andl~'~ng of I!if glludY product - he 11 a past . Musicals, thouJh, oo•ally soUclt 1)11 loyal
for· yeara,-not a braIn In and ture master Of !be ar_tohte•llna -"Ud"' lutgtime.· a~ell .who ~ In Wbete David fears
their heads.
.-. v
··
space - M~ct
lll1llt be. appreciated ail the to tread as a flnanctallndlvlduallst .
.

.

Bakers, .Newsies, Win

PO LARA/ AIR-CONDITIONING SPECIAL

WIN AT IIRIDOE

Jump to Game~-Then What? . ·
.

Noam'

5

·

shows a definite stop bid.
North wants hla partner to
piar three '!o-lrum~. and has
no mterest m slam . .

: ~; 73
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EAST : .

.J53

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• J2
.Q10543

••,Jain t , .t .i r touflftfttflff-wi""illf
tochniquor ,., :fls ·121·book.
F•r~ ,rou: ""' ami Mmt, ftdrtu,
zip 'Cc. oJ I att4 SJ fO: "Win Cl'

• Q10
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• Void
¥J10854

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• KJB654

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tA

.2

Jim: "South wins the first
Both vulnerable
IN.T.
spade
because
he
does
not
Pass 3N.T. Pus Pus
want a shift to hearts. Then Weal North Eat South
Pa,.
he plays a club to dummy's Paso 4•
Opening lead-'!•
Pua· 4N.T.
ace. If he is careleil, be will Pus
St
Pua 6· ·
continue by playing the king Pus foss
Pus
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby of clubs. East will show out
Opening
leadt K
.Jim: "One of the · most .and South will be set."
confusing bids is the jump
Oswald: "There Is a very By Olwald &amp; Jameil Jacoby
to game. What is it? A pre- easy
safety play here. He
empt, a stop bid or some must lead a low club toward · JACOBY MODERN follows
sort of slam 'try?"
his jack. This will cost him modern expert practice and
Oswald: "The experts have a tr1ck if the queen of clubs plays tliat all direct ralaes
done httle to stop the .con- were going to drop but It are limit lilds. The single
fusion .. One reason may be guards against any 4-1 break. raise shows 7-9 supportfng ·
they are also confused."
If East bas the last three points, the raise to three
Jim: ''Our own rules are· c,lubs; the best he can do Is (single Jump) shows lG-12
that opening-suit game bids to rise with hi&amp; queen. West with at least ieven In high
are preemptive, tllat · jumpil holds them and his queen cards and the .jump to four
to game after partner has captures South's jack but shows at least 13 points In
limited his hand are· stop SOuth is now able to 'finesse support.
bids, that other jumps to against West's 10 and bring · Supporting points are In
game tell partner 'that you In the rest Of the suit.''
addition to high card and
want to play in game In !hit
distribution. You count one
denomination and that he
~'
point ext'ra for each trump
can go on If he has a lot
over three and one point
more than the minimum
•
•
•
extra
for each slqgleton or ·
values for his bid. If Inter, The kid nezt door ha8 a void. Furthermore, you cheat
ested in slam, we ap~roach
dune buggJI-425 "dune" a little on the light side.
game by other means. '
-he bought it from a Thus, the North haild counts
Oswald: "Today's Ii and
Scolclf' used-car dealer.
13 points In support ·of one

1.

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'

spade, but we woul~. give the
same raise without the jack
of diamonds.
North . has no ld~§ ai!Qut
what his-partner
make.
He does know that, if •"his
partner has' a minimum, the
opponents have haU the high
cards and the hand may belong to them, so he is mak·
ing It hard for them to com·
pete.
Actually, South has a very
big hand. With two first·
round, plus two second·
round controls and a strong
two-sutter, South wanta to be
in six if his partner has an
ace. He uses Blackwood and
bids the slam.
There Is nothing to the
play. South wins the dia·
mond lead, draws trumps
and claims his contract,
while conceding a club trick.

.J]g~r~..rl w~ . I7~~.

can

'
WEST

Yorl,

Eut-West vulnerable
West North Eat Soulh

•

MODERN: AmoriU'o top uports

IM~,.7,1&lt;/o tllis _.,..,..,}, P.O.
lor U9, Radio City Stollon, No•

~J7

$219 OFF*!

Jump 'to 4 .Shows 13 Plus
NOR111
.A9732

IHIWSP.\Pil INTIIPIISI

=

!

Tho bld!llnl hu 'boen:
we.t North Eat South
1•
Pble
?
.!o1u4 :"~ 7';'~'• .._, 7 83
~
What do you do now?
A-Bid t11ree hw1l. Thla Ia
aliPtly weoker tlw! tho nonllll
UmJt ralae. With • . - . luond
you would redollble.
TODAY'S QUESTION
West bids three sptdes. Your
partner puses and Eut bids
four spades. What do ,you do
now?

3

'

Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
·
Dear · Dr. Lamb-In'. regards "to your. c91WDD .on
P r u de r y can . jlopardlle
health I must 111v boW true.
I am not eolnt:!4~ p.- b .
I was hosplta
~- ..._._
• ,_....,
slve urination, oaf uart 'at
night and getttn1 ·• fiYW or
six times. I was ~te~fon
for h e r n I a Iii ' my left
groin and whUe ' tllen t~Jel·
searched !DY bladder 811i1
stretched my proltale eJ&amp;IId,.
After two montha tbere II
no Improvement.,lbaw eold ·
hands alitl feet aid III!ICb
cramping at n1a11t: Alter
sexual lntercourM blOOd 1D
semen after
What could calllt
t IIIII
full of pep most df
time,
I . exerciae and wlfeb my .
d1et. I am .81 yean )'OUDI
and my doctor l8ld 1 could
still fa fh e r bablea. How
"You're plwoys to/king about getting bock to nature- . about that?
.
,
how about mowino the lown1'' ' 1
'
'
Dear Reader- Vee, bow

~

'

abO,!J( that.. Y1iu are ju't a
spring chicken compared to
some men who have lathei'e!l
cblldren. l auapect ·the most
common eaUH lor the blood
tl •· 1nf1
you mtlll on .. an
ammatloD Of eltbar your prottate.
Jliand or the semlrial veaI.CJu. The latter are Uttle
lilly pouches like llddlebags .next to the prOitate,
wbere semen 11 llored. Uli·
lela lt Ia treated you may
not have as m.ucb pe~ aa you
now ·have. &lt;\II lnlectiOII ~y­
wbere can eventually dec . - a peraon'a eneJ1Y
lttval. Some people even have
fever from lnftammatlon Of
the prostate. 1hl1 Ia not the
lhiDII as aimple enlarftllltllt but ·in acute Infdon ·tnaiOIIOIII . to &amp;aving
an ~trtely Infected throat or
alnlll4ia."
· .
Many readers write me
thet . have p1·evented leg
craftiPI at night. by wearing
s!Oicklngs to ht!fl, win·

•,;•Uoll. -•

.

1l

d

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""'I'

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• \J

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ter and sliniiller .'
Dear Dr. Lamb- My
18 yean Of age,
waa treated by a doctor for
an underactive thyroid con·
dlUOD (determined by examlllation, no symptoms) .
She was given tablets for
aboUt ' ailt months, then
checked qaln. This time the
thyroid wu overactive and
had cauaed bar \0 become
very nervous. He did not
give any medication for this
6ut attar about two months,
the thyroid wat normal. She
IIIII lW IICCIIional bouts of
nervouaneu, poalbly aasoclatetl with bar period and
the ila~d. Pleaae explain
bow fler thyroid Willi from
lllllllractlw I o overiiCIIve
and then to normal with no
medlcatlcih In about eight
months.
~ughter,

Dear Rtndcr- The body Is
a curl~us, wonderful· muchlne. )'eal'S ago when 'tht•re

I

'

were less satisfactory methods for treating overactive
thyroid condition• doctor• became aware that their thy·
rold patlen!J would · have
overactive thyroid cOIIdltiohJ
In ,the spring and fall. And
don't ask me why·. :rhe
. gland seems to have cycles
of more or less activity. If
your daughter had In fact
had a nCJrmal thYI'Oid at the
beginning the amall amount
of thyrofd given would ' not
!lave had any Influence. The
thyroid .gland wo»&gt;d ailllply
put out len thyrolcl hormOM.
So that hat notblnl to do
with her case. If the had an
overactive thyroid &amp;Ia n d
the~ she may have It aptn
later.
INIWWAPU llltU..III A1111.) ,

1

•

,,.

,

1 •

can

l

·COMPACT-SIZE. MINI-PRICE!

DART DEMON.

help

•

1n.

'ITY ,

OAN

&lt;-1-

""' ,_"tWo -"""·
,.,.,. WAllo

IMIWhol
loltltl o/

ltHfrl, llo oWl ,.,..,., ~"'""' In '"'"' .........

•.

· ·you ·

.....,..,.,,
...t. . .. .......... f. "-'M.
M.D., In mw ol
lit. Lamb

•

many
ways..

~~.Rrude'ry Cari ·Threaten Health:
'

HOSPITAL NEWS

•

;lloitla

y~u

DR. LAWIINCI I. 1AMI
'
, At 8J, H~ : Tallcs About Problems
'

!o

•

r---------------------------1

~SSN . )

,I

BERRr'S WORlD

I

CITY
LOAN
CASH

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.

f:

$191 OFF*!

.;.
· =:-==-=-===

.

Downing.

R. H. ·RAWliNGS SONS.CO•
MILL AND SEOOND STREETS, .MIDDLEPORT

,,_,be

~

·

1Jia

br

DART SWINGER AUTOMATIC

f
, u

af!IDGE

~on=E~~~::;
ba!ter,

NOW THE.G-OOD GUYS
HAVE MARKED EVERY CAR
.IN STOCK FOR $PECIAL
CLEARANCE.

lbical•s

WIN AT

e ·

·tw:

pream"

WASHINGTON (NEAl
If information now in hand is correct, the heroin traffic
with' American troops in Vietnam is likely to get worse
despite U.S efforts .
. ..
Strong attempts will be made by the men now profiting
from that trade to expand the distribution system in the
United S!at~s to service the addicts they have developed
in the Far East. '·· ,
.
·
,.,;.sonie.ofthts inform~atlcrll'comes in letters from a friend
in close contact with the Vietnamese police, some from
American officials charged .with keeping an eye on illegal
Vietnamese traffic and some from American customs of·
ficials, who make no bones about the difficulty they face
in preventing heroin smuggling.
So far as can be gathered, the principal bankrollersthe men who furnish the funds and rake in the bui.R of the
profits after agents, officials, transporters and sellers are
paid off- are an interconnected group of Chinese financiers in Hong Kong; Singapore and Macao.
.'
These men are 'international, with business associates
in Thailand, Laos, Malaysia, SO!\\~ Vietnam, Burma and
Conl!nunisl China. In the main ;'ho'Wever, 'the top merl are'
themselves believed to be neither Communist or nonCommunist.
A friend who is an officer in the opium detail of the
Thai police says that some members of the Chinese communities in several nations work together in a close
"family" relationship similar to that of the Mafia in the
United States, with their own codes, "kinship" loyalties
and enforcement procedures.
The bankrollers are "businessmen" who get into any
field where the profits. are large and the risks small. They
move from one type of operation to another according to
opportunity. Opium , from which heroin is refilled, is just
another profitable business venture. The financial wealth,
the wide connections and the tightknit nature of the high
command of these operations make successful attacks on
the structure most difficult.
The opium is grown principally in northern Burma,
Laos, Yunnan Province in mainland China and northern
Thailand. In considerable measure it moves down through
Thailand. Where the conversion is made into heroin is not
clo,ar at this time.
It is estimated that 1,000 tons of heroin a year moves
out of Thailand, but this figure cannot be confirmed as of
now.
Most of the heroin coming into South Vietnam probably
moves on a variety of planes, some Vietnamese-run, some
American, some military and some civilian. It is thought
that some of the men connected with the operation are
Vietnamese and some American. Some officials suspected
(and named in correspondence by U.S. officials) are
closely related to high officials in the South Vietnamese
government.
Though the bankrollers have wide trade, financial and
official associations throughout Southeast Asia, their con·
nections with heroin distributors in the United States are
believed limited, and it may take some time to develop
efficient connections, most American distributors being
associated with European or Latin·l\merican rings.
But the Hong Kong-Slngapore-Macao· men do have relationships with a number of shady trading companies in
the United States and otl)er countries in connection with
some of their corrupt import-export ventures. These associations could conceivably be utilized in making the
contacts necessary for developing the heroin trade here.

e

Thomas' Double
•·
.
.
s
.t.or .Br··ave
·
s
Wm

.tursleal

.Orugs-for-\ils
Traffic Booms

~

fifth error,
The next

'

'

-n:a

RAY CRt.. "'lEY

''

'

it Butthescoringdidn'tendthere passed four .
Dave Burnett then la:d _down· a but big Dave died lhertl •
Meigs American Legion split . Marl ettallcoredalltheruns
· Inning of the The Tigers added another run in· · Gene Powe11 , R
D'1xon, squeeze bunt .to· bnng m Vanneeded
In
the
first
oger
.
. . VanMatre groll!lded 11111 to the
their double hea~er witli
Chet Tannehill
· Marietta Sunday at Syracuse as opener as they poured across the second and fourth and two in Dave Boyd, Dave Burnett, Bob Maire. ~rn~tt was safe at ft:! sh~~~~~g~ down, . Marlett.
"'"'"-'··~-.~~~.:-_..._..~
'
. .....-·---,_:.._.._.._..
'
they dropped tlie opener '-1 but four runs on a walk, an error, the fifth ·while allowing Meigs Werry, and Perry ail· IJild ~ a throwl~ erro~!k.;din wasn't ·out rl. it. The ~
Jll~her,Lonru~Bush.
ralliedwltharuninthellfth~
came back to take the nightcap, and four back-tll'back singles. only one in the second inning. SlngilliJ for Meigs .. ·
It's good to be home.
In
that
second
inning
Meigs
Harris
and
Riley
·led
the
Ritchie
as
hi!'~
~rounder
·~
·
'. I'm frequenUy lisked: "How - and why - did you ever get ii-4. Meigs now Is at 12-9.
looked as though it might have wirmers with a double and scooted through the third twointhesixthtocomeclose,a
·back !Jete after growing up in the Pacific Nm;thwesl?" As if that
pulled it out when .they loaded single each,
baseman's legs. .
.
5;-4 •
II GOd's'Country (actuaUy·arum of that Utlewas made in the 30s
the bases with one out. But
SEalND GAME
. . At this polnt,Marietta tried to Meigs leading hitter was
, starring Barton McLane set In the.big ilmber count&amp; of south·
sharp fielding by Marietta let In the second game Meigs p1ck Bush off f1rst but the throw Gary Hart with a triple and
westWaahington) and the Ohio \'alley is a place Jess benign:
only one run through on Stan broke loose fiJI' five runs in the was qild, and Burnett . scored Powell, Dixon, and D!m!Oikey
.The answer to that question does not belong here; suffice it to
Perry's sacrifice fly. '
third inning o_n only two hits and from third Ill make the score 3- singled. Tom BeardstOI!e led the
}I
Wirmine pitcher Tim Miller held on Ill wm ii-4.
1.
losers with two singles.
say ll)e Padfic Northwest is too wet for my respirafocy system.
aliowed
only
six
hits
to
the
hard
Rick
VanMatre,
leading
off
On
the
play,
Bush
advanced
to
Hick VanMat~e was
One seea no S11J1 for montl:lti on end fromNov~mher through April,
·
hitti M · team H truck the third was safe on an error third and scored on Gene WIMIDg Pilcher. He passe~
ooly rain, clOuds, air so ~olatlt drips, literally.
.
Two
.games
were
play~
in
Glea:·
other
arne
the
M
ets
out ~e a~~~alked
~erry, Bob Rikhie was hit by thfi Powell's perfect bunt single. and sbiick o~l two. ,.Tile loser
.Rain and fag ccmpUcate high school fOQthall games on the
LitUe J,.eague action cainme fr·o·m. beghln·d· to score charged with the loss, gave up pitcher' Howard Taylor Powell got to second as .Dave,, was Jim Robmson lVho .fanned
WI!Stern slope between the Cascades and the Pacific. Another Middleport
Monday, ' the Braves again
1
B d
f
th Tigers tw nd alked two
oa w
.
.
factor, perhaps more serious, hinders .football in central and beating back their closest three runs in the final inning 10 hits, struck out five, and sacrificed the runners a ong, oy was sa e on e
eastern 'Oregon where my brother and family Uve.' Prineville, challengers, the Indians, 4-3 in and drop the Reda into the
pojNiatlon&amp;;ooo plus, hl!s a high school that•last y~r competed in an exira inning, and the Mets cellar.
AAA against schiiQ)s .lhue dmes Ita size (Pendleton, Baker, lrinunlng the Mark VReds, 8-7. The Mets had only four hits,
The Braves, coming from three by Greg Becker and one
Burns, ~th Falls, etc.). This' )&gt;ear Prineville's school
behind,
knocked the Indians out by Jeff Miller. The losers had
population .as down a half-dozen, which permits it to play in AA,
of a tie for first place in the loop nine hits, a double and single
more 10118 size. But wait, that's really no solution.
•
when
Tlnuny Thomas -again each from Case!· and Pickens;
SchooJs·in eastern Oregon send their football teams off early
111 Frldsy morning in time to play Friday at 8 p.m. Even then the hero for the Braves - _Humphrey and 1)Tee each had
their bus drivers have to use a heavy foot Prineville to Pendleton smacked a seventh inning .a double, and Magnotta, CaD
isSOIIlllthlni!Uke 150nilles overfourmountain (the Blues) passes double to knock in the winning and Hag~rty each singled.
of .8,000 fl. ~levation or .;.ore. And Pr~ville, . with manpower run. Thomas socked a grand
about one-third of Pendleton's, absorbs lickings resembling those slam homer Ill win the gilme for HAClER TO WINNIPEG
pastings the late Yellow Jackel8 of Middleport too often took when the Braves when the teams met NEW YORK (UPI)-Shortearlier.
meeting Jackson, Athens, Logan et 1!1.
Steve Bachner pitched the stop Bobby Wine was reactivatNor will Prineville's situation thiS coming autumn, though first six innings for the Braves, ed from the 21--day dlBa bled list
down a classiflcatlori, be much eased. There 'just aren't enough yielding to reliever · Mick by the Montreal Expos Monday
small schools to fill out a sChedule, so It still will have to play Davenport in the seventh. and Rich Hacker was optioned
Pendleton (and other large squads).
Davenport was the winner. He to Winnipeg of the Internalional
'lbe l011g distances traveled make basketball a weekend and Bachner struck out three League 'to make room for him
activity. Games are played Friday and Saturday nights, the team and walked four .
on the roster.
sta)'i!lg ovet in motel or a hotel. This gets to be expensive.
Joey Gleason hurled the Tirst
· Oregon taxpayers, as in most states, are refusing to ante ~P six for the losers and did a INDIANS RECALL PAUL
the bigger bite for schools. And as elsewhere, It Is the athletic fantastic job, farming 14 Braves CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
There's no other deal quite like our all-time success Swinger! Buy :ho~
JI'Dgr8m and other extra-curricular activities that suffer .first. and walking four. Jeff Beaver Cleveland Intlians sent outfielspecially equipped Swinger hardtop, we'll give you the automatic transmission
Oregon has had a stale income tax for a dozen or more years, but took the loss as he pitched the der Ted Ford to their Wichita
farm
club
and
recalled
lefthan·
FREE, (Just like having $191
no sales tax. '!:he income tax is for general revenue, the schools seventh for the Indians.
der
Mike
Paul
from
the
Thomas
led
the
way
at
the
taken off the sticker price!)
receiving whatever they can Obtain by legislative pressure. As
American
Association
team.
plate
as
he
had
two
singles
to
go
here, the property tax'li the base of sehool support.
Hurry - before they're
with
his
double.
Lavender
had
a
After listening to brother Sherm's ltst of problems conall sold .
fronting his youngest son Tommy (sophomore, IHI, 150 lbs. a tight homer and Davenport, a single. RAMS SIGN 1 PLAYERS
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The
The losers had only two hits,
end) Meigs' schoolboy athletics is in fine shape.
lriples by Tony Venoy and Los Angeles Rams ·announced
•
Monday they have seven
• •
players- Ro!llan Gabriel, Mer·
lin Olsen, Joe Scibelli, Deacon
*Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for TorqueFiite
Jones, Coy Bacon, Kermit
automatic tran smission on VS models- $190.60;
Alexander and Clarence Wll·
6·CYiinder models-$182.95.
llams-signed to multi-year
stretched its winning ~tream Ill
Middleport summe~ 7~.
contracls.
four.
In
the
first
game,
Ron
basketball play resumed
Monday evening with the Ohio Ferguson and Mick Childs Although he failed to hit his VESPER CLUB WINS 7
Valley Bakery stomping repeatedly took long passes scoring average, Morris was a
PHILADELPIDA (UPI)
Adolph's Dairy Valley 68-36 and from Jeff Morris and Jimmy tower of strength beneath the The Vesper Boat Club of
boards and unselfishly passed
Th~ Dally Sentinel came off a Boggs Ill score 40 points bet·
Philadelphia junior crews won
do.
w
n
court
to
his
teammales
ween
them
as
the
Bakery
cold flfst half to whip Mark V
Sure, anybody can sell you a car with "air" - but only we can sell you a
who laid-in numerous easy seven of 15 races Monday in the
sixth annual Philadelphia Youth
specially e(juipped Polara with over 50% off the sticker price on
bliskets.
.
Regatta
on
the Schuylkill River.
factory-installed air conditioning! See
Ferguson was the game's
leading scorer with 22 points. The Polllmac Boat Club won
us for a cool, roo'my Polara at
I
-four events.
, ..
~UQ$'1~ad 'tB '' Floyd · ~hey 12,
modelcc.learance.
.
.'I '
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{! ·' -1··· ' ,
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ta/n-fl~ ql!d" JlnUny
a.
prices.
In PomerliY UU!e !.ague gave up 12 hits, five walks .JU!d For Adolph 's, t~ll Tony
action Monday the first place fanned five.
Vaughan hit 16, Andy Vaughan
Tigers of Hershel McClure's Dale also was the big man at' 10, Red Werner 4, and John
kept on rolling, bouncing the the plate for the winners as he Slaven, Dave Jenkins, and
Pirates 17-a.
singled, doubled and tripled. Chuck Hannahs, two each.
The Tigers lroke the game Johnson and Scites each had a
SENTINEL RALLIES
open in the first Inning with nine double and single, McClure had In the other game, The Daily
runs. The Pirates tried to come two singles, Marshall a triple Sentineigot hack on the winning
*Air conditioning-Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, $423.35\ess $218.70 sales discount.
back bt the late inning 11!1-the~ and"Hawk".and Icenhower each trail, coming from behind 1o
best they could do was match singled. ··
whip a fired up Mark V club 72runs With the winners.
For the losers, Soulsby had 60. The Mark V'ers pulled out to
The winning pitcher was Dale two singles, Sisson a homer, and a ~ lead and maintained the
Browning, He gave up six hits, Browning, Roach and Couch pressure till half time.
walked two and fanned 10. The each a single.
In the second half The Senloser· was Doug Browning who
tinel Shockers came alive
behind the shooting of Rich
You can shop uptown, downtown, all-'roundJr,vn-but nobody's in a better
Bailey and Steve Dunfee Ill
position to give you more car for less money than the Dodge Boys with their
outdistance Mark V. With Doxie
amazing little Dart Demon! Room for five.
Walters · rebounding and Don
Brown, Dunfee and Bailey
Big trunk. Wide choice of engines and
running, the Shockers fast
options. (And, as.we say in our
breaked their opponents into
Holzer Medical Center, First
Discharges
headline: Demon is sized
Ave. and Cedar St. . General
Mrs .. Vernon C. Baker, Mrs. submission.
"With the compacts, and
Dwlfee again was the big gun
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-a p.m. Michael E•:ans and son, Mrs.
clearance-priced down
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to John Hartsook, Mrs. T. R. for the Shockers as he po\llied in
with. the mini's.)
4:"30 p.m, Parents only on Hayes, Mrs. Robert L. Metz, 23 points. Walters also had 23,
All colors in stock.
Pediatrics Ward
Kelson S. Phillips, Mrs. Betty Bailey 18, Fred Burney, 4 and
Births
Phipps, Mrs. Cecil W. Rice, French and Brown two each.
Bill Vaughan was the big man
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis v: William Salmons, Mrs.
for
the losers with 18. Jon Scott
Fowler Charleston a daughter. Clarence C. Stewart, Mr~. Iva
'
'
Stewart, .,Michael P. Wmdle, had 16, Bill Chaney 12, Mike
-~-------- Mrs. M. J. Thacker and son, Sayre 10, and Steve Price 4. .
James Saiiii'ons,
Mrs. Clarence
Scott was credited with a good
Milar League Leaders
•
By un'ited Press lnternationaJ Clay, Mrs. Eldon E. Sowers and rebounding job and Brown, a
· Leading Batters
James J . !,{cKltlericn.
fine defensive performance.
National League
M G
E Adkins Mrs
Wednesday The Sentinel
G. AB R. H. Pet.
rs. ary · K 1• G.
meets
Adolph's Dairy Valley
Torre. SI.L 83 324 51 118 .364 William Barnes, ev n .
'Oavis,'LA
82 333 53 117 .351 Betzing, Earl Jesse Henry and the Bakery takes on Mark
Bckrl, E~l
76 306 ~9 107 .350 &amp;own, .Thomas E. Dunsmore, V. Games start at 7 p.m.
7 59 110 336
Brock, St.L
Clmnt,
Pit 80
72 32
287 ~ 95 ·.331 Mrs. Robert F · Dugan , Mrs .
Garr, All
84 349 61 115 .330 George M_. Elcess, Carla A.
Pptn. Chi
62 231 31 76 .329 Foster, AlbertJ. Gabrielli, Mrs.
Cash, Pit "' 66 269 49 87 .323
G dn
Andr
E
Mlllan,Atl' ' 81"322 42 102 .317 Frances ar er,
ew ·
Strgll, Pit
72 265 so 84 .317 Garthee, Mrs. Gerald R.
American League
Hodges, Walter Lee Hughes,
G. AB R. H. Pet. Mrs. Hollis Mayo, . Mrs. W.
0 VACATION
.Oliva, Min 69 270 .51101 .374 .Thunnan M
. ays, Richard E:
Murcer, NY 78 279 47 96 .344
Bird, Blil
63 236 62 75 .318 Reese, Carl o. Six, Joseph E. ·
· o CAR .REPAIRS
Kanne, Del 68 m 41 70 .31 4 Strong, Mrs. Harry' Swan, Mrs.
Rolas, KC
76 278 JS 87 ·313 Mildred D. Taylor and Kendra · .
• OLD BILLS .
Otis, KC
75 298 ~ 91 .305
Rchrdt, Chi 66 249 26 76 .305 S. Ward.
R)tmnd, 8•1 65 209 35 63 .301
o · EMERGENCIES
May', Mil
74 263 42 79 .300 ..---------~;
FRb;m. Ba~ • .,:: ~~n:0 6s '300
The Daily Sentinel
National League: Stargell,
DEVOTED TO THE
NAME IT .••
Pill 28; Aaron, All 23; May,
INTEREST ,OF
..
Cin 21; Bench, Cin, Colbert, SO
MEIGS-MASON AREA
WE
and Bonds, SF 18.
CHESTER l . TANNEHill,
", , .and no
American League: Melton.
Exet. Ed .
SUPPLY ITl
Chi' and Oliva, Mlnn 18; Cash,
ROBEC~t~ ~~~:rliCH,
insurance!"
Del · 17; Smith, B~s and · Pul!llshed daily except
Fire, wlndstor~. explosion
Jackson, Oak 16.
'·
· Salurday by The Ohio Valley
can
demolish
your
,
Runs Batted In
Publishing Company , Ill
, 'Nailonal League : Stargell, coufl st .. Pomeroy, Ohio,
In moments.
(
· A'
· All 64 Torre1 45769 . BUsiness Office Phone·
assume the risk
P\1j 80; ' aron.
;
· ' 99).2156,· Editorial Phone 99.2SI,L '60; Santo, Chi· 59; 2157 .
,
alone. Jo.in your small
Insurance prenilum with
~~~~..:~1iinp~~i~e: Killebrew, .-;.:;~'t~t~~~rslage pa id at others
at Downing-Childs
M\nn S6; Powell, Ball and • Naflonal ., advertising
Agenc~ to give you com.
Pelrocelll, 8os 54; Melton, Chi represenlative Boltlrielli ·
' '
ptete Insurance protection
...,d White, NY 50.
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 Eost 42nd
against loss.
' · !'Itching,
Sl., New York City, N,ew. York.
'
LN~Iit·
Ellis
P.itt
,
Subscrop110n
rates
.
De·
N1tlon.l
'c · 1 ~ livered by carrier where
125 E. Main
•
JJ.J; t;ll"ker, ou 11-4; ar · · available so cents per week ;
' 992-2171
lon, ·Si.L 11'5; Jenkins, Chi N1!; By Motor Roule Whore carrier
8; Downing, LA, Seaver, T service not . available : · One
Pomeroy,O.
··and Blass. Pitt 10-4; Marlc~l, monlh SUS. By '!'Iii In Ohio
SF 10.5
and W. Va .. One year 514.00.
Amtrlcln L,ague: Blue, Oak . Six monlhs $7.25. Three
l7·3': cuenar. Bait
Me,~·~· 1 ~r?~.~~~c~~~~~ ·s~~db:rir~':,n
..l.Yi
.BallMlnn
12-4;12·7.
Lollch. I · 1 " senllnel.
.. --,-' . · ; · - - - · 'jZ~!.-J
Perry,
_ , _
I

.

DKm IIICCIIIIIII P!'ixlueer Iii ! b e . of !be

'* ,...,

' tbq .... ~ llinll,

r:

;::Deai' Heleri :

. . .

lbea..,, But wbal ... 'be dol .
. · Wl*iUNGILU'IWI TO mE4JII
Mlrril* (be llllt.Dmd;,DI~II ''~1111&amp;
····, rmr n111t- Bwi7one .mon wbat a !JiiiB Olvld! -a~ llllft fllle wjtb ldl
- . .•.• 'IV • .Ill; we lml.w wbat a counter-er!Ucal opprobriQm wililall!lllnt
cl( rt • II; a 111 n"' t . 1...- ,_,..., ..., 1 lllrlld fllil&amp;lnl Cl""• eill bill it ·IIIII ...,•
t ltW eJI!Ibow, au...,. dllllltw lllltalbart tlllilrleal...,.c''GII • tbNe
.deplo)i ..
bafa 111 t •! 111'1 *Yibe'ul_.lclpofllll•,m•t.IIDta,
t11e a-t • • 11e fbwndal
iln't bet .. tycoonina lt.'Be'l . . . beat 111 IUbW owr •
Isn't llllhllUIIrdJ.y,
·
. Oentury:Fos ~ \'Ia an entirely lepl Wall
·~ JaatulntbeP s••naWutbeWard,.,bi St. r..._ par&amp;y Iii wlicb be 1a:tbe crullve
lilt tbMtrkU Mttc•• Ia fill ptl)di"•· Not ltl*&amp;lar. But be bill heeD a line If ~Ye
maDY. qllb 11M l!1lllle be_r ..,_; mare often ~ tq wateb owr hi&amp; v~ li~"'ul

•

By RAY CROMLEY

:;. The reign of the long mane may be on the wane at
:: least on one major campus.
·
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:; Tile suggestion· comes from a man in a position to
~:
the manager of the University of Chicago barber

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aoadWI)'

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:: Long Mane on the Wane?

,.

BY .lACK O'BRIAN

..

~'f. .

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_,Voiee along ·Broadway !

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li
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h
M
tt
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. egton ~p · ts Wit . ar1e a .
e

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~-The Dallv Sentinol, Middlepgrt·PQIJlefOy, 0., July 6.1971

.' "

Off. in All Directions •

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Give the. Hunter
. His Proper Due

•tJ$;S1

., I ~v.
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t" :.

. Like a lot Of activities In this ~ologically minded time,
the lljl(lrt or pastime or profession of hunting has come in
for a lo~ of knocks.
.··
~wting Is .not . only barbaric and unnecessary, it is
cla_imed, but it has a detrimental effect on wildlife populations.
,
:•concerned over Increasing antihunting sentiment, The
Wildlife .Society has. gone on record in strong support of
huntin' m the United States," reports Fred G. Evenden,
executive ~tor of the conservation organization headquartered ~Washington, b.C.
, ··
More than anyone, he says, the~professional conserva- .
tionis! .is. aware that the hunter plays a vital role ilt
today • wildlife management programs. '
Hun!Qrs (&gt;BY more tllan ~ million for wildlife restoralion each year. Hunting license fees are the backbone of
50 s~te f1s~ and game departments. An excise tax on
hunting equipment provides over $40 million a year earlllarked solely for wildlife. No other group can ~atch
. these contributions.
·
-...
. '
As to the morality of killing wild animals. many people
fall to comprehend tl)at these animals will die whether
~ey are hunted or not, and in ·nearly aU cases they will
die a much slower ahd (&gt;Binful death. If animals are
overprot~ , overpopulation results and starvation is the
inevitabl~ re.sult.
.
·
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: "Sport huntl!'g Is regulated to maintahi healthy bal·• .anees In wildlife populations," says Evenden. "Seasons
are o_pened only when there is a genuine abundance of
• wildlife an~ hunti!'g is neeaed to bring the popufation In
, b~e With available food. This regulated -hunting in; sures ~ealthy populations of wildlife for the future while
) providing recreation for 17 million Americans each year."
: He goe$ even · further and claims that "without the
: hunter tl!~re would be little, if any, wildlife left iri
• America.
.
·
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' .
• For those who like to hunt, this 'Is a welcome pat on
; the back.
; For those who dis_!ike hunting, and hunters, and are con-.
.' cerned ~bout wildlife, It may at least allay their worst
; fears.
:: ~ ~enden, of . course, is talking about the responsible ·
_: nun_te~ w~o obeys the laws an.d who, happily; is in the
: maJority m the hunting fratermty.
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=:;·

.. :; Carl.Alkire, who has been shearillg academic locks at
:· the umverslty since 1935, notes that more and more-stu•, dents are .h11ving their hair "cut moderately long but
:: neater and more often."
·
·
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:; "'Tbl:s rs··especially true of younger students, but grad:; uate students are also weariQg shorter iiiid neater hair
; Even more indicative, faculty members, · who know a~
;. Ideological bandwagon when they see one, are having
: their bair cut more often and to slightly shorter lengths.
~ "People seem to be taking greater pride In their ap;: pearance," says Alkire. "Men get their beards trimmed
:: DOW Instead of latting them grow wild."
.; This is only one school, an,d it is far too early to tell ·if
·•. the sc.roungy, scruffy era is really ending. For thousands
,:, of depressed barbers around the country, it must sound
~· too good to be true.
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By Helen Bottel ·

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:; YOlJTH ASKED FOR IT!
;~
'lbll column II fiJI' young people, their prOblems and
;:: plulures, their troubles and fun. Aa with the rest of Helen Help
:::U.lll welc«nes laughs but won't dodge a seriOUB question with a ·
~~ brulb-olf.
~
::Bend your teenage qUestions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
·: GIIWen Help Us! this newspaper.
:; PREGNANT BRIDE.
:: WANTS BIG WEDDING
i: Deer Helen:
:;
I'm not ashamed. My friends know I'm pregnant. Terry, my
:: fiance, and I are happy about it. OUr wedding is planiled for uezt
:: month, and II was to be the big, fancy celebration that my mother
,:; and I always wanted, my belng the only girl. I won't "show" by
:; then. So why not go ahead wiih the plans?
;:
But my parents say "No." They want us to get married right
:: away In a neighbOI'Ing state, then make the newspaper an·:: noancementadateless thing, Implying that we were really wed in
:: lhi ipring.
'
.
:;
In these modern times, is It necessary to hide what doesn't
:; upaetyou 01' your.contemporariea? U I caved In and "ran away'.'
:: It would be to plesse a few of my folks' gossipy friends, for even
:: my mother and father aren't too unhappy or Slll'p'lsed. After all,
.;: they knew we roomed together at college.
:;l
Which ill it, Helen; lovelyweddlng, or elopement?- TERRY
;:: AND ME, (And BabY Makes Three)

•:• Dear HMeU:
;:;
Lel'sbepracUcal : you and Terryneedmoneyfordoctor bills,
;.:; a crib, layette, baby food, etc. much more than you need a laney
.:•: wedding. Perhaps your folks will apply the several thousand
·~ ;: ·dollan they save lila bigger prodUction -their grandchild.
';:;• Also pendulums swing. Who knows how "premature parents"
, :;: will be' viewed a decade or two !rem now? Perhaps you 'U
; :; IIOIIHlday be glad your wedding dale wasn't "fixed" with
; :: newap&amp;P.8f stories and the remembered "talk" that goes with aU&lt;: out atravaganzas. - H.
•::Deer Helen:
. ;: I read the letter about marriage contracts and really got
~::. deprell8ed. How about love? U you're going to inarry, you should ·
~:: be so much in love you KNOW it Will last. You shouldn't have to
':,•':learn or test love, leaving a wide-open door if you guessed wrong.
This iB a selfish, gimme-gimme kind of partnership. Why
..:~marry at aU? - IN LOVE FOREVER
.

..

~ ;:

Seems to me a "marriage contract with renewable options,"
~::u IIIGI!Ited by "Forward Thinker" would be aU in the men's
H a fellow is w.orking his way through coUeg.e and decides
:;:;he Willis a girl Ill share expenses, do his chores and sleep with
~~:blm -and llbe'a unwU!ingwithoulmarrlage - then aU he need do

•;!;rawr.

.:::11 Gifer • "contract." AI the ~nd of !he one-year

"change your
::::mllld"pl!riod, he could say "Getlostl" and find a new girl. .
~;: M far the seven-year "lake it or·lesve It" decialon, what
+-:41tppe,. to the children? And to the furniture, house; car, other
~!Pc.wedU~~?.Dissolution wouldn't be as simple as It sounds - but
~-1here might be many more break-ups because of the law.
:::- If you marr)i on these grounds, you won't tri as hard,
• wher .. 1 church wedding Implies lasting love and inspires a will
to dJIIIp and adjust to each other.
I ~!ape "F,T.'s" predlctlona neverccme true! - K.H.
Belen:
.
.
rmiiii!Dl' marriage contracts. Because I'd like to lreak"mine
1rJ apln.- BARNEY, AFTER FIVE YEARS
Jl,eadtn:
l'ldllcllllbly, those against ~a~e contracts were the very
•'lever i!larrleds." Those in favor were the older, "wish
types. llut lfM1 "anti-contract" people outnumbered
iiot.ol" lour · t~ one. ~ H .

1'-!.

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1M' ·• ..._.etc,-

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the Sports
Desk
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llleb. ia Dmcl". ........

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. Merrldi:'f!....... wltb wbaiiW!r critiC tlkel tbe
ll'sdlerrlc:k""" not only ~lilt IIIOfley
· · N, Y. 'f!mel dramupace tbi1 ,., llld It does fGullllllical (-DOOand ap; 'way!IJII) arplily
.IIIOYible poat. Mrrrict 1111 bJabt with &lt;•110,000 llkywardi) lor .-ra, 'lblll be llba
fiv~ TlniiUI,iiiC IInce 11roob AUdM!!ll, and 1111 II opel ty and dra~ ~ cruUve people
j1iat to kl!w IU IPieeo ID, W11b lll!iOried TV araund it.
.
1
crib; Iii fad, aD TV crltlel. .
Even with a ftop such as hi&amp; "Breakfut at
It II an blllarable ~ lbl8 billllng of 111fany'a" (teOO,OOO c.:. mart ~ down the
·JI'Oib!en ve. crib. It mn liu llbn 1111 dolla' drain) be tried a differeD~
' Oljniplan IIIPII:aucllaa when Ben Wt, In thnltoJIIII'Chto:whlllltlelllplttllltheroad;·
,.
II'~ of protlndnc a mlnclltla fllrkeJ. llfllr hi&amp; Merrick hired Eclward Albee, nolle! tor hi&amp;
~ Gl wrl~ eplaeby acriptl fat ibt J11aCt IG1llllypoomynepUvlainll)tryiDdpropup10
&lt;",FfOnt PIP" etc.) and !lima (•'Notldag . deiJchtfully trivilla ptopei ty a.i 'rruman Cepote
8&amp;!!'841" ele.), D1an11tiJ to atrichme of tbe Crlglaated. That ~ trick didn't
· 1Vint critlcalalluliin ibe b11torJ ~ !be ..,..; wwk as Its final foible, and Metrlek promptly
tuney. Ben rellllallid aa •-u bla 'diliptfully cloelid'lt Ill the road, a total lou,,art~~t~•· and
l18itY ~t wllb tbe acicl•111 111 that ertucJ are llnand•Dy.
•
"'lbe Jakel .Fimlly of JGUrlllllam." Now that'•
Merrick however does llid cJd lmow what to
tlaiis l Gooil abull96 di&amp;IIDcU111,
do With a PI'. . t7 to make It I BdWy lit. TGday,
' .David ,Meirlct In bia' latter,diy 1inssdntl)' Davld'laiOIOOwbat tired alinphotlllr morupt
litlllcb 111ce noted be woidd love to take drama to impart whole lhowa lnm pi'0¥111 LOnd1111
reparten- be berred NBC's Ed Newman Ill· runs; lllchas ''Midtummer NIJhl'a
lial.
tlrely "; lllll_cbue them~ llrol'uy with a 11ea11111 ~ "Rolencranllll Gulldenitern" a.few
B A It B S ; basebllU bat. We know one,wrlfllr wbo COllilteftd 11ea10111 earlier. Bec•!M they allo evidenced
. , By PHIL PASTORET
· Wlth,,"liJJ spot bini the ball .bat." 11ie cballen8e mcre esthetic poaaii)Uillel than portended adwy.
.
.
· . · ~aJn'f accepted f. Merrick doesn't accept ptpularlty, Merrick financed thelll with bli qwn
Academic standing ls wha,t ..a..n-es .,.,v lays tbem dowil without charity foundatilll which baa ·lrousht to the
a lot Of young folk are going , ..~'? · .o -v
··
·
·
L.~.
'
to be soon doing, while walt- f~ Ill'• • SUD, be alwa)'lllghlena a dUD llOIIl1lll lots Gl u1latlc lleJ:nl not geared to hts
ing 'in line .for books,_tqltion n 111111, evetllbe 1111t1 be contrlilllelto,.wiJtch noU0111 Of lheer pure ptJiiullr CIIIOCIII, unlike
receipta, clasl schedules ·' ·. liawbeen=areidlut.MetTlcklaagocidprotluCer "Cactus Flower," whlcb be u'w u IUf'e1IOP
• ' '
•. .. -~aereatonelf y1111 elate 1111 blatoryof boiDffi~ bait and backed entirely with hi&amp; own
. · Moat~ratur.fi1'.111J
.
· casb·er•o behauleddown100pct.oflllprollts
outgu~ckltpoperbacks
. ·. · 1•
,
: . .·"·
.
• .,. ,
use tripewriters;
• lq bil1ltll'ld IIWUb with .lhe 18 unions he lnsteadoflbeSOpct, a producer normally takes,
• • •
must deel with before •tardns a produclloo, with lelvlnfthe oth« half to hla becken.
Our favorite water!Dg spot tbe' trauma 11.· tryout trouping, the mer- ·
You see, David knon whereof he Infests.
has had toplesS waitresses d!andl~'~ng of I!if glludY product - he 11 a past . Musicals, thouJh, oo•ally soUclt 1)11 loyal
for· yeara,-not a braIn In and ture master Of !be ar_tohte•llna -"Ud"' lutgtime.· a~ell .who ~ In Wbete David fears
their heads.
.-. v
··
space - M~ct
lll1llt be. appreciated ail the to tread as a flnanctallndlvlduallst .
.

.

Bakers, .Newsies, Win

PO LARA/ AIR-CONDITIONING SPECIAL

WIN AT IIRIDOE

Jump to Game~-Then What? . ·
.

Noam'

5

·

shows a definite stop bid.
North wants hla partner to
piar three '!o-lrum~. and has
no mterest m slam . .

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.2

Jim: "South wins the first
Both vulnerable
IN.T.
spade
because
he
does
not
Pass 3N.T. Pus Pus
want a shift to hearts. Then Weal North Eat South
Pa,.
he plays a club to dummy's Paso 4•
Opening lead-'!•
Pua· 4N.T.
ace. If he is careleil, be will Pus
St
Pua 6· ·
continue by playing the king Pus foss
Pus
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby of clubs. East will show out
Opening
leadt K
.Jim: "One of the · most .and South will be set."
confusing bids is the jump
Oswald: "There Is a very By Olwald &amp; Jameil Jacoby
to game. What is it? A pre- easy
safety play here. He
empt, a stop bid or some must lead a low club toward · JACOBY MODERN follows
sort of slam 'try?"
his jack. This will cost him modern expert practice and
Oswald: "The experts have a tr1ck if the queen of clubs plays tliat all direct ralaes
done httle to stop the .con- were going to drop but It are limit lilds. The single
fusion .. One reason may be guards against any 4-1 break. raise shows 7-9 supportfng ·
they are also confused."
If East bas the last three points, the raise to three
Jim: ''Our own rules are· c,lubs; the best he can do Is (single Jump) shows lG-12
that opening-suit game bids to rise with hi&amp; queen. West with at least ieven In high
are preemptive, tllat · jumpil holds them and his queen cards and the .jump to four
to game after partner has captures South's jack but shows at least 13 points In
limited his hand are· stop SOuth is now able to 'finesse support.
bids, that other jumps to against West's 10 and bring · Supporting points are In
game tell partner 'that you In the rest Of the suit.''
addition to high card and
want to play in game In !hit
distribution. You count one
denomination and that he
~'
point ext'ra for each trump
can go on If he has a lot
over three and one point
more than the minimum
•
•
•
extra
for each slqgleton or ·
values for his bid. If Inter, The kid nezt door ha8 a void. Furthermore, you cheat
ested in slam, we ap~roach
dune buggJI-425 "dune" a little on the light side.
game by other means. '
-he bought it from a Thus, the North haild counts
Oswald: "Today's Ii and
Scolclf' used-car dealer.
13 points In support ·of one

1.

.

'

spade, but we woul~. give the
same raise without the jack
of diamonds.
North . has no ld~§ ai!Qut
what his-partner
make.
He does know that, if •"his
partner has' a minimum, the
opponents have haU the high
cards and the hand may belong to them, so he is mak·
ing It hard for them to com·
pete.
Actually, South has a very
big hand. With two first·
round, plus two second·
round controls and a strong
two-sutter, South wanta to be
in six if his partner has an
ace. He uses Blackwood and
bids the slam.
There Is nothing to the
play. South wins the dia·
mond lead, draws trumps
and claims his contract,
while conceding a club trick.

.J]g~r~..rl w~ . I7~~.

can

'
WEST

Yorl,

Eut-West vulnerable
West North Eat Soulh

•

MODERN: AmoriU'o top uports

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NOR111
.A9732

IHIWSP.\Pil INTIIPIISI

=

!

Tho bld!llnl hu 'boen:
we.t North Eat South
1•
Pble
?
.!o1u4 :"~ 7';'~'• .._, 7 83
~
What do you do now?
A-Bid t11ree hw1l. Thla Ia
aliPtly weoker tlw! tho nonllll
UmJt ralae. With • . - . luond
you would redollble.
TODAY'S QUESTION
West bids three sptdes. Your
partner puses and Eut bids
four spades. What do ,you do
now?

3

'

Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
·
Dear · Dr. Lamb-In'. regards "to your. c91WDD .on
P r u de r y can . jlopardlle
health I must 111v boW true.
I am not eolnt:!4~ p.- b .
I was hosplta
~- ..._._
• ,_....,
slve urination, oaf uart 'at
night and getttn1 ·• fiYW or
six times. I was ~te~fon
for h e r n I a Iii ' my left
groin and whUe ' tllen t~Jel·
searched !DY bladder 811i1
stretched my proltale eJ&amp;IId,.
After two montha tbere II
no Improvement.,lbaw eold ·
hands alitl feet aid III!ICb
cramping at n1a11t: Alter
sexual lntercourM blOOd 1D
semen after
What could calllt
t IIIII
full of pep most df
time,
I . exerciae and wlfeb my .
d1et. I am .81 yean )'OUDI
and my doctor l8ld 1 could
still fa fh e r bablea. How
"You're plwoys to/king about getting bock to nature- . about that?
.
,
how about mowino the lown1'' ' 1
'
'
Dear Reader- Vee, bow

~

'

abO,!J( that.. Y1iu are ju't a
spring chicken compared to
some men who have lathei'e!l
cblldren. l auapect ·the most
common eaUH lor the blood
tl •· 1nf1
you mtlll on .. an
ammatloD Of eltbar your prottate.
Jliand or the semlrial veaI.CJu. The latter are Uttle
lilly pouches like llddlebags .next to the prOitate,
wbere semen 11 llored. Uli·
lela lt Ia treated you may
not have as m.ucb pe~ aa you
now ·have. &lt;\II lnlectiOII ~y­
wbere can eventually dec . - a peraon'a eneJ1Y
lttval. Some people even have
fever from lnftammatlon Of
the prostate. 1hl1 Ia not the
lhiDII as aimple enlarftllltllt but ·in acute Infdon ·tnaiOIIOIII . to &amp;aving
an ~trtely Infected throat or
alnlll4ia."
· .
Many readers write me
thet . have p1·evented leg
craftiPI at night. by wearing
s!Oicklngs to ht!fl, win·

•,;•Uoll. -•

.

1l

d

'

""'I'

I

• \J

'

ter and sliniiller .'
Dear Dr. Lamb- My
18 yean Of age,
waa treated by a doctor for
an underactive thyroid con·
dlUOD (determined by examlllation, no symptoms) .
She was given tablets for
aboUt ' ailt months, then
checked qaln. This time the
thyroid wu overactive and
had cauaed bar \0 become
very nervous. He did not
give any medication for this
6ut attar about two months,
the thyroid wat normal. She
IIIII lW IICCIIional bouts of
nervouaneu, poalbly aasoclatetl with bar period and
the ila~d. Pleaae explain
bow fler thyroid Willi from
lllllllractlw I o overiiCIIve
and then to normal with no
medlcatlcih In about eight
months.
~ughter,

Dear Rtndcr- The body Is
a curl~us, wonderful· muchlne. )'eal'S ago when 'tht•re

I

'

were less satisfactory methods for treating overactive
thyroid condition• doctor• became aware that their thy·
rold patlen!J would · have
overactive thyroid cOIIdltiohJ
In ,the spring and fall. And
don't ask me why·. :rhe
. gland seems to have cycles
of more or less activity. If
your daughter had In fact
had a nCJrmal thYI'Oid at the
beginning the amall amount
of thyrofd given would ' not
!lave had any Influence. The
thyroid .gland wo»&gt;d ailllply
put out len thyrolcl hormOM.
So that hat notblnl to do
with her case. If the had an
overactive thyroid &amp;Ia n d
the~ she may have It aptn
later.
INIWWAPU llltU..III A1111.) ,

1

•

,,.

,

1 •

can

l

·COMPACT-SIZE. MINI-PRICE!

DART DEMON.

help

•

1n.

'ITY ,

OAN

&lt;-1-

""' ,_"tWo -"""·
,.,.,. WAllo

IMIWhol
loltltl o/

ltHfrl, llo oWl ,.,..,., ~"'""' In '"'"' .........

•.

· ·you ·

.....,..,.,,
...t. . .. .......... f. "-'M.
M.D., In mw ol
lit. Lamb

•

many
ways..

~~.Rrude'ry Cari ·Threaten Health:
'

HOSPITAL NEWS

•

;lloitla

y~u

DR. LAWIINCI I. 1AMI
'
, At 8J, H~ : Tallcs About Problems
'

!o

•

r---------------------------1

~SSN . )

,I

BERRr'S WORlD

I

CITY
LOAN
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·

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DART SWINGER AUTOMATIC

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NOW THE.G-OOD GUYS
HAVE MARKED EVERY CAR
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lbical•s

WIN AT

e ·

·tw:

pream"

WASHINGTON (NEAl
If information now in hand is correct, the heroin traffic
with' American troops in Vietnam is likely to get worse
despite U.S efforts .
. ..
Strong attempts will be made by the men now profiting
from that trade to expand the distribution system in the
United S!at~s to service the addicts they have developed
in the Far East. '·· ,
.
·
,.,;.sonie.ofthts inform~atlcrll'comes in letters from a friend
in close contact with the Vietnamese police, some from
American officials charged .with keeping an eye on illegal
Vietnamese traffic and some from American customs of·
ficials, who make no bones about the difficulty they face
in preventing heroin smuggling.
So far as can be gathered, the principal bankrollersthe men who furnish the funds and rake in the bui.R of the
profits after agents, officials, transporters and sellers are
paid off- are an interconnected group of Chinese financiers in Hong Kong; Singapore and Macao.
.'
These men are 'international, with business associates
in Thailand, Laos, Malaysia, SO!\\~ Vietnam, Burma and
Conl!nunisl China. In the main ;'ho'Wever, 'the top merl are'
themselves believed to be neither Communist or nonCommunist.
A friend who is an officer in the opium detail of the
Thai police says that some members of the Chinese communities in several nations work together in a close
"family" relationship similar to that of the Mafia in the
United States, with their own codes, "kinship" loyalties
and enforcement procedures.
The bankrollers are "businessmen" who get into any
field where the profits. are large and the risks small. They
move from one type of operation to another according to
opportunity. Opium , from which heroin is refilled, is just
another profitable business venture. The financial wealth,
the wide connections and the tightknit nature of the high
command of these operations make successful attacks on
the structure most difficult.
The opium is grown principally in northern Burma,
Laos, Yunnan Province in mainland China and northern
Thailand. In considerable measure it moves down through
Thailand. Where the conversion is made into heroin is not
clo,ar at this time.
It is estimated that 1,000 tons of heroin a year moves
out of Thailand, but this figure cannot be confirmed as of
now.
Most of the heroin coming into South Vietnam probably
moves on a variety of planes, some Vietnamese-run, some
American, some military and some civilian. It is thought
that some of the men connected with the operation are
Vietnamese and some American. Some officials suspected
(and named in correspondence by U.S. officials) are
closely related to high officials in the South Vietnamese
government.
Though the bankrollers have wide trade, financial and
official associations throughout Southeast Asia, their con·
nections with heroin distributors in the United States are
believed limited, and it may take some time to develop
efficient connections, most American distributors being
associated with European or Latin·l\merican rings.
But the Hong Kong-Slngapore-Macao· men do have relationships with a number of shady trading companies in
the United States and otl)er countries in connection with
some of their corrupt import-export ventures. These associations could conceivably be utilized in making the
contacts necessary for developing the heroin trade here.

e

Thomas' Double
•·
.
.
s
.t.or .Br··ave
·
s
Wm

.tursleal

.Orugs-for-\ils
Traffic Booms

~

fifth error,
The next

'

'

-n:a

RAY CRt.. "'lEY

''

'

it Butthescoringdidn'tendthere passed four .
Dave Burnett then la:d _down· a but big Dave died lhertl •
Meigs American Legion split . Marl ettallcoredalltheruns
· Inning of the The Tigers added another run in· · Gene Powe11 , R
D'1xon, squeeze bunt .to· bnng m Vanneeded
In
the
first
oger
.
. . VanMatre groll!lded 11111 to the
their double hea~er witli
Chet Tannehill
· Marietta Sunday at Syracuse as opener as they poured across the second and fourth and two in Dave Boyd, Dave Burnett, Bob Maire. ~rn~tt was safe at ft:! sh~~~~~g~ down, . Marlett.
"'"'"-'··~-.~~~.:-_..._..~
'
. .....-·---,_:.._.._.._..
'
they dropped tlie opener '-1 but four runs on a walk, an error, the fifth ·while allowing Meigs Werry, and Perry ail· IJild ~ a throwl~ erro~!k.;din wasn't ·out rl. it. The ~
Jll~her,Lonru~Bush.
ralliedwltharuninthellfth~
came back to take the nightcap, and four back-tll'back singles. only one in the second inning. SlngilliJ for Meigs .. ·
It's good to be home.
In
that
second
inning
Meigs
Harris
and
Riley
·led
the
Ritchie
as
hi!'~
~rounder
·~
·
'. I'm frequenUy lisked: "How - and why - did you ever get ii-4. Meigs now Is at 12-9.
looked as though it might have wirmers with a double and scooted through the third twointhesixthtocomeclose,a
·back !Jete after growing up in the Pacific Nm;thwesl?" As if that
pulled it out when .they loaded single each,
baseman's legs. .
.
5;-4 •
II GOd's'Country (actuaUy·arum of that Utlewas made in the 30s
the bases with one out. But
SEalND GAME
. . At this polnt,Marietta tried to Meigs leading hitter was
, starring Barton McLane set In the.big ilmber count&amp; of south·
sharp fielding by Marietta let In the second game Meigs p1ck Bush off f1rst but the throw Gary Hart with a triple and
westWaahington) and the Ohio \'alley is a place Jess benign:
only one run through on Stan broke loose fiJI' five runs in the was qild, and Burnett . scored Powell, Dixon, and D!m!Oikey
.The answer to that question does not belong here; suffice it to
Perry's sacrifice fly. '
third inning o_n only two hits and from third Ill make the score 3- singled. Tom BeardstOI!e led the
}I
Wirmine pitcher Tim Miller held on Ill wm ii-4.
1.
losers with two singles.
say ll)e Padfic Northwest is too wet for my respirafocy system.
aliowed
only
six
hits
to
the
hard
Rick
VanMatre,
leading
off
On
the
play,
Bush
advanced
to
Hick VanMat~e was
One seea no S11J1 for montl:lti on end fromNov~mher through April,
·
hitti M · team H truck the third was safe on an error third and scored on Gene WIMIDg Pilcher. He passe~
ooly rain, clOuds, air so ~olatlt drips, literally.
.
Two
.games
were
play~
in
Glea:·
other
arne
the
M
ets
out ~e a~~~alked
~erry, Bob Rikhie was hit by thfi Powell's perfect bunt single. and sbiick o~l two. ,.Tile loser
.Rain and fag ccmpUcate high school fOQthall games on the
LitUe J,.eague action cainme fr·o·m. beghln·d· to score charged with the loss, gave up pitcher' Howard Taylor Powell got to second as .Dave,, was Jim Robmson lVho .fanned
WI!Stern slope between the Cascades and the Pacific. Another Middleport
Monday, ' the Braves again
1
B d
f
th Tigers tw nd alked two
oa w
.
.
factor, perhaps more serious, hinders .football in central and beating back their closest three runs in the final inning 10 hits, struck out five, and sacrificed the runners a ong, oy was sa e on e
eastern 'Oregon where my brother and family Uve.' Prineville, challengers, the Indians, 4-3 in and drop the Reda into the
pojNiatlon&amp;;ooo plus, hl!s a high school that•last y~r competed in an exira inning, and the Mets cellar.
AAA against schiiQ)s .lhue dmes Ita size (Pendleton, Baker, lrinunlng the Mark VReds, 8-7. The Mets had only four hits,
The Braves, coming from three by Greg Becker and one
Burns, ~th Falls, etc.). This' )&gt;ear Prineville's school
behind,
knocked the Indians out by Jeff Miller. The losers had
population .as down a half-dozen, which permits it to play in AA,
of a tie for first place in the loop nine hits, a double and single
more 10118 size. But wait, that's really no solution.
•
when
Tlnuny Thomas -again each from Case!· and Pickens;
SchooJs·in eastern Oregon send their football teams off early
111 Frldsy morning in time to play Friday at 8 p.m. Even then the hero for the Braves - _Humphrey and 1)Tee each had
their bus drivers have to use a heavy foot Prineville to Pendleton smacked a seventh inning .a double, and Magnotta, CaD
isSOIIlllthlni!Uke 150nilles overfourmountain (the Blues) passes double to knock in the winning and Hag~rty each singled.
of .8,000 fl. ~levation or .;.ore. And Pr~ville, . with manpower run. Thomas socked a grand
about one-third of Pendleton's, absorbs lickings resembling those slam homer Ill win the gilme for HAClER TO WINNIPEG
pastings the late Yellow Jackel8 of Middleport too often took when the Braves when the teams met NEW YORK (UPI)-Shortearlier.
meeting Jackson, Athens, Logan et 1!1.
Steve Bachner pitched the stop Bobby Wine was reactivatNor will Prineville's situation thiS coming autumn, though first six innings for the Braves, ed from the 21--day dlBa bled list
down a classiflcatlori, be much eased. There 'just aren't enough yielding to reliever · Mick by the Montreal Expos Monday
small schools to fill out a sChedule, so It still will have to play Davenport in the seventh. and Rich Hacker was optioned
Pendleton (and other large squads).
Davenport was the winner. He to Winnipeg of the Internalional
'lbe l011g distances traveled make basketball a weekend and Bachner struck out three League 'to make room for him
activity. Games are played Friday and Saturday nights, the team and walked four .
on the roster.
sta)'i!lg ovet in motel or a hotel. This gets to be expensive.
Joey Gleason hurled the Tirst
· Oregon taxpayers, as in most states, are refusing to ante ~P six for the losers and did a INDIANS RECALL PAUL
the bigger bite for schools. And as elsewhere, It Is the athletic fantastic job, farming 14 Braves CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
There's no other deal quite like our all-time success Swinger! Buy :ho~
JI'Dgr8m and other extra-curricular activities that suffer .first. and walking four. Jeff Beaver Cleveland Intlians sent outfielspecially equipped Swinger hardtop, we'll give you the automatic transmission
Oregon has had a stale income tax for a dozen or more years, but took the loss as he pitched the der Ted Ford to their Wichita
farm
club
and
recalled
lefthan·
FREE, (Just like having $191
no sales tax. '!:he income tax is for general revenue, the schools seventh for the Indians.
der
Mike
Paul
from
the
Thomas
led
the
way
at
the
taken off the sticker price!)
receiving whatever they can Obtain by legislative pressure. As
American
Association
team.
plate
as
he
had
two
singles
to
go
here, the property tax'li the base of sehool support.
Hurry - before they're
with
his
double.
Lavender
had
a
After listening to brother Sherm's ltst of problems conall sold .
fronting his youngest son Tommy (sophomore, IHI, 150 lbs. a tight homer and Davenport, a single. RAMS SIGN 1 PLAYERS
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-The
The losers had only two hits,
end) Meigs' schoolboy athletics is in fine shape.
lriples by Tony Venoy and Los Angeles Rams ·announced
•
Monday they have seven
• •
players- Ro!llan Gabriel, Mer·
lin Olsen, Joe Scibelli, Deacon
*Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for TorqueFiite
Jones, Coy Bacon, Kermit
automatic tran smission on VS models- $190.60;
Alexander and Clarence Wll·
6·CYiinder models-$182.95.
llams-signed to multi-year
stretched its winning ~tream Ill
Middleport summe~ 7~.
contracls.
four.
In
the
first
game,
Ron
basketball play resumed
Monday evening with the Ohio Ferguson and Mick Childs Although he failed to hit his VESPER CLUB WINS 7
Valley Bakery stomping repeatedly took long passes scoring average, Morris was a
PHILADELPIDA (UPI)
Adolph's Dairy Valley 68-36 and from Jeff Morris and Jimmy tower of strength beneath the The Vesper Boat Club of
boards and unselfishly passed
Th~ Dally Sentinel came off a Boggs Ill score 40 points bet·
Philadelphia junior crews won
do.
w
n
court
to
his
teammales
ween
them
as
the
Bakery
cold flfst half to whip Mark V
Sure, anybody can sell you a car with "air" - but only we can sell you a
who laid-in numerous easy seven of 15 races Monday in the
sixth annual Philadelphia Youth
specially e(juipped Polara with over 50% off the sticker price on
bliskets.
.
Regatta
on
the Schuylkill River.
factory-installed air conditioning! See
Ferguson was the game's
leading scorer with 22 points. The Polllmac Boat Club won
us for a cool, roo'my Polara at
I
-four events.
, ..
~UQ$'1~ad 'tB '' Floyd · ~hey 12,
modelcc.learance.
.
.'I '
~
'
.
{! ·' -1··· ' ,
•
' '
ta/n-fl~ ql!d" JlnUny
a.
prices.
In PomerliY UU!e !.ague gave up 12 hits, five walks .JU!d For Adolph 's, t~ll Tony
action Monday the first place fanned five.
Vaughan hit 16, Andy Vaughan
Tigers of Hershel McClure's Dale also was the big man at' 10, Red Werner 4, and John
kept on rolling, bouncing the the plate for the winners as he Slaven, Dave Jenkins, and
Pirates 17-a.
singled, doubled and tripled. Chuck Hannahs, two each.
The Tigers lroke the game Johnson and Scites each had a
SENTINEL RALLIES
open in the first Inning with nine double and single, McClure had In the other game, The Daily
runs. The Pirates tried to come two singles, Marshall a triple Sentineigot hack on the winning
*Air conditioning-Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, $423.35\ess $218.70 sales discount.
back bt the late inning 11!1-the~ and"Hawk".and Icenhower each trail, coming from behind 1o
best they could do was match singled. ··
whip a fired up Mark V club 72runs With the winners.
For the losers, Soulsby had 60. The Mark V'ers pulled out to
The winning pitcher was Dale two singles, Sisson a homer, and a ~ lead and maintained the
Browning, He gave up six hits, Browning, Roach and Couch pressure till half time.
walked two and fanned 10. The each a single.
In the second half The Senloser· was Doug Browning who
tinel Shockers came alive
behind the shooting of Rich
You can shop uptown, downtown, all-'roundJr,vn-but nobody's in a better
Bailey and Steve Dunfee Ill
position to give you more car for less money than the Dodge Boys with their
outdistance Mark V. With Doxie
amazing little Dart Demon! Room for five.
Walters · rebounding and Don
Brown, Dunfee and Bailey
Big trunk. Wide choice of engines and
running, the Shockers fast
options. (And, as.we say in our
breaked their opponents into
Holzer Medical Center, First
Discharges
headline: Demon is sized
Ave. and Cedar St. . General
Mrs .. Vernon C. Baker, Mrs. submission.
"With the compacts, and
Dwlfee again was the big gun
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-a p.m. Michael E•:ans and son, Mrs.
clearance-priced down
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to John Hartsook, Mrs. T. R. for the Shockers as he po\llied in
with. the mini's.)
4:"30 p.m, Parents only on Hayes, Mrs. Robert L. Metz, 23 points. Walters also had 23,
All colors in stock.
Pediatrics Ward
Kelson S. Phillips, Mrs. Betty Bailey 18, Fred Burney, 4 and
Births
Phipps, Mrs. Cecil W. Rice, French and Brown two each.
Bill Vaughan was the big man
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis v: William Salmons, Mrs.
for
the losers with 18. Jon Scott
Fowler Charleston a daughter. Clarence C. Stewart, Mr~. Iva
'
'
Stewart, .,Michael P. Wmdle, had 16, Bill Chaney 12, Mike
-~-------- Mrs. M. J. Thacker and son, Sayre 10, and Steve Price 4. .
James Saiiii'ons,
Mrs. Clarence
Scott was credited with a good
Milar League Leaders
•
By un'ited Press lnternationaJ Clay, Mrs. Eldon E. Sowers and rebounding job and Brown, a
· Leading Batters
James J . !,{cKltlericn.
fine defensive performance.
National League
M G
E Adkins Mrs
Wednesday The Sentinel
G. AB R. H. Pet.
rs. ary · K 1• G.
meets
Adolph's Dairy Valley
Torre. SI.L 83 324 51 118 .364 William Barnes, ev n .
'Oavis,'LA
82 333 53 117 .351 Betzing, Earl Jesse Henry and the Bakery takes on Mark
Bckrl, E~l
76 306 ~9 107 .350 &amp;own, .Thomas E. Dunsmore, V. Games start at 7 p.m.
7 59 110 336
Brock, St.L
Clmnt,
Pit 80
72 32
287 ~ 95 ·.331 Mrs. Robert F · Dugan , Mrs .
Garr, All
84 349 61 115 .330 George M_. Elcess, Carla A.
Pptn. Chi
62 231 31 76 .329 Foster, AlbertJ. Gabrielli, Mrs.
Cash, Pit "' 66 269 49 87 .323
G dn
Andr
E
Mlllan,Atl' ' 81"322 42 102 .317 Frances ar er,
ew ·
Strgll, Pit
72 265 so 84 .317 Garthee, Mrs. Gerald R.
American League
Hodges, Walter Lee Hughes,
G. AB R. H. Pet. Mrs. Hollis Mayo, . Mrs. W.
0 VACATION
.Oliva, Min 69 270 .51101 .374 .Thunnan M
. ays, Richard E:
Murcer, NY 78 279 47 96 .344
Bird, Blil
63 236 62 75 .318 Reese, Carl o. Six, Joseph E. ·
· o CAR .REPAIRS
Kanne, Del 68 m 41 70 .31 4 Strong, Mrs. Harry' Swan, Mrs.
Rolas, KC
76 278 JS 87 ·313 Mildred D. Taylor and Kendra · .
• OLD BILLS .
Otis, KC
75 298 ~ 91 .305
Rchrdt, Chi 66 249 26 76 .305 S. Ward.
R)tmnd, 8•1 65 209 35 63 .301
o · EMERGENCIES
May', Mil
74 263 42 79 .300 ..---------~;
FRb;m. Ba~ • .,:: ~~n:0 6s '300
The Daily Sentinel
National League: Stargell,
DEVOTED TO THE
NAME IT .••
Pill 28; Aaron, All 23; May,
INTEREST ,OF
..
Cin 21; Bench, Cin, Colbert, SO
MEIGS-MASON AREA
WE
and Bonds, SF 18.
CHESTER l . TANNEHill,
", , .and no
American League: Melton.
Exet. Ed .
SUPPLY ITl
Chi' and Oliva, Mlnn 18; Cash,
ROBEC~t~ ~~~:rliCH,
insurance!"
Del · 17; Smith, B~s and · Pul!llshed daily except
Fire, wlndstor~. explosion
Jackson, Oak 16.
'·
· Salurday by The Ohio Valley
can
demolish
your
,
Runs Batted In
Publishing Company , Ill
, 'Nailonal League : Stargell, coufl st .. Pomeroy, Ohio,
In moments.
(
· A'
· All 64 Torre1 45769 . BUsiness Office Phone·
assume the risk
P\1j 80; ' aron.
;
· ' 99).2156,· Editorial Phone 99.2SI,L '60; Santo, Chi· 59; 2157 .
,
alone. Jo.in your small
Insurance prenilum with
~~~~..:~1iinp~~i~e: Killebrew, .-;.:;~'t~t~~~rslage pa id at others
at Downing-Childs
M\nn S6; Powell, Ball and • Naflonal ., advertising
Agenc~ to give you com.
Pelrocelll, 8os 54; Melton, Chi represenlative Boltlrielli ·
' '
ptete Insurance protection
...,d White, NY 50.
Gallagher, Inc ., 12 Eost 42nd
against loss.
' · !'Itching,
Sl., New York City, N,ew. York.
'
LN~Iit·
Ellis
P.itt
,
Subscrop110n
rates
.
De·
N1tlon.l
'c · 1 ~ livered by carrier where
125 E. Main
•
JJ.J; t;ll"ker, ou 11-4; ar · · available so cents per week ;
' 992-2171
lon, ·Si.L 11'5; Jenkins, Chi N1!; By Motor Roule Whore carrier
8; Downing, LA, Seaver, T service not . available : · One
Pomeroy,O.
··and Blass. Pitt 10-4; Marlc~l, monlh SUS. By '!'Iii In Ohio
SF 10.5
and W. Va .. One year 514.00.
Amtrlcln L,ague: Blue, Oak . Six monlhs $7.25. Three
l7·3': cuenar. Bait
Me,~·~· 1 ~r?~.~~~c~~~~~ ·s~~db:rir~':,n
..l.Yi
.BallMlnn
12-4;12·7.
Lollch. I · 1 " senllnel.
.. --,-' . · ; · - - - · 'jZ~!.-J
Perry,
_ , _
I

.

DKm IIICCIIIIIII P!'ixlueer Iii ! b e . of !be

'* ,...,

' tbq .... ~ llinll,

r:

;::Deai' Heleri :

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lbea..,, But wbal ... 'be dol .
. · Wl*iUNGILU'IWI TO mE4JII
Mlrril* (be llllt.Dmd;,DI~II ''~1111&amp;
····, rmr n111t- Bwi7one .mon wbat a !JiiiB Olvld! -a~ llllft fllle wjtb ldl
- . .•.• 'IV • .Ill; we lml.w wbat a counter-er!Ucal opprobriQm wililall!lllnt
cl( rt • II; a 111 n"' t . 1...- ,_,..., ..., 1 lllrlld fllil&amp;lnl Cl""• eill bill it ·IIIII ...,•
t ltW eJI!Ibow, au...,. dllllltw lllltalbart tlllilrleal...,.c''GII • tbNe
.deplo)i ..
bafa 111 t •! 111'1 *Yibe'ul_.lclpofllll•,m•t.IIDta,
t11e a-t • • 11e fbwndal
iln't bet .. tycoonina lt.'Be'l . . . beat 111 IUbW owr •
Isn't llllhllUIIrdJ.y,
·
. Oentury:Fos ~ \'Ia an entirely lepl Wall
·~ JaatulntbeP s••naWutbeWard,.,bi St. r..._ par&amp;y Iii wlicb be 1a:tbe crullve
lilt tbMtrkU Mttc•• Ia fill ptl)di"•· Not ltl*&amp;lar. But be bill heeD a line If ~Ye
maDY. qllb 11M l!1lllle be_r ..,_; mare often ~ tq wateb owr hi&amp; v~ li~"'ul

•

By RAY CROMLEY

:;. The reign of the long mane may be on the wane at
:: least on one major campus.
·
'
:; Tile suggestion· comes from a man in a position to
~:
the manager of the University of Chicago barber

,.

aoadWI)'

.

'

:: Long Mane on the Wane?

,.

BY .lACK O'BRIAN

..

~'f. .

'

_,Voiee along ·Broadway !

.

li
'
h
M
tt
'
·L
. egton ~p · ts Wit . ar1e a .
e

,r~---~~-------------------~-------------~i

·f

--

~-The Dallv Sentinol, Middlepgrt·PQIJlefOy, 0., July 6.1971

.' "

Off. in All Directions •

- --·

l

�'

I

4- The Dally Slldluol, Mlddleport-Pclileroy, 0., July 6, 1971

ip Reds 4-3, Sweep

stros

'

.

HOUSToN· (UPI ). - Wade

4~ame ·SerieS
beaten every other

team in the . Blasinganie scattered seven ond after Rader's fly was .a

'nfair 'tabor Practice ·Charged . ~ =::an~=~= N:::~~ ~~~~~?ee~~~~:

key pl~y in the g!lffie. Houston
scored its other r\ill In ~ first
inning on Roger Metzger's .
triple and Cedeno's ground-out·
to first bllSI!.
'
Cincinna tl tied it in the fifth
on singles by Helmli and Rose, .
sandwiched around a walk. The
Reds took a. 3-1 lead tn the
sixth when Me~ger's error on
Johnny Bench's grounder opened the door.
·
Hal McRae _tripled to scor.e
Bench and McRae came· hmne
on another single by, Helms.
Then Blasingllffie got paye · ·
Concepcion to gr01md to Rader.
who started an innlng-endinli
double play.
The Reds play fll Pitlsl;lurgh
tonight with Tony Cloninge~ ,.
3-6, starting against Dock Ellis,
12-3.

on
. ,
.
.
And allhougb be
i get to leftbanderi/' Bluinpme -.!d. oo1v while batting in the fifth
, NEW YOJU{ (UPI)-Charg- COurtesy" so the oimers wOJJid MIUer said the players need pension fiiDd. In the past, the bang around the full n}ne In· ''The ones who bave been hatd· Inning when righthander Wayne
1ng the owners with· "inaultlng" have time to learn about the details of the new, four-year · players had received 60 , per ~~~ng, to-.avor the victory Mon- eat for n)e were (Pete) Role, Simpson ltllocked him down
the players, the Major League action through proper cbanbela. contract basebaU signed with cent of the World Series money ·day night, Blaaingame got his (Tommy) Helma, and (Frank) with a pitch; .
~baD Players . Association 'John J. Gaherin, the labor 'iheNatlonaiBroadcastlngCoril· and 95 per cent of the All..st8r due.
~.'' .
Reverses Verdict.
~ounced Monday It bas filed c - 1 for 'the club owners, · pany (NBC) thr.ee months ago. game TV revenue for their
The Houaton ,\stros best the That shows how lq Blasln- Jim ' Wynn provided the
~mfair labor practices said he was officlaUy served Commiasloner Bowie Kuhn pension fiiDd and the conlract Reds 4-3 to cap \heir weekend game has been trying to beat clutch hit, lashing a two-riiD
against the basebaU . with the charge on Friday and told the players the true value included a proviso saying they series.
.'
·because Robinson single with two outs in the
, ,
•
at that time, "told the board It .of the package, $71.75 mllllon, reserved the right t.o return to
They bad stopped the Reds was
, to Baltimore slx sixth lnnjr\g to 'turn a 3-2 Cin!tfarv~.MIIller, !lie e%ecuUve was without merit ~d sho!!ld but Miller claims Jl! refused, a percentage in future years:
6-1 SUnday on a Fourth of years ago. . . .
. . clnnatl lead into a 4-3 i!'stro
;,eliir nf the PlayllfS ,\ssoci,a- be dlamlsaed."
.
any additional lilformatlon.
. · ,;
..
. July 88D\e featuring a shoving "I piU:l!ed some good games · .victory. . .
· ·
said the suit waa filed last .. Miller said It normaUy ,takes ,Miller wants to know how the Mllle~satd, what traditional- . match in the dugout betw~n agalllst then), aa, good as to- . Joe Morgan started the rally
~~:~ai=!-~ the New York several months for a final package breakaciown so he can ly has belonged to the players,, Doug Rader and Cesar Cedeno. night," Blasingame' ssld. "Ire-· with a walk, and Cedeno doulii
oj the National decision but, "normally they tell how much NBC is paying say the owners, should now be Cedeno Bald he and Rader be- member onee I had a ~ read bled io send him to third. Bob
Relations Board because work pretty rapidly in a for the World Series, the All- of no interes~ to them. Whl!e . came frle~ds again Moncjlly after five Inning and It rained. Watson walked arid Rader, hit
.owners have reiused to refusal-to-bargain case and star game and importantly, the the owners, in their public nlllht.
· "Wheil the raina stopped, I a sacrifl~ fly that moved all
information about. their that's what Ibis is."
new divisional playoffs.
' relations statenu;n~ are ~ways
Blasingame, 5-7; had D~W:er caine out ol. lite game ·in the tb&amp;e runners and set the stage
TV contract.
The pel)Sion agreement be- "We've got to have that talking about fall1leas and l!efore beaten lbe Reds in alx slxlb and we got beat. And I for Wynn's single.
said the suit was not tw~n the owners and the information In order to bar· 'integrity'. we have learned - ~~'tea, traveling from Milwaukee lost to them 3-2 on~ last Watson's alertness in tagging
ijnouncet ~mtU Monday "as a .players expires in · March and · gain," Miller said as he- also ~t those ~r~ciples aie to Atlanta to Houaton. He 'had year."
up at first and moving to secpoipted out that baseball has mvarlably. modifl~ whenever ·
I' !.l..
refused · to provide · a yearly money is mvolved.
, "''"'=~~
breakdown of the contract since Miller ilald the owners had t
lntemati~nal gan, Hennigan (3) •. Co.lberH7). the figure for each season IB beg~ negotiations br "chal~~~·::~·: League
. Mingorl (9) and Fosse, Suarez reportedly different.
.
lengmg and insulting . , tl)e
~Y TERRY FLYNN
finished the ~ace w; ll ahead of
~~rg~:(i'.~l)nd~~aLL~· (~l Two years ago, when the players" and said they were not
Howard (13th), Billings (2ndk players struck spring training yet ready "I? treat . the
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI)- Hobbs.
Logue·5landings
National Lli1gue
th d ·
1 ted. th
Unser (5th), Neltles (13th).
before signing a c!llitract, they negotiations wtth maturity ..: Bymoor
Un tid Prus·lnternltlonal
Eut ··
Sam Posey wanted to be sure Bo
nvers . comp e
.e
- agreed to a flat fee of $5.45 (so) problems could be worked ·
Amtrlc•n Lli1gue
w.
L. Pd. GB an Anierican - and not an two heats wtth Identical pomt
National League
million annually for their out simply and quickly."
" Eut
Pitt'sburgh
· 52 31 .627 ... Englishman won the ·i.&amp;M totals of 67, but Posey's large
(tst Gamel
L.
Pet.
GB
New
York
.ol6 34 .575 4'12
· f · t · th second
W
.
Montreal 000 000 002- 2 3 0
Baltimore ·
49 30 .6.20 ... · Chcago.
.519 .9 Grand Prix at Mld.()hio Sports margm o v~c ory m e
41
38
New York 000 000 001- 1 5 o
Boston
.ol6 33 .587 3
st. Louis
~2 41 .506 10 car course here but he cut it heat gave hlDI the overall win.
Game)
Strohmayer (7.1) and Bale·
Detroit
43 37 .538' 6'12 Phlladelrhla
35 45 .427 16'12 pretty close in picking up the Hobbs won · $4,700 for his
~IC'!J1?
000 000 000- 0 3 0 man; Ryan, Taylor (8), Me·
New
York
37
45
.451
13'12
·Montrea
· h an d No. 2
100 ooo oox- 1 3 1 Graw (91 and Grole. LP-Ryan
Cleveland
36 45 .4.44 14
West31 so .383 20 victory.
secon d P1ace fmlB.
Johnson (8) and (8-5) .
Washington
37 47 .405 17
w L Pet GB Posey pock~ted a total of pole position in the first hea,t.
Rooker (1-6) and KlrkpaWest
·
San
Francisco
's2 i2 .619 ... $5,900 of the $39,550 pqrse as he He also held his point lead In
LP-Horlen (3-6),
'!znd Game)
Oakland
w52 ~8 .~~ ~~ ~~~:;n~eles ~ ~
:'12 · defeated British David Hobbs the Continental Series with 107.
Montreal 000 000 000- 0 3 0
. 't 9 0
New York 307 JOO oox- 8 11 0
Kansas
City
41
37
.526
10
·
Atlanta
•.
~77
2
'
4 46
12 . by 16.5 secon&lt;ls In the s~cond Posey is second with 94 a.rid
2 7 1
Renko, Reed (5), Marshall
SOUTHPORT,
England
it
on
the
practice
fairway,"
he
Minnesota
39
42
.481
13'12
Cincinnati
"IT
48
.435
.15'12
30-lap heat Monday at Mid· Ron Grable of Mr. Vtew, calif.,
(7) and (8) and Bateman, Boccabella
34 " .436 17 . San Diego
29 55 .345 23 Ohio's 2.4-rnUe road ·course to is third with 46.
Sanders (5); Sadeckl (3·2) and Dyer. LP .(UP!) -South African . Gary said. "I'll tel it talt:e Its course Chicago
Milwaukee
34 " .436 17
. Monday's Results
1 of
u1
WP- -Renko (7-9) . HR-Jones (7th). Player flew In frmt Canada na turaUy."
California
37 48 ,435 11112 Mont. 2 N.Y. 1 (lst) .
win the fOurth race of the A Iota
30 form a "A"
(12·
Monday for this week's British
Most of the 58 foreign players,
Monday's results
N.Y. 8 Mont. o (2nd) ·
Continental · championship se- cars were on the grid for the
Pittsbrgh 000 003 ~ 6 11 0 Open golf championship and which include 16 Americans; K.C. 6 Chic 1 (lsi)
Pill.
6
Chit.
2
ries.
first heat race, but .only 22
Chicago 110 000 ooo- 2 12 1
1
0
at Oelrolt (ppd, rain)
K.C. Chic. (2nd)
L.A. 7 S.F. 3
"We had to be sure an were able to answer the call for
Blass (10-4) and Sangulllen; lmmedlately hit out at the were at the scene to prepare for Mllw
..7 Minn. 1
Phlla. 6 All. 5
Hollzman, Tompkins (7), !lon· American Press.
·
this week's !OOth Open which Ball. at Det. ppd rain
Hous. 4 Cine. 3
American won an American the second contest.
000 000 too- 1 7 0 ham (7), Decker (7), Regan (9)
''Some
of
those
feUows
over
begins
Wednesday.
Wash.
15
Celv.
6
S.D.
3
St.
Louis
2
race
run on the Fourth'Of July Eppe Wielzes of Ontario,
1
100 100 oox- 2 ~ o and Cannizzaro. LP-Holtzman
8os.
12
New
York
7
Hunter, Fingers (7)' and (1-9) '
there have lost all sense of Experienced veterans of the Calli. 2 Oak. 1
weekend/' Posey, of San Juan Canada, driving a, McLarenMay, LaRoche (8),
ethics," the fiery little spring- course Jack Nicklaus and
capistrano, Calif., joked after Chev•. ~mbined a fourth and
(8) and Stephenson. WPk~~
~~~
~
:~
~
bok
told
interviewers
as
he
Australian
Kel
Nagle
both
said
Today's
Probable
PltciHirs
International
Le1gue
Standings
the race.
third place finish, respectively,
(4-5). LP- Hunter (11-7).
Sutton. Brewer (7) and Sims; ·waited to tee off for his first they felt it was easier to play
Kansas Glly (.Drago 8-4) at By United Press International
Posey started the first heat in In the two heats to give him the
. hon (9, land Dietz. practice round at the Royal than in the past.
Milwaukee
!Pallln
7·8),
night.
V'l
L
Pd.
GB
York 500 101 ooO- 7 16 o Perry, McMa
his Surtees-Chev on the pole, third overall position in the
Boslon (Siebert 11-4) at Syracuse
45 31 .~ 320
16 0 WP- Sullon (9-6). · LP-Perry Blrkdale course.
"The
.
bunkers
used
to
lie
Cleveland
(McDowell
8
.
7),
Charleston
.u
32
.579
1
captured
the day before with a race and $2,500 prize money .
(6) , (6-8). HR-Crawford (4th) .
·
He . was commenting
on deadly," Nicklaus, the reigning night.
Tidewater
47 35 .573 1 1:29.9, 96.21 miles per hour
· and
John GIIDn of Miami, Fla.,
·
d def
Washington !Shellenback 3·4 Rochi!Ster
43 34 .558 21/,
( 1)' St. Louis
000 110 ooo- 2 9 1 reports that he refused to PIaY PGA champton an
performance
in
qualifying.
finished
fourth· ove~all in an
ending and Gogolewskl O·Ol al Balli- Richmond
37 43 .~ 10
San
Diego
000
200
0013
6
0
(7)
in the 'Cleveland Open two tiUeholder said. "But now they more (McNally 17-4 and Jack· 'Louisville
36 42 '-.,__462 ·10
He led 28 laps of the heat, Eagle.Chev; Gregg Yo~mg of
(3· 2 ~n~p~~~~~ 0. 1 WP
(3.
Cleveland (7·8) and Simmons. weeks ago because of possible are very easy to play."
son
2·
1),
2,
twl-night.
'
Toledo
31
48
.392
15'12
Alou Norman, Miller (9) and Ken·
only to have Hobbs, o( Rugby, Wilton, Conn., was fifth in a
New York !Bahnsen· 8·7l at Winnipeg
79 47 .382 16
dall. WP-MIIIer (6-7). HRs- demonstrations following · Nagle agreed with Nicklaus Detroit
England, pass him on the 29th Surtees powered by a Cosworth!Lollch 12·6) , night.
Monday's Games
Torre (14th) , Colbert (18th).
threats he feceived while but ,also said the greens were
Cali lorn Ia (Messersmith 7-8) Syracuse 6 Louisville ~
1clrcuit and go on to win by ·Ford engine ; and Jar.k Eitelplaying the recent U.S. Open at slow.
. at Minnesola (Biyleven 7·11 ), Char lesion 3 Tidewater 2
about a car's length in his jorg of Englewood, Colo., was
Ardmcre, Pa.
Lee Trevino, the playoff night.
Rochesler 10 Toledo 8
McLaren-Chev.
sixth in a Lola-Chev.
"I had never entered tho winner of the Canadian Open,
Oakland (Odom. 4-4) at Richmond 7 Winnipeg 0
Chicago (Magnuson 1-0), night.
Hobbs, by virtue of his win in . .-------~~~~
tournament so how could I with- was confideni he could keep his
the
first heat, started the
Wednesday's Games
draw?" the two-time Brililll form and,add the British Open
Calif. at Minn . (nigh'!)
'
Cincl~natl 000 012 OD0- '3 9 ,0 seclond 13h().lapp contest .odn Billet
Opeil
winner' said. "They even crown to hlS four tournament I&lt;.C. at Mllw. (nlghl)
\
"
Houslon 100 003 oox- 4 s 1 poe, w t osey secon . u
reported I would not be playing victories this year.
Oak. al Chic. (nigh!)
Simpson !1·2) and Bench; Posey flew past the English·
in the Canadian Open at He flew in on the same plane N.Y. al Del. (night)
Blasingame,
Gladding (8) .and. man on the fourth lap and
Bos. at Clev. 2 (twl ·nlght)
H1att.
WP-Biaslngame(5.7)
.. '
Montreal while I was actually as Player but beat the Sou!h Wash.
...
'
,._ ,:.-.
-- .
,at Bait. (night)
Dying on my way Iller~."
. African to the course by nearly
Player, disappointed with his an bour and a half 'in an· en·
rece11t form in the United deavor to g~t plenty of practice.
FACTS
$tales, •cut short a scheduled
here and watch it
!bur hour practice fairway
·
"bloom"!
Earn at our
your bills
session after only 30 minutes so
By GARY KALE
always felt we could catch up to sburgh In the N.L. East.
current annual rate of
when you can't '
~nny Doyle scored on Willie
thai he could play around the
UPI SporiB Writer
them so I'm not surprised we
Two decades haven't dlml- are thla close right now. U we Montanez's eighth~nnlng sacri. tough Royal Birkdsle layout.
4%% or 5%
IP SICKNESS or injury left you
"I think I have discovered ·
nished the Dodgers' eye for . don't win with this club, then fice fly for the run that snapped
disabled and out of work,
on 6-month savings
Atlanta's 'six-game winning
what has been wrong with my
revenge over the Giants after a you have to wonder.''
could you pay your bills?
certificates.
swing and I don 'I want to force
playoff loss cost them the 1951 Pittsburgh defeated Chicago, string. Montanez, Don Money
Nationwide's Income Protector Plan guarantees _you a
National League pennant.
!h'l; New York lost to Montreal, and Roger Freed each drove in
monthly cash income for one
It's ell8ctiy 20 years since 2-1, and then came back for an two nms for Philadelphia as ,
year, five years, or, if you
Bobby Thompson's homer beat 8-4 victory; Philadelphia edged Woody Fryman gained his
qualify, for life.
lhe Dodger..and Los Angeles Is Atlanta, 6-6; Houaton clipped fourth victory against three
Call me today for delails:
attempting to prevent a repeat OncinnaU, w, and San Diego losses. Earl Williams socked a
'
Lt. Thomas Selfridge beperfonnsnce by eliminating the edged .St.. Louis, 3-2, In otber three-run hmner for the Braves,
came the first airplane fahis 13th circuit of the season,
Giants from division competl- N,L, action.
tality in the United States,
Nate Colbert waUoped his
lion.
·
Steve
Blass
matched
his
Sept. 17, 1908. The World
Meigs County Branch of
The road is ar~uous . But the entire 1970 winning output by 18th hmner of the year and then
Almanac notes that Ameri·
The Athens County Savings ·
can aircraf~ pion~r Orville
Dodgers, 81&gt; games back of San notching his lOth decision sc.ored the winning run in the. &amp; Loan Co.
.296 Second St.
Wright wa.s piloting the air,
._
in the West Division a against Cltlcago. He aided his bottom of the ninth on Oille
Pomeroy,
Ohio
c r a f t when the accident
month ago, now stand only-31&gt; cause with a two-run single in Brown's double . Joe Torre
occurred, and he suffered
games behind the Giants after the seventh Inning. Manny accounted for both St. Louis Member Feder al Hom e Loan
Bidwell's surging Pirates
multiple hip and leg fracMonday's 7-3 victory.
Sanguillen's two.nJil single in runs with a double and his 14th Bank.
tures when thrown clear of scored a 6-S seventh Inning
Willie Davis, almost too the sixth inning capped a three· homer. Bob Miller extended his Member Federal Savi ngs &amp;
the wreckage.
upset victory Monday night
Loan Insurance , Corp. Ail
yo~mg to remember lbst· In· run Pirate uprising and gave scoreless string to 15 2-3 innings
over the previ9US unbeaten
accounts in su red up to
famous day In '51, drove In Pittsburgh 4he-lead for good. as he picked up his sixth.~In for $10,000.00.
AddavUie Jets In · the Ohio
307 Sprina Ave.
three runs with a ~ses~oaded Np.hit ace Kenny Holtzman San Diego.
. I
PEPITONE BRUISED
Valley
Ll tile
League
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
triple
and
WiUie
Cr8wford
hit
suffered
his
eight
loss.
CHICAGO (UPI)-Joe Pepi- Association.
his fourth· hm~er of the season New York pitchers allowed
tone of the Chicago CUbs was I Bidwell now 7-1 previously
to pin Gaylord Perry with his just three hlts!n each game, but'
carried off the field on a upset Cheshire, 2-1,
Av.111.1bl•· th 1s yp;n o nly'
eighth loss ,and extend the San the Mets only managed a split
stretcher after he fouled a ball 'In otl)er games, Syracuse
Francisco
hurler's
losing
string
against
Montreal.
Nolan
Ryan
off his right anlile Monday. But topped Racine, 9-7; VInton
1',·11 to 1'"'1 nu, .. , .., 011 lhe Up p''' Oh1u
to six straight.
gave up both J:;xpos runs with
the Injury was believed to be a defeated Green, &amp;.s; Cbeshlre
The victory was Los Angeles' ooses~oaded walks in the eighth
=~- bad bruise and not a fracture. shutout Salem, 7-IJ and Cenfifth
in a row and earned Oon Inning of the ~ner to suffer his
terville took a 1Hl forfeit victory
Sutton its ninth win . in 15 fifth loss. Ray Sadeckl
over Rio Grande.
decisious.
benefitted from New York
OVLL Sf ANDINGS
"We
wanted
these
last
two
power In nightcap to win his
TEAM
.W L
victories and we went out and third game. Cleon Jones drove
Addavllle
8 1
got
them," said the 31-year-old in four nms with ahomer and a
Cheshire
8 2
SCHEDULE OF
Bidwell
7 4 HAMMOCK HIGHRISE Is Davis. "Now we are going good single as the Mets flnlsiled the
SAILINGS
Centerville
6 4 the work of spectators at and the Giants Ill'• hurting. I day 41&gt; games back of PittVinton
5 4 Hockenheim race course In
•· '
·Racine
5 4 West Germany, all lor a
better view of the Jochen
Clncl~natl to Marietta ...... . ., .. July 12 • 14
Syracuse
4 6 Rindt Formula·! Memorial
.Salem
2 6 Race, named for an Aus·
Marietta to Plttaburgh ... . : . .... July 14 ·16
Green
2 8 Irian raelng ace ldlled last
E11t Uverpoolto Plttaburgh . .. .. July 15 • 18 ·
Rio Grande
0 11 year.

dldn1

rut '

DES

lr•

ancmn.u,

.......escores

(NJOY SUPERIORS.

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~

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3 MUSKETEERS'·
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•

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BREAD

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I

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shells 5 pa k
.

Pittlburgh to Marietta ........ .. . July 19-21

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oz.
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SCOT LAD

830 E. MAIN

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FINISH

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PRUF

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Cola

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VISIT BAKER'S

Pork &amp; Beef Loaf, Honey Loaf,
Dulch Loaf. Pepper Loaf,.
Pickled &amp; Pimento Loa!. We 1h lb.
cut II tresh lrom full loaves. ·
(Not ready packaged) .' pkg.
Guaranteed tresh! We slice II
tor you .

lb.

Meigs Qt Branch

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Meats
.
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American Press

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I

4- The Dally Slldluol, Mlddleport-Pclileroy, 0., July 6, 1971

ip Reds 4-3, Sweep

stros

'

.

HOUSToN· (UPI ). - Wade

4~ame ·SerieS
beaten every other

team in the . Blasinganie scattered seven ond after Rader's fly was .a

'nfair 'tabor Practice ·Charged . ~ =::an~=~= N:::~~ ~~~~~?ee~~~~:

key pl~y in the g!lffie. Houston
scored its other r\ill In ~ first
inning on Roger Metzger's .
triple and Cedeno's ground-out·
to first bllSI!.
'
Cincinna tl tied it in the fifth
on singles by Helmli and Rose, .
sandwiched around a walk. The
Reds took a. 3-1 lead tn the
sixth when Me~ger's error on
Johnny Bench's grounder opened the door.
·
Hal McRae _tripled to scor.e
Bench and McRae came· hmne
on another single by, Helms.
Then Blasingllffie got paye · ·
Concepcion to gr01md to Rader.
who started an innlng-endinli
double play.
The Reds play fll Pitlsl;lurgh
tonight with Tony Cloninge~ ,.
3-6, starting against Dock Ellis,
12-3.

on
. ,
.
.
And allhougb be
i get to leftbanderi/' Bluinpme -.!d. oo1v while batting in the fifth
, NEW YOJU{ (UPI)-Charg- COurtesy" so the oimers wOJJid MIUer said the players need pension fiiDd. In the past, the bang around the full n}ne In· ''The ones who bave been hatd· Inning when righthander Wayne
1ng the owners with· "inaultlng" have time to learn about the details of the new, four-year · players had received 60 , per ~~~ng, to-.avor the victory Mon- eat for n)e were (Pete) Role, Simpson ltllocked him down
the players, the Major League action through proper cbanbela. contract basebaU signed with cent of the World Series money ·day night, Blaaingame got his (Tommy) Helma, and (Frank) with a pitch; .
~baD Players . Association 'John J. Gaherin, the labor 'iheNatlonaiBroadcastlngCoril· and 95 per cent of the All..st8r due.
~.'' .
Reverses Verdict.
~ounced Monday It bas filed c - 1 for 'the club owners, · pany (NBC) thr.ee months ago. game TV revenue for their
The Houaton ,\stros best the That shows how lq Blasln- Jim ' Wynn provided the
~mfair labor practices said he was officlaUy served Commiasloner Bowie Kuhn pension fiiDd and the conlract Reds 4-3 to cap \heir weekend game has been trying to beat clutch hit, lashing a two-riiD
against the basebaU . with the charge on Friday and told the players the true value included a proviso saying they series.
.'
·because Robinson single with two outs in the
, ,
•
at that time, "told the board It .of the package, $71.75 mllllon, reserved the right t.o return to
They bad stopped the Reds was
, to Baltimore slx sixth lnnjr\g to 'turn a 3-2 Cin!tfarv~.MIIller, !lie e%ecuUve was without merit ~d sho!!ld but Miller claims Jl! refused, a percentage in future years:
6-1 SUnday on a Fourth of years ago. . . .
. . clnnatl lead into a 4-3 i!'stro
;,eliir nf the PlayllfS ,\ssoci,a- be dlamlsaed."
.
any additional lilformatlon.
. · ,;
..
. July 88D\e featuring a shoving "I piU:l!ed some good games · .victory. . .
· ·
said the suit waa filed last .. Miller said It normaUy ,takes ,Miller wants to know how the Mllle~satd, what traditional- . match in the dugout betw~n agalllst then), aa, good as to- . Joe Morgan started the rally
~~:~ai=!-~ the New York several months for a final package breakaciown so he can ly has belonged to the players,, Doug Rader and Cesar Cedeno. night," Blasingame' ssld. "Ire-· with a walk, and Cedeno doulii
oj the National decision but, "normally they tell how much NBC is paying say the owners, should now be Cedeno Bald he and Rader be- member onee I had a ~ read bled io send him to third. Bob
Relations Board because work pretty rapidly in a for the World Series, the All- of no interes~ to them. Whl!e . came frle~ds again Moncjlly after five Inning and It rained. Watson walked arid Rader, hit
.owners have reiused to refusal-to-bargain case and star game and importantly, the the owners, in their public nlllht.
· "Wheil the raina stopped, I a sacrifl~ fly that moved all
information about. their that's what Ibis is."
new divisional playoffs.
' relations statenu;n~ are ~ways
Blasingame, 5-7; had D~W:er caine out ol. lite game ·in the tb&amp;e runners and set the stage
TV contract.
The pel)Sion agreement be- "We've got to have that talking about fall1leas and l!efore beaten lbe Reds in alx slxlb and we got beat. And I for Wynn's single.
said the suit was not tw~n the owners and the information In order to bar· 'integrity'. we have learned - ~~'tea, traveling from Milwaukee lost to them 3-2 on~ last Watson's alertness in tagging
ijnouncet ~mtU Monday "as a .players expires in · March and · gain," Miller said as he- also ~t those ~r~ciples aie to Atlanta to Houaton. He 'had year."
up at first and moving to secpoipted out that baseball has mvarlably. modifl~ whenever ·
I' !.l..
refused · to provide · a yearly money is mvolved.
, "''"'=~~
breakdown of the contract since Miller ilald the owners had t
lntemati~nal gan, Hennigan (3) •. Co.lberH7). the figure for each season IB beg~ negotiations br "chal~~~·::~·: League
. Mingorl (9) and Fosse, Suarez reportedly different.
.
lengmg and insulting . , tl)e
~Y TERRY FLYNN
finished the ~ace w; ll ahead of
~~rg~:(i'.~l)nd~~aLL~· (~l Two years ago, when the players" and said they were not
Howard (13th), Billings (2ndk players struck spring training yet ready "I? treat . the
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI)- Hobbs.
Logue·5landings
National Lli1gue
th d ·
1 ted. th
Unser (5th), Neltles (13th).
before signing a c!llitract, they negotiations wtth maturity ..: Bymoor
Un tid Prus·lnternltlonal
Eut ··
Sam Posey wanted to be sure Bo
nvers . comp e
.e
- agreed to a flat fee of $5.45 (so) problems could be worked ·
Amtrlc•n Lli1gue
w.
L. Pd. GB an Anierican - and not an two heats wtth Identical pomt
National League
million annually for their out simply and quickly."
" Eut
Pitt'sburgh
· 52 31 .627 ... Englishman won the ·i.&amp;M totals of 67, but Posey's large
(tst Gamel
L.
Pet.
GB
New
York
.ol6 34 .575 4'12
· f · t · th second
W
.
Montreal 000 000 002- 2 3 0
Baltimore ·
49 30 .6.20 ... · Chcago.
.519 .9 Grand Prix at Mld.()hio Sports margm o v~c ory m e
41
38
New York 000 000 001- 1 5 o
Boston
.ol6 33 .587 3
st. Louis
~2 41 .506 10 car course here but he cut it heat gave hlDI the overall win.
Game)
Strohmayer (7.1) and Bale·
Detroit
43 37 .538' 6'12 Phlladelrhla
35 45 .427 16'12 pretty close in picking up the Hobbs won · $4,700 for his
~IC'!J1?
000 000 000- 0 3 0 man; Ryan, Taylor (8), Me·
New
York
37
45
.451
13'12
·Montrea
· h an d No. 2
100 ooo oox- 1 3 1 Graw (91 and Grole. LP-Ryan
Cleveland
36 45 .4.44 14
West31 so .383 20 victory.
secon d P1ace fmlB.
Johnson (8) and (8-5) .
Washington
37 47 .405 17
w L Pet GB Posey pock~ted a total of pole position in the first hea,t.
Rooker (1-6) and KlrkpaWest
·
San
Francisco
's2 i2 .619 ... $5,900 of the $39,550 pqrse as he He also held his point lead In
LP-Horlen (3-6),
'!znd Game)
Oakland
w52 ~8 .~~ ~~ ~~~:;n~eles ~ ~
:'12 · defeated British David Hobbs the Continental Series with 107.
Montreal 000 000 000- 0 3 0
. 't 9 0
New York 307 JOO oox- 8 11 0
Kansas
City
41
37
.526
10
·
Atlanta
•.
~77
2
'
4 46
12 . by 16.5 secon&lt;ls In the s~cond Posey is second with 94 a.rid
2 7 1
Renko, Reed (5), Marshall
SOUTHPORT,
England
it
on
the
practice
fairway,"
he
Minnesota
39
42
.481
13'12
Cincinnati
"IT
48
.435
.15'12
30-lap heat Monday at Mid· Ron Grable of Mr. Vtew, calif.,
(7) and (8) and Bateman, Boccabella
34 " .436 17 . San Diego
29 55 .345 23 Ohio's 2.4-rnUe road ·course to is third with 46.
Sanders (5); Sadeckl (3·2) and Dyer. LP .(UP!) -South African . Gary said. "I'll tel it talt:e Its course Chicago
Milwaukee
34 " .436 17
. Monday's Results
1 of
u1
WP- -Renko (7-9) . HR-Jones (7th). Player flew In frmt Canada na turaUy."
California
37 48 ,435 11112 Mont. 2 N.Y. 1 (lst) .
win the fOurth race of the A Iota
30 form a "A"
(12·
Monday for this week's British
Most of the 58 foreign players,
Monday's results
N.Y. 8 Mont. o (2nd) ·
Continental · championship se- cars were on the grid for the
Pittsbrgh 000 003 ~ 6 11 0 Open golf championship and which include 16 Americans; K.C. 6 Chic 1 (lsi)
Pill.
6
Chit.
2
ries.
first heat race, but .only 22
Chicago 110 000 ooo- 2 12 1
1
0
at Oelrolt (ppd, rain)
K.C. Chic. (2nd)
L.A. 7 S.F. 3
"We had to be sure an were able to answer the call for
Blass (10-4) and Sangulllen; lmmedlately hit out at the were at the scene to prepare for Mllw
..7 Minn. 1
Phlla. 6 All. 5
Hollzman, Tompkins (7), !lon· American Press.
·
this week's !OOth Open which Ball. at Det. ppd rain
Hous. 4 Cine. 3
American won an American the second contest.
000 000 too- 1 7 0 ham (7), Decker (7), Regan (9)
''Some
of
those
feUows
over
begins
Wednesday.
Wash.
15
Celv.
6
S.D.
3
St.
Louis
2
race
run on the Fourth'Of July Eppe Wielzes of Ontario,
1
100 100 oox- 2 ~ o and Cannizzaro. LP-Holtzman
8os.
12
New
York
7
Hunter, Fingers (7)' and (1-9) '
there have lost all sense of Experienced veterans of the Calli. 2 Oak. 1
weekend/' Posey, of San Juan Canada, driving a, McLarenMay, LaRoche (8),
ethics," the fiery little spring- course Jack Nicklaus and
capistrano, Calif., joked after Chev•. ~mbined a fourth and
(8) and Stephenson. WPk~~
~~~
~
:~
~
bok
told
interviewers
as
he
Australian
Kel
Nagle
both
said
Today's
Probable
PltciHirs
International
Le1gue
Standings
the race.
third place finish, respectively,
(4-5). LP- Hunter (11-7).
Sutton. Brewer (7) and Sims; ·waited to tee off for his first they felt it was easier to play
Kansas Glly (.Drago 8-4) at By United Press International
Posey started the first heat in In the two heats to give him the
. hon (9, land Dietz. practice round at the Royal than in the past.
Milwaukee
!Pallln
7·8),
night.
V'l
L
Pd.
GB
York 500 101 ooO- 7 16 o Perry, McMa
his Surtees-Chev on the pole, third overall position in the
Boslon (Siebert 11-4) at Syracuse
45 31 .~ 320
16 0 WP- Sullon (9-6). · LP-Perry Blrkdale course.
"The
.
bunkers
used
to
lie
Cleveland
(McDowell
8
.
7),
Charleston
.u
32
.579
1
captured
the day before with a race and $2,500 prize money .
(6) , (6-8). HR-Crawford (4th) .
·
He . was commenting
on deadly," Nicklaus, the reigning night.
Tidewater
47 35 .573 1 1:29.9, 96.21 miles per hour
· and
John GIIDn of Miami, Fla.,
·
d def
Washington !Shellenback 3·4 Rochi!Ster
43 34 .558 21/,
( 1)' St. Louis
000 110 ooo- 2 9 1 reports that he refused to PIaY PGA champton an
performance
in
qualifying.
finished
fourth· ove~all in an
ending and Gogolewskl O·Ol al Balli- Richmond
37 43 .~ 10
San
Diego
000
200
0013
6
0
(7)
in the 'Cleveland Open two tiUeholder said. "But now they more (McNally 17-4 and Jack· 'Louisville
36 42 '-.,__462 ·10
He led 28 laps of the heat, Eagle.Chev; Gregg Yo~mg of
(3· 2 ~n~p~~~~~ 0. 1 WP
(3.
Cleveland (7·8) and Simmons. weeks ago because of possible are very easy to play."
son
2·
1),
2,
twl-night.
'
Toledo
31
48
.392
15'12
Alou Norman, Miller (9) and Ken·
only to have Hobbs, o( Rugby, Wilton, Conn., was fifth in a
New York !Bahnsen· 8·7l at Winnipeg
79 47 .382 16
dall. WP-MIIIer (6-7). HRs- demonstrations following · Nagle agreed with Nicklaus Detroit
England, pass him on the 29th Surtees powered by a Cosworth!Lollch 12·6) , night.
Monday's Games
Torre (14th) , Colbert (18th).
threats he feceived while but ,also said the greens were
Cali lorn Ia (Messersmith 7-8) Syracuse 6 Louisville ~
1clrcuit and go on to win by ·Ford engine ; and Jar.k Eitelplaying the recent U.S. Open at slow.
. at Minnesola (Biyleven 7·11 ), Char lesion 3 Tidewater 2
about a car's length in his jorg of Englewood, Colo., was
Ardmcre, Pa.
Lee Trevino, the playoff night.
Rochesler 10 Toledo 8
McLaren-Chev.
sixth in a Lola-Chev.
"I had never entered tho winner of the Canadian Open,
Oakland (Odom. 4-4) at Richmond 7 Winnipeg 0
Chicago (Magnuson 1-0), night.
Hobbs, by virtue of his win in . .-------~~~~
tournament so how could I with- was confideni he could keep his
the
first heat, started the
Wednesday's Games
draw?" the two-time Brililll form and,add the British Open
Calif. at Minn . (nigh'!)
'
Cincl~natl 000 012 OD0- '3 9 ,0 seclond 13h().lapp contest .odn Billet
Opeil
winner' said. "They even crown to hlS four tournament I&lt;.C. at Mllw. (nlghl)
\
"
Houslon 100 003 oox- 4 s 1 poe, w t osey secon . u
reported I would not be playing victories this year.
Oak. al Chic. (nigh!)
Simpson !1·2) and Bench; Posey flew past the English·
in the Canadian Open at He flew in on the same plane N.Y. al Del. (night)
Blasingame,
Gladding (8) .and. man on the fourth lap and
Bos. at Clev. 2 (twl ·nlght)
H1att.
WP-Biaslngame(5.7)
.. '
Montreal while I was actually as Player but beat the Sou!h Wash.
...
'
,._ ,:.-.
-- .
,at Bait. (night)
Dying on my way Iller~."
. African to the course by nearly
Player, disappointed with his an bour and a half 'in an· en·
rece11t form in the United deavor to g~t plenty of practice.
FACTS
$tales, •cut short a scheduled
here and watch it
!bur hour practice fairway
·
"bloom"!
Earn at our
your bills
session after only 30 minutes so
By GARY KALE
always felt we could catch up to sburgh In the N.L. East.
current annual rate of
when you can't '
~nny Doyle scored on Willie
thai he could play around the
UPI SporiB Writer
them so I'm not surprised we
Two decades haven't dlml- are thla close right now. U we Montanez's eighth~nnlng sacri. tough Royal Birkdsle layout.
4%% or 5%
IP SICKNESS or injury left you
"I think I have discovered ·
nished the Dodgers' eye for . don't win with this club, then fice fly for the run that snapped
disabled and out of work,
on 6-month savings
Atlanta's 'six-game winning
what has been wrong with my
revenge over the Giants after a you have to wonder.''
could you pay your bills?
certificates.
swing and I don 'I want to force
playoff loss cost them the 1951 Pittsburgh defeated Chicago, string. Montanez, Don Money
Nationwide's Income Protector Plan guarantees _you a
National League pennant.
!h'l; New York lost to Montreal, and Roger Freed each drove in
monthly cash income for one
It's ell8ctiy 20 years since 2-1, and then came back for an two nms for Philadelphia as ,
year, five years, or, if you
Bobby Thompson's homer beat 8-4 victory; Philadelphia edged Woody Fryman gained his
qualify, for life.
lhe Dodger..and Los Angeles Is Atlanta, 6-6; Houaton clipped fourth victory against three
Call me today for delails:
attempting to prevent a repeat OncinnaU, w, and San Diego losses. Earl Williams socked a
'
Lt. Thomas Selfridge beperfonnsnce by eliminating the edged .St.. Louis, 3-2, In otber three-run hmner for the Braves,
came the first airplane fahis 13th circuit of the season,
Giants from division competl- N,L, action.
tality in the United States,
Nate Colbert waUoped his
lion.
·
Steve
Blass
matched
his
Sept. 17, 1908. The World
Meigs County Branch of
The road is ar~uous . But the entire 1970 winning output by 18th hmner of the year and then
Almanac notes that Ameri·
The Athens County Savings ·
can aircraf~ pion~r Orville
Dodgers, 81&gt; games back of San notching his lOth decision sc.ored the winning run in the. &amp; Loan Co.
.296 Second St.
Wright wa.s piloting the air,
._
in the West Division a against Cltlcago. He aided his bottom of the ninth on Oille
Pomeroy,
Ohio
c r a f t when the accident
month ago, now stand only-31&gt; cause with a two-run single in Brown's double . Joe Torre
occurred, and he suffered
games behind the Giants after the seventh Inning. Manny accounted for both St. Louis Member Feder al Hom e Loan
Bidwell's surging Pirates
multiple hip and leg fracMonday's 7-3 victory.
Sanguillen's two.nJil single in runs with a double and his 14th Bank.
tures when thrown clear of scored a 6-S seventh Inning
Willie Davis, almost too the sixth inning capped a three· homer. Bob Miller extended his Member Federal Savi ngs &amp;
the wreckage.
upset victory Monday night
Loan Insurance , Corp. Ail
yo~mg to remember lbst· In· run Pirate uprising and gave scoreless string to 15 2-3 innings
over the previ9US unbeaten
accounts in su red up to
famous day In '51, drove In Pittsburgh 4he-lead for good. as he picked up his sixth.~In for $10,000.00.
AddavUie Jets In · the Ohio
307 Sprina Ave.
three runs with a ~ses~oaded Np.hit ace Kenny Holtzman San Diego.
. I
PEPITONE BRUISED
Valley
Ll tile
League
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
triple
and
WiUie
Cr8wford
hit
suffered
his
eight
loss.
CHICAGO (UPI)-Joe Pepi- Association.
his fourth· hm~er of the season New York pitchers allowed
tone of the Chicago CUbs was I Bidwell now 7-1 previously
to pin Gaylord Perry with his just three hlts!n each game, but'
carried off the field on a upset Cheshire, 2-1,
Av.111.1bl•· th 1s yp;n o nly'
eighth loss ,and extend the San the Mets only managed a split
stretcher after he fouled a ball 'In otl)er games, Syracuse
Francisco
hurler's
losing
string
against
Montreal.
Nolan
Ryan
off his right anlile Monday. But topped Racine, 9-7; VInton
1',·11 to 1'"'1 nu, .. , .., 011 lhe Up p''' Oh1u
to six straight.
gave up both J:;xpos runs with
the Injury was believed to be a defeated Green, &amp;.s; Cbeshlre
The victory was Los Angeles' ooses~oaded walks in the eighth
=~- bad bruise and not a fracture. shutout Salem, 7-IJ and Cenfifth
in a row and earned Oon Inning of the ~ner to suffer his
terville took a 1Hl forfeit victory
Sutton its ninth win . in 15 fifth loss. Ray Sadeckl
over Rio Grande.
decisious.
benefitted from New York
OVLL Sf ANDINGS
"We
wanted
these
last
two
power In nightcap to win his
TEAM
.W L
victories and we went out and third game. Cleon Jones drove
Addavllle
8 1
got
them," said the 31-year-old in four nms with ahomer and a
Cheshire
8 2
SCHEDULE OF
Bidwell
7 4 HAMMOCK HIGHRISE Is Davis. "Now we are going good single as the Mets flnlsiled the
SAILINGS
Centerville
6 4 the work of spectators at and the Giants Ill'• hurting. I day 41&gt; games back of PittVinton
5 4 Hockenheim race course In
•· '
·Racine
5 4 West Germany, all lor a
better view of the Jochen
Clncl~natl to Marietta ...... . ., .. July 12 • 14
Syracuse
4 6 Rindt Formula·! Memorial
.Salem
2 6 Race, named for an Aus·
Marietta to Plttaburgh ... . : . .... July 14 ·16
Green
2 8 Irian raelng ace ldlled last
E11t Uverpoolto Plttaburgh . .. .. July 15 • 18 ·
Rio Grande
0 11 year.

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shells 5 pa k
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Dulch Loaf. Pepper Loaf,.
Pickled &amp; Pimento Loa!. We 1h lb.
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(Not ready packaged) .' pkg.
Guaranteed tresh! We slice II
tor you .

lb.

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Meats
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:
Scenes of Racine and,~utland Independence D~y Observances ~ ·
-..•..
.

· -'1'111

lonllneJ, ~Punleao,, 0., July 6,11171

f '.
'

'

'
'

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.

Majorette -Traits .ormed

.

....
-...
-

The regents fired her. A being an accomplice to murder . leadership acllvities. During
Tlli Riddle of Aqela Dam In an all-black high schoot band Greenwich Vjllage to :a "pro· .
Sludlel Manlam
Edl$er't aele: ''Sweet ud In Alabama to a €ommuntat greulve" setiool and a white She 1\'88, graduated magna California cpurt overruled Although shewas not present In her early years she earned a
deelle'' ue werdl ...t miPl revolulionary wbo became one home w~ a Protestant cum la"\de from Branpeis and, them. The regents fired her court she was accused aa the certificate from her Sunday

....,
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PETE SIMl'IION, QIAJRIIAJf of, the ::;

l&lt;'ire :

MEMBERS Ol' RACINE American
legion Post 602 during opening ceremoJiies of
the Independence parade Mondl!y at Racine.

psrade. spooaored by .lhe Rac(lle
Department presents Mts. Herbert RQiish the ~
third place trophy for the fiost entered by the .,
Ohio Valley Grange. .
..
~

. - "'..
"""

\

IJIPIW

to of the three women ever to minister waa involved deeply In at Marcuse's urging, spent a. again, this time on the grounds alleged purchaser of the guns School for excellent perfor·

.year at. a Marxist-oriented that she was making speeches uaed in the abortive escape
.Institute in Frankfurt, Germa- around the state unbefitting a attempt. She ned, waa arrested
. on fugitive warrant in New
ny · .
. '
.
. university faculty member.
~med an Accompllc:e
. York two months later and
She came back to the
University of California at San Now a· busy and . vocal return~ to California • be
Diego 10 siJldy for her. master's militant, she became involved tried. ·
WJren you talk to people who
.._merle111 •o~lety. Wl!al a member ,of. the bOard of ham for the funer81 of four degree wtder Marcuse. While in the cause of tile "Soledad
broql!l Allpla DIYIB to IIIII regents, invited l)er to Jurich at yowtg negro gil:Is killed In the there, she beca'lne the.principal brothers," three Negroes ac· say they knew Angela Davis the
J111U7 Ualte4! Pnu llltenltfo!l. a Los Angeles ~eataurant.
bombing of. 11 Baptist Sunday . figure. in a ~onfrontati~n with cused of the murder of a white constant theme is that she Is
at rejlarten tbreapat lbe After some brief ama)1 talk, school near her home.
Chancellor Wtlllam McGill, now guard at Soledad prison in personally a non-violent hwnan
U!ilted statet ll!d Ia EuroPe Simon leaned . .Ver to the She . me~ . imd became · a presldento! Columbia Universi· California in Jl!nuary., 1970. She being.
(wl!ere tile ltudledl bave ll)lel!l poiaed, soft-epoken young WO· ·student of ! Herbert Marcuse, ty . .
made a trip to Castro's CUba. Mrs. Mabel B. Murphy,·advi:
...Rihl see"'•&amp; the Ulwer. man and said:
. the ·G~n,bom phjlosopby Then .S1le took a post as Then came the affair at the ser to girls at Parker High
. 'l1dt li tbe ~t of.five !arl!clet "Well; you . certainly don't. prQfessor ·iltl!l prophet oi the assistant 'professor of philoso: San Rafael courthouee on Aug: School in Birmingham, says of
!faeb!C tbe We• of one of tl!e look like a Communillt and you "New un." She spen\ a year pby · at .~ I,Jniverstty of 7, 1970, when an effort was Angela :
"Smartest PupU"
llltlaa'amothurpriJillg revtlll- · don't aclllke 1 CommiUIIst."
at the Sorbonne in Paris California af,Loa ~eles and, made to effect the escape of
"She was exemplary In every
· li..-let. .
Leivn South at IIi
marked b~ a, love affair .with a when ihe boar~' of regents three San Quentin convicts.
.
"Mr. Simon, I do not want white Ge~n student which demanded to know if she was a Superior Court Judge Harold J . ..}!ay. Her attendance and her
By JACK V. FOX
you 10 JI)IBunderstand one tbing broke up In lbe .face of member of the 'Communist Haley and twq convicts were behavior were l)oth excellent.
Ualted Press JDternaUODal for a moment," she said. "I am opposition from both sets of pai'fy, she IDI.hesitatingly ack- llilled in the resulting shootout. Her grades were excellent. She
Miss Davis was charged with was a girl scout w~o showed
Angela Davis bas been dedicated to the overthrow .of parents.
·
nowledged that she was.
sizzling for a long time.
your system of government ilnd
· In her' 'll years she bas your soci.ety."
.
_,
.
undergone a transformalion At age 15,.she went from the
from a' baton twirling majorette deep sout)l to New York's

ft

,.

lleea

A. . oan, U ''reeead) II make tbe FBI's 11101t wanted · clvll rights. 1 . ·
lid a dlllea year, 11!1- Bat Ust.
. Wblle on• scholarahlp · to
. . lellaJ llllei!Mda let!! ml u Ill During the controversy over· Brandeis UniverSity lin th~.
ilecnplb 1D marder, IIi yO!!DI whether she abould be allowed Boston ou~ts there was a
- piJUioutely ~ted to teach at UCLA, multtmUiion. tralDII8tlc ijiterl;we wheq. she
. lo tile ov~rtl!r~w of tod1y'1 aire indUBtriallst Norlo!) Si!non returned to l)ef nalive Birmlng'.

~

.

VeteraDB Memorial Hospital Hartford.
Sandra ·WinebreMer, Cbarle&amp;;:
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS THE LEGION FLOAT waa ooe of several that took part in the 4tb of July eelebrl!tion - Harold F. Jeffers, Racine; . MONDAY DISCHARGES - Cochran, Hll'rison Robinson "'
Chris Davis, ·Emmett . Ward, Sr. , Lizzie Hanning.
:::
Monday at Racine...
'
Sandra .. Winebrenner,
..
., '
Syracuse; Mildr.ed Powell,
.,
Portland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
.,.. Edna Wayland, Donna Devol,
George Tope, Hayward J~nes,
Charles Beegle, Clinton
Dlnguss, Bernie Edwards,
Edna Parsons, Carol Sisson.
.·.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS .Worley
Davis,
Dexter;
Harrison Robinson, Sr., Utart,
W. Va.; Clifford · Stumbo,
'1.00 OFF
Middleport; Marilyn Louise
Burleson; Clyde, Tex.; Chris
ON EVERY PAIR
Sizes 29 to 50. Over 2,000
Davis, Mason.
. to choose from. ·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Mary RobinsOn, Sarah Congo,·
Jenny White.
MEN'S COLORED POCI&lt;,ET
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Fred Roush, Racine; Louise
Partlow, Syracuse; . Clara
Murray, Wellston ; · Lori
Laudermill, Mason; Anthony
AND
Heaton, Chester; Lula Moore,

....,

~.~ ·. Best

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T:...Ill1e.nt

Beulah Jones. Judging was on
the basis of talent and audience
(eoidmaed from Page 1) 1 response.
Fisher of Hebron; a. vocal trio, The former Rutland High
Beverly, Georgene and Jenny School football field was the .
Grate, accomjlanled by Mrs. scene of all of the celebration
Gecqe Grate; Katrina Batey, activities. Throughout the day,
Middleport, a tap number . to firemen and their· wives
Hawaii Fl~; Charles Price, operated coilce8sion and game
Lancaster, vocal, "Folsum booths and a fireworks diaplay
Pri.lon Blues," and a tap routine followed the talent show.
by Lynette Whittington, All non-winning contestanta
Rutland, "Raindrops Keep were given $2 gifts by 1M fire ·
Filling on My Head."
department. ftrchie McKinney
Judges
were
Donna is president of the department,
Wllltamson, Wayne Turner and Duke Kennedy the fire chief.

BY THE UP!

~

TEE SHIRTS
BOYS
Reg·. 1.99 to. 3.99

SPECIAL

I

~

I;MIES'

Values Up

J~ U)IJi"

'20~:ff '

td 20.00

Buy · Now &amp; Sa \IE!

GIRLS' SHORT SETS

.

TAKING SEroND place was the float
entered by the Methodist Church of Racine.

AHORSE AND SULKY added an oldtlme
note to the 4tb of July parade Monday at
Racine.

THE SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
marching band took part In Monday's activities at Racine.

Bicentennial
Circuit Rider
By REV. DAVID POLING
Much thought, and properly so, is attached to the com·
lng bicentennial celebration of the United States of AmerIca. The year 1976 will soon be here and the national activities surging around this historic event are well under •
way.
Yet significant events did precede the Declaration of
IndeJ.&gt;I'ndence, the signing of the Constitution and the
shapmg of the Congress. Much of the 18th century was
pioneer, frontier work-and on the front edge were mis·
llionaries and circuit riders probing the forest settle·
ments and staying close to wagon trains and home·
steaders.
Not surprising is the salute going up to the prerevolu·
Uonary leadership of Francis Asbury, Methodist circuit
rid~ commissioned by John Wesley and surely one of
the keys to the vast expansion of Protestant Christianity
in the colonies. Asbury touched these shores in 1771 and

provided the initial thrust lor the tradition of circuit
1771.
riding among Christian churches and fellowships.
The Rev. Ted Nicholas of Ashland, Ky. , has written a
Asbury was to stretch his preaching-teaching run from
script for a motion picture to be shown during the conNew Hampshire to Georgia and head as far west as the
vocation. Speakers for the three days include Kentucky's
Mississippi. Communities with no regular pastor and
Gov. Louie B. Nunn, Bishop Roy H. Short of Louisville
many without regular public worship were eager for
and Bishop Kenneth W. Copeland or'Houslon, Tex .
the five· or six-week stops of preachers on horseback.
In North Carolina, another jmportant stop on Bishop
As part of the 200th-anniversary celebration of Asbury's
Asbury's circuit, there will be special events at Lake .
Junaluska, the Jurisdictional Conference Grounds of the
arrival in the colonies (Maryland) an art medal has been
created by sculptor Ralph J. Menconi. One side shows
!]nited Methodist Church and center of world Methodism.
a head of Wesley who inspired Asbury's work in the New ···· Dates for North Carolina are Sept. 3-5.
World. The opposite or reverse traces the first circuit
created by Asbury in 1771.
Saddlebags, bedroll and Bible make up some of the
symbolism of this first American Methodist bishop who
v.isited and preached in taverns, jails and private homes
MONEY GIVEN
from 1771 to 1816. Historians note that Asbury gave more
COLI,JMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
than 16,000 sermons and covered some 300,000 miles on school districts received $6.1
horseback.
· million more in state aid in June
The Methodist-Episcopal Church was organized in 1784. lban in May, the state auditor's
Our circuit judge system of law was influenced by the office said Mollday.
logic an(~ success of this saddlebag ministry. The ChauThe latest disbursemeni was
tauqua Circuit, also a Methodist creation, brought out· $23,688,180, the largest amowtts
standing 'programs of discussion, debate and music to of which went 'to ,Franklin
rural and small-town America. ·
Special commemorations of Bishop Asbury's . pioneer County • $1.75 million; Hamilton.
ministry will take place in the mid-South. At Wilmore, County,$1.26mlllion; Cuyahoga
Ky ., home of Asbury College and Asbury Theological County, $1.2 million, and
Seminary, a three-day convocation will be held starting Montgomery County, $1.02
Oct. 26-'the date of Asbury's arrival in the colonies in million.
'

!

May Wins
again,
Filially
.
Your

Your Polley
Has the Recipe
for. hcurlty
expenence,
for your needs and
plan~lng lo save you
all go .inlo your
program . We see

1Cnow1tdgo,

.
'
By- VITO STELLINO
Jim Hunter allowed just three PetroceUi also had a three-run bases-loaded walk in · the
UP! Sports Writer
hitlt in six innings but absorbed triple. New York shelled Gary seventh to band Milwaukee ·the
Don't tell Rudy May that the his seventh loss against II Peters for five •uns in the first. ·victory over Minnesota. Theadog is man's best friend.
wins. Tony Gonzalez' sacrifice inning but Bob Bolin and Ken bald snapped a J.J tie when he
May tripped over his dog- fly in the first and Jim Taf:Um held then\ to two runs worked ~im Perry, now 12-7,
that's what he claims, at least Spencer's run-scoring do11ble In the rest of the game. ·
for a.bases.loaded walk.
-and fractured his right wrist the fourth decided the game.
Dick Billings hit the first . Supj!rb pitching by Bruce Dal
in what must be the most In the other games, Boston grand slam of his career and Canton and Jim Rooker carried
freakish accident of the base- routed New York 12-7, Milwauk- Frank Howard and Del Unser Kansas City to the sweep over
ball seasqn. .
,
ee edged Minnesota 2-1, Wash· chipped. I~ with t~e-run Chicago. In the first game, Dal
The result was that May ington clobbed Cleveland 15-6, homers. as Washington born· Canton held the White Sox to
didn't pitch from May 21st until Kansas c;ity swept a double- barded Cleveland tO sweep a one rwt and eight hits in 7 1-3
June 17th and .Jle finally got his header from Chicago S-1 and 1-0. four·game series. The Senators .innings and Tom Burgmeir
first victory in almost two and the Detroit-Baltimore game bad 18 hits. Denny McLain finished. up. In the second
months Monday wiih, a seven was rained out.
1 · started the game but ~as lifted game. Rooker pitched a three·
inning performance as the In the National leage, when he fell behind 3.() in the hit shutout. The Royals
California Angels downed the Montreal beat New York 2·1 but second inning and reliever Paul wrapped up each game in the
Oakland A's, 2·1.
lost the secona ·· game 8-0, Lindblad got the victory and rirst lhning, scoring four runs
May, who hadn't won a game Pittltburgh topped Chicago 6-2, ·the benefit of the Senator in the first inning of the opener
since May 8, had failed to get a •Los Angeles beat San Francisco barrage.
.
and the lone run of the game in
victory in his first lour starts 7-3, HoU8ton edged Cincinnati 4Ron Theobald drove In one the first inning of the nightcap
since returning to the rotations. 3, Philadelphia lopped Atlanta 1'111\ with a sacririce fly In the on Fred Patet's double and
But the 'lefthanded thrower- · 6-5 ancl San Diego edged St. 'third and the second with a Amos Otis' single.
· fortunately he didn't break his Louis 3-2. .
• pitching wrist-allowed only six Boston came up with a lf&gt;.hit
hits before he was lifted when barrage including four homers
Joe Rudi led off the eighth with to wipe out a S-0 deficit and '
I
a double. Dave LaRoche came trounce New York. Reggie
. .
. OPTOMETRIST . .
on to retire two batters and Smith hi t a three-run homer,
·OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE'
then Lloyd Allen got the final George Scott added a two-run
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.:
four outs. It was May's fourth shot and Rico Petrocell,i · and
victory in nine &lt;!ecisions. ·
Joe Lahoud had solo homers.

w. :COM

Ins.

NOW

LOOKING SHARp lit black and white
costumes were members of the Riggs Royat'
Cadets in Mondsy's Fourth of July parade in

)Uiclne.

DAVID POLING, D.D.

ro') ~~f~w

D.

GIRLS SCOOTER

ANT DRESSES
Reg. 1.99 to 3.99

Fri. &amp;

Nights '

BIGGS DEPT. STORE
4th &amp; Main

pt, Pleasant, W.Va.

,.

mer

.

The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., of Pomeroy cap·
tured the First.Annual Redman
Inn Slow Pitch SOftball Tournament held over the July
Fourth • Holiday weekend on
Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
· The Pomeroy entry, unbeaten
in the· double elimination
tournalnent with five straight
triumphs, thumped Hart's Used
Cars ls-8 in tbe championship
gameJMonday night. Eighteen
teamS were entered in the four
day ·t vent. ·
Royal· Crown Cola o( Mid·
dlep~rt placed third, and
Ran~olph 76 of Pl. Pleasant was

.

fourth.
In the championship battle,
Greg G(bbs was credited with
the win. Raymond Cundiff was
charged with the loss. Bill Davis
hurled the final lrining for tht
losers,
. Hart's jumped off to a J.1l lead
in the first Inning of the final
contest, but The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., bounced back
for seven in Its half of' the first,
and waa 'never headed.
For the winners, non swisher
bad a double and two singles;
Bob Whaley a triple and two
singles; Bill Radford a double
and two singles; Pee Wee

How To Hold ·

fALSE T

i

~"fd~~:;,;:/t"~'FF~DI•
ture Adheolv• Po'l!dor.
'~ ,.
that fll are eOMntlal to
•.1111\' "
your·dentiat recul&amp;rlJ.

'

SENSATIONAL VALUI:
INACOMPACT
CONSOLE!

Wright a homer and two
singl~s; Jell Burt a double and
single; Greg Bailey, John Wolfe
and Bob Grueser all singles and
Gibbs a double . '
For the losers, Jimmy Jo
Hemsley had two singles; Ed
Van Maire a double and single;
Dan Rizer a double and single;
Dick TeMant two singles; B.
Johnson two singles and Sam

Van Maire two singles.
To win the 1971 championship,
Tile Farmers Bank a~d Savings
Co., defeated Holzer Medical
Center, Falls City, Randolph 76
and Hart's Used Cars twice.
Following the championship
contest, .individual and team
trophies were presented to the
top four teams by tournament
director Mike Allen.
•

:GIANT

ED FOR
GREATER DEPENDABILITY

Two Attended. Women s Comerence

'

Pastoral Family Honored Sunday

S'oc'lal·
caIen dar

1

The DALTON • !14112W
Contemporary styled cornpact c::onsole ln
tr!lU'Ied Walnut color on~~~~~ t\ttd~

it&lt;'
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with bSth
• easy one-knob Color
· Commander Control .....
• AFC Automatic
Fine-tuning Control

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ONLY

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OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. ·NIGHTS
992-2635
.MIDDLEPORT

f\tsft'\tne
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'

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~~~··
GET YOUR 4-PIE~E
IMPIIt~L

FINI CHINA

, I

,A!! Carved~
OIAMO,NO

·

.

,RINGS

We'll do our part.

Juot brlnl your friendly
bachelor in to oee our ArtCorved
diamond riq1. When he lett
hoW you llatit up when you
t,y one on, he'll HIIOlve thtn
·ond therethol nobody but
him witt~ve you-·
And he'll II ty .-tve thot

DRIVE-1M
··BANKING &gt;.
.

.•

'

.

. .Fridays Only

.

t

The Drive-In Wlncloy.~

,

i

isOpen

near
here. Brian
.
, , 20,
Clevelarid:
Wamaer;
Cleveland, drowned In Lake
Erie near here after hll
Blnlt

·Salllrday
Usbon: TIIO!ll8a E. Po~sa&amp;e,
22, 'UJbon, In a on~ar cruh
east of here.
~UII '--•• · . Ca!llbrldge : Edward C.
MaU8t, 'll, Derwent, when
'
IDQtorcycle and a car collided

(Continuously)

HI RT.

·

-~Fre:m:on;t:~Ra:ym:on:d~W;·:Ba:U~·~;:·: : : ; :·: · : : :

We have a credit plan designed to fit

itoun '

Orlltr aanlilng
,and 5 to 7 IS
Frtd•r•.

here.
Rio Grande: Paul R. Booth,
&amp;, Thurman, in a two-car eruh
· on u.s. S&amp; west Ill hete.
Larain: Rullell Boyd, II,
Vermilion, .drowned while try·
ing til lwlm· acroa tbl Black

..

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foot COitbol It thll :
low price.
:

's aeaneiS' '

9 A.M. to7 P.M.

tho- ho'Ulift,.,.. will
be an ArtC~rvecf even btfort we
tell him about Aitea,.q·, ·
Permenent V•'lue Pl•n.

*

E'Jet'

.JSAVE'31FI.

'fiN ISH ING

.WITH .AMOBILE HOME
LOAN ·,f.ROM ..

111 ...y "

,

PHn.o, ILL. - A single· Rep. Kenneth Creasy, R·
engine airplane carrying jockey Delaware, ~d bis group '!'ants
Vernon S&amp;ylor and four others to see how well the land has
a fllght from Si()W[ City, been reclaimed afler mining.
Iowa, to · Cincinnati craahed The .legislators are to Ry over
near here Mon(lay, killing all the area in Gov. John J.
aboard. S&amp;ylor, 21, ·ttie win· GUUgan's official airplane and
•
,
_£
ningesljockey at River. Downs then mo.tor from Wheellng,·.w.
Race Track this season, bad · Va. to a number of mining
ridden at a track in sOuth areas. Tiley plan to fly back to
Mrs. John Werner, president with 211 Ohio women coming for
Dakota during the weekend and Columbus from Zanesville.
of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary at least one day,
was returning to Clnclnnali to Other lawmakers planning to
Society
of the Middleport First
Featured speaker was Miss
. pick up hll schedule. He bad. take the ~ur in~lude Reps. John
Baptist Church, and Mrs. June Sutton, an Australian
•
won 35 tlmes in 160 races at the Scott, R·Fa1rborn; John
Charles
Searles of Middleport, . Baptist Missionary loaned to
track.
Bechtold, n.cincinnatl; Sam
president of the Women's the American Baplist Foreign
WRAIN, OIDO- CYRUS S. Spec, R·New Concord; Michael
f
Society of the Rio Grande Mission Society to work with the
Eaton, a Cleveland industrialist De!Bane, D·Hubbard; Don
.~·.
Baptist Association, have joint committee of Swatow
and a confidante of world Maddux, D·Lancaster; Walter
returned from the 27th annual • Baptist Churches Hong Kong.
Communist rulers, said the only Paulo, R·Canfleld; Ralph
conference of American Baptist
Mrs. Searles ~as ~ne of
things secret about the Pen· Welker, R-Pomeroy, and A. G·.
.
Women
held
at
Otterbein
several
who assisted With the
tagon Papers were that !hey Lanclone, !).Bellaire. The Ohio B)I UnitedPress llltematlooal River.
serving of communion. The
"were really secret to our A!Ues General Assembly adjourned
The extended July 4 weekend Cleveland: Thomas Nunn, 59, College, Westerville.
Ohio
Baptist Convention to be
and to the American people" - last Thursday for the extended will termed "disastrous" on a Cleveland, and Terry Libertine,
There
were
335
registered
for
held
in
Akron Oct. 13-15, was
not to CommiDiist leaders In Fourth of July holiday and was nationwide scale, .but the num· 11, Brook Park, 1n a two~ar
the entire four-day conference ·anriowtced.
Hanoi,PeklngandMoacow.Ina to return to Its work today:
blir of traffic fatalities in Ohio ~rash on ,I-71 here.
copyrighted arlicle In Sunday's
fell far short of wbat safety Hillsboro: Roger ·Hatfield, 5,
Lorain Journal written by
officials bad feared.
Rt. 4, Hillsboro, when the .car
Editor Irvin Leibowitz, Eaton
At least 22 persons were he was riding in crashed on
saldCommunlat~ ~-~~ •
ld~iltlfieddurlngthe 7il-hqurpe· u.s. 50 near here in Highland . A poUuct ~U.nner w~ held ·-Wtilton ~:was speaker .at ,the..
knew virtuallY·every lnove the ~ '
riod.'tn Ohio as viclinU of·traf. County.
'. 1 ·· • • ·
Sunday at Trinity Church Sunday service of Trinity
U. S. planned in Indtcblna
fic-relalelj mishaps. It bad been Youngstown : Vance C. Moore, lionoring the Rev. and Mrs. Church. He used a patriotic
before It happened.
pr)Jdlcted that 38 would die be- 37, Poland, when bis motorcycle Robert Hegnauer of Berne, theme ,
''
'Much, If not moat of the
tWeen 6 p.m. Friday and mid· clashed on Walker Mill Rd. in Ind., former pastoral family of
material In the Pentagon
nlght Monday, Thirty-one died nearby Boardman Twp.
Trinity.
..._ . SYSTEM PLANNED
papers covering the years of
a year ago.
Toledo: Evelyn Ruckley, 83,
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. CLEVELAND (UP!) - A$1.~
Pre sl dents Truman,
TUESDAY
!In addition, at least nine per· Toledo, run over by a backing Hegnauer were guests over the million communications center
Eisenhower, Kennedy and MIDDLEPORT Masonic sons drowned, one died in a up auto near her home.
weekend of Mr. and Mrs, Ray will be installed at Cleveland
Johnson were familiar to Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday 7:30 fJre and another died in a fall .Bowling Green : Ronald Bell· Riggs and planned to continue Clinic within tbe next year,
Commwtist leaders, Eaton told p.m. .
tO stretch the overall acciden· fy, 20, Toledo, drowned at today on their vacation. The becoming th~ first hospital in
Liebowitz 4yring a telephone POMEROY CHAPTER 186, tal toll to 33 In ihe state.
Clear Water quarry along Ohio minister had the morning Ohio to have such program·
conversation from Eaton's OES, Tuesday evening at !Six of the traffic victims 163 in ·wood Cowtty.
prayer and.spoke brieRy at the ming.
farm in Nova Scotis. During a Masonic Tem~le .tor initiation. were involved iJj motorcycle Cincinnati: Ronald Donnelly' Sunday morning services.
Tile system· would be U8ed to
visit to Hanoi in December of · All members mvtted.
f llshes. TWo.pedestrians were Jr., 16 , Cincinnati, dro1""ed
Sundsy evening they were maintain recorda of patient-bed
IIIQII for 10 days, Eaton said he PYTHIAN Sisters, 7:30 p.m. T!)ong the dead.
while wading in the Whitewa,ter dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. and patient-doctor assign·
was entertained by Premier Tuesday night at the American
'l:he Pleasant weather condi· River here.
Phil Meinhart, and on Monday ments, schedule operating
Pham Van Dong and Ton Due legion Hall, Middleport.. The liens contributed to a fearsome Newark:MichaeiShaumleffel, evening the guests of Mr. and rooms, order services and
Tbang, head of state, and was charter will be draped for Mrs. drowning toll. Two young men 14, Newark, died of injuries suf. Mrs. Thomas Young. Kennit supplies witbin tbe hospital and
told of . the Communists' Margaret Seldenabel. Members !h'Pwned in Lake Erie S&amp;IIJrdaY fered when he fell off a car in
clinic, route patients and keep
superior ln"telllgence personnel ·iirged to attend.
~n their .. salll;loat coil8j)sed. a shopping center here.
pharmacy and central supply
but was again rebuffed by p. S.
- ~!f.Y were Daniel A. Grumney,
Rocky River: Daniel A.
.
offlclala.
THURSDAY
24, North Otmated, and Stewart Grumney, 2'1, North Otmated, man, 38, in a one;efa~ acctdent inventories.
COLUMBUS - THE bitterly TRINITY CHURCH Sunday Gergol, 23, ~ll'!'ood.
and Stewart Cergol, 23, Lake· .on Ohio 590 west o ere.
ted te b d t 8 nd ta
1
ood dr
d in Lak E ·
Brimfield; Joyce Townsend,
contei sta u ge
x school . hayride and wiener
jTwo 'multiple death traffic w • own~
e rte 11 , drowned in Brimfield Lake
proposals remain in the roast, Thursday, at Royal Oak ··accidents also marred the holi- when thell' satlboat collapsed. near here .
spotllght of state government Park. Those needing trans- \ day.
.
Sunday
SandUBky : George Freytag,
Ibis' week, but other legislative portation report to Pomeroy , A Saturday craah on 1·71 in Warren : Carol Adams, 27,
h h'
to
business waa to Include an on- church at 6:45, be at park at 7. l Cleveland claimed Thomas and Judy Jack, 24, both of 19, Sandusky, w en IS mo rIlle-spot examination of strip·
' NIDin 59 Cleveland and Terry Warren, when the car they cycle coUided with a car in
mined areas of southeastern
'''bertine'' 11 Brook' Park.
were riding in crashed on .Ohio Perkins Twp., Erie Cowtty.
'"'
' '
Ruhl L. Rose,
Ohio. A, House subconunittee
UNDERGOING TESTS
i On Sunday, Carol Adams, 27, 305 north of here in Trumbull 46,Portsmouth:
Portsmouth, when his car
crashed here.
studying several measures William "Shorty" ~aver Is a and Judy Jaclt, 24, bOth of War· Co~ty:
which would tighten up patient at the Riverside ren,• were killed In a one~ar Chilrtlon: Robert B. Hosmer
Akron: Walter Ernest, 46,
regulations o~ strip-mining Methodist Hospital, Room 8023, crash on Ohio 305 in Trumbull II, 24, ~urton, in a ?lotorcy~le· Akron, drowned in the Nimislia
planned a Friday trip by air and Columbus. He is currently ,County.
. car c~lltston at the ~tersecUon Reservoir south of here.
undergoing tests to determine ' Tile last reported traffic of Ohio 528 and 166 111 Geauga
Lima: Anna May Robinson'
the feasibility of surgery for a · death was that of Bertha Cowtty ·
b
sh
. r - - - - - - - - - • , ' seriouscondition.Cardamaybe ' Smith,64,Sprlngfleld,wbowas Cleveland: Kenneth Krlsl.a· 64, Lima, hit y a car as e
1
Cl land h f
walked In a field here.
' ·
sent to him at the hospital. Mil. • Injured Saturday• and expired usy, IO, eve
• w en tre
Springfield : Bertha Smith, 64,
Beaver Is a former Middleport Monday night at a Springfield destroyed the family's . home Springfield, died of injuries suf·
•
• hospital.
I'JiSident. 1
her~, ·
'
fered Saturday in a two-car
.
"
.
The hollday weekend deaths C,mcmnati·l Patrick Lucas, 30, crash on a Champaign County
8C OfS,I
' were:
Naples, Fla., when hia car rail
A THOUGHT '.
· Friday Nlgbl
off U.S. 52 .and rolled, over ro.adlil.liiltl!---~-~
. Coshocton: David Lee More- several tlmes !)ear he~.
..S. ,
'·FOR TOD' AY. . . house
38 Mollni Vernon in a Warren : James R. Hodges,
motor'cycle accidtint on ~ eo. 20, Warren, in a two-car crash
, Worry lakes away
shocton Coynty road west of on Ohio 305 near here.
.
. courage and shortens life.
here.
·
Orwell
T~hip : Benjamin
·. c
&lt;\dena: William R. Wallace;" Jackson, 18, Cleveland, drownea
SAME DAY
18,
Adena
in
a
one-car
crash'
wblle
swimming
at
Midway
-John 'L. Spalding
SERVICE
on
a
jefferson·
County
road
Lake
near
here
.
·
In At 9-0ut At 5
..
near" here.
Mouay
Palnesvllle : Lenore sue Lisbon: Richard D. Heaton,
Use'Oul'f=rn Park.ing LAit
.
'
Gross, . 21, North Ridgeville, 25, We~ville, died of injuries Robii'ISOII'
'
lfs Quick! Easy . l
wben
the
motorcycle
she
was
he
recetved
Saturday
In
a
one·
IWtSTIC St~
riding crashed Into two cars car crash near here.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

HeIp ,
stamp out
b heI

Down Paym.,t ranrina'tromlO% to 25'lo of retail sale small addlti111al cost.
Life insurance is available on an ~tiona I basis at~ · price will_be acceil~.

H:

false·teeth emb...... ~_iT :
. eolnl~~ 1"""" ,.h·~-.ogp: .,
ortatk
. Adenture
-~ :
FASTEETH•glveo dsOI 1/\
•
er, firmer. oteadier bold. W
,.
Do

·
·

gT :

h-I O .sa £er

NOW sl.57ro '2.88

OFF

land.

. 1

mine.''

(1)
'"

Reg . 2.99 To 4.99 '
Nowq 1GTn

G~~~ L~~~!v~a~1!!n's ~0%

Wire

on

MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS .

,•

I

Ov~tnigbt

.· ~i ·

RVTLAND J!'IRI!:MA,N Tim Martin whipped out cotton
candy In hll role with llrenien who staged an Indperidence
Day celelnUon Mmday,

a

mance at the First Congrega·
tional Church where she was a
member .
''I have notl)lng but tears in
my eyes when I think . she
might be involved In something
not right. I wo.uld go so far as
to say she had done _nothing
wrong. Whatever she did do or
is supposed to have done, I am
convmced she had to do what
she felt was right." - .
Tile ..Parker band , director
described her as "the smartest
pupil at the school and the most
outstanding majorette I can
· recall." .

Pomeroy·T~amWins Tournament

~

'I

Angela Davis, ded~ RevolutionBry,
one o{'3 Women o.n Most-Wa"&lt;ted List

· Of au the eilenll!
the dettiny ~
probably the
occurred on Sept. II,
four Negro girla
a bomb eq&gt;losion llt
street BapUst
mingham while a
cia$$ was
-A Parker
the funeral with
"She (Angela ) wu
girl whose ties with
ended the day of
bombing," said the

REG. '99.95

�'•

~

'·

:,

.

"'
:::
DlilJ
:
Scenes of Racine and,~utland Independence D~y Observances ~ ·
-..•..
.

· -'1'111

lonllneJ, ~Punleao,, 0., July 6,11171

f '.
'

'

'
'

'

.

Majorette -Traits .ormed

.

....
-...
-

The regents fired her. A being an accomplice to murder . leadership acllvities. During
Tlli Riddle of Aqela Dam In an all-black high schoot band Greenwich Vjllage to :a "pro· .
Sludlel Manlam
Edl$er't aele: ''Sweet ud In Alabama to a €ommuntat greulve" setiool and a white She 1\'88, graduated magna California cpurt overruled Although shewas not present In her early years she earned a
deelle'' ue werdl ...t miPl revolulionary wbo became one home w~ a Protestant cum la"\de from Branpeis and, them. The regents fired her court she was accused aa the certificate from her Sunday

....,
.--.
-...

wei haft

b

.."'
m

~

"'

.,,
~

.

;:

PETE SIMl'IION, QIAJRIIAJf of, the ::;

l&lt;'ire :

MEMBERS Ol' RACINE American
legion Post 602 during opening ceremoJiies of
the Independence parade Mondl!y at Racine.

psrade. spooaored by .lhe Rac(lle
Department presents Mts. Herbert RQiish the ~
third place trophy for the fiost entered by the .,
Ohio Valley Grange. .
..
~

. - "'..
"""

\

IJIPIW

to of the three women ever to minister waa involved deeply In at Marcuse's urging, spent a. again, this time on the grounds alleged purchaser of the guns School for excellent perfor·

.year at. a Marxist-oriented that she was making speeches uaed in the abortive escape
.Institute in Frankfurt, Germa- around the state unbefitting a attempt. She ned, waa arrested
. on fugitive warrant in New
ny · .
. '
.
. university faculty member.
~med an Accompllc:e
. York two months later and
She came back to the
University of California at San Now a· busy and . vocal return~ to California • be
Diego 10 siJldy for her. master's militant, she became involved tried. ·
WJren you talk to people who
.._merle111 •o~lety. Wl!al a member ,of. the bOard of ham for the funer81 of four degree wtder Marcuse. While in the cause of tile "Soledad
broql!l Allpla DIYIB to IIIII regents, invited l)er to Jurich at yowtg negro gil:Is killed In the there, she beca'lne the.principal brothers," three Negroes ac· say they knew Angela Davis the
J111U7 Ualte4! Pnu llltenltfo!l. a Los Angeles ~eataurant.
bombing of. 11 Baptist Sunday . figure. in a ~onfrontati~n with cused of the murder of a white constant theme is that she Is
at rejlarten tbreapat lbe After some brief ama)1 talk, school near her home.
Chancellor Wtlllam McGill, now guard at Soledad prison in personally a non-violent hwnan
U!ilted statet ll!d Ia EuroPe Simon leaned . .Ver to the She . me~ . imd became · a presldento! Columbia Universi· California in Jl!nuary., 1970. She being.
(wl!ere tile ltudledl bave ll)lel!l poiaed, soft-epoken young WO· ·student of ! Herbert Marcuse, ty . .
made a trip to Castro's CUba. Mrs. Mabel B. Murphy,·advi:
...Rihl see"'•&amp; the Ulwer. man and said:
. the ·G~n,bom phjlosopby Then .S1le took a post as Then came the affair at the ser to girls at Parker High
. 'l1dt li tbe ~t of.five !arl!clet "Well; you . certainly don't. prQfessor ·iltl!l prophet oi the assistant 'professor of philoso: San Rafael courthouee on Aug: School in Birmingham, says of
!faeb!C tbe We• of one of tl!e look like a Communillt and you "New un." She spen\ a year pby · at .~ I,Jniverstty of 7, 1970, when an effort was Angela :
"Smartest PupU"
llltlaa'amothurpriJillg revtlll- · don't aclllke 1 CommiUIIst."
at the Sorbonne in Paris California af,Loa ~eles and, made to effect the escape of
"She was exemplary In every
· li..-let. .
Leivn South at IIi
marked b~ a, love affair .with a when ihe boar~' of regents three San Quentin convicts.
.
"Mr. Simon, I do not want white Ge~n student which demanded to know if she was a Superior Court Judge Harold J . ..}!ay. Her attendance and her
By JACK V. FOX
you 10 JI)IBunderstand one tbing broke up In lbe .face of member of the 'Communist Haley and twq convicts were behavior were l)oth excellent.
Ualted Press JDternaUODal for a moment," she said. "I am opposition from both sets of pai'fy, she IDI.hesitatingly ack- llilled in the resulting shootout. Her grades were excellent. She
Miss Davis was charged with was a girl scout w~o showed
Angela Davis bas been dedicated to the overthrow .of parents.
·
nowledged that she was.
sizzling for a long time.
your system of government ilnd
· In her' 'll years she bas your soci.ety."
.
_,
.
undergone a transformalion At age 15,.she went from the
from a' baton twirling majorette deep sout)l to New York's

ft

,.

lleea

A. . oan, U ''reeead) II make tbe FBI's 11101t wanted · clvll rights. 1 . ·
lid a dlllea year, 11!1- Bat Ust.
. Wblle on• scholarahlp · to
. . lellaJ llllei!Mda let!! ml u Ill During the controversy over· Brandeis UniverSity lin th~.
ilecnplb 1D marder, IIi yO!!DI whether she abould be allowed Boston ou~ts there was a
- piJUioutely ~ted to teach at UCLA, multtmUiion. tralDII8tlc ijiterl;we wheq. she
. lo tile ov~rtl!r~w of tod1y'1 aire indUBtriallst Norlo!) Si!non returned to l)ef nalive Birmlng'.

~

.

VeteraDB Memorial Hospital Hartford.
Sandra ·WinebreMer, Cbarle&amp;;:
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS THE LEGION FLOAT waa ooe of several that took part in the 4tb of July eelebrl!tion - Harold F. Jeffers, Racine; . MONDAY DISCHARGES - Cochran, Hll'rison Robinson "'
Chris Davis, ·Emmett . Ward, Sr. , Lizzie Hanning.
:::
Monday at Racine...
'
Sandra .. Winebrenner,
..
., '
Syracuse; Mildr.ed Powell,
.,
Portland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
.,.. Edna Wayland, Donna Devol,
George Tope, Hayward J~nes,
Charles Beegle, Clinton
Dlnguss, Bernie Edwards,
Edna Parsons, Carol Sisson.
.·.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS .Worley
Davis,
Dexter;
Harrison Robinson, Sr., Utart,
W. Va.; Clifford · Stumbo,
'1.00 OFF
Middleport; Marilyn Louise
Burleson; Clyde, Tex.; Chris
ON EVERY PAIR
Sizes 29 to 50. Over 2,000
Davis, Mason.
. to choose from. ·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Mary RobinsOn, Sarah Congo,·
Jenny White.
MEN'S COLORED POCI&lt;,ET
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Fred Roush, Racine; Louise
Partlow, Syracuse; . Clara
Murray, Wellston ; · Lori
Laudermill, Mason; Anthony
AND
Heaton, Chester; Lula Moore,

....,

~.~ ·. Best

.

~

~ ·

~

~

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f. :

~ '
~

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2

i,·
~

:S
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.

T:...Ill1e.nt

Beulah Jones. Judging was on
the basis of talent and audience
(eoidmaed from Page 1) 1 response.
Fisher of Hebron; a. vocal trio, The former Rutland High
Beverly, Georgene and Jenny School football field was the .
Grate, accomjlanled by Mrs. scene of all of the celebration
Gecqe Grate; Katrina Batey, activities. Throughout the day,
Middleport, a tap number . to firemen and their· wives
Hawaii Fl~; Charles Price, operated coilce8sion and game
Lancaster, vocal, "Folsum booths and a fireworks diaplay
Pri.lon Blues," and a tap routine followed the talent show.
by Lynette Whittington, All non-winning contestanta
Rutland, "Raindrops Keep were given $2 gifts by 1M fire ·
Filling on My Head."
department. ftrchie McKinney
Judges
were
Donna is president of the department,
Wllltamson, Wayne Turner and Duke Kennedy the fire chief.

BY THE UP!

~

TEE SHIRTS
BOYS
Reg·. 1.99 to. 3.99

SPECIAL

I

~

I;MIES'

Values Up

J~ U)IJi"

'20~:ff '

td 20.00

Buy · Now &amp; Sa \IE!

GIRLS' SHORT SETS

.

TAKING SEroND place was the float
entered by the Methodist Church of Racine.

AHORSE AND SULKY added an oldtlme
note to the 4tb of July parade Monday at
Racine.

THE SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
marching band took part In Monday's activities at Racine.

Bicentennial
Circuit Rider
By REV. DAVID POLING
Much thought, and properly so, is attached to the com·
lng bicentennial celebration of the United States of AmerIca. The year 1976 will soon be here and the national activities surging around this historic event are well under •
way.
Yet significant events did precede the Declaration of
IndeJ.&gt;I'ndence, the signing of the Constitution and the
shapmg of the Congress. Much of the 18th century was
pioneer, frontier work-and on the front edge were mis·
llionaries and circuit riders probing the forest settle·
ments and staying close to wagon trains and home·
steaders.
Not surprising is the salute going up to the prerevolu·
Uonary leadership of Francis Asbury, Methodist circuit
rid~ commissioned by John Wesley and surely one of
the keys to the vast expansion of Protestant Christianity
in the colonies. Asbury touched these shores in 1771 and

provided the initial thrust lor the tradition of circuit
1771.
riding among Christian churches and fellowships.
The Rev. Ted Nicholas of Ashland, Ky. , has written a
Asbury was to stretch his preaching-teaching run from
script for a motion picture to be shown during the conNew Hampshire to Georgia and head as far west as the
vocation. Speakers for the three days include Kentucky's
Mississippi. Communities with no regular pastor and
Gov. Louie B. Nunn, Bishop Roy H. Short of Louisville
many without regular public worship were eager for
and Bishop Kenneth W. Copeland or'Houslon, Tex .
the five· or six-week stops of preachers on horseback.
In North Carolina, another jmportant stop on Bishop
As part of the 200th-anniversary celebration of Asbury's
Asbury's circuit, there will be special events at Lake .
Junaluska, the Jurisdictional Conference Grounds of the
arrival in the colonies (Maryland) an art medal has been
created by sculptor Ralph J. Menconi. One side shows
!]nited Methodist Church and center of world Methodism.
a head of Wesley who inspired Asbury's work in the New ···· Dates for North Carolina are Sept. 3-5.
World. The opposite or reverse traces the first circuit
created by Asbury in 1771.
Saddlebags, bedroll and Bible make up some of the
symbolism of this first American Methodist bishop who
v.isited and preached in taverns, jails and private homes
MONEY GIVEN
from 1771 to 1816. Historians note that Asbury gave more
COLI,JMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
than 16,000 sermons and covered some 300,000 miles on school districts received $6.1
horseback.
· million more in state aid in June
The Methodist-Episcopal Church was organized in 1784. lban in May, the state auditor's
Our circuit judge system of law was influenced by the office said Mollday.
logic an(~ success of this saddlebag ministry. The ChauThe latest disbursemeni was
tauqua Circuit, also a Methodist creation, brought out· $23,688,180, the largest amowtts
standing 'programs of discussion, debate and music to of which went 'to ,Franklin
rural and small-town America. ·
Special commemorations of Bishop Asbury's . pioneer County • $1.75 million; Hamilton.
ministry will take place in the mid-South. At Wilmore, County,$1.26mlllion; Cuyahoga
Ky ., home of Asbury College and Asbury Theological County, $1.2 million, and
Seminary, a three-day convocation will be held starting Montgomery County, $1.02
Oct. 26-'the date of Asbury's arrival in the colonies in million.
'

!

May Wins
again,
Filially
.
Your

Your Polley
Has the Recipe
for. hcurlty
expenence,
for your needs and
plan~lng lo save you
all go .inlo your
program . We see

1Cnow1tdgo,

.
'
By- VITO STELLINO
Jim Hunter allowed just three PetroceUi also had a three-run bases-loaded walk in · the
UP! Sports Writer
hitlt in six innings but absorbed triple. New York shelled Gary seventh to band Milwaukee ·the
Don't tell Rudy May that the his seventh loss against II Peters for five •uns in the first. ·victory over Minnesota. Theadog is man's best friend.
wins. Tony Gonzalez' sacrifice inning but Bob Bolin and Ken bald snapped a J.J tie when he
May tripped over his dog- fly in the first and Jim Taf:Um held then\ to two runs worked ~im Perry, now 12-7,
that's what he claims, at least Spencer's run-scoring do11ble In the rest of the game. ·
for a.bases.loaded walk.
-and fractured his right wrist the fourth decided the game.
Dick Billings hit the first . Supj!rb pitching by Bruce Dal
in what must be the most In the other games, Boston grand slam of his career and Canton and Jim Rooker carried
freakish accident of the base- routed New York 12-7, Milwauk- Frank Howard and Del Unser Kansas City to the sweep over
ball seasqn. .
,
ee edged Minnesota 2-1, Wash· chipped. I~ with t~e-run Chicago. In the first game, Dal
The result was that May ington clobbed Cleveland 15-6, homers. as Washington born· Canton held the White Sox to
didn't pitch from May 21st until Kansas c;ity swept a double- barded Cleveland tO sweep a one rwt and eight hits in 7 1-3
June 17th and .Jle finally got his header from Chicago S-1 and 1-0. four·game series. The Senators .innings and Tom Burgmeir
first victory in almost two and the Detroit-Baltimore game bad 18 hits. Denny McLain finished. up. In the second
months Monday wiih, a seven was rained out.
1 · started the game but ~as lifted game. Rooker pitched a three·
inning performance as the In the National leage, when he fell behind 3.() in the hit shutout. The Royals
California Angels downed the Montreal beat New York 2·1 but second inning and reliever Paul wrapped up each game in the
Oakland A's, 2·1.
lost the secona ·· game 8-0, Lindblad got the victory and rirst lhning, scoring four runs
May, who hadn't won a game Pittltburgh topped Chicago 6-2, ·the benefit of the Senator in the first inning of the opener
since May 8, had failed to get a •Los Angeles beat San Francisco barrage.
.
and the lone run of the game in
victory in his first lour starts 7-3, HoU8ton edged Cincinnati 4Ron Theobald drove In one the first inning of the nightcap
since returning to the rotations. 3, Philadelphia lopped Atlanta 1'111\ with a sacririce fly In the on Fred Patet's double and
But the 'lefthanded thrower- · 6-5 ancl San Diego edged St. 'third and the second with a Amos Otis' single.
· fortunately he didn't break his Louis 3-2. .
• pitching wrist-allowed only six Boston came up with a lf&gt;.hit
hits before he was lifted when barrage including four homers
Joe Rudi led off the eighth with to wipe out a S-0 deficit and '
I
a double. Dave LaRoche came trounce New York. Reggie
. .
. OPTOMETRIST . .
on to retire two batters and Smith hi t a three-run homer,
·OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12,2 T05 (CLOSE'
then Lloyd Allen got the final George Scott added a two-run
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.:
four outs. It was May's fourth shot and Rico Petrocell,i · and
victory in nine &lt;!ecisions. ·
Joe Lahoud had solo homers.

w. :COM

Ins.

NOW

LOOKING SHARp lit black and white
costumes were members of the Riggs Royat'
Cadets in Mondsy's Fourth of July parade in

)Uiclne.

DAVID POLING, D.D.

ro') ~~f~w

D.

GIRLS SCOOTER

ANT DRESSES
Reg. 1.99 to 3.99

Fri. &amp;

Nights '

BIGGS DEPT. STORE
4th &amp; Main

pt, Pleasant, W.Va.

,.

mer

.

The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., of Pomeroy cap·
tured the First.Annual Redman
Inn Slow Pitch SOftball Tournament held over the July
Fourth • Holiday weekend on
Memorial Field in Gallipolis.
· The Pomeroy entry, unbeaten
in the· double elimination
tournalnent with five straight
triumphs, thumped Hart's Used
Cars ls-8 in tbe championship
gameJMonday night. Eighteen
teamS were entered in the four
day ·t vent. ·
Royal· Crown Cola o( Mid·
dlep~rt placed third, and
Ran~olph 76 of Pl. Pleasant was

.

fourth.
In the championship battle,
Greg G(bbs was credited with
the win. Raymond Cundiff was
charged with the loss. Bill Davis
hurled the final lrining for tht
losers,
. Hart's jumped off to a J.1l lead
in the first Inning of the final
contest, but The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., bounced back
for seven in Its half of' the first,
and waa 'never headed.
For the winners, non swisher
bad a double and two singles;
Bob Whaley a triple and two
singles; Bill Radford a double
and two singles; Pee Wee

How To Hold ·

fALSE T

i

~"fd~~:;,;:/t"~'FF~DI•
ture Adheolv• Po'l!dor.
'~ ,.
that fll are eOMntlal to
•.1111\' "
your·dentiat recul&amp;rlJ.

'

SENSATIONAL VALUI:
INACOMPACT
CONSOLE!

Wright a homer and two
singl~s; Jell Burt a double and
single; Greg Bailey, John Wolfe
and Bob Grueser all singles and
Gibbs a double . '
For the losers, Jimmy Jo
Hemsley had two singles; Ed
Van Maire a double and single;
Dan Rizer a double and single;
Dick TeMant two singles; B.
Johnson two singles and Sam

Van Maire two singles.
To win the 1971 championship,
Tile Farmers Bank a~d Savings
Co., defeated Holzer Medical
Center, Falls City, Randolph 76
and Hart's Used Cars twice.
Following the championship
contest, .individual and team
trophies were presented to the
top four teams by tournament
director Mike Allen.
•

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near
here. Brian
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Clevelarid:
Wamaer;
Cleveland, drowned In Lake
Erie near here after hll
Blnlt

·Salllrday
Usbon: TIIO!ll8a E. Po~sa&amp;e,
22, 'UJbon, In a on~ar cruh
east of here.
~UII '--•• · . Ca!llbrldge : Edward C.
MaU8t, 'll, Derwent, when
'
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here.
Rio Grande: Paul R. Booth,
&amp;, Thurman, in a two-car eruh
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Larain: Rullell Boyd, II,
Vermilion, .drowned while try·
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PHn.o, ILL. - A single· Rep. Kenneth Creasy, R·
engine airplane carrying jockey Delaware, ~d bis group '!'ants
Vernon S&amp;ylor and four others to see how well the land has
a fllght from Si()W[ City, been reclaimed afler mining.
Iowa, to · Cincinnati craahed The .legislators are to Ry over
near here Mon(lay, killing all the area in Gov. John J.
aboard. S&amp;ylor, 21, ·ttie win· GUUgan's official airplane and
•
,
_£
ningesljockey at River. Downs then mo.tor from Wheellng,·.w.
Race Track this season, bad · Va. to a number of mining
ridden at a track in sOuth areas. Tiley plan to fly back to
Mrs. John Werner, president with 211 Ohio women coming for
Dakota during the weekend and Columbus from Zanesville.
of the B. H. Sanborn Missionary at least one day,
was returning to Clnclnnali to Other lawmakers planning to
Society
of the Middleport First
Featured speaker was Miss
. pick up hll schedule. He bad. take the ~ur in~lude Reps. John
Baptist Church, and Mrs. June Sutton, an Australian
•
won 35 tlmes in 160 races at the Scott, R·Fa1rborn; John
Charles
Searles of Middleport, . Baptist Missionary loaned to
track.
Bechtold, n.cincinnatl; Sam
president of the Women's the American Baplist Foreign
WRAIN, OIDO- CYRUS S. Spec, R·New Concord; Michael
f
Society of the Rio Grande Mission Society to work with the
Eaton, a Cleveland industrialist De!Bane, D·Hubbard; Don
.~·.
Baptist Association, have joint committee of Swatow
and a confidante of world Maddux, D·Lancaster; Walter
returned from the 27th annual • Baptist Churches Hong Kong.
Communist rulers, said the only Paulo, R·Canfleld; Ralph
conference of American Baptist
Mrs. Searles ~as ~ne of
things secret about the Pen· Welker, R-Pomeroy, and A. G·.
.
Women
held
at
Otterbein
several
who assisted With the
tagon Papers were that !hey Lanclone, !).Bellaire. The Ohio B)I UnitedPress llltematlooal River.
serving of communion. The
"were really secret to our A!Ues General Assembly adjourned
The extended July 4 weekend Cleveland: Thomas Nunn, 59, College, Westerville.
Ohio
Baptist Convention to be
and to the American people" - last Thursday for the extended will termed "disastrous" on a Cleveland, and Terry Libertine,
There
were
335
registered
for
held
in
Akron Oct. 13-15, was
not to CommiDiist leaders In Fourth of July holiday and was nationwide scale, .but the num· 11, Brook Park, 1n a two~ar
the entire four-day conference ·anriowtced.
Hanoi,PeklngandMoacow.Ina to return to Its work today:
blir of traffic fatalities in Ohio ~rash on ,I-71 here.
copyrighted arlicle In Sunday's
fell far short of wbat safety Hillsboro: Roger ·Hatfield, 5,
Lorain Journal written by
officials bad feared.
Rt. 4, Hillsboro, when the .car
Editor Irvin Leibowitz, Eaton
At least 22 persons were he was riding in crashed on
saldCommunlat~ ~-~~ •
ld~iltlfieddurlngthe 7il-hqurpe· u.s. 50 near here in Highland . A poUuct ~U.nner w~ held ·-Wtilton ~:was speaker .at ,the..
knew virtuallY·every lnove the ~ '
riod.'tn Ohio as viclinU of·traf. County.
'. 1 ·· • • ·
Sunday at Trinity Church Sunday service of Trinity
U. S. planned in Indtcblna
fic-relalelj mishaps. It bad been Youngstown : Vance C. Moore, lionoring the Rev. and Mrs. Church. He used a patriotic
before It happened.
pr)Jdlcted that 38 would die be- 37, Poland, when bis motorcycle Robert Hegnauer of Berne, theme ,
''
'Much, If not moat of the
tWeen 6 p.m. Friday and mid· clashed on Walker Mill Rd. in Ind., former pastoral family of
material In the Pentagon
nlght Monday, Thirty-one died nearby Boardman Twp.
Trinity.
..._ . SYSTEM PLANNED
papers covering the years of
a year ago.
Toledo: Evelyn Ruckley, 83,
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. CLEVELAND (UP!) - A$1.~
Pre sl dents Truman,
TUESDAY
!In addition, at least nine per· Toledo, run over by a backing Hegnauer were guests over the million communications center
Eisenhower, Kennedy and MIDDLEPORT Masonic sons drowned, one died in a up auto near her home.
weekend of Mr. and Mrs, Ray will be installed at Cleveland
Johnson were familiar to Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday 7:30 fJre and another died in a fall .Bowling Green : Ronald Bell· Riggs and planned to continue Clinic within tbe next year,
Commwtist leaders, Eaton told p.m. .
tO stretch the overall acciden· fy, 20, Toledo, drowned at today on their vacation. The becoming th~ first hospital in
Liebowitz 4yring a telephone POMEROY CHAPTER 186, tal toll to 33 In ihe state.
Clear Water quarry along Ohio minister had the morning Ohio to have such program·
conversation from Eaton's OES, Tuesday evening at !Six of the traffic victims 163 in ·wood Cowtty.
prayer and.spoke brieRy at the ming.
farm in Nova Scotis. During a Masonic Tem~le .tor initiation. were involved iJj motorcycle Cincinnati: Ronald Donnelly' Sunday morning services.
Tile system· would be U8ed to
visit to Hanoi in December of · All members mvtted.
f llshes. TWo.pedestrians were Jr., 16 , Cincinnati, dro1""ed
Sundsy evening they were maintain recorda of patient-bed
IIIQII for 10 days, Eaton said he PYTHIAN Sisters, 7:30 p.m. T!)ong the dead.
while wading in the Whitewa,ter dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. and patient-doctor assign·
was entertained by Premier Tuesday night at the American
'l:he Pleasant weather condi· River here.
Phil Meinhart, and on Monday ments, schedule operating
Pham Van Dong and Ton Due legion Hall, Middleport.. The liens contributed to a fearsome Newark:MichaeiShaumleffel, evening the guests of Mr. and rooms, order services and
Tbang, head of state, and was charter will be draped for Mrs. drowning toll. Two young men 14, Newark, died of injuries suf. Mrs. Thomas Young. Kennit supplies witbin tbe hospital and
told of . the Communists' Margaret Seldenabel. Members !h'Pwned in Lake Erie S&amp;IIJrdaY fered when he fell off a car in
clinic, route patients and keep
superior ln"telllgence personnel ·iirged to attend.
~n their .. salll;loat coil8j)sed. a shopping center here.
pharmacy and central supply
but was again rebuffed by p. S.
- ~!f.Y were Daniel A. Grumney,
Rocky River: Daniel A.
.
offlclala.
THURSDAY
24, North Otmated, and Stewart Grumney, 2'1, North Otmated, man, 38, in a one;efa~ acctdent inventories.
COLUMBUS - THE bitterly TRINITY CHURCH Sunday Gergol, 23, ~ll'!'ood.
and Stewart Cergol, 23, Lake· .on Ohio 590 west o ere.
ted te b d t 8 nd ta
1
ood dr
d in Lak E ·
Brimfield; Joyce Townsend,
contei sta u ge
x school . hayride and wiener
jTwo 'multiple death traffic w • own~
e rte 11 , drowned in Brimfield Lake
proposals remain in the roast, Thursday, at Royal Oak ··accidents also marred the holi- when thell' satlboat collapsed. near here .
spotllght of state government Park. Those needing trans- \ day.
.
Sunday
SandUBky : George Freytag,
Ibis' week, but other legislative portation report to Pomeroy , A Saturday craah on 1·71 in Warren : Carol Adams, 27,
h h'
to
business waa to Include an on- church at 6:45, be at park at 7. l Cleveland claimed Thomas and Judy Jack, 24, both of 19, Sandusky, w en IS mo rIlle-spot examination of strip·
' NIDin 59 Cleveland and Terry Warren, when the car they cycle coUided with a car in
mined areas of southeastern
'''bertine'' 11 Brook' Park.
were riding in crashed on .Ohio Perkins Twp., Erie Cowtty.
'"'
' '
Ruhl L. Rose,
Ohio. A, House subconunittee
UNDERGOING TESTS
i On Sunday, Carol Adams, 27, 305 north of here in Trumbull 46,Portsmouth:
Portsmouth, when his car
crashed here.
studying several measures William "Shorty" ~aver Is a and Judy Jaclt, 24, bOth of War· Co~ty:
which would tighten up patient at the Riverside ren,• were killed In a one~ar Chilrtlon: Robert B. Hosmer
Akron: Walter Ernest, 46,
regulations o~ strip-mining Methodist Hospital, Room 8023, crash on Ohio 305 in Trumbull II, 24, ~urton, in a ?lotorcy~le· Akron, drowned in the Nimislia
planned a Friday trip by air and Columbus. He is currently ,County.
. car c~lltston at the ~tersecUon Reservoir south of here.
undergoing tests to determine ' Tile last reported traffic of Ohio 528 and 166 111 Geauga
Lima: Anna May Robinson'
the feasibility of surgery for a · death was that of Bertha Cowtty ·
b
sh
. r - - - - - - - - - • , ' seriouscondition.Cardamaybe ' Smith,64,Sprlngfleld,wbowas Cleveland: Kenneth Krlsl.a· 64, Lima, hit y a car as e
1
Cl land h f
walked In a field here.
' ·
sent to him at the hospital. Mil. • Injured Saturday• and expired usy, IO, eve
• w en tre
Springfield : Bertha Smith, 64,
Beaver Is a former Middleport Monday night at a Springfield destroyed the family's . home Springfield, died of injuries suf·
•
• hospital.
I'JiSident. 1
her~, ·
'
fered Saturday in a two-car
.
"
.
The hollday weekend deaths C,mcmnati·l Patrick Lucas, 30, crash on a Champaign County
8C OfS,I
' were:
Naples, Fla., when hia car rail
A THOUGHT '.
· Friday Nlgbl
off U.S. 52 .and rolled, over ro.adlil.liiltl!---~-~
. Coshocton: David Lee More- several tlmes !)ear he~.
..S. ,
'·FOR TOD' AY. . . house
38 Mollni Vernon in a Warren : James R. Hodges,
motor'cycle accidtint on ~ eo. 20, Warren, in a two-car crash
, Worry lakes away
shocton Coynty road west of on Ohio 305 near here.
.
. courage and shortens life.
here.
·
Orwell
T~hip : Benjamin
·. c
&lt;\dena: William R. Wallace;" Jackson, 18, Cleveland, drownea
SAME DAY
18,
Adena
in
a
one-car
crash'
wblle
swimming
at
Midway
-John 'L. Spalding
SERVICE
on
a
jefferson·
County
road
Lake
near
here
.
·
In At 9-0ut At 5
..
near" here.
Mouay
Palnesvllle : Lenore sue Lisbon: Richard D. Heaton,
Use'Oul'f=rn Park.ing LAit
.
'
Gross, . 21, North Ridgeville, 25, We~ville, died of injuries Robii'ISOII'
'
lfs Quick! Easy . l
wben
the
motorcycle
she
was
he
recetved
Saturday
In
a
one·
IWtSTIC St~
riding crashed Into two cars car crash near here.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

HeIp ,
stamp out
b heI

Down Paym.,t ranrina'tromlO% to 25'lo of retail sale small addlti111al cost.
Life insurance is available on an ~tiona I basis at~ · price will_be acceil~.

H:

false·teeth emb...... ~_iT :
. eolnl~~ 1"""" ,.h·~-.ogp: .,
ortatk
. Adenture
-~ :
FASTEETH•glveo dsOI 1/\
•
er, firmer. oteadier bold. W
,.
Do

·
·

gT :

h-I O .sa £er

NOW sl.57ro '2.88

OFF

land.

. 1

mine.''

(1)
'"

Reg . 2.99 To 4.99 '
Nowq 1GTn

G~~~ L~~~!v~a~1!!n's ~0%

Wire

on

MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS .

,•

I

Ov~tnigbt

.· ~i ·

RVTLAND J!'IRI!:MA,N Tim Martin whipped out cotton
candy In hll role with llrenien who staged an Indperidence
Day celelnUon Mmday,

a

mance at the First Congrega·
tional Church where she was a
member .
''I have notl)lng but tears in
my eyes when I think . she
might be involved In something
not right. I wo.uld go so far as
to say she had done _nothing
wrong. Whatever she did do or
is supposed to have done, I am
convmced she had to do what
she felt was right." - .
Tile ..Parker band , director
described her as "the smartest
pupil at the school and the most
outstanding majorette I can
· recall." .

Pomeroy·T~amWins Tournament

~

'I

Angela Davis, ded~ RevolutionBry,
one o{'3 Women o.n Most-Wa"&lt;ted List

· Of au the eilenll!
the dettiny ~
probably the
occurred on Sept. II,
four Negro girla
a bomb eq&gt;losion llt
street BapUst
mingham while a
cia$$ was
-A Parker
the funeral with
"She (Angela ) wu
girl whose ties with
ended the day of
bombing," said the

REG. '99.95

�'

,

,I

"''

.i-Thllldr ..l"

!,Middlepori.M..Oy, 0., July6,1fl1

..

Medicare .Payments IncreaS~ 30 cents in JUly
'

'

.

.

(

.

insUrance part of Medicare by '!'be olher half c1111ei · from margin for ~ootingencies, Mr.
helplngtopaydoctcrblllunda ceaeraJ Federal revenues.
Elrmatlnger •said. •·
·
wide variety of olher'"medlcll The30centpremlum1Jicr~ase.. The reddeed margin for
expepaes In apd out ,of the for !lllch· beneficiary is the net Cc!ntlngenciels is posaible, Mr.
hospital. About 19.5 mllll011 l'eiU!t of three I~ tllat are Erma~nger\ · pointed • out,
people 65 · aqd over . have estimated to lna'eale costs by . because last year, program
enrolled for this ~tal}' 10 cenbl In tile fiscal year costs for the ~callnlllrance
medical insUrance protectlan. beginning July 1, and .!hell a Jl!"OgJ'am were below e~tlmate•
The monthly. prenll111111 ) :owr ilecreaM~ of . 20 cenbl · at:islng for the fir~ time since the
hi!Jf the coli! of their ~rotectioll, ·prjmarlly because of a reduced Medicare pr~gram started.

Green Tli~mb
Notes • ••.

'.

ted" bJa

'

Thelteins that ~.!
overs~ 50 cent .,..._,.

:U::

Native Ohio Shrubs

.are

·•

an

•

Pomeroy....

•

Personal Notes

'

-

Beautiful offer.

Beautiful color.
Beautiful size.

a#'ll

16

Beautiful shape.

I

•

And that's the beauty of it all.

\

v:·

woods

;!":

Middleport

Personal Notes.

.

',

Ashland.
I

•'

•

.

.

,.

I.

J.

&gt;

!!(_ t pert'tDI

: :': ue /~· 111r. \

Monthly_ social security
v!cel:
.
·
•
checkS for beneficiaries 85 and
elude .
· ~· cents to covet the
over who have signed up for
-31
cents
to
cover
an
··
tlidillcralllolllpilrcent
Medicare's doctor bill inestimated increase ~~;
and ulllllaUm of Ill·
surance wiD be reduced by 30
''•
cent In~~~lbyof
serv1ce1 covered bt
· cen.ll in July, Eugene lj:r·
111e program atltutl~
feesre~·~
the
(lor eumple, for
malinger, social security
A neldy re"ature of .Meip· •
In tile fiscal year beginning In hoa::-:.:tpaUent and In·
manager in Marietta, said
County Garden Club
m,ml&gt;ers. '
J .
~y; . . .
·
de ndent dlnlc eervicel).
'.
· today.
'.
~10
cents
to
cover
an
pe ·
The checks scheduled for
delivery on July 3 will have ~·------~~~~~..~~----~----~·~
· ~_L
I ~----~--~~-c~~------~~~~--~ .1
'
J
I
'
$5.60 deducted · for each
\.
beneficiary to pay the increased
I
B.Y UM; HOMER PAR,KER, .
monthly voluntary medical
I
j'
i'
Rlldand Frlelldly Gerdeaen Club.
insurance premium. The rate
Shrubs that JII:OVide food lind cover far wUdllie are interesting for the past year was $5.30 for
,.
beyond the average. They poaaess beeuty, Interesting and useful· each beneficiary, Mr. Er·
. fruit and growtb bablts, and offer the possibility of adding much malinger said. :
to life ·on land.
·
·. • ··
·· ·
The iitcrease was .announced
FaD fruits and berriea brighten Ohio's outdoors, They mean 'by the ~par1ment of Health,
'
survival to wildllte, new treabl IAJ.appreciative Buckeye tastes. Education. and Welfare In
They are .vlluable w the outdoorisman whether he is a Deceniber m accordance with a
spor tsman naturallat or casual recreation s'eeter. The berries requirement in the. Medicare .
·: '·
·
·
·
law that makes an annual
• '
which 1eed wild creatures are used by men as choice foods or review of the costs of the
II'IUIIIlenll. The shrubs
used as ornamental plantings or medical insurance program
hedgel! around homes, Clumps or lines of these more desirable
dptory The law requires
,woody plailts break up the monotonyof an unvarying, level sweep :;: the m~nthly premium rate
of land and ad&lt;linterelll wthe laJxlscape.
be set at a polrlt estimated wbe
They also slow down er081011 by Wind and water, thus adding sufficient wcover all expenses
to the permancy of agriculture. A ftncerow grown to shrufaincurred during each premium .
barb(n fewer lnaeclli than one i,n 8¢ and, In addition, har rs period, with
aUowaoce for
birds which helP to CCIIItrol inlects.
contingencies.
NATIVE SHRUBS ARE j!EST. 'llley have been· conditioned Mr. Ennatlnger said that the
aver thousands ol yean ·to thrive where they occur. Fencerows, medical insurance program
fence cornen. gulJies, woods edges, swampy sites and other supplements the basic hospital
acattered waate ar•• will produee heavily In tenns of happy
"
hours If permitted togrowthenatlveshrubs. The.following shrubs
I wUI name are usef1il on the land and represent good stewardship
of the land.
.
i
Flowering dogwood is well known and loved for its beautiful
i
bl088CIIIis (bt'actli) and Its bright red berries feed Wtldllfe while
I
seine animals browse the twlga. 'Ibey grow aU.over Ohio.
Arrowood grows In Wet fields and beArs blue belTies.which
are eaten by birds fnm September through November. II atiabls
"
a height of 3 to 8 feet and the straight stems of this plant used by · Mrs. Mary Bealtey of Newark
'
!he Iridi8nafor arrow shafts, gave the plantlblname.
and her mother-in-law, .Mrs.
i
Black haw grows weD in bottomland and fencerow thickets. ll Carl Beattey of Zanesvllle were
Free iced.. tea glass with
bears a richly flavored; aweet berry which ripens In Sepiember vlsiiA&gt;rs this week of Miss Katie
•
and is heavily feCI upon by wUdllfe. Black haws are soUght by Guth and Miss Lena Guth. Mrs.
each $3.00 gasoline purchase ~ at parti~ipating
111mantJ who know the sweet prune like flavor and are used 00 Mary Heatley, a former
make jam:
:
· resident, also visited other
Ashland stations.
Elderberry """""' In moist sites and fencerows and where friends in Pomeroy·
,......
'
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Foster and
undisturbed, f~ dense thlcllets useful to wildlife. They are f m1ly of Li · 1a Mich spent
Rich, avocado green.
Uled by bUIIIIIII for Jies, jeUy, jam and wine. Elder branches, ~e holiday ~':'ek~d he;e with
'
.
aerved u
for maple sap and were fasbloned Into popguns, . their parents, Mr: and Mrs.
folk toys of an almorrt forgotten past. Elderberries are eaten b~ Ralph Webb, Racine, and Mrs.
Generous 1 ·ounces for
much ol wlldJife and the plant is browsed~ deer and rabbits. cJ. Edward Foster, Pomeroy. · ·
your favorite summertime beverages.
. 1Wine made from elderberry blossoms Iii considered to be Carol and Robin remained for a
I
"ethereal."
.
two week visit.
The Maple-leafed vlrbumum grows In th~ wpods, usual)y In
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzllng
With · th:,e cutest I ittle
abade, and so rarely bears heavily. The shrubs are scattered, and Miss Sybil Ebersbach were
offerlngUttlecover,butthefrultsareeatenbyb!J:ds.
Saturday evening guests of
dimples.
.
i
•
I
BLUEBERRIES AND HUCKLEBERRIES grow in moist Elmer Ebersbaqb, Emmajean
sites with acid aoil, with buckleberrles occupying higher; drier Yeauger, and Mr). Irene Gibh~ .
sites. Blueberries, which ripen ln July, are available through Point Pleasant. &lt;
lleVMmber. When they.are In good supply, many wildlife and Charles Lochary of Eden
hffili'gl\hei'ito' feaatl Predators such as· coPi)erheadi and rat- Prarie, Minn.', joined "his wife ,
"
··.
tlesnakes c011centrate here wbere a fOod supply of mamnials and · Jan, and chUdren Meg and
l:irdlla •thick. In aouthern Ohio .huckleberry patches are fav91'ite Robert, at the home of his
spolll for snake bun ten wgather. Humans use the fruit for ples.or parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
•
eatlhemwUIIcreamandsuw~ Theberryisclean to handle and Lochary, Friday evening. The
illere are no briars to cooterid with.
~ies Lochary family also
Wild grape la one of the great staple food and cover plants for ~ With Mr · and Mrs. Leo
wildllfe. TbeyfeedonitfromlateAugustthroughthewinter.
Mr~ . Elizabeth Chase of
Persimmons are found chiefly in hilly southern Ohio dry Day.IA&gt;n is here for a visit with
woodlands. They bear heavily.and the puckery fruits are eaten by her sister, Miss Helen Lochary,
_wildlife and are also prized by humans who ha~ eaten well and Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
flaVOi"ed ones at the right season and used them in puddings, pies· Lochary.
_
and cakes.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs spent
The hazelnut grows wbe 8 or 10 feet tall, over most of Ohio, the weekend with her husbMd
primarily In fence rows. Chipmunks and mice get most of them Cliff, at the couple's home 1r1
before wiJclllfe is aware of the crop. Grol18e ft1fd on the catkins in Springfield.
late winter and deer lind rabbiII browse on the suckers resulting
Mr, and Mrs. Lorentz Smith
•
frcm cutting the shrub. Humans prize hazelnuts but rarely find of Missouri and Mrs. Frances
Smith W'right of Logan, all
many.
PAWPAWS FORM THEIR island growth thickets throughout former residents of Pomeroy,
Ohio and beer large fruits in September and October. Many were Sunday visitors of friends
wildlife seek them and they are a favorite of outdoors people. here. They called oq Miss Marie
Pawpaw limbs make good bean poles.
Bichman and Mr. and Mrs.
The red mulberry ripens In June and July and the luscious Patrick Lochary,
sweet berries 81'tH!Bten bywlldllfe and hwnans. They can grow w , Pai~e and Parrish . Carr of
.
Merv~ne, ~· .are h&lt;7e for a
8 height of 50 or 60 feet.
•
Witch hazel grows at the edge of we! a_reas or in cool.ffiolst week ~
:'~
:te~
areas and has yeUow blossoms in the fall . Its seeds are eaten by :,ren utter ·
·
wildllfe and the birds are eaten by grouse and deer and rabbits
nee
·
lrowSe the plant. Ins an interesting plant with a long history of
medlcliial use.
Juneberry. or serviceberry' dots the dark
with its
white spray in early spring woods. II grows over most of Ohio
excepting In limestonewestern Ohio. It thrives best in cool moist
wooded sites and It is eagerly sought by song birds and in pioneer
; limes were considered wbe choice pie "timber."
•
RED HAWS WERE CONSIDERED a tasty fruit 50 years ago,
but few are eaten today. It is most useful as a cover for· wildlife
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
andlaeaten by deer. Redhawsgrowfrom lOw 20feelhigh.
\
Michael, Sandy imd Gary of
WUd crab apple thickets are useful as a cover and the apples Bucyrus were the holiday
are eaten by wildlife. Woodcock use these thickets for cover and weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
feed upon the earlllworms common 1rl the soil conditioned by Joe Turner. sandy remained for
faUen apples. The apples are high In pectin and are combined with a longer visit with her grandelderberries to make jelly. The fragrance from a field of blooming parents.
wlkl crab is one of the fine pleasures of the outdoor year.
Mr. imd Mrs. Allen saunders
'
The wUd rose clumps provide milch cover. for wildlife. The and family of Point Pleasant
swamp rose ~as the most wildlife value and the tose hips ..are were hollday visitors of Mr. and
eaten by many wildlife. They are also U8ed to make a delicately Mrs. Kenny See and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Ward
flavored jelly.
•
of Ravenswood, W. va. were
dumac, winged or smooth, is found all over Ohio. The seed SUnday visiwrs of Mrs. James
heada bearing bright mahogany red fruits are used by. many Murray.
A c t u ~ l size
wllf1lfe as food. Deer and rabqits also browse the twigs and bark.
Mrs. Nora Mills returned
, Greenbrier also known as cat brier, when undisturbed grows Mondsy from a visit In Dayton
Into a dense pillar of almost impenetrable cover and the blue with Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Moore
frullli are eaten by many birds and the young stems are eaten by and with other relatives and
rlbbits and deer. Young greenbrier shoots are also eaten by friends in Cincinnati.
outdoorsmen.
Charles de Gaulle was
The brambles - blackberry, raspberry, dewberry - are. once given the nickname of
plentiful throulihout Ohio. These fruits are available from late ··Asparagus" because of nls
I
·
June through September and are eaten by more thim 50 species of heigh!.
birds anil mammals. Tender stems are eaten by rabbits and deer.
•The abundance of predator species near berry patches is a strong delicious hot or cold. Other
lndlcawr of the concentration of wildlife near the food supply. The native shrubs are · Alder
'"
.uae of these berries for pies, jellies, jams arid cobbler is old.
1Common and Speckled) ,
Wt• h&lt;ln91' B\lnkA.mcrlr ard
•
Wlnterberry' or swamp holly may be found in arty moist site, Bultonbush
ar1d
Wild
I' ami Mo1!1h•r ChmMU r rl'rlil c:tmls.
especially where the soil is ¥Cid. Its bright red berries brightens Hydrangea. Some of the woody
I'
'
fencerowsfrom Sep(eJilber through the winter and is gathered by vines are Virginia Creeper,
.!~
I
outdoor lovers for winter decorations. It proyides food for many Win tergreen, · Partridgebe•ry
wildlife and birds.
'
and PDison Ivy. All of these
•I
Additional shrubs include small trees such as Hophornbeam, either bear fruit which is eaten
wild plum and sassafras. Tile latter's roots and bark are used lor by wildlife or the plant is
•
making sas.&lt;;afras tea ••"1se flavor resemble&amp; root beer . II is browsed.
\

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..
Qtrpenter

Wolfpen
.

~

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;

. ews, Event News, Notes
Relatives here have learned
the reeent birth of a son,
Nicholas Andrew, lA&gt; Mr. and
Mrs: '"Grant Price, (Rebecca
· Dye) Iii COlumbus. Dale Dye,
local, iB a great.grandf~ther of
the baby. The little one has a
brother, Dan.
Mr. and Mrs. William Lawson
and Cheryl , visited Mrs.
Lawson's mother, Mrs. Bert
Withrow and other"relatives In
the Otarlesfun, W.Va., area on
Saturday. Enroute home they
stopped In Poe~, W, Va. and
were guests of Mr. Lawson's
brother-in-law and slsll!r, Mr.
and Mr&amp;. Bob Grim and Cheryl,
and stayed for a few days
vacation there.
Kathy Rupe, daughter of Mrs.
Lillie Rupe, is a patient at
Children's Hospital, ~lumbus,
where she is reportedly improving from her recent illness.
Nina Chase, fo.rmerly of this
area, who•is living with her sonIn-law and daughter, Reverend
and Mrs. Howard Rein, Hillsdale, Mich., visited withiriends
in this area this past week.
Columbia Grange members
who attended and participated
in Degree Night at Rock Springs
on Friday evening were: Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Greenlees, J,furl
Galaway, Kathy Cheadle, Ruth
Ann Jordan, Larry Btrchfleid
and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood
were also initiated as members
of Columbia Grange, Members
of Columbia' and Harrisonvllle
Granges cooperated In the 4th
degree presentation as their
part of Degree Night.
Mr, and Mrs. Harold GiUogly,
Vicky and Bruce, were in
Columbus during the weekend
and visited his sister, Mrs.
Bernice McKnight and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus on Friday
and saturday where he attended the regular - monthly
meetings of Oirecwrs of the
Grange Mutual Casualty In·
surance Company the Grange
Life Insurance ~mpany and
the GM Premium Budget
Corporation. They also visited
with Mr. Starkey's sister, Mrs.
Jessie Jewell.
·
Several residents of the
community attended Open
House at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil GiUogly,
Steve, Jeff and AJisa , joined
members of her family for a
picnic dinner at the Lambert
home on Pomeroy Route .
· Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Morning, Elyria; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Grover and
daughter, Mr. 'and Mrs. Bryne
Vaughn, ·Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert and famlly, Mr. and
"'·
· Mr . an d Mrs.
.... s. Ra y Hanmg,
Marvin White and family and
Mrs. Helen Johnson and family ,
Pomeroy; Twilll Rowland,
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Forrest, Middleport.
Relatives here have learned
of the birth of a son, Delbert
Wayne, to Mr. and Mrs. Evans
Rutherford, Plano, Texas. Mr.
Rutherford, a brother of Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, was borri and
reared in this community and is
known wmany residents here.
· Among those attending s-9-10
year camp at Canters Cave 4-H
Camp were Julia .Johnson,
Betty and-" Jerri 'Sue Jordan,
Vicky Giilogly and Joann
McWhorter as campers, with
Barbara Jordan as a counselor.
These are aU members of
Columbia Make-It Girls 4-H
Club. Grant Johnson, Triple C
Boys 4·H Club, was also a
counselor for this camp.
Dinner guests of Mrs. Ida
Dennison near salem Center on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan and family,
Larry Birchfield, Gall Chesser,
Judy Hill and ~s . Faye .Jor·
dan . Mrs . Dennison ac·
companied them home and is
spending a few days here.

Carmel News ·
Mrs . Clyde Johnson and,
daughter Connie· of Hamden
spent Sunday aftembOn with
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
daughter Sheryl Leann.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle, New Haven, W.
Va., spent Sunday with Mrs.
Mary Circle.
Pauline Rose called on Mary
Circle one evening. . '
Guests of Mr, and l)lrs. Dan
Smith and faniuy on Father's
Day were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Smith of Dorcas and Mr .
l.awrenr.e Smith and Mra,.
Gilkey of l.aurei"Cliff.

Mr. and r.,rs. Eugene
Thomp$00; Gina and Cyndia,
leftTuesday to visit his mother,
Mr.andMrs.KennethWiseman
and family of Mansfield. _.,
Mrs .. btiniavy. of ColwnbWI
visited her daughter, Mr, and
Mrs. George Warner. ·
Mrs. LeO¥ Knapp of Llingsvllle was a visitor of her son,.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp this
week.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard RusseU ivere Mr.
lll)d Mrs. Robert VenilY., • Mr.
arid Mrs. Wllliam RUssell.
BW.. McElroy of Columbus
spent Monday and Tuesday with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy.
Mrs. Bertie Wyatt was ~
Sunday visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Wyatt.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Kanauga.
Mr. and Mia. Guy Tuckerman
of Springfield are spending the
week with his bro,ther, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman.
Mrs. Ivan Carman, Mrs .
Brady l{notts and aunt visited
Mrs. l{notts' brother, Mr. and
Mrs.EugeneHanlngandfamlly
Tuesday afternoon.

1970 CHEVROLETMONTE CARLO CPE.
13195
400 cu: ln. engine, automatic trans.; power steering power

disc front brakes, G-70-15 w.-w tires, Rally wheels. tinted
glass. facto r·y air conditioned, ' bumper ' guards.
Posltroctlon, radio &amp; R.S. speaker console with bucket
seats, beautiful beige color with blk. vinyl ~oof. New car
titl e 8. bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles. See this one.
1966 FORD GALAX IE HT CPE.
$995
6 Cyl, engine, std. trans ... air conditioning, good tires,
clean Interior, dark green fin ish.
1965 BUICK LaSABRE4 DOOR
$895
Clean Interior, good w-w tires, blue finish . automatic,
power steering &amp; brakes:
·
·

Pomeroy Motor Co. ·
OPEN EVES. 8:00 f' ;M.
POMEROV, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.
.5 P.M. [)ay Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
. CanceUatlon &amp; Corrections
WiU be accepted untll9·a.m, for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
' The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed Obieclional , The
publlsher.wlll not be responsible
for more. than one IncOrrect.
Insertion.
RATJ!:S
For W~.QI Ad Service
,

NEW CUSTOM built home.

three bedrooms, carpor1,

ut ility room. In Rustic Hills

Addiii on. No down payment,
low interest rates, long term .

·Phone 992-3454 If no answer
ca ll 992-5455.
7-l·lfC

@

STOP PAYING RENT and own a house with
~
your rent money.

•

12'• · 14' · 24' ; WIDE

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES

SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
1220 Washington Btvd.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
4-23-ltc ..,_ _Belpre.
_ _Ohio
_ _ __ .

---'----~---:- 1967
SEARS
ROEBUC!&lt;
TO 'THE thief or thleyes who molorcycle, good condition,.
stole the flowers fr om 1150.00. Phone 992-3530.
William Henry LLandders'
7-2·3fc..
5 cents per Word one Insert lor:
grave artd Jane an ers'
Minimum Charge 75c
grave, go back and try for the
12 cents per word three. other three and gel your 1966 FORD truck, 4 wheel drive
consec utive insertions.
reward. I ,will give $100 for wi th self contained camper .

18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.

any information from an yone

6.98

.

Plus
Parts

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

.WANT A NEW HOUSE?

Notice

KOSCOT Kosmellcs. Jul y.
August special. · Kare Kon.
dltion oil $5. value now only
$2.50. Distributor, S. Brown.
Phone 992-5113.
7-4-ttc

Special

. AI

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

See
Dale Dutton
992-2534
Middleport

Tom Crow
992·2580
Pomeroy

EXP~RT

. Wheel AI"
. lin' mad
· 15.55
- GUARANTEEDPhone in-2~4

Pomeroy Home

&amp;Autl

OpenlTIIS
Monday lhru'Siturdly
6D6 E. Mlln, Pomeroy, 0.

~====~==~==~~
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
.EXPERIENCED
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40
Mmutes
of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Prof!UIIIt
·Radiator
Service
Time
You
Ever Spent.
'
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
-'.tWINSOR
•BuooY

See Junior Holsinger on Mile

ojrCHAMPION
OYKE

~VAN

-II ALSO
DOUBLE - WIOES

who can tell me. Evelyn Hill back of Racine.
.SEE TOM CROW OR BOll CROW
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Landers, who they were or
7-2-31c
ads and ads paid with in 10 days.
was. Phone 992·5836.
PARKERSBURG MOilLE HOME$, INC:
CARD OF THANKS
,
7-4-Jtp 4 CHEVROLET Rally rims,
&amp;OBITUARY
From
the
Largest
Truck
or
MEMORIAL BRIOGI!' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
··· Meigs
$1 .50 for 50 word min imum . TRAP SHOOT starling at 12 150.00. Browning automatic, Bulldozer Radiator to the
PARKERSII"URG, W. :YA..
Each additional word 2c.
noon , Sunday, July 4 at li ke new. Phone 773-5178.
.Smallest Heater Core.
BLIND ADS
Rutland Gun Club, New Lima
7-2-Jip
INTERiOR, exterior decorator
Additional 25c Charge per
Rd .. Rutland . Trophies given - - - - - - - - -and barn roots: Phone 7~2Advertisement.
in 3 classes.
BUI LDING Jots or trailer
Roofing &amp;Carper11e.t '
5683.
OFFICE HOURS
6-30-4tc
space. On new water line,
.Ph.
992-2143
P~meroy .
6-20-301c
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally.
school bus route, on county
Work
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon REDUCE safe and fast with road 25, one mile west of
O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SER·
Saturday.
Gobese tablets and E-Vap Chesler, Ohio. If interested,
Spoliting, Roof
VICE . Phone 949-4551,
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
call Chester 985-4197.
Auto
Sales
.5·30-lfc
6·27-301p _ _ _ _ __ __ 6-_30·61p
Raymond Cole, Farie Cole to
FORD dump truck with O'DELL WHEEL alignment
LEGAL N011'CE
Conley E Cole, Life Estate,
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
8 YEAR OLD Palomino mare, 5 67c heat
Lost
er s, new tire s, good
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
gaited with saddle, bridle and
salisbury.
Complete front end service,
blanket. Phone 7 42-5865, condi tion. Phone 446-4246.
LOST- EXTRA large tom cal
NOTICE TO
All Wf •fher Roofing &amp;
Walter B. Harris, Hlida R.
tune up and brake service.
1-2·31p
CONTRACTORS
con1tructlon Co.
missing In Reedsv il le area.
Harrisonvi lle.
Wheels balanced elec.
Harris to Wanda B. Beck, Lot,
HATE OF OHIO
6-30-6tc
DEXTER, 0. 45726
White and dark gray, whi te
Ironically .
All
wor k
DEPARTMENT OF
PHONE 742·1945
feet , black on hind leas. Whi te
Middleport.
1950 DODGE 4 door Sedan, guaranteed.
HIGHWAYS
Reasonable
r i ng around neck , wi t h CLEAN carpets the save and
'1nsurtCI-ExptrJtftctd
excellen t condition . Phone 949·
F.
Harmon
O'Brien, Columbus, .Ohlo June 25, 1111'
rates. Phone 992·3213.
fleacollar on him . Reward for
Work Gu1r1ntttd
safe
way
with
Blue
Lustre.
Contract
SII&amp;S
3221.
Henrietta O'Brien to James E.
· 6·24·301c
return . Bill Bailey, Box 14,
Legal Copy No. 71-575
Rent electri c shampooer $1 .
7-Htc ·'
Pope, Judy A. Pape, 1.50 A.,
Reedsville. Ohio 45772.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Baker Furniture company.
FREE ESTIMATE on general WILL DO roofing, pelntlnv,
Sealed p r opost~ls will be
6·29-!0tc
6-30-6tc
Syrac~se .
.
remodeling , roofing and
plumbing and . carpenter
re ceived at the office of the
1961 P(YMOUTH, 5100. Contact
Wtlliam C. Jones, Elste L. State HighWay Director of Oh io,
painting.
Phone
992-7729,·
9
work
; also tearing down old
Harvey
Roseberry,
Bashan·
8 X 35 I BEDROOM
a.m.
to
Columbus,
Ohio
,
until
10:00
Wanted
To
Buy
6
p.m.
buildings.
Phone 992·7324 or
Keno Road.
Jones to Jesse Morris, Meda E. A.M.• Eastern Dayl ight Sav ing
housetrail er, 2 school buses.
6-9-JOtc
742-4979.
7·4·31p
Morris, 3 A., Bedford.
Time, Tuesday , July 20, 1971 , T0P PRICE on ginseng and -.. 54 passenger for campers.
7-6-121c
Golden Seal · yellow root. Sea l
in :
Bill Cozart, Racine, Ohio.
William B. Witte, sarah Sue for Impro-vements
C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
lops and stem bone dry,.clean
Part 1
Phone 949-2322.
1966 CHEVY convertible, good
Complete Service
SEPTIC 'TANKS CLEANED
Witte to Kenneth Jess Stewart, M eigs County, Ohio, on ME G .
no dirt. All roots. Bill Ballev.
7-4·31
c
condition.
8,
cyt.,
new
shocks
·Phone
949,382.
1
~qu;, "
124
·
( 2~ . 10 · 29 . H), State Rou te
Rea1011able
ratei. Ph. 446-P121.
P.O. · Box 14, Second Street,
Arizona Stewart, Lots, Ches~r. 12A and' Roads ide Rest, in Sutton
... and ,l,[ re~, •. P.~,on~,:!'/~·2627~;• 3tc
Racine, Ohio "' 11~t
Galftpolls. John r-• Ru-llr
·
Reedsville,
·QhJo
45772.
·
UNCLAIMED frel9ht . New zig
Kester D. Mathe~y : V1cki J. T-ownthip.-end In the Villages of
~
Crllt Bradford
Owner &amp; Operator.
· 7-1-30tc
Syracuse and Rac ine, by
zag console sewing machines,
5-1-lfc
Matheny to W1lham H. resurfa
.S.1:J.Ifc
'67CHEVELLEMallbu2door,
I
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
,..._.
__
ci ng with asphal t con nationally
advertised
brands.
Coleman, Della H. Coleman , 16 crete .
local owner. V·8 automaflc,
To be sold for storage and
ANTIQUES :
dish e s ,
READY.MIX CONCRETE
Pave ment Width - 18 feet .
new tires. excellent condition. Real Estate For Sale
A., Lebanon.
freight
costs.
Price
$36.20.
lelephones
,
clocks.
brass
delivered right to ~our
Project and work Length Phon!\. 992-2084 or 992-7098.
Call 992-7085.
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill ,
Eher Wolfe, dec.; to Davey D. 29 ,832 .0 feel or 5.65 miles .
HOUSE
story
and
halt,
6
rooms,
pro/eel. Fast and easy, Fret
7-4-ttc bath, Rutland. Phone 742· est
7-4-5tc
Phone
992-3403.
The
dale
set
for
completion
"
males. Phone 992-3214.
Wolfe, Catherine Y. Wolfe, of th is wor k shall be as set forth
7·1-3()1p -:-::-::-::-:--:-=--:--5613.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Court Order, An~qwty.
In the bidding proposal. "
STEREO-RADIO console ,
- -- - - Mlddteporf; Ohio.
6-25-lfc
bidder sha ll be required TE LEPHONES, bra ss beds,
maple slereo with AM-FM Real Estate For Sale
Mary M. Memtt to Charles to Each
6-:JO.Ifc
f ile wit h his bid a cert ifi ed
radio
deluxe
floating
turn.
cloc
ks.
dishes,
old
furn
iture,
Hysell, ~athryn Hysell, Par· check for an amount equal to
new home, older
table, 4 speaker sound- BUILDING
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bean
five
per
ci:tnt
of
his
bid,
but
In
no
home
for
sale:-t:arge twoeels, Salisbury.
event more than ten thousand
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271. .. system, 4 speed ·turntable. story, shade trees, on I A. Rf.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Ba lan ce $81.46. Use our
Jesse C. Profitt, Ora Nelson dollars, for a bo'hd for ten per
operator's license? Ctfl 992·
4-27-lfc
In
Tuppers
Plains.
Needs
7
of h1S bid , payable to the
budget terms. Free gift with
Profitt to Edward Dale An· cent
2966.
'
some repairs but nice. Priced
Di r ector .
every purchase. Phone 9926-15-llc
on
inspection
.
Phone
667-3956.
derson, Lots, Salem.
Bidders must appl y, on the Help Wanted
7085.
7-4-61p
proper forms, for qualifica ti on
7-4-51c _ . : . _ _
Ge6rge Abbott, Irene Abbott at
.
GOLF lessons and club ripa&amp;r.
least lten days prior to th e
·Broker
John Teaford.
to Richard J . Chambers, date set tor opening bids in
WALNUT stereo, dual volume 5 ROOM brick home with bath,
110
Mechanic
Street
accordance wllh Chapter 55 25
paneling and wall to wall
Martha H. Chambers, 70 A., Oh io R:f!v ised Code .
control, 4 speed Intermixed
.
Poll!el"l)y, Ohio
carpeting
. Phone 992-2540 or
changer , 4 speaker sound
Plans and specifications are
Chester.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
file In the Department of
svstem, with AM-FM radio . . 992-3465.
POMEROY - 7 rooms. 111,
Sanitation, Sh!wart, Ohio. Ph.
Frank Stewart, dec., to Ethel on
Highways and the Offic e of th e
Balance 569.87. Use · our
7-4-7tc
baths,
gas
fired
hot
water
·
662-3035.
Stewart, Evelyn S. Lucke, Di v ision Deputy Director.
budget terms. Free gift with - -- -- -- - heal. Full basement, nice
2·12·1f:
The Director reserves the
Victor E: Stewart, Maxine E. r ight
every
purchase.
Call
992.7085.
to re [ect any and all b ids.
SAL E. House, 6 rooms and
kitchen and TV room. Double
7-4-51c FOR
garage. Asking $20,000.00.
NEIGLER Construction. For
Sayre, Cerl. fo r Trans., MinersJ. PHILLIP RICHLE Y
bath. 1651 Lincoln Hgts., full
......,-:~::-:----_
DIRE
CTO
R
building or remodeling your
basement,
garage,
wall
to
ville.
2 RIDING horses. ~hone 949·
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
wall
carpeting
In
living
room,
Sherman Summerfield to
( 7) 6, 12, 21c
3196.
and
firep lace In den . Call 992-3970. only 5 years old. Has 2 Racine, Oh[o.
7-4-61c
Dinsmore Boyles, Eleanor R.
7·31 ·1fc
. 6-J0.6tc bedroom. large paneled
Jiving,
dining.
kitchen
and
Boyles, Lot 27, Olive.
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW zig-zag HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His., bath. Garage. Only 56,500.00. RALPI;t'S CARPET - Up.
t EGAL NOTICE
And an 8 room older home;
holstery Cleaning Strvlce.
se w ing machine left in
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Phone 992-2156
se aled proposals wil l be
bath.
gas
heal.
For
$4,500.00.
Free ntlmatea. Phont
layaway
.
Beautiful
pastel
The Almanac
re ce ived by th e Boa r d of
10-25-lfc
color,
full
size
model.
All
Gallipolis
446-0294.
By United Presslnternallonal E ducation of the M eig s Local EARN al home address ing
buill -in to buttonhole, over· HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights. RACINE - •7 room older home,
:J.12·1fc
Schoolr District In th e office of
large bath and klfchen.
Today is Tuesday, July 6, the the cler k In the M«igs Jr. High envelopes . Rush stamped self·
casl and fan cy stitch. Pay just
call Danny Thompson, 992- with
Dining room, gas torced air SEWING MACHINES. Rep.lr
School Build ing In· Middleport, addr essed envelope . The
$48 .75 cash or terms . 2196.
!87th day of 1971.
service, all makes. 992·2211.
Oh io. for insurance cov erag e Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
furnace , concrete drive .
s
ac·
availabl
e.
Trade
-in
5-26-tfc
The moon is between its first for Sc;: hool buses , trucks, and Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
Garage
and
carport.
Asking
The Fabric Shop, Pon.-oy.
cepled . Phone 992-5641.
'
other motor vehicles. untll12 :00
$12,500.00.
.
Authorized Singer 51111 arid
quarter and full phase .
6·29-61c
7-2-3()1p
noon on Aug'ust 4, 1971, Ea stern
3 BEDROOM br lck l home .
Sorvlce.
Wt Sharpen Sci--.
The morning stars are Venus, Daylight Standard Time. at - - - - - - Choice location In Middleport. COUNTRY ESTATE - new 4
J.:zt.llc
LOGAN
FIRE
and
safety
which time bids w !tl be opened .
Mars and Saturn.
Seen
by
appointment
only.
.
spacious
bedrooms
with
,.alk·
equipment. Sales and sei\VIce.
A I i) t of 1he buses , tr ucks, and
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m. in closets. 3 sets of sliding cUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
The evening sta~s are Mercu- other motor vehi cles to be In- For Rent
All types and sizes of fire
H·lfc glass doors to patio and fronl
sured wi th th e specif ic at ions for 12' WIDE, 2 bedroom , fur- extinguishers. Special pr ices
Dick Vaughan, ..._ 992·
ry and Jupiter.
same mav be obtained by
porch. 2 full baths, hot water
nished, ut ili ties paid. Phone on extinguishers for boats,
3374,
Dale Little, Phone tft.
Those born of this day are call ing Mr , Lar r y Morrison ,
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom, heat, family room with
992-7384 or 992-7133 .
63&gt;16.
campers,
homes
.
Al
so
telephone 992-2153.
with or without farm fireplace. beilullful kitchen . ____ _ _ _ _6-:.:;:2l-;.;301c,__
under the sign of Cancer.
7-4-31c discount prices on other sizes.
ma
chinery . House with 3 with garbage disposal, dish.
Rt. 3; Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
The founder of the U.S. Navy,
Meigs Lo cal - - - -- ·bedrooms,
dining room, living washer and cook units. 65 foot AWNINGS, storm doors lnd
992-3821. Owner !Jwlght
SC hOOl· Distr ic t NICE 8x35 trailer with tlpout
John Paul Jones, was born July
room.
w,
~aths. enclosed
basement, copper'plumblng, 2 wIndows, c 1 r p ~r h,
Bo ard of Education · extension, 1 bedroom and air
Logan.
back
porch.
wall
to
wall
6, 1947.
.
conditioning. Phone 992-6452.
car
garage, 15 acres of
marq.-, aluminum lldlllg
6-16·30tc
carpeting. Aluminum siding, woodland. $37,500.00.
Leew . M cComas
6-25-ttc
and
railing. Call A. Jlalll,
On this day in history :
awning, storm windows and
. ClerK - - - - - -- -'sales
representative. For fret
In 1699 the pirate captain
sform doors . City water . MIOOLEPORT - 5 rooms,
estimates,
phone ChtriH
TRAILER
LOTS,
Bob's
Mobile
Selling due to-Ill health. Phone bath, floor furnace, 2 porches.
William Kldd was seized in 17l 6, tJ, 20. 21 , 41
Lisle,
Syracuse.
v. Y.
Cour t, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
614-985-3938.
Level
Jot.
Only
$4,000.
Boston and deported w En·
-36"
x
23"
f
:oo9
Johnson
tnd
Son,
•
Inc.
Ohio. 992-2951.
6-23-JOip
S.V·Ifc
4·2-lfc
gland.
22 ACRES - on Chesh!r water
SIX ROOM house, bath, full system. 4 bedroom home,
In 1885 bacteriologist Louis
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt . 33,
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave., bath . furnace, barn, and BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Pasteur in Paris inoculated the
.AI
'l•·mlle
north
of
new
11/ielgs
SeDtlc tenks Installed. ~
just walking distance from garage. Space for 2 mobile
:, LEGAL NOTICE
High School. Phone 992-2941.
(Blll l Pullfnt, Phone 992·2-ft.
first human being, a boy who
sealed bids will be received
downlown Pomeroy . Contact homes with septic tank .
3-5-lfc
4-:ZS.IIc
had been bitten by an infocted by lh e Meigs Loci I ·School
Ed Hedrick. 2137 Wadsworth Asking ·only $6,000.00.
USEOOFFSET PLATES
~
Dlotrlct Board of Educotlon .. at ·
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
HAVE
dog , and the youngster did not the ir office In tho Meigs Jr . FURNISHED and unfurnished
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
237-4334,
Columbus.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
MANY USES
" Hig h School Building , Mld - apartments. Close to school .
develop rabies.
TENNA SERVICE. Pl!ont
5·9-tfc
ASSOCIATE
d.leport, Oh i o, for school bus
Phone 992·5434.
99H522.
In 1933 the American League t;res until 12: 00 o'clock noon
992-3325997-2371
10-18-l!c
6-10-llc
LARGE house, 11/, acres, all
defeated the National League, EaSier n Daylight Standard
20~
• 7-4-61C
utilities.
51
,000.
Phone
992·
Tim e, on Augusf A, 1971 , at
afor $1.00
6021.
4-2, at Chicago, in the first All· wh ic h time Bids wil l be opened .
Star baseball game.
The Tire-bid prlc~s are to In · · For Sale
7-4-6lc
elude the demoun t •no of the old
~----In 191lll ·President Lyndon tire and mounting lhe new or VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 modeL Complete with all
Johnson visited Central Ameri-t recapped tire on the rim and
.
I ed ,.. Ill·. . placing the mounted tire and
cleaning tools. Small 'palnf
ca and proms
...,., m 10n m rim on lh e bus .
damage In shipping , Will take
econoinic aid.
For , pec ificatlons P!ease call
$27 cash or budget plan
608 East Main
or wr ite Larrv Morr tsan, 992·
available. Phone 992·5641.
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy
2153.
6·29-61c
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
M ei gs Local
Sc hool Distr ic t
WANTED - 3 BEDROOM
Board of Education COAL limestone . Excels ior
HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY
.
Salt Works, E. Main St. , .BUILDING LOTS for sale .
- FROM $8,900 to Sl5,000.
Lee W . McComas Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
,Newly approved In restricted
Clerk
4-9-lfc• housing district. Nttr Rock ALSO WANTED- FARMS Springs. Phone 992-6817 after
15 acres to 150 acres, FROM
!71 6, 13, 20, 27. 4t
R
5 P m or on w-kends
$5,000
to $20,000.
raspberries. . oy
· ·•
~
·
-~--'-------- BLACK
Protflll. Phone 843·2281.
__· _ _ _ _ _ __ 6_·17-llc
ou;'?oNLY BUSINESS
6-27-91c
LEGAL NOTICE
IS REAL ESTATE
Auto Sales
Notice Is herebv given of the
public hearing on the proposed o16 ACRES. IO .x 60 trailer with 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
HEN~Y .CLELAND
budvot of Lebanon Township tor tlpout. Old vacant house, ·Jake
hardtop,
power
steering,
REALTOR
1972. A meollng will be held 11 7 and excellent camp site. 2
power brakes, air, 18,800
. m . on July 14, 1971 at lht
miles. Excellent condlltan.
Ottlw ft2.221f
ownth lp vor.ge . Ltbonon miles from Middleport . Phone
Phone 992-2288.
owntlllp Trulloes, Cltnnct 997-2362.
Rtlidlnw tft.:tJA
6-:J.Ifc
l.twrence. Clerk ,
6·25-tfc
421-tl&lt;
7-6-llc --L-----:---:~- - -,-------

Property

. BLAETTNARS

Transfers

Painting

-----

Virgil B.

___

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

SR.

------------=-

HARTFORD

-For Sale
Aluminum

Sheets

.

Tlie
C
.
l
eland
Realty
Daily Sentinel

~

TEAFORD

..

�'

,

,I

"''

.i-Thllldr ..l"

!,Middlepori.M..Oy, 0., July6,1fl1

..

Medicare .Payments IncreaS~ 30 cents in JUly
'

'

.

.

(

.

insUrance part of Medicare by '!'be olher half c1111ei · from margin for ~ootingencies, Mr.
helplngtopaydoctcrblllunda ceaeraJ Federal revenues.
Elrmatlnger •said. •·
·
wide variety of olher'"medlcll The30centpremlum1Jicr~ase.. The reddeed margin for
expepaes In apd out ,of the for !lllch· beneficiary is the net Cc!ntlngenciels is posaible, Mr.
hospital. About 19.5 mllll011 l'eiU!t of three I~ tllat are Erma~nger\ · pointed • out,
people 65 · aqd over . have estimated to lna'eale costs by . because last year, program
enrolled for this ~tal}' 10 cenbl In tile fiscal year costs for the ~callnlllrance
medical insUrance protectlan. beginning July 1, and .!hell a Jl!"OgJ'am were below e~tlmate•
The monthly. prenll111111 ) :owr ilecreaM~ of . 20 cenbl · at:islng for the fir~ time since the
hi!Jf the coli! of their ~rotectioll, ·prjmarlly because of a reduced Medicare pr~gram started.

Green Tli~mb
Notes • ••.

'.

ted" bJa

'

Thelteins that ~.!
overs~ 50 cent .,..._,.

:U::

Native Ohio Shrubs

.are

·•

an

•

Pomeroy....

•

Personal Notes

'

-

Beautiful offer.

Beautiful color.
Beautiful size.

a#'ll

16

Beautiful shape.

I

•

And that's the beauty of it all.

\

v:·

woods

;!":

Middleport

Personal Notes.

.

',

Ashland.
I

•'

•

.

.

,.

I.

J.

&gt;

!!(_ t pert'tDI

: :': ue /~· 111r. \

Monthly_ social security
v!cel:
.
·
•
checkS for beneficiaries 85 and
elude .
· ~· cents to covet the
over who have signed up for
-31
cents
to
cover
an
··
tlidillcralllolllpilrcent
Medicare's doctor bill inestimated increase ~~;
and ulllllaUm of Ill·
surance wiD be reduced by 30
''•
cent In~~~lbyof
serv1ce1 covered bt
· cen.ll in July, Eugene lj:r·
111e program atltutl~
feesre~·~
the
(lor eumple, for
malinger, social security
A neldy re"ature of .Meip· •
In tile fiscal year beginning In hoa::-:.:tpaUent and In·
manager in Marietta, said
County Garden Club
m,ml&gt;ers. '
J .
~y; . . .
·
de ndent dlnlc eervicel).
'.
· today.
'.
~10
cents
to
cover
an
pe ·
The checks scheduled for
delivery on July 3 will have ~·------~~~~~..~~----~----~·~
· ~_L
I ~----~--~~-c~~------~~~~--~ .1
'
J
I
'
$5.60 deducted · for each
\.
beneficiary to pay the increased
I
B.Y UM; HOMER PAR,KER, .
monthly voluntary medical
I
j'
i'
Rlldand Frlelldly Gerdeaen Club.
insurance premium. The rate
Shrubs that JII:OVide food lind cover far wUdllie are interesting for the past year was $5.30 for
,.
beyond the average. They poaaess beeuty, Interesting and useful· each beneficiary, Mr. Er·
. fruit and growtb bablts, and offer the possibility of adding much malinger said. :
to life ·on land.
·
·. • ··
·· ·
The iitcrease was .announced
FaD fruits and berriea brighten Ohio's outdoors, They mean 'by the ~par1ment of Health,
'
survival to wildllte, new treabl IAJ.appreciative Buckeye tastes. Education. and Welfare In
They are .vlluable w the outdoorisman whether he is a Deceniber m accordance with a
spor tsman naturallat or casual recreation s'eeter. The berries requirement in the. Medicare .
·: '·
·
·
·
law that makes an annual
• '
which 1eed wild creatures are used by men as choice foods or review of the costs of the
II'IUIIIlenll. The shrubs
used as ornamental plantings or medical insurance program
hedgel! around homes, Clumps or lines of these more desirable
dptory The law requires
,woody plailts break up the monotonyof an unvarying, level sweep :;: the m~nthly premium rate
of land and ad&lt;linterelll wthe laJxlscape.
be set at a polrlt estimated wbe
They also slow down er081011 by Wind and water, thus adding sufficient wcover all expenses
to the permancy of agriculture. A ftncerow grown to shrufaincurred during each premium .
barb(n fewer lnaeclli than one i,n 8¢ and, In addition, har rs period, with
aUowaoce for
birds which helP to CCIIItrol inlects.
contingencies.
NATIVE SHRUBS ARE j!EST. 'llley have been· conditioned Mr. Ennatlnger said that the
aver thousands ol yean ·to thrive where they occur. Fencerows, medical insurance program
fence cornen. gulJies, woods edges, swampy sites and other supplements the basic hospital
acattered waate ar•• will produee heavily In tenns of happy
"
hours If permitted togrowthenatlveshrubs. The.following shrubs
I wUI name are usef1il on the land and represent good stewardship
of the land.
.
i
Flowering dogwood is well known and loved for its beautiful
i
bl088CIIIis (bt'actli) and Its bright red berries feed Wtldllfe while
I
seine animals browse the twlga. 'Ibey grow aU.over Ohio.
Arrowood grows In Wet fields and beArs blue belTies.which
are eaten by birds fnm September through November. II atiabls
"
a height of 3 to 8 feet and the straight stems of this plant used by · Mrs. Mary Bealtey of Newark
'
!he Iridi8nafor arrow shafts, gave the plantlblname.
and her mother-in-law, .Mrs.
i
Black haw grows weD in bottomland and fencerow thickets. ll Carl Beattey of Zanesvllle were
Free iced.. tea glass with
bears a richly flavored; aweet berry which ripens In Sepiember vlsiiA&gt;rs this week of Miss Katie
•
and is heavily feCI upon by wUdllfe. Black haws are soUght by Guth and Miss Lena Guth. Mrs.
each $3.00 gasoline purchase ~ at parti~ipating
111mantJ who know the sweet prune like flavor and are used 00 Mary Heatley, a former
make jam:
:
· resident, also visited other
Ashland stations.
Elderberry """""' In moist sites and fencerows and where friends in Pomeroy·
,......
'
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Foster and
undisturbed, f~ dense thlcllets useful to wildlife. They are f m1ly of Li · 1a Mich spent
Rich, avocado green.
Uled by bUIIIIIII for Jies, jeUy, jam and wine. Elder branches, ~e holiday ~':'ek~d he;e with
'
.
aerved u
for maple sap and were fasbloned Into popguns, . their parents, Mr: and Mrs.
folk toys of an almorrt forgotten past. Elderberries are eaten b~ Ralph Webb, Racine, and Mrs.
Generous 1 ·ounces for
much ol wlldJife and the plant is browsed~ deer and rabbits. cJ. Edward Foster, Pomeroy. · ·
your favorite summertime beverages.
. 1Wine made from elderberry blossoms Iii considered to be Carol and Robin remained for a
I
"ethereal."
.
two week visit.
The Maple-leafed vlrbumum grows In th~ wpods, usual)y In
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Neutzllng
With · th:,e cutest I ittle
abade, and so rarely bears heavily. The shrubs are scattered, and Miss Sybil Ebersbach were
offerlngUttlecover,butthefrultsareeatenbyb!J:ds.
Saturday evening guests of
dimples.
.
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BLUEBERRIES AND HUCKLEBERRIES grow in moist Elmer Ebersbaqb, Emmajean
sites with acid aoil, with buckleberrles occupying higher; drier Yeauger, and Mr). Irene Gibh~ .
sites. Blueberries, which ripen ln July, are available through Point Pleasant. &lt;
lleVMmber. When they.are In good supply, many wildlife and Charles Lochary of Eden
hffili'gl\hei'ito' feaatl Predators such as· coPi)erheadi and rat- Prarie, Minn.', joined "his wife ,
"
··.
tlesnakes c011centrate here wbere a fOod supply of mamnials and · Jan, and chUdren Meg and
l:irdlla •thick. In aouthern Ohio .huckleberry patches are fav91'ite Robert, at the home of his
spolll for snake bun ten wgather. Humans use the fruit for ples.or parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
•
eatlhemwUIIcreamandsuw~ Theberryisclean to handle and Lochary, Friday evening. The
illere are no briars to cooterid with.
~ies Lochary family also
Wild grape la one of the great staple food and cover plants for ~ With Mr · and Mrs. Leo
wildllfe. TbeyfeedonitfromlateAugustthroughthewinter.
Mr~ . Elizabeth Chase of
Persimmons are found chiefly in hilly southern Ohio dry Day.IA&gt;n is here for a visit with
woodlands. They bear heavily.and the puckery fruits are eaten by her sister, Miss Helen Lochary,
_wildlife and are also prized by humans who ha~ eaten well and Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
flaVOi"ed ones at the right season and used them in puddings, pies· Lochary.
_
and cakes.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs spent
The hazelnut grows wbe 8 or 10 feet tall, over most of Ohio, the weekend with her husbMd
primarily In fence rows. Chipmunks and mice get most of them Cliff, at the couple's home 1r1
before wiJclllfe is aware of the crop. Grol18e ft1fd on the catkins in Springfield.
late winter and deer lind rabbiII browse on the suckers resulting
Mr, and Mrs. Lorentz Smith
•
frcm cutting the shrub. Humans prize hazelnuts but rarely find of Missouri and Mrs. Frances
Smith W'right of Logan, all
many.
PAWPAWS FORM THEIR island growth thickets throughout former residents of Pomeroy,
Ohio and beer large fruits in September and October. Many were Sunday visitors of friends
wildlife seek them and they are a favorite of outdoors people. here. They called oq Miss Marie
Pawpaw limbs make good bean poles.
Bichman and Mr. and Mrs.
The red mulberry ripens In June and July and the luscious Patrick Lochary,
sweet berries 81'tH!Bten bywlldllfe and hwnans. They can grow w , Pai~e and Parrish . Carr of
.
Merv~ne, ~· .are h&lt;7e for a
8 height of 50 or 60 feet.
•
Witch hazel grows at the edge of we! a_reas or in cool.ffiolst week ~
:'~
:te~
areas and has yeUow blossoms in the fall . Its seeds are eaten by :,ren utter ·
·
wildllfe and the birds are eaten by grouse and deer and rabbits
nee
·
lrowSe the plant. Ins an interesting plant with a long history of
medlcliial use.
Juneberry. or serviceberry' dots the dark
with its
white spray in early spring woods. II grows over most of Ohio
excepting In limestonewestern Ohio. It thrives best in cool moist
wooded sites and It is eagerly sought by song birds and in pioneer
; limes were considered wbe choice pie "timber."
•
RED HAWS WERE CONSIDERED a tasty fruit 50 years ago,
but few are eaten today. It is most useful as a cover for· wildlife
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
andlaeaten by deer. Redhawsgrowfrom lOw 20feelhigh.
\
Michael, Sandy imd Gary of
WUd crab apple thickets are useful as a cover and the apples Bucyrus were the holiday
are eaten by wildlife. Woodcock use these thickets for cover and weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
feed upon the earlllworms common 1rl the soil conditioned by Joe Turner. sandy remained for
faUen apples. The apples are high In pectin and are combined with a longer visit with her grandelderberries to make jelly. The fragrance from a field of blooming parents.
wlkl crab is one of the fine pleasures of the outdoor year.
Mr. imd Mrs. Allen saunders
'
The wUd rose clumps provide milch cover. for wildlife. The and family of Point Pleasant
swamp rose ~as the most wildlife value and the tose hips ..are were hollday visitors of Mr. and
eaten by many wildlife. They are also U8ed to make a delicately Mrs. Kenny See and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Ward
flavored jelly.
•
of Ravenswood, W. va. were
dumac, winged or smooth, is found all over Ohio. The seed SUnday visiwrs of Mrs. James
heada bearing bright mahogany red fruits are used by. many Murray.
A c t u ~ l size
wllf1lfe as food. Deer and rabqits also browse the twigs and bark.
Mrs. Nora Mills returned
, Greenbrier also known as cat brier, when undisturbed grows Mondsy from a visit In Dayton
Into a dense pillar of almost impenetrable cover and the blue with Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Moore
frullli are eaten by many birds and the young stems are eaten by and with other relatives and
rlbbits and deer. Young greenbrier shoots are also eaten by friends in Cincinnati.
outdoorsmen.
Charles de Gaulle was
The brambles - blackberry, raspberry, dewberry - are. once given the nickname of
plentiful throulihout Ohio. These fruits are available from late ··Asparagus" because of nls
I
·
June through September and are eaten by more thim 50 species of heigh!.
birds anil mammals. Tender stems are eaten by rabbits and deer.
•The abundance of predator species near berry patches is a strong delicious hot or cold. Other
lndlcawr of the concentration of wildlife near the food supply. The native shrubs are · Alder
'"
.uae of these berries for pies, jellies, jams arid cobbler is old.
1Common and Speckled) ,
Wt• h&lt;ln91' B\lnkA.mcrlr ard
•
Wlnterberry' or swamp holly may be found in arty moist site, Bultonbush
ar1d
Wild
I' ami Mo1!1h•r ChmMU r rl'rlil c:tmls.
especially where the soil is ¥Cid. Its bright red berries brightens Hydrangea. Some of the woody
I'
'
fencerowsfrom Sep(eJilber through the winter and is gathered by vines are Virginia Creeper,
.!~
I
outdoor lovers for winter decorations. It proyides food for many Win tergreen, · Partridgebe•ry
wildlife and birds.
'
and PDison Ivy. All of these
•I
Additional shrubs include small trees such as Hophornbeam, either bear fruit which is eaten
wild plum and sassafras. Tile latter's roots and bark are used lor by wildlife or the plant is
•
making sas.&lt;;afras tea ••"1se flavor resemble&amp; root beer . II is browsed.
\

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..
Qtrpenter

Wolfpen
.

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;

. ews, Event News, Notes
Relatives here have learned
the reeent birth of a son,
Nicholas Andrew, lA&gt; Mr. and
Mrs: '"Grant Price, (Rebecca
· Dye) Iii COlumbus. Dale Dye,
local, iB a great.grandf~ther of
the baby. The little one has a
brother, Dan.
Mr. and Mrs. William Lawson
and Cheryl , visited Mrs.
Lawson's mother, Mrs. Bert
Withrow and other"relatives In
the Otarlesfun, W.Va., area on
Saturday. Enroute home they
stopped In Poe~, W, Va. and
were guests of Mr. Lawson's
brother-in-law and slsll!r, Mr.
and Mr&amp;. Bob Grim and Cheryl,
and stayed for a few days
vacation there.
Kathy Rupe, daughter of Mrs.
Lillie Rupe, is a patient at
Children's Hospital, ~lumbus,
where she is reportedly improving from her recent illness.
Nina Chase, fo.rmerly of this
area, who•is living with her sonIn-law and daughter, Reverend
and Mrs. Howard Rein, Hillsdale, Mich., visited withiriends
in this area this past week.
Columbia Grange members
who attended and participated
in Degree Night at Rock Springs
on Friday evening were: Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Greenlees, J,furl
Galaway, Kathy Cheadle, Ruth
Ann Jordan, Larry Btrchfleid
and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wood
were also initiated as members
of Columbia Grange, Members
of Columbia' and Harrisonvllle
Granges cooperated In the 4th
degree presentation as their
part of Degree Night.
Mr, and Mrs. Harold GiUogly,
Vicky and Bruce, were in
Columbus during the weekend
and visited his sister, Mrs.
Bernice McKnight and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
were in Columbus on Friday
and saturday where he attended the regular - monthly
meetings of Oirecwrs of the
Grange Mutual Casualty In·
surance Company the Grange
Life Insurance ~mpany and
the GM Premium Budget
Corporation. They also visited
with Mr. Starkey's sister, Mrs.
Jessie Jewell.
·
Several residents of the
community attended Open
House at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil GiUogly,
Steve, Jeff and AJisa , joined
members of her family for a
picnic dinner at the Lambert
home on Pomeroy Route .
· Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Morning, Elyria; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Grover and
daughter, Mr. 'and Mrs. Bryne
Vaughn, ·Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Lambert and famlly, Mr. and
"'·
· Mr . an d Mrs.
.... s. Ra y Hanmg,
Marvin White and family and
Mrs. Helen Johnson and family ,
Pomeroy; Twilll Rowland,
Albany, and Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Forrest, Middleport.
Relatives here have learned
of the birth of a son, Delbert
Wayne, to Mr. and Mrs. Evans
Rutherford, Plano, Texas. Mr.
Rutherford, a brother of Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, was borri and
reared in this community and is
known wmany residents here.
· Among those attending s-9-10
year camp at Canters Cave 4-H
Camp were Julia .Johnson,
Betty and-" Jerri 'Sue Jordan,
Vicky Giilogly and Joann
McWhorter as campers, with
Barbara Jordan as a counselor.
These are aU members of
Columbia Make-It Girls 4-H
Club. Grant Johnson, Triple C
Boys 4·H Club, was also a
counselor for this camp.
Dinner guests of Mrs. Ida
Dennison near salem Center on
Sunday were Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan and family,
Larry Birchfield, Gall Chesser,
Judy Hill and ~s . Faye .Jor·
dan . Mrs . Dennison ac·
companied them home and is
spending a few days here.

Carmel News ·
Mrs . Clyde Johnson and,
daughter Connie· of Hamden
spent Sunday aftembOn with
Mrs. Arthur E. Johnson and
daughter Sheryl Leann.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle, New Haven, W.
Va., spent Sunday with Mrs.
Mary Circle.
Pauline Rose called on Mary
Circle one evening. . '
Guests of Mr, and l)lrs. Dan
Smith and faniuy on Father's
Day were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Smith of Dorcas and Mr .
l.awrenr.e Smith and Mra,.
Gilkey of l.aurei"Cliff.

Mr. and r.,rs. Eugene
Thomp$00; Gina and Cyndia,
leftTuesday to visit his mother,
Mr.andMrs.KennethWiseman
and family of Mansfield. _.,
Mrs .. btiniavy. of ColwnbWI
visited her daughter, Mr, and
Mrs. George Warner. ·
Mrs. LeO¥ Knapp of Llingsvllle was a visitor of her son,.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp this
week.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard RusseU ivere Mr.
lll)d Mrs. Robert VenilY., • Mr.
arid Mrs. Wllliam RUssell.
BW.. McElroy of Columbus
spent Monday and Tuesday with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy.
Mrs. Bertie Wyatt was ~
Sunday visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Wyatt.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of
Kanauga.
Mr. and Mia. Guy Tuckerman
of Springfield are spending the
week with his bro,ther, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman.
Mrs. Ivan Carman, Mrs .
Brady l{notts and aunt visited
Mrs. l{notts' brother, Mr. and
Mrs.EugeneHanlngandfamlly
Tuesday afternoon.

1970 CHEVROLETMONTE CARLO CPE.
13195
400 cu: ln. engine, automatic trans.; power steering power

disc front brakes, G-70-15 w.-w tires, Rally wheels. tinted
glass. facto r·y air conditioned, ' bumper ' guards.
Posltroctlon, radio &amp; R.S. speaker console with bucket
seats, beautiful beige color with blk. vinyl ~oof. New car
titl e 8. bal. of 5 yr., 50,000 miles. See this one.
1966 FORD GALAX IE HT CPE.
$995
6 Cyl, engine, std. trans ... air conditioning, good tires,
clean Interior, dark green fin ish.
1965 BUICK LaSABRE4 DOOR
$895
Clean Interior, good w-w tires, blue finish . automatic,
power steering &amp; brakes:
·
·

Pomeroy Motor Co. ·
OPEN EVES. 8:00 f' ;M.
POMEROV, OHIO
WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.
.5 P.M. [)ay Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
. CanceUatlon &amp; Corrections
WiU be accepted untll9·a.m, for
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
' The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed Obieclional , The
publlsher.wlll not be responsible
for more. than one IncOrrect.
Insertion.
RATJ!:S
For W~.QI Ad Service
,

NEW CUSTOM built home.

three bedrooms, carpor1,

ut ility room. In Rustic Hills

Addiii on. No down payment,
low interest rates, long term .

·Phone 992-3454 If no answer
ca ll 992-5455.
7-l·lfC

@

STOP PAYING RENT and own a house with
~
your rent money.

•

12'• · 14' · 24' ; WIDE

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES

SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
1220 Washington Btvd.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
4-23-ltc ..,_ _Belpre.
_ _Ohio
_ _ __ .

---'----~---:- 1967
SEARS
ROEBUC!&lt;
TO 'THE thief or thleyes who molorcycle, good condition,.
stole the flowers fr om 1150.00. Phone 992-3530.
William Henry LLandders'
7-2·3fc..
5 cents per Word one Insert lor:
grave artd Jane an ers'
Minimum Charge 75c
grave, go back and try for the
12 cents per word three. other three and gel your 1966 FORD truck, 4 wheel drive
consec utive insertions.
reward. I ,will give $100 for wi th self contained camper .

18 cents per word six consecutive insertions.

any information from an yone

6.98

.

Plus
Parts

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

.WANT A NEW HOUSE?

Notice

KOSCOT Kosmellcs. Jul y.
August special. · Kare Kon.
dltion oil $5. value now only
$2.50. Distributor, S. Brown.
Phone 992-5113.
7-4-ttc

Special

. AI

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

See
Dale Dutton
992-2534
Middleport

Tom Crow
992·2580
Pomeroy

EXP~RT

. Wheel AI"
. lin' mad
· 15.55
- GUARANTEEDPhone in-2~4

Pomeroy Home

&amp;Autl

OpenlTIIS
Monday lhru'Siturdly
6D6 E. Mlln, Pomeroy, 0.

~====~==~==~~
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
.EXPERIENCED
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40
Mmutes
of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Prof!UIIIt
·Radiator
Service
Time
You
Ever Spent.
'
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
-'.tWINSOR
•BuooY

See Junior Holsinger on Mile

ojrCHAMPION
OYKE

~VAN

-II ALSO
DOUBLE - WIOES

who can tell me. Evelyn Hill back of Racine.
.SEE TOM CROW OR BOll CROW
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Landers, who they were or
7-2-31c
ads and ads paid with in 10 days.
was. Phone 992·5836.
PARKERSBURG MOilLE HOME$, INC:
CARD OF THANKS
,
7-4-Jtp 4 CHEVROLET Rally rims,
&amp;OBITUARY
From
the
Largest
Truck
or
MEMORIAL BRIOGI!' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
··· Meigs
$1 .50 for 50 word min imum . TRAP SHOOT starling at 12 150.00. Browning automatic, Bulldozer Radiator to the
PARKERSII"URG, W. :YA..
Each additional word 2c.
noon , Sunday, July 4 at li ke new. Phone 773-5178.
.Smallest Heater Core.
BLIND ADS
Rutland Gun Club, New Lima
7-2-Jip
INTERiOR, exterior decorator
Additional 25c Charge per
Rd .. Rutland . Trophies given - - - - - - - - -and barn roots: Phone 7~2Advertisement.
in 3 classes.
BUI LDING Jots or trailer
Roofing &amp;Carper11e.t '
5683.
OFFICE HOURS
6-30-4tc
space. On new water line,
.Ph.
992-2143
P~meroy .
6-20-301c
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally.
school bus route, on county
Work
8:30 a.m. to 12: 00 Noon REDUCE safe and fast with road 25, one mile west of
O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SER·
Saturday.
Gobese tablets and E-Vap Chesler, Ohio. If interested,
Spoliting, Roof
VICE . Phone 949-4551,
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
call Chester 985-4197.
Auto
Sales
.5·30-lfc
6·27-301p _ _ _ _ __ __ 6-_30·61p
Raymond Cole, Farie Cole to
FORD dump truck with O'DELL WHEEL alignment
LEGAL N011'CE
Conley E Cole, Life Estate,
NEW &amp; OLD WORK
8 YEAR OLD Palomino mare, 5 67c heat
Lost
er s, new tire s, good
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
gaited with saddle, bridle and
salisbury.
Complete front end service,
blanket. Phone 7 42-5865, condi tion. Phone 446-4246.
LOST- EXTRA large tom cal
NOTICE TO
All Wf •fher Roofing &amp;
Walter B. Harris, Hlida R.
tune up and brake service.
1-2·31p
CONTRACTORS
con1tructlon Co.
missing In Reedsv il le area.
Harrisonvi lle.
Wheels balanced elec.
Harris to Wanda B. Beck, Lot,
HATE OF OHIO
6-30-6tc
DEXTER, 0. 45726
White and dark gray, whi te
Ironically .
All
wor k
DEPARTMENT OF
PHONE 742·1945
feet , black on hind leas. Whi te
Middleport.
1950 DODGE 4 door Sedan, guaranteed.
HIGHWAYS
Reasonable
r i ng around neck , wi t h CLEAN carpets the save and
'1nsurtCI-ExptrJtftctd
excellen t condition . Phone 949·
F.
Harmon
O'Brien, Columbus, .Ohlo June 25, 1111'
rates. Phone 992·3213.
fleacollar on him . Reward for
Work Gu1r1ntttd
safe
way
with
Blue
Lustre.
Contract
SII&amp;S
3221.
Henrietta O'Brien to James E.
· 6·24·301c
return . Bill Bailey, Box 14,
Legal Copy No. 71-575
Rent electri c shampooer $1 .
7-Htc ·'
Pope, Judy A. Pape, 1.50 A.,
Reedsville. Ohio 45772.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Baker Furniture company.
FREE ESTIMATE on general WILL DO roofing, pelntlnv,
Sealed p r opost~ls will be
6·29-!0tc
6-30-6tc
Syrac~se .
.
remodeling , roofing and
plumbing and . carpenter
re ceived at the office of the
1961 P(YMOUTH, 5100. Contact
Wtlliam C. Jones, Elste L. State HighWay Director of Oh io,
painting.
Phone
992-7729,·
9
work
; also tearing down old
Harvey
Roseberry,
Bashan·
8 X 35 I BEDROOM
a.m.
to
Columbus,
Ohio
,
until
10:00
Wanted
To
Buy
6
p.m.
buildings.
Phone 992·7324 or
Keno Road.
Jones to Jesse Morris, Meda E. A.M.• Eastern Dayl ight Sav ing
housetrail er, 2 school buses.
6-9-JOtc
742-4979.
7·4·31p
Morris, 3 A., Bedford.
Time, Tuesday , July 20, 1971 , T0P PRICE on ginseng and -.. 54 passenger for campers.
7-6-121c
Golden Seal · yellow root. Sea l
in :
Bill Cozart, Racine, Ohio.
William B. Witte, sarah Sue for Impro-vements
C BRADFORD, Auctioneer
lops and stem bone dry,.clean
Part 1
Phone 949-2322.
1966 CHEVY convertible, good
Complete Service
SEPTIC 'TANKS CLEANED
Witte to Kenneth Jess Stewart, M eigs County, Ohio, on ME G .
no dirt. All roots. Bill Ballev.
7-4·31
c
condition.
8,
cyt.,
new
shocks
·Phone
949,382.
1
~qu;, "
124
·
( 2~ . 10 · 29 . H), State Rou te
Rea1011able
ratei. Ph. 446-P121.
P.O. · Box 14, Second Street,
Arizona Stewart, Lots, Ches~r. 12A and' Roads ide Rest, in Sutton
... and ,l,[ re~, •. P.~,on~,:!'/~·2627~;• 3tc
Racine, Ohio "' 11~t
Galftpolls. John r-• Ru-llr
·
Reedsville,
·QhJo
45772.
·
UNCLAIMED frel9ht . New zig
Kester D. Mathe~y : V1cki J. T-ownthip.-end In the Villages of
~
Crllt Bradford
Owner &amp; Operator.
· 7-1-30tc
Syracuse and Rac ine, by
zag console sewing machines,
5-1-lfc
Matheny to W1lham H. resurfa
.S.1:J.Ifc
'67CHEVELLEMallbu2door,
I
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
,..._.
__
ci ng with asphal t con nationally
advertised
brands.
Coleman, Della H. Coleman , 16 crete .
local owner. V·8 automaflc,
To be sold for storage and
ANTIQUES :
dish e s ,
READY.MIX CONCRETE
Pave ment Width - 18 feet .
new tires. excellent condition. Real Estate For Sale
A., Lebanon.
freight
costs.
Price
$36.20.
lelephones
,
clocks.
brass
delivered right to ~our
Project and work Length Phon!\. 992-2084 or 992-7098.
Call 992-7085.
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill ,
Eher Wolfe, dec.; to Davey D. 29 ,832 .0 feel or 5.65 miles .
HOUSE
story
and
halt,
6
rooms,
pro/eel. Fast and easy, Fret
7-4-ttc bath, Rutland. Phone 742· est
7-4-5tc
Phone
992-3403.
The
dale
set
for
completion
"
males. Phone 992-3214.
Wolfe, Catherine Y. Wolfe, of th is wor k shall be as set forth
7·1-3()1p -:-::-::-::-:--:-=--:--5613.
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Court Order, An~qwty.
In the bidding proposal. "
STEREO-RADIO console ,
- -- - - Mlddteporf; Ohio.
6-25-lfc
bidder sha ll be required TE LEPHONES, bra ss beds,
maple slereo with AM-FM Real Estate For Sale
Mary M. Memtt to Charles to Each
6-:JO.Ifc
f ile wit h his bid a cert ifi ed
radio
deluxe
floating
turn.
cloc
ks.
dishes,
old
furn
iture,
Hysell, ~athryn Hysell, Par· check for an amount equal to
new home, older
table, 4 speaker sound- BUILDING
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bean
five
per
ci:tnt
of
his
bid,
but
In
no
home
for
sale:-t:arge twoeels, Salisbury.
event more than ten thousand
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271. .. system, 4 speed ·turntable. story, shade trees, on I A. Rf.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Ba lan ce $81.46. Use our
Jesse C. Profitt, Ora Nelson dollars, for a bo'hd for ten per
operator's license? Ctfl 992·
4-27-lfc
In
Tuppers
Plains.
Needs
7
of h1S bid , payable to the
budget terms. Free gift with
Profitt to Edward Dale An· cent
2966.
'
some repairs but nice. Priced
Di r ector .
every purchase. Phone 9926-15-llc
on
inspection
.
Phone
667-3956.
derson, Lots, Salem.
Bidders must appl y, on the Help Wanted
7085.
7-4-61p
proper forms, for qualifica ti on
7-4-51c _ . : . _ _
Ge6rge Abbott, Irene Abbott at
.
GOLF lessons and club ripa&amp;r.
least lten days prior to th e
·Broker
John Teaford.
to Richard J . Chambers, date set tor opening bids in
WALNUT stereo, dual volume 5 ROOM brick home with bath,
110
Mechanic
Street
accordance wllh Chapter 55 25
paneling and wall to wall
Martha H. Chambers, 70 A., Oh io R:f!v ised Code .
control, 4 speed Intermixed
.
Poll!el"l)y, Ohio
carpeting
. Phone 992-2540 or
changer , 4 speaker sound
Plans and specifications are
Chester.
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
file In the Department of
svstem, with AM-FM radio . . 992-3465.
POMEROY - 7 rooms. 111,
Sanitation, Sh!wart, Ohio. Ph.
Frank Stewart, dec., to Ethel on
Highways and the Offic e of th e
Balance 569.87. Use · our
7-4-7tc
baths,
gas
fired
hot
water
·
662-3035.
Stewart, Evelyn S. Lucke, Di v ision Deputy Director.
budget terms. Free gift with - -- -- -- - heal. Full basement, nice
2·12·1f:
The Director reserves the
Victor E: Stewart, Maxine E. r ight
every
purchase.
Call
992.7085.
to re [ect any and all b ids.
SAL E. House, 6 rooms and
kitchen and TV room. Double
7-4-51c FOR
garage. Asking $20,000.00.
NEIGLER Construction. For
Sayre, Cerl. fo r Trans., MinersJ. PHILLIP RICHLE Y
bath. 1651 Lincoln Hgts., full
......,-:~::-:----_
DIRE
CTO
R
building or remodeling your
basement,
garage,
wall
to
ville.
2 RIDING horses. ~hone 949·
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
wall
carpeting
In
living
room,
Sherman Summerfield to
( 7) 6, 12, 21c
3196.
and
firep lace In den . Call 992-3970. only 5 years old. Has 2 Racine, Oh[o.
7-4-61c
Dinsmore Boyles, Eleanor R.
7·31 ·1fc
. 6-J0.6tc bedroom. large paneled
Jiving,
dining.
kitchen
and
Boyles, Lot 27, Olive.
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW zig-zag HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His., bath. Garage. Only 56,500.00. RALPI;t'S CARPET - Up.
t EGAL NOTICE
And an 8 room older home;
holstery Cleaning Strvlce.
se w ing machine left in
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
Phone 992-2156
se aled proposals wil l be
bath.
gas
heal.
For
$4,500.00.
Free ntlmatea. Phont
layaway
.
Beautiful
pastel
The Almanac
re ce ived by th e Boa r d of
10-25-lfc
color,
full
size
model.
All
Gallipolis
446-0294.
By United Presslnternallonal E ducation of the M eig s Local EARN al home address ing
buill -in to buttonhole, over· HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights. RACINE - •7 room older home,
:J.12·1fc
Schoolr District In th e office of
large bath and klfchen.
Today is Tuesday, July 6, the the cler k In the M«igs Jr. High envelopes . Rush stamped self·
casl and fan cy stitch. Pay just
call Danny Thompson, 992- with
Dining room, gas torced air SEWING MACHINES. Rep.lr
School Build ing In· Middleport, addr essed envelope . The
$48 .75 cash or terms . 2196.
!87th day of 1971.
service, all makes. 992·2211.
Oh io. for insurance cov erag e Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
furnace , concrete drive .
s
ac·
availabl
e.
Trade
-in
5-26-tfc
The moon is between its first for Sc;: hool buses , trucks, and Davisburg, Mich., 48019.
Garage
and
carport.
Asking
The Fabric Shop, Pon.-oy.
cepled . Phone 992-5641.
'
other motor vehicles. untll12 :00
$12,500.00.
.
Authorized Singer 51111 arid
quarter and full phase .
6·29-61c
7-2-3()1p
noon on Aug'ust 4, 1971, Ea stern
3 BEDROOM br lck l home .
Sorvlce.
Wt Sharpen Sci--.
The morning stars are Venus, Daylight Standard Time. at - - - - - - Choice location In Middleport. COUNTRY ESTATE - new 4
J.:zt.llc
LOGAN
FIRE
and
safety
which time bids w !tl be opened .
Mars and Saturn.
Seen
by
appointment
only.
.
spacious
bedrooms
with
,.alk·
equipment. Sales and sei\VIce.
A I i) t of 1he buses , tr ucks, and
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m. in closets. 3 sets of sliding cUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
The evening sta~s are Mercu- other motor vehi cles to be In- For Rent
All types and sizes of fire
H·lfc glass doors to patio and fronl
sured wi th th e specif ic at ions for 12' WIDE, 2 bedroom , fur- extinguishers. Special pr ices
Dick Vaughan, ..._ 992·
ry and Jupiter.
same mav be obtained by
porch. 2 full baths, hot water
nished, ut ili ties paid. Phone on extinguishers for boats,
3374,
Dale Little, Phone tft.
Those born of this day are call ing Mr , Lar r y Morrison ,
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom, heat, family room with
992-7384 or 992-7133 .
63&gt;16.
campers,
homes
.
Al
so
telephone 992-2153.
with or without farm fireplace. beilullful kitchen . ____ _ _ _ _6-:.:;:2l-;.;301c,__
under the sign of Cancer.
7-4-31c discount prices on other sizes.
ma
chinery . House with 3 with garbage disposal, dish.
Rt. 3; Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
The founder of the U.S. Navy,
Meigs Lo cal - - - -- ·bedrooms,
dining room, living washer and cook units. 65 foot AWNINGS, storm doors lnd
992-3821. Owner !Jwlght
SC hOOl· Distr ic t NICE 8x35 trailer with tlpout
John Paul Jones, was born July
room.
w,
~aths. enclosed
basement, copper'plumblng, 2 wIndows, c 1 r p ~r h,
Bo ard of Education · extension, 1 bedroom and air
Logan.
back
porch.
wall
to
wall
6, 1947.
.
conditioning. Phone 992-6452.
car
garage, 15 acres of
marq.-, aluminum lldlllg
6-16·30tc
carpeting. Aluminum siding, woodland. $37,500.00.
Leew . M cComas
6-25-ttc
and
railing. Call A. Jlalll,
On this day in history :
awning, storm windows and
. ClerK - - - - - -- -'sales
representative. For fret
In 1699 the pirate captain
sform doors . City water . MIOOLEPORT - 5 rooms,
estimates,
phone ChtriH
TRAILER
LOTS,
Bob's
Mobile
Selling due to-Ill health. Phone bath, floor furnace, 2 porches.
William Kldd was seized in 17l 6, tJ, 20. 21 , 41
Lisle,
Syracuse.
v. Y.
Cour t, Rt. 124, Syracuse,
614-985-3938.
Level
Jot.
Only
$4,000.
Boston and deported w En·
-36"
x
23"
f
:oo9
Johnson
tnd
Son,
•
Inc.
Ohio. 992-2951.
6-23-JOip
S.V·Ifc
4·2-lfc
gland.
22 ACRES - on Chesh!r water
SIX ROOM house, bath, full system. 4 bedroom home,
In 1885 bacteriologist Louis
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt . 33,
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave., bath . furnace, barn, and BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Pasteur in Paris inoculated the
.AI
'l•·mlle
north
of
new
11/ielgs
SeDtlc tenks Installed. ~
just walking distance from garage. Space for 2 mobile
:, LEGAL NOTICE
High School. Phone 992-2941.
(Blll l Pullfnt, Phone 992·2-ft.
first human being, a boy who
sealed bids will be received
downlown Pomeroy . Contact homes with septic tank .
3-5-lfc
4-:ZS.IIc
had been bitten by an infocted by lh e Meigs Loci I ·School
Ed Hedrick. 2137 Wadsworth Asking ·only $6,000.00.
USEOOFFSET PLATES
~
Dlotrlct Board of Educotlon .. at ·
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
HAVE
dog , and the youngster did not the ir office In tho Meigs Jr . FURNISHED and unfurnished
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
237-4334,
Columbus.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
MANY USES
" Hig h School Building , Mld - apartments. Close to school .
develop rabies.
TENNA SERVICE. Pl!ont
5·9-tfc
ASSOCIATE
d.leport, Oh i o, for school bus
Phone 992·5434.
99H522.
In 1933 the American League t;res until 12: 00 o'clock noon
992-3325997-2371
10-18-l!c
6-10-llc
LARGE house, 11/, acres, all
defeated the National League, EaSier n Daylight Standard
20~
• 7-4-61C
utilities.
51
,000.
Phone
992·
Tim e, on Augusf A, 1971 , at
afor $1.00
6021.
4-2, at Chicago, in the first All· wh ic h time Bids wil l be opened .
Star baseball game.
The Tire-bid prlc~s are to In · · For Sale
7-4-6lc
elude the demoun t •no of the old
~----In 191lll ·President Lyndon tire and mounting lhe new or VACUUM cleaner brand new
1971 modeL Complete with all
Johnson visited Central Ameri-t recapped tire on the rim and
.
I ed ,.. Ill·. . placing the mounted tire and
cleaning tools. Small 'palnf
ca and proms
...,., m 10n m rim on lh e bus .
damage In shipping , Will take
econoinic aid.
For , pec ificatlons P!ease call
$27 cash or budget plan
608 East Main
or wr ite Larrv Morr tsan, 992·
available. Phone 992·5641.
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy
2153.
6·29-61c
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
M ei gs Local
Sc hool Distr ic t
WANTED - 3 BEDROOM
Board of Education COAL limestone . Excels ior
HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY
.
Salt Works, E. Main St. , .BUILDING LOTS for sale .
- FROM $8,900 to Sl5,000.
Lee W . McComas Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
,Newly approved In restricted
Clerk
4-9-lfc• housing district. Nttr Rock ALSO WANTED- FARMS Springs. Phone 992-6817 after
15 acres to 150 acres, FROM
!71 6, 13, 20, 27. 4t
R
5 P m or on w-kends
$5,000
to $20,000.
raspberries. . oy
· ·•
~
·
-~--'-------- BLACK
Protflll. Phone 843·2281.
__· _ _ _ _ _ __ 6_·17-llc
ou;'?oNLY BUSINESS
6-27-91c
LEGAL NOTICE
IS REAL ESTATE
Auto Sales
Notice Is herebv given of the
public hearing on the proposed o16 ACRES. IO .x 60 trailer with 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
HEN~Y .CLELAND
budvot of Lebanon Township tor tlpout. Old vacant house, ·Jake
hardtop,
power
steering,
REALTOR
1972. A meollng will be held 11 7 and excellent camp site. 2
power brakes, air, 18,800
. m . on July 14, 1971 at lht
miles. Excellent condlltan.
Ottlw ft2.221f
ownth lp vor.ge . Ltbonon miles from Middleport . Phone
Phone 992-2288.
owntlllp Trulloes, Cltnnct 997-2362.
Rtlidlnw tft.:tJA
6-:J.Ifc
l.twrence. Clerk ,
6·25-tfc
421-tl&lt;
7-6-llc --L-----:---:~- - -,-------

Property

. BLAETTNARS

Transfers

Painting

-----

Virgil B.

___

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

SR.

------------=-

HARTFORD

-For Sale
Aluminum

Sheets

.

Tlie
C
.
l
eland
Realty
Daily Sentinel

~

TEAFORD

..

�•
•

EEK AI\'D MEEK
UH-· HO\IJDV

DiD I MISS

PAW WUZ rt:t:.l..lt\

ENN'ITHING
DRETFUL
IMPORTANT?

PORELV 'IESTIDDV
THAT'S HOW COME
l DIDN'T GIT
TO CHURCH

, I

... l?r\

PAACTICi~G

. ·WILL e&gt;E WORKIN'

UPAITOOPID
'NUFF LOOK
lOGIT i-jiM

THAS5
STOOPID
'NUFF!!

HATE M2E

~ -·

Htf!/J
1-1o~r,
WHAT-!:&gt; THE E!1G

V&amp;s,·
MA'AM

LOVE AI\ID

MV
SPEle~- ~EADI NG .l

V~-(

IDEA!

I

CLOSE TOOETI-\'-

•

E.R ---AND I.
CA"-PROVf:
.
IT!
~----

AH HAIN'T \'JORKED
ONE. UP 'lET!!

· PSST.'-AH'I.L

.J..UR£ HIM OUT-

YO' GRAa "'""'!!

OJT.'.'

I

1· 5"

RITNNV

HI, MISS
DOES IT $TART
WO!:ti&lt;IN' WHEN
YOU KICK IT?

1301, A LOT OF FUN
YOV ARE ! YOU'VE:
6EEN A5LEEP OR
YAWNING DURING!105TOUR
I I

IF YOU A5t&lt; M_£, 5He!5
GOT 51.EEPIN&lt;.:&gt; .
51CKNE~!

YiA.M,MAN,
lHA'S TH'

v.DI'J&gt;!

BORN LOSER
I Ml&lt;- .,a;e~ IS
OJT ~ UMJ! t'M IW
til~ OF 1H6 ~IJTl~

tJmE ORPHAN ANNIE

~ &lt;(~
~:

~ ~

~

WE SIJR! WILL, SCOO!l~!
I'LLifAVE MEW SIGHS
MADE FO~ 1Hf HE~T
TOv.lt WE HIT! HOW DO

47. Excite

ski resort

48.Landlng

6.Froma
distance
10. Like some
kisses
12. Leslie Caron

role

· place
49. TreBpaBS

DOWN
1. Take for

granted

13. Waste

2. Unfruitful

H . TajMaha l
city
15. English

river
16. Pagoda
ornament
18. Biddy
19. Czarist
village

&lt;l. Guido's

note
6. Region of

-TERRY .

-

cuckoo

ruler ·
7. Battling

cs wds.)

SNAPPER BRA55ARI7
P!R5UAPf5 TERRY
TO ATTE NV THE
OP!NINIS Of GALEE
GI«1 S PLAY IN C~E
HfR MOTHER 5HOULI7
IIECOME INVOLVEr&gt; IN
~ME INCIPENT ANI:&gt;
NEEI7 HIS HELP.
\11TH CHAY
THE tATE COLONEL GAR,

THE PLAY IJE61N5.

.-n--Il'

REMARKA6LE
WOMAN! LINES
u•E THAT MUST
HURT1 8UT ~HE
HASN'T E~cN

FLINCHEP.

!JUT THE FACE CF THE THEATER'S
II{JST INFLUENTIAL CRill ~ IS

IMPASSIVE Mi HIS MINP 160UTLININI3 THE
MAKE, OR

WHICH WILL
THE WAN! A.

line
shape
27.·-1, smasher
29. IJne·

er's
forte
31. Spanish

province

over
34:. Undress
35. Children's
cl8.85lC

IWI'Y1'

37. Reg~rdas
saintly
~3 . ScotUsh
county

~

~5. -

Dieu !

llllfftx
11. Verdi opera

16. Actor,
Stewart

Strictness
~~~~~~~~~J 13.
12.
Dllnots city
14. Sheepltke

10 I&lt;:EAD
THIS POET Ai
THE: SEACH!

\..

molars

18. Signal
for
attenUon
19. Paddle

13. Water-

borne
17. - ofthe

20. "0 Sole

-"
21. Super-

annua ted

.W ."i.W

,

1 1/I "'I""CI&gt;ol ''~"-

'"'''" """'''-

· 25. carro

wet(Itt
27. G&amp;udy

y.,~&amp;e,.a:r'• Auwer

SO. Scoff ·
Sl.By- ·!
112. Algsrlan

35. Irlrlh rtver
36. Frenzy

37.-Throw off

· port

38. On a

88. Concerning

winning

(2wds.)
M. FuUle

10

KJ I

strea.k

Jumhl•" AFTER

[1 X1 X]

CLOAK

fiTFUL

31. Familiar
comedienne

•••
(.'OL"il . ll

INFECT

y,, lfU 'I' w j't-,-1 it - AFFECTION

Now amnp the clrel*lleUert
toformtheaajilwel ••·•

(2wds.)

38. Robert

~~~~~~~iiii~~~IUIIUUid lor tile ..... CIII"IIL
Lr.....:Prill=·~llti:..::Sd::.:II=UISI=WII::..:Ilrl=.:...,.....~l 0 ( I I I I I l

· E.Lee'a
"Traveler"

39. Bemh&amp;rdt

Now arran1e the clrded !etten
to form the~'surprise answer, u
IIUfiftlted by;.the above cartoon.

(Amwcr~ toJpOrrow)

\;Amt~·.,r=

I

tile

weight

Prillt~e SURPRISE ANSWIB here

.

nant

2~.Worked

30. Indian

EMiliA(;

Saturda\''t

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

Noel
23. Rem-

29.E4en

I Kj

porary
32. German
river
34. Old Chinese
kingdom
36. l!lg(S (Lat.)
38. Bowstring
hemp
39. Young
sheep

ton or

28. Trampled

contem-.

,o. Eu-Bhape&lt;l

(+

~!.Turning .

point
, ~2. Gsdcla or
~3.

Ye•t~rday'•

BerJOll&amp;l

lllxlgsncy

.

. DOWN
1. Corrtcla
antm&amp;l
2. Kan'a name

lumlol•" AMUII

~.

Lt.tvtan
capital
44. Loch - ,
scottish
lake

bench!- IUlNS

.

PI \ ' l I"-

...

.,

'

.~

.........

l lt l l o. O.,_.!, • · ,. ~ .-.t&lt;

... "'-

. 3. W1os
,.Portico

DAILY CRYI'TOQUOTE-Rere'a how to work It:
A.XYDLBAAXB

lo

.

LONOI'JlLLOW

9J&gt;e tett.r llmpq -

tor anotller. In thl.l sample A L•
Ulld tor the thrlte L'1, X "for the two 0'1, etc, SIDIIe leiters,
apootrop._, the I...,U. and forg~~otton of thF words &amp;re all
.
hllllll. 'l:ach clay W code lottera are dlfferont,

DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE_;Here's how to work It:
A.XYVLBA.AXR
'
lo LON- GFELL&lt;JW
One letter simply stan&lt;lo for another. In thlB samp!e A Is . . - - - - - - - - -.........
uoed toi the three L's; X tor the two O'o, etc. Single letters. THE'I''D l161lT A WHOLE GTRIN6
apootrophea, the length and torrnatton of the word• are al) AT ONE TIME;ANO iHEV'D 60
hints. Each &lt;loy the code letters are different.
. .
POP o,o ""P I'OP POP PoP f'OP
A

Oeyptocnm

,..,..

I

AV'l'E

8xfxHII

V0

Y K T

J M W WT N .

'

IJIIEN 't'OU TELL A SlVfi!(, C/iUCj(,
1{0(/ HAVE ATE~DENCI( 10.60
INltJ 100 MVCH ~AIL. •.

I~

I'OP PCP PCP POP POP POP POP
POP RJP PO!' POP POP POP POP
POP POP f'QP PO!' f'OP POP POP...

Quotation

ATFTHVEL .Y N: .. . ESTWWE EBTTYTH
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DAILY CROSSWORD

s.-.:y'l Oryptoquot..: MODESTY IS NOT ONLY AN ORNAloDIIN'l', BUT ALSO A GUARD TO VIRTU"'
TORJilPH
ADDISON.
tO 1911 Klnr Fea.lurea Syadlf ate, Inc.)

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DAILY CROSSWORD
With

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PAUGHtER OF 0)-I'Il:R WARSUCKS •••

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JJ- 'l'bl D1i1J S.nttMI, Mldclleport-Ptmy, 0., July 8, 1971

.

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Disaster
Weekend
.:Kc Boani Hires Mrs. Davis Died Monday ~~ ~ News.••in Briefs
· _
Three Teachers
:·:·~=:s::
I

IIJ United Prell •• TR¢rhwl • to am per10111 would be
'l1le number of holiday traffic ldl1ed 1n highway accidents.
victims pu.:t the .eoo mark . "It wu a bad weekend," a
early today wltb delayed spokesman laid Monday night.
reports c:ontbwinc In what the "It wu disutroua." · ·
,NatiCIIIIl Safety Council termed Lilt year, Mel persons died
" "cllslltrOUI" weekend. ·.
cluring the Independence Day
The councll hal esUmated weekend.·
•
· before the hollday period began .A United Preas International
at&amp; p.m.loeal time Friday that count at aa.m. EDT showed 617
.
penona bad died in traffic

~~~

Mrs. Roush
n.!'-..J S-·-J-

~·

Mrs. William R. Davia, the
.
former 'Opal Sinclair, Jacbon,
The ~yger Creek Board of a former Pomeroy resident,
Education Monday night em- died at 4 a.m. Monday at the
ployed three inlltructors and Holzer Medical Center in
accepted the, reaignaUon of Gallipolis. .
another·
.
. Born June 22, 1928, Mrs.
, Mrs. N~cy Reiter,~ ~d Davis · Is survive~ by her
e~l?yed just last mon
husband, Lt. W~ R. Davia
not Sl~n her contrac!. _
9f the Ohio State ,Hlghway
Employed on one-year ~ Patr~l, and the following
tracts were Charles McKean, children, Mrs. Barbara Kegley

Atbena,andanumberofniecea
IDd nepbews.
Funeral services will be held
aUp.m.'nlurldayattheEWlng
Funeral Home with the _Rev.
Frank Cheeaebrew officiating.
Friends may call at the
Mayhew Funeral Home In
Jacbon until 9 tonight and at
the Ewin&amp; run."al Home after 2
p.m. on Wednesday· Burial will
be In Rock Springs Cemetery.

Mrs. ~~F~~~~d~~-~.~.;~.·----~··-~----·--------~~---~~------~~-~~

A breakdown of acCidental Reese. Miss Reese was hired to Virginia Cooper of Logan; Mrs.

deathS showed·

uaJ.. IIIHUJY
MASON - Mrs. Clara
.
Roush 72, Mlddl
t

=of~ dledS:::'
1n A~ b..,ital.
y
10

replace Fred Sisson who
Trafitc
·
817 resigned after 35 years of
Droftaags
·
· 181 teaching . She hol.ds ,a
Pw.e.
18 Bachelor's an~ Masters
Otller
,
59 Qegree from Ohio University.
Total
.
875 She formerly taught . at
california rdported 80 traffic Cheshlre-Kyger Elementllry
deatha Texu 47 IncHana 31 School.
'
•
•
Rizer Oil Co Pomeroy was
Georgia 29 and New York and awarded the co~tracts to s~pply
Florida 28 each. Only North fuel oil and gasoline for the 1971Dakota, South Dakota, Alaska 1 72school.year. Their low fuel oil
and Vermont reported no traffic . bid was 12.6 cents per gallon.
fataliUes.
The gasoline bid totaled 15.6
.cent4 per gallon.
Board clerk Mrs. Doris Roush
was authorized to advertise for
L
bids on a new pick-up ·truck and
'
UCCWIWS
60 passenger school bus.

Viola Aldrich, Lorain; Rqbert
R. (Dickie) Michelle, and
Samuel,, of Jackson; three
grandchll~ren, Catherena
Kegley' Todd Cooper' and
Christina
Aldrich;
two .
brothers, Alba Sinclair,
Burlingham, and Noel Sinclair,
·

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

b
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orn

BIID· lWIIIII' " -

d
Mr, Poun s,
72 S --·-

.

'

SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 JO.5 •.• , WEEKENDS 9:3Q TO.9:00 P.M.

.............. •·

Feb ·9
• •
1•, at Muon, the daughter of
•
the late Peter and Martha
•
Bertha Joa(:blm Young. Her
•
IN 4-DAY CAMP
•
husband, Roacoe, preceded her
Mrs. Lee Baughman and son, •
In death In 1970.
Jeffrey of Bradbury ·and Mrs. ••
Surviving are two daughters,
Eugene Smith and children, :
Mrs. Pauline Gr~atbouse,
Tim, Johnnie, Cindy, ah~ Mark •
Middleport, and Mrs. C1alre
of Syracuse spent the past four :
Lucille Lleving, _Huntington; a
days camping at Forked Run •
son, Roscoe F. Ro11sh, . of
State Park. On Sunday Mrs. · !
Carlsbad, New Mexico; . a
Baughman and Mrs. Smith had •
brother, Leo Young, of West Koby Pounds, 72, a resident of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. ••
Columbia, 14 grandchildren, Bidwell, died In Veterans
. EISENHOWER HIT
William Fred Smith, Sr. of •
aiJd 18 grea~. Hospital in Huntington, W. Va., TACOMA, Wash. (UPI)
Funeral aervlc:ea·wlll be held: around 7:15 p.m., Sunday. He Edgar Eisenhower, 82, brother Bradbury, for a day at the :
at 11 a.m. Wednelday at the St.' was a fetlred 2Q..y~ employee of the late President Dwight D. campsite. ·
•••
Joieph Catholic Cburcb In of the Natco Brick aiKt Tile Co., Eisenhower,
was
In
•
Muon with the Rev. Father Haydenville.
"!lltisfactory condition today
•
•
Bernard Krajcovic officiating. Mr · Pounds was,born Aug. B, fo'tlowlng a stroke. "The stroke .
. SYRACUSE WINS
•
Burial will be In t1ie St. Joseph 1898, on Rt. 2• ViJ!ton, 800 of the Is not critical to his life but he
The Syracuse Uttle League :
Cemetery. Rosary serVices will late Johil apd Mittie Anderson has suffered brain dsmage and team defeated Racine 9 to 7 In · •
be held at 7:30 tl)la evening at Pounds.
· ..
' he can't speak or ·understand an Ohio Valley League game at ••
the Foglesong FUneral Home. H~ married the former what Is said to him," the Syracuse on Monday. Brian :
· Friends may call at the funeral EliZabeth Harris of .Blackfork. -physician treating Eisenhower Hamilton's home run with the •
htme any Ume.
Sbe preceded him lh death in
ld
·
bases loaded was the high point :
1957. He Is survived ~Y five sa ·
for Syracuse. J: F. young had a •- - - - - - - -. . nieces and nephews: ''Four
three run homer for Racine. ; •
brothers and two sisters
LODGE .TO MEET
Other Syracuse hitters were •
lR
preceded him In death.
Pomeroy
Masonic
Lodge
Dan Riffle a triple; · Roger !
Mr. Pounds was a World War
Tonight, July 6
I veteran, a member of the F&amp;AM will hold a stated con- Roush a single. David Bass was •
claveat 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the wlnJling pitcher. .
:
PRETTY MAIDS
Shiloh Baptist Church:
the
temple.
All
master
Masons
••
ALL IN A ROW
Funeral services will be
ITechnlcolor)
·
•
conducted 2p.,m., Wednesday at are Invited.
Rock Hudson
LODGE
TO
MEET
:
the McCoy Funeral Home in
Angle Dickinson
Modem Woodmen Camp 7230 •
CLUB TO MEET
"R" Vinton with Rev. Vance Watson
The Winding Trail Garden will hold its annual picnic. !
ColorCirtooM:
officiating. Burial will be in
Hurts and Flowers
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at noon at the state park ••
Morgan-Bethel Cemetery.
lit led lobCit
Friends may call at the Wednesday at Royal Oak Park on Route 33 on the left going •
100 Smile Chlckup funeral home betWeen 6 and 9 with Mrs. Don Thomas as south. All members and friends ••
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
are Invited.
•e
hostess.
p.m., today.
u - "-··" - •

Charlea- ligar Saturday night
on a reckless operatlcln charge. Opposition to the ,..r ~ lfOWD• Wkhlfl'ead In the HOUle that
CENSU$ REPORT
· anapparentmaJorltynewfavcna~andqulchndtoU.
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ 'lbe . S. mllltuy lnv~t In V~ If aeceptin&amp; tbe Viet Cc1ni ·
CeiiiWI Bureau reports that ll'opolalwiD~hcmeallAinerklnprilollel'lofwar.
· .
East Cleveland, Ohio, beclm&amp;
Last 'lbui.WIIY vtet Coni delegates to the Parla Peace Talb
predominantly black In Its &lt;ifered to releue Amerl~ ~of war if tbe United States
population during the 1980's.
witbdralQ all ill force~ from Vfetnam by the end flf the year.
The report laid 18.8 per cent NIXon admlnlatratiCil officials bave responded ctutiOUily to the
of East Cleveland's population after, •yiJ!IIhrlll bave to be studied earefully.
was black In the last ce~.
.. ·

.

••

as seen in
· SEVENTEEN

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July1-l ·
NOT OPEN

-

!' ·1.·, ~

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nDIU::·IN
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Tonight, July 6
Double F•ture Progr1m
TWO MULES FOR
SISTER SARA
Color r •
Clint E1stwood
Shirley MaCialne

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e

l

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MEIGS THEATDE.

Wtd111sdly &amp; Tbursdly

The Now·Knlt
Pantsuit

I

•
•

•••
•

Laced-up sideshow!'
•

Superknit with something nifty to note: A-shaper crisscrossed with eyelet lacings on both sides. Vicky Vaughn
'adds a lowdown color band t~ hea\hery jacquard diogonal doubleknit of fprtrel polyester. Machine washes
and dries, too. Groy or red. 5-l ~.
•

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: Punctuate your wardrobe with Toni Todd's knockout of.a
: pantsuit and go- anywhere, anytime. Deep patch
• pockets ·and white saddle stitching add to the general
enchantment. In daubltkl)it of Dacron® polyester and
worsted wool, wonderfully machine-washable/dryable.
Navy or groy. 8-18.

GP

- PlufLATITUDE ZERO
bel!Hth the SH I
Color
Joseph Cotten
Cesar Romero
Wed., Ttlu. &amp; Fri.
July7-1-9
"JENNY"
COTor
Marlo Thomas
Alan Aida
-Piu."SUPPOSE THEY
GAVE A WAR AND
NOBODY GAME"
Color
Brian Keith
Tony Curtis

····•••e•eeeee

••

G

GP

•
••
••..
••
•••
••
••
••
•••
•

as seen In
'
SEVENTEEN

STUDENT POWER with a vengeance Ia demonstrated by young Japanese protestIng the treaty with the Ullted States on Oilnilwa mUitary bases. Despite resem·
blanee to medieval blghta jousting, the students meant business. Hundreds were
arrested In demonstrations.

Mr. Holston, 94, Claimed Sunday

William Holston, 94, a 9:45 a.m., Sunday.
Mr. Holston was born In Clay
resident of Rt. 2, McArthur,
died In the Turner Nursing Twp., near Eureka on Feb. 20,
GP
Home, Ceredo, W. Va., around 1877, son of the late William and
Sarah Holston.
. .- ...- . . - - - - - - - - - -...- - - . . Hespenthisearlyyears In the
Eureka area. He worked on
steamboats.
· Mr. HolstOn was a SpanishAmerican War Veteran. His
only survivors are nieces and
nephews. J&gt;uring recent years,
Mr. Holston resided with a
newphew, Charles Holston, at
McArthur. ·
. Funeral services ·will Isle held'
2 p.m., Wednesday at Miller's
Home for Funerals with Rev.
Harly
Cole officiating. Burial
Before purchasing
will be In Clay Chapel
your new car or
Cemetery.
Friends may call at .the
used car be sure
funeral home after 7 this
to ask about fin·
evening.

AUTO LOANS

Investigate·
your financ1ng-

ancing.
Loans plans for cars do vary. We offer one
of the lowest rates for loans on cars and
you can repay us· in easy monthly payments. Ask about our loan plans.
! J H H ~ Y() lJ V I ',I T P A \! t&lt;' f

1-J

ff

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USED CARS

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I

" You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
PomeroY:
Open Evenings 'TII.I:OO
Til S P.M. Sat.

MURDER CHARGES
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (UPI)
- Samuel Phillips of Waverly
was charged with first degree
murder and held without bond
In the shooting of Roger
Roberts, 42, during the
weekend.
Roberta was found shot four
times in the chest at a motel just
south of here Saturday night.
Phillips was charged Monday.

••
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Staggers
(Continued from Page 1)
fused to divulge unused film
footage or al'l hour-long documentary.
'
"We are specifically con~
cerned with his recent attacks
upon Stanton, especially in the
light of the recent Supreme
Court decisions, which upheld
the right of The (New York)
Times and The (Washington)
Post, to publish the Pentagon
papers," said Paul Nyden, a
spokesman (or the committee.
Now In his 12th term in Congress, the 63-year-old Staggers
heads the House Commerce
Committee, which voted 25- 13
to request contempt charges by
the House against Stanton.
Ross, however, said West Vli'ginla law doesn't provide for
recall of a congressman, and·
such Is the case In nearly all
other states.
Recall elections are possible
un.der state law, he note9, addIng that In .most cases, states
that have recall taws apply only
to judicial offices.
"And, then they apply only·to
sUite offices," he lidded.
• \
Apparently undaunted by this 1
advice, Nyden sajd hiS committee In te11ds to press the Issue
here and In ·other areas with
several public meetings.

••

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Zlpl Jacquard knit
sidetracked with ·Interest

I

'

Shop our Second Floor•
Ready To Wear

Dep~rtment

in air conditioned comfort.

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a zipper that starts out right from curvy side-notched
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doubl11knlt. Machine washes and dries beautifully. Gold
or blue. 1.4~-U~.

Big selection of Juniors, Misses, Women's styles
in new fall merchandise arriving daily.

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HoHest Jumpahorts In town

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•• Boldly banded shoulder and waist are these. Vicky ee
Petite has the really right idea from pants taking a e
••• wild
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wosh-and-dry Fortrel polyester dovbleknlt. Navy •
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ELBERFELDS
IN
-~--- ~------~---~--~lllill!lll--. .--~--·i,.ii-----.-...
.....

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