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Mary Ann

Pierce, two-yearold daughter of Mr. an!l Mrs. ,
Donald Eugene Pierce, Mid·
dleport, 'Rt. 1, was strvc~ and
lnjur,ed by a truck driven by her ·
father as he pulled from a
garage on the Pierce property
in Letart Township Tuesday at
3:30 'p. m., the Meigs County

Sheriff's De~tment said.
The youngster suffered
painful but not critical
lacerations and abrasions to her
left side. She . was taken to,
Holzer Medical center by the
Racine emergency squad.
On SR 338 at Apple Grove, in
front of the old U. S. Locks and

2, Hit by-Truck I By

Dam Tuesday at· 4:10 p. m.,
John Wesley Lawson, 67,
Portland, Rt. 1, was traveling
~ast when he struck the rear of
a car driven by Roy L. Pierce,
18, Racine, Rt. 2. Pierce was
making a left turn. The Pierce
car went off the highway,
striking 30 feet of chain link

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fence and two metal posts.
Lawson had lacerations of his
lip and forehead but was not
immediately treated. Norma
Jean Jarrell, 9, Racine, Rt. 2, a
passenger in Pierce's car, had
injuries to her neck and abdomen. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1971

n
during which he will conduct a
major foreign policy reappraisal and review his forthcoming
budget.
It was ·the first time Nixon
had spoken of the possibility of
a negotiated peace since Viet
Cong representatives offered a
seven-poi.nt plan at the Paris
talks Thursday. The Communist
proposal provides for simul~
taneous release of American
prisoners of war with total U.S.

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troop withdrawal by the end of
the year.
The Communists also have
said the plan was flexible, and
secret negotiations would be
welcomed.
Nixon did not address himself
to the offer and his press
secretary, Ronald Ziegler, was
noncommital.

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Jungle Trails Raked
..
SAIGON-AMERICAN 852 bombers pounded the Ho Chi Minh
trail In Laoe today, flying above the monsoon rains and the squalls
left over from Typhoon Harriet which brought ground fighting to
a virtual standstill along the Demilitarized Zone.
Military sources said B52s flew some 30 sorties In hammering
the mountainous, jungle-6hrouded trail that wlnda 400 miles down
the Laotian Panhandle and is used by North Vietnam to funnel
men and supplies Into South Vietnam an~ Cambodia.

PAUL GERARD
TV and radio.
Q: How does it feel to have
played a role in the making of
history?
A: I wouldn't be so bold as to
think mine was any major role.
It does make you feel very good
to se~ something you've worked
for achieved.
Q: Since you are a somewhat
youthful candidate (for Mayor
of Middleport), do you hope to
benefit directly from the 18year old vote?
A: You can only benefit
directly from the 26th Amendment if you are under 21, which
I'm not. If you mean, will I get
the youth vote, I would be lieing
if I said I didn't hope to get a lot
of under-21 votes, but I hope to
get a lot of older votes as well.
Q: Now that you have seen the
18-year old vote achieved, what
will be next?
A: If you mean, will I be
throwing myself into some new
cause, the answer is "probably
not." I'm not really a
professional do-gooder. From
time to time I do find things I
think a~e worthwhile. That's all.

Lemon, Pure and Simple

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Warm
and humid with a
WASHINGTON (UPI) -SEN. WILLIAM PROXMIREsays the
Navy's new F14 jet fighter iB ·"a lemon, )pure and simple" and chance of thundershowers
might cost the govel'J11llent $4 billion In e~a charges. Proxmire, Friday. Highs in the upper 80s
a WisconSin Democrat, called on the Seriate to cancel contracts and low 90s. Lows in the mid
for the swtng-wlDg jet. The House already has cut off production . 70s to the low 80s. Clearing
Jlnd cooler Saturday and
funds for ~e F14. Proxmlre,ln remarks jx-epared for delivery on Sunday with highs dropping
the Senate noor today, said ConRress should authorize purchase to the mid 70s and low 80s.
ci an Improved version of the F4 PhantOm fighter-bomber as an Lows In the mid and upper
interim replacement for the'F14. He said this should be done until 50s.
a new fighter can be developed ..

Moonlight Swims
wWARE CLIENTs .suspected of ln l1\T.ew
Sch. edule
ll

Cheaters Prove Few

WAS.HINGTON (uPI) cheating represented less tha9 1 per cent of the nation's welfare
S thl
bel
·case load in 1970, the government said today.
orne ng new .1s . ng
. State welfare agencies identifit:d 33,900 cases of suspected , added this week to the
fr ud an Increase ci 200 cases over th 1....., total the H lth
schedule of ~he .Middleport
a '
e ,_
•
ea ' swimming pool
Ruby
Education and WeHare Department (HEW) said in a report on Vaughan, dlrect~r, said
welfare fraud 1 The figure was 0.071F cent o~ the average mon- today.
thly case load for all federally.ftnapced v.:elfare programs. But
The pool, enjoying one of its
only 3,000 of the s•cted cases ever were prosecuted by law busiest summers since being
. enforcement agencies, the report said. California led the nation · opened in 1955, will offer
' With 1,600 such.prosecutions.
"Moonlight" swimming
tomorrow, Friday . and
Sat.irday, 9 p.m. to midnight.
'
"If this provea appealing to
the public It could becl)me a
MEETING CALLED
FEE HIKE, MAYBE
All committee members and
q&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio regular thing," said Mrs.
parenta of steer and lamb SUite University President Vaughan.
Moonlight swimmers must ..
project members are invited to 1 Novice G. Fawcett baa warned
be
at least 11 years. old and
attend the 4-H Steer and Market ' students to expect lncreaaed
Lamb Sale Committee meeting fees thla fall if the Ohio General tbe admission wiD be lden·
at ·the Meigs County Extension Assembly falls to approv.e the . tical for singles or couples, $1 ,
Office at 8:30p.m. Wednesda'' ' university's $165,558,000 state In each case.
:::::~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::=:::~:~:::
July 7.
· aid reque!'t.' .

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Appointments of town officials were made in a
:r::: : regular session of the newly-elected Mason Council
itH Tuesday night.
. ·
f)} Mike Shaw, Mason County prosecuting attorney, was
'((: hired as the town attorney.
tiJ
Richard Fowler was elected treasurer of the to'Y'I
and of the water department, .and Charlotte Jenks was
:.,f appointed secretary of the water department at a
: '· monthly salary of $250 .
In other actions, council discussed raising the
:}' water tax fee and the installation charge. No action ·
was taken, pending further data .
··.·. ·
After approvipg the Appalachian Power Company
. ) . bills, council . approved a salary increase of Ersel
.: Bowyer, a town employee, from $1.35 an hour to $1.50
an hour.
' ·
-;.,:··
,. : Troy Zwilling of the- Rizer Oil Company of Pomeroy
. ·.: explained benefits the town would have if it continued
/'( service with Rizer's.

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Jun!:e~e~~lo~~:::in~~ ~o~::;~;!:.t ~= ji \IJ~

.:':{: explained that the new town ordinance did not stipulate
;, a certain number of patrolmen were to be employed .
&lt;}
Present were Roy Harless, mayor ; Gary Gibbs,
:::::;:;:: recorder; Joe Jones, Richard Fowler, Russell Barton,
Sunny. today and Thursday.
~= ~~~~;de~~uncilmen, and Charlotte Jenks, former
Highs today in the mid to upper
80s except near 80 along the
/;i A special meetil!g of the council has been
shore of Lake Erie. Clear
"We have indicated that we tonight with lows in .the 60s.
are interested in serious Highs Thursday in the upper 80s
negotiations with the other and low !Ml!l.
"
side," Ziegler said. "The other
side knows what the appropriate forum Is."
The White House did not rule
out secret talks with the other
side but said there were no
plan for such meetings.

Weather

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ii!!;;~:~;~i~;~~~~

LONDON (UPI) - The munity, now composed of
government asked Parliament France, West Germany, Italy,
and a reluctant public today to Belgium,
Holland
and
back British membership in a Luxembourg.
European common market that "In a single generation we
would rival ·America, Russia should have renounced an
and Communist China in power Imperial past and rejected a
and prestige.
European
future,"
the
The appeal came in a 20,000- document said. "Our friends
word government "white everywhere
would
be
paper" aimed at the hearts and dismayed. They would rightly
pocketbooks of Britons, be as uncertain as ourselves
assuring them they would about our future role and -place
retain their national identity, in the world.
beloved monarchy and otller "The present community
institutions while sharing in the would · continue to grow in
European community's strength and unity without us.
booming prosper! ty.
Our power to influence the
The document coupled the community would steadily
appeal with a warning of the diminish, wq,ile the com•
dire con~ lt'said woutct· mtmity's .power ·to affect our
befall· Britain if it remains future would as steadily in·
outside the six-nation com- crease."

Tammy the Twirler Will
Take.Part in Nationals
"Tammy the Twirler," after
successes of last weekend, is
eligible for N.B.T.A. national
competition to be held at Notre
Dame University at South
Bend, Ind., in August.
Tammy the Twirler is
Tammy Eichinger, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy.
In Mansfield, Ohio this past
weekend she competed in Ohio'sN.B.T.A. State championships,
a three.day event attracting
some of this country's finest
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mildred
Bissell, Reedsville; Ricky
Deeter, Racine; Charles
Humphreys, Pomeroy; Hazel
Harris, Vinton; Christine
Branham, Pomeroy; Steve ·
Smith, Pomeroy; Irene Darst,
Cheshire : Frances Howery,
Albany; Charles Withers, Point
Pleasant; Garold Graliam,
Pomeroy; Ira · Roach, Long
Bottom; Billy McDaniel,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Stanley
McClain, Walter Heilman,
Mildred Powell.

~irlers.

Ohio, having over 100
registered teachers in two large
organizations (N .B.T.A. and
USTA) is one of the most difWHO SAYS GmLS DON'T KNOW BASEBALL?
ficult of all states in the country
Demaris Ash does. Demaris was busy Tuesday night
to win a state championship.
coaching
first base for the Pomeroy A Pony league team
Some states have only one or
playing Southwestern at Syracuse. Chuck Bartels is coach of
two registered teacliers.
the Pomeroy squad. Demaris comes from an athletic-minded
To be eligible to enter the
family.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ash, Syracuse,
N.B.T.A. Nationals, a twirler
her brothers, Rick and Mick,· play baseball. Mick is on
must place in the top five of
Bartels' Pony team. Dick Ash is remembered as an outtheir state competition.
Three new staff members
standing Pomeroy High athlete a generation ago.
At Mansfield the top seven
.
were employed Tuesday niglit
were ' awarded trophies with
by the Gallia-Melgs Community
Tammy coming home with two, I.
Action board cif directors.
·
t ••••
having entered only three I
I
Mrs.
Unda
Aikman,
Dexter,
categories. She took fourth
was hired as 'a parttime
place in twirling and fifth place II
assistant director of tbe
in fancy strut.
I
Summer Neighborhood You~
Several ~eeks ago Tammy I
Corps Program. Jaina
was second runner-up in the
Bob
Hoeflich
.
Wickline was hired as counselor
Miss Majorette of Ohio
for the project and Miaa
Pageant, taking first place in JI
Michelle Buck of Cheshire wu
Mrs.
Nellie
Vale,
genial
county
school
supervisor,
will
return
fancy . strut and fourth in
to her duties at the county superintendent's office Monday employed a~ secretary-typist.
twirling
Tammy was the only twirler following a vacation. Mrs. Vale made her first flight during her Richard Sayre, executive
entered in the Ohio State vacation - a trip from Columbus via plane to visit an aunt in St. direc.tor, announced $33,760 . lb
addi tiona! funds has been
Championship from this area. Louis, Mo.
LOWER MIDDLEPORT has really taken on a.new look with allocated for the project lriOUt of state judges were used.
• Accompanying Tammy was _ the housing 'development by Jemo, Inc., which will be starting six creaSing it§ enr91lees from 120
her mother, Mrs. Paul more tfouses within the next two weeks. The firm also is busy to 210 in both coiinties. Doit
Hodge is director of the
Eichinger, and her teacher, building similar homes in McArthur.
Gloria Buck.
MARION (HAMMER) HAWK has a ruler apparently program.
distributed as a favor by a Pomeroy Jewelry Store some years Sayre also reviewed the
ago. The ruler advertises Aicher's of Pomeroy - diamonds, Summer Head Start Project
startin.B its fourth week with 420
watches, jewelry, silverware and spectacles. Anyone know the children particlt&gt;ating at 10
era Involved?
centers in Gallia and Meig~
HERE'S A NEW ONE -.
Counties. The project provides
state tournament in two weeks.
A program to provide information and entertainment to temporary employment for 150
The term has a 12-9 record, at Vintlln County high school students while riding school buses has persons. Another 60 persons are
this point. It will play the been approved by the Ohio Department of Education under Title working under the Operation
remainder of its games at home Ul provisions. .
•
Mainstream .
(SyracuS&lt;!).
Cost of the project is $81,500and the idea is to improve student Mrs. Edna Russell, Project
attitudes
toward education and promote greater instructio'rial J\SSist Nurse, reviewed medicAl
The second quarter financial
report was given by Charles activities by effective utilization of bus riding time. Some health ~linic activities. Her
Swatzel. Two World ·war I stud~nts ride buses as many as two and a half hours a day and the project, funded through ()c.
veterans, Frank Fugate in average length of time high school students in Vinton County ride tober, provides medical
assistance to indigent families.
Holzer Medical Center, and buses is 1.3~ hours a day.
AN OUTDOOR EVANGELISTIC service will be held at the David Fox, Out of School NYC
Charles Frank, at home after
Southern
High School football stadium from SUnday through July··· ·Director, reported 40 in·
being discharged
from
dividuals are enrolled in that
Veterans Memorial ijospital, 18.
This is the 'second.year for \he stadium in Racine to be ust'd project which will end July 11
were reported ill. Two veterans
of the Vietnam War, Dor Coates for outdoor services. There is no offering taken and residents unl!!SS congress acts upon the
and Melvin Swisher, were coming are invited to bring lawn chairs, sit in their cars br on the a~propriation measure.
guests. ·
bleachers.
.
DIVORCESOUGHT
The death of Mrs. William. The services will be at 8 each evening with the Rev. Charles S. Charging . grCIII neglect ~
Davis, wife of OSP Lt. W. R. Norris serving as evangelist and Duane Wolfe as song leader. duty Dixie Dotson Jr. BlclweD
Davis, a former. commander of Dennis Manuel will be featured soloist and taking part in special has
a petiU~ s'eekt!W ~
the post, was reported. Paul musical presentations during the week will be the Bis,sell divorce from Vu-glnia Doteao
Casci, assisted by Paul Taylor Brothers, Mt. Union Q\lartet, the Exline Sisters of Jackson, the Rt. 1, Vinton. They we~
and Guy Guinther, servea a Freeland Norris Quartet, the Bob Sayre Family, the King Family married Feb. 10, 1!153 and haft
dinner ..
and the East l.etart Youth Choir.
one child.

3 Hired
By CAP·

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Bea
Of the Bend

l·By

Jewell Installed
Marlon Bush, Eighth District
commander' installed new
officers of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, Tuesday
night.
Installed were Leonard
Jewell, commander; Donald
Whaley, first vice-commander;
Roy Reuter, second vicecommander; Paul easel, adjutant; Charles Swatzel,
finance officer;
James
Gilmore, chaplain; Joe Struble,
four year trustee, and Edgar
Vanlnwagen, sergeant-at-arms.
Plans were made for the post
to serve again as the county fair
police detail in August.· Members are asked to sign a roster
at the post home inQ!cating
which days,and nights they will
be available for work.
Don Hunnel reported on the
county Legion baseball team,
stating that it will enter the

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Power Ploy

eGNervativ~ ~.l.b.:.OC~..Ythir!B

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iEN CENTS

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Vote 19, thinking th$t 19 would
be more likely to be successful
than 18. This led to pie forming
of a state organization in July
1969, to support ,a Vote 19
proposal which w~s to be put
before voters in N~vember.
Q: Did you get a Jot of support
here in the county?
A: I think we dlfl. It's funny,
because I was told by the
"professionals" jn Columbus
that Meigs Couhty was too
like this. Yet When the IssUe
went to the voteraln 1969, Meigs
voted 52 pet. In favor compared
to only about 45 pet. in Franklin
County (where all the "big
money" was).
Q: The Issue' failed in 1969?
A: Yes, it did, statewide. We
lost by less than 1 pet. of the ·
·total votes cast. I spent the last
two years trying to keep the
issue alive here. I knew Ohio
was an lmpor.tant state In the
national movement for lowering
the voting age. I Issued bumper
stickers, I wrote letters ~d
articles, I talked with !.don'tknow • how ~ many individuals
and groups and I appeared on

PHONE 992-2156

romzse

Footnote Role ---By Paul Gerard
When historians write about
the 26th amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, Ohio will rate a
footnote as the state which, on
June 30, 1971, gave 18-year olds
the right to vote.
· Paul Gerard of Middleport
will not be Included in that
footnote, though he has been
active In the youth suffrage
movement since 1969. Following
IS an Interview with Gerard,
soon after the Vote 18 amend·
IJ1t!.i Wlli ratifled~: , .. .
Q: What was your reaction to
the ratification of the 26th
amendment?
A: When you work for
something to long and hard,
when It consumes so much of
your time and attention, you're
really glad it's over.
Q: How were you involved in
the efforts to lower the voting
age? ·
.
A: It's hard to pinpoint the
exact date when I became involved. I thought for a iong time
the voting age should be
lowered, but I guess It wasn't
until earl)11969 that the thought
was tr11181ated into any. kind of
action. I started Volunteers For

way headed east
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·
Ed Stark, Pomeroy, traveling
west, struc.k the left door of the
Taylor car, then went off the
highway into a ditch. There
were no arrests or injUries.
There was heavy damage .

Of 'lJae Meiga-M010n Area

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SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. • American involverne~t in the
(UPI)-President Nixon, mak· : war is ended.
.
lng a careful review of the Viet ''We are actively pursuing the
Cong's latest peace proposal, negotiation channel," he said.
sa.ys he is "actively pursuing" "We also, regardless o~ what
ways to end the Vietnam war happens on the negotiation
by negotiation.
front, are pursuing our proBriefing newspaper and ' gram of Vietnamization in
broadcast executives from 13 which all Americans will be
Midwestern states Tuesday in withdrawn from Vietnam :.. "
Kansas City, Mo., Nixon said it · Nixon made his rematks in a
"Is only a matter of time" and stopover en route to his Pacific
"only a matter of how" Coast villa for a two-week stay

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. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ar's

Appointments App1'011«1 . • .-:
t,:t)
Newly-Elected Mason
t~ : ·
(Smith ) Taylor, 18, Pomeroy, JiM Co
· . rr. da' . J\T.• h --· - W&lt;1 • '·
Rt. 2, was stalle$.1 on the high- ~:tt
URCl1 ~ ues . Y ll~ t . . ... t%

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· Devoted To 'lJae lntere~ll

NO. XXIV 'NO. 58

the Racine E-R squad where
she was treated and released.
Both cars were demolished.
Lawson was clted into County
Court on a charge of failing to
stop within assured clear
distance.
Tuesday at 10:30 p.m. on the
Forest Run Road, Brenda S.

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Pierce, ·~Age

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2-Tile Dilly Srnlinel, MidcDeport-Pt:met"o)t.O.: July 7, 1971

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Warm-Up for the World Series

IDnORIA1
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Future Bleak for
lnsuranc~ Industry ·.

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PST! HERE'S A GEM
-· ,NEW YORK Dnddllng Around Some &amp;sy
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MemorieS: Once upon a Runyon nme there wu

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aYerfwlttygent.ebou~dwaynamedC!mck

Green. No one tMw bls ~orrect given lag and (]ruck compoonded the minl-m}'Biery by giving

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When crime and civil disorder move in and gain conof a community or a neighborhood, insurance must
move out. After that, it is only a matter of
before law-abiding residents and ilusinessmen must
"leaving another no-man's land to the spreading
of the lawless." .
The threat is not confined to the areas of crime and
;&lt;:nru disorder, however.
"The insurance industry is caught in one of the most
;serious crises in its history," says DeForest W. Abel Jr.,
;president of Automobile Mutual Insurance Company of
•&lt;\merica (AMICAl.
•
~ People are becoming more and more conscious of the
·~ssential nature of insurance, he says. They are also be·
~oming increasingly dissatisfied with il~ cost and avail:ablli!Y. The industry is caught in a crossf~re of a complex
;set of social revolutions.
:. "We are all familiar with the multiple issues of crime,
;pollution, racial strife, automobile slaughter, inflation
:and the like from even the most cursory reading of our
-daily newspapers. Our ability to preserve a stable and
:orderly society-a prerequisite to the survival of a pri:vate insurance mechanism-is now being challenged,"
:says Abel.
:: Is a public insurance mechanism-one subsidized with
, .:ta'l:payer dollars-the answer then?
r--~------------~-----------~
;: A new federal crime insurance program becomes opera:ltve In several states on Aug. 1, notes Bateman. But
Q-Which was the first
'lrhile this may satisfy an immediate need, it is certainll.
distinct breed of cattle prono long-range solution to the problems of crime and ci¥il
duced in the Umted States?
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disorder in our society, he asserts .
A-The Santa Gertrudis,
I
By Helen Bottel
1 a cross between the Short·
"It is, of course, humane and just to help those who
~ve suffered and lost at the hands of criminals. But this
horns and Brahmans.
.Is nothing more than a palliative. It does little or nothing
CONSIDER THE FRIGip HUSBAND ....
Q-ls there a planet
;~discourage the criminal."
named
Vulcan?
Dear Helen:
' ~ ;: The same is true in the automobile lleld when insurers
A-No, V u lean was a
My husband al8o has two personalities. Around others; you'd
.;:'Pool their resources to insure otherwise uninsurable
name given to a planet supthink we were very happy. But at home, he withdraws. He wat- posed to exist between Mer.•: drivers. While some financial protection is afforded the
;·: victims of irresponsible drivers, little or nothing ,is done
cbes television or naps in another room. Only when I go to bed cury and the sun, but its ex;: to discourage the frequency of accidents,
does he come out of his den. Tben he stays up until he's sure I'm istence was never estab;· "The answer to the automobile insurance problem clearlished,
asleep.•
•• ly lies in our ability to reduce traffic a9cldents and to
We've been married only a short while but he's made love to
Q-Which is the world's
,, lower the cost of those losses that do .occur," says Abel.
me
just
eight
limes
in
a
year,
He
says
he
loves
me,
but
I
have
my
southernmost
seat of govern~- "Thls is true under today's insurance system; it will be
doubts. I feel the only reason he married me was to have someone ment?
.:Jis true under any other insurance,system that may evolve
A-The city of Ushuala on
"ln the future."
help pay the biDs and keep the house clean. - ·TURNED OFF
the island of Tierra del
· :: "The ultimate solution to our common problem is not
Dear Helen:
Fuego, Chile.
to pay out ever more money to recompense the victims
Nothing marriage? Yes, I have one, too!
~f crime," says Bateman, "but to put more money into
We were married wben I was 23, and as each child came
!be effort to destroy organized crime and control unalong, my husband pushed me a little farther into the background.
prganized crime, so that crimes against ~ople and propWhen I caress or kiss bim, he tells me to slop. I could walk
~rty are reduced to a minimum and traditional insurance
around nude but he wouldn't bat an eye.
;}widamentals will again be workable."
Last night, llke many nights, he played with the kids for so
;; The insurance industry mirrors the society in which it
·:~xists and for which it performs an essential function.
loog thai I went to the neighbor's. I was gone two hours and he
~~ The image currently reflected i~J!Ot a pretty one.
, dldn 'I even notice I'd ll!fl.
•,
N
....
,
Helen,i'm 30 and quite attractive; tiui'onl~ th~ kidS mat~' £0
~
. •
~~
~
1
••
bim. He uses them to keep J!ll\ from getting close. flilm; IOIM!'n 'Wf
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
finally go Iii bed, he preterds he is already asleep.
I'm reaching the point where I'd almost throw myself at any
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have
avallablemale.Shouldlgiveup? -MRS.NOTIIING
been married twice and have
two children. I lost my first
Dear All of you:
husband and my daughter is
(And there are many wives with ''frigid" husbands.)
from
that marriage. I now
Nothing hits'a man so hard as the fear of impotency.
have a little boy from my
He'll find every excuse to hide his secret, especially from the second marriage My little
one person who could help bim most, if he'd confide in her: his g1rl is 41.2 years old and
•
wife. He can't let her know he's a failure - so he Jretends my first husband's parents
By BRUCE BJOSSAT
disinterest, says he's "too tired," or even blames HER for often come to see her. She is
too httle to understand what
WASHINGTON (NEA)
"turning bim off."
really
happened to her daddy
Despite heralded handicaps and the consequent bad·
If you can persuade your husbands to discuss their problems, but her grandparents seem
mouthing, Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine still seems to
you're on the way to solving them. Once you break down that wall to want to tell her things
be clearly leading the Democratic presidential pack at
of fear, and they learn that many other men share their Wt'mes, about him and she is a very
the halfway mark in 1971.
they may not balk at the next step, which Is specialized man !age nlixed-up little girl. I have
Governors, aides and politicians who met not long ago
:-in Omaha for the second quarterly Democratic gover· counseling for both of you, Masters and Johnson style. Sometimes asked them not to say anything to her but it seems that
;::pors' conference reinforce this conclusion.
a cure (or at least a workable compromise) comes from simply they don't care to keep quiet.
·:• With one or two exceptions, the indication is that Muskie
:;Is either the strong front-runner or in the top two in the reading the right books- and a good starter is a condensation of What can I do?
"Hwnan Sexual Inadequacy."- H.
;-ttates represented (12).
Dear Reader- The simDear Helen:
;:: H1s stiffest r~val appeared to be Sen. Hubert Humphrey.
plest thing in most complex
:='fhough it is being asserted today in party circles that
I agree with "Flat Broke." Why must face lifts and other situations is just to tell the
•;fie is damaged by publication or the so-called Pentagon
truth. I think you have to be
cosmetic surgery be so expensive?
:;papers on Vietnam, only one or two governors raised this
honest with children and this
Every time I look-ill the mirr&lt;H' I cry. -M. H.
:;tx~ssibility in private conversations.
begins from the time they
Dear Helen:
:•: One of the most startling findings of my survey of
are old enough for you to
Cosmetic surgery is "over-priced" because it isn't necessary have any verbal communica·
::leadership sentiment is that Sen. George McGovern of
for health or life. Also, dealing with vanity (not necessarUy a bad llon with them at all. Event·
•:South Dakota , the only declared 1972 candidate, is judged
&lt;:fo have very little strength in places he is counting on
trait) you lake great risks. Many plastic surgeons prefer NOT to ually, they will find out ~he
:;for good support-including Minnesota and the critical
do so.ealled face lifts and other appearance aids because they get truth and usually lh!s is not
!·primary states of Wisconsin and Nebraska.
so many complaints. People expect miracles, when a surgeon as great a shock as finding
~; McGovern managers long have said they must do well
out that they have been de·
can, at best, erase only about 10 years. We would rather restore CPJved by their loved ones.
·:in Wisconsin and think they can. They have talked or
lroken faces or rebuUd congenital defects than remove wrinkles
\: Nebraska as 1f it were m the1r pocket.
•
I don '! mean that 11 is nee·
:: Nebraska sources said the state is heavily for Muskie
and sags. And that's the truth. Thus the cost.- DR. X.
essary to go into traumatic
:·right now. One man said McGovern isn't really m it.
details. but 1 think all ques·
; :Another said his early organization effort is good, but
lions should be answered as
::that Indiana Sen. Birch Bayh's is much better. The latter
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - s1mply and directly as. pos-:]s deemed to have a good grip, for the moment, on several
sible Your problem reminds
•
::state Democratic committeemen.
me or what somet:mes hap:; A veteran professional's judgment 1s that Muskie pres·
pens to adopted children
:.ently would win the W1sconsin primary This man would
' They do very well when they
···hold the options open, but he does not find it easy to name
are told from birth that they
·::a close challenger for Muskie.
are adopted : but if they are
.-: In Minnesota, a conventmn state, Humphrey would get
not and learn the truth later
::full loyalty 1f he became a candidate. Beyond that, it's
m life. they often have a very
::Muskie. McGovern gets little spillover from South Dakota
severe emotiOnal shock. 1
:·into the neighbor state.
presume that your hltle girl
; : Other states where Muskie IS said to have commanding
&lt;or substantial advantage are Oklahoma and the new
•:;primary states of Rhode Island, Maryland and North
;;carolina cwhose Gov . Hobert. &amp;ott has endorsed him ).
FACTS
~ · The Mame senator is one of two or three top contenders
' r---~!!!
~:rur delegates in Georgia, and is reported the strongest
:·one in Ohw at this stage
•' llumphrcy gets strong mentwn m Maryland , some in
: Hhode Island and Georg•a Sen llenJ'Y .Jackscm of Wash• ingtun pups up in Georgia and' Oklahoma.

!Helen Help Us lI

QUICK QUIZ

:u:

characlen

earuer

WIN 'AT BRIDGE
'

Worth Study
Child Should Know Sla~ : Bidding Dave
showed his · club supNORTH
port. He didnt' know Jack
.K10843
really had
but he
Abo~t. th~. . Family .
.AK9
didn't ,care "because Jack

~

BRUCE BIOSSAr

Muskie No. 1 but
Watch Humphrey

B[AAf'S WORLD

'

7

if

clURS,

' • ·975

does know that her real
father is de"ad and, certainly,
11 1s better that she understands th1s early in life.
Children are often much
stronger than their parents
realize. I believe that if you
follow the course of just be·
ing truth f u I and honest
there really shouldn't be any
pro b I em about what the
child's grandparents tell her.
Dear Dr. Lamb--I am a 40year-old woman with a
weight' problem. Can I reduce safely by consuming
liquids only-such as juices
and broth? I take one hl~hpotency vitamin table( daily
and one organic iron tablet
with vitamin B-12 three
times a day. It is much
easier for me to lose weight
this way than it is by eating
foods. I always end up with
too many calories.
Dear Reader- You · probably can Jose weight that
way , depending on what is in
your juice and broth. 1 don't
recommend i 1 particularly,
unless you are under a physi·
ciao's care. Any· weight you
lose will probably come right
back after you resume your
usual eatmg habits. Clearly.
vou can't live on juice and
broth forever. The key to
weight control, as ooposed to
lose a little- gain a little, is
a basiC change m living habits . This includes what you
eat and how much physical
activltv you do. Why don't
you Ju'st "cut out the fat. the
sugar and the bread and
walk a mile each day ? Then
see where you are in about
three months.

.;

.A6
EAST (Dl

WEST

.J

.107432
.QJ5
• Q 103 2
tAKJ86
.1074
.Q953
SOUTH
• AQ9762

•as

t4
.KJ82
West
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Both vulnerable

North

It

South
I.

Pass

3t

Easl

PassU

l'ass 4•
Pass •5•
Pass

would know.
~···
This club raise was enough
for Jack to take full charge.
He Blackwooded and then
bid six spades. The bidding
is well worthy of study. It is
complicated, but expert
bridge is.
There are two other points
of interest. If Dave had
really been void of dla·
munds, he would have re·
sponded six diamonds to the
Blackwood four no-trump. If
Dave held two diamonds and
one heart, he wouldn't have
cue-bid diamonds at all.

PBM

'

Opening lead- t 2
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __... ' 'th~ biddmg has been:
IIIII
By Oswald 1c Jame1 Jacoby Wesl North
Dble
When today's hand was 3 •
Pass
played at the Louisville Re· You, South, hold:
gional in April, e'{ery ' South
player made the small slam •uu •ctaz t3 ,f.J7U
What do you do now?
m spades, but practically no
one bid it. Dave Siebert of A-Pus. You hope to boat
contract bat do DOl wut
Little Ra&lt;:k and Jack Blair of lhis
to
tlp
your lrllmp leqth.
Tulsa dld and we feel their
TODAY'S QUESTION
sequence is worth study.
· Dave's spade overcall was Instead of biddinJ . three
normal and Jack decided to ..pades, West has _ . t. Your ,
explore with a two-diamond · ~IBrtner blCb four heartl and
cue bid. H~ was going to East bids lour spades, What do
wmd up m spades, but you do now~
wanted to explore slam pos·
s~bilities Daves' two"spade
b1~ temponzed and Jack
tr1ed ~hree clubs. The ~ue bid
had m11iated a forcmg se·
Crown of Lombardy
quence, so he wasn't worried . The Iron Crown of Lorn·
about be!ng dropped there. bardy Is made of gold, decDaves hand had suddenly orated with jewels and clotimproved, so he bid three sonne enamel. Its name.
diamonds. ·.Jack was not comes from an Inner Iron
ready to . ra1se spades as ~et circlet which tradition says
so he !ned three hearts to was beaten from a nall of the
get further information. Cross of Christ.

1•

®

WORLD ALMANAC

;

4.

Though here and there Bayh's aggressive uvertnres to

'f state ancl county t•ohtu·ians we1 e J'atl'fl at least partly
, productive, fur the most part he JS lumped w1lh Md;ovcrn
;.unc.J luwa 's Sen llaruhJ llughcs as "unknown' ~ ur "41
.. mystl!ry

1'

• This half-yew venhct fJCtrn

~ovcrnors

ancl others docs

':none 11f UICS(' thrcl! c:nnh.mtl&lt;•rs any gond. Hut 11 is cspt•cial"'" ly rhunaging lu Md:uv(·f'n
•

Th&lt;• ~ullil' is an intelligent , loyal dog wh1rh has
bem used for ceniiii"!J'S b)
StOlt ish sheplwrds in caring
for tlmr Rocks Thc• World
Almanac: null's that earlv
collies WNe black or black
and tan. and wl're known as
r coally" dogs. from which
theil' namt&gt; was derived .

'; The• whulc: ralionalc• unclc•rlymg his t•arly dt•claratJCJn
~ .. ,,r c:mululw·y ww; lhal 11 wuuld IK• his SfH'IIlghual'lf lo
: t.wdly m·f'flf•cl naruf· Jdf•llltli(·H IIUII Wf•ll , fll('ll' hasn 't ht!('n
· ~1111d1 :-iJIIlllg Jn 1111' oltl hu:ud
,.. l•'wltu•rmt~ff• , whati'\Wt 1111111 hVt·nwnt tiU"II' has hl'('ll
'" in itlmtltty hw~ uot lfaus lah-d Jbt·lf tnlu sllaq1 ~ ains in
~NIJJUI&lt;H' tly . Itt• lt:wgs :•I tlut•t• ltJ ltVf' JH'f' t't•nl in llu• pulls ...
.. "'l'l••·r•· t' , 1111 '' ';II llul;wtl fm lii111 it: ul• ~ •·1 vin~ t hal Jo:u~t'll«'
~Mr·C:u ·thy JuJiially WHS aJs,, \IPI'.Y h1W tn 1111' )lulls
~ M••:wllHJ'' , Musku• g••••:-; ~·lt•tlfllllg altmg, iW('tlmulaiiiiJ~
;~ii zahh· llilklat ·~ td ~war lt :i,' olll ' yt·l IHII lu • IIIJ~ Sf•Jtuusly dis·
-:lwur•••l 'f lu • lluu ,~· Ill' dtw ·. wflwh 'ioJul· lt·ad•·• s ch·,hk•·
•/" thlllfifljl

IJ ro• I•JI '

IJI

: !rUJf•JI •IJ ('' I• IIi II loll !' IIIII

I y ,.,,., ,j/

l.dll
·lwu/ ,J.· ., lml lw '

' •, fJt •f•d u •,

flllt f;11111 " ) illl' CUll ·

.'~ •IIIII ' !'11 \1 1'/ltu!'S, •,yiHJ'IIIIIII'fJl •HI ·

·''"'j' ,I ' ,,,

i

'''''" '''IJ VI' I .• I II I' I ., I It·

"Don't worry- you'll· outgrow it before Ailmirol
Zumwalt's n('w uniform goes into use!"

ll l • ~ u ·.

'

Girafft•s havt• lht•

UP WITH THE
L"''N!!I 'MoO 'NOA.K
FOR THI!IR. KEEP- ..

~-·-TO
:&lt;&gt;sePt-! Y SON

world'~

.

higlll'st blood J•ressure. It is
alloul lhr't't'
mnn

tmws

'tlml nl

~~~

~~fiE"Ij
IIA,SS.

By United Pr01s lntornatton.t

'

lad who died In Jail. Rulkln worked the mon
honest aides ci lllepl operatlclllll, aid! u
booiJegglng and opera~ nightcktlll, pmbJIIll
C811n0a, promotlonl of variDUI IIGrtl. Drays
frtm behind lbe 1Ce1181: hil IIIOIIIJ fhwnced
1 uh partnerehlp with hil ''fronll " ~
~wy. ww u Jllghtelub lie ap11~ and
wanted Chuck Green to frolit. C1mck IIIOCitily
advlaed Jim he had "a rep~~lation to keep" and

limlelf lbe exaggeratedly clatlsy run name of c.
Cambridge Green, w~Uh Chuct;s wife Baid walked grandly bact lnlo hll doorway.
hadn't been on bls ~ certlflctte which even
Jim got a Bdwy. ~ agent and 1 wal"'shecouldn'tremem'*'ifBhe'd~ee~~Uornot.
ca~ from Jack DemJileY'a, to operate hll
aruct was a Jewelry salesman without an wartime noUon ~ they coined a fortune. M lbe
office He sold to Broadway slll'l _pnp1ers wat ground down and Chuck Green ~ttad bls
producers Whoever~ get up ~ hssty retreat Into hltl repulaUon, If any, Jim's
large ~i cmct•s g~ COli. Camon Runyon cabaret (expended to three ll(loll by then) struck
called Chuck ''The Doca way CarUer."Now-dead him as teetertncat the top of their lllll'bt with a
gangster Abner ZwWman, wbo owned New glide ~ward imminent. He ~ hll J)ariDera
Je
befm-e Jersey Juatice took on Its ·rar he had a nch caBh offer from a ganuent center
~nt incumbent cbaracter, told me, "Y011 black-market mlllliXUIIre."
mlgbt just as well buy your Jewelry frtm Clllck.
The press agent-partner grabbed 1be offer
It's Jl!at 88 g:i:Tlllany's and doe81l't cost and ran for his Un box. The unfrod:ed walterb ·mord"
'
captain begged Jim not tq aell. "Y011've fel!d
mucChUck's'
t Wlll iegellCia!'f,: Damon what a nightelub genius I am, Jim," he told the
Runyon dipped into It With considerable fervor sbrewd RUtkin, who knew that the laid cafe
for his short storle8 and movie acripts. Clalck genius' reputation had been created by the J1ftJ11
didn't care 10 long 88 Damon bought his ~els agent-partner 011t of notblng pl111 the Wlrlli&amp;
from Chuck. Damon did select a grallfylng -heap boom. So Jim and the pre.111 agent sold and the
of jewelry from his Doorway
when headwaiter held on, unto bar*ruptcy within lib:
courting the lady who later became hiB wife and months - whereupon he had a .U. of bear!
still later divorced Runyon which pve attacks and died, of vanity.
Broadway Its liggest torch 'ever a silent
Chuck Green finally felt better about tt all.
romantic ¢ef for Runyon was v~ much a All he stood at the funeral, be ~ to Rutkin
private person' amazing indeed for a man who and whispered, "I told yw it wasn't a gdod Idea
spent almost ~ll his nonslee(ing moments in in the first place."
such quiet monasteries 88 Undy's frmt tables,
Chuck once was contracted by Jim Rutkln
the CUb Room at the Stork Club and similar (see- bal;ic to It) to buy a frame for a photo of a
clOisterS
Bdwy. restaurateur taken at ff8rry Truman's
we s'at With ~on and Walter Winchell In tnauguralluncheon. CbUck went to a mldtinm
the Stork's Cub Room one midnight when Darryl art shop and gave orders that this was for a Vf1Y
F. :r.nuck arrived. He had just cashed corporate rich person. The framer agreed to only the
fortunes for :!lfth..Fox with movie yerijons of richest woods. When he finished measuring hll
Runyon's "Lemon Drop Kld,"-based on another photo's dlmensl0118, he advlaed Clalct It would
Broadway characier named Swifty Morgan and cost $16.75.
"A Slight Case of Murder" based 011 a ~on
''What!" barked the wtraged Oruek. "My
flight c;: horse-betting ra'ncy with a sOothinjJ toilet seat. coet more than that!"
,
syrup of multiple gangster" homicides. Zanuck
Chuck solved that tocHow cost by adding a
confided his delight with ~on •s ca8Jiilble 14-carat gold plaque inscribed with date and
fanciesandsuggesledhe "thlnkupsomemore." principals of the event.
Runyon, a dreamer with a splendid serise of " . Once ~.e Unday talk got~ to llberals.
bookkeeph.a COWiter"'"•~gested ''How about liberals. Chuck exclaimed. 'Give me Jim
-.,,
~....
'
,..
Ru'"'-• N the ' Liberal'"
some thinking money?" Whereupon Darryl sat
""''· ow
res a
•
right dawn and wrote a check for $25,11111! and
Chuck died in a Plaza Hotel phone bootb
asked, "Is this enough thilting money?"lt'Was. while t8li'fng to Ella Logll!'. Ordering jewelry. So
Cbuckoncegotacontract-we'll~tbli'Tltto Chuck died in hsmesa. Or in Loop, u the
it- frcm Jim Rutkin, a New Jersey;Manbaltan jewelers say. Just a few nostalgic memorls.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

~

I

'·

BY JACK O'BRIAN

': ··Jt is no longer a question of collecting small amounts

from large numbers . of peqple to pay for the losses of
:the few. It 1s, mstead, a problem of collecting large
amounts from many ln order to pay the losses of many."
Such is the parlous state of the insurance industJ:y iri
United States today, as described by J. Carroll Bate11an, president of the Insurance Information Institute.
stated, insurance is designed to provide prothe accidental or unexpected, infrequent
Bateman. But when the infrequent be·
when the unexpected becomes the comtraditional concept of insurance just will

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

Linesoores

Ellis Makes It 12 In Row

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

iVoice along Broadway·!.
1

S-The Dilly Sentinel, ~cmeroy, 0., July 7, 1971

•

PI1'TSBURGH (UPI) - The
Dock Ellla~ky Anderson
contro.versy is now out in the
·open, and maybe It would have
been just as well if It hsd never
even started.
Ellis would be better off if he
let his If..'! pitching record do
the talking for him.
Ellla 111id a couple weeks ago
thatAnderson"didn'tUke" him
but then Tuesday night, after'
the Pirate righthander won his
14th game of the season by a 52 ~ore over the Cincinnati
· Reda, the pitcher tried to
minimize the Issue."
"It goes back to $011le things
that happened in spring tralriing, but I don't want to go into
detail," said Ellla, who went
the first seven innings in
winning his 12th straight.
"We had a beanball incident
with the Pirates in Tampa,"
Anderson said, "but Ellis
wasn't Involved. Milt Wilcox
threw a ball close to Manny
Sanguillen after a couple of
homers, but Ellis was out in the
bull pen. The only thing I

Americ•n League
list Gomel
Washngtn 001 001 ootr'- 2 6 2
llalltmore 402 000 OOx- 6 9 I
National League
Shelleback, Plna 17) anq
Eut
Casanova; McNally 113-4) and
W. L. Pet. GB Etchebarren. LP - Shelleback
Pittsburgh
53 31 .631 ' ... 13·51. HRs- Bulord (13th), B.
New York
46 35 .575 S1h Robinson I10th l. Ret!enmund
Chicago
42 38 .525 9 (Sih), Nelson (2nd). Howard
St. Louts
42 ~1 .506 10'1&gt; (14th) .
Philadelphia JS 48 422 17 112
Montreal
32 SO 390 20 (lnd ,Game)
West
Washngln 100 001 10D- 3 8 1
W. L. Pet. GB Baltimore 000 002 ooo- 2 S 1
San Francisco 52 33 _. 612 .,1•
Gogolewskl. Cox 16) and
los Angeles 48 36 57 1 3" Casanova ; Jackson, Hall (7) ,
HOU51on
42 3'1 .519 8 Walt (8) and Hendricks. WPAtlanta
43 46 .483 II
Cox (3-4). LP-Jackson (2-2 ).
Cincinnati
37 49 .430 15'1' HR- Howard (15th).
San Otego
29 ss 345 22 112
Tuesday s Results
Boslon
000 012 ooo- 3 7 0
Monlreal S New York I, night Cleveland 101 000 ooo- 2 10 1
Pittsbrqh s CJnclnnafi 2, night
Siebert, Peters t7l and
Atlanta 5 Phlla 2, night
Montgomery; Lamb, Farrrler
Chicago 3 Los Angeles I, night 171, Mingorl (9) and Suarez.
Houston 5 San Fran 2, night
WP- Steberl 112 41 LP-Lamb
Today's Probable Pitchers
IS-S) . HRs- Pinson (6th ). Smith
Monlreal !Morton 7-101 at I171h I
New York (Williams 3·21
Houston !Dierker 11 -41 at San New York 001 240 ooo- 7 1 2
Francisco (Slone 4-7) .
Detroit
070 300 20x- 12 12 3
Cinctnnati (Nolan 6-81 at
Bahnsen, Hardin 12), Jones
Pi llsburg h 1Johnson 4-6 or (4). Wastewskl (S), Akker (7) ,
Briles 4·11, night.
McDaniel .(8) and Munson ;
Phtladelphla I Lersch 4-71 al Loltch (13 6) and Freehan. LP
Atlanla (Reed 8-6). night.
- Ba~nsen (8·81 , HRs- Cash 2
51. Louis (Gibson 5-71 at San 1181h &amp; 19th!, While !13th).
Diego I Kirby 6-6). night
Hansen (lsi) .

.

remember is that he was uses Ellla next Tuesday in the The Pirates scored three times By United Pre5S'Internotlonat
American League
jawing frOm out ~bert.
All-Star game, "It'd be for a in the eighth on Clemente's
East
·
"I think Doc's pulling a Joe third of an inn!nil. or an inning ' single, a walk, AI Ollver's triple
W. L. : Pet. GB
Namath·. 'l'llis is his way of at the most. The Pirates are In andSanguillen'sinlieldroller.
~~~ore
~ ~~ :~ 2,12
~tirring something up, and I &amp;..pennant fight, and I wouldn't
Ellla was asked if he'd relisll Detroll
44 37 .543 6
lblnk he started It a whlle back want to mess fllem up ·for the All-Star assignment of New York
37 46 .446 14
~ that in the event be wasn't thst."
opening the game against Vida Cleveland
36
46 . ~ 14'1'
Washlnglon 33 48 - 7 17
•
picked for the allofltar game,
The Pirates, taking advan- Blue, Oakland's 17-game win·
west
· W, L. Pet. GB
he'd hsve something to fall tsge of the. Mets' defeat, ner. "I would," Ellis said, "but
back on. boosted their lead over New it'd never happen. There's no Oakland
,53 28 .654 ···
Kansas Cil'( 42 37 .532 10
"Well, he has no fear of not - York in the National League way they'd lei a brother from Minnesota
3'1 43 .476 l4'h
making the" team."
East to 5'h games, Pitts- one league open that game California
38 48 .442 17'1&gt;
Ellis, fCH'ced to leave Tues- burgh's biggest spread ' this against a brother from the Chicago
34 45 .430 18
day's game because his left leg ~ason.
other league."
Mttw•u.{';sday~i R~uli~ 18
swelled up after he was struck The Pirates broke a 1·1 tie in Why?
./
Ball 6 Wash 2, 1st, Twi
byTomrtlie Heilllsf line drive ljvthe 6th when Roberto Clemente,
"That's baseball," he said.
Wash 3 Ball 2, 2nd, n1ght
· kJng up his 2,800th career That,s Doc Elila, who doesn 't , California
Mlnn S, night
the fourth, expects to take his PIC
Kan Cily 17Milwaukee
o, nigh!
regular turn in the rotation hit, t:i'ippled and scored on lake long to go from one Oakland 9 Chicago 4, night
which would be on Sunday Riehle Hebner's sacrifice fly. controversy to another.
, Delrott 12 New York 7, night
which would be against AUanta
Boston 3 Cleveland 2, ntght
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
here.
.
California (Clark 2-0l al
"Because of my elbow
Minnesota I Kaat 6·71, nigh!.
Kansas City (Butler 1-1) at
tr bl "th N ti ILea •
ou e, e a ona
gues
Mllwaukee(ParsonsH),nighl.
top winner said, "I ususlly
Oakland (Dobson 7-0) a!
don't throw between starts, but
'
Chicago (John 6-9), night.
New York (Peterson 7-7) at
If th ey wan t me to • I 'D fil P
Detroit (Gilbreth 1-0), night.
three innings in Detroit."
Washlnglon (Bosman 6·91 al
Anderson, who as manager of
Balli more 1Dobson 8-41, nigh!.
the defending champion Reda is
Boston ICulp 9·6 and Tiant O·
manager
of
the
National
2)
at Cleveland (Lamb 5·4 and Housion 300 000 101- 5 9 1
the
Fosler 5-71. 2, Twl -ntghl.
League tesm, said that If he
Thursday's Games
San Fran 010 001 000- 2 6 0
Blllmgham, Culver (8) and
California at Mlnnesola
Hlalt , Bryant, Carrithers (1).
Oakland at Chtcago
Kan City at Milwaukee, ntght McMahon 16L Johnson (7) and
NEW YORK (UPI)-There Two National League star- New York at Detroit, night
Dielz. WP-Billtngham (4 8)
LP- Bryanl 17-4) . HR- Bbnds
can be no surprise that two old ters, McCovey and Stargell, are Boston at Cleveland, ntght
Washington at Balttmore, ntght (191h)
favorites of the fans-Hank also sidelined.
Aaron and Willie Mays-were
the top two vole-getters in the
fans' balloting for the starting
National League team in the
42nd All-Star game in Detroit
next Tuesday night.
Cheshire's unbeaten Redlegs Larkins later scored on a Southwestern 4-1 and the
Asron led aU players in the rallied for three runs in the top throwing error.
Pomeroy B learn edged Racine,
balloting with 1,119,3116 votes of the sixth inning and added Four more runs came across 111-14.
while Mays was second in the four runs in the seventh frame the plate in the seventh inning. In the Pomeroy A • SouthNational League with 1,084,887 Tuesday night for a come-from- Third baseman Clay Hudson western game, Chuck Eastman
votes. A total of 2,396,895 votes behind 11).4 victory over Mid- started the rally with a double . tlmited Southwestern to three
were cast this year -l!bout dleport in the Gallia-Meigs Cremeans singled driving in hits and Bill Chaney and Rob
gume, Goldsberry Issued only 360,000 more than last season Pony League. Cheshire is now 9- Hudson, Dave Wise singled Eason each hit two-run homers,
when baseball conducted the 0 in loop play, and 1~ overaD. moving Cremeans to second. He Eastman walked two and
two walks.
New Haven scored three runs first computerized balloting by Middleport is IN in loop play. scored on McCarty's third struckout nine.
in the first and added eight In the fans.
The losing pitcher was Nida.
Trailing 4-3 in the sixth, single of the game. McCarty
The
top
vote-getting
in
the
lbe third. Buzzard, T. Sayre and
Cheshire opened the inning wllh and Wise sc&lt;H'ed on a double by He was relieved by Carter in the
Davis were the Cubs' leading American League was Balti- Orland Cremeans reaching on a Joe Stidham, Redleg cen- f~rst inning.
more's Brooks Robinson, who two base error. He moved to lerfielder.
hitters.
Other hitters for Pomeroy
finished with 1,110,469-00ly third and scored on a fielder's Cheshire moved into a 1.0 lead were Charlie' Marshal with two
Striking for six runs in the about 9,000 votes behind Aaron. choice off the bat of leftflelder in the second lmiing on singles; M1ck Ash, a triple,
third inning, the Galllpolls Besides Asron of AUanta, Greg McCsrty.
Cremeans' single, a stolen base Eastman, a double, and Freddy
Yankees defeated Green, ~ in Robinson and Mays of San McCarty crossed the plate on and McCarty single,
Burney chipped in with a single.
the final game Tuesday night. Francisc.o, the only other a two-out single to center by Middleport took a 4-1 lead in
For Southwestern Nida had a
Keilh Burdette hurled the million vote getters were rlghtfielder Mike Larkins. the third inning. With one out, single and Carter rapped out a
second no hitter of evening in Cincinnati catcher Johnny
Perk Ault was ISSued his second double and triple.
pacing the Yankees victory. Bench at 1,1160,651 and Boston
The Pomeroy B team game
free pass llf the evening. Steve
Meigs
Burdette, Gragg and Kuhn outfielder Carl Yastrzemski at
Price singled ·sending Ault to was just as high scoring as the
collected hits for the winners. 1,002,908.
third. Rick Stobart's infield hit other was low as all the runs
The starting National League
Tonight, the Mason Tigers
scored Ault to tie the game. were scored in four innings
and Addaville Jets collide at 6 team will hsve Willie McCovey
Woody Call, Jr. then smashed a because of darkness.
p.m. Gallipolis' Orioles and of San Francisco at f~t,.Gl~nn .
~
Big Jerry Crem~ans, led the
3-2 pitch to right field plating
McArlhur
In ' the second Beckert of the Chicago Cubs at
winners With three hits, triple
Price and Stobart.
coolest and Racine will battle second, Joe Torre of the St.
Stidham, the Redlegs ' and two singles, Qualls had a
Albany In the ftnale.
Louis Cardinals at third, Bud
starting hurler was then double and single, Fisher two
Harrelson of the New York Margaret E. Harbrecht, replaced by righthander John singles, Bierce, a double, .and
Mets at short, Bench at catcher Robert L. Harbrecht, Mary E. Baird. Baird walked Pickens Blevins, Fields, and Soulsby
and Aaron, Mays and Willie Leonard, Martin J. Leonard, before fanning WaiUatch and each had a single.
Stargell of the Pittsburgh Parcels, to Hazel McCallum, Wartier.
For the losers Jon Jenkins
Pirates in the outfield.
Parcels, Sutton-Minersville.
Middleport's final run scored had two singles, Curfman, had a
The American League tealh Hazel McCallum to Don E. on a passed ball.
triple, Nease, a double, and D.
wiD have Boog Powell of Rea, Dorothy Rea, Parcel, Cheshire fought back with two Jenkins, J)unnlng, and Huffman
Baltimore at first base, Rod Minersville-Sutton .
Baltimore over Washington in Carew of Minnesota at second, Don E. Rea, Dorothy Rea to runs In the fourth frame to cut each singled.
The winning pitcher was
the margin to 4-3. Hudson again
the first gakmeHa
. II' thr win Robinson of Baltimore at third, Hazel McCallum, l'arcel, started the rally with a triple to Kevin Fields. He walked five
But Die
s
o g Luis Aparicio of Boston at Sutton, Minersville.
and fanned five, while loser
of
error in the seventhletInning
f Cl eve- William c. Jones, Elsie Jones center.
·
the
shortstop,
Ray
Fosse
t
Dave Theiss walked eight and
Cremeans
singled
scoring
the secon d game
m
land at cateher and Yastrzem- to Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
deciding run and gave
the ski, Tony Oliva of Mmnesota
.
Lots S-6, Bosworth's Add., Hudson and later scored on fanned three.
'
Th
another hit by McCarty.
Senators the victory ·
e and Frank Robinson of Balti- Middleport.
Orloles could lulve suffered a more in the outfield.
Roxie J. Shockey to Ray W. Stidham and Baird combined
costly loss Monday night when
The closest race in the Miller, Blondell J. Miller, 52 for a three-hitter. They walked
four while fanning 14. Price, the
Mike Cuellar suffered a neck National League came at Acres, Lebanon.
Rlchard s. Owen, Sara D. losing pitcher, issued two walks
sprain in an auto ace lden t but
·
h
ing
the
inj
shortstop
as
Harrelson
received
the cIub IS op
lll'Y'
Owen to Ohio Valley Publishing wh1Ie striking out three
isn't seriow;.
567,127 voles compared to C Lot p
. Red legs.
489,847 for Chicago's Don o.,
, omeroy.
Ken McMullen's two-run
ho- Kessinger and 459,207 for Los Thurston H. Clark, Anna In other action Tuesday night
•
tw
mer and Ken Berry s o-run Angeles' Maury Wills. Ironical- Clark to Way F. Clark, 3.21 the Pomeroy A snu~d downed
I hlghU gbled a four-run
singe
Ufted Csllf
Iy, Harrelson is h'1tti ng .269 Acres, Orange .
The Dai~ Sentinel
eighth inning that
or- compared to .293 for WUls and Clarence P. Grueser, Clara B.
DEVDTEDTDTHE
nla past Minnesota. The Angels
Grueser to Manning D. WebINTEREST OF
had a 1Milt attack with ·291 for Kessinger.
s1er, 35 .05 Acres, sutton,·
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
McMullen collecting three of The closest race In the
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Exec. Ed ,
theln.
American League was for the Webster, to Cfarence P.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Edtfor
Dave Duncan's run«orlng third outfield spot as Frank Grueser, Clara B. Grueser,
Pub! •shed dally except
double and run-roducing singles Robinson received 633,217 votes 35.05 Acres, Sutton.
Sa turday by The Oh10 Valley
PubliShing Company , 111
by Larry Brown and Dick to beat out Bobby Murcer of .
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio , ·
Green capped a six-run rally In New York, who had 606,203
45769 Business Office Phone
the . fifth inning and lifted votes. Murcer Is outhltting Homer Goodwin, Palma 992 ·2156, Editorial Phone 992 Goodwin to Joseph Clayton 2·157
Oakland past Chicago. Diego Frank by 40 points.
Second class postage paid at
OhtO.
Segui went eight innings to get But the fans didn't follow the Hall, Leta Lynn Hall, 21.31 Pom
the victory and Bob Looker averages in maldng their Acres, Bedford.
~)Nlf~~:;;~~iatf1veadvertising
Botttnelli ·
, 12 East 42nd
flhlshed up.
selections as two of the Guy L. Swadley, Geraldine M.
Ctty, New York ,
John Kennedy tripled in the Anierican League starters, Swadley to John W. Haley,
rates: De carrier where
tieing
and scored the Powell and Aparicio, are hltUng Janet E. Haley, o/, Acre,
cents per week .
deciding run on Jack Heide- under 225. Only three of the top Rutland.
ly}~otor Route where carrier
ice not ava rlable . One
mann's throwing error In the ten hitters in the .National Norman McCsllum, dec. to
51.75 By ma tt In Ohio
Hazel
McCallum,
Margaret
E.
sixth as Boston defeated League and just two in the
'
.
W Va , One year $14 00.
months S7 25
Three
Cleveland. Sonny Siebert went American League were selected Harbrecht, Mary E. Leonard,
ths $4 50 Subscrrpfton
Aff. for Trans., Suttonsix innings ·to get his · 13th by the fans.
.ncludes Sunday T•mes.ientitne
victory and Gary Peters • The fans voted for five of the Minersvllle.
finished up.
.same ~ight players in the

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Wise, Wilson (7) and Ryan;
Slone, Upshaw 19) and King.
WP- Sione (2-3). LP--Wioe 18·
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Tou~ney

Pl. Pleasant City Ice and
FUel, 19'10 dl!feri!Jing champions, the New Haven Cuba and
Gallipolis Yankees advanced to
second round action Tuesday in.
the 13th annual Kyger Creek
litUe League Tournament.
Pt. Pleasant ousted the
Middleport Reds, 15-2 in the
opening game. Middleport
collected two hits off Stevens,
the winning pitcher. Magnotta
and Haggerty had the only hits.
City Ice and Fuel scored two
runs in the first, seven in the
third and five in the fifth to win
going away. Billings, Bateman,
and Wamsley hsd three hits
each for the winners.
/:'ew Havep's Cubs · behind
~!he no-bit &amp;ftbrt 'ot·~bel'ry,
blanked. Pomeray's Dodgers,
11.0. In pitching a near perfect

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Cash Ignored

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
The American League's leading home run hitler may be
conspicuous by his absence in
the' All-Star game Tuesday
nlght.in Detroit.
The Detroit first baseman,
Norm · Cssh, took over the
lesgue lead In homers Tuesday
night with a pair of three-run
shots that powered the Tigers
to a 12-7 victory over the New
York Yankees.
But even though Cssh has a
.~average and 19 homers, the
Tigers believe manager Earl
Weaver left Cash off the team
when he completed the All-Star
squad, alth~ugh the official
announcement won't be made
until wter thts week,
"I think It's a disgrace and
I've told Joe Cronin (the AL
president) that," general manager Jim Caplpbell said.
"This is the first time in
years the leading home run
hitter hasn't made the 111-Star
team," manager BIUy Mru;tin
said.
Cssh hit his two three-run
blasts In the aecond and fourth
Innings to hand Mickey LoUch
his 13th victory. Slaked to a 7:{Y
lead, Lollch coasted and gave
up 11 hits.
In the other AL games,
l!altimore beat Washington 6-2
but lost the second game 3-2,
Boston edged Cleveland 3-2, ,
, , _, ,.
Oakland routed Chicago !M,
SCIOTO RESULTS .
Kansas City blanked Milwaukee · COLUMBUS (UPI) - 'utUe
1.0 and California outslugged Master finished a nose ahead of
Minnesota 7~.
Trim Lll to win the featured
1n the National League, $1,500 trot at Scioto Do\vns
Montreal topped New York 5-l, Tuesday night.
I
Allanta edged Philadelphia S-2, The winner went the mile in
Chicago beat Los Angeles 3-1, 2:01 ~ and returned $9.40, $4
Pittsburgh downed,Cinclnnati 5- and $3.
•
2 and Houston defeated San Iifthe nighUy double, Winger
Francisco, S-2. •
·
Ace won the first race and
Cookie R6Jas hit a sacrifice Harmony Chips took the second,
fly In the fourth inning and producing a 4-7 combination
Dick Drago pitched a six-hitler wCH'th • .20.
to give Kansas City the victory . Attendance was 5,299 with a
over Milwaukee. This was the ' handle of $215,744.
fourth time In the last five
starts the J;toyals have been
involved In a 1-0 game, winning Cincinnati 000 100 001- 2 11 o
Piltsbrgh 000 101 03•- s 8 2
two an&lt;) losing two.
McGiolhltn, Carroll {7) and
Don Buford, Brooks Robinson Bench; Ellis, Grant (8), GJ.ustl
and Merv Rettendmund hit first (91 and S.ngulllen. WPr-Etlls .
' inning homers that powered 114-J).,LP- McGtolhlln IHl .

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Asron, Bench and Beckertwere named as repeaters.
Although Carew was selected
last season, Dave Johnson of
Baltimore started the game
because Carew was injured.
While the fans pick the eight
starters in each league, the
managers-Earl Weaver of
Baltimore and Sparky Anderson
of Cincinnati-will choose the
pitchers and the subs on the 28man ~quads.
Two of the American League
slarters, Fosse and Oliva, are
both currently sidelined on a
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Future Bleak for
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•
MemorieS: Once upon a Runyon nme there wu

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\

When crime and civil disorder move in and gain conof a community or a neighborhood, insurance must
move out. After that, it is only a matter of
before law-abiding residents and ilusinessmen must
"leaving another no-man's land to the spreading
of the lawless." .
The threat is not confined to the areas of crime and
;&lt;:nru disorder, however.
"The insurance industry is caught in one of the most
;serious crises in its history," says DeForest W. Abel Jr.,
;president of Automobile Mutual Insurance Company of
•&lt;\merica (AMICAl.
•
~ People are becoming more and more conscious of the
·~ssential nature of insurance, he says. They are also be·
~oming increasingly dissatisfied with il~ cost and avail:ablli!Y. The industry is caught in a crossf~re of a complex
;set of social revolutions.
:. "We are all familiar with the multiple issues of crime,
;pollution, racial strife, automobile slaughter, inflation
:and the like from even the most cursory reading of our
-daily newspapers. Our ability to preserve a stable and
:orderly society-a prerequisite to the survival of a pri:vate insurance mechanism-is now being challenged,"
:says Abel.
:: Is a public insurance mechanism-one subsidized with
, .:ta'l:payer dollars-the answer then?
r--~------------~-----------~
;: A new federal crime insurance program becomes opera:ltve In several states on Aug. 1, notes Bateman. But
Q-Which was the first
'lrhile this may satisfy an immediate need, it is certainll.
distinct breed of cattle prono long-range solution to the problems of crime and ci¥il
duced in the Umted States?
I
"'
disorder in our society, he asserts .
A-The Santa Gertrudis,
I
By Helen Bottel
1 a cross between the Short·
"It is, of course, humane and just to help those who
~ve suffered and lost at the hands of criminals. But this
horns and Brahmans.
.Is nothing more than a palliative. It does little or nothing
CONSIDER THE FRIGip HUSBAND ....
Q-ls there a planet
;~discourage the criminal."
named
Vulcan?
Dear Helen:
' ~ ;: The same is true in the automobile lleld when insurers
A-No, V u lean was a
My husband al8o has two personalities. Around others; you'd
.;:'Pool their resources to insure otherwise uninsurable
name given to a planet supthink we were very happy. But at home, he withdraws. He wat- posed to exist between Mer.•: drivers. While some financial protection is afforded the
;·: victims of irresponsible drivers, little or nothing ,is done
cbes television or naps in another room. Only when I go to bed cury and the sun, but its ex;: to discourage the frequency of accidents,
does he come out of his den. Tben he stays up until he's sure I'm istence was never estab;· "The answer to the automobile insurance problem clearlished,
asleep.•
•• ly lies in our ability to reduce traffic a9cldents and to
We've been married only a short while but he's made love to
Q-Which is the world's
,, lower the cost of those losses that do .occur," says Abel.
me
just
eight
limes
in
a
year,
He
says
he
loves
me,
but
I
have
my
southernmost
seat of govern~- "Thls is true under today's insurance system; it will be
doubts. I feel the only reason he married me was to have someone ment?
.:Jis true under any other insurance,system that may evolve
A-The city of Ushuala on
"ln the future."
help pay the biDs and keep the house clean. - ·TURNED OFF
the island of Tierra del
· :: "The ultimate solution to our common problem is not
Dear Helen:
Fuego, Chile.
to pay out ever more money to recompense the victims
Nothing marriage? Yes, I have one, too!
~f crime," says Bateman, "but to put more money into
We were married wben I was 23, and as each child came
!be effort to destroy organized crime and control unalong, my husband pushed me a little farther into the background.
prganized crime, so that crimes against ~ople and propWhen I caress or kiss bim, he tells me to slop. I could walk
~rty are reduced to a minimum and traditional insurance
around nude but he wouldn't bat an eye.
;}widamentals will again be workable."
Last night, llke many nights, he played with the kids for so
;; The insurance industry mirrors the society in which it
·:~xists and for which it performs an essential function.
loog thai I went to the neighbor's. I was gone two hours and he
~~ The image currently reflected i~J!Ot a pretty one.
, dldn 'I even notice I'd ll!fl.
•,
N
....
,
Helen,i'm 30 and quite attractive; tiui'onl~ th~ kidS mat~' £0
~
. •
~~
~
1
••
bim. He uses them to keep J!ll\ from getting close. flilm; IOIM!'n 'Wf
Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
finally go Iii bed, he preterds he is already asleep.
I'm reaching the point where I'd almost throw myself at any
Dear Dr. Lamb - I have
avallablemale.Shouldlgiveup? -MRS.NOTIIING
been married twice and have
two children. I lost my first
Dear All of you:
husband and my daughter is
(And there are many wives with ''frigid" husbands.)
from
that marriage. I now
Nothing hits'a man so hard as the fear of impotency.
have a little boy from my
He'll find every excuse to hide his secret, especially from the second marriage My little
one person who could help bim most, if he'd confide in her: his g1rl is 41.2 years old and
•
wife. He can't let her know he's a failure - so he Jretends my first husband's parents
By BRUCE BJOSSAT
disinterest, says he's "too tired," or even blames HER for often come to see her. She is
too httle to understand what
WASHINGTON (NEA)
"turning bim off."
really
happened to her daddy
Despite heralded handicaps and the consequent bad·
If you can persuade your husbands to discuss their problems, but her grandparents seem
mouthing, Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine still seems to
you're on the way to solving them. Once you break down that wall to want to tell her things
be clearly leading the Democratic presidential pack at
of fear, and they learn that many other men share their Wt'mes, about him and she is a very
the halfway mark in 1971.
they may not balk at the next step, which Is specialized man !age nlixed-up little girl. I have
Governors, aides and politicians who met not long ago
:-in Omaha for the second quarterly Democratic gover· counseling for both of you, Masters and Johnson style. Sometimes asked them not to say anything to her but it seems that
;::pors' conference reinforce this conclusion.
a cure (or at least a workable compromise) comes from simply they don't care to keep quiet.
·:• With one or two exceptions, the indication is that Muskie
:;Is either the strong front-runner or in the top two in the reading the right books- and a good starter is a condensation of What can I do?
"Hwnan Sexual Inadequacy."- H.
;-ttates represented (12).
Dear Reader- The simDear Helen:
;:: H1s stiffest r~val appeared to be Sen. Hubert Humphrey.
plest thing in most complex
:='fhough it is being asserted today in party circles that
I agree with "Flat Broke." Why must face lifts and other situations is just to tell the
•;fie is damaged by publication or the so-called Pentagon
truth. I think you have to be
cosmetic surgery be so expensive?
:;papers on Vietnam, only one or two governors raised this
honest with children and this
Every time I look-ill the mirr&lt;H' I cry. -M. H.
:;tx~ssibility in private conversations.
begins from the time they
Dear Helen:
:•: One of the most startling findings of my survey of
are old enough for you to
Cosmetic surgery is "over-priced" because it isn't necessary have any verbal communica·
::leadership sentiment is that Sen. George McGovern of
for health or life. Also, dealing with vanity (not necessarUy a bad llon with them at all. Event·
•:South Dakota , the only declared 1972 candidate, is judged
&lt;:fo have very little strength in places he is counting on
trait) you lake great risks. Many plastic surgeons prefer NOT to ually, they will find out ~he
:;for good support-including Minnesota and the critical
do so.ealled face lifts and other appearance aids because they get truth and usually lh!s is not
!·primary states of Wisconsin and Nebraska.
so many complaints. People expect miracles, when a surgeon as great a shock as finding
~; McGovern managers long have said they must do well
out that they have been de·
can, at best, erase only about 10 years. We would rather restore CPJved by their loved ones.
·:in Wisconsin and think they can. They have talked or
lroken faces or rebuUd congenital defects than remove wrinkles
\: Nebraska as 1f it were m the1r pocket.
•
I don '! mean that 11 is nee·
:: Nebraska sources said the state is heavily for Muskie
and sags. And that's the truth. Thus the cost.- DR. X.
essary to go into traumatic
:·right now. One man said McGovern isn't really m it.
details. but 1 think all ques·
; :Another said his early organization effort is good, but
lions should be answered as
::that Indiana Sen. Birch Bayh's is much better. The latter
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - s1mply and directly as. pos-:]s deemed to have a good grip, for the moment, on several
sible Your problem reminds
•
::state Democratic committeemen.
me or what somet:mes hap:; A veteran professional's judgment 1s that Muskie pres·
pens to adopted children
:.ently would win the W1sconsin primary This man would
' They do very well when they
···hold the options open, but he does not find it easy to name
are told from birth that they
·::a close challenger for Muskie.
are adopted : but if they are
.-: In Minnesota, a conventmn state, Humphrey would get
not and learn the truth later
::full loyalty 1f he became a candidate. Beyond that, it's
m life. they often have a very
::Muskie. McGovern gets little spillover from South Dakota
severe emotiOnal shock. 1
:·into the neighbor state.
presume that your hltle girl
; : Other states where Muskie IS said to have commanding
&lt;or substantial advantage are Oklahoma and the new
•:;primary states of Rhode Island, Maryland and North
;;carolina cwhose Gov . Hobert. &amp;ott has endorsed him ).
FACTS
~ · The Mame senator is one of two or three top contenders
' r---~!!!
~:rur delegates in Georgia, and is reported the strongest
:·one in Ohw at this stage
•' llumphrcy gets strong mentwn m Maryland , some in
: Hhode Island and Georg•a Sen llenJ'Y .Jackscm of Wash• ingtun pups up in Georgia and' Oklahoma.

!Helen Help Us lI

QUICK QUIZ

:u:

characlen

earuer

WIN 'AT BRIDGE
'

Worth Study
Child Should Know Sla~ : Bidding Dave
showed his · club supNORTH
port. He didnt' know Jack
.K10843
really had
but he
Abo~t. th~. . Family .
.AK9
didn't ,care "because Jack

~

BRUCE BIOSSAr

Muskie No. 1 but
Watch Humphrey

B[AAf'S WORLD

'

7

if

clURS,

' • ·975

does know that her real
father is de"ad and, certainly,
11 1s better that she understands th1s early in life.
Children are often much
stronger than their parents
realize. I believe that if you
follow the course of just be·
ing truth f u I and honest
there really shouldn't be any
pro b I em about what the
child's grandparents tell her.
Dear Dr. Lamb--I am a 40year-old woman with a
weight' problem. Can I reduce safely by consuming
liquids only-such as juices
and broth? I take one hl~hpotency vitamin table( daily
and one organic iron tablet
with vitamin B-12 three
times a day. It is much
easier for me to lose weight
this way than it is by eating
foods. I always end up with
too many calories.
Dear Reader- You · probably can Jose weight that
way , depending on what is in
your juice and broth. 1 don't
recommend i 1 particularly,
unless you are under a physi·
ciao's care. Any· weight you
lose will probably come right
back after you resume your
usual eatmg habits. Clearly.
vou can't live on juice and
broth forever. The key to
weight control, as ooposed to
lose a little- gain a little, is
a basiC change m living habits . This includes what you
eat and how much physical
activltv you do. Why don't
you Ju'st "cut out the fat. the
sugar and the bread and
walk a mile each day ? Then
see where you are in about
three months.

.;

.A6
EAST (Dl

WEST

.J

.107432
.QJ5
• Q 103 2
tAKJ86
.1074
.Q953
SOUTH
• AQ9762

•as

t4
.KJ82
West
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Both vulnerable

North

It

South
I.

Pass

3t

Easl

PassU

l'ass 4•
Pass •5•
Pass

would know.
~···
This club raise was enough
for Jack to take full charge.
He Blackwooded and then
bid six spades. The bidding
is well worthy of study. It is
complicated, but expert
bridge is.
There are two other points
of interest. If Dave had
really been void of dla·
munds, he would have re·
sponded six diamonds to the
Blackwood four no-trump. If
Dave held two diamonds and
one heart, he wouldn't have
cue-bid diamonds at all.

PBM

'

Opening lead- t 2
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __... ' 'th~ biddmg has been:
IIIII
By Oswald 1c Jame1 Jacoby Wesl North
Dble
When today's hand was 3 •
Pass
played at the Louisville Re· You, South, hold:
gional in April, e'{ery ' South
player made the small slam •uu •ctaz t3 ,f.J7U
What do you do now?
m spades, but practically no
one bid it. Dave Siebert of A-Pus. You hope to boat
contract bat do DOl wut
Little Ra&lt;:k and Jack Blair of lhis
to
tlp
your lrllmp leqth.
Tulsa dld and we feel their
TODAY'S QUESTION
sequence is worth study.
· Dave's spade overcall was Instead of biddinJ . three
normal and Jack decided to ..pades, West has _ . t. Your ,
explore with a two-diamond · ~IBrtner blCb four heartl and
cue bid. H~ was going to East bids lour spades, What do
wmd up m spades, but you do now~
wanted to explore slam pos·
s~bilities Daves' two"spade
b1~ temponzed and Jack
tr1ed ~hree clubs. The ~ue bid
had m11iated a forcmg se·
Crown of Lombardy
quence, so he wasn't worried . The Iron Crown of Lorn·
about be!ng dropped there. bardy Is made of gold, decDaves hand had suddenly orated with jewels and clotimproved, so he bid three sonne enamel. Its name.
diamonds. ·.Jack was not comes from an Inner Iron
ready to . ra1se spades as ~et circlet which tradition says
so he !ned three hearts to was beaten from a nall of the
get further information. Cross of Christ.

1•

®

WORLD ALMANAC

;

4.

Though here and there Bayh's aggressive uvertnres to

'f state ancl county t•ohtu·ians we1 e J'atl'fl at least partly
, productive, fur the most part he JS lumped w1lh Md;ovcrn
;.unc.J luwa 's Sen llaruhJ llughcs as "unknown' ~ ur "41
.. mystl!ry

1'

• This half-yew venhct fJCtrn

~ovcrnors

ancl others docs

':none 11f UICS(' thrcl! c:nnh.mtl&lt;•rs any gond. Hut 11 is cspt•cial"'" ly rhunaging lu Md:uv(·f'n
•

Th&lt;• ~ullil' is an intelligent , loyal dog wh1rh has
bem used for ceniiii"!J'S b)
StOlt ish sheplwrds in caring
for tlmr Rocks Thc• World
Almanac: null's that earlv
collies WNe black or black
and tan. and wl're known as
r coally" dogs. from which
theil' namt&gt; was derived .

'; The• whulc: ralionalc• unclc•rlymg his t•arly dt•claratJCJn
~ .. ,,r c:mululw·y ww; lhal 11 wuuld IK• his SfH'IIlghual'lf lo
: t.wdly m·f'flf•cl naruf· Jdf•llltli(·H IIUII Wf•ll , fll('ll' hasn 't ht!('n
· ~1111d1 :-iJIIlllg Jn 1111' oltl hu:ud
,.. l•'wltu•rmt~ff• , whati'\Wt 1111111 hVt·nwnt tiU"II' has hl'('ll
'" in itlmtltty hw~ uot lfaus lah-d Jbt·lf tnlu sllaq1 ~ ains in
~NIJJUI&lt;H' tly . Itt• lt:wgs :•I tlut•t• ltJ ltVf' JH'f' t't•nl in llu• pulls ...
.. "'l'l••·r•· t' , 1111 '' ';II llul;wtl fm lii111 it: ul• ~ •·1 vin~ t hal Jo:u~t'll«'
~Mr·C:u ·thy JuJiially WHS aJs,, \IPI'.Y h1W tn 1111' )lulls
~ M••:wllHJ'' , Musku• g••••:-; ~·lt•tlfllllg altmg, iW('tlmulaiiiiJ~
;~ii zahh· llilklat ·~ td ~war lt :i,' olll ' yt·l IHII lu • IIIJ~ Sf•Jtuusly dis·
-:lwur•••l 'f lu • lluu ,~· Ill' dtw ·. wflwh 'ioJul· lt·ad•·• s ch·,hk•·
•/" thlllfifljl

IJ ro• I•JI '

IJI

: !rUJf•JI •IJ ('' I• IIi II loll !' IIIII

I y ,.,,., ,j/

l.dll
·lwu/ ,J.· ., lml lw '

' •, fJt •f•d u •,

flllt f;11111 " ) illl' CUll ·

.'~ •IIIII ' !'11 \1 1'/ltu!'S, •,yiHJ'IIIIIII'fJl •HI ·

·''"'j' ,I ' ,,,

i

'''''" '''IJ VI' I .• I II I' I ., I It·

"Don't worry- you'll· outgrow it before Ailmirol
Zumwalt's n('w uniform goes into use!"

ll l • ~ u ·.

'

Girafft•s havt• lht•

UP WITH THE
L"''N!!I 'MoO 'NOA.K
FOR THI!IR. KEEP- ..

~-·-TO
:&lt;&gt;sePt-! Y SON

world'~

.

higlll'st blood J•ressure. It is
alloul lhr't't'
mnn

tmws

'tlml nl

~~~

~~fiE"Ij
IIA,SS.

By United Pr01s lntornatton.t

'

lad who died In Jail. Rulkln worked the mon
honest aides ci lllepl operatlclllll, aid! u
booiJegglng and opera~ nightcktlll, pmbJIIll
C811n0a, promotlonl of variDUI IIGrtl. Drays
frtm behind lbe 1Ce1181: hil IIIOIIIJ fhwnced
1 uh partnerehlp with hil ''fronll " ~
~wy. ww u Jllghtelub lie ap11~ and
wanted Chuck Green to frolit. C1mck IIIOCitily
advlaed Jim he had "a rep~~lation to keep" and

limlelf lbe exaggeratedly clatlsy run name of c.
Cambridge Green, w~Uh Chuct;s wife Baid walked grandly bact lnlo hll doorway.
hadn't been on bls ~ certlflctte which even
Jim got a Bdwy. ~ agent and 1 wal"'shecouldn'tremem'*'ifBhe'd~ee~~Uornot.
ca~ from Jack DemJileY'a, to operate hll
aruct was a Jewelry salesman without an wartime noUon ~ they coined a fortune. M lbe
office He sold to Broadway slll'l _pnp1ers wat ground down and Chuck Green ~ttad bls
producers Whoever~ get up ~ hssty retreat Into hltl repulaUon, If any, Jim's
large ~i cmct•s g~ COli. Camon Runyon cabaret (expended to three ll(loll by then) struck
called Chuck ''The Doca way CarUer."Now-dead him as teetertncat the top of their lllll'bt with a
gangster Abner ZwWman, wbo owned New glide ~ward imminent. He ~ hll J)ariDera
Je
befm-e Jersey Juatice took on Its ·rar he had a nch caBh offer from a ganuent center
~nt incumbent cbaracter, told me, "Y011 black-market mlllliXUIIre."
mlgbt just as well buy your Jewelry frtm Clllck.
The press agent-partner grabbed 1be offer
It's Jl!at 88 g:i:Tlllany's and doe81l't cost and ran for his Un box. The unfrod:ed walterb ·mord"
'
captain begged Jim not tq aell. "Y011've fel!d
mucChUck's'
t Wlll iegellCia!'f,: Damon what a nightelub genius I am, Jim," he told the
Runyon dipped into It With considerable fervor sbrewd RUtkin, who knew that the laid cafe
for his short storle8 and movie acripts. Clalck genius' reputation had been created by the J1ftJ11
didn't care 10 long 88 Damon bought his ~els agent-partner 011t of notblng pl111 the Wlrlli&amp;
from Chuck. Damon did select a grallfylng -heap boom. So Jim and the pre.111 agent sold and the
of jewelry from his Doorway
when headwaiter held on, unto bar*ruptcy within lib:
courting the lady who later became hiB wife and months - whereupon he had a .U. of bear!
still later divorced Runyon which pve attacks and died, of vanity.
Broadway Its liggest torch 'ever a silent
Chuck Green finally felt better about tt all.
romantic ¢ef for Runyon was v~ much a All he stood at the funeral, be ~ to Rutkin
private person' amazing indeed for a man who and whispered, "I told yw it wasn't a gdod Idea
spent almost ~ll his nonslee(ing moments in in the first place."
such quiet monasteries 88 Undy's frmt tables,
Chuck once was contracted by Jim Rutkln
the CUb Room at the Stork Club and similar (see- bal;ic to It) to buy a frame for a photo of a
clOisterS
Bdwy. restaurateur taken at ff8rry Truman's
we s'at With ~on and Walter Winchell In tnauguralluncheon. CbUck went to a mldtinm
the Stork's Cub Room one midnight when Darryl art shop and gave orders that this was for a Vf1Y
F. :r.nuck arrived. He had just cashed corporate rich person. The framer agreed to only the
fortunes for :!lfth..Fox with movie yerijons of richest woods. When he finished measuring hll
Runyon's "Lemon Drop Kld,"-based on another photo's dlmensl0118, he advlaed Clalct It would
Broadway characier named Swifty Morgan and cost $16.75.
"A Slight Case of Murder" based 011 a ~on
''What!" barked the wtraged Oruek. "My
flight c;: horse-betting ra'ncy with a sOothinjJ toilet seat. coet more than that!"
,
syrup of multiple gangster" homicides. Zanuck
Chuck solved that tocHow cost by adding a
confided his delight with ~on •s ca8Jiilble 14-carat gold plaque inscribed with date and
fanciesandsuggesledhe "thlnkupsomemore." principals of the event.
Runyon, a dreamer with a splendid serise of " . Once ~.e Unday talk got~ to llberals.
bookkeeph.a COWiter"'"•~gested ''How about liberals. Chuck exclaimed. 'Give me Jim
-.,,
~....
'
,..
Ru'"'-• N the ' Liberal'"
some thinking money?" Whereupon Darryl sat
""''· ow
res a
•
right dawn and wrote a check for $25,11111! and
Chuck died in a Plaza Hotel phone bootb
asked, "Is this enough thilting money?"lt'Was. while t8li'fng to Ella Logll!'. Ordering jewelry. So
Cbuckoncegotacontract-we'll~tbli'Tltto Chuck died in hsmesa. Or in Loop, u the
it- frcm Jim Rutkin, a New Jersey;Manbaltan jewelers say. Just a few nostalgic memorls.

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

~

I

'·

BY JACK O'BRIAN

': ··Jt is no longer a question of collecting small amounts

from large numbers . of peqple to pay for the losses of
:the few. It 1s, mstead, a problem of collecting large
amounts from many ln order to pay the losses of many."
Such is the parlous state of the insurance industJ:y iri
United States today, as described by J. Carroll Bate11an, president of the Insurance Information Institute.
stated, insurance is designed to provide prothe accidental or unexpected, infrequent
Bateman. But when the infrequent be·
when the unexpected becomes the comtraditional concept of insurance just will

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

Linesoores

Ellis Makes It 12 In Row

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

iVoice along Broadway·!.
1

S-The Dilly Sentinel, ~cmeroy, 0., July 7, 1971

•

PI1'TSBURGH (UPI) - The
Dock Ellla~ky Anderson
contro.versy is now out in the
·open, and maybe It would have
been just as well if It hsd never
even started.
Ellis would be better off if he
let his If..'! pitching record do
the talking for him.
Ellla 111id a couple weeks ago
thatAnderson"didn'tUke" him
but then Tuesday night, after'
the Pirate righthander won his
14th game of the season by a 52 ~ore over the Cincinnati
· Reda, the pitcher tried to
minimize the Issue."
"It goes back to $011le things
that happened in spring tralriing, but I don't want to go into
detail," said Ellla, who went
the first seven innings in
winning his 12th straight.
"We had a beanball incident
with the Pirates in Tampa,"
Anderson said, "but Ellis
wasn't Involved. Milt Wilcox
threw a ball close to Manny
Sanguillen after a couple of
homers, but Ellis was out in the
bull pen. The only thing I

Americ•n League
list Gomel
Washngtn 001 001 ootr'- 2 6 2
llalltmore 402 000 OOx- 6 9 I
National League
Shelleback, Plna 17) anq
Eut
Casanova; McNally 113-4) and
W. L. Pet. GB Etchebarren. LP - Shelleback
Pittsburgh
53 31 .631 ' ... 13·51. HRs- Bulord (13th), B.
New York
46 35 .575 S1h Robinson I10th l. Ret!enmund
Chicago
42 38 .525 9 (Sih), Nelson (2nd). Howard
St. Louts
42 ~1 .506 10'1&gt; (14th) .
Philadelphia JS 48 422 17 112
Montreal
32 SO 390 20 (lnd ,Game)
West
Washngln 100 001 10D- 3 8 1
W. L. Pet. GB Baltimore 000 002 ooo- 2 S 1
San Francisco 52 33 _. 612 .,1•
Gogolewskl. Cox 16) and
los Angeles 48 36 57 1 3" Casanova ; Jackson, Hall (7) ,
HOU51on
42 3'1 .519 8 Walt (8) and Hendricks. WPAtlanta
43 46 .483 II
Cox (3-4). LP-Jackson (2-2 ).
Cincinnati
37 49 .430 15'1' HR- Howard (15th).
San Otego
29 ss 345 22 112
Tuesday s Results
Boslon
000 012 ooo- 3 7 0
Monlreal S New York I, night Cleveland 101 000 ooo- 2 10 1
Pittsbrqh s CJnclnnafi 2, night
Siebert, Peters t7l and
Atlanta 5 Phlla 2, night
Montgomery; Lamb, Farrrler
Chicago 3 Los Angeles I, night 171, Mingorl (9) and Suarez.
Houston 5 San Fran 2, night
WP- Steberl 112 41 LP-Lamb
Today's Probable Pitchers
IS-S) . HRs- Pinson (6th ). Smith
Monlreal !Morton 7-101 at I171h I
New York (Williams 3·21
Houston !Dierker 11 -41 at San New York 001 240 ooo- 7 1 2
Francisco (Slone 4-7) .
Detroit
070 300 20x- 12 12 3
Cinctnnati (Nolan 6-81 at
Bahnsen, Hardin 12), Jones
Pi llsburg h 1Johnson 4-6 or (4). Wastewskl (S), Akker (7) ,
Briles 4·11, night.
McDaniel .(8) and Munson ;
Phtladelphla I Lersch 4-71 al Loltch (13 6) and Freehan. LP
Atlanla (Reed 8-6). night.
- Ba~nsen (8·81 , HRs- Cash 2
51. Louis (Gibson 5-71 at San 1181h &amp; 19th!, While !13th).
Diego I Kirby 6-6). night
Hansen (lsi) .

.

remember is that he was uses Ellla next Tuesday in the The Pirates scored three times By United Pre5S'Internotlonat
American League
jawing frOm out ~bert.
All-Star game, "It'd be for a in the eighth on Clemente's
East
·
"I think Doc's pulling a Joe third of an inn!nil. or an inning ' single, a walk, AI Ollver's triple
W. L. : Pet. GB
Namath·. 'l'llis is his way of at the most. The Pirates are In andSanguillen'sinlieldroller.
~~~ore
~ ~~ :~ 2,12
~tirring something up, and I &amp;..pennant fight, and I wouldn't
Ellla was asked if he'd relisll Detroll
44 37 .543 6
lblnk he started It a whlle back want to mess fllem up ·for the All-Star assignment of New York
37 46 .446 14
~ that in the event be wasn't thst."
opening the game against Vida Cleveland
36
46 . ~ 14'1'
Washlnglon 33 48 - 7 17
•
picked for the allofltar game,
The Pirates, taking advan- Blue, Oakland's 17-game win·
west
· W, L. Pet. GB
he'd hsve something to fall tsge of the. Mets' defeat, ner. "I would," Ellis said, "but
back on. boosted their lead over New it'd never happen. There's no Oakland
,53 28 .654 ···
Kansas Cil'( 42 37 .532 10
"Well, he has no fear of not - York in the National League way they'd lei a brother from Minnesota
3'1 43 .476 l4'h
making the" team."
East to 5'h games, Pitts- one league open that game California
38 48 .442 17'1&gt;
Ellis, fCH'ced to leave Tues- burgh's biggest spread ' this against a brother from the Chicago
34 45 .430 18
day's game because his left leg ~ason.
other league."
Mttw•u.{';sday~i R~uli~ 18
swelled up after he was struck The Pirates broke a 1·1 tie in Why?
./
Ball 6 Wash 2, 1st, Twi
byTomrtlie Heilllsf line drive ljvthe 6th when Roberto Clemente,
"That's baseball," he said.
Wash 3 Ball 2, 2nd, n1ght
· kJng up his 2,800th career That,s Doc Elila, who doesn 't , California
Mlnn S, night
the fourth, expects to take his PIC
Kan Cily 17Milwaukee
o, nigh!
regular turn in the rotation hit, t:i'ippled and scored on lake long to go from one Oakland 9 Chicago 4, night
which would be on Sunday Riehle Hebner's sacrifice fly. controversy to another.
, Delrott 12 New York 7, night
which would be against AUanta
Boston 3 Cleveland 2, ntght
Toclay's Probable Pitchers
here.
.
California (Clark 2-0l al
"Because of my elbow
Minnesota I Kaat 6·71, nigh!.
Kansas City (Butler 1-1) at
tr bl "th N ti ILea •
ou e, e a ona
gues
Mllwaukee(ParsonsH),nighl.
top winner said, "I ususlly
Oakland (Dobson 7-0) a!
don't throw between starts, but
'
Chicago (John 6-9), night.
New York (Peterson 7-7) at
If th ey wan t me to • I 'D fil P
Detroit (Gilbreth 1-0), night.
three innings in Detroit."
Washlnglon (Bosman 6·91 al
Anderson, who as manager of
Balli more 1Dobson 8-41, nigh!.
the defending champion Reda is
Boston ICulp 9·6 and Tiant O·
manager
of
the
National
2)
at Cleveland (Lamb 5·4 and Housion 300 000 101- 5 9 1
the
Fosler 5-71. 2, Twl -ntghl.
League tesm, said that If he
Thursday's Games
San Fran 010 001 000- 2 6 0
Blllmgham, Culver (8) and
California at Mlnnesola
Hlalt , Bryant, Carrithers (1).
Oakland at Chtcago
Kan City at Milwaukee, ntght McMahon 16L Johnson (7) and
NEW YORK (UPI)-There Two National League star- New York at Detroit, night
Dielz. WP-Billtngham (4 8)
LP- Bryanl 17-4) . HR- Bbnds
can be no surprise that two old ters, McCovey and Stargell, are Boston at Cleveland, ntght
Washington at Balttmore, ntght (191h)
favorites of the fans-Hank also sidelined.
Aaron and Willie Mays-were
the top two vole-getters in the
fans' balloting for the starting
National League team in the
42nd All-Star game in Detroit
next Tuesday night.
Cheshire's unbeaten Redlegs Larkins later scored on a Southwestern 4-1 and the
Asron led aU players in the rallied for three runs in the top throwing error.
Pomeroy B learn edged Racine,
balloting with 1,119,3116 votes of the sixth inning and added Four more runs came across 111-14.
while Mays was second in the four runs in the seventh frame the plate in the seventh inning. In the Pomeroy A • SouthNational League with 1,084,887 Tuesday night for a come-from- Third baseman Clay Hudson western game, Chuck Eastman
votes. A total of 2,396,895 votes behind 11).4 victory over Mid- started the rally with a double . tlmited Southwestern to three
were cast this year -l!bout dleport in the Gallia-Meigs Cremeans singled driving in hits and Bill Chaney and Rob
gume, Goldsberry Issued only 360,000 more than last season Pony League. Cheshire is now 9- Hudson, Dave Wise singled Eason each hit two-run homers,
when baseball conducted the 0 in loop play, and 1~ overaD. moving Cremeans to second. He Eastman walked two and
two walks.
New Haven scored three runs first computerized balloting by Middleport is IN in loop play. scored on McCarty's third struckout nine.
in the first and added eight In the fans.
The losing pitcher was Nida.
Trailing 4-3 in the sixth, single of the game. McCarty
The
top
vote-getting
in
the
lbe third. Buzzard, T. Sayre and
Cheshire opened the inning wllh and Wise sc&lt;H'ed on a double by He was relieved by Carter in the
Davis were the Cubs' leading American League was Balti- Orland Cremeans reaching on a Joe Stidham, Redleg cen- f~rst inning.
more's Brooks Robinson, who two base error. He moved to lerfielder.
hitters.
Other hitters for Pomeroy
finished with 1,110,469-00ly third and scored on a fielder's Cheshire moved into a 1.0 lead were Charlie' Marshal with two
Striking for six runs in the about 9,000 votes behind Aaron. choice off the bat of leftflelder in the second lmiing on singles; M1ck Ash, a triple,
third inning, the Galllpolls Besides Asron of AUanta, Greg McCsrty.
Cremeans' single, a stolen base Eastman, a double, and Freddy
Yankees defeated Green, ~ in Robinson and Mays of San McCarty crossed the plate on and McCarty single,
Burney chipped in with a single.
the final game Tuesday night. Francisc.o, the only other a two-out single to center by Middleport took a 4-1 lead in
For Southwestern Nida had a
Keilh Burdette hurled the million vote getters were rlghtfielder Mike Larkins. the third inning. With one out, single and Carter rapped out a
second no hitter of evening in Cincinnati catcher Johnny
Perk Ault was ISSued his second double and triple.
pacing the Yankees victory. Bench at 1,1160,651 and Boston
The Pomeroy B team game
free pass llf the evening. Steve
Meigs
Burdette, Gragg and Kuhn outfielder Carl Yastrzemski at
Price singled ·sending Ault to was just as high scoring as the
collected hits for the winners. 1,002,908.
third. Rick Stobart's infield hit other was low as all the runs
The starting National League
Tonight, the Mason Tigers
scored Ault to tie the game. were scored in four innings
and Addaville Jets collide at 6 team will hsve Willie McCovey
Woody Call, Jr. then smashed a because of darkness.
p.m. Gallipolis' Orioles and of San Francisco at f~t,.Gl~nn .
~
Big Jerry Crem~ans, led the
3-2 pitch to right field plating
McArlhur
In ' the second Beckert of the Chicago Cubs at
winners With three hits, triple
Price and Stobart.
coolest and Racine will battle second, Joe Torre of the St.
Stidham, the Redlegs ' and two singles, Qualls had a
Albany In the ftnale.
Louis Cardinals at third, Bud
starting hurler was then double and single, Fisher two
Harrelson of the New York Margaret E. Harbrecht, replaced by righthander John singles, Bierce, a double, .and
Mets at short, Bench at catcher Robert L. Harbrecht, Mary E. Baird. Baird walked Pickens Blevins, Fields, and Soulsby
and Aaron, Mays and Willie Leonard, Martin J. Leonard, before fanning WaiUatch and each had a single.
Stargell of the Pittsburgh Parcels, to Hazel McCallum, Wartier.
For the losers Jon Jenkins
Pirates in the outfield.
Parcels, Sutton-Minersville.
Middleport's final run scored had two singles, Curfman, had a
The American League tealh Hazel McCallum to Don E. on a passed ball.
triple, Nease, a double, and D.
wiD have Boog Powell of Rea, Dorothy Rea, Parcel, Cheshire fought back with two Jenkins, J)unnlng, and Huffman
Baltimore at first base, Rod Minersville-Sutton .
Baltimore over Washington in Carew of Minnesota at second, Don E. Rea, Dorothy Rea to runs In the fourth frame to cut each singled.
The winning pitcher was
the margin to 4-3. Hudson again
the first gakmeHa
. II' thr win Robinson of Baltimore at third, Hazel McCallum, l'arcel, started the rally with a triple to Kevin Fields. He walked five
But Die
s
o g Luis Aparicio of Boston at Sutton, Minersville.
and fanned five, while loser
of
error in the seventhletInning
f Cl eve- William c. Jones, Elsie Jones center.
·
the
shortstop,
Ray
Fosse
t
Dave Theiss walked eight and
Cremeans
singled
scoring
the secon d game
m
land at cateher and Yastrzem- to Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
deciding run and gave
the ski, Tony Oliva of Mmnesota
.
Lots S-6, Bosworth's Add., Hudson and later scored on fanned three.
'
Th
another hit by McCarty.
Senators the victory ·
e and Frank Robinson of Balti- Middleport.
Orloles could lulve suffered a more in the outfield.
Roxie J. Shockey to Ray W. Stidham and Baird combined
costly loss Monday night when
The closest race in the Miller, Blondell J. Miller, 52 for a three-hitter. They walked
four while fanning 14. Price, the
Mike Cuellar suffered a neck National League came at Acres, Lebanon.
Rlchard s. Owen, Sara D. losing pitcher, issued two walks
sprain in an auto ace lden t but
·
h
ing
the
inj
shortstop
as
Harrelson
received
the cIub IS op
lll'Y'
Owen to Ohio Valley Publishing wh1Ie striking out three
isn't seriow;.
567,127 voles compared to C Lot p
. Red legs.
489,847 for Chicago's Don o.,
, omeroy.
Ken McMullen's two-run
ho- Kessinger and 459,207 for Los Thurston H. Clark, Anna In other action Tuesday night
•
tw
mer and Ken Berry s o-run Angeles' Maury Wills. Ironical- Clark to Way F. Clark, 3.21 the Pomeroy A snu~d downed
I hlghU gbled a four-run
singe
Ufted Csllf
Iy, Harrelson is h'1tti ng .269 Acres, Orange .
The Dai~ Sentinel
eighth inning that
or- compared to .293 for WUls and Clarence P. Grueser, Clara B.
DEVDTEDTDTHE
nla past Minnesota. The Angels
Grueser to Manning D. WebINTEREST OF
had a 1Milt attack with ·291 for Kessinger.
s1er, 35 .05 Acres, sutton,·
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
McMullen collecting three of The closest race In the
Manning D. Webster, Mary A.
Exec. Ed ,
theln.
American League was for the Webster, to Cfarence P.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Edtfor
Dave Duncan's run«orlng third outfield spot as Frank Grueser, Clara B. Grueser,
Pub! •shed dally except
double and run-roducing singles Robinson received 633,217 votes 35.05 Acres, Sutton.
Sa turday by The Oh10 Valley
PubliShing Company , 111
by Larry Brown and Dick to beat out Bobby Murcer of .
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio , ·
Green capped a six-run rally In New York, who had 606,203
45769 Business Office Phone
the . fifth inning and lifted votes. Murcer Is outhltting Homer Goodwin, Palma 992 ·2156, Editorial Phone 992 Goodwin to Joseph Clayton 2·157
Oakland past Chicago. Diego Frank by 40 points.
Second class postage paid at
OhtO.
Segui went eight innings to get But the fans didn't follow the Hall, Leta Lynn Hall, 21.31 Pom
the victory and Bob Looker averages in maldng their Acres, Bedford.
~)Nlf~~:;;~~iatf1veadvertising
Botttnelli ·
, 12 East 42nd
flhlshed up.
selections as two of the Guy L. Swadley, Geraldine M.
Ctty, New York ,
John Kennedy tripled in the Anierican League starters, Swadley to John W. Haley,
rates: De carrier where
tieing
and scored the Powell and Aparicio, are hltUng Janet E. Haley, o/, Acre,
cents per week .
deciding run on Jack Heide- under 225. Only three of the top Rutland.
ly}~otor Route where carrier
ice not ava rlable . One
mann's throwing error In the ten hitters in the .National Norman McCsllum, dec. to
51.75 By ma tt In Ohio
Hazel
McCallum,
Margaret
E.
sixth as Boston defeated League and just two in the
'
.
W Va , One year $14 00.
months S7 25
Three
Cleveland. Sonny Siebert went American League were selected Harbrecht, Mary E. Leonard,
ths $4 50 Subscrrpfton
Aff. for Trans., Suttonsix innings ·to get his · 13th by the fans.
.ncludes Sunday T•mes.ientitne
victory and Gary Peters • The fans voted for five of the Minersvllle.
finished up.
.same ~ight players in the

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Tou~ney

Pl. Pleasant City Ice and
FUel, 19'10 dl!feri!Jing champions, the New Haven Cuba and
Gallipolis Yankees advanced to
second round action Tuesday in.
the 13th annual Kyger Creek
litUe League Tournament.
Pt. Pleasant ousted the
Middleport Reds, 15-2 in the
opening game. Middleport
collected two hits off Stevens,
the winning pitcher. Magnotta
and Haggerty had the only hits.
City Ice and Fuel scored two
runs in the first, seven in the
third and five in the fifth to win
going away. Billings, Bateman,
and Wamsley hsd three hits
each for the winners.
/:'ew Havep's Cubs · behind
~!he no-bit &amp;ftbrt 'ot·~bel'ry,
blanked. Pomeray's Dodgers,
11.0. In pitching a near perfect

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Cash Ignored

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
The American League's leading home run hitler may be
conspicuous by his absence in
the' All-Star game Tuesday
nlght.in Detroit.
The Detroit first baseman,
Norm · Cssh, took over the
lesgue lead In homers Tuesday
night with a pair of three-run
shots that powered the Tigers
to a 12-7 victory over the New
York Yankees.
But even though Cssh has a
.~average and 19 homers, the
Tigers believe manager Earl
Weaver left Cash off the team
when he completed the All-Star
squad, alth~ugh the official
announcement won't be made
until wter thts week,
"I think It's a disgrace and
I've told Joe Cronin (the AL
president) that," general manager Jim Caplpbell said.
"This is the first time in
years the leading home run
hitter hasn't made the 111-Star
team," manager BIUy Mru;tin
said.
Cssh hit his two three-run
blasts In the aecond and fourth
Innings to hand Mickey LoUch
his 13th victory. Slaked to a 7:{Y
lead, Lollch coasted and gave
up 11 hits.
In the other AL games,
l!altimore beat Washington 6-2
but lost the second game 3-2,
Boston edged Cleveland 3-2, ,
, , _, ,.
Oakland routed Chicago !M,
SCIOTO RESULTS .
Kansas City blanked Milwaukee · COLUMBUS (UPI) - 'utUe
1.0 and California outslugged Master finished a nose ahead of
Minnesota 7~.
Trim Lll to win the featured
1n the National League, $1,500 trot at Scioto Do\vns
Montreal topped New York 5-l, Tuesday night.
I
Allanta edged Philadelphia S-2, The winner went the mile in
Chicago beat Los Angeles 3-1, 2:01 ~ and returned $9.40, $4
Pittsburgh downed,Cinclnnati 5- and $3.
•
2 and Houston defeated San Iifthe nighUy double, Winger
Francisco, S-2. •
·
Ace won the first race and
Cookie R6Jas hit a sacrifice Harmony Chips took the second,
fly In the fourth inning and producing a 4-7 combination
Dick Drago pitched a six-hitler wCH'th • .20.
to give Kansas City the victory . Attendance was 5,299 with a
over Milwaukee. This was the ' handle of $215,744.
fourth time In the last five
starts the J;toyals have been
involved In a 1-0 game, winning Cincinnati 000 100 001- 2 11 o
Piltsbrgh 000 101 03•- s 8 2
two an&lt;) losing two.
McGiolhltn, Carroll {7) and
Don Buford, Brooks Robinson Bench; Ellis, Grant (8), GJ.ustl
and Merv Rettendmund hit first (91 and S.ngulllen. WPr-Etlls .
' inning homers that powered 114-J).,LP- McGtolhlln IHl .

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Cs- . .
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Yastrzemskl and
Frank Robinson-for the second
straight year. In the National
League, four players-Mays,
Asron, Bench and Beckertwere named as repeaters.
Although Carew was selected
last season, Dave Johnson of
Baltimore started the game
because Carew was injured.
While the fans pick the eight
starters in each league, the
managers-Earl Weaver of
Baltimore and Sparky Anderson
of Cincinnati-will choose the
pitchers and the subs on the 28man ~quads.
Two of the American League
slarters, Fosse and Oliva, are
both currently sidelined on a
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Ia
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5-TheDaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Prmeroy, 0., July 7,1971

.
' '

SWEET ARROW

SLICED
CIIAMPI()~SHIP .'l'E.UI .:... 111e Farmer.

Casper
Hot in
TROPHY PRESENTED - Mike ADen, director of tbe
1971 ~n Inn Slo-Pitch Tournament, presents the
championship trophy of the double elimination affair to
~ Wiggins, cen~, and Bob Wingett, repreSenting the
WllDilDg Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company team.

.
•
·
R
d
IS
.
ea
.
y
II
E
.;
~.

~.

/•
:;

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Dock . Ellis has all the
credentials but he still doesn't
think he'll start in next
Tuesday night's All-Star game
't
~In DetrOl •
.
Ellis recorded his . 12th
: consecutive victory and 14th of
the season Tuesday ilight when
the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the
Cincinnati Reds a-2. He ranks
as the Natlooal League's
leading pitCher with a 14-3
re~ord.
But Ellis feels that a
personallty conflict wi~Sparky
01 Anderson, the Cincinnati mana·
;; ger who'll handle the NL Stars
~ this year, and one of baseball's
"unwritten laws" will keep him
-:A from starling.
'
:
Ellis, who said a._couple of
weeks ago that Anderson
"doesn't like me", refused to
elaborate on the iitcident after
" Tuesday night's victory but
said: "It goes back to some
•· things that happened in spring
tr~inlj, .\JUt I don't want to go
·

~·1

,•

•·

~lion,, on :the other hand,
; was Willing to discuss the issue
' openly. "We had a beanball
• incident with the Pirates In
Tampa," said Anderson. "But
- Ellis wasn't inVolved. Mllt
1

Kessinger scored on Billy
Williams' sacrifice fly. before
Santo doubled home Beckert
and scored on Brock Davis'
siitgle.
Jack Billingham scored his
fourth career vic.tory over San

warm·up
·

•

·

.

champiCIISblp of lbe Redman Inn Slow-PIIcb Softball
Tournament at Memcrial Field in.GaiUpolla. Team lilem·ben, allown wllb their Individual ~. are fruit, I to r,
. ~ Ault, Greg Bailey, Gary Slat, Keith Pbalin, Jerry Van
Inwagen, IMry Grue8er, M1P Wright, Jeff Bart, noo
Swisber; sUuMIIng, KeliiY Wiggins, CCiadl; Bob wtncett,
manager; Gregg Gibbs, Bob Whaley; l!arry M~. ReJ:
.CUmmings, Jolin Wolfe, BID Radfll'd, Cle!ll Pratt, Jr., Jiob
Grueser, Ed Baer and 1m .Tournament Director Mite Allell. .
Hart's Used cars ol New Haven was runner-up, IIC C9Ja of
MlddlejiCI't placed lblrd and Randolph 78 ol Point Pleasant
woo the fourtb place trophy.

~~:s:a~i::u~r~~:: B~~::"~eo~atedholesamatongRoytheal

8P91sopenforlbemjustlncase
th ·
· .
k to f'
""'
they did.
ell" wmmng strea
lve hardest finishing holes In the '.Nicklaus, striving to win his
Wilcox threw a · ball close to games.
world. But don't tell golfiitg third title In six yean, clalmed
Manny Sanguillen afier a
Bob Watson's two-run siitgle ''tnillionaire" Billy Casper.
the greens were too 8P9D8Y and
couple of homers, but Ellis was highlighted
three-run
The 40-year-old; two-time U.S. too slow and most of the field
out In the bullpen. The only inning for Houston. The loss left Open winner wound up a fwal supported hlnl.
·
3
thiitg I remember is that he the Giants '» games ahead of practice round for the lOOth
"Wind alid sun for the rest of
was jawing from out there.
· Los Angeles In the Western British Open Tu!!Sday by the week won't dry them out,"
Division race.
""".ting eagles at the last '-o, he sa1'd.
The main reason Ellis may
B'll
Sto
bed
· ~~
'"
1
not start is· that he's pitching
neman pile
a SIX· both of which are par-fives.
The "Golden Bear," wbo Ill
Sunday against AUanta. But he hitter and boosted his NL . "If I can do that In every fast gaining a reputation for Ills
added : "Because of my elbow strikeout lead to 150 by striking round of the Open then I'll be outspoken criticism of golf
trouble, 1 usually don't throw out nine hatters in the Expos' happy;' Casper said af~ · courses, also claimed that the
between starts, but if they warit victory over New York.
chipping Into the last hole from sixth hole, cbanged from a parme to, I'll flip three innings in
Ron Woods' triple highlighted 10 yards off the green.
five to a par..four by decreasing
Detroit."
a two..fWl first Inning for
Rated a 12-1 shot for the title. its length and the addilim of a
Montreal against Jerry Koos· Casper was one of the happ1'er · bunk
t 'te 1n Une
Elsewhere in the NL, Chicago man, who was forced··to leave
er wu no qw
.
dumped Los Angeles 3-1, the game that Inning and WaS of the. 15 Americans among a
"It's a good par..four for me
Houston beat San Francisco a-2
55-strong foreign contingent and about 10 others who can
and AUanta defeated PhiladeJ. placed on the 21-d&amp;Y disabled competing in the $108,000 drive over the bunker but it's
phia a-2 in the only other list with a sore shoulder.
classic beginning today.
strictly par..five for most of the
scheduled games.
Mike Lum's lwfH&gt;ut tw~
Defendiitg c)1ampion Jack boys," he said.
In American League play, double m the fifth m~g Nicklaus-the 4-1 favorite- - - - - - - - Baltimore beat Washington 6-2 boosted Atlanta past,the Phils.i came in with a final practice
before losing the second game I~ was t_he Braves seve.nth . round of 69 but didn't lilre the
of the doubleheader 3-2, Boston VICtory m theU" last eight greens; wise..:racking Lee Treedged Cleveland 3-2, Detroit games ·
vlno came in oozing confidence
bombed New York 12·7, Oak·
. to newsmen but then qw't International
Leogue
Standi'"ts
By United ·Press
International
land ripped Chicago 9-4, CaliforpracUclng because he didn't
W L Pet. GB
nia downed Minnesota 7-i'J and
like
the
crowds,
and
British
Syra~use
46
31 .597
· te
Tidewater
48 35
.578 - 1
44 33 .571 2
~C~msas City shaded MUwaukee BROWN SIGNS
ama ur champion Steve Mel· Charleston
1.0. ·
SEATTLE (UPI) - Fred nyk came iit disgusted with Rochester
44 34 · .564 2'12
R. on Sa...~...doubled in on
. e. run ~rown,
.who
~If because he didn't like Louisville
Richmond
38 43 .469 10
...,.
·
b ll
th played his
· college his
36 43 .456 11
and scored another during a a at e University'«. Io_,.
gal1)e.
•
,
, y Toledo
• ,31 19 .388' 1w,
threHwl"third Inning that gave aild was the No. 1 draft p1Cii: of
Four other Americans, Ar· Winnipeg
29 48 .377 17
Chicago its victory over the the Seattle Supersonics, Tues· nold Palmer, Bob Murphy, Ken
Tuesday's ResuHs
1
5
Dodgers. Don Kessinger was day signed a multi-year con- Ventur~ and Dave Hill didn't ~~~~~:!'6 t~~\\i':~
safe on an error and moved to tra~t with the National Basket- come m at all, although the Rochester 7 Toledo 2
third on Glenn Beckert's single. ball Association Club.
royal and ancient broke their ·Richmond 7 Winnipeg 5

~

M~

SOUTHPORT, England (UPI) own tournament rules and kept

~t

BACON

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Savq, Clinpany softball team of Pcmeroy woo five canseculive ga!JM!!I !Iter IIi! July all w hrl to capCure lbe

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;,r;y; .

. BUZZ BUTTERED•

.

65~

DAIRY DEPARTMENT
~C8tet'fle

10% Ol CAN

BLUE
BONNET

. Rillrt
Resenll
To.

POTATOES

10

BOSTON STYLE

.

'

3 LBS. OR MORE ·

BAR-B-QUE

.·

WITH THE QUALITY YOU LIKE

I

46 oz.

PORK

FllESW OAf'Y

--·FRESH
-----~~--------------·
67 ~
GROUND.-BEEF 690
------. SLICED-BOILED __________~_
1
HAM '1 !
SLAB BACON
49 0
.

BEEF OR

AND

H
.
P1cn1c ams . . . . . ~~:.

UIC. ~

VIETTI

)ar

SUPERIORS

ORANGE

SANDWICH
~ SLICED PICKLES

~- ~';

YIJurTasles

87~LB.
CHUCK STEAK.·

STOKELY

FRESH SWEET

Goraon H. Caldwell' ·
Meigs County Auditor

•

~

Aunt Janes .

The delinquent land list will be ready for publication
after July 20, 1971 .
I

OAST

lb.

If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements
made with the County Treasurer to pay not later than 48
hours before said publication, the parcel will be removed
from the delinquent list before advertising.

-

BONELESS
ENGLISH

CHUCK

I

MEAT SPECIALS

67~lB.

'

·----··-----------~--""!"---1111!'---.

•

ARM

FREE

·FREE

Trew;~

headedforaputtlngsesaionbut
abruptly quit, COOlp)alnlng.lbe
area wu not roped off and
lbere were too msny people
about.

1 .LB.
PKG.

tor .

Red Rip'e Tomatoes

o·

R·

'.
' .
'.

4 LB.·
I

BSKl

·.

�. I

'

5-TheDaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Prmeroy, 0., July 7,1971

.
' '

SWEET ARROW

SLICED
CIIAMPI()~SHIP .'l'E.UI .:... 111e Farmer.

Casper
Hot in
TROPHY PRESENTED - Mike ADen, director of tbe
1971 ~n Inn Slo-Pitch Tournament, presents the
championship trophy of the double elimination affair to
~ Wiggins, cen~, and Bob Wingett, repreSenting the
WllDilDg Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Company team.

.
•
·
R
d
IS
.
ea
.
y
II
E
.;
~.

~.

/•
:;

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Dock . Ellis has all the
credentials but he still doesn't
think he'll start in next
Tuesday night's All-Star game
't
~In DetrOl •
.
Ellis recorded his . 12th
: consecutive victory and 14th of
the season Tuesday ilight when
the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the
Cincinnati Reds a-2. He ranks
as the Natlooal League's
leading pitCher with a 14-3
re~ord.
But Ellis feels that a
personallty conflict wi~Sparky
01 Anderson, the Cincinnati mana·
;; ger who'll handle the NL Stars
~ this year, and one of baseball's
"unwritten laws" will keep him
-:A from starling.
'
:
Ellis, who said a._couple of
weeks ago that Anderson
"doesn't like me", refused to
elaborate on the iitcident after
" Tuesday night's victory but
said: "It goes back to some
•· things that happened in spring
tr~inlj, .\JUt I don't want to go
·

~·1

,•

•·

~lion,, on :the other hand,
; was Willing to discuss the issue
' openly. "We had a beanball
• incident with the Pirates In
Tampa," said Anderson. "But
- Ellis wasn't inVolved. Mllt
1

Kessinger scored on Billy
Williams' sacrifice fly. before
Santo doubled home Beckert
and scored on Brock Davis'
siitgle.
Jack Billingham scored his
fourth career vic.tory over San

warm·up
·

•

·

.

champiCIISblp of lbe Redman Inn Slow-PIIcb Softball
Tournament at Memcrial Field in.GaiUpolla. Team lilem·ben, allown wllb their Individual ~. are fruit, I to r,
. ~ Ault, Greg Bailey, Gary Slat, Keith Pbalin, Jerry Van
Inwagen, IMry Grue8er, M1P Wright, Jeff Bart, noo
Swisber; sUuMIIng, KeliiY Wiggins, CCiadl; Bob wtncett,
manager; Gregg Gibbs, Bob Whaley; l!arry M~. ReJ:
.CUmmings, Jolin Wolfe, BID Radfll'd, Cle!ll Pratt, Jr., Jiob
Grueser, Ed Baer and 1m .Tournament Director Mite Allell. .
Hart's Used cars ol New Haven was runner-up, IIC C9Ja of
MlddlejiCI't placed lblrd and Randolph 78 ol Point Pleasant
woo the fourtb place trophy.

~~:s:a~i::u~r~~:: B~~::"~eo~atedholesamatongRoytheal

8P91sopenforlbemjustlncase
th ·
· .
k to f'
""'
they did.
ell" wmmng strea
lve hardest finishing holes In the '.Nicklaus, striving to win his
Wilcox threw a · ball close to games.
world. But don't tell golfiitg third title In six yean, clalmed
Manny Sanguillen afier a
Bob Watson's two-run siitgle ''tnillionaire" Billy Casper.
the greens were too 8P9D8Y and
couple of homers, but Ellis was highlighted
three-run
The 40-year-old; two-time U.S. too slow and most of the field
out In the bullpen. The only inning for Houston. The loss left Open winner wound up a fwal supported hlnl.
·
3
thiitg I remember is that he the Giants '» games ahead of practice round for the lOOth
"Wind alid sun for the rest of
was jawing from out there.
· Los Angeles In the Western British Open Tu!!Sday by the week won't dry them out,"
Division race.
""".ting eagles at the last '-o, he sa1'd.
The main reason Ellis may
B'll
Sto
bed
· ~~
'"
1
not start is· that he's pitching
neman pile
a SIX· both of which are par-fives.
The "Golden Bear," wbo Ill
Sunday against AUanta. But he hitter and boosted his NL . "If I can do that In every fast gaining a reputation for Ills
added : "Because of my elbow strikeout lead to 150 by striking round of the Open then I'll be outspoken criticism of golf
trouble, 1 usually don't throw out nine hatters in the Expos' happy;' Casper said af~ · courses, also claimed that the
between starts, but if they warit victory over New York.
chipping Into the last hole from sixth hole, cbanged from a parme to, I'll flip three innings in
Ron Woods' triple highlighted 10 yards off the green.
five to a par..four by decreasing
Detroit."
a two..fWl first Inning for
Rated a 12-1 shot for the title. its length and the addilim of a
Montreal against Jerry Koos· Casper was one of the happ1'er · bunk
t 'te 1n Une
Elsewhere in the NL, Chicago man, who was forced··to leave
er wu no qw
.
dumped Los Angeles 3-1, the game that Inning and WaS of the. 15 Americans among a
"It's a good par..four for me
Houston beat San Francisco a-2
55-strong foreign contingent and about 10 others who can
and AUanta defeated PhiladeJ. placed on the 21-d&amp;Y disabled competing in the $108,000 drive over the bunker but it's
phia a-2 in the only other list with a sore shoulder.
classic beginning today.
strictly par..five for most of the
scheduled games.
Mike Lum's lwfH&gt;ut tw~
Defendiitg c)1ampion Jack boys," he said.
In American League play, double m the fifth m~g Nicklaus-the 4-1 favorite- - - - - - - - Baltimore beat Washington 6-2 boosted Atlanta past,the Phils.i came in with a final practice
before losing the second game I~ was t_he Braves seve.nth . round of 69 but didn't lilre the
of the doubleheader 3-2, Boston VICtory m theU" last eight greens; wise..:racking Lee Treedged Cleveland 3-2, Detroit games ·
vlno came in oozing confidence
bombed New York 12·7, Oak·
. to newsmen but then qw't International
Leogue
Standi'"ts
By United ·Press
International
land ripped Chicago 9-4, CaliforpracUclng because he didn't
W L Pet. GB
nia downed Minnesota 7-i'J and
like
the
crowds,
and
British
Syra~use
46
31 .597
· te
Tidewater
48 35
.578 - 1
44 33 .571 2
~C~msas City shaded MUwaukee BROWN SIGNS
ama ur champion Steve Mel· Charleston
1.0. ·
SEATTLE (UPI) - Fred nyk came iit disgusted with Rochester
44 34 · .564 2'12
R. on Sa...~...doubled in on
. e. run ~rown,
.who
~If because he didn't like Louisville
Richmond
38 43 .469 10
...,.
·
b ll
th played his
· college his
36 43 .456 11
and scored another during a a at e University'«. Io_,.
gal1)e.
•
,
, y Toledo
• ,31 19 .388' 1w,
threHwl"third Inning that gave aild was the No. 1 draft p1Cii: of
Four other Americans, Ar· Winnipeg
29 48 .377 17
Chicago its victory over the the Seattle Supersonics, Tues· nold Palmer, Bob Murphy, Ken
Tuesday's ResuHs
1
5
Dodgers. Don Kessinger was day signed a multi-year con- Ventur~ and Dave Hill didn't ~~~~~:!'6 t~~\\i':~
safe on an error and moved to tra~t with the National Basket- come m at all, although the Rochester 7 Toledo 2
third on Glenn Beckert's single. ball Association Club.
royal and ancient broke their ·Richmond 7 Winnipeg 5

~

M~

SOUTHPORT, England (UPI) own tournament rules and kept

~t

BACON

sa a: ·

Savq, Clinpany softball team of Pcmeroy woo five canseculive ga!JM!!I !Iter IIi! July all w hrl to capCure lbe

shooting a 71,

ROAST

At Your Certified .Oil ComltiRJ .Stal!oft '

Check 't he .Specials At You~
.
l.G.A. FOODLINER THIS WEEK

"Your Gasoline Purchase Free" If We Fail To
Clean. Your Windshield, Weather Permitting.
No · Other Company Dares To Qffer This
Policy.

Certified ·Gas Stations

...

992-9981

538 W. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

CWe Honor Ba"kAmericard ,and Master Char el

••

ROAS.T

nt

In compliance with the provtstons of Section 5721:02
Revised Code of Ohio, there will. be published jn this
newspaper, a list of the delinquent real estate
Meigs
·County, Ohio, upon which the taxes, assessments and
penalties or either have not been paid for two consecutive·
tax paying periods.

·ONLY

in

48 oz.

liD CROSS
.

hi

I · /1/

.•

. ·, .·:

:

·:

ROYAL

SMOKED

POLISH

SAUSAGE

.h49~

VA. WHITE

COBBLER

PORK ROAST

rb-ba&amp;

-:lllllt·. .
'QIIIlllltla

n.11
1

n:u .ntJ

,f'll7mer Ea\l~

STEAKS
10 Ol.
pkg.

SILVER DUST
GOLDEN ISLE

59~ SHORTENING

SAUCE

TEEN QUEEN
PRICES GOOD
THRU SAT., JULY 10

1--·-..-·-------··--·-·
WE ·
ACCEPT FEDERAL
STAMP.S

TOMATOES
BWE RIBBON

MARGARINE 4:89~

·-------

r--------- ~

No. 1

can

I
I
I

WITH

I

GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE

COUPuN

MAXWELL HOuSE®

I

2:: : COffEE
I

4:

I
I

1-

•

.. '

.

II. cin

79•

willt cotipon

2 lb. pkg.

'

FRIES

I

GOlDEN ISL£
'

FROZEN

I

pkgs.

CASTLEBERRY

HOT DOG

'

4••

1 LB.·PKG.

count

69~ q:rt 35t

GIANT SIZE

In The Piece

•

I •

60.

LB.

.

IN ·.STICKS

_Best Grade

MILK

t[

.

CHARM IN ·

GREEN PEPPERS
CUCUMBERS

Chocolate

~---·-----------------·-·

'

•

;,r;y; .

. BUZZ BUTTERED•

.

65~

DAIRY DEPARTMENT
~C8tet'fle

10% Ol CAN

BLUE
BONNET

. Rillrt
Resenll
To.

POTATOES

10

BOSTON STYLE

.

'

3 LBS. OR MORE ·

BAR-B-QUE

.·

WITH THE QUALITY YOU LIKE

I

46 oz.

PORK

FllESW OAf'Y

--·FRESH
-----~~--------------·
67 ~
GROUND.-BEEF 690
------. SLICED-BOILED __________~_
1
HAM '1 !
SLAB BACON
49 0
.

BEEF OR

AND

H
.
P1cn1c ams . . . . . ~~:.

UIC. ~

VIETTI

)ar

SUPERIORS

ORANGE

SANDWICH
~ SLICED PICKLES

~- ~';

YIJurTasles

87~LB.
CHUCK STEAK.·

STOKELY

FRESH SWEET

Goraon H. Caldwell' ·
Meigs County Auditor

•

~

Aunt Janes .

The delinquent land list will be ready for publication
after July 20, 1971 .
I

OAST

lb.

If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements
made with the County Treasurer to pay not later than 48
hours before said publication, the parcel will be removed
from the delinquent list before advertising.

-

BONELESS
ENGLISH

CHUCK

I

MEAT SPECIALS

67~lB.

'

·----··-----------~--""!"---1111!'---.

•

ARM

FREE

·FREE

Trew;~

headedforaputtlngsesaionbut
abruptly quit, COOlp)alnlng.lbe
area wu not roped off and
lbere were too msny people
about.

1 .LB.
PKG.

tor .

Red Rip'e Tomatoes

o·

R·

'.
' .
'.

4 LB.·
I

BSKl

·.

�.

..

..

•·

Satchmo Style, .~iving and Playing, had ·G~sto
NEW YORK (UPI)-Loul.s
"Satduno" ArnlstrongUvedbla
ljfe the same way be played bla
IJcm,.:.with a 1o1 of gusto.
"A lot ol people live

a~liillflYie," Ariii8Crooi

saki In Italy In 1958 after a

near-fatal collapse. "But
Hnvle's dead-llive
.,
-...
to Louis,Annstrong."
Armstrong, who wu ex·
lremely · ill in March witb a
kidney ailment and heart
trouble., waa found dead

accor••ft«

n.es:.

~ Bunda the F--"- ol •--~.: La'-, ..... _ __._ .and
"''
y,
-~
.....
- ..., ''""'"''"
Corona CangrepUooal &lt;llurcll July, ·be cc.leb:ated bill 711t tele\'illdupjlearancesandiiiiCb
In New York with 1111rt.1 to blrlbday by playq witb • lew mlll1011-ee!Ung recordl aa
follow. The ljJt of booGrary frlelq al, qain 011 Monday, ''Illicit tbe Knite" In the 196GB
pallbearers Included the greats be prac!k:ed. ·
and "Bello Dolly "In the 198Gs
of show ~ and IIIUIIc
CllldGienees poured Ill lrGm IDIIde hlm,trell kao.n to new
tpdttdlng Duke EIIIDgtOD, Dilly llrVIIIId the wwld, lrGm aD tbe ·a- au- ol jail fans.
Gl" rJe; Pearl BaDey, Coont places and people be bad Finlandforemolta trumpel
Basie, Guy Lombardo
.
and D.._ pla,ed with Oftl' live cleredea ~ Armltroo&amp; also waa
.
' •
Qoosby. ·
of jul. He lllllde seve .. WCidd ftll bwn for Ida rupy voice
..
.
!Gin for the State llepa bneut, wblcb be used m«e and more
Satc!un9 played his. beloved lnclullq to llullla, wlll!re jail u be grew older, the willie
h&lt;n~ ~to the end. He had ,Is Cfllllldered decadent, and a handkerclllef'CGIIStanUy 'Wiping
been practicing about u how' a tr!•mphant · VIsit to Billet
duled for , 1 p.m. Friday at

~y:~~v::;~ ::;.:~~= ~~!.~-Nizou

7- The Dilly SeiiUnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 7, 1971

.I

eyi!S,
. YeY
earned. shap\l.
broad II'ID wblch ~SatCbel
Aabort time after leaving the
.him the njcD•I!IOlla.ter' sh • balpli.l 1ft an Interview llltb
m~th" which waa
or· UPl t 'bJa home Arma~rung
tened to "Sa,\clllllq."th lar I put d:.O Ida hom' and pointed
~ en~ Be
ae to a pb0l!J8raph of hlmaelf
H!JIIIlltal earlier ~ · year, "Seeth8tca!?"hesald •:You
gravely ill. But he ~
't kill him .
.,;..~t
n
eJIOUIIh for doctors to aDow CAn ·
' maD. .... cat
~e
·.
ltal · d alu't ever g01111a die. We just
.him to leaV.: ~ hosp
an gonna · keep on going j118t
start .~acticmg ag'alu. He
y
aah
1, '
talked of a comeback as soon · going. eeea
man .

I:

•

enlrance of Sllftler's Department Stcre in Pomeroy. Patrons
.-e being a.ilred to use the Court and Main St. entrances
.mtng the remodeling.

NiXon Pressed
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Hlnt- ment of Agriculture support oc
lng that tbe Agriculture Depart- promise of full funding,'! the
meat baa reneged on Its prom- senators said In their letter,
( Ia&amp; to feed hungry children Ibis dated last Friday and released
• summer, 40 senators today urg- today.
ed ti.e Nlxon administration to · · "As you are no doubt aware,
nearly double planned spending the expansion in the summer
on the program.
feeding programs Ibis year is a
lu 1 letter to Director George direct result of Department of
I P. Sllultz of tbe Office of Man· .Agricultw:e promotion in clUes
agemeut and Budget, the sena· and states across the naUon.
tors asked for "Immediate Our clUes were urged to elji8Dd
j reconflderatlon" of the an- their efforts and were promised
nounced decision to spend $18.1 that the necessary money would
l million on the summer feeding be forthcoming . Programs were
pr!1ll'8lll Ibis Ye&amp;l'.
planned In full faith that the
1
I 1be bipartisan group, which Department of Agrlculture
I lucluded Sen. Robert Taft Jr., would stand behind Its promise
: R.()hio, said recent esUmates of funds ... ," they said.
I showed It would take $30 mil· "Congress intended that the
' lion to fully fund the program. summer programs be iJnmedi.
I
They also pointed out that Con· atelyand fully 'funded," the letgreu last week auth~ the ter added.
I AgrlcullureDepartmenttospend Thesummerfeedingprogram,
up to $100 million from customs an offshoot of the school lunch
receipts If necessary. ·
program, provides lun~ and a
I
1be aenators said Congress morning snack for thousands of
I
•
: took tbe acllon to Inaure full needy children In recreallon profundlngpfterthedepartmenten· gramaanddaycare centersdur·
1
couraged ciUea - where most lng the summer months. The
I ofthe8UIIIlller......,'""programs senators said it was the firm
'
··~.,.
are centered- to broaden their Intent of Congress that the Agi·
projects.
..
culture Department use the cua'
"It Ia not as ·if our clties and toms funds if need be to see'
stiteshadac~ Mtbout Depart- that the job gets done.
""

I

Wire Disnatc.hes

I

!

I

I

'
I

I
I

I

Sub
.
Sl•dies Slump

i

I

·

•.year.

the

OubNews

the

=::i.!:W:~!:"!g:~: stiitistii21
cherry
preserves. ·Juli
Whitehead was in charge of
recreallon. Teresa Chichester
and Patricia Boston were
responsible for refreshments. Niese! DuvaD, Reporter.
11IE CONDOR 4-11 Club met
June 211 at Steve Moore's home.
There were four advisors and
six members present. Dale
Rowley was in charge of
recreation. They played softball. Steve Moore served
refreshments. The next meeting
is scheduled for July 12 at the
Research Farm.
'

(

1

the

Meigs 4-H

the

qufrk/ , ; · •· :.

By Clarence . !I
Millet

I

-WASHINGTON (UPl):_Fed· lng up their boldings. The Post
era! subsidies for cotton, wheat said the practice was to lease
and feed grain farmers will the land to other farmers and
1
drop about $2.7 biilion Ibis year, collect the payments from tbe
dOwn about $600 million from . tenants,
19'/1), tbe Agriculture Depart· The newspaper said Eastland,
ment saya.
a member of the Senate .Agri·
A new law that went into ef· culture Commlttee, subdivided
feet this year limits payments his 5,200-acre Mississippi cotton
to a ·.lnaximmn of $55,000 per plantation into eight new bust·
crop or a total of $165,000 for nesses to gain benefits of $160,·
farmers quallfytng un~ all 000.
three categories.
The Post aaid Wayne and
At birth, an opossum is
5t N. 2nd Aw.
Monday, the Waahington Post some business partners will re- about the size of a kidney
Middlopatt
;reported actor John Wayne and ceive $218,000 in cotton JIIIY· bean. A teaspoon cau hold
992-5561
Sen. James o. Eastland, !). mentson three Arizona ranches. from 15 to 18 newborn opos·
· Miss., were among many grow- The group got $810,000 in cot· u:m~s;·. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~:::::::::::;:::;::
era who had softened the ef. ton subsidies in 1970.
feels of the leglslation by break· The law does not han the
lease arrangements.

t--'-------'1

:

. New Haven Social Events

Mr. 11nd 'Mrs. Gerala .Gerlach LexiDgton, Ky. visited this week
and children from Cuyahoga with his brother and family,
Falls, Ohio were weekend and Mrs. John F. Roush and
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William · children.
Dye.
.
Mi. and Mrs. Okey Howard
· Mrs. Dick Dotson and and family· visited lbeir son
children of Lake Park, Florida Tim HOV(&amp;rd thlB past weekend
are vlsltlng the former's at Bristol, 'renn. Tim is playing
mother, ·Mrs. Claud Bumgar- hasebaU with the Kingsport
ner.
Royals, • branch team of the
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Roll$h of ltansas City Royals.

w:

Jeanette and Jeannine Miller his home after being .a surgical
are vacationing at Myrtle patient at Vetera~· Hospital in
Beach, S. C.
1 HunUngton.
Mrs. Reba Woodrwn is a· Mr. and Mrs. Otto Grimm
patient at Pleasant Valley accompanied Raymond · Layne
Hospital.
'
'of Parkersburg to Canton; Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Roush recenUy where they visited
and daughter, Sheryl, ac- Mrs. Clair Horner, sister of
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Grimm and Mrs. Layne.
Sheldon Roush of Michigan are· Mrs. William Wentzell ls a
spending a vacatlon at Virginia patient at Pleasant Valley
Beach.
HospitaL .
Clyde Foley, who now resides Scott Roush, son of Mr. and
at Kingwood, visited friends In Mrs . John F: Roush, ac· ·
the Bend Area on Thursday.
companied his grandparents,
Mr. !llld Mrs. Bobbie Roush Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lyo~ to
and Mrs. Wllliam Dye visited 'l:exas, where they baYe been
recently with Mr. and Mrs. · visil\ng relatives:
Frank Ridao and fl.lmily in ' DWain Russell, Son of Mr. and
Indiana.
.
Mrs . 'William Russell , ha~
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lieving returned home after attending
and daughters, who reside 1n the Jerry West Basketball
Massachusetts, spent last week Camp at Charlottesville,
vtsiUng the fonner's parents, Virginia.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Otha Uevlng. Mr. Bruce Adams and Roxanne
Lievlng returned home, but his Wallace attended camp Horfamily remalued for a longer seshoe at Parso~, W. Va. last
visit.
week. They were spo~ored by
John Layne, who resides in the New Haven Rotary Club.
Pennsylvania, spent the Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rice and
weekend with his parents, Mr. family of Petersburg, Indiana
and Mrs. Harry Layne.
were weekend guests of the
Mrs. T. Bert Roush is a latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
medical patient at Pleasant Thomas Grinstead.
Valley HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. William Powell,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. William
Roush were in steubenville Powell, ITI and children are
recently to attend the funeral visiting Mr. and Mrs. John
services of Ronald Roush.
Powell at St. Cloud, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sayre Mr .. and Mrs: John ~yne of
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Danv!lle, .Pa. VISited durmg the
Herman Knapp and family weekem.I with Mr. and Mrs.
vacationed last week at Myrtle Harry Layne.
Beach, S. c:
Harry ~PP has returned to • •~~•'•••~'.fl~•••·•~~•:f'

the

,.
•

Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
the GOP national chairman,
said Democrats "who have
been trying to make joblessneB$
a polillcal issue may be without
jobs themselves In 1972 if they
conUnue to rely on this issue."

r
. t

I
I

I

I
By LEE·LEoNARD
ate cQncern, but there
UP~ Stalellouae ~r
were .,indications the budgC))LUMBUS (UPI) - House et cuts could come to a Jloor
. Republlcan leader• are con- vote it a ·Republican-Democrat: · Commerce committees iii both the House of Representatlves
tlnuing tbelr doilble-barreled ap. ic comp~omise lB reached.
and the Senate haV'e held extensive hearings on legislation dealing
· pro&amp;Ch to the tax problem this
Within the House Republican ~thso-called· ''no.fault"insurance, under which a motorist's OWil
·week in hopes ti)ey can avoid caucus; Kurfllss and other lead· lllSurer would compensate the motorist for injuries and losses
Senate Intercession threatened ers added a new wrlnkle io sustalned in autm~obile accidents, aslde from a determlnaUon of
for later in the week.
their proposed 1.5 per cent !lilt · . w~o- if anyone -:- was respoOstble for the mishap. This would
The GOP chieftains renewed Income tax to try to· lure some eliininate lhe present tort liability system In which the person
their efforts Tuesday to get an votes from fiscal conservatives . ~~ible for an accident pays the damages.
agreenientwlthln their DWil cau- wh~ support the 0.8 per cent
The White House position on the tasue has been that the
cus, at the aame time negotia· county, tax.
jresent system of automobile insurance system is in need of
Ung will! Democrats over dif., ·Under the latest draft the "'""~ The dmlnis
ferent lai propositions.
income lax would be colli,cted y-.,.e.
A
. tra.tion is urging the Congress to enact a
H
Speake
resolution appealing to each of the states to' adopt a ''no.fault"
· ~
r Charles F. and re-dlstrlbuted by a seven- plan. Deparlment of Transportation officials under Committee
lurfe,is, R-Bowling Green, has member Local Government questiooing, h8ve even conceded that the A~tration wliuld
said he would move a bill to Furidlilg Conunlssion conslsUng
t ob• 1 to
the fioor as SOon as possible of r,epresentatlves of the Ohlo no
,ec
a Congressionally authored law setUng federal
whether lt came out of the GOP Municipal League, county audl- staroards for states to meet, just so lang as there would be no
caucus or .the bipartisan talks, tors, county commlssloners federal take-over involved.
.
as long .as lt appeared to have state Board of Tax Appeals:
Problems facing automobile insurance customers ~e not
the support of 50 members.
Ohio House and Senate and new; but they are increasing. Rates are rising, policy canKurfess aaid there would be state tax commissloner. '
cellaUOJ_~S arxl non-renewals are becoming increasingly frequent,
no bill ready for acUon before Kurfess cooced~ Ibis w~s new policy standards are more stringent, auto repair costs have
Friday, . but he .left the door "obviously" an attempt to com- Jumped upward, and payments for claims may take months to
open for a posa1ble vote that promise between those Republl· settle. In public testimony on this probl~; Tra~portation
dlte.
cans who want a state collect- Department officials recently said that motorists who have
The Republican caucus met ed lncome tax and those who sustained damages of less than $500 collect, on the average, much
for • show of bands on lai pro- want a county collected tax.
more than the amount of loss. It was also reported, however that
poaals,andonememberdescrlbIu Other Acllon
those Individuals with injury claims from $10,000 to $2:i,o00 or
ed the caucus as "closest to un- If Kurfess is unable to either more, collect an average of only 15to50pet.oftheir claims.
anlmOUI lt has he&lt;in for a long negoUate an agreement with the
LeglBlation has been submitted to the Senate to require each
time·". . .
tate
DemocralB or move a Repuli- s
to establish a system of "no fault" auto Insurance. The
However, a 1.5 per cent flat can-spOnsored bill to the floor provisions of this particular bill would enable auto accident
county • state Income lai plan Ibis week, it Is reported the victims to recover their "net economic loss" wlthin 30 days after
whlch has been tossed around Senate will begin work on a tax proof ofsuchlossisflled with the insurer. The leglslation calls for
for weeks could mUller only 40 bill.
payment by the victim's own insurance company without
votes out of 54 in the caucus.
A $297 millipn interim budget reference to fault In the case. tntimate adjustments of claims
A proposed 0.8 per cent !lilt !li"£!J.l'Ying the state through the between insurance companies would be detennined later wlthout
ROTARY MEETS
county Income ta:irecelvedeven end of the month until the tax forcing the victim to walt during the interim for. his settlement.
NEW HAVEN - The New
less support, Kurfesa revealed. stalemate is solved.
AU "no fault" insurance proposals _ both in HOUle and Haven Rotary Club held its
Kurfess also met with House In floor action Tuesday, the, Se te
Democra\ic leaders and repre- Senate unanimously passed and
na - are now awaiting further action by the respective regular dinner-meeting
Thursday evening which was
aentatives of the admlnislratlon returned to the House for con- conunittees to which they were referred.
followed
with a short business
of Gov. John J. Gilligan to ex- curr~nce in amendmenls a bill
The state of Massachusetts has already established a ''no
plore possible compromises on allowlng a surviving spouse to fault" insurance program, which became effective January I session. Members attending
that front.
retain the registrallon and li· 1971.lniUal reports of .the program show that after the first~ were Dick Ord~ John Thomas,
1be hangup in these negoUa- cense plates of a motor vehicle months of operation, bodily Injury claims have been reduced by 36 Karl Wiles, Hennan Layne,
lions was described as a dis· owned by the deceased.
pet. This trend, supporters of the program contend, could well be Lloyd Roush, Russell Capehart,
agreeinent over closing aales Unanimquslyeleared and sent an important first step in the reduction of insurance policy rates. Rome Williamson, Harry
lai' loopholes for business and to Gov. John J. Gilligan was a Backers of "no fault" insurance plans also say that the program Miller, Rev. William DeMoss,
industry. Kurfesi! said the prob- House-passed bill modernizing would help unsnarl court congestion. It lB estimated that more James N. Roush, and guests
lem could be solved through theaccounUng,,reporting andre- than 200,000 cases a year are added to the nation's existing court Mike Howard and Gen~ .
some language changes In the cording procedures of building load and mor~ than 17 pet. of judicial time Ia consumed in auto Morgan. Mike and Gene gave a
legislation.
. and Joan associations.
accident claim cases. Areductlon in the number of auto i~urance report an their visit to the In·
1be Republican • Democratic
The House unanlmously pass- claim cases would cerlainly improve administration of justice slltute of World Mfairs, which ·
was held at West Virginia
negoUallons involve a Ito 4 per ed an!! semJnto the Senate a bill and reduce court costs as well.
University. The two Wahama
centgradualedstateincometax allowing orstoreceivework·
There ls opposillon to the "no fault" program as it is
students were sponsored by the
on Individuals and a minlmum 111en's compensation ~wards In presently being considered. The American Trial Lawyers· Rotary Club.
4 per cent corporate net income' a Jum~ sum Of up to $l,OOO.with· AssociaUon, which represents tnore than 2ti,OOO lawyers, argues
lai.
out gomg_ through '!be c\lstly pro- t!Jat the "no fault ...,Proposals would prompt some drivers to be
tw.Q,JN !fOSPA'f~, ..
Democra~ heve ·demanded cedui'illil havlftg• ...,guardliln, l;:iiiore ~less in al!l!&gt;mobile operation, urxler the assumption thai
·
NEW
HAVEN - Mrs; Harry
that $187 milllon worth of.budg· appointed.
.
they wOuld be compensated for damages, even if such losses were
Dyer is a medical pallent at
etcuts be restored to the House- The House also passed, 84-2, · the result of their DWil negligence.
Pleasant
Valley Hospltal and
paaaed $7.8bill,Jon appropriation and sent to the Senate legisla·
There lB no doubt that changes are needed in our to b'l
blU nov.: under co~ideratlon in lion updaUng the fruit and v~g- insurance system, and it appears as though legislallona~g:~: David Rose, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rose, is a surgical
the Sefll!!!,__
.
etable la~ling and packagmg auto insurance and accident claims will be forthcoming in the
patient
at Holzer Medical
Repu_!lll~~nshavereJectedtbls law to enable ~estate Depart- near future.
Center.
request on grounds appro- ment of Agriculture to act
prlatlons are now a Sen- agalnstdecepUvepackagingand
mheling lilws.

plea"""'

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EXTENSIVE remodellqf Is underway at the Seemd St.

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led
· apparent heart attack,
cuueback in Las Vegas Ibis mourntug In tbe Uniled States
'r
Funeral services were sc!Je.. fall.
Wilh a statement issued wblle
'·
··
·
en route to Kansas City, Mo.
''One of tbe architects of an
Bl' p;iE UPI
in seeking a Middle East Rel11.tlons 'Aa.-oclatlon
American art form, a free and
W()(ISTEJt, OHIO _ 'niE agreement.
(NAPRA), ~ honaty Is the
.
independent spirit and au artist wor14 's largest ice cream Mrs. Meir, spealdng Tuesday . bes.t pollef&gt;: We will talk.about
of _.ld wide fame, bill great suuday _ 183 pounds _ was nlght at a Llb~ral party the many things Ulat a young
taleuia and magrrillceut iplrit devoured lu 45 minutes by some meeUng, said "the problem is person should do, but then the
. added ric:bness and
to 2,000 pers0111 gathered here for not so much how to stand young people see som~tbing
all our lives," Nizou said.
8 holiday fireworks display. agalust our enemies as how to ' directly contradictory take
Born Daulel Louis Armstroog Bob Bercaw owner of the Ice stand in isolailon. "We will go lt place each day •" he said. "They
m July 4, 1100, the BOD of a O'eam Par~ and Restaurant, alooe if there is no olher way. can read through people and
WASIII!'IGTON (UPI)- De- EconomicCommittee'smidyear lurpentinefactoryworkeranda claime•J'theworldrectlidforhis What ..is betier, to galD -sym· pick out a r,hany faster than
mocrats opened fire today oo review of the ecor*ny, wu hou."''Dlaid, be grew up along creation ' which contalued 42 pathy or gain security?"
anyone else.
President Nixon's decision to ezpecled to expreaa the J)emo. wilh American. jazz on the flavors. .,;, lee cream.
MIAMJBEACH-A.blgfund· COWMBUS- THE federal
stand pat on the pollcl~ he crat's dismay over Nixon's aeemy slde of Ntw Orleans. Hill Bercaw said the previous raising party for imprisoner government will offer crime
hopes will restore momentum declsion not to alter any of the parents separated wben .be wu record was a flf1 pound ~e James R. Hoffa Tuesday night Insurance In Ohio.starting Aug.
to
economy by time the fmdlmentals of his economic yo!lllg and fer a time he lived prep~too. by Baskin-Robbins of at · a plush oceanfront hotel I, but the plan announced by lhe
PresidUtial 'campaigl1 opens policies.
,
with his grandmother. At tbe Hollywood, Calif.
netted oVer $130,000 for the U. S. Department of Housing
1
nat summer.
Treasury Secretery John B. age of 13 he waa aent to •
KIJWAIT _VICE President fonner Teamsters president, andUrbanlleveopmenthaanot
Senate Democratic Leadet Connally Jr., the Deritocrat who wall's home for shooting a Spiro T. Agnew the hlghest- according to its sponsors.
been embraced by state of.
Mike ManSfield, the leadoff some believe will replace Spiro pistol during a celebrallon.
ranldng Ameri~ ever to visit
The money will be glven to flcials . State Insurance
witness at the Hou.Senate T. Agnew on Nixon's redectiOII
It waa at tbe home that be Kuwait, opened four daya of Hoffa to help pay part of the Department Dlrector Kennelh
ticket next year, spelled out really learned to play the talks with Arab leaders today. legal cots he has built up in the E. Deshletler saki Tuesday he
that decision last week.
cornet. When he got out after Be said be would spent moot of long fjght, first to stay out of jali would prefer some Insurance
HesaidNixonhadruledouta more than
Armstrong his time listening to their andnowtogetoqtofprison. The mdustry alternative to the
lai cut or a big increase In pla,ed In tbe streets ~ viewpoints on
'Middle ·East U. S. Parole Board·was due to federal program.
spendlng to sllmulate the flllerals and bordellos of New sltualion.
consider today his reque5t for Approved by Congress last
economy and rejecled wage- Orleans before moving Into Kid Agnew arrived in Juwait reconsiderallon of Its rejecllon fall, It P~ovldes thet federal
price guidelines as a check on oty's band as a replacement Tueeday night after a lo.bour of his Parole In April, the aecond insurance will be available only
for Kid Otiver,
Oight from Singapore with a time the board baa declined to In states which lack crtme In·
The-Columbia Make It Girls 4- inflalloo.
lu the 19208, Armstrong refueling stop in Bombay. He is parole him.
.
surance at "affordable rates"
H Club met at Mary Jordan's "He baa confidence thet
Missis- 011 a IIJ.flallou world tour of
COWMBUS - SANTEE c. and in which the state governheme on June 26• There were 24 we're ·on the right tract," . followed OU~ up
Connally
saiil
of
Nixon,
reflectslppl
to
Chicago
and
later
Asia,
Middle
East
and
Ruffin
Jr., black prindpal of •ment baa taken no •action to
members and six visitors
ing confidence that the impact ~ed to New. York to play Europe.
Philadelphia's .Germantown provide Its own Insurance plan.
of
"enormous"
deficit
spendlng
Wli;b
.Fietcber
Henderson
before
PRIME
MINISTER
Golda
High
School, !U!id Tuesday the Those states In Ulat category
~y~llected all nower bulb
will soon be reflected in Oiling striking out 011 his 01fb. He Weir says Israel is ready to problems in the schools often lnclude along with Ohio,
orders and gave out the rates of unemployment . and switched to tbe trumpet during stand alone agalust friends and are caused by educators California, ConnecUcut, Illinois,
remaluing Stanley orders. AU inflation.
Ibis period and his recordings .foes alike to defend its right to speaking
"with
forked Maryland, Massachusetts,
the first y'ear sewers .gave
But even as conaervaUve a ?f the time are now collectors eaist.Herremarkswereaclear tongues."
Michigan, Missouri, New York,
demon8trallons on assembling Republican as Sen. John G. 1~·
WID1llngtothe Uniled States not Ruffin, speaking at the Pennsyh:anla and Rhode
a~~Maryand~
His years of one-nlgbt .stands to pressure Israel to make too ~general session here of Island. Tlie Dlalrlct of Columbia
Jordan served refreshments. _ Tower of Texas now advocates
a, quick lai cut to eollce spread his fame across the many concessions to the Araba the National School Public is also eligible.
Ruth Jordan, Reporter·
11IE RIVERVIEW 4-H Club reloctantco~umersbackinto,_------------------------------------------~-------------------------------met June . 29 at tbe home of the marketplace. Consumer.
spending baa 'been far more •.
Maxine Whitehead, wlth two sluggish than Nixon's advisers
advisors and eight members in anticipated.
attendanci!.
Unemplf1Yment fell to 5.6 per
Th
d'
d tak'
e! ls~sse
mg_ a cent In June, but some of tbe
cam~•~g ir!p . ~n~. ,gomg &lt;1\'w' ·was •attributed to a

Democrats Attack·
Economic Policy

'

Kurfess Holds I Washington ·. !
R e·rn' o

his -ling
brow • the tollinll aa biB . lqa, or. ''plnl'; as he
the jl
wisecraciiB and ·· called .tbeni, were bact in

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KOOSMANOUT
·
NEW YORK (UPI)-soulh· GOLFERS NAMED
paw Jerry Koosman of the New NEW YORK (UPI)- Wake
York Meta was placed on the Forest's Jlm Simons, who tied
2J-4ay disabled list today and for fifth place in last month's
will undergo tests immediately U.S. Open, and NCAA champion
to determine the cause of a Ben Crenshaw of Texas head
tightness in his left .shoulder the 1971 AU-American collegiate
and bact which has plagued golf team announced Tuesday.
him for the laat month.
Others named to the team
The Mets announced that Jon were: Mark Hayes of OklahoMatlack, who has an 8-5 record rna state, Bill Hoffer of Purdue,
at Tidewater In the lnternation· Ray Leach of Brigham Young,
al League, will be recalled to John Mills of Houston, Andy
tske Koosman's spot on the North of Florida, Gary Sanders
roster. Koosman was .removed of Southern California and
from Tuesday night's game Lanny Wadkins of Wake Forest.
with the Montreal Expos after
pitching only one inning during
which he was hit hard and gave NASCAR MILLIONAIRE
up two runs.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Dr. Peter LaMotte, the Meta' (UPI)- Richard Petty's second
physician,diagnosedKoosman's place finish in Sunday's fire·
'injury as a pulled deltoid cracker 4!)0 moved him closer.. I
muscle in the left sboulder, but to becoming NASCAR's first
the M:ets are sending Koosman driver to earn $1 mlllion, it was
to Dr. Ken Donaldson, an announced Tuesday. Petty has
inll&gt;rnist, to see if there is some · earned' $152,075 this year and
other cause for the ailment.
has career earnings of $980,901. ··

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5th and PEARL STS., .RACINE .
'7he Store With A Heart,
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Pomeroy, dhio
Phone: 992-Sill

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Ripley, W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

.,

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Good On~ At
· Phebe's
.Racile Mkt

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Satchmo Style, .~iving and Playing, had ·G~sto
NEW YORK (UPI)-Loul.s
"Satduno" ArnlstrongUvedbla
ljfe the same way be played bla
IJcm,.:.with a 1o1 of gusto.
"A lot ol people live

a~liillflYie," Ariii8Crooi

saki In Italy In 1958 after a

near-fatal collapse. "But
Hnvle's dead-llive
.,
-...
to Louis,Annstrong."
Armstrong, who wu ex·
lremely · ill in March witb a
kidney ailment and heart
trouble., waa found dead

accor••ft«

n.es:.

~ Bunda the F--"- ol •--~.: La'-, ..... _ __._ .and
"''
y,
-~
.....
- ..., ''""'"''"
Corona CangrepUooal &lt;llurcll July, ·be cc.leb:ated bill 711t tele\'illdupjlearancesandiiiiCb
In New York with 1111rt.1 to blrlbday by playq witb • lew mlll1011-ee!Ung recordl aa
follow. The ljJt of booGrary frlelq al, qain 011 Monday, ''Illicit tbe Knite" In the 196GB
pallbearers Included the greats be prac!k:ed. ·
and "Bello Dolly "In the 198Gs
of show ~ and IIIUIIc
CllldGienees poured Ill lrGm IDIIde hlm,trell kao.n to new
tpdttdlng Duke EIIIDgtOD, Dilly llrVIIIId the wwld, lrGm aD tbe ·a- au- ol jail fans.
Gl" rJe; Pearl BaDey, Coont places and people be bad Finlandforemolta trumpel
Basie, Guy Lombardo
.
and D.._ pla,ed with Oftl' live cleredea ~ Armltroo&amp; also waa
.
' •
Qoosby. ·
of jul. He lllllde seve .. WCidd ftll bwn for Ida rupy voice
..
.
!Gin for the State llepa bneut, wblcb be used m«e and more
Satc!un9 played his. beloved lnclullq to llullla, wlll!re jail u be grew older, the willie
h&lt;n~ ~to the end. He had ,Is Cfllllldered decadent, and a handkerclllef'CGIIStanUy 'Wiping
been practicing about u how' a tr!•mphant · VIsit to Billet
duled for , 1 p.m. Friday at

~y:~~v::;~ ::;.:~~= ~~!.~-Nizou

7- The Dilly SeiiUnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., July 7, 1971

.I

eyi!S,
. YeY
earned. shap\l.
broad II'ID wblch ~SatCbel
Aabort time after leaving the
.him the njcD•I!IOlla.ter' sh • balpli.l 1ft an Interview llltb
m~th" which waa
or· UPl t 'bJa home Arma~rung
tened to "Sa,\clllllq."th lar I put d:.O Ida hom' and pointed
~ en~ Be
ae to a pb0l!J8raph of hlmaelf
H!JIIIlltal earlier ~ · year, "Seeth8tca!?"hesald •:You
gravely ill. But he ~
't kill him .
.,;..~t
n
eJIOUIIh for doctors to aDow CAn ·
' maD. .... cat
~e
·.
ltal · d alu't ever g01111a die. We just
.him to leaV.: ~ hosp
an gonna · keep on going j118t
start .~acticmg ag'alu. He
y
aah
1, '
talked of a comeback as soon · going. eeea
man .

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enlrance of Sllftler's Department Stcre in Pomeroy. Patrons
.-e being a.ilred to use the Court and Main St. entrances
.mtng the remodeling.

NiXon Pressed
WASHINGTON(UPI)-Hlnt- ment of Agriculture support oc
lng that tbe Agriculture Depart- promise of full funding,'! the
meat baa reneged on Its prom- senators said In their letter,
( Ia&amp; to feed hungry children Ibis dated last Friday and released
• summer, 40 senators today urg- today.
ed ti.e Nlxon administration to · · "As you are no doubt aware,
nearly double planned spending the expansion in the summer
on the program.
feeding programs Ibis year is a
lu 1 letter to Director George direct result of Department of
I P. Sllultz of tbe Office of Man· .Agricultw:e promotion in clUes
agemeut and Budget, the sena· and states across the naUon.
tors asked for "Immediate Our clUes were urged to elji8Dd
j reconflderatlon" of the an- their efforts and were promised
nounced decision to spend $18.1 that the necessary money would
l million on the summer feeding be forthcoming . Programs were
pr!1ll'8lll Ibis Ye&amp;l'.
planned In full faith that the
1
I 1be bipartisan group, which Department of Agrlculture
I lucluded Sen. Robert Taft Jr., would stand behind Its promise
: R.()hio, said recent esUmates of funds ... ," they said.
I showed It would take $30 mil· "Congress intended that the
' lion to fully fund the program. summer programs be iJnmedi.
I
They also pointed out that Con· atelyand fully 'funded," the letgreu last week auth~ the ter added.
I AgrlcullureDepartmenttospend Thesummerfeedingprogram,
up to $100 million from customs an offshoot of the school lunch
receipts If necessary. ·
program, provides lun~ and a
I
1be aenators said Congress morning snack for thousands of
I
•
: took tbe acllon to Inaure full needy children In recreallon profundlngpfterthedepartmenten· gramaanddaycare centersdur·
1
couraged ciUea - where most lng the summer months. The
I ofthe8UIIIlller......,'""programs senators said it was the firm
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··~.,.
are centered- to broaden their Intent of Congress that the Agi·
projects.
..
culture Department use the cua'
"It Ia not as ·if our clties and toms funds if need be to see'
stiteshadac~ Mtbout Depart- that the job gets done.
""

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Wire Disnatc.hes

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Sub
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Sl•dies Slump

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the

OubNews

the

=::i.!:W:~!:"!g:~: stiitistii21
cherry
preserves. ·Juli
Whitehead was in charge of
recreallon. Teresa Chichester
and Patricia Boston were
responsible for refreshments. Niese! DuvaD, Reporter.
11IE CONDOR 4-11 Club met
June 211 at Steve Moore's home.
There were four advisors and
six members present. Dale
Rowley was in charge of
recreation. They played softball. Steve Moore served
refreshments. The next meeting
is scheduled for July 12 at the
Research Farm.
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the

Meigs 4-H

the

qufrk/ , ; · •· :.

By Clarence . !I
Millet

I

-WASHINGTON (UPl):_Fed· lng up their boldings. The Post
era! subsidies for cotton, wheat said the practice was to lease
and feed grain farmers will the land to other farmers and
1
drop about $2.7 biilion Ibis year, collect the payments from tbe
dOwn about $600 million from . tenants,
19'/1), tbe Agriculture Depart· The newspaper said Eastland,
ment saya.
a member of the Senate .Agri·
A new law that went into ef· culture Commlttee, subdivided
feet this year limits payments his 5,200-acre Mississippi cotton
to a ·.lnaximmn of $55,000 per plantation into eight new bust·
crop or a total of $165,000 for nesses to gain benefits of $160,·
farmers quallfytng un~ all 000.
three categories.
The Post aaid Wayne and
At birth, an opossum is
5t N. 2nd Aw.
Monday, the Waahington Post some business partners will re- about the size of a kidney
Middlopatt
;reported actor John Wayne and ceive $218,000 in cotton JIIIY· bean. A teaspoon cau hold
992-5561
Sen. James o. Eastland, !). mentson three Arizona ranches. from 15 to 18 newborn opos·
· Miss., were among many grow- The group got $810,000 in cot· u:m~s;·. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~:::::::::::;:::;::
era who had softened the ef. ton subsidies in 1970.
feels of the leglslation by break· The law does not han the
lease arrangements.

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:

. New Haven Social Events

Mr. 11nd 'Mrs. Gerala .Gerlach LexiDgton, Ky. visited this week
and children from Cuyahoga with his brother and family,
Falls, Ohio were weekend and Mrs. John F. Roush and
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William · children.
Dye.
.
Mi. and Mrs. Okey Howard
· Mrs. Dick Dotson and and family· visited lbeir son
children of Lake Park, Florida Tim HOV(&amp;rd thlB past weekend
are vlsltlng the former's at Bristol, 'renn. Tim is playing
mother, ·Mrs. Claud Bumgar- hasebaU with the Kingsport
ner.
Royals, • branch team of the
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Roll$h of ltansas City Royals.

w:

Jeanette and Jeannine Miller his home after being .a surgical
are vacationing at Myrtle patient at Vetera~· Hospital in
Beach, S. C.
1 HunUngton.
Mrs. Reba Woodrwn is a· Mr. and Mrs. Otto Grimm
patient at Pleasant Valley accompanied Raymond · Layne
Hospital.
'
'of Parkersburg to Canton; Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Roush recenUy where they visited
and daughter, Sheryl, ac- Mrs. Clair Horner, sister of
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Grimm and Mrs. Layne.
Sheldon Roush of Michigan are· Mrs. William Wentzell ls a
spending a vacatlon at Virginia patient at Pleasant Valley
Beach.
HospitaL .
Clyde Foley, who now resides Scott Roush, son of Mr. and
at Kingwood, visited friends In Mrs . John F: Roush, ac· ·
the Bend Area on Thursday.
companied his grandparents,
Mr. !llld Mrs. Bobbie Roush Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lyo~ to
and Mrs. Wllliam Dye visited 'l:exas, where they baYe been
recently with Mr. and Mrs. · visil\ng relatives:
Frank Ridao and fl.lmily in ' DWain Russell, Son of Mr. and
Indiana.
.
Mrs . 'William Russell , ha~
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lieving returned home after attending
and daughters, who reside 1n the Jerry West Basketball
Massachusetts, spent last week Camp at Charlottesville,
vtsiUng the fonner's parents, Virginia.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Otha Uevlng. Mr. Bruce Adams and Roxanne
Lievlng returned home, but his Wallace attended camp Horfamily remalued for a longer seshoe at Parso~, W. Va. last
visit.
week. They were spo~ored by
John Layne, who resides in the New Haven Rotary Club.
Pennsylvania, spent the Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rice and
weekend with his parents, Mr. family of Petersburg, Indiana
and Mrs. Harry Layne.
were weekend guests of the
Mrs. T. Bert Roush is a latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
medical patient at Pleasant Thomas Grinstead.
Valley HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. William Powell,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. William
Roush were in steubenville Powell, ITI and children are
recently to attend the funeral visiting Mr. and Mrs. John
services of Ronald Roush.
Powell at St. Cloud, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sayre Mr .. and Mrs: John ~yne of
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Danv!lle, .Pa. VISited durmg the
Herman Knapp and family weekem.I with Mr. and Mrs.
vacationed last week at Myrtle Harry Layne.
Beach, S. c:
Harry ~PP has returned to • •~~•'•••~'.fl~•••·•~~•:f'

the

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Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
the GOP national chairman,
said Democrats "who have
been trying to make joblessneB$
a polillcal issue may be without
jobs themselves In 1972 if they
conUnue to rely on this issue."

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By LEE·LEoNARD
ate cQncern, but there
UP~ Stalellouae ~r
were .,indications the budgC))LUMBUS (UPI) - House et cuts could come to a Jloor
. Republlcan leader• are con- vote it a ·Republican-Democrat: · Commerce committees iii both the House of Representatlves
tlnuing tbelr doilble-barreled ap. ic comp~omise lB reached.
and the Senate haV'e held extensive hearings on legislation dealing
· pro&amp;Ch to the tax problem this
Within the House Republican ~thso-called· ''no.fault"insurance, under which a motorist's OWil
·week in hopes ti)ey can avoid caucus; Kurfllss and other lead· lllSurer would compensate the motorist for injuries and losses
Senate Intercession threatened ers added a new wrlnkle io sustalned in autm~obile accidents, aslde from a determlnaUon of
for later in the week.
their proposed 1.5 per cent !lilt · . w~o- if anyone -:- was respoOstble for the mishap. This would
The GOP chieftains renewed Income tax to try to· lure some eliininate lhe present tort liability system In which the person
their efforts Tuesday to get an votes from fiscal conservatives . ~~ible for an accident pays the damages.
agreenientwlthln their DWil cau- wh~ support the 0.8 per cent
The White House position on the tasue has been that the
cus, at the aame time negotia· county, tax.
jresent system of automobile insurance system is in need of
Ung will! Democrats over dif., ·Under the latest draft the "'""~ The dmlnis
ferent lai propositions.
income lax would be colli,cted y-.,.e.
A
. tra.tion is urging the Congress to enact a
H
Speake
resolution appealing to each of the states to' adopt a ''no.fault"
· ~
r Charles F. and re-dlstrlbuted by a seven- plan. Deparlment of Transportation officials under Committee
lurfe,is, R-Bowling Green, has member Local Government questiooing, h8ve even conceded that the A~tration wliuld
said he would move a bill to Furidlilg Conunlssion conslsUng
t ob• 1 to
the fioor as SOon as possible of r,epresentatlves of the Ohlo no
,ec
a Congressionally authored law setUng federal
whether lt came out of the GOP Municipal League, county audl- staroards for states to meet, just so lang as there would be no
caucus or .the bipartisan talks, tors, county commlssloners federal take-over involved.
.
as long .as lt appeared to have state Board of Tax Appeals:
Problems facing automobile insurance customers ~e not
the support of 50 members.
Ohio House and Senate and new; but they are increasing. Rates are rising, policy canKurfess aaid there would be state tax commissloner. '
cellaUOJ_~S arxl non-renewals are becoming increasingly frequent,
no bill ready for acUon before Kurfess cooced~ Ibis w~s new policy standards are more stringent, auto repair costs have
Friday, . but he .left the door "obviously" an attempt to com- Jumped upward, and payments for claims may take months to
open for a posa1ble vote that promise between those Republl· settle. In public testimony on this probl~; Tra~portation
dlte.
cans who want a state collect- Department officials recently said that motorists who have
The Republican caucus met ed lncome tax and those who sustained damages of less than $500 collect, on the average, much
for • show of bands on lai pro- want a county collected tax.
more than the amount of loss. It was also reported, however that
poaals,andonememberdescrlbIu Other Acllon
those Individuals with injury claims from $10,000 to $2:i,o00 or
ed the caucus as "closest to un- If Kurfess is unable to either more, collect an average of only 15to50pet.oftheir claims.
anlmOUI lt has he&lt;in for a long negoUate an agreement with the
LeglBlation has been submitted to the Senate to require each
time·". . .
tate
DemocralB or move a Repuli- s
to establish a system of "no fault" auto Insurance. The
However, a 1.5 per cent flat can-spOnsored bill to the floor provisions of this particular bill would enable auto accident
county • state Income lai plan Ibis week, it Is reported the victims to recover their "net economic loss" wlthin 30 days after
whlch has been tossed around Senate will begin work on a tax proof ofsuchlossisflled with the insurer. The leglslation calls for
for weeks could mUller only 40 bill.
payment by the victim's own insurance company without
votes out of 54 in the caucus.
A $297 millipn interim budget reference to fault In the case. tntimate adjustments of claims
A proposed 0.8 per cent !lilt !li"£!J.l'Ying the state through the between insurance companies would be detennined later wlthout
ROTARY MEETS
county Income ta:irecelvedeven end of the month until the tax forcing the victim to walt during the interim for. his settlement.
NEW HAVEN - The New
less support, Kurfesa revealed. stalemate is solved.
AU "no fault" insurance proposals _ both in HOUle and Haven Rotary Club held its
Kurfess also met with House In floor action Tuesday, the, Se te
Democra\ic leaders and repre- Senate unanimously passed and
na - are now awaiting further action by the respective regular dinner-meeting
Thursday evening which was
aentatives of the admlnislratlon returned to the House for con- conunittees to which they were referred.
followed
with a short business
of Gov. John J. Gilligan to ex- curr~nce in amendmenls a bill
The state of Massachusetts has already established a ''no
plore possible compromises on allowlng a surviving spouse to fault" insurance program, which became effective January I session. Members attending
that front.
retain the registrallon and li· 1971.lniUal reports of .the program show that after the first~ were Dick Ord~ John Thomas,
1be hangup in these negoUa- cense plates of a motor vehicle months of operation, bodily Injury claims have been reduced by 36 Karl Wiles, Hennan Layne,
lions was described as a dis· owned by the deceased.
pet. This trend, supporters of the program contend, could well be Lloyd Roush, Russell Capehart,
agreeinent over closing aales Unanimquslyeleared and sent an important first step in the reduction of insurance policy rates. Rome Williamson, Harry
lai' loopholes for business and to Gov. John J. Gilligan was a Backers of "no fault" insurance plans also say that the program Miller, Rev. William DeMoss,
industry. Kurfesi! said the prob- House-passed bill modernizing would help unsnarl court congestion. It lB estimated that more James N. Roush, and guests
lem could be solved through theaccounUng,,reporting andre- than 200,000 cases a year are added to the nation's existing court Mike Howard and Gen~ .
some language changes In the cording procedures of building load and mor~ than 17 pet. of judicial time Ia consumed in auto Morgan. Mike and Gene gave a
legislation.
. and Joan associations.
accident claim cases. Areductlon in the number of auto i~urance report an their visit to the In·
1be Republican • Democratic
The House unanlmously pass- claim cases would cerlainly improve administration of justice slltute of World Mfairs, which ·
was held at West Virginia
negoUallons involve a Ito 4 per ed an!! semJnto the Senate a bill and reduce court costs as well.
University. The two Wahama
centgradualedstateincometax allowing orstoreceivework·
There ls opposillon to the "no fault" program as it is
students were sponsored by the
on Individuals and a minlmum 111en's compensation ~wards In presently being considered. The American Trial Lawyers· Rotary Club.
4 per cent corporate net income' a Jum~ sum Of up to $l,OOO.with· AssociaUon, which represents tnore than 2ti,OOO lawyers, argues
lai.
out gomg_ through '!be c\lstly pro- t!Jat the "no fault ...,Proposals would prompt some drivers to be
tw.Q,JN !fOSPA'f~, ..
Democra~ heve ·demanded cedui'illil havlftg• ...,guardliln, l;:iiiore ~less in al!l!&gt;mobile operation, urxler the assumption thai
·
NEW
HAVEN - Mrs; Harry
that $187 milllon worth of.budg· appointed.
.
they wOuld be compensated for damages, even if such losses were
Dyer is a medical pallent at
etcuts be restored to the House- The House also passed, 84-2, · the result of their DWil negligence.
Pleasant
Valley Hospltal and
paaaed $7.8bill,Jon appropriation and sent to the Senate legisla·
There lB no doubt that changes are needed in our to b'l
blU nov.: under co~ideratlon in lion updaUng the fruit and v~g- insurance system, and it appears as though legislallona~g:~: David Rose, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rose, is a surgical
the Sefll!!!,__
.
etable la~ling and packagmg auto insurance and accident claims will be forthcoming in the
patient
at Holzer Medical
Repu_!lll~~nshavereJectedtbls law to enable ~estate Depart- near future.
Center.
request on grounds appro- ment of Agriculture to act
prlatlons are now a Sen- agalnstdecepUvepackagingand
mheling lilws.

plea"""'

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EXTENSIVE remodellqf Is underway at the Seemd St.

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led
· apparent heart attack,
cuueback in Las Vegas Ibis mourntug In tbe Uniled States
'r
Funeral services were sc!Je.. fall.
Wilh a statement issued wblle
'·
··
·
en route to Kansas City, Mo.
''One of tbe architects of an
Bl' p;iE UPI
in seeking a Middle East Rel11.tlons 'Aa.-oclatlon
American art form, a free and
W()(ISTEJt, OHIO _ 'niE agreement.
(NAPRA), ~ honaty Is the
.
independent spirit and au artist wor14 's largest ice cream Mrs. Meir, spealdng Tuesday . bes.t pollef&gt;: We will talk.about
of _.ld wide fame, bill great suuday _ 183 pounds _ was nlght at a Llb~ral party the many things Ulat a young
taleuia and magrrillceut iplrit devoured lu 45 minutes by some meeUng, said "the problem is person should do, but then the
. added ric:bness and
to 2,000 pers0111 gathered here for not so much how to stand young people see som~tbing
all our lives," Nizou said.
8 holiday fireworks display. agalust our enemies as how to ' directly contradictory take
Born Daulel Louis Armstroog Bob Bercaw owner of the Ice stand in isolailon. "We will go lt place each day •" he said. "They
m July 4, 1100, the BOD of a O'eam Par~ and Restaurant, alooe if there is no olher way. can read through people and
WASIII!'IGTON (UPI)- De- EconomicCommittee'smidyear lurpentinefactoryworkeranda claime•J'theworldrectlidforhis What ..is betier, to galD -sym· pick out a r,hany faster than
mocrats opened fire today oo review of the ecor*ny, wu hou."''Dlaid, be grew up along creation ' which contalued 42 pathy or gain security?"
anyone else.
President Nixon's decision to ezpecled to expreaa the J)emo. wilh American. jazz on the flavors. .,;, lee cream.
MIAMJBEACH-A.blgfund· COWMBUS- THE federal
stand pat on the pollcl~ he crat's dismay over Nixon's aeemy slde of Ntw Orleans. Hill Bercaw said the previous raising party for imprisoner government will offer crime
hopes will restore momentum declsion not to alter any of the parents separated wben .be wu record was a flf1 pound ~e James R. Hoffa Tuesday night Insurance In Ohio.starting Aug.
to
economy by time the fmdlmentals of his economic yo!lllg and fer a time he lived prep~too. by Baskin-Robbins of at · a plush oceanfront hotel I, but the plan announced by lhe
PresidUtial 'campaigl1 opens policies.
,
with his grandmother. At tbe Hollywood, Calif.
netted oVer $130,000 for the U. S. Department of Housing
1
nat summer.
Treasury Secretery John B. age of 13 he waa aent to •
KIJWAIT _VICE President fonner Teamsters president, andUrbanlleveopmenthaanot
Senate Democratic Leadet Connally Jr., the Deritocrat who wall's home for shooting a Spiro T. Agnew the hlghest- according to its sponsors.
been embraced by state of.
Mike ManSfield, the leadoff some believe will replace Spiro pistol during a celebrallon.
ranldng Ameri~ ever to visit
The money will be glven to flcials . State Insurance
witness at the Hou.Senate T. Agnew on Nixon's redectiOII
It waa at tbe home that be Kuwait, opened four daya of Hoffa to help pay part of the Department Dlrector Kennelh
ticket next year, spelled out really learned to play the talks with Arab leaders today. legal cots he has built up in the E. Deshletler saki Tuesday he
that decision last week.
cornet. When he got out after Be said be would spent moot of long fjght, first to stay out of jali would prefer some Insurance
HesaidNixonhadruledouta more than
Armstrong his time listening to their andnowtogetoqtofprison. The mdustry alternative to the
lai cut or a big increase In pla,ed In tbe streets ~ viewpoints on
'Middle ·East U. S. Parole Board·was due to federal program.
spendlng to sllmulate the flllerals and bordellos of New sltualion.
consider today his reque5t for Approved by Congress last
economy and rejecled wage- Orleans before moving Into Kid Agnew arrived in Juwait reconsiderallon of Its rejecllon fall, It P~ovldes thet federal
price guidelines as a check on oty's band as a replacement Tueeday night after a lo.bour of his Parole In April, the aecond insurance will be available only
for Kid Otiver,
Oight from Singapore with a time the board baa declined to In states which lack crtme In·
The-Columbia Make It Girls 4- inflalloo.
lu the 19208, Armstrong refueling stop in Bombay. He is parole him.
.
surance at "affordable rates"
H Club met at Mary Jordan's "He baa confidence thet
Missis- 011 a IIJ.flallou world tour of
COWMBUS - SANTEE c. and in which the state governheme on June 26• There were 24 we're ·on the right tract," . followed OU~ up
Connally
saiil
of
Nixon,
reflectslppl
to
Chicago
and
later
Asia,
Middle
East
and
Ruffin
Jr., black prindpal of •ment baa taken no •action to
members and six visitors
ing confidence that the impact ~ed to New. York to play Europe.
Philadelphia's .Germantown provide Its own Insurance plan.
of
"enormous"
deficit
spendlng
Wli;b
.Fietcber
Henderson
before
PRIME
MINISTER
Golda
High
School, !U!id Tuesday the Those states In Ulat category
~y~llected all nower bulb
will soon be reflected in Oiling striking out 011 his 01fb. He Weir says Israel is ready to problems in the schools often lnclude along with Ohio,
orders and gave out the rates of unemployment . and switched to tbe trumpet during stand alone agalust friends and are caused by educators California, ConnecUcut, Illinois,
remaluing Stanley orders. AU inflation.
Ibis period and his recordings .foes alike to defend its right to speaking
"with
forked Maryland, Massachusetts,
the first y'ear sewers .gave
But even as conaervaUve a ?f the time are now collectors eaist.Herremarkswereaclear tongues."
Michigan, Missouri, New York,
demon8trallons on assembling Republican as Sen. John G. 1~·
WID1llngtothe Uniled States not Ruffin, speaking at the Pennsyh:anla and Rhode
a~~Maryand~
His years of one-nlgbt .stands to pressure Israel to make too ~general session here of Island. Tlie Dlalrlct of Columbia
Jordan served refreshments. _ Tower of Texas now advocates
a, quick lai cut to eollce spread his fame across the many concessions to the Araba the National School Public is also eligible.
Ruth Jordan, Reporter·
11IE RIVERVIEW 4-H Club reloctantco~umersbackinto,_------------------------------------------~-------------------------------met June . 29 at tbe home of the marketplace. Consumer.
spending baa 'been far more •.
Maxine Whitehead, wlth two sluggish than Nixon's advisers
advisors and eight members in anticipated.
attendanci!.
Unemplf1Yment fell to 5.6 per
Th
d'
d tak'
e! ls~sse
mg_ a cent In June, but some of tbe
cam~•~g ir!p . ~n~. ,gomg &lt;1\'w' ·was •attributed to a

Democrats Attack·
Economic Policy

'

Kurfess Holds I Washington ·. !
R e·rn' o

his -ling
brow • the tollinll aa biB . lqa, or. ''plnl'; as he
the jl
wisecraciiB and ·· called .tbeni, were bact in

the·Ovem
.,.. -e
i~ht
'

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NOW! THE YEAR'S .
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IN ~fllllfJUINITORE STYLED CONSOLE!

ALL
NEW

1971

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Htth·lidel i11 SOIInd

Stereo Record.

be~ !II S!CI~Q tC J i o11~ I IOII a n d I CCOi d IC!·

tno dutliorL
•

'

I

....

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...,.. l

II

1:'~_\(I!Jl

d

~
INGELS FURNITURE

1

The qutlity gou in bef011tht ntrrw (IOU on"

MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2625

'

r

•

!

I

I

KOOSMANOUT
·
NEW YORK (UPI)-soulh· GOLFERS NAMED
paw Jerry Koosman of the New NEW YORK (UPI)- Wake
York Meta was placed on the Forest's Jlm Simons, who tied
2J-4ay disabled list today and for fifth place in last month's
will undergo tests immediately U.S. Open, and NCAA champion
to determine the cause of a Ben Crenshaw of Texas head
tightness in his left .shoulder the 1971 AU-American collegiate
and bact which has plagued golf team announced Tuesday.
him for the laat month.
Others named to the team
The Mets announced that Jon were: Mark Hayes of OklahoMatlack, who has an 8-5 record rna state, Bill Hoffer of Purdue,
at Tidewater In the lnternation· Ray Leach of Brigham Young,
al League, will be recalled to John Mills of Houston, Andy
tske Koosman's spot on the North of Florida, Gary Sanders
roster. Koosman was .removed of Southern California and
from Tuesday night's game Lanny Wadkins of Wake Forest.
with the Montreal Expos after
pitching only one inning during
which he was hit hard and gave NASCAR MILLIONAIRE
up two runs.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Dr. Peter LaMotte, the Meta' (UPI)- Richard Petty's second
physician,diagnosedKoosman's place finish in Sunday's fire·
'injury as a pulled deltoid cracker 4!)0 moved him closer.. I
muscle in the left sboulder, but to becoming NASCAR's first
the M:ets are sending Koosman driver to earn $1 mlllion, it was
to Dr. Ken Donaldson, an announced Tuesday. Petty has
inll&gt;rnist, to see if there is some · earned' $152,075 this year and
other cause for the ailment.
has career earnings of $980,901. ··

LP-Gas barbecue
when you buy an Ashland
LP-Gas forced.air .heating system.

Extra

As low as

Special!

Did you have trouble with your
furnace last winter? II so, now's the ·
time to take advantage of our special su.mmertime oller. Order a new
Ashland LP-Gas Heating system
now and we'll include a deluxe LP·
Gas barbecue grill FREE. The heavy
duty cast aluminum grill Is an $80
value. Your bonus with a ~;o mp!ete ,
modern Ashland LP-Gas heating
system installation.
You also get free installation and
rent-tree use of the storage tank.
And Ashland offers you a conven·
lent LP-Gas budget plan. Levels out
your annual heating bill in equal In·
stallments over a t 0 mll'nth period.

4XB SHEET

I
I
I
I.

I

l

..9.95
.

'

$35.00

Down-:

BaJ.n,:e On
Convnient

Ternrs.

MASON
FURIITURE
M11011, W. Va:
•

'

PORI( LOIN

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

ROAST

CONYINtiNT

.uDOITlUMt
AM AV&amp;tl..Aal

Mon. Tues., Wed.-.-9 to 7
Thurs., Fri, Sat: ... _.9 to 9

., SPECIAL FREE BARBECUE
GRILL OFFER EXPIRES ·AUG. 31,
t971 . So don't delay.
Want more Information? Write or
phone the Ashland LP-Gas Bulk
Plant nearest you .
1,-

200ct

lb.

MATERIALS CO.
We Delisa

MASON

Sliced

Beef Stew Meat

2

'

..

lb.

JOWL BACON

p~

79$

Scotties.......~~~~.~~~~............................. 4 boxes
twin
Gala ·JoweIs..........................................~
..:. 39'
Dill Slices ....~~t..~~:~.~~.~.~~~..... ~ ...........~;~.... 39'
Kraft Mayonnaise
..........................
J~.:
.
69'
·
·
·
King
Cheer.. ...~~~~.......:............................
.
'
....
~~
..
1.19
.
.
pl.

A·l Bleach.....................:.......................~~..

• -----------:l

I

ASHLAND PETAOLEUIII CO--PANY

..

D11to!an ol Athllnd 011, Inc.

.. RED RIPE
' 'G'E'NE COLEMAN, Agent
Box 471, State Road 124

.

·----------------·
From USDA Choice Beef
-

HOGG &amp; ZIJSPAN
773-5554

Del Monte Catsup ..~~~~t~.......... 3
303
Corn ....~~.~!.~c..~~~.~.~~..~.~·~·················· 6 cans
300
Pork &amp;Beans.....~?~~~.................... 8 cans

20oz.
bois.

CLOSED SUNDAYS

I
'

$52 7!.,~. g~~.

Right reserved to limit quantities

Young, Tender USDA Choice

Prices Effective July 7·13

CASH &amp;CARRY

1 3_

l.

5th and PEARL STS., .RACINE .
'7he Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

Pomeroy, dhio
Phone: 992-Sill

,

·

Ripley, W. Va. - Phone: 372-2221

.,

·'

Good On~ At
· Phebe's
.Racile Mkt

I
I
I

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I

I
I

�.
' .

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.

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,

,.
II ,

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.[

'·

ECON-0-PAK

MEl&amp;

GIRLS'

WALTZ
BABY DOLL . · · .
PAJAMAS LENGTH

,

TENNIS
OXFORDS

2-PIECE

Leisure 'comfort for evening and holiday
· wear. Available in white only'-

••I'SSIZIS16III·I f:
•IOYS' SIZISI 11-6.

&gt;-----"'3

Permanent

\ -Pajamas in "bobv·
I .
doll"
ruffle trim
Wolrz-lenglh gowns , .
the "femii1ine
.
~- 14 .
with lace trim for your ·
liHie girl. Sizes 4-14. . ·

.

'

SCOOTER ·
SKIRTS
·Fun in the sun playwoar. All ·
cotton ladies' scooter Kirts
in your choice of neat printed dosignt. Sizes 8-18.

· -~

$1 .99

.

PANTY
HOSE

LADIES' NYLON
.
.

MESH HOSE
Nylon mesh hose in sizes A, 8, C.
Colors: Beige and Cinnamon.

quality, American made panty
hose. Colors : Beige, tinnamon, TOupe, Brown and
Smoke.

'~
\~
- ~

.,

54&lt;

·•. $1.18

SOLD TWO
PAIR IN PACKAGE

24(

~

481 Pkg.

f\~

HICK'S REG.
77' Pkg.

POLICE BAND

PORTABLE TAPE
PLAYER

' . AM·FM

L-.,.J--.2:;m

PORTABLE

RADIO

Operates on 6 "C" cell batteries and has a
buih-irl AG line _cord. Hi police covers 1~7 174 Me. Low police covers 30 · SO Me. Slide
l'elescoping antenna. Site:

3-l/ 2".

6~ "x 9 V.."•t

.

s3418

HICIC'S
lEG.
$44.96

-----·
.,......-· .. -----::::::::
_.....__- ..

:,:· ~

1
.. _

•

I

,

..

,

;

ALL
FISHING

e Gives 2-8 five -ounce cu.ps of
delicious coffee e Handy brew

HECIC'S lEG.
$47.96

REEL

CHARCOAL

$!99
HECK'S
lEG.
$3.99

,,,_

s~Wrs

•
A•t•moNre
IJtpt• .

SI'OITJ DE/IT.

ll'tlrs

•EXTRA DRY
•EXTRA DRY
· UNSCENTED

DUPONT

· RUBBING &amp;POLISHING
COMPOUND

~H~ICE 58~

68&lt;
· HICK'SIEG.
$1.09

COSIIIfiC IJEI'T.

MAC LEANS

TOOTHPASTE
· lfGULAI AND MINT
HICK'S
lEG.
79'

(

31(

...,,.,
,,_

HECK'S REG.

41 t (

27&lt;

~
IIOIISIWAIE 111/11.

.,,,,

. HAIR
SPRAY
,

•Ext.. lleW

HECK'S
REG.

••HHIH

69(

$1.99

$1 . 33

99~
"

$6.38

ao•

CHOPPER

. SALAD
SHREDDER
SET

(
HECK'S lEG.

' $1.20
MNSiftAIE

,.,_ .

1101/SEWAIE
II/IT.

Heck's Reg.
.. 44.

INSIWAII
II/IT.
BROMWELL

FOLEY

HICK'S
REG.

3!:$1

HECK'S
lEG.

- IIOIISIWAII
. /JII'T.

144 55&lt;

......

HICK's
lEG.

$2.28

JAR
OPENER

PAIL

$444

BROMWELL

HECK'S
REG.

10 QT. UTILITY

HECK'S
DETERGENT

FOOD MILL
COLANDER -

FOLEY

17'

IIOUSIWAIE

CANNING SIZE

$166

MillO ALUMINUM

HECK'S
lEG.

HECK'S REG.
44'

32'

.. /~

MEASURING
SPOON SET

•

. DISH PAN

DIPPER

MIRRO ALUMINUM

MEASURING CUP

19'

-PINT

.
499

IIOISEWAII 111'1.

SIFTER
HECK'S
lEG.

MIRRO
ALUMINUM

$

...........
HECK'S
lEG.
BOt

PL Pleasant Store On~
FOLEY

FUNNEL

39&lt;

19&lt;

HICK'S fiG.

ft i WAif

rrr.

,·

'

I
'

HICK'$
.REG.

56'

•

.

MIIIOI
ALUMINUM
FIUIT JAI

FUNNEL

COSMt71tiPT.

\,

$255

$3.48

. .IISIWAIE
MI'T.

17QT.

WHITE RAIN
6.75 OUNCE

$2.19

MillO ALUMINUM

SI'OITJ HEac·s
III/IT.

DEODORANT

TREATMENT

99'

lEG.
$3.38

ARRlD

OIL

HECK'S
II G.

Heck's Reg. 11.44

.

HICK'S
REG.

2-CUP

IIR.

Camper's special . .. this sleeping bag is
ideal for those fall camping trips coming
up . Worm fiber HU with water resistant
outer co•ering.
'

ROTARY FOOD PRESS

HECK'S
REG.

ENTUPIISE ALUMINUM

99~

130UNCE

STUD

66&lt;

HECK'S

MNISIWAIE MI'T.

M!JliO ALUMINUM

.1

BROMWELL

49'

$7.99

$3.99

8 1~

HECK'S lEG.

$·2"-

HECK'S
IEG.

55
,•

GLASSES

SLEEPING
BAG
Made of ''Colorfast" tent twill, completely
~djusta~le outside aluminum frame. Sewn·
in floor ... 68"x22" screened pidure win·
dow in .ach side of tent with storm flaps .
80" screen door . _ . swnpout floor .. .
complete with frame
steel sra•os.

SAUCE POT

_IIOIISEWAB IE/IT.

.......,
CAlli TEIT

s

16 QT. COV.ERED .

$3.99

HICIC'S
lEG.

12'

KEnLE

ICE TEA

33c ::·

X

PRESERVING

'

JEANmE

LIGHTER

SET

. 16 QT.

14 QT.PRESERVING

HECK'S
REG.

$3.99

IIOUSEWARE ·
/JII'T.

INTIIPIISE. ALUMINUM

$2''

HECK'S
REG.

$5.66

WGIJIAIEMI'T.

HECK'S REG.

WATER
HOS

BADMINTON

$29.96

s.2''

PAN-0-FIRE

$12.96

$2418

HECK'S
lEG.

BLANCHER

HECK'S
REG.

KEnLE

7/16"x50'

HECK'S
lEG.

$]88

PRESSURE COOKER

IIOISIWAM
111'1.

HICK'S
IIG.

7Qt.

CANNER
211hQT.

.

$2.18

4-PLAYER

• Stainless steel spinnerheod, oitrate hardened e Thumb control button • Constant
Onti-reverse • 75 yds. line.

HECK'S REGULAR PRICE

$1''

S]66

PL Pleasant Store

ZEBCO

OFF

7JAR
COLD PACK

ROTARY

Cli~M/11.

selector to adjust strength of
coffee e Easy-to-read markings under handle tells how
·much water to odd.

$1077

RODS.&amp; REELS

250Jo

AUTOMA

6QT.

$2.21

JIWE~IY 11/11.

JlfiiUYIJ9t

......

G.E.

e

rule tuning ond rotary squelch control. AFC.

$]58

CI.DT/1/M IE/IT.

WITH AM RADIO
Deluxe Portable B Track Player w/ AM
Radio e Plastic Cabinet w/ Chrome Finsih
Trim e Channel Selector Switch- Tone
Control e Operates on Battery and
"
tr ic .

HECIC~S
liG_-

20QT.

$4.99

The new Summer look of '71.
Features include: front zip,.
cuHed bottoms, button front and
pockets. Available in prints, solids, and stripes. Sizes 5-13.

$4.66

ClOTII/IIC DE/IT.
REALTONE

PAIR

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

36QT.
COLD PACK
CANNER

All new summer fashions .
Roll sleeves. Many styles to
choose from . Solid and
prints. Sties 32-38. ,

IIOUSIWAif I"T.

ENTERPRISE ALUMINUM

CANNER

PKG.

HECK'S REG. 69' PKG.

IIOGEWAIE _,T.

HECK'S lEG.

SHIRTS

52(

"SIIOP IECI'S FOI All YOII o•iiG lEEDS"

FOOD
BLANCHER

ROLL SLEEVE

One size fits all in these

Hetk's
lleg. &amp;r

1

I

CHOICE

COLUMBIAN
. C,OLD PACK

LADIES'

QUARTS•..71N PACK
PINTS...121N PACK

5 ~OZEN

~

/IOUSIWAIE IJ"T.

$2.21

NYLON

HICK'S
REG.

I
.... I""'

LU,~i·~

r

HICIC'S ·
lEG. ao,.

LADIES'

. ~

.17( BOX

SJS&amp;

HECK'S REG.

$2.94

HELMET

••
•

'itsut···. .

.and Maize.

Cl.9111111f 19T.

~..:

1 PIECE LIDS

and lace and -em. broidered trim ac. cent the be a uly of

$2.99

CANNING JARS
STANDARD QUARTS

,.

pajmamos.
· Choose from colors
of Blue, Pink ~ Mint,

$2.38

lAnlNG

BOX

1 style

$·

·BASEBALL

37~

PLASTIC.
FREEZER
CONTAINERS

MASON

these "baby doll"

•

HECK'S
lEG.

BABY
DOLL
PAJAMAS

•The sleeveless style

HECK'S REG.

Heck's
l . .ular

JAR CAPS &amp; LIDS
2 PIECE CAPS

lADIES•

·. LADIES'
'

. .

�---··. . .

..

' .

$11'1.

•

f"' rr
I

·~TIIeDIIIIJIIIaliDel,~,O.;July7,1971

.

.

~

.

.

Bargains, Bargains and M()r~ · Bargains ]n The sentinel Classifieds-_

IRUC:f BIOSSAJ

Nixon Strategy on
Viet Paper Caper
By llRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)

From the beginnin~. President Nixon has been ,aCting

.

. WANT AD
tNFo_RMATtoN-

5P.M.o!'::!:~:.N~;bllcatlon
Monday QeadllntU,m.

ca~~uatlon &amp; Corr~lons

wut be~~:\'~~t,~r~~,r.:;m· f~r

®.

• •.

2 SIIIIS
. Of : ,
·

QUALITY :

L-erav
nn• •J

11:..
(o
IIIVfOr

•

•

·GbT A

r---:--r--------''----~:0.~----------,'----:-~---'1

·,8 usmes
· • · -8 ·Se~
no~,
. · .. ~ ~
-·
·. .

· ···

'f.·..

. .

REGULATIONS
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
The ·Publl&amp;her r...rves the
1966 BUICK WILDCAT CPE.
$1195
MOBILE HOME BUY.ER$1
right to edit or reject any ads ,
Automatic trans., ·power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w
,40 Minulfl of Y.ow Time Con Well Bt 11M ,_t Profltoblt
deemed objectional. The .
!Ires, radio, heater, whllellnlsh, clean Interior. Reg . price
Tlmt You Ever Spent,
. .
publlsherwlllnotberesponslble .
S1395.oo.
·
er
· ·
M'l
d
·Sa
for more ' than one Incorrect.
• ·
lYe 36
1 es an
ve ·A Bundle I
insertion. . ·
IJ67 FORQ LTO .
.
.
$1595
.
.
,._
.
RATES
4 Door Seda~, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl Interior, blk. ., ' !«'WINSOR
iCHA"'PION
' •• AUO
For Want Ad Servl.ce
vlnyl.roof, maroon finish, radio, new w·w tires, v.a with
,:•BUDDY
· ir)IAN DYKE
OOUBLE..:wtDI!S
'5 cents par.INordon~ lnlertion
automa)lt trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Minimum Ctlarge75c . ,
Special. " _ __
.•
SEE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW · ·
1969 CHEVROLET
' ,
• 12 cents per· word . three
consecutive Insertions.. . . ,
,·· .
·
· · .
··
· mu
PARKERSBURG
MOIILI
HOMES, -INC.
18 cents per , word' SIK cor• , Townsman·2-,seat wagon, dark blue, black vinyl Int., 2·
.
.
• •
.
secutive insertions. · ~
· ,: ' ,01ay tall gatewjth elec. Wind""(, )I.e; auto., P.S.• like new
MEMORIAL BIUOGJ TRAFFIC CIRCLE .
.
· 25 Per Cent Discount on paid ' , w-s· w, ,radio, &lt;!.ean &amp;.ready to lrav.el, ' . ·
'·
.
PARKERSI!'URG, W.VA •. · . ,
ads and ads pald 1wllhln 10 days.
• •
'.
'· ' · · •

CA~~~~~J:::Ks

Pome,ro.y

or Co.

·A,t:_.
Ut\t

For

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

. IS A
8ASEBALL
WIDDER?

"THAT'S FLATLAND
TALK FER
CHECKER
WI DOER

•"·

I ~·~
;

.

:4•·•••
.. :-·_
,;

'

-

,-.

11M Yeur' Siimw
1:.

r...iitionine ·.

1111 _.,.
ln. linll__

'''

"'•

and
.
·
R..-l'lo'"..,.

•

--p

'

__....,

..

from conflicting motives in his response to pubhcallon
"
Plus
of the Pentagon paper,.
• .
" .
~ 11 1
He felt a need to · defend the government's authonty
_AI .
Ports
lri a situation where some breach of the law evidently had
alre~y occurred, and further violations-perhaps at cost
to liational security-were possible.
.
PHONE m-2143 ,.
· Yet, to the e~tent this course put him, as one source
suggests, "In bed with LBJ," he sought mo:,ans of separ!lt·
ing bimseU from the Johnson era.
Nixon alone decided the administration should move
Mot
..
$1.50 for so word minimum.
In the courts against the newspapers which published
Each additional word 2c. · ·
OP.£M I!VE$; 8:00 P.M.
• ·
classified documents on U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
.
BLIND
ADS
·
.....,,I!.ROY
""10
He Is convinced that certain materials in the war study
STOP PAYING RENT and own. a -house' witll.
Additional 25c Charge per ' '·
-"""
; ""
.
do truly affect U.S. security. This view i~ held 'even thou~h
Advertisement.
· · L-...,..-T""---,------~------~--~
your rent money. .
.
. · ·· ·
·
nothing published thus far seems ser10usly to have m-.
O.FFICE HOURS
volved that security.
_
.
.
.
Sale
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally, Lost
But the President had somethmg else on h•s mmd. A
8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon·
·coAL. limestone . Excelsior
Saturday.
man with some awareness of his thinking told me : A
LOST-EXTRA l,rge tom . cal .Salt Works, E. Main St., " -GUARANT~ED­
few years ago the late President Eisenhower advised the
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
,
missing in Reedsville area.
See
·
Phone 992-2094
In Memory
.
4-9-lfc
new president not to do anything that would gravely reWhile and dark gray, white
Tom Crow
feet, .black on hlncf;legs. While
Daie ·Dutton
·
flect upon Johnson, .
IN LOVING memory of Riley S.
Home
&amp;
Auto
BLACK
raspberries,
Roy
992-258p
Eisenhower's point was that there is a heed for . con992-2534
Manley •1\'hO passed away 7 ring around neck. with
Open
8
Tll5
Proffitt.
Phone
843·2281..
flea collar on him. Reward for
Pomeroy
years ago July 7, 1964; Seven
tinuity in presidential administration, that one pres1dent
Middleport
6-27-91c
Monday lhru Saturday
return.
Bill
Bailey,
Box
14,
'
years
of
walling
and
longing
· should not seek to enhance his position by undercutting
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
for
a
glimpse
of
one
we
loved
or discrediting the man who went before him.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.
~=========-;=====~~~~
6·29-101c
dear; things just aren't the
46 ACRES, 10 x 60 trailer with 1========~=~~My source is persuaded that Ike's words loomed large
same without you . Oh, Daddy,
tipout. Old vacant house, lake .r
for the · President as he chose to move in the courts,
we loved
so dear. I am Notice
and eKCellent camp site. 2
POMERO.Y
n m~
'
..l
·
despite the prosP-":t of losing there.
sure tha God made no ;,WE CURL Up And Dye For miles from Middleport. Phone
o
·
' ·•
~.....:,.~
mistake when He look you
Tbe President s aides say today he fully understood he .
You," Helen's Beauty Shop Is 992-2362.
HOME &amp; AUTO
f'..omplete
oilllliiiMI
.
home to rest. He needed
might also 'tose something politically by going that route.
pleaSed to announce Marsha
another angel there with a
·25-tfc
992-2094
Remodeling ' I
Pugh and Margaret Bally has - -- --:--:,6-:
He expected a massing of the nation's press against him,.
kind and loving face. Long
joined our staff. Now open 2 HORSE tandem wheel trailer,
and he got it. The tricky ground of freedom of the press is
E,
Main
Pome
'
roy
Kitchens, Bolhs ·
606
dar,s and nights you bore your
daily, ~onday thru Saturday,
electric
brakes,
Frank
B.
Roonr
Additions
not a likely arena for presidential victory.
pa n, but lrled to be very
8:30 to 5:00. Tuesday and
NiXon felt compelled, nevertheless, to make the fight.
Wilson,
Brownell
Ave.,
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
And
Patios
braVe. AnCthe sadness . we
Friday evenings by ap ~iddlepotl. Phone 992-3742.
Baclihoe And . ·
At .the same time, however, .he was always deep)y consaw in your eyes told us you
pointment only. Aok for your
7-7-6tc
And
Endloader Work
had to go. We miss your love
cerned over boW to separate himsel( from J.,BJ.
favorite operator - Terrie,
and kindness as we struggle
On June 21, a secret strategy meeting of the President's
Marsha, Margaret, Helen. INTERNATIONAL Cub Cadet 7
FURNITURE
along life's road. You afways
Septic Tanks
Phone now 9'12-2890.
advisers dealt heavily wltb.. this problem. Domi~ant was
H.P. tractor with 38 in. rotary
took lime to listen to our
From the
· Truck or\
And
Leach Beds.
7-7-61p
mower, good condition, see or Stop In and See Our
pqlitically acute Defense Secretary Laird's v1ew that
problems, great or small, and
Bulldozer
to the
call Marvin Keebaugh, 992· Floor Display • .
"getting out from under" was vitaL
the advice you carefully gave ~K:-:0:-:$:-:C:-:.0:-:T:-:-:K-os_m_e-:t:-1c-s-.-:J uIy • 5342
,
Smallest
Heater.
Core.
till
6
p.m.
After
6
p.m.
The fruits of that and other discussions quickly showed.
us made them seem to grow
August special, Kare KonChester 985-3913.
very small. Oh, Daddy, we all
Laird Said the Pentagon WOUld begin declassifying dOCU·
dltlon oil ss. value now only
7-7-31c
INTERIOR; eKierlor decorator . .
Dl
are so lonely and anxiously
Pets
Sale.
meilts Involved in the published Vietnam study. The Pres·
and barn roots. Phone 742·
· ~II n · ·
52.50.
Distributor,
S.
Brown.
~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;.,
walling our lr·lp to join you
Phone 992·5113.
ident said he woUld send the whole . bundle, still on a
5683.
·
· · &lt;· PII.--992-~143, · _ .•·!~&lt;». ""~r
POODLE puppies- AKC small
once more In Heaven. And we
6-20-JOic - ....
··
7-4-lfc
c~d basis, to the Congress.
black
or
white
females
,
know you'll be waiting for us
7
champion pedigree, per These moves do not mean Nixon feels the lid should
when they open the beautiful -:S"'A"'v=E-:-:U:=P-t"'o_o_n_e"'h"'a 1f:-.-=Bring
manent
shots $75 . Coolville O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER- ,.....-:-~-----~
be off altogether. He expects Congress to handle the
gales. Sadly missed by loved
your sick TV to &lt;:;huck's TV
667,6214!
VICE. Phone 9ofl-4551.
Roofing
materials judiciously. The Pentagon probably will stop
ones.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
5-30-tfc
I
7·7·61p
7-7-llp
Pomeroy.
• ,
short of releasing everything.
Wolt
4-23-lfc
01 great concern is the volume dealing with America's
Auto
Sales
diplomatic exchanges; ·Paul Warnke, Johnson era De·
Real Estate For Sale
Business Opportunities
TO THE thief or •thieves who
· 1966 CHEVY convertible, good
fenie official presently a dove, says it would be harmful
12'
.
•
14'
·
•
24'
o WIDE
stole the flowers from
condition, 8 cyl., new shocks HOUSE stor,y and half, 6 rooms,
IS YOUR FUTURE
to publillh major elements from this chapter. The New
Painting
William Henly Landers'
bath, Rutland. Phone 742·
and
tires. Phone 992·2622.
WORTH 8c?
York Times said in print it does not possess that particugrave
and
Jane
Landers'
5613.
7-~·JIC
_NEW &amp; OLD WORK
CAN you · visualize . yourself
grave, go back and try for the
6-25-lfc
lar 'VOlume.
operating your own spare
other three and get your
1970 MAVERICK, 3-speed,
At this moment, neither the President nor any adviser
time business? Can you see
All Wolllttr Roofing &amp;
reward. I will give $100 for
radio $1,495. 1965 Ford
kJ\ows how he i_s going to emerge from the Pentagon
construction co.
yourself stocking delicious
GalaKie, automatic, factory
any Information from anyone
1220 Washington Blvd.
DEXTER, O. 45726
products such as Nabisco,
·
. · ·
,
papers caper.
who can tell me, Evelyn
air, nice $595. Coolville 667PHONE 742·1945
Belpre, Ohio
Slim J)m and Kraft Snack
· It is an easr, guess the disclosures will hei~hten voters
Landers, who they were or
6214.
PackaOes
on
your
.
D~
'Insured-Experienced
Impatience w1th the war, but the President ~1ves no early
7-7-61p
was. Phone 992-5836.
608' East Mlln
automatic merchandising
BUILDING lots or trailer
Work Guaranteed
sign be will speed up troop withdrawals. It 1s also a good
7-~-3tp
POMEROY
roule?
Also
enjoy
the
thrill
of
space.
On
new
water
line,.
19
~
5
0D
:-:
0
:-:
D
:-::
G:-::E
:4:-d:-oo-r-:Sed-:-:;an
,
guess that general credibility of government, Including
making money 24 hours a day REDUCE safe and fast with school bus route, on county
excellent condition. Phone 949 · MIDDLEPORT - I story WILl DO roofing, painting,
that of the Nixon regime, has suffered fresh reverses.
while working on your regular
Gobese tablets and E-Vap road 25, one mile west of 3221.
frame, 6 rooms, J large
plumbing and carpenter
Despite this Nixon and· company comfort themselves
job, .If you can see all this and
Chester, Ohio. If interested,
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
bedroom• with closets, bath,
7-2-61c
work; also tearing down old
that they may'come out all right. They count on the pub·
are willing ·lo make a
call
Chester
985-4197.
6-27-301p
large front porch, nice
buildings. Phone 9'12·7326 or
moderate Investment- · to
lie remembering that the papers focus on past events,
'· .... . '" -~' ,. ~ .. 6-30-61p
In
kitchen,
level
lot
cabinets
742-4979.
.
.
achiev' whatever earning· GUN SHOOT,,· Forked Run
j E a n d administrations. They_ figure that, with
SOx90,
storage
building,
ALL
a'
Y
EA
,
R
OLD
Paloml~o
l'(lare,
1961
PL
Y~OUTH,
$100.
Contact
7-6·121C
1
5
y.op set fo~ yourself,
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
ari 1
or. two, DemOCTats will'll~hurt most. ..
I' goals
_l
IN · E·XCE'LLEN,T "COit• ' "ilaifl!'d with saddle, bridle' and
~=~d'i~.!~l"e~r;ry&lt; ' l!,a~han· DITION.
writ~ Dalworth · Marketing
11. 12 noor\~" ~ '
July
A , thOugh, nobody really knowS'now whether Nixon
JUST
$9,600.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Corp., 3318 E. Highway 67,
·&amp;lanket. Phone 742·5865,
7·4-3tp
7-7-3tc
will be cblelfy remembered for sending tl)e l'apers to
Reasonable rates. Ph. 6.16-6782,
Mesquite, TeKas 751~9 . We - - , - - - - - Harrisonville.
DEXTER- Lot 1SOKI00, 2 story
Congress, or for trying to suppress their publication in
Gallipolis. John Russell,
welcome Investigation.
6-30-6lc '67 CHEVELLE Malibu 2door, 1 frame, 4 nice bedrooms, batl1,
REDUCE excess fluids with
Owner &amp; Operator.
7·7-Jtp
the newspapers.
Fluldex, $1.69. Lose weight :::-::-:-:-:---:-:-:- local owner, V-8 automatic, large front porch, NEW en5-I:J.lfc
CLEAN
carpels
the
save
and
new
tires,
eKcellent
•
condlllon.
safely with DeK-A-Diet. 98
closed side porch, large barn
SET YOUR own hours, good
safe way with Blue Lustre.
Phone 992-2084 or 992-7098.
cents at Nelson Drugs.
2 garages, large storage READY -MIX
CONCRETE
earnings ,first year; operate
Rent electric shampooer $1.
7-•·lfc wllh
7-7-llp
building,
NEW forced air
delivered right to your
Baker Furniture company.
part or full time, start with
project. Fast and easy. Free
6-30-61c 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . furnace. ALL FOR $8,900.
minimum investment, men 'or "Y"A"R"D-S'A"L'E"".-S'-a"tu:::r"'da::::y:-,-,July
10,
10
a
.m.
lo
4
p.m.,
coins,
hardtop, power steering,
estimates . Phone 992-3286.
women, age no barrier,
Avon bottles, dishes, iron tea 8 X 35 Goegleln Ready-MIK Co.,
I BEDROOM
power brakes, air, 18,000 POMEROY- 2 nlce ·bullding
husband and wife can work
on quiet street, one house
kettle,
some
antiques,
misc.
housetrailer, 2 school buses,
miles. Excellent condition . lois
logether. Leisurely, dignified
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30•· tre- - -.
that needs remodeling,
Items. 511 Park St.. ~id54 passenger for campers.
Phone 992-2288.
work . Retirement Income
6·3-lfc EXCELLENT NEIGHdleporl.
•
Bill Cozart, Racine, Ohio.
possible. Phone 992-2533.
BORHOOO.
7-7-31c
Phone
949-2322.
Alii'OMDBt LE Insurance
7-7-6tc
$7,000.
7-~ · 31c
cancelled?
Lost
your
By RAY CROMLEY
operator's license? Call 9'12·
For Sale
Real Estate
Sale
POMI!RO'I' - 2 bedrooms,
Help Wanted
2966.
1964 PL YMDUTH 9-passenger UNCLAIMED fr~lsht. New zig ~o ACRE FAR~. uoom house NEW bath NEW forced air
WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
6-15-lfo
zag console sewing machines,
station wagon, good con EARN at home addressing
furnace, nice kitchen, .22 acre
with
bath
.
Outbuildings
and
nationally
advertised
brands.
"Because the war has gone on so long and our forces
•nvelopes. Rush slamped self- dition . Homelite chain saw,
of ground, located on quiet GOLF lessi&gt;ns and club repair.
pond. Phone 614-662-3448.
To be sold for storage and
28" bar . Phone 992-2889.
have been worn down, a number of our party members.
street,
IN EXCELLENT
addressed envelope. The
"
J.7-3tp
John Teaford.
freight costs_. Price 136.20.
7-1-5tc
cadre and combatants have become reluctant to make
CONDITION
ON THE IN·
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
6-30-121c
Call 9'12-7085.
- - - -- -·
SIDE. A STEAL AT JUST
sacrlllces. They fear protracted war. 'rhey lack determiDavisburg , ~lch ., 48019.
7
-~
·
51c
FRI&lt;IIPAIRE flair stove,
nation."
NEW CUSTO~ built home, S5,30Q.
SEPTIC tanko cleaned. Miller
7-2-301p
coprrtone, eye level oven, ---:-:-:-::--~­
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
three bedrooms, ..carport,
TO BUY OR SELL
So wrote the Communist acting comlnander of a major
pul out burners . Set of STEREO-RADIO console,
662-3035.
utility
room,
In
Rustle
Hills
CALL
us
maple stereo with AM-FM
Maylag washer and dryer,
war zone just north of Saigon about the middle of last
2-12-llc
Addition. No down payment,
radio deluxe floating turn·
white. Phone 992-5765.
year. The situation is now worse. He went on:
low interest rates, long term.
HENRY CLELAND
table, 4 speaker sound
7-7-6tc
"The food supply has improved. But the civilian prose·
. NEIGLER Construction. For
Phone 992-3454 It no answer
REAL TOR
system, 4 speed turntable.
building or remodeling your
lyting task is . . . ineffecllve. Motivation of the masses
SB1.46.
Use
our
Balance
Ntrw 1971 zig-zag sewing
call 992-5455.
Office m-2259
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
to contribute to the Revolution has brought few' results ...
budge! terms. Free gill with
7· 1·11 C
machine In original' factory
Residence H2-2~
Racine, Ohio.
every purchase. Phone 992· _I!_U_IL~D-1-N-:G-n-ew_h_o_m_e.,.;:..o.:.ld.:.:e.:.r
carton . Zig -zag to make
"The revolulionary forces have been worn down, par·
7-7-61c
7-31-lfc
7085.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
ticularly due to the loss of a number of key cadre at dis·
home
for
sale.
Large
two·
monograms, and make fancy
tricl and village levels and the -slow recruitment of addi·
RALPH'S CARPET - Up·
story, shade trees, on 1 A. Rt.
designs with just the twist of a
tional personnel."
holstery Cleaning Service.
7 in Tuppers Plains. Needs
single dial . Lefl In layaway WALNUT slereo, dual volume
Free estimates. , Phone
and
conlrol
,
4
speed
lnlermiKed
some
repairs
but
nice
.
Priced
This man's sentiments are typical of the thoughts found
and never been used. Will sell
Gallipolis
646-0296.
changer,
4
speaker
sound
on
Inspection.
Phone
667·3956.
tor
only
$47
cash,
or
credit
in North Vietnamese and Viet Cong documents captured
3·12-lfc
with
AM·
F~
radio.
7-4-61p
svslem,
lerms
available.
Phone
992over the past 12 months. They show growing discourage·
Balance
$69.87.
Use
our
-:-:-:--:--:-:--:---:::-:56~1.
ment with the military war in South Vietnam .
SEWING MACHINES... Repalr
budget lerms. Free gift with 5 ROOM brick home with bath,
7-7-61c
Phone 992·2156
service, all makes, 9'12·228-C,
But there is another recurrent theme in these docu·.paneling and wall to wall
every purchase. Call 992-7085 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
7-4-Stc
carpeting
.
Phone
992-2540
or
ments-an increasing conviction that Hanoi's propaganda
ELECTROLUX va c uum
Broker
Authorized Singer Sales and
For Rent
992-3465.
war in the. United States 'will make victory possible In the
cleaner complete with at- - - - - - - -110 Mechanic Street
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
7·4-7tc
12' WIDE, 2 bedroom , fur - tachments, cordwinder and 2 RIDING horses, phone 9~9 end.
Pomer~y, Ohio
3-29-lfc
nished,
utilities
paid.
Phone
paint
spray.
Used
but
In
like
3196.
One document is a most remarkable North Vietnamese
992-7384 or 992-7133.
new condilion. Pay $34.45
7- ~·61c
FOR SALE, House, 6 rooms and POMEROY - 7 rooms, 1'1&gt;
~EAT CUTTING.
7-4-31c cash or budge I plan available. - - - - - - -- order. Attached were these instructions: " This directive
bath, 1651 Lincoln Hgts., full
baths, gas fired hot water CUSTOM
Dick
Vaughan,
phone 9'12·
Phone 992-5641.
basement, garage, wall to
is classified Absolute Secret. It will be disseminated only
heat. Full basement, nice
LOGAN FIRE and safety
~T"'R-:A"'IL;-;:-E;:;R-.'B"'r:::o:::w:::n-:'s:-;Ti':r7.aII e r
3374,
Dale
Little,
phone 9'12·
7-7-6tc
wall c&lt;~rpetlng In living room,
kitchen and TV room. Double. 6346.
down to the District Party Committee. It is not permitted
equipment. Sales and service.
Court, Minersville, Ohio. --~--:--:garage. Asking $20,000.00.
fireplace In den . Call 992-3970.
to reproduce it or transport it . . . " The order was deAll lypes and sizes of fire
Phone 992-3324.
6·23-JOIC
1964 G~C till cab lruck, 18 fl . extinguishers.
6·30-61c
Special
prices
signed for hard-core party officials, not for the public .
7-J.6tc
aluminum produce body wilh on extinguish~rs for boats,
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one, AWNINGS, storm doors and
Though this document was signed a year and a half
a job if wanted. Charles campers, homes. 'Also HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His .,
N
- -IC_E_ 8-K3-5.....,.tr-a"'ll-er-w"'lt"'h-t77'ipout
only 5 yea" old. Has 2
w 1n dow s , c a r p or Is ,
Harris . Phone 843-2693, · discount prices on other sizes.
ago, it$ importance is that after running through the
•Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
bedroom, large panel~d
marquees, aluminum siding
extension, 1 bedroom and air;
Porlland .
Communist failures, it outlines step·by·step ·how the " dip·
10-25-lfc
living, dining, kitchen and
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
·
conditioning. Phone 992-6452 .
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
7-7-4tc 992-3821. Owner Dwight
6-25-lfc
lomatic" war in the United States will finally make possales representative. For free
bath. Garage. Only $6,500.00.
HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights.
And an 8 room older home,
estimates, phone Charles
sible a North Vietnamese military victory . Some noteS• cT::R:-:A:-:1:L::E::R:-L-:O:::T:::S, ::B-:ob-:,s-::Mobile _ F_R_E_E- -F-R-:E-:E--::F-:-REE! Logan .
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
bath, gas heal. For $4,500.00.
6-16-30tc
from that outline follow :
.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse , Swivel rocker or recliner
2196.
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
"The war ... :lis being) smoothly coordinated with our
Ohio . 992-2951.
chair with a purchase of $300 ) - - - - - - -- - - - j
5-26-lfc RACINE -7 room older home,
5-27-lfc
political and diplomatic struggles and the antiwar move·
with large bath and kitchen.
4-2-tfc worth of living room fur·
ni1ure. This week only! Used
Dining room, gas .forced air BACKHOE AND oOZ!R work.
ments of the American &lt;people! . These. movements !are
3 BEDROOM brick home .
TRAILER
SPACE
on
old
Rt.
33,
Furniture'·
2
bedroom
suites,
furnace,
concrete drive .
becoming I increasingly effective , and have weakened the
Choice location In Mlddlepcrt.
36" X23" X .009
Septic tanks l~stalled . George
'
h
mlle
north
of
new
Meigs
1
set
bunk
beds
,
I
Garage
and
carport. Asking
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Vietnam•zation , . . (lQlicy of 1President) Nixon ...
I Bill! Pullins, Phone 992-2618.
High School. Phone 992-2941.
refrigerator , metal bed $12,500.00.
Phone
992-5523
after
4
p.m
.
6-25-tfC
"On the diplomatic front , we . , . stepped up the U.S.
J.S.Ifc sleaHs. Parsons Furniture,
5-7-lfc
and world people's inovement. demanding that Nixon
- -- - - - - -- located 2 miles norlh ol Sil•er
COUNTRY ESTATE -new • HARRISON'S TV AND ANFURNISHED and unfurn ished
Bridge on Slate Route7. Open
quickly withdraw troops from Vietnam and abandon the
spacious bedrooms with walk·
2~ ACRE farm Long Bottom,
TENNA SERVlCE . Phone
apartments . Close to school.
trom 9 to 5.
Thleu-Ky· Khiem 1group I ...
In closets . 3 sets of sliding
with or without tarm'
992-2522.
7-7-3tc
Phc&gt;ne 992 ·5~34 .
USEOOFFSET.PLATES
glass doors to patio and front
machinery . House with 3
6-10-lfc
,
10-18-tfc
pbrch. 2 full baths. hot water
HAVE
bedrooms,
dining
room,
living
Notl¢e ·
LEGAL
NOTICE
7-Y:IAR
OLD
palomino
mare,
heat, family room with
room, 11/:z baths, enclosed
MANY USES
·GuN SHOOT, Sunday, July 11 , 1
WHEEL alignment
genlle . broke lor riding .
back porch, wall to wall · tlreplace, beautiful kitchen O'DELL
p.m. at, Racine Gun Club.
located
at
Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Wanted
To
Buy
Phone
992-5090.
with
garbage
disposal.
dish
LEGAL NOTICE
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
7-7-3tc
Complete
front end service,
7-7-6tc
washer and cook units. 65 foot
There w i ll be a spe ci a l
awning, storm windows and
r
di shes,
tune
up
and
brake service.
meeting of S~lem Town ship ANTIQUES :
basement, copper plumbing, 2
storm doors . City water.
&amp;for $1 .00
Wheels
·
balanced
elec- .
telephones , clocks, brass YARD SALE on Larkin St ..
Trustees Wednesday .· July r.t ,
car
garage,
15
acres
of
Selling due to ill health. Phone
work
Ironically
.
1971 ar 8:00p .m . for the purpose
All
beds , lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill.
Rutland. Friday and Satur1
woodland.
$37,500.00.
614-985-3938.
of setting up the Budget for 1972.
guaranteed.
Reuonable
Phone 992·3403.
day.
6-23·301p
rates. Phcine '992·3213.
7·1-301p
7-7-3tc
·
ITEM: Jack Kane.
MIDDLEPORT
5
rooms,
Alma Smith
6-26-:lotc
bath, floor furnace, 2 porches.
ou somehow get the
Salem Townsh ip Clerk
SIX
ROD~ house, bath, tull
TELEPHONES,
brass
beds,
NO REtRET, the best yet , Blue
Level lot. Only $4,000.
(7)7.11
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
ling he has thought
ESTIMATE on general '
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
Lustre
cleans carpets
jusl walking distance from
' Chester water FREE
remodeling, roofing ond
etc. Write M. D: Miller, Rl . 4,
beautifully . Rent electric
22
ACRESon
bout whal he's
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur system. • bedroom home, painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
\ LEGAL NOTICE '
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ed Hedrick, 2.137 Wadsworth
r!nt with you. Your
Th.t . Board of TruSII!'t$ of
4-27-lfc
'
niture Company.
bath, furnace, bern, and a.m. IQ 6 p.m.
Drive, Columbus. Qhio, phone
Oli ve lOWMh tp , Me igs County,
IIIII II right.
1·1-61 c
6-9-JOic
garage. Space for 1 mobile
Ohlo, subm Its Its ~ pn uaf Budget TOP PRICE on -¢J_seng and
BUILDING LOTS for sale . . 237-4334, Columbus. 5-9-lfc
homes with septic. tank. ~~---~~;_~~
for pubnc inspection at thlf
Golden Seal . yellow roOT. Seal VIOLIN,' J,•.size, bow and case
Asking only 56.000.00,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Newly approved in restricted ----~-~-...:!.:=
oflict or the Trustees ThurSdby .
tops and slem bone drY . clean
· Complete Service
housing
district
.
Near
Rock
LARGE
house,
w,
acres,
all
sss.
Ironer.
excellent
conJutv 15, 1971 df 8 o'clock P.M . ' no dirl. All rools. Bill Ballev.
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Phone96'1-3121
•
utililjes, $1,000. Phone 992·
dllion cost $350 soli $35 . Springs . Phone 992-6887 after
P.O. ' Bo• 1•, Second Street,
ASSOCIATE
Racine, Ohio
5 p. m., or on weekends.
6021.
Ada Blss•il. Clerk
Coolville 667-6214 .
Reedsville, Ohio mn.
992-lnl992·2371
Crill
Brodford
(7)1 , 11
·• 6-17-lfc
7-7-6tp
~Hie
7-1-JOtc
5-1-lfc
7-Hfc
&gt; - - - - - - - - - l,;:-

@)
.

LETTER FROM
COUSIN ~)/~ELBA JANE
IN TH' FlATLANDS AN'
SHE SAID SHE'S A
BASEBALL
WIDDER

ON AIRTH

6,;98 ·

•.

••, •

\

alaettnar•

:· ·

·WANT ANEW HOUSE?

. NO DOWN .PAYMEt(f ·.
GREEN ·HILL HOMES, INC.

ZIG · ZAGGE.D 1700

CROOKED
MILES!!

f!/D

l NEN!OR F:liAI.I'ZIOI? HOW
lf!O!;!' 'TWO HAVE' IN COM.oi\ON

.,.;F!-AANT!!- WE. HAIN'T

-1'0'1700

Ponieroy

~

l

CROOKE.D FEI!.T-AN'
AH IS POOPED!!'

~

i

~

i

,-OH
· _N
·. sov-u•Nt.NRY ,' EXPER·•ENCED

rou

'

742-4902

For

ArnMAIS

fi
i
•

\

WllffliE WINKLE

-. '

l''

IF l COULD ONLY GET AWAY
FRON\ MOM FOR A NIGHT
1\110, ID TRAIL

® POOR WENDY. SHE'S RUNNING&gt;
HEReCLF RAGGED TRYING&gt;
10 lAND A JOB IN lHE ·

I.

WENDY AND FIND

Ot!T v..HAT 5HE$
REALLY UP TO!

· lHEATER!

. .......

·~' '
~

• • , .. ,,., ,,,' 1&lt; ' "

,

~.--

&amp;Carpenter

- -- - - -

Spoutin.. Roof

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

,.

.' '.

Don't 40u have work
to do in tne qaraqe,
Sarqe?

Cleland Realty

- - - -- -

he
nt

~

THE BORN LOSER

- -- - - -

~

RAY CROMlEY

'Diplomatic' War
Hanoi Ace-in-Hole

or

h·
TIIERE'S A MAN BEHIND US1 HE ....,KHED
US EiflER THE ICE CREAM f!\RLOR,
PHONED FROM A SIDEWAlK SOOTH ...
f'IIID WHEN VIE LEFT, HE BEGAH IQ
Tell-~!

been

re
of

For

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

L&gt;Ail Y CROSSWORD
ACROSS

~-----~~~--~"'1

HARTFORD

------

bnnch
:W. Spru!C

36. Beauty
d . Bread·

&amp;

map

winner

rrJ o
1

WHAi "THE

u . Etemlly

• eQol, COIJ6iRIC10R'5

&amp;I&amp; LOVE Afli6Jf'.

iURNEt' OUT 1t1 1'1:.

28. Frolic

211.-clOth
rt. Polo
30.Thalland
of old
32. Shrill

lll!IIUf.'

~'"":::=_

..

lncrodlent
315. -Roy
37.Churclllll

TilE PlAY
fNPS; THE

(AIItfl'n IOiftOnowt

.n,n

CRITICSlfAVE
TO WRITB THEIR

Junolol··" PANSY IAIGE DEFILE MUCOUS

33. Hoclcey
. name

m1ews-

Now orronce the clreltd 1tt1B1
to form the ourprioe - · •
IUI(eJIN by tbe oiJo¥e euteoft.

=-=-=. .~1;;:(X~l~X;;JA"( XX11 ]"

bt.rk

33. Vamflh

"""11'~1·~ ·..

39. Expected
40. Fleming

I'OllOI'Ifi:&gt;
BY .1\R&amp;. GAR.

41. Bo..Orlty -.
member
48. Record
bolder

46. On the briny
46. Delayed

Sheets

WIIP0/1390

..

(comb.
10. Star'• mlleu 31. Rich
(2 wdll. j
deuert
fonn)
:ZO. PurvieW'
:&amp;1. Refrigerates

Aluminum

2(1
The
Daily Sentinel

as; lAbor union

folded,

8: Get loot!
(2 wcls.j
9. Twine about

-

• ...............
"'"~' "' r...,.,,,,_

y~··.&amp;uw•

29. Un·

ofM-a

leti:er

~----,---,--

For Sale·

alock
28. SpUt

( 2 wdll.l
8. --fright
1. Brother

19. New

l'l'UtS

IIUI'fl

for
Uve-

dellghl
or ordeal

17. 1nthe
past
18.Hebrew

SR.

26. Eruilo-

JOOr'l

further

TEAFORD

0

11. Br&amp;Z!Uan
tapir

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

24.Merry
· mo'tb

3. Cllfet

4. Lwnmox
5. Movie·

12. My•tery
IS. Trepidation'
lf. Wholly
15. Say

·Virgil B.

22. Title
In
India

2. Madison
Ave. toller

8. Next to

DICKT8ACY

I&amp;, Fate

DOWN
1. - LaUn

1. Buddy
• •.Greek
mountain

41.Afford48. PoeUc

oontrac\lon
DAitY CRYPT()QUOTE-Rere's bow to_work It:
AXYDLIIAAXa
Ia LONGI'J:LLOW
. One letter limply ltandl for IUIOther. :In Wo ...,.pia A Ia

CAPI'AJN EASY

uaed for the tbreo L'o, X for the two 0'•, etc. Sln•lo !etten,
11po•trophea, the l&lt;ingtb and fonnaUon ot .the words ""' t11

hfnte. lllach

clsy the eode

lettel'll ""' dltfem&gt;t.

A CIJptopun qaoiaG~SW

PRNW

ROFQ

AQFG

JDOD·

IT MAKES l{()U MNJ•. ,..
OOESN'T IT?811TWUCAN I
6ET ME. NOIII2 1' FRff !!!

UWYQOZ GQ RKQDJ GUQFW QUDYUF
DY

ZQBNFWOC

JOF .HOWRFW
GUQARI'

R

LUDPU

' ZQII:

DY

PQAAQYOZ
QGUWNF .-

SWAHDP'

Yeo.....,., CIJpCo ..ote: IT IS NATURAL FOR ANY MAN
TO BRR, BU'r ONLY FOR A FOOL TO PIJRSIST IN IDS
tt:RROR.-ciCBitO
10 111'1 klal F•t.uru lfyUkat•. 11K'.t

---~··---

I'•

1· 1

.

�---··. . .

..

' .

$11'1.

•

f"' rr
I

·~TIIeDIIIIJIIIaliDel,~,O.;July7,1971

.

.

~

.

.

Bargains, Bargains and M()r~ · Bargains ]n The sentinel Classifieds-_

IRUC:f BIOSSAJ

Nixon Strategy on
Viet Paper Caper
By llRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON &lt;NEA)

From the beginnin~. President Nixon has been ,aCting

.

. WANT AD
tNFo_RMATtoN-

5P.M.o!'::!:~:.N~;bllcatlon
Monday QeadllntU,m.

ca~~uatlon &amp; Corr~lons

wut be~~:\'~~t,~r~~,r.:;m· f~r

®.

• •.

2 SIIIIS
. Of : ,
·

QUALITY :

L-erav
nn• •J

11:..
(o
IIIVfOr

•

•

·GbT A

r---:--r--------''----~:0.~----------,'----:-~---'1

·,8 usmes
· • · -8 ·Se~
no~,
. · .. ~ ~
-·
·. .

· ···

'f.·..

. .

REGULATIONS
ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
The ·Publl&amp;her r...rves the
1966 BUICK WILDCAT CPE.
$1195
MOBILE HOME BUY.ER$1
right to edit or reject any ads ,
Automatic trans., ·power steering &amp; brakes, good w-w
,40 Minulfl of Y.ow Time Con Well Bt 11M ,_t Profltoblt
deemed objectional. The .
!Ires, radio, heater, whllellnlsh, clean Interior. Reg . price
Tlmt You Ever Spent,
. .
publlsherwlllnotberesponslble .
S1395.oo.
·
er
· ·
M'l
d
·Sa
for more ' than one Incorrect.
• ·
lYe 36
1 es an
ve ·A Bundle I
insertion. . ·
IJ67 FORQ LTO .
.
.
$1595
.
.
,._
.
RATES
4 Door Seda~, power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl Interior, blk. ., ' !«'WINSOR
iCHA"'PION
' •• AUO
For Want Ad Servl.ce
vlnyl.roof, maroon finish, radio, new w·w tires, v.a with
,:•BUDDY
· ir)IAN DYKE
OOUBLE..:wtDI!S
'5 cents par.INordon~ lnlertion
automa)lt trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Special,
Minimum Ctlarge75c . ,
Special. " _ __
.•
SEE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW · ·
1969 CHEVROLET
' ,
• 12 cents per· word . three
consecutive Insertions.. . . ,
,·· .
·
· · .
··
· mu
PARKERSBURG
MOIILI
HOMES, -INC.
18 cents per , word' SIK cor• , Townsman·2-,seat wagon, dark blue, black vinyl Int., 2·
.
.
• •
.
secutive insertions. · ~
· ,: ' ,01ay tall gatewjth elec. Wind""(, )I.e; auto., P.S.• like new
MEMORIAL BIUOGJ TRAFFIC CIRCLE .
.
· 25 Per Cent Discount on paid ' , w-s· w, ,radio, &lt;!.ean &amp;.ready to lrav.el, ' . ·
'·
.
PARKERSI!'URG, W.VA •. · . ,
ads and ads pald 1wllhln 10 days.
• •
'.
'· ' · · •

CA~~~~~J:::Ks

Pome,ro.y

or Co.

·A,t:_.
Ut\t

For

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
15.55

. IS A
8ASEBALL
WIDDER?

"THAT'S FLATLAND
TALK FER
CHECKER
WI DOER

•"·

I ~·~
;

.

:4•·•••
.. :-·_
,;

'

-

,-.

11M Yeur' Siimw
1:.

r...iitionine ·.

1111 _.,.
ln. linll__

'''

"'•

and
.
·
R..-l'lo'"..,.

•

--p

'

__....,

..

from conflicting motives in his response to pubhcallon
"
Plus
of the Pentagon paper,.
• .
" .
~ 11 1
He felt a need to · defend the government's authonty
_AI .
Ports
lri a situation where some breach of the law evidently had
alre~y occurred, and further violations-perhaps at cost
to liational security-were possible.
.
PHONE m-2143 ,.
· Yet, to the e~tent this course put him, as one source
suggests, "In bed with LBJ," he sought mo:,ans of separ!lt·
ing bimseU from the Johnson era.
Nixon alone decided the administration should move
Mot
..
$1.50 for so word minimum.
In the courts against the newspapers which published
Each additional word 2c. · ·
OP.£M I!VE$; 8:00 P.M.
• ·
classified documents on U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
.
BLIND
ADS
·
.....,,I!.ROY
""10
He Is convinced that certain materials in the war study
STOP PAYING RENT and own. a -house' witll.
Additional 25c Charge per ' '·
-"""
; ""
.
do truly affect U.S. security. This view i~ held 'even thou~h
Advertisement.
· · L-...,..-T""---,------~------~--~
your rent money. .
.
. · ·· ·
·
nothing published thus far seems ser10usly to have m-.
O.FFICE HOURS
volved that security.
_
.
.
.
Sale
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally, Lost
But the President had somethmg else on h•s mmd. A
8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon·
·coAL. limestone . Excelsior
Saturday.
man with some awareness of his thinking told me : A
LOST-EXTRA l,rge tom . cal .Salt Works, E. Main St., " -GUARANT~ED­
few years ago the late President Eisenhower advised the
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
,
missing in Reedsville area.
See
·
Phone 992-2094
In Memory
.
4-9-lfc
new president not to do anything that would gravely reWhile and dark gray, white
Tom Crow
feet, .black on hlncf;legs. While
Daie ·Dutton
·
flect upon Johnson, .
IN LOVING memory of Riley S.
Home
&amp;
Auto
BLACK
raspberries,
Roy
992-258p
Eisenhower's point was that there is a heed for . con992-2534
Manley •1\'hO passed away 7 ring around neck. with
Open
8
Tll5
Proffitt.
Phone
843·2281..
flea collar on him. Reward for
Pomeroy
years ago July 7, 1964; Seven
tinuity in presidential administration, that one pres1dent
Middleport
6-27-91c
Monday lhru Saturday
return.
Bill
Bailey,
Box
14,
'
years
of
walling
and
longing
· should not seek to enhance his position by undercutting
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
for
a
glimpse
of
one
we
loved
or discrediting the man who went before him.
606 E. Main, Pomeroy,O.
~=========-;=====~~~~
6·29-101c
dear; things just aren't the
46 ACRES, 10 x 60 trailer with 1========~=~~My source is persuaded that Ike's words loomed large
same without you . Oh, Daddy,
tipout. Old vacant house, lake .r
for the · President as he chose to move in the courts,
we loved
so dear. I am Notice
and eKCellent camp site. 2
POMERO.Y
n m~
'
..l
·
despite the prosP-":t of losing there.
sure tha God made no ;,WE CURL Up And Dye For miles from Middleport. Phone
o
·
' ·•
~.....:,.~
mistake when He look you
Tbe President s aides say today he fully understood he .
You," Helen's Beauty Shop Is 992-2362.
HOME &amp; AUTO
f'..omplete
oilllliiiMI
.
home to rest. He needed
might also 'tose something politically by going that route.
pleaSed to announce Marsha
another angel there with a
·25-tfc
992-2094
Remodeling ' I
Pugh and Margaret Bally has - -- --:--:,6-:
He expected a massing of the nation's press against him,.
kind and loving face. Long
joined our staff. Now open 2 HORSE tandem wheel trailer,
and he got it. The tricky ground of freedom of the press is
E,
Main
Pome
'
roy
Kitchens, Bolhs ·
606
dar,s and nights you bore your
daily, ~onday thru Saturday,
electric
brakes,
Frank
B.
Roonr
Additions
not a likely arena for presidential victory.
pa n, but lrled to be very
8:30 to 5:00. Tuesday and
NiXon felt compelled, nevertheless, to make the fight.
Wilson,
Brownell
Ave.,
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
And
Patios
braVe. AnCthe sadness . we
Friday evenings by ap ~iddlepotl. Phone 992-3742.
Baclihoe And . ·
At .the same time, however, .he was always deep)y consaw in your eyes told us you
pointment only. Aok for your
7-7-6tc
And
Endloader Work
had to go. We miss your love
cerned over boW to separate himsel( from J.,BJ.
favorite operator - Terrie,
and kindness as we struggle
On June 21, a secret strategy meeting of the President's
Marsha, Margaret, Helen. INTERNATIONAL Cub Cadet 7
FURNITURE
along life's road. You afways
Septic Tanks
Phone now 9'12-2890.
advisers dealt heavily wltb.. this problem. Domi~ant was
H.P. tractor with 38 in. rotary
took lime to listen to our
From the
· Truck or\
And
Leach Beds.
7-7-61p
mower, good condition, see or Stop In and See Our
pqlitically acute Defense Secretary Laird's v1ew that
problems, great or small, and
Bulldozer
to the
call Marvin Keebaugh, 992· Floor Display • .
"getting out from under" was vitaL
the advice you carefully gave ~K:-:0:-:$:-:C:-:.0:-:T:-:-:K-os_m_e-:t:-1c-s-.-:J uIy • 5342
,
Smallest
Heater.
Core.
till
6
p.m.
After
6
p.m.
The fruits of that and other discussions quickly showed.
us made them seem to grow
August special, Kare KonChester 985-3913.
very small. Oh, Daddy, we all
Laird Said the Pentagon WOUld begin declassifying dOCU·
dltlon oil ss. value now only
7-7-31c
INTERIOR; eKierlor decorator . .
Dl
are so lonely and anxiously
Pets
Sale.
meilts Involved in the published Vietnam study. The Pres·
and barn roots. Phone 742·
· ~II n · ·
52.50.
Distributor,
S.
Brown.
~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;.,
walling our lr·lp to join you
Phone 992·5113.
ident said he woUld send the whole . bundle, still on a
5683.
·
· · &lt;· PII.--992-~143, · _ .•·!~&lt;». ""~r
POODLE puppies- AKC small
once more In Heaven. And we
6-20-JOic - ....
··
7-4-lfc
c~d basis, to the Congress.
black
or
white
females
,
know you'll be waiting for us
7
champion pedigree, per These moves do not mean Nixon feels the lid should
when they open the beautiful -:S"'A"'v=E-:-:U:=P-t"'o_o_n_e"'h"'a 1f:-.-=Bring
manent
shots $75 . Coolville O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER- ,.....-:-~-----~
be off altogether. He expects Congress to handle the
gales. Sadly missed by loved
your sick TV to &lt;:;huck's TV
667,6214!
VICE. Phone 9ofl-4551.
Roofing
materials judiciously. The Pentagon probably will stop
ones.
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
5-30-tfc
I
7·7·61p
7-7-llp
Pomeroy.
• ,
short of releasing everything.
Wolt
4-23-lfc
01 great concern is the volume dealing with America's
Auto
Sales
diplomatic exchanges; ·Paul Warnke, Johnson era De·
Real Estate For Sale
Business Opportunities
TO THE thief or •thieves who
· 1966 CHEVY convertible, good
fenie official presently a dove, says it would be harmful
12'
.
•
14'
·
•
24'
o WIDE
stole the flowers from
condition, 8 cyl., new shocks HOUSE stor,y and half, 6 rooms,
IS YOUR FUTURE
to publillh major elements from this chapter. The New
Painting
William Henly Landers'
bath, Rutland. Phone 742·
and
tires. Phone 992·2622.
WORTH 8c?
York Times said in print it does not possess that particugrave
and
Jane
Landers'
5613.
7-~·JIC
_NEW &amp; OLD WORK
CAN you · visualize . yourself
grave, go back and try for the
6-25-lfc
lar 'VOlume.
operating your own spare
other three and get your
1970 MAVERICK, 3-speed,
At this moment, neither the President nor any adviser
time business? Can you see
All Wolllttr Roofing &amp;
reward. I will give $100 for
radio $1,495. 1965 Ford
kJ\ows how he i_s going to emerge from the Pentagon
construction co.
yourself stocking delicious
GalaKie, automatic, factory
any Information from anyone
1220 Washington Blvd.
DEXTER, O. 45726
products such as Nabisco,
·
. · ·
,
papers caper.
who can tell me, Evelyn
air, nice $595. Coolville 667PHONE 742·1945
Belpre, Ohio
Slim J)m and Kraft Snack
· It is an easr, guess the disclosures will hei~hten voters
Landers, who they were or
6214.
PackaOes
on
your
.
D~
'Insured-Experienced
Impatience w1th the war, but the President ~1ves no early
7-7-61p
was. Phone 992-5836.
608' East Mlln
automatic merchandising
BUILDING lots or trailer
Work Guaranteed
sign be will speed up troop withdrawals. It 1s also a good
7-~-3tp
POMEROY
roule?
Also
enjoy
the
thrill
of
space.
On
new
water
line,.
19
~
5
0D
:-:
0
:-:
D
:-::
G:-::E
:4:-d:-oo-r-:Sed-:-:;an
,
guess that general credibility of government, Including
making money 24 hours a day REDUCE safe and fast with school bus route, on county
excellent condition. Phone 949 · MIDDLEPORT - I story WILl DO roofing, painting,
that of the Nixon regime, has suffered fresh reverses.
while working on your regular
Gobese tablets and E-Vap road 25, one mile west of 3221.
frame, 6 rooms, J large
plumbing and carpenter
Despite this Nixon and· company comfort themselves
job, .If you can see all this and
Chester, Ohio. If interested,
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
bedroom• with closets, bath,
7-2-61c
work; also tearing down old
that they may'come out all right. They count on the pub·
are willing ·lo make a
call
Chester
985-4197.
6-27-301p
large front porch, nice
buildings. Phone 9'12·7326 or
moderate Investment- · to
lie remembering that the papers focus on past events,
'· .... . '" -~' ,. ~ .. 6-30-61p
In
kitchen,
level
lot
cabinets
742-4979.
.
.
achiev' whatever earning· GUN SHOOT,,· Forked Run
j E a n d administrations. They_ figure that, with
SOx90,
storage
building,
ALL
a'
Y
EA
,
R
OLD
Paloml~o
l'(lare,
1961
PL
Y~OUTH,
$100.
Contact
7-6·121C
1
5
y.op set fo~ yourself,
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
ari 1
or. two, DemOCTats will'll~hurt most. ..
I' goals
_l
IN · E·XCE'LLEN,T "COit• ' "ilaifl!'d with saddle, bridle' and
~=~d'i~.!~l"e~r;ry&lt; ' l!,a~han· DITION.
writ~ Dalworth · Marketing
11. 12 noor\~" ~ '
July
A , thOugh, nobody really knowS'now whether Nixon
JUST
$9,600.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Corp., 3318 E. Highway 67,
·&amp;lanket. Phone 742·5865,
7·4-3tp
7-7-3tc
will be cblelfy remembered for sending tl)e l'apers to
Reasonable rates. Ph. 6.16-6782,
Mesquite, TeKas 751~9 . We - - , - - - - - Harrisonville.
DEXTER- Lot 1SOKI00, 2 story
Congress, or for trying to suppress their publication in
Gallipolis. John Russell,
welcome Investigation.
6-30-6lc '67 CHEVELLE Malibu 2door, 1 frame, 4 nice bedrooms, batl1,
REDUCE excess fluids with
Owner &amp; Operator.
7·7-Jtp
the newspapers.
Fluldex, $1.69. Lose weight :::-::-:-:-:---:-:-:- local owner, V-8 automatic, large front porch, NEW en5-I:J.lfc
CLEAN
carpels
the
save
and
new
tires,
eKcellent
•
condlllon.
safely with DeK-A-Diet. 98
closed side porch, large barn
SET YOUR own hours, good
safe way with Blue Lustre.
Phone 992-2084 or 992-7098.
cents at Nelson Drugs.
2 garages, large storage READY -MIX
CONCRETE
earnings ,first year; operate
Rent electric shampooer $1.
7-•·lfc wllh
7-7-llp
building,
NEW forced air
delivered right to your
Baker Furniture company.
part or full time, start with
project. Fast and easy. Free
6-30-61c 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr . furnace. ALL FOR $8,900.
minimum investment, men 'or "Y"A"R"D-S'A"L'E"".-S'-a"tu:::r"'da::::y:-,-,July
10,
10
a
.m.
lo
4
p.m.,
coins,
hardtop, power steering,
estimates . Phone 992-3286.
women, age no barrier,
Avon bottles, dishes, iron tea 8 X 35 Goegleln Ready-MIK Co.,
I BEDROOM
power brakes, air, 18,000 POMEROY- 2 nlce ·bullding
husband and wife can work
on quiet street, one house
kettle,
some
antiques,
misc.
housetrailer, 2 school buses,
miles. Excellent condition . lois
logether. Leisurely, dignified
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30•· tre- - -.
that needs remodeling,
Items. 511 Park St.. ~id54 passenger for campers.
Phone 992-2288.
work . Retirement Income
6·3-lfc EXCELLENT NEIGHdleporl.
•
Bill Cozart, Racine, Ohio.
possible. Phone 992-2533.
BORHOOO.
7-7-31c
Phone
949-2322.
Alii'OMDBt LE Insurance
7-7-6tc
$7,000.
7-~ · 31c
cancelled?
Lost
your
By RAY CROMLEY
operator's license? Call 9'12·
For Sale
Real Estate
Sale
POMI!RO'I' - 2 bedrooms,
Help Wanted
2966.
1964 PL YMDUTH 9-passenger UNCLAIMED fr~lsht. New zig ~o ACRE FAR~. uoom house NEW bath NEW forced air
WASHINGTON &lt;NEAl
6-15-lfo
zag console sewing machines,
station wagon, good con EARN at home addressing
furnace, nice kitchen, .22 acre
with
bath
.
Outbuildings
and
nationally
advertised
brands.
"Because the war has gone on so long and our forces
•nvelopes. Rush slamped self- dition . Homelite chain saw,
of ground, located on quiet GOLF lessi&gt;ns and club repair.
pond. Phone 614-662-3448.
To be sold for storage and
28" bar . Phone 992-2889.
have been worn down, a number of our party members.
street,
IN EXCELLENT
addressed envelope. The
"
J.7-3tp
John Teaford.
freight costs_. Price 136.20.
7-1-5tc
cadre and combatants have become reluctant to make
CONDITION
ON THE IN·
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn,
6-30-121c
Call 9'12-7085.
- - - -- -·
SIDE. A STEAL AT JUST
sacrlllces. They fear protracted war. 'rhey lack determiDavisburg , ~lch ., 48019.
7
-~
·
51c
FRI&lt;IIPAIRE flair stove,
nation."
NEW CUSTO~ built home, S5,30Q.
SEPTIC tanko cleaned. Miller
7-2-301p
coprrtone, eye level oven, ---:-:-:-::--~­
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
three bedrooms, ..carport,
TO BUY OR SELL
So wrote the Communist acting comlnander of a major
pul out burners . Set of STEREO-RADIO console,
662-3035.
utility
room,
In
Rustle
Hills
CALL
us
maple stereo with AM-FM
Maylag washer and dryer,
war zone just north of Saigon about the middle of last
2-12-llc
Addition. No down payment,
radio deluxe floating turn·
white. Phone 992-5765.
year. The situation is now worse. He went on:
low interest rates, long term.
HENRY CLELAND
table, 4 speaker sound
7-7-6tc
"The food supply has improved. But the civilian prose·
. NEIGLER Construction. For
Phone 992-3454 It no answer
REAL TOR
system, 4 speed turntable.
building or remodeling your
lyting task is . . . ineffecllve. Motivation of the masses
SB1.46.
Use
our
Balance
Ntrw 1971 zig-zag sewing
call 992-5455.
Office m-2259
home . Call Guy Nelgler,
to contribute to the Revolution has brought few' results ...
budge! terms. Free gill with
7· 1·11 C
machine In original' factory
Residence H2-2~
Racine, Ohio.
every purchase. Phone 992· _I!_U_IL~D-1-N-:G-n-ew_h_o_m_e.,.;:..o.:.ld.:.:e.:.r
carton . Zig -zag to make
"The revolulionary forces have been worn down, par·
7-7-61c
7-31-lfc
7085.
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
ticularly due to the loss of a number of key cadre at dis·
home
for
sale.
Large
two·
monograms, and make fancy
tricl and village levels and the -slow recruitment of addi·
RALPH'S CARPET - Up·
story, shade trees, on 1 A. Rt.
designs with just the twist of a
tional personnel."
holstery Cleaning Service.
7 in Tuppers Plains. Needs
single dial . Lefl In layaway WALNUT slereo, dual volume
Free estimates. , Phone
and
conlrol
,
4
speed
lnlermiKed
some
repairs
but
nice
.
Priced
This man's sentiments are typical of the thoughts found
and never been used. Will sell
Gallipolis
646-0296.
changer,
4
speaker
sound
on
Inspection.
Phone
667·3956.
tor
only
$47
cash,
or
credit
in North Vietnamese and Viet Cong documents captured
3·12-lfc
with
AM·
F~
radio.
7-4-61p
svslem,
lerms
available.
Phone
992over the past 12 months. They show growing discourage·
Balance
$69.87.
Use
our
-:-:-:--:--:-:--:---:::-:56~1.
ment with the military war in South Vietnam .
SEWING MACHINES... Repalr
budget lerms. Free gift with 5 ROOM brick home with bath,
7-7-61c
Phone 992·2156
service, all makes, 9'12·228-C,
But there is another recurrent theme in these docu·.paneling and wall to wall
every purchase. Call 992-7085 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
7-4-Stc
carpeting
.
Phone
992-2540
or
ments-an increasing conviction that Hanoi's propaganda
ELECTROLUX va c uum
Broker
Authorized Singer Sales and
For Rent
992-3465.
war in the. United States 'will make victory possible In the
cleaner complete with at- - - - - - - -110 Mechanic Street
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
7·4-7tc
12' WIDE, 2 bedroom , fur - tachments, cordwinder and 2 RIDING horses, phone 9~9 end.
Pomer~y, Ohio
3-29-lfc
nished,
utilities
paid.
Phone
paint
spray.
Used
but
In
like
3196.
One document is a most remarkable North Vietnamese
992-7384 or 992-7133.
new condilion. Pay $34.45
7- ~·61c
FOR SALE, House, 6 rooms and POMEROY - 7 rooms, 1'1&gt;
~EAT CUTTING.
7-4-31c cash or budge I plan available. - - - - - - -- order. Attached were these instructions: " This directive
bath, 1651 Lincoln Hgts., full
baths, gas fired hot water CUSTOM
Dick
Vaughan,
phone 9'12·
Phone 992-5641.
basement, garage, wall to
is classified Absolute Secret. It will be disseminated only
heat. Full basement, nice
LOGAN FIRE and safety
~T"'R-:A"'IL;-;:-E;:;R-.'B"'r:::o:::w:::n-:'s:-;Ti':r7.aII e r
3374,
Dale
Little,
phone 9'12·
7-7-6tc
wall c&lt;~rpetlng In living room,
kitchen and TV room. Double. 6346.
down to the District Party Committee. It is not permitted
equipment. Sales and service.
Court, Minersville, Ohio. --~--:--:garage. Asking $20,000.00.
fireplace In den . Call 992-3970.
to reproduce it or transport it . . . " The order was deAll lypes and sizes of fire
Phone 992-3324.
6·23-JOIC
1964 G~C till cab lruck, 18 fl . extinguishers.
6·30-61c
Special
prices
signed for hard-core party officials, not for the public .
7-J.6tc
aluminum produce body wilh on extinguish~rs for boats,
2 COUNTRY HOMES - one, AWNINGS, storm doors and
Though this document was signed a year and a half
a job if wanted. Charles campers, homes. 'Also HOUSE , 1640 Lincoln His .,
N
- -IC_E_ 8-K3-5.....,.tr-a"'ll-er-w"'lt"'h-t77'ipout
only 5 yea" old. Has 2
w 1n dow s , c a r p or Is ,
Harris . Phone 843-2693, · discount prices on other sizes.
ago, it$ importance is that after running through the
•Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
bedroom, large panel~d
marquees, aluminum siding
extension, 1 bedroom and air;
Porlland .
Communist failures, it outlines step·by·step ·how the " dip·
10-25-lfc
living, dining, kitchen and
and railing. Call A. Jacob,
·
conditioning. Phone 992-6452 .
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
7-7-4tc 992-3821. Owner Dwight
6-25-lfc
lomatic" war in the United States will finally make possales representative. For free
bath. Garage. Only $6,500.00.
HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights.
And an 8 room older home,
estimates, phone Charles
sible a North Vietnamese military victory . Some noteS• cT::R:-:A:-:1:L::E::R:-L-:O:::T:::S, ::B-:ob-:,s-::Mobile _ F_R_E_E- -F-R-:E-:E--::F-:-REE! Logan .
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
bath, gas heal. For $4,500.00.
6-16-30tc
from that outline follow :
.
Court, Rt. 124, Syracuse , Swivel rocker or recliner
2196.
Johnson
and Son, Inc.
"The war ... :lis being) smoothly coordinated with our
Ohio . 992-2951.
chair with a purchase of $300 ) - - - - - - -- - - - j
5-26-lfc RACINE -7 room older home,
5-27-lfc
political and diplomatic struggles and the antiwar move·
with large bath and kitchen.
4-2-tfc worth of living room fur·
ni1ure. This week only! Used
Dining room, gas .forced air BACKHOE AND oOZ!R work.
ments of the American &lt;people! . These. movements !are
3 BEDROOM brick home .
TRAILER
SPACE
on
old
Rt.
33,
Furniture'·
2
bedroom
suites,
furnace,
concrete drive .
becoming I increasingly effective , and have weakened the
Choice location In Mlddlepcrt.
36" X23" X .009
Septic tanks l~stalled . George
'
h
mlle
north
of
new
Meigs
1
set
bunk
beds
,
I
Garage
and
carport. Asking
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Vietnam•zation , . . (lQlicy of 1President) Nixon ...
I Bill! Pullins, Phone 992-2618.
High School. Phone 992-2941.
refrigerator , metal bed $12,500.00.
Phone
992-5523
after
4
p.m
.
6-25-tfC
"On the diplomatic front , we . , . stepped up the U.S.
J.S.Ifc sleaHs. Parsons Furniture,
5-7-lfc
and world people's inovement. demanding that Nixon
- -- - - - - -- located 2 miles norlh ol Sil•er
COUNTRY ESTATE -new • HARRISON'S TV AND ANFURNISHED and unfurn ished
Bridge on Slate Route7. Open
quickly withdraw troops from Vietnam and abandon the
spacious bedrooms with walk·
2~ ACRE farm Long Bottom,
TENNA SERVlCE . Phone
apartments . Close to school.
trom 9 to 5.
Thleu-Ky· Khiem 1group I ...
In closets . 3 sets of sliding
with or without tarm'
992-2522.
7-7-3tc
Phc&gt;ne 992 ·5~34 .
USEOOFFSET.PLATES
glass doors to patio and front
machinery . House with 3
6-10-lfc
,
10-18-tfc
pbrch. 2 full baths. hot water
HAVE
bedrooms,
dining
room,
living
Notl¢e ·
LEGAL
NOTICE
7-Y:IAR
OLD
palomino
mare,
heat, family room with
room, 11/:z baths, enclosed
MANY USES
·GuN SHOOT, Sunday, July 11 , 1
WHEEL alignment
genlle . broke lor riding .
back porch, wall to wall · tlreplace, beautiful kitchen O'DELL
p.m. at, Racine Gun Club.
located
at
Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Wanted
To
Buy
Phone
992-5090.
with
garbage
disposal.
dish
LEGAL NOTICE
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
7-7-3tc
Complete
front end service,
7-7-6tc
washer and cook units. 65 foot
There w i ll be a spe ci a l
awning, storm windows and
r
di shes,
tune
up
and
brake service.
meeting of S~lem Town ship ANTIQUES :
basement, copper plumbing, 2
storm doors . City water.
&amp;for $1 .00
Wheels
·
balanced
elec- .
telephones , clocks, brass YARD SALE on Larkin St ..
Trustees Wednesday .· July r.t ,
car
garage,
15
acres
of
Selling due to ill health. Phone
work
Ironically
.
1971 ar 8:00p .m . for the purpose
All
beds , lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill.
Rutland. Friday and Satur1
woodland.
$37,500.00.
614-985-3938.
of setting up the Budget for 1972.
guaranteed.
Reuonable
Phone 992·3403.
day.
6-23·301p
rates. Phcine '992·3213.
7·1-301p
7-7-3tc
·
ITEM: Jack Kane.
MIDDLEPORT
5
rooms,
Alma Smith
6-26-:lotc
bath, floor furnace, 2 porches.
ou somehow get the
Salem Townsh ip Clerk
SIX
ROD~ house, bath, tull
TELEPHONES,
brass
beds,
NO REtRET, the best yet , Blue
Level lot. Only $4,000.
(7)7.11
basement, 133 Butternut Ave.,
ling he has thought
ESTIMATE on general '
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
Lustre
cleans carpets
jusl walking distance from
' Chester water FREE
remodeling, roofing ond
etc. Write M. D: Miller, Rl . 4,
beautifully . Rent electric
22
ACRESon
bout whal he's
downtown Pomeroy . Contact
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
shampooer, $1. Baker Fur system. • bedroom home, painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
\ LEGAL NOTICE '
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ed Hedrick, 2.137 Wadsworth
r!nt with you. Your
Th.t . Board of TruSII!'t$ of
4-27-lfc
'
niture Company.
bath, furnace, bern, and a.m. IQ 6 p.m.
Drive, Columbus. Qhio, phone
Oli ve lOWMh tp , Me igs County,
IIIII II right.
1·1-61 c
6-9-JOic
garage. Space for 1 mobile
Ohlo, subm Its Its ~ pn uaf Budget TOP PRICE on -¢J_seng and
BUILDING LOTS for sale . . 237-4334, Columbus. 5-9-lfc
homes with septic. tank. ~~---~~;_~~
for pubnc inspection at thlf
Golden Seal . yellow roOT. Seal VIOLIN,' J,•.size, bow and case
Asking only 56.000.00,
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Newly approved in restricted ----~-~-...:!.:=
oflict or the Trustees ThurSdby .
tops and slem bone drY . clean
· Complete Service
housing
district
.
Near
Rock
LARGE
house,
w,
acres,
all
sss.
Ironer.
excellent
conJutv 15, 1971 df 8 o'clock P.M . ' no dirl. All rools. Bill Ballev.
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
Phone96'1-3121
•
utililjes, $1,000. Phone 992·
dllion cost $350 soli $35 . Springs . Phone 992-6887 after
P.O. ' Bo• 1•, Second Street,
ASSOCIATE
Racine, Ohio
5 p. m., or on weekends.
6021.
Ada Blss•il. Clerk
Coolville 667-6214 .
Reedsville, Ohio mn.
992-lnl992·2371
Crill
Brodford
(7)1 , 11
·• 6-17-lfc
7-7-6tp
~Hie
7-1-JOtc
5-1-lfc
7-Hfc
&gt; - - - - - - - - - l,;:-

@)
.

LETTER FROM
COUSIN ~)/~ELBA JANE
IN TH' FlATLANDS AN'
SHE SAID SHE'S A
BASEBALL
WIDDER

ON AIRTH

6,;98 ·

•.

••, •

\

alaettnar•

:· ·

·WANT ANEW HOUSE?

. NO DOWN .PAYMEt(f ·.
GREEN ·HILL HOMES, INC.

ZIG · ZAGGE.D 1700

CROOKED
MILES!!

f!/D

l NEN!OR F:liAI.I'ZIOI? HOW
lf!O!;!' 'TWO HAVE' IN COM.oi\ON

.,.;F!-AANT!!- WE. HAIN'T

-1'0'1700

Ponieroy

~

l

CROOKE.D FEI!.T-AN'
AH IS POOPED!!'

~

i

~

i

,-OH
· _N
·. sov-u•Nt.NRY ,' EXPER·•ENCED

rou

'

742-4902

For

ArnMAIS

fi
i
•

\

WllffliE WINKLE

-. '

l''

IF l COULD ONLY GET AWAY
FRON\ MOM FOR A NIGHT
1\110, ID TRAIL

® POOR WENDY. SHE'S RUNNING&gt;
HEReCLF RAGGED TRYING&gt;
10 lAND A JOB IN lHE ·

I.

WENDY AND FIND

Ot!T v..HAT 5HE$
REALLY UP TO!

· lHEATER!

. .......

·~' '
~

• • , .. ,,., ,,,' 1&lt; ' "

,

~.--

&amp;Carpenter

- -- - - -

Spoutin.. Roof

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

,.

.' '.

Don't 40u have work
to do in tne qaraqe,
Sarqe?

Cleland Realty

- - - -- -

he
nt

~

THE BORN LOSER

- -- - - -

~

RAY CROMlEY

'Diplomatic' War
Hanoi Ace-in-Hole

or

h·
TIIERE'S A MAN BEHIND US1 HE ....,KHED
US EiflER THE ICE CREAM f!\RLOR,
PHONED FROM A SIDEWAlK SOOTH ...
f'IIID WHEN VIE LEFT, HE BEGAH IQ
Tell-~!

been

re
of

For

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

L&gt;Ail Y CROSSWORD
ACROSS

~-----~~~--~"'1

HARTFORD

------

bnnch
:W. Spru!C

36. Beauty
d . Bread·

&amp;

map

winner

rrJ o
1

WHAi "THE

u . Etemlly

• eQol, COIJ6iRIC10R'5

&amp;I&amp; LOVE Afli6Jf'.

iURNEt' OUT 1t1 1'1:.

28. Frolic

211.-clOth
rt. Polo
30.Thalland
of old
32. Shrill

lll!IIUf.'

~'"":::=_

..

lncrodlent
315. -Roy
37.Churclllll

TilE PlAY
fNPS; THE

(AIItfl'n IOiftOnowt

.n,n

CRITICSlfAVE
TO WRITB THEIR

Junolol··" PANSY IAIGE DEFILE MUCOUS

33. Hoclcey
. name

m1ews-

Now orronce the clreltd 1tt1B1
to form the ourprioe - · •
IUI(eJIN by tbe oiJo¥e euteoft.

=-=-=. .~1;;:(X~l~X;;JA"( XX11 ]"

bt.rk

33. Vamflh

"""11'~1·~ ·..

39. Expected
40. Fleming

I'OllOI'Ifi:&gt;
BY .1\R&amp;. GAR.

41. Bo..Orlty -.
member
48. Record
bolder

46. On the briny
46. Delayed

Sheets

WIIP0/1390

..

(comb.
10. Star'• mlleu 31. Rich
(2 wdll. j
deuert
fonn)
:ZO. PurvieW'
:&amp;1. Refrigerates

Aluminum

2(1
The
Daily Sentinel

as; lAbor union

folded,

8: Get loot!
(2 wcls.j
9. Twine about

-

• ...............
"'"~' "' r...,.,,,,_

y~··.&amp;uw•

29. Un·

ofM-a

leti:er

~----,---,--

For Sale·

alock
28. SpUt

( 2 wdll.l
8. --fright
1. Brother

19. New

l'l'UtS

IIUI'fl

for
Uve-

dellghl
or ordeal

17. 1nthe
past
18.Hebrew

SR.

26. Eruilo-

JOOr'l

further

TEAFORD

0

11. Br&amp;Z!Uan
tapir

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

24.Merry
· mo'tb

3. Cllfet

4. Lwnmox
5. Movie·

12. My•tery
IS. Trepidation'
lf. Wholly
15. Say

·Virgil B.

22. Title
In
India

2. Madison
Ave. toller

8. Next to

DICKT8ACY

I&amp;, Fate

DOWN
1. - LaUn

1. Buddy
• •.Greek
mountain

41.Afford48. PoeUc

oontrac\lon
DAitY CRYPT()QUOTE-Rere's bow to_work It:
AXYDLIIAAXa
Ia LONGI'J:LLOW
. One letter limply ltandl for IUIOther. :In Wo ...,.pia A Ia

CAPI'AJN EASY

uaed for the tbreo L'o, X for the two 0'•, etc. Sln•lo !etten,
11po•trophea, the l&lt;ingtb and fonnaUon ot .the words ""' t11

hfnte. lllach

clsy the eode

lettel'll ""' dltfem&gt;t.

A CIJptopun qaoiaG~SW

PRNW

ROFQ

AQFG

JDOD·

IT MAKES l{()U MNJ•. ,..
OOESN'T IT?811TWUCAN I
6ET ME. NOIII2 1' FRff !!!

UWYQOZ GQ RKQDJ GUQFW QUDYUF
DY

ZQBNFWOC

JOF .HOWRFW
GUQARI'

R

LUDPU

' ZQII:

DY

PQAAQYOZ
QGUWNF .-

SWAHDP'

Yeo.....,., CIJpCo ..ote: IT IS NATURAL FOR ANY MAN
TO BRR, BU'r ONLY FOR A FOOL TO PIJRSIST IN IDS
tt:RROR.-ciCBitO
10 111'1 klal F•t.uru lfyUkat•. 11K'.t

---~··---

I'•

1· 1

.

�-·
.

.

• ' • .....,..-,'7.'"""'"""'~"-------~..-,--·~-

•

.

'

.. 12-'l'llt D1111.,.ij,..._ Wtepan.I'WMOJ! 0., Jul7 7, lfll

rl!ft
.
.
~:~~
c:~:u:eeting
a:o~~~~
Cone
.
ludes
School
Co
News,
mmeB
' m \..d.l on . .
mrra
wrec1r: r.
t. •

BY

&amp;:

Social
Calendar ·

Hor::.

"

'

r.ei

p.m.

a year,

· FAMOUS BRANDS ·. BUDGO PRICES

Ftin with Foods .
·· by Charlene Hoeflich

Mc.t CIMlb haft I speda)ty or two. For Roae Reynolds, it
lilA me lo he liMed ell! ' I! grill,
Grilli, at~~~ to Webster, Is comely growid hominy, In
CJIIJGUdldn'tkmw. Wilen dlnnen are planned at the Middleport
~ crf a.t1t 11bere Roae Is very active, lbe plamen just
•!tlnalkallr Jllil biJr dOWIL f1r hated cbeeae grits.
a- tell~• tbatbllrrec:ipeservecl 15,giw or take one or two.
BAQD «Jiti:SE GluTs
,1cup grtta, fc.'Upl boillngwater, 1teaspooosalt, 2ew,1 stick
butter'crr ffiii'PJ'Ine, I roll Krlft's garlic cheese, 'At pound yeUow
ei.-e (grale4).
.
. .
.
. Ute a ~ bo11er. Stir eup ol. grits into four cups bolling
walllrlllldllllt. Add the butlllr andg!ll'lic cheesesnd stir until both
tre mellld 111111 lbe grit&amp; are lblck.
BeaU.O eMS. place in cup and fllllbe cup with.sweet milk.
raid IIIIo 1be grill. Pour the grit mixture Into a large flag
.. 1 ·ale aD! coot f5 minutes at 325 degrees. Then take out of
C11'1!11lllld eo- .with the yeUow cheese which has been grated.
-ilelurll to CM!D for _another 10 minutes.

TRY aDLI CIUCKEN for a change. This recipe came to us
rrQn Marian Miehael wbile she was vacationing In Tennessee.
CHILI CHICKEN
· 2whale ctaclrenbrelsta (about I'At pounda)splitand skinned,
2 tabl !lOIN flour, 1 tablespoon aalad oil, I eight CJWICe can of
llmato uuce with cteen, 1 tablespoon granulated sugar, I
tau J - pan1ey flakes, 1 teaspooil salt, and 'At to 1 teaspoon

c

lldttm Tilt Coup..• ltlow And

SAVE ~3°

0

-~-~·- 7··gc Bologna • • • • •
CHUNK STYLE

OSCAR MAYER

Wieners

I

I

I

•

I

plq.

OSCAR MAYER

Beef Bologna

:U•OL

•

•

MORTONS-ALL VAR.

•

pkg.

75

c

ggc

ROUND BONE SHOULDER

Swiss Steak • • • •

lb.

Pot Pies

I

I

I

I

I

-22c

SUPER-RIGHT

WienerS

I

I

COiri,ARE THIS ,liCE!

Jum~~

17 1/a•OL

36
sin

bo•••

IONA FANCY

Tomatoes

4~~ 89c:
• 2·~:-49c:
.4Of&gt;~•· '1 00

• • •

HOT DOG SAUCE

Castleberry

•

A\MOUR'S

Potted Meat ·

•

•

can•

'

lh.49c Raisin Bread
JANE PARKER

WASHINGTON STATE

Bing Cherries •
FRESH, YELLOW

• •

I

I

3

6 59C Overnight fliapers

~-lb.
In.

'100

CURITY "TAPE TAl"

Sweet Corn

• •

Nn

FRESH A&amp;P

Hoisted ·Peanuts

2~~g agc

•

I

CURITY "TAPE TAl" .

plir.

Regular Diapers •

of

• • 10

.$139

'·

l ,:~
)..

,

~

22· 0L

bottles

u~·-.' -69c '
59
Ice
Cream
.
•
•
:.:.Beef Stew
59C
......
V1'tal1's
• . • • ••..~~-·.·· 49 On1'on R1'ngs • . •
. ·49c
,
Caffein Free v:
Dry Milk • 20 1 Orange Plus • . • ~!
.ggc· · miX
~ ~RedOZEVN
• 24 :
egeta bl es. 4p.... age· ea
• •
•

SUPER-RIGHT

• • • • ·;~L

MARVEL LEMON

DETERGENT

c

Burst •
A&amp;P NON,FAT

•

CBOuMfPfAeRErTI. Hnis PR•I.CE.!

c

MRS. PAUL'S

LIQUID

IJ.OL
pk(•

$ 9t BIRDSEYE

• •

P1:1.

·

·

o

AlP 97%

I

I

I

.•

L·lb.

.

I

FROZEN

10-0I.

OTUR OWN

•

I·

. stN.2ndAVE.

"o It WALLS

ti

,.,os

A CElLI .

I
I

ODORLESS LATEX PAINT
wtllli, CEIUNG WHili &amp;10 COLORS

1-.

REG. '3.99 GAL Makes Interior painting easier and faster. Applies with brush
or roller. covers most surfaces in one coat. Dries in minutes
to a smooth. hard, scrubbable finish that lasts. Tools wash up

'•.

in water.

..

EITEII. LITEI PIIIT
WHITE
REG. $4.49 GAL A durable, weatherproof paint that applies easily with
-brush, roller or spray. Needs no primer 011 sound aur·
· races. Dries bug-~ in 30 minutes. Reslsta bllltering allll
·• peeling.· !J'-waell r~~Ut In soapy ·W iler. ...... •' t• -.+I

le

nt
le

2
EXTERIOR

LA.TEX

:h
81
1r

GALLONS
FOR

.

PAl~

h·

re
of

F01t Wooo SlO!NG. Sl!lllfius. sTUCCO·

•

r

ItIn
er
p.
ay

Town &amp; Country Reg. 89c
QUICK QRY

Ill-

~~~!~~!INT 52~can

SHOP AT STIFFLER'S

---------------------ATERRIFIC BUY!!

-PIOFESSIOIIL TYPE-

Reg. $15.00 Value
81f2'x ll-lf2' Sizes

ROOM
SIZE RUGS

PAN &amp;ROLLER SET
BIG 9;1NCH SIZE
llig nine inch pan with
nine inch roller. Paint
the. easy way to give
room that
profE!SSiOtrtal look.

CDIPAIE AT 99'

Reg. $15.00 Value Room Size
Rug . 8'12'xlJih' cushioned foam
back. No pad needed, 90 per
cent viscose rayon, 10 per cent
nylon. Asst. tweed patterns.

Big 24x44
Asst. Floral,
Stripes and Plains

~ BATH

TOWELS

Reg. 79c Big 24x44 size Bath
Towels. Florals, plains. colors
and stripes. Stop at · your
favorite Dept. Store and save.

Reg; $15.00 Value

00
REG. 7f &amp; 8f

REG. s2.50

REG. '1.29 VALUE

RAYON LOOP AND SHAG

LATEX AND GLOSS

30· QUART

THROW RUGS

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

PAINT
Reg . $2.50 gal . Latex and Gloss
interior and exterior paint.
Available in most wanted
·anlf while. New low
price.

99

c

GAL

EA.

I
/

.•

•

e
it

LA.TEX 1 PAIN;

'·

BAKER

.

ODORLESS

Oose out group of asst. sizes
and styles. Grouped for -quick
sale. Viscose rayon loop and
Sale Values to 79c and 89c.

MIDDLEPO.RT, 0 •

! ·

'

D,;Cntc' Uefd

ff2.J560

.

'

Garuen
,,]_ C'T b

Floriaf ·

tJ ..'&lt;

.
'•..

Personal Notes

The IIBiPbora wtehed
your dao,Ptfulneu
, . . deliWI M -

-

I

":

Middleport

YourFTD,

'

REG. $4.79 GAL -

Perfect for woodwork, kitchen and bathroom. Easy to apply
with brush or roller. Dries fast to a hard, glare-free finish that Is
washable. Toola clean up in water.

VISIT. BAKER'S.

S·OL
cans

£•WITHUTU
SEII·ILDSS EIIIEL
COLORS MAtCHING DRiPLESS LATEX

Personal Notes

Calif:

....

Store Hours!
9 TO 6 MONDAY .&amp;TUESDAY
WED., THURS;, .FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

..

Pomeroy ....

.Election and installation Qf Mr. and Mn. Jack Price, Usa
officers highlighted a recent and Charles, of CarroU were
meeting of the Ohio Valley MondayvisitorsofMr.andMrs.
Comrnandery 24, Knight Leslie Price and Mr. and Mrs.
Templars, at the Pomeroy Charles Eskew. Visiting
Masonic Temple.
Tuesday with the Estews were
,
Installed by Paul M. DarneD, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hall and
Mr. !llld Mrs. Ferman E.
d Mr DaJ K Roush past commander, assisted by daughter, Viclti of Fremont.
. Moore were bosta at an open Mr. an
s. e .
' Danny S. Zirkle, also a past Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pbilipa
boule recutly bonorlng Mrs Steven and Kathy, of Apple commander, were Jesse E. and Mrs. Sadie Brown of
Verilece Turley of Pinch,
Creek were the holiday Brinker, commander; Norbett Minersville xpent the holiday
ind Mrl. Laurette :Lee Shan· weekend guesb of her parenb, W. Compton, generalissimo; weekend 1n Bellefontaine
n1n Cbria~her and Glenna Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Turner. Hugh P. Custer, past com· visitingMr.andMrs. BillNease
· r..ee: ol San Francisco, Calif.
John Riggs, Mr. and Mrs. mander, captain general; and family.
Mn. Turley 11 the mother ol Chari~ Graman and daughter, David W. Fox, senior warden; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J ,
Mrs. Moore and Mr. Annand Rose~, and Mr. snd Mrs. Richard W. Vaughan, junior Struble were Monday guests of
Turley, !llld Mrs. Lee 18 lbe Philip Vtck~, Lancaster, were warden; Theodore T. Reed, Jr., _Mr. and Mrs. Ross Davis,
daughter ol lbe Moores. Mrs. Saturday VISitors of Mr. and treasurer; Paul M. Darnell, Athens.
past commander, prelate;
Mr. and Mrs. otto nes, Sr.
'IW'Iey!llldtheLeecbildrenwill Mrs. Dale Jacobs.
A!main In .Middleport for a
Mr. and M~s, Lawrence Clarence J .' Struble, past accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
month
Stewartilnd family and Mr. snd commander, recorder; Charles Hubert Stagg, Nelsonville, to
A, !Mdre~ dinner was aerved Mrs. Michael Gerlac~ joined E. Blakesiee, standard bearer; Burr Oak Park Tuo:sday for a
lnd entertainment ·was Mr. and .Mrs. Wilham T. Richard Sayre, sword bearer; picnic.
povlded by Herbert F. Moore Grueser for a weeke.nd outing at Dale E. Smith, past com- Mr. and Mrs. Bill MaUack of
anci Harry s. Moore who lbelr Antiquity cabm.
IIUinder, warder; Max Manuel, Chester Road spent the
presented several vocal Mr. snd Mrs. Wilbur Ho1ter, sentinel; and Albert G. weekend with their son and
selections, with Armand Turley Mrs. Anna ~lacy and Vaughan, Woodard, Struble, and Lorenzo daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
,.1t the cqu.fc.~ lillCini~Akron, were weekend gues~. ~ .• 0. Qatls, _all past conun&amp;ndllf, .{;e~rge Dallas and...cllildren of
Mr. snd M'rs. 'Robert DucK· guards and bermlts.
St. Paris.
~ lbe afternoon.
Mrs. Betty Robinson and sons
Gueslll Mr. and Mrs. worth and family.
Mrs.
Florence
Hannay
·
of
of
washington, D. C. were the
Marcus Chamben, Martha and
holiday weekend guests of Mr.
Bruce Outmhen, Mr.. and Mrs. Akron came Thursday for a
JU and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd, Mr.
Jamea D. Euler, Mrs. Millie summer visit with her sister,
Mrs.
Beulah
White.
and Mrs. Carl Qualls, Mr. and
Humpll'eya, Melinda !llld Jack,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
•
Mrs. Robert Cyrus, Mrs. Bertie
Mrs.~ Sherman, Mrs.
Winebrenn~r returned to
Powell, and Mrs. Elsie Bryant,
Eima ~n. Mrs. Mae Bailey. Columbus
Tue~day after .r;,
111
Ralph E. Stewart, Ulllan Moore
and Henrietta Demmltt, visiting with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Karl OWen. Mrs. John
Dllyton, cOUIIIIt of Mrs. Tuiley.
Apatriotic theme was carried
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Goodrich of Dayton is here
Mr. and Mrs. Marion French,
out In flower arrangements for .The seventh birthday anMr. and Mn. Donald Stivers, visiting Mr. and Mrs. OWen.
the annual picnic of the Mid· mversary of Lynn Kloes,
Mildred Beeson, Helen Holt, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs dieport Garden Club Monday daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
took a trip recently through
h E. Jesse, Mr. !llld Mrs. Kentucky
and Tennessee. night at the home of Mrs. Carl Manning Kloes, was (!bserved
Pete Thoren and children,
Sunday with a family party at
Before returning home they Horky
Pullr and Mrs. Arthur i.und,
ay.b-angeas from the garden the Smart cabin at Long BotMr. and Mrs. Herbert Moore, went to Colwnbus to visit Mr. of Mrs. Garen Stansbury and tom. Attending were Mr: and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moore, and Mrs. Steve Jacobs and red roses were used In the floral Mrs. Kloes, Lynn and Lori, Mr.
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
, Mn. L..DIIvis, Sandy Anderson,
Timothy Priddy snd family, pieces for the refreshment and Mrs. Paul Smart, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Braun and both at Lockbourne. The Steve tables. Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Mrs.
George . Hackett,
l(eJU, sandy Johnson, Mrs.
and
Janet
and
Sheila
Horky
Rosemary
and Lmda, both
Jacobs family spent the.
Ada Ohlinger, Mra. Vivian weekend with relatives bere. were guests.
ho~e _from Ohio State
Waddell, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mr.sndMrs. Ernest A. Jones,
Members attending were Umver~tty, ~elanle, Dennis
KaiT; Mr. !llld Mn. Donald Carol Jean and Kenneth, of Mrs. James Arnold, Mrs. David and BtU, Middleport, and
· KeUy, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Columbus were weekend guests Entsminger, . Mrs. Davld Herman Kloes, AtheJIS.
Mills, and Mr.and Mrs. Thomas of Mr. ilnd Mrs. Harry Moore Farmer, Miss Frieda Faehnle,
Clelland.
~ Mrs. Stanley D. Jones, Mrs. C. 0 . Fisher, Mrs. M. L.
French, Mrs. Walter Hayes,
P~meroy.
Mrs. A. R. Hecox, Mrs. Carl
DAUGHTER OMITl'ED
_HOSPITAL NEWS
Horky,
Mrs.
John
Kincaid,
Mrs.
Unintentionally
mnitted from
HOlzer Medk2J Center, Firat
Malcolm RoUer, Mrs. Stans- survivors of Mrs. W'llliam R.
Ave. and cedar St. General
RESIDENCY BEGUN
bury, Miss Judy Arnold, Mrs. Davis, Jackson, formerly of
visiting hours 3-4 mtd 7-8 p.m. Dr. Tom Skinner began his E. 0. Tewksbary, Mrs. M. C. Pomeroy, who died Monday
Mlllemlty visiting hourl2:30 to . two years of residency at the Wlison, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, Miss morning at lite Holzer Medical
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Cleveland Metropolitan Hallie Zerkle, and Mrs. Nellie Center was a daughter,
Pediatrics 'Ward.
General Hospital on July I. For Zerkle .
LotTaine, at home.
·Birllul
the past year he has been
· Mr. and Mrs. Allen M. employed at the hospital wbile
Emerson, Uverpool, W· Va., a completing studies in oral ·
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. surgery at Case Western ,.----~~--------~--~
RaymondT.Casb,Jackson,a
Reserve. ofDr.the Skinner,
son;IDIMr.andMrs.
SteeleF. graduate
College ola
Carrico, OU HID, a daughter. Dentistry at Ohio State
DllebrJea
University, served three years
Mic!tael L. Campbell, Mrs. in lbe u. s. Anny before
Ronald
Carr,
Mary enrolling last year at Case. ,
Holllngibesd, Mrs. Ronald L.
Hugbea, Lelmard Leach, Mrs.
Patricia eatteraon, Daniel
VISIT AIRPORT
'lbompeon, Mn. Woodrow W.
Five
and
six-year.dcis In the
Bobo, and Mn. Gene Puckett.
beadstart class taught by Mra.
SALE PLANNED
Mary Skinner visited the
A nanma~t llle will be held Galllpolil Airport Friday and
by the Mlnemllle Women's had a picnic at the roadaide
Society ol Olrlstlan Service In park. AdUlts with lbe group
lbe Brown bul1dlng 011 West besides Mrs. stlnner were Mrs.
"fain Friday ilnd Slturday. The Wanda 'Shuler, Mn. Dale
sale wW he beld from I a.rn. to 4 Hermann, and Mrs. Raymond
Manley. '
p.m. bolb daJ1.

.:Californians
:Are.Honored

c

POMEROYOPEN FRI. 9:30 TO 9:00 SAT. 9:30·ro·_ 9:00

• People !ravel by car pulling a
lbe
and
Ui tempers to get to a camp site;
IM!tling QP camp, stay ·
a few days; then do lbe lone haul again to get home. When at last
they're home two daysatleastare needed to rest up!
All tills Ianot necessary with the faclllty we.baw bere In our
own bact yard, which Is the Ohio riwr olfering IDIIIIY atlractiw
camp sites along the west v~ shore.
·
Olarles and Maxine Griffith' and Phil and Alice Globokar
esch own property along the West Virginia side that they rent to
sulnmer C81Dpers, Both sites are located below the Pmterw·
Mason bridge.
The C81Dper&amp; erect tenia, use trailers, and even pat up patios
at their respectlw' sites. ntoie who do not bave to work on
Saturday start clllllng In 011 Friday night. By Slturday afternoon
lite campsites are humming.
·
•
The sandy beaches offer excellent swimming spots with
boating and skiing taldng over as the No. I recreatioo activity.
At lbe Dick Neutzling site there are all the comforts of home
plus the recreation. Dick has hulit a brick barbecue pit tbat beats
all portsble units.
The 11UJ11ber of boats On the river seem to warrant ~ in
boating and perhaps a right and left lane for upriver and
downriver traffic. One thing certain, when you are Oljt on the river·
you should watCh In front, cin esch side, and to the bact to make
sure yOU: are clear of other boats.
It is wonderful to have such facilities right at hand but I
suggest that the greatest caution be used at all times.

Installation
Is Conducted

.·

Ohio Valley's Favorite Shopping Center

. .

By Katie Crow -

01 waxed paper, coat chicken Ugbtly with Dour, shake off
seal flaar .In nwdium skillet over medium beat In the oil, saute
d;cten tift mhiutes au each lide. Add remaining ingredlenta.
eov. and of!MI!I' 20 mlnufea 1r IDIIli chicken Is lender. Makes
foai' IIII'YIDII wilh 220 calories per serving. ..

Prlcos Good Thru Sat. July lOth!

Katie·'s Korner

·. (

cblll P9Wder.
About Iii minutes before serving time prepare as follows:

dinners'

.

**' m: .. ,~~~-

JUJJbdbJ£!

''Opea
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd
will be
Sadly,
entertained Monday with a July ll,'atz
IB thuaeW .
room ef Sl. Paal Ltdlleru
family barbecue.
Ch.urch ·~-re to boaOr Pulw
Guests were Mrs. Betty
""
Robinson and ,son, Barry snd , ud M!'l. James Yee KiaMoy
V
W h' to 0 C Mr
and ·alina.'
'
E~~eBr::n;n:f ~u~nj; ,;;: Pastor Moy, wbo will be
and Mrs, Carl Qualls, Pomeroy; ieavtng New Haven the flnt
Mr
d M R bet Cyrus ofAlJIUII,wWgd'loWalerloo,
· an · · ~- 0 . r
ti • Iowa, w!tm'he bU aeee,ted
~~!~~· ~~::~~:s·F~[ds~ an admlnl 1 trative poaltloa at
M'ddi
h 1 8 d Wartburg College. He hal
1 eport; · Cares
oy ; se-·"Ath_eNewllavenchurch
Tuppers Plains; and Mrs.
"""
.
Joanne Bass, Greg,_Lori, ·and 1be paot two years . willie
Raylene of Bidwell. Also . worldllg 00 hli Ph. D. degree
present were the hosts' at Ohio untvenlly;
. Invitations to the. "open
children, David and ·Donna.·
·hOWle" have been eltended te
The u.s. Navy's first. sub· the local churches, to. the
marine, the ..Holland, was · Lutheran Church ID Pomeroy
launched 1n 1898 and ac- and to Zion aad Sl, Ml!rk
cepted' in 1900.
·
I.utheran Churcheo, and to all ·
- - - - - - - - - of the many 'frlelllls of the
Bi~le School closed Sunday ·Moys, wbo would like to at·
everung, June 27, at 6 p.m. with tend.
a program presented by the
. ... m .. : •.•,,"····w:».W&amp;$~
childre
. n· Each .class has sought ~w,::&gt;..:«-:·&gt;:·~&lt;":'-&lt;·:&lt;":&lt;
· .. . of
' the
Java lies 10 the ·•area
tohtakeha teaching
oft Jesus
world's ' greatest thunderth
k and
h
s ow
_
ow
e
pas
wee
as
storm
activit~. It has no
d 't
·
lui to
rna e I more meanmg
fewer than 2 3 storm days

1

Country Fair at
Louis ]ohnsons

.

Boyds E,ztertain

congregational singing led by
were so realistic that you felt Wayne Thomas of Thomasville,
you ·were actually there. They Pa.; moving messages of NEW HAVEN - The .United Becky Burris; closing prograin,
toured for 17 days and enjoyed familiar hymns sung nlghUy by Methodist Church of New Miss Kay Hoffman.
·
·
h
h ·
every minute of it.
75 voice volunteer choif; love}y Haven has reported· a.. "vea_ Kilc en, Haze 1 Cape art,
: CAMP_ MEETJIIIQ ,
solos and duets by Mr. and·Mfs. successful'.' Vacation Bible ElSie . Lievlng, . Peggy Ro~~.
Brl!l~ famtl~ and friends to Thomas; stirring instrumental School just concluded. . .
Shelma Jones, 'Mrs : Cliff
th~ Umon Cainp Ground (two arrangements · by pianist . The theme was "Jesus Speaks &amp;oush; Nursery, Jean HofflJUles south of New Haven on Shirley Garlow and organist to our World Todsy,'' ern- rnan, Gorma Bumgarner.,
Union Road) July 19. thro'l'h Genetli Krebs.
· phasizing study on the reality of Becky Roush; beginners, ages 3
Augusdt bl camU~t mdeeMtinghspd~n-t And friendly people to Christ in life todayhas con,• hto 4, teacGber , dJudy HR~ssonh ,
1
1 istorica1 eper,
sore y me
eo 1s welcomeyou!
trastedtothepurey
era 1 me
ous;
Churches of Greater Point · HOME FROM GERMANY conception Of Jesus held by kindergarten, ages '· 5 and 6,
PI
· t' d Be d Ar
.
.
d
t h
Sh lb
D
easan an
n
ea.
Mrs. Ntcky Nicholson an most children. ·
eac er, ' e Y
un~anb,
You'D thrill to the dynamic daughter, Amber Rachel, is
Crafts were not only pleasing helpers, Becky Gilmore, Bo
gospel preachmg of evangelist home frbm Rastatt, Germlllly to the eye but also helped to. Dye.
Laverne E. Rohrbaugh, pastor, for a short visit. She is visiting carry through the qteme of the Grade I, teacher, Janet
Grace United Methodist h~r mother-in-law, Mrs. Evelyn study. It was Inspiring to feel Bumgarner, helper Charlene
Church, Hagerstown, Md .. Rev . Ntcholson, Clifton, and l)er the enthusiasm .among the _ Weaver ; grade 2, teacher,
Rohrbaugh w~s converted while home at Coalton, Ohio. S.sgt. workers and students, 'school C;ll'9lyn Hesson, helper, Brenda
held as a prisoner of war m Nicholson has been in Ge1,1nany officials said, who thanked all Jividen; gr~de 3, teacher,
World WarA L He IS . now .an 2'k years. and Jean and Amber those who helped to !Dllke the Connie · Thompson, helpers,
evangelist of note, havmg Rachel w1U return there August school meaningful. Those who Debbie Rickard, Karen ~ent;
Served in more than one hun· 4 to be with their husband and helped with the school were: grade 4, teacher, Jean Grindred p~e~ching missions and father.
Director , Mrs . William stead, helpers, Chris Hoffman,
ev_ange_listic c_rusades. Y_ ou, too,
VISIT MADE
DeMoss; Secretary-treasurer, Linda Roush ; grade 5, teacher,
· Ken,t he1pers, Sharon
":ill l?v.e hun for· his frank Mrs. Powell Reynolds and Mrs. Janet Bumgarner ; Loueila
' devot_ions, Mrs. Clara Rickard, Ja-ne Haymaker ;
stmphctty ; dynam1c for- Mrs. Billy Casto, Point mornmg
cefulness and Biblical sound• Pleasant, spent a day recenUy Burris ·, morning story, Rev. g·rade 6, teacher, Sue Sayre,
ness
with Mr. and Mrs. Ray . Fox, DeMoss; song leader, Mrs : IM!Ipers, Connie Carder, Kay
·
them
You'll love the music at the Clifton.
WiUiam DeMoss; pianist, Miss Hoffman.
.

A
reported almQSt
every 11(eek. /1. petition is for....._, •• · 1n this. small com·~-~...
munlty •before sqme one is
, killed, becauae sqme .Insane
tcnm after 1be accident · dri~er thinks speed is a slgp of
Wedn!! by ol 1 molber and gOOd.driving. We .can.also hear
c:blldmtdanelebbor'sUttleglrL drag racing aU hours of the
Mlna srntib and daughter, nighl
'nler 1II, ilnd Jackie Blake had When will all tl)is speed stop
.
hen cycle andwhowillbethenextvictlm?
adrnarriowbesc.peCII wt · ·D•i •us'
roCKERS ON TRIP
ven y
n on
n~ ,
Llngsvllle tried to pass when a Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker
car ...,1 ~Into a side road. and cbildren1 Terry, Tim, Tod
Thla 18
lraight tretch of and Troy have enjoyed a
d as
s wa sightseefig trip of their home
road an a regular speed y. state, west Virginia. They
traveled to . Hawk's Next,
Sommerville's o8111, enjoyed
trout fishing at Edtay, T. H.;
Radio Astrology at Green Bank
observatory Blackwater Falls
(Blackwate;llesuponaplateau
over 3,000 feet high snd the best
way to look at _the Mountains is
WEDNESDAY
down upon them at the Parks
Lod
ge that overI00ks the great
WINDING .TRA IL Garden
hasm carv ed bY· Blackwate r
Club' 7·.30tonightatRoyalOak cRl
Park, Mrs . Don Thomas,
ver.)
·.
They traveled to Spruce
h~'O:!EROY MASONIC Knob,. highest point in . ~est,
Lodge F&amp;AM ststed conclave Virginis and enjoyed a VISit to
7:30 u;nlght ai temple. ,
' · smallest church in the United_
THURSDAy
States, only six pews. People
·
MEIGS '-II Pleasure Riders, come from·all over to visit ,!he
Tbursday, 6 p.m. at itock little church located at
Springs Fairgrounds for Morgantown. l.Uther, Shirley
practice session.
and the four T's rounded out
MEIGS CHAPTER DAV, 7:30 ~ir trip,with a day a! Dayton,
p.m. 'i'huraday, at haD on Ohio VISiting the Air Force
Butternut Ave., . Poineroy. Muaeum.
Refreshments. Veterans of aU
BROWSING
wars invited.
Browsing through the book
TRINITY CHURCH Sunday and magazine department of a
ichool hayride and wiener large store .In a neighboring
roast, Thursday, ,t Royal Oak town, I noticed a lad, about 15
Part. ThOle needing trans· years old, also brow~g, but at
portation report to Pomeroy .a dH!erent rack.
church at 6:45, be at park at 7. Having heard so much about
SUNDAY
. pornography and how it was so
MODERN WOODMEN openly displayed for all to see,
Camp 7230 annu81 picnic 1:i buy and' read, I thought I would
noon ~Y at ' State ~k stick around and see just what
Route 33, left gling south. Ali he would do. This s~·s ~k.
memben and friends Invited. shelves were reek1~g w~th
MOTO-CROSS Sunday at pornography and -~ou d think
Meigs Motorcycle Club ,tills boy was cramming for an
ground8, five miles north of_examination ~y the way he
Pomeroy on Route 33. TrophieS lntent~y studted each lur1d
for all claases, also junior class magazme. He was such,a clean
for rlderl15 Jllld Under riding o. cut young man. I thought
125 ce motorcycles. Practice 11 maybe he'd move over to the
a.rn. to 1, races starting 1:30 ~~ SecUon but be stayed
p.rn Refreshments available on nght m there.
~
· _
He studied each picture and
omo VALLEY Cornmandery read each headline. I'm sur·
llnl8l picnic Racine Shrine prised the manager didn't say
Part, ~. 1 p.rn. Take "Move on," but he didn't. I
covend dish Jllld table service. figured I had worn out my
'
·
welcome, so I moved on. The
TUESDAY
boy finally left, snd caught up
~ LEWIS ~LEY• Post ,263, with' &lt;fbe'•llt'·~' 'f8shi~r·s desk;
American Legion Auxillliry, 7 so doing a little more snooping,
p.m. Tuesday at the h&lt;mle of · I lingered, and sure enough he
Mrs. Nellie Winston,
· was paying for a book ti,Ued
"Sexology."
What is pronography? It is
"obscene, licentious, writing or
painting" and that's just
exactly what all the books were
- I think there ought to be a
LQNG BOTI'OM _ A county law. Oh, weD!
.
fair abnosphere with bam snd
ATJ'ENDING SCHOOL
chicken
prevailed at Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler,
the Louis Johns~n home, Long Clifton, is attending Leadership
Botloln, R. D., when guests Classes at the West Vlrglnja
began arriving Saturday Unive~slty cam~ ~or two
mot'ning ftorn northern Ohio weeks ~ study. This IS Mrs.
snd Pennsylvania. Horseback Winkler s ~ond year .. lnstead
riding and music were the main of studymg theology and
as
diversions of the holiday preachm~ .sermons
weekend
they . dtd 10 semlna,ry,
the clergymen will experience
·
Enjoying the hoepitalty of the group dynamics, increase their
Johnsons were Mr · and Mrs. reading speed and learn about
Jack Johnston, Pat, Tommy' their role in community .
Gary, Larry and Butch, and development. The session will
Mrs. Myrtl~ Johnston, all of offer 20 non~redit courses
Negley, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. taught by specialists froni
Floyd Fox, Frankie Rose, and various organizations.
~ Cathy Estes !rom New Evening sessions will Include
Bnghton, P~. ; Mr · and Mrs. Appalachian music and folk
_Tracey . Sc~r. Mr. and dances, a film fesUval, drama
Mrs. Cliff Jemgm and Pam, at the Creative Arts center, a
and Miss Alta Scrimsher, all of bl!ltquetanda talk by Dr. Ralph
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bert E: Nelson, W.V.W. provost for
Scrlmsher, Hartford, W. Va., "'l
. ed · lion Mr
""·-d F 1 d Lo Bot- "' • campus uca .
s.
d
. an ""'' Y r en • ng
Winkler was recenUy made an
torn. Mr . and Mrs :. Floyd associate pastor at meeting of
Weber, Long Bottom, jomed the West Virginia Conference of
group Saturday evening for a United Methodist Church at
wiener roast. Other callers Buckhannon.
•
were Mr. and Mrs. MaywOOd BURTONSON VACATION
Johnston, PorUand, _and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Murl Burton,
and Mrs. Robert White, Long Mason, and Faye Burton,
Bottom.
Norfolk, Va. have returned to
their homes after a "once in a
life-time" trip to California. Mr.
Burton felt he was very lucky
CLUB MEETS
for the women chauffeured for .
NEW· HAVEN - Mrs . the entire trip.
Thomas Grinstead was hostess The three spent one day at
·at the June meeting of the Grand Canyon, two at
GoodwiU Club. At the COO· Disneyland, one in National
elusion of the evening refresh- Stone Park and toured 20 states, ·
ments were served to Mrs. but the most interesting to Mr.
Melvin Knapp, Mrs . Cliff Burton was Disneyland.
Roush, Mrs. Cecil Duncan and Of great interest was the
I. cbildren, Mrs. William Mc- churches they attended. They
Farland, Mrs. Ray Weaver, were churches mostly for
Mrs. Thelma Capehart, Mrs. tourists, sotite 200 years old.
:1 William Grins\!!ad and guest, In Disneyland they enjoyed
Mrs. John Fry.
seeing a lift·like statue of
~'
Abraham Lincoln who stood,
·J
delivered a speech and sat
down.
•,
CLUB MEETS
They enjoyed a film shown in
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Her- a round circled room 100 ft. in
•. man Layne was hostess at the diameter; they were ta~en by
1;, recent meeting of the JUlia T. film to Pennsylvania Avenue to
,. Bryant Sewing Club. Those tlje White House, France
• attending were Mrs. J. S. !}ermany and when the ·
1' McMurray, Mrs. John C. Fray, narrowed down, it took them
1 Mrs. Ollie Roush, Mrs. Howard ·through a t'Overed bridge in
1: Wagenhals, Mrs. Donald Smith, South Dakota. It was like
Mrs. N. 0. Weinand the hostess. treading on water. The scenes
Ft)X

CLD'TON _ \¥ lbepeople of
,..,..__
e, ~--"than
........, areiiiCII't convu"'"'
.,.. itlllt n need 1 double
·.
ow line (nopulline) thtough

... ~ .,

&lt;'

·cooLER CHEST
Reg. $1.29 30 quart Styro Foam
Cooler Chest. Light, easy to
carry for picnic. camping,
for car. Get yours now.

•Wt

....
~-

·r.

t

~

�-·
.

.

• ' • .....,..-,'7.'"""'"""'~"-------~..-,--·~-

•

.

'

.. 12-'l'llt D1111.,.ij,..._ Wtepan.I'WMOJ! 0., Jul7 7, lfll

rl!ft
.
.
~:~~
c:~:u:eeting
a:o~~~~
Cone
.
ludes
School
Co
News,
mmeB
' m \..d.l on . .
mrra
wrec1r: r.
t. •

BY

&amp;:

Social
Calendar ·

Hor::.

"

'

r.ei

p.m.

a year,

· FAMOUS BRANDS ·. BUDGO PRICES

Ftin with Foods .
·· by Charlene Hoeflich

Mc.t CIMlb haft I speda)ty or two. For Roae Reynolds, it
lilA me lo he liMed ell! ' I! grill,
Grilli, at~~~ to Webster, Is comely growid hominy, In
CJIIJGUdldn'tkmw. Wilen dlnnen are planned at the Middleport
~ crf a.t1t 11bere Roae Is very active, lbe plamen just
•!tlnalkallr Jllil biJr dOWIL f1r hated cbeeae grits.
a- tell~• tbatbllrrec:ipeservecl 15,giw or take one or two.
BAQD «Jiti:SE GluTs
,1cup grtta, fc.'Upl boillngwater, 1teaspooosalt, 2ew,1 stick
butter'crr ffiii'PJ'Ine, I roll Krlft's garlic cheese, 'At pound yeUow
ei.-e (grale4).
.
. .
.
. Ute a ~ bo11er. Stir eup ol. grits into four cups bolling
walllrlllldllllt. Add the butlllr andg!ll'lic cheesesnd stir until both
tre mellld 111111 lbe grit&amp; are lblck.
BeaU.O eMS. place in cup and fllllbe cup with.sweet milk.
raid IIIIo 1be grill. Pour the grit mixture Into a large flag
.. 1 ·ale aD! coot f5 minutes at 325 degrees. Then take out of
C11'1!11lllld eo- .with the yeUow cheese which has been grated.
-ilelurll to CM!D for _another 10 minutes.

TRY aDLI CIUCKEN for a change. This recipe came to us
rrQn Marian Miehael wbile she was vacationing In Tennessee.
CHILI CHICKEN
· 2whale ctaclrenbrelsta (about I'At pounda)splitand skinned,
2 tabl !lOIN flour, 1 tablespoon aalad oil, I eight CJWICe can of
llmato uuce with cteen, 1 tablespoon granulated sugar, I
tau J - pan1ey flakes, 1 teaspooil salt, and 'At to 1 teaspoon

c

lldttm Tilt Coup..• ltlow And

SAVE ~3°

0

-~-~·- 7··gc Bologna • • • • •
CHUNK STYLE

OSCAR MAYER

Wieners

I

I

I

•

I

plq.

OSCAR MAYER

Beef Bologna

:U•OL

•

•

MORTONS-ALL VAR.

•

pkg.

75

c

ggc

ROUND BONE SHOULDER

Swiss Steak • • • •

lb.

Pot Pies

I

I

I

I

I

-22c

SUPER-RIGHT

WienerS

I

I

COiri,ARE THIS ,liCE!

Jum~~

17 1/a•OL

36
sin

bo•••

IONA FANCY

Tomatoes

4~~ 89c:
• 2·~:-49c:
.4Of&gt;~•· '1 00

• • •

HOT DOG SAUCE

Castleberry

•

A\MOUR'S

Potted Meat ·

•

•

can•

'

lh.49c Raisin Bread
JANE PARKER

WASHINGTON STATE

Bing Cherries •
FRESH, YELLOW

• •

I

I

3

6 59C Overnight fliapers

~-lb.
In.

'100

CURITY "TAPE TAl"

Sweet Corn

• •

Nn

FRESH A&amp;P

Hoisted ·Peanuts

2~~g agc

•

I

CURITY "TAPE TAl" .

plir.

Regular Diapers •

of

• • 10

.$139

'·

l ,:~
)..

,

~

22· 0L

bottles

u~·-.' -69c '
59
Ice
Cream
.
•
•
:.:.Beef Stew
59C
......
V1'tal1's
• . • • ••..~~-·.·· 49 On1'on R1'ngs • . •
. ·49c
,
Caffein Free v:
Dry Milk • 20 1 Orange Plus • . • ~!
.ggc· · miX
~ ~RedOZEVN
• 24 :
egeta bl es. 4p.... age· ea
• •
•

SUPER-RIGHT

• • • • ·;~L

MARVEL LEMON

DETERGENT

c

Burst •
A&amp;P NON,FAT

•

CBOuMfPfAeRErTI. Hnis PR•I.CE.!

c

MRS. PAUL'S

LIQUID

IJ.OL
pk(•

$ 9t BIRDSEYE

• •

P1:1.

·

·

o

AlP 97%

I

I

I

.•

L·lb.

.

I

FROZEN

10-0I.

OTUR OWN

•

I·

. stN.2ndAVE.

"o It WALLS

ti

,.,os

A CElLI .

I
I

ODORLESS LATEX PAINT
wtllli, CEIUNG WHili &amp;10 COLORS

1-.

REG. '3.99 GAL Makes Interior painting easier and faster. Applies with brush
or roller. covers most surfaces in one coat. Dries in minutes
to a smooth. hard, scrubbable finish that lasts. Tools wash up

'•.

in water.

..

EITEII. LITEI PIIIT
WHITE
REG. $4.49 GAL A durable, weatherproof paint that applies easily with
-brush, roller or spray. Needs no primer 011 sound aur·
· races. Dries bug-~ in 30 minutes. Reslsta bllltering allll
·• peeling.· !J'-waell r~~Ut In soapy ·W iler. ...... •' t• -.+I

le

nt
le

2
EXTERIOR

LA.TEX

:h
81
1r

GALLONS
FOR

.

PAl~

h·

re
of

F01t Wooo SlO!NG. Sl!lllfius. sTUCCO·

•

r

ItIn
er
p.
ay

Town &amp; Country Reg. 89c
QUICK QRY

Ill-

~~~!~~!INT 52~can

SHOP AT STIFFLER'S

---------------------ATERRIFIC BUY!!

-PIOFESSIOIIL TYPE-

Reg. $15.00 Value
81f2'x ll-lf2' Sizes

ROOM
SIZE RUGS

PAN &amp;ROLLER SET
BIG 9;1NCH SIZE
llig nine inch pan with
nine inch roller. Paint
the. easy way to give
room that
profE!SSiOtrtal look.

CDIPAIE AT 99'

Reg. $15.00 Value Room Size
Rug . 8'12'xlJih' cushioned foam
back. No pad needed, 90 per
cent viscose rayon, 10 per cent
nylon. Asst. tweed patterns.

Big 24x44
Asst. Floral,
Stripes and Plains

~ BATH

TOWELS

Reg. 79c Big 24x44 size Bath
Towels. Florals, plains. colors
and stripes. Stop at · your
favorite Dept. Store and save.

Reg; $15.00 Value

00
REG. 7f &amp; 8f

REG. s2.50

REG. '1.29 VALUE

RAYON LOOP AND SHAG

LATEX AND GLOSS

30· QUART

THROW RUGS

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

PAINT
Reg . $2.50 gal . Latex and Gloss
interior and exterior paint.
Available in most wanted
·anlf while. New low
price.

99

c

GAL

EA.

I
/

.•

•

e
it

LA.TEX 1 PAIN;

'·

BAKER

.

ODORLESS

Oose out group of asst. sizes
and styles. Grouped for -quick
sale. Viscose rayon loop and
Sale Values to 79c and 89c.

MIDDLEPO.RT, 0 •

! ·

'

D,;Cntc' Uefd

ff2.J560

.

'

Garuen
,,]_ C'T b

Floriaf ·

tJ ..'&lt;

.
'•..

Personal Notes

The IIBiPbora wtehed
your dao,Ptfulneu
, . . deliWI M -

-

I

":

Middleport

YourFTD,

'

REG. $4.79 GAL -

Perfect for woodwork, kitchen and bathroom. Easy to apply
with brush or roller. Dries fast to a hard, glare-free finish that Is
washable. Toola clean up in water.

VISIT. BAKER'S.

S·OL
cans

£•WITHUTU
SEII·ILDSS EIIIEL
COLORS MAtCHING DRiPLESS LATEX

Personal Notes

Calif:

....

Store Hours!
9 TO 6 MONDAY .&amp;TUESDAY
WED., THURS;, .FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

..

Pomeroy ....

.Election and installation Qf Mr. and Mn. Jack Price, Usa
officers highlighted a recent and Charles, of CarroU were
meeting of the Ohio Valley MondayvisitorsofMr.andMrs.
Comrnandery 24, Knight Leslie Price and Mr. and Mrs.
Templars, at the Pomeroy Charles Eskew. Visiting
Masonic Temple.
Tuesday with the Estews were
,
Installed by Paul M. DarneD, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hall and
Mr. !llld Mrs. Ferman E.
d Mr DaJ K Roush past commander, assisted by daughter, Viclti of Fremont.
. Moore were bosta at an open Mr. an
s. e .
' Danny S. Zirkle, also a past Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pbilipa
boule recutly bonorlng Mrs Steven and Kathy, of Apple commander, were Jesse E. and Mrs. Sadie Brown of
Verilece Turley of Pinch,
Creek were the holiday Brinker, commander; Norbett Minersville xpent the holiday
ind Mrl. Laurette :Lee Shan· weekend guesb of her parenb, W. Compton, generalissimo; weekend 1n Bellefontaine
n1n Cbria~her and Glenna Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Turner. Hugh P. Custer, past com· visitingMr.andMrs. BillNease
· r..ee: ol San Francisco, Calif.
John Riggs, Mr. and Mrs. mander, captain general; and family.
Mn. Turley 11 the mother ol Chari~ Graman and daughter, David W. Fox, senior warden; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J ,
Mrs. Moore and Mr. Annand Rose~, and Mr. snd Mrs. Richard W. Vaughan, junior Struble were Monday guests of
Turley, !llld Mrs. Lee 18 lbe Philip Vtck~, Lancaster, were warden; Theodore T. Reed, Jr., _Mr. and Mrs. Ross Davis,
daughter ol lbe Moores. Mrs. Saturday VISitors of Mr. and treasurer; Paul M. Darnell, Athens.
past commander, prelate;
Mr. and Mrs. otto nes, Sr.
'IW'Iey!llldtheLeecbildrenwill Mrs. Dale Jacobs.
A!main In .Middleport for a
Mr. and M~s, Lawrence Clarence J .' Struble, past accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
month
Stewartilnd family and Mr. snd commander, recorder; Charles Hubert Stagg, Nelsonville, to
A, !Mdre~ dinner was aerved Mrs. Michael Gerlac~ joined E. Blakesiee, standard bearer; Burr Oak Park Tuo:sday for a
lnd entertainment ·was Mr. and .Mrs. Wilham T. Richard Sayre, sword bearer; picnic.
povlded by Herbert F. Moore Grueser for a weeke.nd outing at Dale E. Smith, past com- Mr. and Mrs. Bill MaUack of
anci Harry s. Moore who lbelr Antiquity cabm.
IIUinder, warder; Max Manuel, Chester Road spent the
presented several vocal Mr. snd Mrs. Wilbur Ho1ter, sentinel; and Albert G. weekend with their son and
selections, with Armand Turley Mrs. Anna ~lacy and Vaughan, Woodard, Struble, and Lorenzo daughter-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
,.1t the cqu.fc.~ lillCini~Akron, were weekend gues~. ~ .• 0. Qatls, _all past conun&amp;ndllf, .{;e~rge Dallas and...cllildren of
Mr. snd M'rs. 'Robert DucK· guards and bermlts.
St. Paris.
~ lbe afternoon.
Mrs. Betty Robinson and sons
Gueslll Mr. and Mrs. worth and family.
Mrs.
Florence
Hannay
·
of
of
washington, D. C. were the
Marcus Chamben, Martha and
holiday weekend guests of Mr.
Bruce Outmhen, Mr.. and Mrs. Akron came Thursday for a
JU and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd, Mr.
Jamea D. Euler, Mrs. Millie summer visit with her sister,
Mrs.
Beulah
White.
and Mrs. Carl Qualls, Mr. and
Humpll'eya, Melinda !llld Jack,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
•
Mrs. Robert Cyrus, Mrs. Bertie
Mrs.~ Sherman, Mrs.
Winebrenn~r returned to
Powell, and Mrs. Elsie Bryant,
Eima ~n. Mrs. Mae Bailey. Columbus
Tue~day after .r;,
111
Ralph E. Stewart, Ulllan Moore
and Henrietta Demmltt, visiting with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Karl OWen. Mrs. John
Dllyton, cOUIIIIt of Mrs. Tuiley.
Apatriotic theme was carried
BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Goodrich of Dayton is here
Mr. and Mrs. Marion French,
out In flower arrangements for .The seventh birthday anMr. and Mn. Donald Stivers, visiting Mr. and Mrs. OWen.
the annual picnic of the Mid· mversary of Lynn Kloes,
Mildred Beeson, Helen Holt, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jacobs dieport Garden Club Monday daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
took a trip recently through
h E. Jesse, Mr. !llld Mrs. Kentucky
and Tennessee. night at the home of Mrs. Carl Manning Kloes, was (!bserved
Pete Thoren and children,
Sunday with a family party at
Before returning home they Horky
Pullr and Mrs. Arthur i.und,
ay.b-angeas from the garden the Smart cabin at Long BotMr. and Mrs. Herbert Moore, went to Colwnbus to visit Mr. of Mrs. Garen Stansbury and tom. Attending were Mr: and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moore, and Mrs. Steve Jacobs and red roses were used In the floral Mrs. Kloes, Lynn and Lori, Mr.
family, and Mr. and Mrs.
, Mn. L..DIIvis, Sandy Anderson,
Timothy Priddy snd family, pieces for the refreshment and Mrs. Paul Smart, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Braun and both at Lockbourne. The Steve tables. Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Mrs.
George . Hackett,
l(eJU, sandy Johnson, Mrs.
and
Janet
and
Sheila
Horky
Rosemary
and Lmda, both
Jacobs family spent the.
Ada Ohlinger, Mra. Vivian weekend with relatives bere. were guests.
ho~e _from Ohio State
Waddell, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mr.sndMrs. Ernest A. Jones,
Members attending were Umver~tty, ~elanle, Dennis
KaiT; Mr. !llld Mn. Donald Carol Jean and Kenneth, of Mrs. James Arnold, Mrs. David and BtU, Middleport, and
· KeUy, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Columbus were weekend guests Entsminger, . Mrs. Davld Herman Kloes, AtheJIS.
Mills, and Mr.and Mrs. Thomas of Mr. ilnd Mrs. Harry Moore Farmer, Miss Frieda Faehnle,
Clelland.
~ Mrs. Stanley D. Jones, Mrs. C. 0 . Fisher, Mrs. M. L.
French, Mrs. Walter Hayes,
P~meroy.
Mrs. A. R. Hecox, Mrs. Carl
DAUGHTER OMITl'ED
_HOSPITAL NEWS
Horky,
Mrs.
John
Kincaid,
Mrs.
Unintentionally
mnitted from
HOlzer Medk2J Center, Firat
Malcolm RoUer, Mrs. Stans- survivors of Mrs. W'llliam R.
Ave. and cedar St. General
RESIDENCY BEGUN
bury, Miss Judy Arnold, Mrs. Davis, Jackson, formerly of
visiting hours 3-4 mtd 7-8 p.m. Dr. Tom Skinner began his E. 0. Tewksbary, Mrs. M. C. Pomeroy, who died Monday
Mlllemlty visiting hourl2:30 to . two years of residency at the Wlison, Mrs. B. B. Zeigler, Miss morning at lite Holzer Medical
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Cleveland Metropolitan Hallie Zerkle, and Mrs. Nellie Center was a daughter,
Pediatrics 'Ward.
General Hospital on July I. For Zerkle .
LotTaine, at home.
·Birllul
the past year he has been
· Mr. and Mrs. Allen M. employed at the hospital wbile
Emerson, Uverpool, W· Va., a completing studies in oral ·
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. surgery at Case Western ,.----~~--------~--~
RaymondT.Casb,Jackson,a
Reserve. ofDr.the Skinner,
son;IDIMr.andMrs.
SteeleF. graduate
College ola
Carrico, OU HID, a daughter. Dentistry at Ohio State
DllebrJea
University, served three years
Mic!tael L. Campbell, Mrs. in lbe u. s. Anny before
Ronald
Carr,
Mary enrolling last year at Case. ,
Holllngibesd, Mrs. Ronald L.
Hugbea, Lelmard Leach, Mrs.
Patricia eatteraon, Daniel
VISIT AIRPORT
'lbompeon, Mn. Woodrow W.
Five
and
six-year.dcis In the
Bobo, and Mn. Gene Puckett.
beadstart class taught by Mra.
SALE PLANNED
Mary Skinner visited the
A nanma~t llle will be held Galllpolil Airport Friday and
by the Mlnemllle Women's had a picnic at the roadaide
Society ol Olrlstlan Service In park. AdUlts with lbe group
lbe Brown bul1dlng 011 West besides Mrs. stlnner were Mrs.
"fain Friday ilnd Slturday. The Wanda 'Shuler, Mn. Dale
sale wW he beld from I a.rn. to 4 Hermann, and Mrs. Raymond
Manley. '
p.m. bolb daJ1.

.:Californians
:Are.Honored

c

POMEROYOPEN FRI. 9:30 TO 9:00 SAT. 9:30·ro·_ 9:00

• People !ravel by car pulling a
lbe
and
Ui tempers to get to a camp site;
IM!tling QP camp, stay ·
a few days; then do lbe lone haul again to get home. When at last
they're home two daysatleastare needed to rest up!
All tills Ianot necessary with the faclllty we.baw bere In our
own bact yard, which Is the Ohio riwr olfering IDIIIIY atlractiw
camp sites along the west v~ shore.
·
Olarles and Maxine Griffith' and Phil and Alice Globokar
esch own property along the West Virginia side that they rent to
sulnmer C81Dpers, Both sites are located below the Pmterw·
Mason bridge.
The C81Dper&amp; erect tenia, use trailers, and even pat up patios
at their respectlw' sites. ntoie who do not bave to work on
Saturday start clllllng In 011 Friday night. By Slturday afternoon
lite campsites are humming.
·
•
The sandy beaches offer excellent swimming spots with
boating and skiing taldng over as the No. I recreatioo activity.
At lbe Dick Neutzling site there are all the comforts of home
plus the recreation. Dick has hulit a brick barbecue pit tbat beats
all portsble units.
The 11UJ11ber of boats On the river seem to warrant ~ in
boating and perhaps a right and left lane for upriver and
downriver traffic. One thing certain, when you are Oljt on the river·
you should watCh In front, cin esch side, and to the bact to make
sure yOU: are clear of other boats.
It is wonderful to have such facilities right at hand but I
suggest that the greatest caution be used at all times.

Installation
Is Conducted

.·

Ohio Valley's Favorite Shopping Center

. .

By Katie Crow -

01 waxed paper, coat chicken Ugbtly with Dour, shake off
seal flaar .In nwdium skillet over medium beat In the oil, saute
d;cten tift mhiutes au each lide. Add remaining ingredlenta.
eov. and of!MI!I' 20 mlnufea 1r IDIIli chicken Is lender. Makes
foai' IIII'YIDII wilh 220 calories per serving. ..

Prlcos Good Thru Sat. July lOth!

Katie·'s Korner

·. (

cblll P9Wder.
About Iii minutes before serving time prepare as follows:

dinners'

.

**' m: .. ,~~~-

JUJJbdbJ£!

''Opea
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Boyd
will be
Sadly,
entertained Monday with a July ll,'atz
IB thuaeW .
room ef Sl. Paal Ltdlleru
family barbecue.
Ch.urch ·~-re to boaOr Pulw
Guests were Mrs. Betty
""
Robinson and ,son, Barry snd , ud M!'l. James Yee KiaMoy
V
W h' to 0 C Mr
and ·alina.'
'
E~~eBr::n;n:f ~u~nj; ,;;: Pastor Moy, wbo will be
and Mrs, Carl Qualls, Pomeroy; ieavtng New Haven the flnt
Mr
d M R bet Cyrus ofAlJIUII,wWgd'loWalerloo,
· an · · ~- 0 . r
ti • Iowa, w!tm'he bU aeee,ted
~~!~~· ~~::~~:s·F~[ds~ an admlnl 1 trative poaltloa at
M'ddi
h 1 8 d Wartburg College. He hal
1 eport; · Cares
oy ; se-·"Ath_eNewllavenchurch
Tuppers Plains; and Mrs.
"""
.
Joanne Bass, Greg,_Lori, ·and 1be paot two years . willie
Raylene of Bidwell. Also . worldllg 00 hli Ph. D. degree
present were the hosts' at Ohio untvenlly;
. Invitations to the. "open
children, David and ·Donna.·
·hOWle" have been eltended te
The u.s. Navy's first. sub· the local churches, to. the
marine, the ..Holland, was · Lutheran Church ID Pomeroy
launched 1n 1898 and ac- and to Zion aad Sl, Ml!rk
cepted' in 1900.
·
I.utheran Churcheo, and to all ·
- - - - - - - - - of the many 'frlelllls of the
Bi~le School closed Sunday ·Moys, wbo would like to at·
everung, June 27, at 6 p.m. with tend.
a program presented by the
. ... m .. : •.•,,"····w:».W&amp;$~
childre
. n· Each .class has sought ~w,::&gt;..:«-:·&gt;:·~&lt;":'-&lt;·:&lt;":&lt;
· .. . of
' the
Java lies 10 the ·•area
tohtakeha teaching
oft Jesus
world's ' greatest thunderth
k and
h
s ow
_
ow
e
pas
wee
as
storm
activit~. It has no
d 't
·
lui to
rna e I more meanmg
fewer than 2 3 storm days

1

Country Fair at
Louis ]ohnsons

.

Boyds E,ztertain

congregational singing led by
were so realistic that you felt Wayne Thomas of Thomasville,
you ·were actually there. They Pa.; moving messages of NEW HAVEN - The .United Becky Burris; closing prograin,
toured for 17 days and enjoyed familiar hymns sung nlghUy by Methodist Church of New Miss Kay Hoffman.
·
·
h
h ·
every minute of it.
75 voice volunteer choif; love}y Haven has reported· a.. "vea_ Kilc en, Haze 1 Cape art,
: CAMP_ MEETJIIIQ ,
solos and duets by Mr. and·Mfs. successful'.' Vacation Bible ElSie . Lievlng, . Peggy Ro~~.
Brl!l~ famtl~ and friends to Thomas; stirring instrumental School just concluded. . .
Shelma Jones, 'Mrs : Cliff
th~ Umon Cainp Ground (two arrangements · by pianist . The theme was "Jesus Speaks &amp;oush; Nursery, Jean HofflJUles south of New Haven on Shirley Garlow and organist to our World Todsy,'' ern- rnan, Gorma Bumgarner.,
Union Road) July 19. thro'l'h Genetli Krebs.
· phasizing study on the reality of Becky Roush; beginners, ages 3
Augusdt bl camU~t mdeeMtinghspd~n-t And friendly people to Christ in life todayhas con,• hto 4, teacGber , dJudy HR~ssonh ,
1
1 istorica1 eper,
sore y me
eo 1s welcomeyou!
trastedtothepurey
era 1 me
ous;
Churches of Greater Point · HOME FROM GERMANY conception Of Jesus held by kindergarten, ages '· 5 and 6,
PI
· t' d Be d Ar
.
.
d
t h
Sh lb
D
easan an
n
ea.
Mrs. Ntcky Nicholson an most children. ·
eac er, ' e Y
un~anb,
You'D thrill to the dynamic daughter, Amber Rachel, is
Crafts were not only pleasing helpers, Becky Gilmore, Bo
gospel preachmg of evangelist home frbm Rastatt, Germlllly to the eye but also helped to. Dye.
Laverne E. Rohrbaugh, pastor, for a short visit. She is visiting carry through the qteme of the Grade I, teacher, Janet
Grace United Methodist h~r mother-in-law, Mrs. Evelyn study. It was Inspiring to feel Bumgarner, helper Charlene
Church, Hagerstown, Md .. Rev . Ntcholson, Clifton, and l)er the enthusiasm .among the _ Weaver ; grade 2, teacher,
Rohrbaugh w~s converted while home at Coalton, Ohio. S.sgt. workers and students, 'school C;ll'9lyn Hesson, helper, Brenda
held as a prisoner of war m Nicholson has been in Ge1,1nany officials said, who thanked all Jividen; gr~de 3, teacher,
World WarA L He IS . now .an 2'k years. and Jean and Amber those who helped to !Dllke the Connie · Thompson, helpers,
evangelist of note, havmg Rachel w1U return there August school meaningful. Those who Debbie Rickard, Karen ~ent;
Served in more than one hun· 4 to be with their husband and helped with the school were: grade 4, teacher, Jean Grindred p~e~ching missions and father.
Director , Mrs . William stead, helpers, Chris Hoffman,
ev_ange_listic c_rusades. Y_ ou, too,
VISIT MADE
DeMoss; Secretary-treasurer, Linda Roush ; grade 5, teacher,
· Ken,t he1pers, Sharon
":ill l?v.e hun for· his frank Mrs. Powell Reynolds and Mrs. Janet Bumgarner ; Loueila
' devot_ions, Mrs. Clara Rickard, Ja-ne Haymaker ;
stmphctty ; dynam1c for- Mrs. Billy Casto, Point mornmg
cefulness and Biblical sound• Pleasant, spent a day recenUy Burris ·, morning story, Rev. g·rade 6, teacher, Sue Sayre,
ness
with Mr. and Mrs. Ray . Fox, DeMoss; song leader, Mrs : IM!Ipers, Connie Carder, Kay
·
them
You'll love the music at the Clifton.
WiUiam DeMoss; pianist, Miss Hoffman.
.

A
reported almQSt
every 11(eek. /1. petition is for....._, •• · 1n this. small com·~-~...
munlty •before sqme one is
, killed, becauae sqme .Insane
tcnm after 1be accident · dri~er thinks speed is a slgp of
Wedn!! by ol 1 molber and gOOd.driving. We .can.also hear
c:blldmtdanelebbor'sUttleglrL drag racing aU hours of the
Mlna srntib and daughter, nighl
'nler 1II, ilnd Jackie Blake had When will all tl)is speed stop
.
hen cycle andwhowillbethenextvictlm?
adrnarriowbesc.peCII wt · ·D•i •us'
roCKERS ON TRIP
ven y
n on
n~ ,
Llngsvllle tried to pass when a Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker
car ...,1 ~Into a side road. and cbildren1 Terry, Tim, Tod
Thla 18
lraight tretch of and Troy have enjoyed a
d as
s wa sightseefig trip of their home
road an a regular speed y. state, west Virginia. They
traveled to . Hawk's Next,
Sommerville's o8111, enjoyed
trout fishing at Edtay, T. H.;
Radio Astrology at Green Bank
observatory Blackwater Falls
(Blackwate;llesuponaplateau
over 3,000 feet high snd the best
way to look at _the Mountains is
WEDNESDAY
down upon them at the Parks
Lod
ge that overI00ks the great
WINDING .TRA IL Garden
hasm carv ed bY· Blackwate r
Club' 7·.30tonightatRoyalOak cRl
Park, Mrs . Don Thomas,
ver.)
·.
They traveled to Spruce
h~'O:!EROY MASONIC Knob,. highest point in . ~est,
Lodge F&amp;AM ststed conclave Virginis and enjoyed a VISit to
7:30 u;nlght ai temple. ,
' · smallest church in the United_
THURSDAy
States, only six pews. People
·
MEIGS '-II Pleasure Riders, come from·all over to visit ,!he
Tbursday, 6 p.m. at itock little church located at
Springs Fairgrounds for Morgantown. l.Uther, Shirley
practice session.
and the four T's rounded out
MEIGS CHAPTER DAV, 7:30 ~ir trip,with a day a! Dayton,
p.m. 'i'huraday, at haD on Ohio VISiting the Air Force
Butternut Ave., . Poineroy. Muaeum.
Refreshments. Veterans of aU
BROWSING
wars invited.
Browsing through the book
TRINITY CHURCH Sunday and magazine department of a
ichool hayride and wiener large store .In a neighboring
roast, Thursday, ,t Royal Oak town, I noticed a lad, about 15
Part. ThOle needing trans· years old, also brow~g, but at
portation report to Pomeroy .a dH!erent rack.
church at 6:45, be at park at 7. Having heard so much about
SUNDAY
. pornography and how it was so
MODERN WOODMEN openly displayed for all to see,
Camp 7230 annu81 picnic 1:i buy and' read, I thought I would
noon ~Y at ' State ~k stick around and see just what
Route 33, left gling south. Ali he would do. This s~·s ~k.
memben and friends Invited. shelves were reek1~g w~th
MOTO-CROSS Sunday at pornography and -~ou d think
Meigs Motorcycle Club ,tills boy was cramming for an
ground8, five miles north of_examination ~y the way he
Pomeroy on Route 33. TrophieS lntent~y studted each lur1d
for all claases, also junior class magazme. He was such,a clean
for rlderl15 Jllld Under riding o. cut young man. I thought
125 ce motorcycles. Practice 11 maybe he'd move over to the
a.rn. to 1, races starting 1:30 ~~ SecUon but be stayed
p.rn Refreshments available on nght m there.
~
· _
He studied each picture and
omo VALLEY Cornmandery read each headline. I'm sur·
llnl8l picnic Racine Shrine prised the manager didn't say
Part, ~. 1 p.rn. Take "Move on," but he didn't. I
covend dish Jllld table service. figured I had worn out my
'
·
welcome, so I moved on. The
TUESDAY
boy finally left, snd caught up
~ LEWIS ~LEY• Post ,263, with' &lt;fbe'•llt'·~' 'f8shi~r·s desk;
American Legion Auxillliry, 7 so doing a little more snooping,
p.m. Tuesday at the h&lt;mle of · I lingered, and sure enough he
Mrs. Nellie Winston,
· was paying for a book ti,Ued
"Sexology."
What is pronography? It is
"obscene, licentious, writing or
painting" and that's just
exactly what all the books were
- I think there ought to be a
LQNG BOTI'OM _ A county law. Oh, weD!
.
fair abnosphere with bam snd
ATJ'ENDING SCHOOL
chicken
prevailed at Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler,
the Louis Johns~n home, Long Clifton, is attending Leadership
Botloln, R. D., when guests Classes at the West Vlrglnja
began arriving Saturday Unive~slty cam~ ~or two
mot'ning ftorn northern Ohio weeks ~ study. This IS Mrs.
snd Pennsylvania. Horseback Winkler s ~ond year .. lnstead
riding and music were the main of studymg theology and
as
diversions of the holiday preachm~ .sermons
weekend
they . dtd 10 semlna,ry,
the clergymen will experience
·
Enjoying the hoepitalty of the group dynamics, increase their
Johnsons were Mr · and Mrs. reading speed and learn about
Jack Johnston, Pat, Tommy' their role in community .
Gary, Larry and Butch, and development. The session will
Mrs. Myrtl~ Johnston, all of offer 20 non~redit courses
Negley, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. taught by specialists froni
Floyd Fox, Frankie Rose, and various organizations.
~ Cathy Estes !rom New Evening sessions will Include
Bnghton, P~. ; Mr · and Mrs. Appalachian music and folk
_Tracey . Sc~r. Mr. and dances, a film fesUval, drama
Mrs. Cliff Jemgm and Pam, at the Creative Arts center, a
and Miss Alta Scrimsher, all of bl!ltquetanda talk by Dr. Ralph
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Bert E: Nelson, W.V.W. provost for
Scrlmsher, Hartford, W. Va., "'l
. ed · lion Mr
""·-d F 1 d Lo Bot- "' • campus uca .
s.
d
. an ""'' Y r en • ng
Winkler was recenUy made an
torn. Mr . and Mrs :. Floyd associate pastor at meeting of
Weber, Long Bottom, jomed the West Virginia Conference of
group Saturday evening for a United Methodist Church at
wiener roast. Other callers Buckhannon.
•
were Mr. and Mrs. MaywOOd BURTONSON VACATION
Johnston, PorUand, _and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Murl Burton,
and Mrs. Robert White, Long Mason, and Faye Burton,
Bottom.
Norfolk, Va. have returned to
their homes after a "once in a
life-time" trip to California. Mr.
Burton felt he was very lucky
CLUB MEETS
for the women chauffeured for .
NEW· HAVEN - Mrs . the entire trip.
Thomas Grinstead was hostess The three spent one day at
·at the June meeting of the Grand Canyon, two at
GoodwiU Club. At the COO· Disneyland, one in National
elusion of the evening refresh- Stone Park and toured 20 states, ·
ments were served to Mrs. but the most interesting to Mr.
Melvin Knapp, Mrs . Cliff Burton was Disneyland.
Roush, Mrs. Cecil Duncan and Of great interest was the
I. cbildren, Mrs. William Mc- churches they attended. They
Farland, Mrs. Ray Weaver, were churches mostly for
Mrs. Thelma Capehart, Mrs. tourists, sotite 200 years old.
:1 William Grins\!!ad and guest, In Disneyland they enjoyed
Mrs. John Fry.
seeing a lift·like statue of
~'
Abraham Lincoln who stood,
·J
delivered a speech and sat
down.
•,
CLUB MEETS
They enjoyed a film shown in
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Her- a round circled room 100 ft. in
•. man Layne was hostess at the diameter; they were ta~en by
1;, recent meeting of the JUlia T. film to Pennsylvania Avenue to
,. Bryant Sewing Club. Those tlje White House, France
• attending were Mrs. J. S. !}ermany and when the ·
1' McMurray, Mrs. John C. Fray, narrowed down, it took them
1 Mrs. Ollie Roush, Mrs. Howard ·through a t'Overed bridge in
1: Wagenhals, Mrs. Donald Smith, South Dakota. It was like
Mrs. N. 0. Weinand the hostess. treading on water. The scenes
Ft)X

CLD'TON _ \¥ lbepeople of
,..,..__
e, ~--"than
........, areiiiCII't convu"'"'
.,.. itlllt n need 1 double
·.
ow line (nopulline) thtough

... ~ .,

&lt;'

·cooLER CHEST
Reg. $1.29 30 quart Styro Foam
Cooler Chest. Light, easy to
carry for picnic. camping,
for car. Get yours now.

•Wt

....
~-

·r.

t

~

�'

- ...

I .

-- -

14 ~Tilt Di1)f llelltinel: Mlddleport-Pimey, o ., July 7, 1971 '

Twirlers Win Big
Two area twirlers, Miss
Diana Guthrie ancl Karen
Sll'alllbauch, together won tO
Wopblea recently In the South·
wa~t "Queen of

!lie Baton"

cantest tn Albuquerque, N. M.
Tbe hro-4ay CG~~~Petition was
• aancUoned by Ule National
Baton Twlrlln8 Assn.
'!be two girll' won the travel
trophies for 'having traveled
1,800 miles, the farthest
dlatance to the contest. Other
twirlers alter\ded from as far
a~y is 800 miles.
·
Mt.,. Guthrie won ~ junior
high point champlon,l))ip on the
~ day, having compil~
· the most over all points. She
was In cOmpetition with the
New Mexico and Colorado

One Killed• in

.Alumni Will Plan Centennial Year

Wreck of Train

Looking toward 1the observance of its centennial year,
the executive cillllllittee of the
Middlepoct High School Alumnl
' Assn.,'wm ~tat 7:30 tonight
in the f'Cirmei- high school at
Middlepoct.
The meeting will be the' first
· since new by-laws were reacl
and approVed last month . .The
by-Jaws established a regular
meeting night (the first Wed·
nesday of each month) and

County Home dining room
according to C. E. Blakeslee,
president.
A reply has been received
from the Herscher Foundation
trustees indicating that when
·•
the community raiSes $10,000
they would approve use of .the
foundation money for purchase
and aperation of a Meigs County
A crackdown on speeders in Museum. Procedure will be
Rutland village was promised planned at the short Thursday
when Rutland ·council met in meeting.
regulat session ThurSday night.
Jim Fry, Rutland councilman,
Bald offenders will be arrested
FOUR FINED
and fined.
Four defendants Were fined
·Attending the session were
Tuesday
night in the· court of
Mayor Eugene Thompson ,
..councilmen .Fry, William MlddlepW-t Mayor C. 0. Fisher.
Brown, Bob SnQWden and Er· they were Everett Chaffm, 69,
nest Nicholson, and Clerk Indianapolis, $10 and · costs,
lntoxlcatlon; Sharon A.
Vernon Weber.
Freeman, 21, $1D and costs, stop
sign; Otto Johnson, 67,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,- in·
DELEGATE NAMED
toxlcation, and James M.
· Harold Roush was selected as Milliron, 20, Middleport, $15 and
delegate froin Meigs.County tO
casts, speeding. The fine of
attend the 18th BMual meeting
William McHaffie, 45, Mid.
of the Ohio School BOards Assn.
dleport, for Intoxication was
in Cleveland In November by
suspended and he was placed on
the county school board
probation for 30 days.
Tuesday nig~t. Attending the
regular meeting were Harold
Rouah, Harold Lohse, Virgil
Atkins, George P~rry and
Gordon CoWna, members, and
· Robert Bowen, superintendent.
A. meeting of the Meigs
County Pioneer Historical
Socleiy trustees, finance
committee and others in!erested will be held at 1:30 p.
m. Thursday in the Meigs

Crackdown Due

Vehicular Tax
At $29,938.16

$1,000 AWARDED
·
The Meigs County com·
missioners have contributed
$1,000 to the Meigs County Fair
Board against the cqst of the
new water lines laid at the
fairgrounds, Clerk Martha
Chambers reported. Attending
the brief session Tuesday were
Bob Clark and Warden Ours,
commissioners, and Mrs.
Chambers.
·

Toniglll, Thu. &amp; Fri . .
July 7-8-9
"JENNY 11

"t'oTor
Marlo Thomas

Alan Aida

GP

- Pius"SUPPOSE THEY
GAVE A WAR AND ·
NOBODY GAME"
·
Color
Brian Keith

Tony Curtis

:

~======G=P=·~

.MEIGS THEATRE
' lo•1ight &amp; Thursday
July 7-8
NOT OPEN
. Friday &amp; S•turday
July 9-10

HELLCATS
(Technicolor)
Ross Hagen
~ Duffy

WADED with several
thousand dollars ·worth of
blgb.fasblon costume jewelry, Swedish actreos Eva
Swaim brightens up Paris'
Place Vendome for the
opening or a jewelry salon.

ail

Illness.

.

'

I

s·ALE
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
WOMEN'S AND ~IRLS' SWIMWEAR
IS REDUCED FOR lHIS SAl E

Out They GO!.

BOATS RELEASED
KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI ) The Coast Guard released four
imprisoned Cuban fishing boat
captains and their vessels in
international waters Tuesday
night and the Cuban govern·
ment indicated it would free 17
Americans today . An 18th
American jailed in Cuba, Fritz
Sprandel, 17, of Whitehall, Pa.,
a long distance canoeist, was
nomination.
Harris, whose Senate seat released Tuesday night and
comes up for election next flew lo Miami on a Cuban
year, said his decision would be refugee flight.
based on "what sort of
response there is Ill some
MARRIAGE LICENSE
slunding out efforts" in the next James Arlen Graham, 18,
several weeks.
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and Brenda
Marie Lunsford, 17, Pomeroy,
Rt. 3.
BELFAST BOMB
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
LOCAL TEMPS
(UPI )-An explosion police said
could be heard for lD miles Temperature in downtown
extensively damaged a televi- Pomeroy .WedneSday at II a.m.
sion sales showroom today and was 76 degrees, under sunny
broke windows in 30 nearby skies.
· houses.

·-

Excellent Selection . . . Maverick, Mustang, Falcons, fairlane SOO,
Torino, Torino GT, Galaxie 500, LTO, Station· Wagons ... Shop
Early For Big Bargains. Also FtOO &amp; F2SO Pickup Trucks · V-B's,
6's, Std. &amp; Automatic Transmissions.

Whether she's timing your pulse or
the baby's leeding, every second
counts. And Caravello has the
watch she can count on. Aspecial
nurse's model named the "Radclif
B". Water resistant, shock resist·
ant, il has 17 jewels, a sweep sec·

•

$l59!i

CARAVELLE ®
by BULOVA

ii

Buy Of AUfetime!
Come In Now!

S·Gets
h. 1•

.Ov
er

M

au_Jngj~~

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - A sion of all offices through the Adams, Highland, Clinton. Warsweeping reorganization of the districtmanagerswithassistant ren and BuUer counties.
Ohio Bureau of Employment district managers charged with · :_District Two: All offlces In
Services was announced today business management. In addi- Montgomery, Preble, Greene,
by the bureau's Administrator, lion, he said, new posltiona· of Clark, Miami, Darke, Mercer,
William E. Games.
employment services assistant Auglaiu, Shelby and Logan
'!be new plan called for the and unemployment compensa- counties.
creation of eight districts, each lion assistant will be created.
-District 'lbree: All offices In
with a district manager to he In BMouncing !hi! plan, Lucas, Allen, Williams, Fulton,
responsible directly to the local
central office of the bureau.
Garnes said the presentsthlc·
lure of the bureau includes a
local office in each of Ohio's B8
counties, operating as a separate entity, with the aception
of offices In the eight major
metropolitan areas of the state.
Garnes said the reorganiza.
lion will permit direct supervt.

Garnes appointed John W.
F1eming, currently chief of the
unemployment compensation
technical services, as assistant
director for local offlce operalions within the bureau.
The ·eight new districts and
their &amp;reiiS to be In operatiOIJ
by Sept. I oc earlier, ~e:
-District One: All offlces in
Hamilton, Clermont, Brown,

By U..;ted Prell Interutlcmal

'

•

,

SANTO-DOMINGO -POLICE said an American Baplist
mlaslooary couple found beaten and sl8shed to death in their
home Wedlleaday may have been the victims of anti-American
terrorists. Paul Potter, 39, and his 'llife, Nancy, 36, of Marshfield,
Mo., were found by their aon, David, 10, In their home in Santiago
de los Caballero. Neighbors and pollee ran to the bouse after
hearing screama of the lioy and his slater;Snun, 12.
Tilt couple operated a Baptist 8Cbo01ln Santiago, 110 miles
north of Santo Domingo and had establiabed four ~ In the
Island republic. The family had returned to the Dominican
Republic eight weelm ago after spendio&amp; a year In the United
States. 'lbey had been here fwr Years prev1181Sly.

morass.

~ as

Pin,

Ottawa, Defiance, Henry, .Wood,
Sandusky, Paulding, Putnam,
Hancock, Seneca, Van Wert,
and Hardin counties.
District Four: All offlces In
Lorain, Erie, Huron, Wyandot,
Crawford, Richland, Ashland,
Morrow, Marion and Knox
counties.
- District Five: All offices in
Franklin, Union, Delaware,

Licking, Madlaon, Fayette,
Plckaway, Fairfield, Ross,
Hocking, Pike, Vinton, Athens,
Scioto, Jackson, Meigs, Lawrenee and Gallia counties.
- District Sii: All offices in
Stark, Holmes, Tuscarawas,
Carroll, Coshocton, Harrison,
Jefferson, Musklngum, Guernsey, Belmont, Perry, Morgan,
Noble, Wasliington and Monroe
counties.
.:.District Seven: All offices
In Mahonlng, Summit, Ashtabu·
Ia, Trumbull, Columbiana, Portage and Wayne counties.
-District Eight: Cuyahoga,
Lake, Geauia · and Medina
counties.
·

' '

FLOWER SlllW DRAWING- Repa Jlnlalhw of Melp Olanly gadou daltl dmr -:·

.Over by

Fiow··at
Armstrong Bier

NEW ; ORK (UPI) -The Armstrong wore a necktie of
body of jazzman Louis Arm· pink and blue to go with hi$.
strong, ~ in a black silk pink shirt and hi$ ever-present
suit and a pink shirt, went on white handkerchief lay beneath
public display ln a Manhattan one of hi$ hands. Armstrong
armory today for thousands of always carried the handkerchmourners. Many wept.
ief when he played hi$ trumpet
Mast of the early mourners, to, as he said, ''wipe my
some of whom had been In line chops."
outside the building before A spokesman said Ann·
dawn, w~re black, Including a strong's gold-plated trumpet
77-year1lld man who said be was In the (!OBSession of hi$
first met Armstrong in the New· wife Lucille and would not be
Orleans orphan8ge where both buried with him.
spent part of their boyhoods.
"~~'*· "· 11':'$1 f 1&gt;
:8!~;:;$1
"I had to come to his ..,.,..._ -m:;;; '· ...no.. ·
L
funeral," said the old · man,
CINCINNATI (UPI) - An
El:neatBrOglin of New York. "I .ladlan burial site believed
loved him as a musician and be used by the Hopeweli culture
was a great one. He was the llOIIlld tile year 501 A.D. bas
perfect eritettalner. Tbe world beell dllcovered in western
laved him. A lot of people tried Hamilton County.
to imitate him -but there wiD
Workmen developing
never be another Satch."
Sba,_ Lookout Park unArmstrong's body lay in a N'l"ered the ' site. Warren
metal casket In the rolunda of Wells, aatllraUat for the
the large brick 'l'itb Regtment c-ty par11 dlslrlcl, said
armory on Park AveQUe at 66th Wedneoday oae complete
was surrounded by skeletoll bad been folllld and
dlillD&amp; would NDIIIIIIe.
flowers of putel «;;Oors and
illuminated by ~ floor lamps. ]utJ.dUJ&amp;.•JddC:U.:.umu. e ~:::::::::::·
-~ -~~............. ..
_,.,, · ~ "'t~ • ._
:&lt;. ..:...
EAT CJUCKEN
EXTENDED oun.oox
The Middleport Fire Dept.
Fair ud eMier S.tmlay and will hold a chicken barbecue
SUaday ul ,.,_ wllll • Saturda be . .
t 11
cbuce ol altowen M-*Y·
.
Y _gllllllll8 a
a.m.
lliglllla lllil a.., 'Itt and low at the Leg~on P~ near the
811 S.tmlaylllll 8 ''IJ 11111 tn Middleport. P~t Office. A new
lie apper • )llllllay, Lowlla bar~ue p1t will be used for the
the mid lll .telow • S.turday first ·time and a mobile ~tchen
11111 Saday 11111 mid .. 18 1.., completed recent!&gt;' by f1remen
will also be u.sed m conjunction
'Ill Mllday.
with the barbecue. 'lbe public is

"no economist, just a common guy who has his

fatigue."

Some Wdl Pay for Head Start ·

Wednesday for classe~~ of the artistic arrangement&amp; division lor the two flower shows to ~
staged at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured here with Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewill, third from left,
general chairman of the County Fair shows, are Mrs. Harry S. Moore of the Middleport .·
Amateur Gardeners, Mrs. James Nlcbolaon, Star Garden Club (keeping he.- draw 100 pet.
honest by closing her eyes) , and Mrs. Maxine Hart of the Walk-In Garden Club, left to right.

2 Bound

ches ~lcoffln

worrleS," Mansfleld said hefelm the nation bas run out of luck-on
the economic front just as it did in Vlehm. In both the war .00
the econolny, he said, the country has experienced a "f~tlon
fed by promises and followed only by a plague of failures and

Open 8 to 8 Daily-Thurs. &amp; Sat.. Til 6

SHOE

.

.

Clearance
Continues!

WA8111NG'ION -1BE HEAD START propam lor needy
preschOol cblldren has picked up quiet endocaementa far Ita t*n .·,··u.~ .._. .·s~~e~ a ; :XIf'W· welc.ome.
to ct.rge the parenta of nitMie clasa cblldren enrolling after
Sept. 1. "'lbere Isn't any ream wby ••111001' clildnn a)looldn't
partlclpale, but if they, aren't pocr they ougbt to pay their own
way," said Sen. Gaylord Nelson, J&gt;.Wia., a IIJKAW« of the 1989
CoogreiiSional a""""lnlllllt ordering head start fee IIChedules.
•'Secon\111, It would be good to have a better mix of kids,;:
Nelson Ald. '!be sliding fee acbedule is not espected Initially to
Change the 90 .per cent poor, ill per eent nCJIIPOCI' ratio of Head
WASHINGTON (UPI) . -A -lnegaton weapo.i (equivalent to
Start's 471,500 ehlldnil.
newly fonned '"committee for 5 miDion ' 111111 of TNT) at a
nuclear responsibility" today depth of 6,000 feet In the rock
announced federal court acilon ·under Alaska's Aleutian island
LAS Vl!lGAS, NEV. - · lt. sp!IIFS of exploPOOII - cause to try to keftl the Atcmlic. of AIJichltb.
unknown - shattering windows blocb away aeat Dames tlnugb Energy Commlalon (AEC) A declsion by the ~esident
a block-lone abcwi• i:en1er early today, ldllq «De man and from staging Its - 1 poWerful may be forthcmllng soon.
leveling eight shops. The initial blast ripped out windows In uitderground weapo1111 ~~next Aceording to ~ AE~, the
test Is "of prime mgnlflcance to
apartment bulldings in a five-equare block- ~ the fall.
wr
national security." The
eenler.
'lbeAEC,aubjecttoapProval conunission has said lt is
The vlclinl'a body wu found In a dolut abop near the middle
of the center, located abclut three bloek8 from the Las Vegas by President Nixon, apects in "highly unlikely" that the
Oclilber to detonate a five- buried explosion -code-named
'
''Strip.''

Somebody Got a Bad PiJ!e RoU

'

''G"

CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

461

Pomeroy

s. 3rd

KEITH GOBLE FORD
Phone 992·2196

Middlepart

--------~----~----~~----~. --~
'

/

•

•....

· At today's se.ssion, Bruce said
the United States welcomed the ·
Comm1111ist plan if lt meant
llimoi and the VietCong ''wish
at last Ill enter into seriojis:
negotiations."
•

\z.

Show
Draws
Held
.

Justi~.e -

'

'

.

~

'

to School."
can enler "olher•rt• •s of the
As In previous years, the club show- aa many as they want
representatives drew for - but are limited ·to one
classes In the artistic arrangement per class for each
arrangements division of both club member. '!be invitational
sliows. Each club assumes classes are also open ·fpr
responsibility !(II' providing six exhibits from any club memarrangements ln the class ' hers.
.
drawn, assuring full classes at Staging techniques, more
the fair.
participation, and the rules of
In addition, club members

·(Continued.on page 5)

Boater Fees in Works
way system can't pay the an- lngCongress oepends on the' i.tnual cast of aperating and titude of "industry groups tn
maintaining it, then there may Cincinnati, along the Ohio River
be some question as to whether and elsewhere - If they ~
it should be operated and main- port lt, the user charge 1111J
talned from an ~onomlc point be favorably considered by Conof view," Robert Burns a gress."
Transportation · Deparbnent Users of the Ohio Rl-nr
economist assigned Ill the pro- woold pay $10,145,000 the flrit
P.osed bill, said.
year as their allotment ol opilr;
But Roger Adkins, chief of ation-maintenance CC18Ia of tbll ,
the transportation unit in the system, llccordlng Ill lfatrt•.
Office of Management and Cook, executive vice pr 1hu~
Budget, emphasized that the' of the National WalenraJI
cbances of the legislation clear· Conference.
• ''
A total of 121,238,000 net 00'· '
go tons wu hauled oo the 01110
River In 1989, the last Jeal" lK
which a report is avallable:.or
that total, 51.5 million tons,W
coal.
~

Charles Miller
Died Wednesday

....,,.

RUTLAND - Charles Mllier,
68, died Wednesday evening at
Veter111111 Memorlsl Hospital hi$ home, Main St.
DMI
The Middleport E·R squad
A
TTED
Roy answered a call to the home at
Kesterson, Pomeroy; Elizabeth 8,12 p.m.'far. MlDer was dead
Roush, Racine ; Lena Heilman,
arri 1 De th
near Pomeroy· Melva Robbins upon the squad's
va · a
RUTLAND - Robert BlaekMiddleport. '
' was caused apparently by a wood, 76, Route 1, died
DISCHARGED _ KeMeth . heart attack..
nesday afternoon at
Matson, Lori Laudermllt, M~ . Miller IS survived by hi$ Memorial Hospital. A
Clifford Stumbo, Anthony wife, Bonnie; three daugh~s, Of World War I, Mr.
Heaton, Charles Klein.
Mrs. Evelyn Knapper, Mid- h8d been a fiii'IIlel'
dieport Route I; Mrs. Betty Hirrlloovllle area aD
Dill, Pomeroy Route 3,, and Mrs. He had been a scbool bua
Loi$ Jane SchOonover, Rutland; in Sdplo Townablp 13
four sons, Kenneth, of
He is survived by
Springfield; Robert, Middleport Glallys; a daught., Mn.
Route I ; Donald, Pomeroy Wein, of Albany; a son, c::~:
Roote 3, and James, of Cheshire Florida, and one i
Route 2, and two sisters, Mrs. daucht..
alert the .AmerlCJn public to E11)1118 Haggnet and Mrs. Dollie Funeral ae"lcea
the dangers ..inheren,t in .our Barleon, both of .Wellaton.
cooclla:ted at 2 ~~:~===
growing commilmenttcmuclear Funeral services will·be at 2 the HanilonVIile
poWer for the generation of p.m. Sunday .at the Rutland · Cburdl of "hk:b he
electricity and to our reliance Churc~. o( the Nazarene with the IIIIIIMer. '!be lift,
on nuclear weapona."
Rev. Uoyd Grimm officiating. Mayae will
Its cochairmen lnclu&lt;je Dr. Friends may call at the Martin be In the Weill
John .w. Gofman of Livermore, Funeral Home any time Pqetown.
calif., long a critic of the AEC; Saturday w1UI noon on Sunday tile M,lrtln Eunanll
Former Sen. Charles E. Good· when the body will be taken to time FridiJ .S
ell, R-N.Y., an4 Mrs. Lenore the church to lie In state until SaturdaJ.-Ihl'llll
Marshall, a poet and novelist of time of llerv.lces. Burial will be taki!n to llle cltlifttt
. New Hope, Pa. .
In Miles Cemetery.
state' untilll!ne II

Mr. Backt.DtJOtl.'·

Weather
Chance of thunderstorms
northwest late this afternoon,
more likely tonight, and
spreading . over the state
Friday. Lows tonight in the ~
and loiv 7~. Turning cooler
Friday with highs In the 7~
northwest and the lMl!l southeast.

Age 76, Die8 ·~;:.

posed

cannikin -lllll trigger damag·
ing earthquakes or other
environmental ~tide effects.
But critics contend the shot
conceivably could harm wlld·
life, cause quakes and tidal
waves, and .Jeopardi2e dtsarmament talks between the
United States and the Soviet
Union.
,
The committee for Nuclear
Respqnsibility, acco~ to its
spokesmen, was formed "to
,•'.

..
~

•

- ·.

Classes to be exhlblied at the
Meigs County fair flower shows
were drawn during a meeilng of
garden club representatives
with Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis
Wednesday afternoon at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
. Mrs . LelfiS is general
chairman· of the shows which
will be staged Wednesday, Aug.
19, and Friday, Aug. 21 ,
carrying oot the theme, "Back

PT. PLEASANT - .William
Whitlatch and Steven Swann
waived preliminary hearings
here this morning and were
bound over to the grand jury
today. Both hearings were In
connection with the death of
Miss Sandra Faye Williams, 19,
a
Marshall
University
sophomore , Robert Peoples,
justice of the peace, heard both
cases.
Whitlatch is charged with the
sale and illegal possession- of ·
drugs. He is being held In Mason
County jail in lieu of $1D,OOO
bond.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
The drugs, found in the Nixonadministration )s drafting
possession of Whitlatch, were legislation calling for a use
determined to be in the "hard charge to be paid by barge
drug " category, reported and pleasure boat operators on
Prosecuting Attorney Michael the nation's inland waterways,
Shaw. The drugs were sent the Cincinnati Enquirer reportTuesday to the State Police ed today.
Laboratory in Charleston for
Barge lines would pay on a
analysis.
ton-mile.cargo basis and pleasSwann, 21, is being held ure boats would be charged a
withll!ll bond .on a first degree straight $10 !~ for every use
murder charge in the death of of .locks, the newspaper said.
Miss .Williams. A drug party' Such charges would 'be the
Involving both men allegedly is first every by the federal gov·
connected to the death of Miss ernment for users of the inland
Williams.
·waterway system and would
Names of the other four males follow airport user charges enat the alleged drug party have acted last year. ·
not been released.
" If users of the Inland water·

Megaton Boom

JULY

.

'ji;

WASIIIHGTON - SENATE DEIIOCRA'nC Leader Mike
Mansfield said Wednesday It is time- just once- to put politics
aside and swnmon a blportisan meeting of capitol HID and Nixon
admtnlstratlon leadera to find a way out of the nation's economic

Your Trade Is
WOrth More NOW

'

1Jl ·

Depends on .Whose Shoe

WE NEED
USED CARS.M

ond hand, full numeral luminous

dial, stainless steel back case. And
1 practical price.

imperative demands of ~ ,
people of VIetnam, the Uniti\d;,
States and the world."
··
Thuy said, "We have a~ . ·
the American delegate Iii ·
reflect In a more mature,
fashion" on the Commun~ ·
plan. He said the Comn!unists''
hope to get a more !avoca~!~
response neil week.
·

•:~·:·~:·!

Webster.

Saudi leaders.

65 CARS IN STOCK-

package and allied peace
proposals as well.
Madame Nguyen Thi Binh,
foreign minister of the provi·
sional government of tile South
Vietnam National Uberation
Front, and Xuan Thuy, official
head of the North Vietnamese
delegation, told newsmen after
· the session that 8ruce seeming·
ly wanted to sidestep a clearcut
answer to their latest peace
package.
Madame Blnh said after the
meeting the United States "is
seeking to change the form of
the conference to elude the

- Tbe warld- atntepc III1DI t.lance 'A'''
I NEW YORit
Z•:•:•;::
receatly paned putty IJid tipped lD favor of the Soviet ~~
•.i i_. UDIGD, the U.S. Stra~gle Air Comm•ader said today.
.it "ADd their momealluD is very worrllome," be added.\
}}
In an latervlew lbal cGiaclded with the ..,.-nlal of die {fu,
mlll l'OIIIId of Strategle Arml Uniltatl• Tallm (SALT) tn jf:~
{j HelaiUI, Gm.llrDce X. Holloway, .....m•ndef In eblef of •f~
Et the Stralegle Air Command, termed the tal1m "the most p
t'ii lmJ141l'tant tlllqfor the future ofma*lndlbow."
~d
@@ . Alfvrtbeatrateglcarmshal•JW,Hollowaysald: ''Ia

Missionary wup!e Slain ·

Her choice?
A Caravella,
of course.

{::::::::~

'.n·'

It's NOW TlmeJJ

Chapman's

Main St.

~I ! Balance Said with Soviets ;~-~ ~~r~;;n:~~~~a!:~~

..-....;;

July
Selldown

EXCELLENT SELECTION

talks. But up to no\V in the
Paris negotiations, now 2'h
years old, they have rejected
all U.S. suggestions for official
but "restricted" meetings.
Bruce toiil newsmen outside
the conference hall, on sundrenched Avenue Kleber near
the Arch of Triumph, ".We
think they want to continue to
use these meetings as a forum
for propaganda ."·
Bruce had gone into the I 20th
session of the Vietnam peace
from Vietnam this conference and urged prompt
private talks to explore the
July I Communist peace

turned Bruce down.
Bruce &lt;had said the United
States needed a lot more
clarification of the seven-point
Communist. peace plan proposed by the Viet Cong last
week.
The plan Includes an offer Ill
release all American war
prlsoqers -Hanoi's figure is 320
but the United States says
there are at' least 433 providing all U.S. troops are

:~:n:m*f®I¥\SfliUl@tMJ.titlf:tiillii~m\@~Jin~::Wi}\(\~\ t :t: : l~:,I;~; ;~~awn

JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA - VICE Prellldent Spiro T.
Agnew arrived in Saudi Arabia tnday with a pledge that the
UnltedStatesseelma "just and lasting peace" in the Middle East.
Agnew new to this huge desert ~dom on the fourth stop of
lii3May,llklatlonround-the-worldtour.Hew1Dspeadtwodays
Cilllferrq with King FaiSal, leader of one of the most conservatlve and traditicmal nations of the Arab world, and other

'
MASS PRODUCED
RACERS are lined up for a final
checkout at an auto works In Plzen, Czecboslovakla.
Designed for speed circle races, the cars are t'urned
out on a ftve-montb producUon schedule.
HARRIS MAY RUN
LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Sen.
Fred Harris, D-Okla., said
TueSday· he seriously was
considering running for the 1972
Democ;ratic Presidential nomin·
ation.
Harris told newsmen he had
been contacteed by persons
· "who have to be taken
seriously" about seeking the

SMACK IN THE MIDDlE. - Mrs. Jlllllel Council,
LanpvU!e, to avoid bitting motber ear wben ber !rakes
failed, struck 11 uUilty pole at the comer of Pomeroy's Main
and Court SIB., Weomesday in~. Tbe car had beavy
damage to the grilllllld hood •.• 'IIlii not injured. &amp;lrveylng
the frG!t, hit amidships, are Jim QEm, of Rawlings Sons
eo., Middleport, left, ~ Pomeroy Olief of Pollee Ted

Agnew Sets Mideast Goal

FORD
1

~

no."
He had suggested making a
fresh start In the talks by
holding a restricted mt!jlting
next week ao the two sides
could work out an agreement
outside the "glare of publicity."
But though the Communists
had Indicated in press interview4 earlier this week that
they woold be wllling to meet
the Americans in private, they
·

~-~N;;;:~:fu~jjri~{;-~ l Tears

'71

·PHONE 992·215£

-..,...-:-'--'--..,...-~.:...:

cret·

PARiS (UPI) - '!be .Unlied
. States ~ered to day to hold
private talks on the new
Vlfhmm Communist peace
propowl• but the Nlll'th Vletna· and the Viet Cong
refused.
'
David K.E. Bruce, the chief
AmeriCan negotiator' emerged
from a 3'h-bour weekly lii!BSion
of the Paris peace talks and
told newsmen, "I got a decided

.

GIGANTIC SELLDOWNIII

\.

~

'

GRANGE TO MEET
LETART FAU.'l - · Ohio .
Valley Gr,mge 2612 will meet at
8 p.m. 'lbursday at the home of .
Mrs. Elizabeth Roush, Refresh.
ments of homemade ice cream,
cake lind pie will be se.tved.

End• of Model

H
(\~~
Q'F~

-~

.~~ -c

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ASKS DIVORCE
Sheila . Yvonne
Rash,
Syracuse, has filed suit for
divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court agalrult
Pfc. Darrell David Rash, Ft.
Carson, Colo., charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme .
cruelty.

THURSO~Y. JULY 8." 1971

POMEROY-MIDDI
FPORT... ...:·OHIO
•- - . - ..
:.c.:
·· ::.;-=..
-

. 'NO: kXIV. : NO. 59
'·

•

Her time is
precious.
Her timepiece
must be
trustworthy.

AUSSIE QUAKE
BREWSTER
MELBOURNE,
Austra11·a
r.
McCLOUD
(UP! ) - An earth tremor
. (Technicolor)
cracked walls in hundreds of
Aud Cart, Sally Kellerman
· homes . and buildings .in Mel'
" R"
bourne suburbs ·and eastern
SHOW STARTS 7 P. ~.
Victoria country areas today,
. ._ _ _ _• • - - •. . police said. ·~

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Tiie Pomeroy E-R squad Willi
called to Rose Hill at 3:00p.m.
Tuesday for Cbristine Branham
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted for treatment of

..

year and we want to have the
money to make it a memocable
occasion. I'll be recommending
to the e:&lt;ecutive committee. a
liUDber of lily own ideas, 'lot
we're completely open to
suggestions anyone may have,"
Gerard concluded.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Nora
Sinunons, Procious; Mrs. Ada
TWO FINED
Engfield, Mrs. Wesley PearSQD,
REGUlAR - JUNIOR - EXTRA SIZES
Fined in the court of Pomeroy Mrs . Marie Ward, Mrs.
Mayor Charles Legar Tuesday Genevieve Higgings, all Point
night were Leroy Simpkins, 39, Pleasant; Martin Reynolds,
GIRLS 2-3X, 4-iX, 7-14 and TEEN SIZES
Mason, $5 and costs, unsafe Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Gladys
vehicle, and Charles Reitmire, Dunham, Leon; Timothy Gibbs,
ALL INCLUDED IN.11US BIG SALE
34, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, New Haven; Mrs. Elmer Click,
squealing tires . F'o_rfeiting · Cottageville.
•
bond_s were Terry. Reiber, . 20, DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ray
IN OUR SECOND FLOQR READY-TO-WEAR
Racme, $33-70 posted on VanMatre, Georgia McCoy,
~ charges, and GeOrge Mrs. Elmer McGinnis, Elbert
DEPARTMENT
Jenkins, 22, $25,_ pos_ted on .a Martin, James Clonch, Mrs.
charge of squealing tires.
Charles Warner and son; Carl
SHOP WEEK DAYS 9:30-5, WEEKENDS 9:30 TO "9 P.M.
Forfeiting bonds in the court Dabney, Dennis and David
were Maaon E. Arnold, 24, .Williamson, Misty Gillispie,
Pomeroy, $25, posted on a stop James Wallace, Mrs. Keith
sign violation; Thomas M. DeWitt and son; Josie Fisher,
Roush, New Haven, $25, posted Mrs. John Piatt, Burl Duncan,
on a speeding charge, and - An-;dr;;e;;;w~She;:;;:ar;er;.;._..,;;,iiiiiiiiiiii,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""tt
Rlmald Wilcoxen, 34, Gallipolis, f
·
50, carrying concealed weapon.

'

Several residents of the area
around Glenmachen Street in
central Belfast were treated for
shock, an army spokesman
said.
He said army experts estimated 10 to 15 pounds of TNT
were used ln the device, which
was placed against an exterior
wall . Two men wearing leather
jackets were seen·running from
the scene, lhe spokesman said.

welcome, the p~oisident stated.
One of the key items on
.Wednesday's agenda · irm be
fund raisiilg.
'~We 've talked Informally
about different.ways of raising
money. 1bis is wr centermlal.
. ·

Keith Goble Ford In Mlclclleport

DEFENDANT FINED
One defendant was fined and
another forfeited . bond ln
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's court Tuesday night.
·Marshal Milton Varian -said
"11\ey were tarry Joe PeiUII 24,
Pomeroy, fined $15 .00 costs,
and Patrick J. capretta, 18,
QJiumbus, forfeited a $20 bond,
both for speeding .

DOZING BLAMED
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Turnpike Commission Chair·
man James .W. Shocknessy has
askedhisstafftodevote some of
its attention to the problem of
the dozing driver. A report of
traffic deaths on the northern
Ohio tOll road submitted
TueSday showed "clear in·
dlcations" that five fatal
crashes resulted from drivers
dozing or going to sleep .

provide for public meetings
an Middleport High
Scbool alumni, Paul Gerard,
m'lci!ltion president, said.
Gerard _has ·asked anyone
having addllional names and
adilrelses of ·alumni members
Iring tl!em to the meeting. .
"We are in the process of
establishing, a compri!bensive
membership list. Actually, it's
two lists, one of eligibility, and
Qnother of current paid
members, " Gerard said.
Wellston Sentinel ·Gerard expressed hope than an
· ·~alumni journal" will be
published in August. The format
Stops its Press
WEUEI'ON, Ohio (UPI ) - Is flexlble and suggestions are
The ·only daily newspaper
serving-residents of Vlnliln and
Jackson counties, the Wellston
Daily Sentinel, in continuous
publication since 1882, has
SllSJ"'nded operations.
.
Wendell
D.
Harbert,
publisher of the paper, said
publication of the McArthur·
Democrat-Enquirer, a weekly
paper, was also suspended. 'lbe
weeklY was founded in . 1867.
Harbert
purchased
the
newspapers from B. B. and
Patricia Mills last month. He
blamed his action on heavy
financial losses.
cpen to

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.SWIMWEAR

'

Meigs
Count!~ paid
$22,938:16 in sales 1m: on motor
vehicles purchased dnring June
according to the monthly niport
of Mrs. Evelyn Lucke', Meigs
County Clerk of CourtS.
In addition, $4,85.5.80was paid
In casual and use laJ:es and $255
on auto inspections on vehicles
brought into the county from
other states.
Also made were 908 certificates of title, 2'11 notations of
lien, 180 memocandums, 779
applications, affidavits and
assignments, and 12 certified
copies. Receipts from these
activllit~~ totaled $1,896. The
county's share is $1,465.75 while
the state's share is $430.25.

••

;

junior state championsirHiie 1314 year old age divisions, while
nine year old Karen
NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Two
StrausbaUgh took first place in cars of a Peiln Central train
her aolo division both days, and · derailed in Grand Central ·
bad the N,B.T.A. naUonal terminal today. Police reported
strutting champion · to contend one passenger killed and
with in all the other 9-10 year old several injured.
divisiorul.
·
One of the cars was ripped
Diana i$ the daughter of Mr. open when It left the tracks and
and Mrs. Gerald Guthrie of Rt. smashed lnlil an abutment In
3; Coolville, and Karen is the the tunnel on the upper level.
daughtp" of Mr. and Mrs.
Police called for floodlights to
KeMeth StraiJllbaugh of Rt. 5, assist in rescue oPerations.
Athens.
Doctors and .nurses were
They were the wee).end dlapatched, along with several
guests of Mr .. and Mrs. Harold ambulances.
.
.
V. Noble, parents of Mrs. Judy
Riggs, the girls' Instructor who
traveled to Albuquerque with
them.
· ·

,Procedures to Be Determined

USUAL BUSINESS
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Selective Service Act expired
June 30, but operations are sUII
near normal at the state offices
here: Col. Thomas Farrell, who
heads the Ohio headquarters,
said
Tuesday
physical
.
examinations
anjl
clasaifications are continuing.
Only Induction notices have
been suspended in the last
week.
'

- -~

'

.

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