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·ollision

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AZUSA, Caljf. (~I) "'1\in\ir .West DC9 jetliner collided
the bole but none was recovered'.
S!JI!daY with a Navy llgbter plane 12,000 feet over Mt. Bliss
C(Xinty Fire Division Chief Dean RusseU, who flew over the
killing 49 persons. There appareqtly was just one survivor:
wreckage several liines, was asked by newS!nen if there
The -two planes plOwed into the rugged mountain in the
were any otller survivors.
·
Angeles Na tiona! Forest, spewing wreckage a mile over the
" H there are, it will be the greatest miracle I've ever
almost inaccessible terrain.
·
seen," he replied.
The known survivor was a Marine first leiuienant who
parachuted to safety seconds after the collision.-The pilot of ·
"There was no room for it (the DC9) to skid, it just went
his Navy Phantom F-48 apparently was killed.,
straight in. When it hit the groUnd it broke all ·to hell," a
Sheriff's deputies quoted witnesses .as saying the military
sheriff's spokesinan said.
craft apparently ripped into the aide of the DC9, opening a
There were 43 passengers and a crew of five aboard the
gaping hole. Witnesses said articles apparently streamed
DC9, which split in two major pieces in a wooded area about
· from thebigjetasitp!unged toward !he mountainside.
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20 miles northeast of Los Angeles.
Deputies said pieces of paper flew out the hole in the side of
Sheriff's deputies flown to the crash area said the bodies of
the jeUiner. Several were recovered and. office!'ll said they r• nine persons, all apparently thrown clear on Impact, were
were marked with Sunday's date and the name Air West..
found beside the tail section of the jeUiner.
Witnesses said other objects, possibly luggage, fell out of
Becaus~ of heavy fog, authorities said no attempt would be

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VOL XXIV NO. 38

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made until daybreak to remove the boiJies and look for others
in the wreckage.
The Federal Aviation Administration said the jetliner
was Flight 706 froin Los Angeles International Nrport to Salt
Lake City and bad taken off minutes before the collision. The
Phantom fighter was out of El Toro Marine Air Station near
Santa Ana, Calif.
The survivor, Marine 1st Lt. Christopher E. Schiess,
24, of Salem, Ore., who was serving as radar interceptor
aboard the Navy plane, declined to talk to sheriff's in·
vestigators. He was treated at Santa Teresita Hospital in
nearby Duarte for slight injuries.
Marine Capt Larry Karch, a safety officer from El Toro,
said the military craft was returning from a routine training
flight when the collision occurred. He said he could give no
further information pending a military investigation.

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Weather

a1

Lows tonight in the 60s.
Jariable cloudiness and not as
warm with chance of showers ·
Tuesday with highs fr om the
upper 70S to the upper 80S.

Devowd To 11r.e lnwrests Of The Meigs-MQSOn Area
.PO~_E~QY-M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

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MONDAY, JUNE 7, 197_1

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

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3 nJure in Acci ents

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Four accidents in which three
persons were injw-ed - none
seriously - were investigated
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. over the weekend.
Saturday at noon on SR 124,
about 1.6 mile east of Rutland,
Sylvan Cleland 64, Lancaster,
Ohio, traveling west topped a
small rise · and slowed down
when she saw Boy Scouts along
the highway. Onnie France, 86,

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Cheshire, also coming west,
topped the small rise and struck
the rear of the Cleland car.
Dora Ann France, Cheshire, a
passenger,
suffered
a
laceration of the head and left
elbow. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Pomeroy E·R squad,
treated and released. There
were medium damages to the
Cleland vehicle and heavy to the

France car. No citation was
issued.
Saturday at 3:20p. m. on New
Route 33, Walter E. Morris, 29,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, driving northwest, sigmiled to make a left
turn. Due to mechanicalfailw-e,
'his truck went off the highway
on the right, struck a guardrail,
went 125 feet and tw-ned over.
Morris sustained a laceration
of his chin. He was not im-

mediately treated. The 1971
Ford truck was demolished.
Sunday at 12:30 p. m. three
miles south of Rutland !cycle P.
Herdman's, Middleport, Rt. I,
lost control when a bee got in
the car. The car went off the
highway on the left into a fence.
Herdmans suffered a laceration
to her nose and bruised chest,
· but was not immediately
treated. There was mediwn

damage to the car and no
arrest.
Sunday at 7:30 p. m. on
County Road 30, Ray Roush, 47,
Mason, traveling west, had a
tire blow out, causing his car to
go off the road on the right into a
ditch. Enroute, it struck and
broke off a telephone pole.
There were no injuries or
arrest although heavy damage
to the car ..

Dr. ·Lester Roush, Religious Leader,
Dies .Early Sunday of Heart Failure

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Rev. Dr. Lester L. Roush, 80,
ci 1093 Sunset Drive, Gallipolis,
died at 5:40a.m. Sunday in the
Holzer Medical Center on First
Ave. He had been a patient
lhere one day following an
apparent heart attack.
He had plityed ·goH Friday,
and told friends he experienced
chest pains. He was taken to the
hospital Saturday morning.
A retired Methodist minister
and author, Rev. Roush had
been a pastor 54 years, retiring
In June, 1961.
He was born Jan. 1, 1891, near
~cine, Meigs County, son of
. the Ia te Ephriam Roush and
Jesale Darst Roush. He was
twice married, ftrst to Ruth
Shain who died Dec. 4, 1960. His
IJeCOnd wife was Helen Ables,
whom he married Aug. 13, 1961.
She survives.
These children from his first

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41ews ••• rn rre1 s

Salyut Linkup is Space First
Y0U'D -BETTER 1-lURRY R(GI-IT
I·OV~~/D.CX!OR,J.IE'S Hi?D ,A I&lt;.Et;APSE/

L SiJgr:·oo! DR.BoAl&lt;DMA'N · .

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:sAid H~ couu:l~·r OO•AT!-l.IN6
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ISTSTHE ,
DOLLAR 15
. iNOW WORTH

MOSCOW - THREE SOVIET COSMONAtrrS today
established the first orbital space laboratory, docking their Soyuz
llspacecraft with the orbiting scientific station Salyut. At least
two of them entered Slayut to begin the era of maMed scientific
study in space.
It was the first lime a crew has been transported to an un·
manned scientific station In space, and scientific sow-ces in
Moscow said one or more maMed spaceships may go aloft soon to
join the space complex as prelude to a permanent orbital
laboratory.

Ohio Lashed by Bad Weather

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I. PlJT 01-J~ ,AWAY .
IN FE5R~RY FOR
SAFE.!"e-E"?I;\ki t

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DENSE HAll. FORCED the temporary Closing of an in·
terstate highway, nearly five inches of rain was reported in
central Ohio and at least eight funnel clouds were reported as
severe thunderstorms swept across Ohio Sunday. The density of
hail although not large in size, made driving nearly impossible
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along a four-mile stretch of Interstate·77 south of Gambridge.
The Licking County community of Fredonia reported 4.75
.inches of rain SUnday afternoon from a thundm:storm that was
also reported to have spawned a funnel .cloud near Sunbury in
Delaware County. Several other funnel clouds were reported late
Sunday afternoon or early the same evening in the state but none
was reported to have touched ground.

Rogers Appeals for New Tools

t:aos Polley
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Under wz

F8Jr Bo8rd
Pres•'dent

Dead

Two Hurt Early Sunday
Two persons were treated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sunday morning for injw-ies
received in ~n accident on East
Main St.
Pomeroy police said a
westbound car driven by
Richard E. Williams, 19,
Parkersburg, was demolished
when it turned from Nye Ave.
onto Mai11 and struck a utility
pole.
Williams was taken to the
hospital - as was a passenger,
Robert Cale, of Davisville, W.
Va. - by the Pomeroy E-R
squad . Williams had facial
Iacer a lions
and
Cale
lacerations of his forehead and
mouth. Both were dismissed

20 Dead
in
crash
648 Board Funded
The boards of commissioners
of Meigs, Gallia ·and Jackson
counties today had joined to
allopate operating funds for
their three-couqty's newly
formed Board of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
Board known as the " 648
Board."

PARIS-SECRETARYOFSTATE William P. Rogers call~!!~
today for the,Western countries to·set up special machinery to
-further expand world trade and avoid trade conflicts. Rogers
made the appeal at the opening of a· two-day session of the
Ministerial Council of the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECO).
Rogers also announced the American goverrunent's
Meigs and Jackson County
readiness to lmprpve Western cooperation in combatting Commissioners allocated $1,250
recurrentmon~ll!rY unheavals due to uncontrolled movements of each for tl)e first six months
short&gt;tenil capital.
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· ~eration, and Gallia County set
aside $2,5110 for the entire first
year . These funds will be used
Actor'J'an Heflin Slricken
to establish a central office and
HOLLY'NOOD- VAN Hin.IN, 10, WHO SUFfERED a pay an administatpr.
Through . a preliminary
(Continqed ou page 8)

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MRS. JAMES Gll.LIAM of the Progressive Mothers Club, Gallipolis, left, was elected

president of the South Central District, Ohio Child Conservation League, at Saturday's district
tendent of the Wilmington, Ohio
spring conference. She is with Mrs. Raymond Stewart of the Middleport CCL who has held the
district.
position the past two years . See Page 5.
Dr. Roush wa.s a member of
the Franklin County Sons of
American Revolution, the
Fr.ench . t.r~ , .Co\ony . ,.ao4 , ~ -EX-TENDED,OOTLOOK
Gallipolis Golf Club. He was
Extended outlook for Ohio
author Of three volumes of Wednesday through Friday.
Roush family history and two
Fair and mild Wednesday,
religious books. For many followed · by chance of
years listed in the Who's Who of showers with little tem·
America, he was county perature change Thw-sday
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chairman of the chaplains' and Friday .- Dally high
committee of the Holzer readings mostly In the 70s and
Medical Center and served as lows at night from the low 50s
one of the chaplains at the to the lower 60s.
Holzer Medical Center.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The As the debate renewed, the
Or. Roush served in the ~::·:~·:•:::,; :?:m::~'•'•':'•': ~''''''''''''""'''"''''''' ,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. ,,,
pulpits of churches at Rio
Senate convened a rare closed State Deparlment sent a letter
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session today to talk about to Kennedy warning that a
Grande, Bidwell, Rutland,
Portsmouth, CiliCinnati and
Laos, with the Nixon adminis· Laos controlled by the CommuWorthington. He Jived in ·
tcation defending its involve- nists would "greatly enhance
Columbus 25 years where he
ment In the Southeast Asian their position in those areas of
kingdom as vital to ending Laos bordering on South
wa.s honored last year for so
years service in the Ohio ·
Ame'rica 's role in the Vietnam Vietnam from which they could
Council of Chw-ches.
War.
launch attacks on United States
Sen. Stuart Symington, 0. and a!Ued forces ."
FuneraiServtces
~Masonic services will be held
S
Mo., chairman of the Armed The letter was in response tq
7:30 p. m. Tuesday by the
Services Committee, said the a request Kennedy had niade
Fred C. Leifheit, 66, Rock secret afternoon session would April 23 asking for a clarifica.
(Continued on page B)
Springs, president of the Meigs examine the " Increasingly tion of U.S. policy in Laos. It
County Fair Board, and a well grave" U.S. role in Laos -{)De was signed by David M.
known Meigs County livestock which he claimed costs "hun· Abshire, assistant secretary for
dealer, died Sunday night at the dreds of millions of dollars" congressional relations, who
Southeastern · Ohio Mental instead of official estimates of said Nixon had asked him to ·
Health Center in Athens. Mr . about $52 . million for the reply.
Leifheit
had been ill several current year .
following treatment
(estimated at $500); cause of
months.
·
Williams was cited to Mayor the fire undetermined.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- " If the North Vietnamese
Charles Legar's Court on a - At 11 :52 p.m. Satu.-day, the Re-elected a number of times Mass., charged President Nixon were to conquer all of Laos,
charge of failing to have his E-R squad to the home of as president of the fair board, was waging an unauthorized they could divert thousands of
vehicle under controL
Joseph Hood in Minersville; Mr. Leifheit also had been a "presidential war" in northern their forces now engaged in
The Pomeroy E-R and fire . Hood, who was ill, was taken to S.&gt;lisbury Township trustee. He Laos .
north Laos to the war agalru!t
units put in a busy weekend Veterans Memorial Hospital was active in Meigs County Symington contended the South Vietnam," Abshire said.
Republican circles .
answering other calls for help. and admitted.
Nixon administration has been
He added that administration
These included :
- At 3:11p. m. Sunday theE· A past member of the Meigs hiding the extenr of U.S. ' actions in Laos were aimed at
-At 9:30 p. m. Saturday to R squad to the county infirmary County Riding Club, he and activity in Laos in possible ending hostilities. He said the
the Charles Shuler home on from where Mrs. Shirley King, Mrs. Leifheit over many years violation of congressional re.' President had authority "to
Leading Creek, who. refused who had injured her back in a were active in numerous horse strictions imposed last year on protect our troops and to bring
trealment.
fall from a bicycle, was taken to shows throughout the area.
the use of American troops the hostilities which were under
- At 10:16 p.m. Satw-day t)Je Veterans Memorial Hospital for Surviving are his wife, Lucille inside Laos, and on the funding way when he took office to an
Radford Leifheit; two sisters, of foreign mercenary forces to end in a way that will
Fire Dept., upon the request of examination and released.
Mrs. Otho (Ada) Murray of defend Laos.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach, to
contribute to a dw-able peace.'' .
Pomeroy,
and
Mrs.
Lena
Nye Ave., where a car owned
Bramlage, Columbus , and ;:::.:::: ::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:~::;:~::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:: :;:;:::::;:,:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;::~:::::~::~::::=:::~:::~:~
and driven by Rodney Hysell
several nieces and nephews. He
had caught fire; the 1964 model
was preceded in death by his j:
vehicle was a total loss
parents, Fred and Barbara
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Leifheit; a brother, Clifford, j
and a sister, Mrs. Clara WinNEW HAVEN, CoM. (UPI)- don .
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sw-vey the 648 board found that An Allegheny Airlines plane, Funeral services will be _held
MT. RUSHMORE, S. D. (UPI) -A group of American
the tri-{:ounty area is pari· with 29 persons aboard, crashed at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the · Indtans,.wbo say tbe federal government In 1868 promllea
ticulary in need of mental and burned today after slam· Ewing Funeral Home with the
them everything In South Dako)a west of -the Mlasow:t River,
health facilities. At present, ming into five unoccupied Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating.
climbed Ml Ruslimore Memorial Sunday and refused to
there . are no psychiatric ser· waterside cottages during· an Friends may call at the funeral - leave.
vices, no marriage and family approach to New Haven Munici· home from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
Be tween 40 and 80 Indiana aclaed tbe MeII)trial whicb
counseling services, no facility pal Airport.
p.m. today and Tuesday. Burial
consists of sculpted llkenessea of Presidents Wasblngtea,
to which parents . or young
At least 20 persons were will be in Rock Springs
Uncohi, Jefferson and Teddy Roosevelt. Twenty-ene per&amp;OJIII
people can turn for information killed.
Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the
were arrested and charged wltb climbing Mt Rusbmo~, a
or help with drug problems in
witnesses said the twin· family has asked frien.ds to
misdemeanor.
·
any of the three coun'lies.
engine convair 508' enroute contribute to the Meigs CQunty
The lnl!lans represented ·111e Crazy Hone Moant.m
These are some of the gaps from Washington, D.C., TO Heart Fund.
Movement and tbe American Indian Movebeul. MOll ollhe
that the 'J'ri.COunty Board of Connecticut veered to one side 'Mr. U1ilheit's death was "'"
,
twelve w~en aud Dine men IU'relted were relea&amp;ed 011 boad
Mental Health an(i Mental afte( apparently hitting over· . s.econd member of the county
early today, according 10 a sJ)okesman aI the coualy jail.
Retardation', with the help of the head wires.
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fair board to die this year.
The arrests . came alter MI. Rlllbmore NaUoul
County Commissioners and th_e
The crash occw-red shortly Charles Radford, Pome~oy ,
Memorial Supt Wallace McCaw climbed I the ·mwntabi 1e
general pu~lic, wiU try to close, after the plane took off from Mason City hardware merchant
talk Ill tbe proteston. He tOld them lhey faced-amat UIIIey
according to Mrs. Hamlin C. . New Londo.n, its first stop, 50 and ·veteran member of the
did n,ot leave by 2 p. m.
Kmg, board secretary.
mjles away .
board, died May 2.
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marriage survive: Miss which he was a 50-year mem·
Mildred Roush and DeUoyd L. ber.
Roush, both of Colupbus;
A graduate of Rio Grande
Edwin L. Roush, Ormand College, Dr. Roush received a
Beach, Fla. ; John M. Roush, DOctor of Divinity Degree from
Phoe11ix, Arl~., and Mrs. Ohio . Northern . UnlYeralty,
Eugene (Mariam) Trwnbull, in attended Drew Theological
Belgium.
Seminary, the Garrett Biblical
A daughter, Melbra Roush, Institute, and the graduate
preceded him in death.
school of the . University of
Also surviving are two step-- Cincinnati .
children, George H. Ables, Ft. He had served on many
·wayne, Ind., and Dr. Gene H. committees, both national and
Ables, Gall polis; 22 grand· conference·wide, and for many
children,
two
great. years was a trustee of Ohio
grandchildren, three brothers Northern University. He also
and one sister, Ross Roush, was a trustee of the Wor.
Gallipolis; Uoyd Roush, Racine thlngton Methodist Children's
Rt. 1; Leverett Roush, Mid· Home for a number of years,
dleport, and Mrs. Law-a Morris, and at his death was a member
Gallipolis, and several nieces of the Inter-Church Center of
and nephews.
the Ohio Council of Churches.
· Rev. and Mrs. Roush had He was a life member of the
resided
in the Gallipolis area Ohio Historical Society, and for
DR. ROUSH
the past four years, having 19 years was treasurer of the
moved to Gallia County from Ohio Conference of Churches.
r-------~-------------------, Meigs County.
He served two years as
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I V'mton Lodge of Masons of two years as district superin·
By Uolted Press InternaUonal

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The fAA said there were no radio. transmissi!lJlS from . ",
either plane to indicate a e9llisioo was ililminent. An Air ' .
We5t official said the twin-engine jet, with a passenger . ...
capacity of 98, was "climbing to its normal operating
altitude of 29,000 feet" when the collision occurred at about
6:08 PDT.
The final destination of the DC9 was Pa.sco, Wash.; after
stops in Salt Lake City and Boise and Lewiston, Idaho.
Mike Zarate, an Azusa fire dispatcher, said he -was sitting in his home here when he heard the collision.
"I heard a loud explosion and saw a plane coming down
in flames. Heavy black smoke followed the plane."
Mrs. Dorothy Greve of Azusa also heard it.
" It sounded like a bomb blast and then it rolled like
thunder," she said.
The crash ignited three brush fires which were quickly
controlled .

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In popular Eastern
myth. the lion cub is supposedly always still-born
and is licked for three days
by its sire until it comes to
life; the lion, therefore, became a symbol of resurrection.

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• Crazy Horse Movement Wants I•

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·.; 1868 Paleface Promise Kept

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3- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, June 7, 1971

2-The natly Senhnel, Midnieport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 7, 1971

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WIN AT BRIDGE r----------------------------1

"You Must Understand, Russia Cannot
Afford to Lose Face in Egypt!"

EDITORIALS

Weak Two-

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Firebug in Cloak
Of Righteousness
Arson has mcreased dramatically m the Umted States
m recent years, and especially m Califorma, where the
21st firebomb attack on a Bank of America off1ce occurred
the other day
Frre off1c1als attnbute much, 1[ not most, of the Increase
to the fact that arson has come mto 1ts own as a form of
"SOCial protest "
According to the National Fire Protectwn AssocJatwn,
known mcend1ary or suspiCIOUS fires accounted for 58 per
cent of all fires m the Umted States m 1969, the last year
for Which complete ligures are avallable. Th1s compares
w1th a percentage of 2.3 m 1959
Accordmg to the Califorma Governor's Arson Information Study Group, the rate of mcend•ary fires m that state
mcreased an estimated 87 per cent In the last three years
At the same time, the total number of fires, both crlmmal
and accidental, rose only 19 rer cent
In other words, the rate o arson mcreased more than
four times as fast as the combmed lire total
"Begmnlng With the Watts rwts of 1965," states the
Callforma group, "the factor of fire bombmgs and arson
as a means of dissent became a dommant and significant
motive for mcend1ary fires
"Orgamzed groups have already dlstnbuted leaflets,
pamphlets, 'underground' newspaper articles and have
furn1shed speakers and demonstrators to mstruct and
advise on the construction of var1ous kmds of mcendlary
and explosive devices "
There was a time when the firebug was cons1dered a
sick, deranged person Today he can cloak himself m the
garb of righteousness and be cons•dered by some m1s·
guided people as a brave fighter agamst the forces of
repression

BI'd .m Act'100 lI
NORm
.A953
.875

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Better Than Money
With apologies to Rudyard Kipling, 1f you can keep your
cool In a monetary crls1s while all about you are Losmg
therrs, you must have a credit card, my son
It seems that during the recent "dollar cris1s" m
Europe, when many American tour1sts suddenly d1scov.
ered that thetr greenbacks or travelers' checks were con·
sldered so much funny money by the local populace, hold·
ers of credit cards had no such problem •
~he cards had to be of the International vanety, of
wh1ch there are three maJor ones- American Express
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Diners' Club and Carte Blanche
The reason IS that the Issuers of these cards pay mer·
chants, Innkeepers, etc , 10 thetr own currency when they
present the chits Thus It ls 1mmatertal to propnetors how
much the value of the dollar may be fluctuating m relation
to !hell' national currency In fact, they are eager to do
buslness
There comes the day of reckonmg, of course, when the
toumt gets back home and has to re•mburse the company
In good(?) old Amer1can dollars
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BRUCE BIOSSAT

McCarthy 'Party'
Jars Democrats
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

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West
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Both vulnerable
North East South
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1

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SENSUAUTY RUMORED
A FAMILY TRAIT
NEW YORK - The !ella who wrote the
smut-book "The Sensuous Man" ts rumored the
real~ife brother of the dame who inflicted the
best.smeller, "The Sensuous Woman"
Even
sedate dentls!B' offtces m Radio City can't
escape VIolence One madman gun-wh1pped a
dental assistant because she couldn't give the
VICIOUS 1diot a lot of cash she didn't have Brod
crawford's richly deserved Oscar can't keep
him In stylish tippling money, so he's now the TV
vo1ce of Brlllo Pads Howard Samuels (head of
N Y 's Off-Track Betting) JS coDSJdered a mce,
decent, mtelligentgent ''who ISII't street.smart,"
considered a fatal lack in any bookie, biz, even
legal
Old time star Ftfi D'Orsa) 's not too choked
up about her reduced - stnce- the- tryout - tour
role m "Follies," a fabulously fine mustcal liB
success (and that of "Company," ''West S•de
Story" and several of his other shows) hasn't
seemed to make t!B agmg bachelor songwriter
Steve Sondhelm cheery His mtervtews stress
his show btz negatives; not to mention occasiOnal
swatB at the late Larry Hart, who wtth Richard
Rodgers tlirned out the great standard show
blnes and remains mfact Sondheun 's superior m
therr shared sphere . Which doesn't mean
Sonhelm Isn't a flrsk:lass songsnllth . Maybe
with songs more brilliantly fabncated than
creatively Imaginative
Long..ago screen child-actress Glori&amp; Jean
now Is 43 and a happy Califorrua swttchboard
opera 1m'; she'd love another flick .career tho ..
Under the Go Ju School's Sign advertising tis
Karata instruc!Jon IS the menacmg notice,
"Beware of tbe Dog" (a black belt retrtever?)
IriSh pubs m Dingle, where "Ryan's
Daughter" was halfiihot, feature his photos wtth
the captions, "Bob Mitchum Drank Here" (and
here and here and here and there)
The msulting ''Oh r Calcutta'" has a grubby secondary
attraction. Streetwalkers convene at tts extts at
finale-times flgurtng the ero!Jc nonsense should
inspire the males

Today'•

AlrntUUJC

1
f

I

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Good old Eugene McCarthy has 'em twittering agam,
with his talk of a "new party," even though he qwckly
said the press was makmg too much of 11
Organization Democrats get the shakes when they hear
stuff like that Many prtvately say Pres•dent Ntxon may
not be all that easy to beat in 1972, even tf his opposition
IS umfted They can do wtthout the splltoffs
Regular party people can't qwte make up their minds
about Gene In polls, he's down m the small print with
Senators Henry Jackson, Btrch Bayh and Harold Hughes
Some appratsers agree w1th the wag who said "The
McCarthy wing of the party just went by In a Flat station
wagon " Others fear he mtght rise fairly high as rallymg
symbol for those who say they hate "the system "
No doubt about It, the young folk ln overalls are caught
by his style as the amused monk delivering oblique
thrusts agamst the grubby, contemptible, secular world
of polittcs He lends constant encouragement to the tdea
that "the system •s not workmg" unless It elects mav·
erlcks, outstders and other untradtllonal types.
In their frustration over "thmgs as they are," the anttestabhshment people love Gene's marvelous put-downs
Without nammg them, he took care of such as National
Chairman Lawrence O'Bnen and 1972 contenders Edmund
By United Press International
Muskte and Hubert Humphrey
Today IS Monday, June 7, the
With those who are turned on by the btg rap, httle more
ls needed to stir the old legend It's all In the name of !58th day of 1971.
The moon JS between 1ts ftrst
love, isn't It? Gene's applauders never have Looked hard
quarter
and full phase
to see how much real love of people there Is In his Life
McCarthy has been puttmg down men he knows In pubThe morning stars are
lic life since forever H1s roster of unworthtes Is long
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Elected to the U S Senale from Mmnesota m 1958 he Saturn.
,
used to buddy tt up 10 those early days wtth h1s "classThe evening star ts Juptler
mates"-fellows like Senators Musk1e, Ph1lip Hart of
Those born on th1s date are
Mlchtgan. Frank Moss of Utah, Gale McGee of Wyommg
under
the sign of Gemini
But In private chats, he lore those chaps apart
Br1tlsh fashion expert George
In his 1968 prestdenttal campa•gn, two reporters Late m
the sprmg were busy comptlmg examples of McCarthy's
wasptsh wit They both gave up wnbng about it\when
Hado's
looking at it m the large, they concluded 90 per cent of tt
'
simply put the knock on other people
A man mvolved m hts campa1gn told me then that In
Gene's more astnngent moments be even slapped down
some of the eager k1ds who were among h1s chtef sup.
porters They bored h1m, and they annoyed him
Recently some people who know McCarthy were casting
back to 1968 I asked them what motivated him Prefacmg
therr response by saymg they Liked him very, very much
they answered, almost m umson "Hate "
'
A harsh JUdgment, but qmte a common one among those
who have taken the longer, deeper VIew The testimony
would flll a shelf
Yet the legend rides rtght over such Judgments Demo·
cratlc Drofesstonals wtll tell you t~at, for at least a yeat
after the 1968 battle, national party headquarters got a
steadY. stream of complaints The song was always the
same The Chicago convention was 'ngged " and Me·
Certhy thereby done out of tbe nomlnatton
Truth IS, there wasn't a thmg wrong with McCarthy's
campaign that wouldn't have been cured by h1s w!Ming a
whole batch of the primarJes h~ entered
Even so, he could have had huge otrsets had he done
well In his f1eld VISlls to convention delegations In popu·
" , loua statea Like Michigan There and In other Important
-, places. he bombed He Just plain blew It
Harold Hughes says that at Chicago McCarthy wouldn't
go to most of the major state delegation caucQses to plead.o
for Uteir vntH. Hu~hes, a McCarthy man by then; often
went to hts surro~ah• The Iowan uys Gene had to be
hountle&lt;l to gn hun"'" hclore lhf vital New York and
Cellfm nla caocuSI•s !low's Ihat al(aln about being
"rigged" out of 1!?

•

EAST
• Votd

WEST

Making News Understandable
West Germany's government-owned televJSton system 1s
planning a news broadcast especially designed for chll·
dren from about the age of 10 on up
Tentatively schediJ)ed to start early next year, the program wlll constst of three to five news 1tems, Illustrated
With films and photos and written to make events under·
standable to children
If the tdea proves successful, American networks may
want to copy Come to thmk of It, wtth the world sltuatwn
as complicated as 1t ts these days, a news program at
chlld's-eye level would probably have a huge adult follow.
lng, too

7

The Shelton Towers Hotel on Lex. at 49th St.
IS closmg The management pleaded wtth umons
that they had to reduce the staff or flop- and got
a flat oo, so the 75 per cent that were to be
retamed, weren't
Faye Dunaway has more
new beaus than Zsa Zsa Her latest, HarrJS
Yulm, took her to The Ground Floor spot .
ASCAP (the songwrtters-pubhshers group)
moved from gray flannel Madison Ave to
Broadway where Tm Pan Alley really belongs;
between 63rd - 64th Sts (oppOSite Uncoln
Center)
Hans Courted dined at Walsh's
steaker1e and several diners mJStook tbe elegant
Hans for Howle (The Horse) Samuels; now Hans
is Street Smart - but for Bdwy , not racetracks
Harper's Magazme copy editor Edith Schur
weds Brooklyn ass't D A Peter Leavitt any
ed1tion
So many empty Manhattan offiCe
bulldings led a realty lad at the 1407restaurant to
note that they don't msiSt on solid signatures at
the bottom of leases any more: "We now accept
doodling"
Rod Reed, the Pine Bush N Y sage, notes
sensttive tehmc groups complainmg about slurs
that aren't even there and wonders if he IDight
start a WASP Anti-Defamabon League· Not a
chance, Rod - a ma)ortty can't get anything
done, you gotta be a nmsy mmor!ty, attack the
U.S or J Edgar Hoover (a redundancy?) and
you're set for life.
Back ln the days wben we revtewed TV,
assorted mlnortties screamed at every fancted
shght m the tube, and the solution seemed to be
to change a v1llamous character, gangster or
whatever, to an Irish name, which didn't really
rankle but made us laugh wtth the scriptwriters'
good old artistic rtght to fright; so we would
mention such scaredy1!011celts and suggest we
were blrnmg the matter over to "The Irish AntiDefamation League", there never was one - tt
was our own joke . But you shoold've seen the
hundreds of pieces of mall flood In written m
brogues urgmg us to "go-go-go" get the
omadhauns . An mtelligent eye or ear out for
VIcious, reckless and unnecessary slurs always
Is In order -but tbe s1lly professtonal thinskins
ruin everyone's fun.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J•m "We have certamly
had a wonderful response to
the JACOBY MODERN weak
two- btd How about some
more d1scusston on 11 "
Oswald "We use two clubs
as our only forcmg opemng
btd The other su1t two·btds
show a s1x-card su1t headed
by at least two of the four
top honors, 7-10 pomts m
h1gh cards and m general a
6·3-2·2 or 6.3-3·1 dtstr1butwn "
Jtm "South's hand 1s a
classic example of a weak
two b•d He has 9 h1gh-card
pomts, the nght dJstnbubon
•nd the r1ght sutt holdmg
North's JUmp to four spades
" a gamble He doesn't know
1! South can make t! but he
knows he won't be doubled
and he 1s pretty sure that
h1s opponents can do well m
one of the red sUJts "
Oswald "Everyth1r g turns
out fine South loses the club
finesse, but sbll scores game
and rubber wh1le East and
West have had to stt back
and watch South operate "
Jtm "Wtthout weak two·
b1ds South would pass West
would open one heart and
East would take stron~ ac·
twn South mtght back m or
mtght stay e n t 1r e I y out
Should he stay out West
would make four hearts wtth
an overtrtck Should he back
m East and West would take
the push to five hearts and
the best North and South
could do would be to sacn·
fice at five spades "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

The b1dd•ng has been
West North East South
, 1¥

Db1e

By Helen Bottel

You, South, hold
What do you do now?
.,.. A-Bid one no .. trump You
want to show some values while
you can do so cheaply

II

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
He who

. .
lau~hs ,
~

The fellow who gets
taken to the cleaners
every ttme he goes to the
track should cut out the
horseplay

be two hangovers m the
mormng

Diets and Cholesterol

Dear Dr. Lamb-Although
htgh cholesterolm blood has
been discussed many limes
m dtlferent arhcles I am still
confused I have h•gh cho
lesterol w1th an ulcer and
have found no doctor w•th a
prescnbed dtet to control
etther Is there any help for
me? I dtd take Atrom1d for
months, but have stopped be
cause of s1de effects Any
"Beau" Brummell was born hower became president of answer would be of help
June 7, 1778
Columbia Unlverstty ln New
Dear Reader-The btggest
On this day m htstory
York City
problem
most people have 1s
In 1864 delegates meeting m
m
understandmg
that cho.
Baltimore nommated Abraham
A thought for today Ralph le~terol 1s not a fat People
Uncoln and Andrew Johnson to Waldo Emerson satd, "Beauty who eat too much fat, or too
head the Republican prestden- wtthout grace ts the hook many calones, often manuttal ttcket
facture more cholesterol m
w1thout the ba1t "
the body The cholesterol
In 1933 Great Brttam, France,
•
wtth fat particles ends up m
Italy and Germany Signed a 1().
Feeltng run·down• the artenes causmg athero
year peace pact
E1ther see the doctor or sclerosis or heart and vas
In 1939 King George VI and get the lrcense number
cular problems Then tf you
Queen Elizabeth became the
eat foods that are ncb m
first Bntish monarchs to vtstt
Swttzerland uses tis an· cholesterol (not necessarily
the Umted States
c1ent name, Helvetia, on 1ts fat) thts adds to the prob
In 1948 Gen Dwtght E1sen- postage stamps
lem Egg yolks are a good
example
They'll Do It Every Time ®
You can have a diet that 1s
useful for treatmg ulcers,
hyperaetdtty or sJmllar d1s
LIST'CN TO 0t: ~A/M\ER
RICf.lE6T ANO Tf.lli
orders, and still follow rec
ANO TI:Jt,i;5. THEY'RE THE
TIGf.IT'EST'! THEY HAD
ommendations made for pa·
ONES ~'Me f.li'.D THE SAONA
THREE WI\ITER5 FIREO
t1ents · w1th a htgh choles.
AND THE INDOOR SKATING
I'OR NOT 80+/ING FOR
terol
Ne1ther fat nor choles
DIME TIP
· "''·"'\ RINK PfJT IN
terol are necessary for d•·
etary ireatment of ulcers at
I DON'T LIKE AN
all Unless you are one of
AS5E5SMENT EITHER,
those
people who can not to!
BI.IT T]oiOSe TWO ARE THE
erate
milk (and there are
RIOIEST'GIJYS IN THE
quite
a
few of them) you can
C~llB"·
us,e skim m1lk or low fat
milk-you don't need cream
A moderate amount of lean
beef, like round steak wtth
all excess fat removed, ts ac.
ceptable Creamed vege.
tables made w1th a whtte
sauce Without fat IS fme
Low fat or uncreamed cottage cheese 1s good

• •

most tmposs1ble to take too
much of most commerc1al
preparations One or two
tablets every two or four
hours ts usually not enough
Ac1d that IS not neutraLized
keeps the ulcer acltve The
second group of medtcmes
that are helpful block the
nerve stimulus to the stomach to form ac1d pepsm
JUICe None of these or the
antactds wdl mterfere wt!h
controlling your htgh choles·
terol
Often h 1g h cholesterol
Levels can be lowered by suf
f1c1ent reduction of body fat
It ts a bad lime to try to
reduce whtle an ulcer ts ac
twe, but once tt ts under con·
trol, wtth contmued support
from ulcer medtcmes and

careful ch01ce of foods, you
should be able to reduce 1f
1! •s needed An ulcer by the
way doesn't keep one from
exerctsmg and t~at could
help a good deal '
Med1cmes used to lower
cholesterol are often less ef·
fecltve than dtet, exercise
and adequate reduction of
body fat To lower choles·
lerol levels to destrable
ranges m o s t medicmes
cause undemable side ef.
feels JUSt as you have ex·
penenced
So eat bland foods, Low tn
calones, often and take
enough antactd, exercise,
and you may do somethmg
useful for both your ulcer
and htgh cholesterol

8[RRY'S WORlD

errors
Thts barrage knocked out
Metgs starter Stan Perry and
brought on Gary Hart who got
the last two outs of the ftrst
Hart stayed on the mound until
the ftfth, g1vmg way then to
Sktpper Johnson In hts three
and two th1rds mnmgs Gary
gave up four earned runs on
seven h1ts Johnson m the fmal
three mmngs, was reached for
three h1ts good for two s1xth
mmng runs
Portsmouth's Ralph Rodgers
picked up hiS [Jrst VIctory wtth
his seven frames of shutout ball
m wh1ch he allowed only f1ve
h1ts He fanned seven and
passed two
Perry was charged w1th the
loss, h1s record droppmg to the
500 mark at 1-1 Me1gs pttchers
combmed to walk four and KO
SIX
Me1gs hitters were Lonme
Bush, Gene Powell, RICk Ash,
Roger D1xon and Stan Perry,
each w1th a smgle
Second at Portsmouth
Metgs came out ready m the
second game, showmg tt when
the game's leadoff man , Lonme
Bush, smacked a towenng
home run over the centerfteld
wall Roger Dtxon, next up, was
hit by a p1tch, got to thtrd base

W

L

Pet

GB

W

~

Pet

GB

34 21 618
33 21 611 1/ 2
30 20 600 1'12
Ch~eago
26 28 481 7'12
Montreal
21 27 43B 9'12
Philadelphia 20 32 385 12'12
West
San Fran
Los Angeles
Houston
Allanla
Cmc•nnat1
San D1ego

38
29
27
25

19
26
28
31
22 33
18 37

667
527
491
446
400
327

8
10
12'12
15
19

Sunday 1 s Games

Ch•cago 6 Atlanta 3
P•flsburgh 9 Houston 8
Ctnctnnatt

4

St Louts 2

Los Angeles 4 New York 3
Ph!la 1 San Fran 0 lsi
San Fran 4 Ph1la 3 2nd
San D1ego 8 Mon treal 0 lsi
San D1090 8 Montrea l 4 2nd
Today's Probable Pitchers
P•ffsburgh ( Bnles 3 11 at
Ch•cago (Pappas 6 5 or Holtz
man 3 61
Sf LouiS (Torrez 1 21 al
Atlanta I Reed 6 31 mght
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

San Fran al Mil mght
San D•ego at New York n•ghl
Los Ang al Ph1la n•g ht
P!ltsburgh at Ch1cago
Clnct at Houston ntght

Sl LouiS at Atlanla, mght
Saturday's Results
Philadelphia 5 San Fran 3
Mon!real 2 San D•ego 1
Allan fa 6 Ch1cago 4 I 11 mnsl
Houst on 4 Pit tsburgh 1

Los Angeles 3 New York 0
Amencan League

East

W L Pet

31
31
Boston
De tr ot!
28
23
Cle-eland
New York
23
19
Wash1ngton
West
Balltmore

19
22

25
28
30
33

528

41 2

451

B1h

27 27

Mmnesota

Al Unser Cops

434 91/ 2

365 13

W L f'ct GB

Oakland
737 18
Kansas C!ly 26 23

673
531 8

Rex Mays Classic

500 9lf2

:::::::::51

League

Ol1va,

M•nn 12 Cash and Horton Del,
OilS, KC and Jackson Oak
Runs Batted tn
Naltonal League Slargell,
P1ll 49 Aaron At! and Torre,

Sl L 41, Sanlo
Cardenal St L 38

Cho

40

Amencan League Killebrew,

"Your monuswpt exposoQg the Ltttle Leogue IS sensotiono/
but I'm olrood ot's a lottie too hot lor us to handlel" '

Del 8 5

M1nn 8 4

ClarA\ at second base and
Lambert al f~rst Randy Smith
smgled, but Me1gs hurler Rick
Van Maire got Curt1s Roush on
lhree Z1ppmg fastballs to end
the threat
Van Matre bore down m the
fifth and stxlh but gmng mto
Me1gs' hall of the s1xth, he still
b'atled l.Q
Roger D1xon opened that
uuung wtth a walk, and aftet the
next two batters fanned, Wet ry
trtpled deep to cente1 to tte 1t
up, and set the stage lot
Demoskey 's game wtnnmg
pmch smgle
Van Matre, grven h1s ltrst
lead of the game, wasn't about
wblow 1! as he sat the Mason
Counllans down m order to end
the game
R1ck exh1b1ted excellent
control, walkmg only one, m
gammg hts f1rst vtctorv He
whtffed four
Loser Randy Sm1th also
pttched a !me game as he held
llle Me1gs team to only four h1ts
Metgs h1tters were Rtch Ash,
two smgles, We1ry, a tpple,
and Demoskey, a smgle For
Ne11 Haven , Haymaker, Randy
Clark, Randy Sm1th, and
Romeo each had s10gles Brent
Clark had the only extra base
h1t a tnple
Second WJth Ne11 Haven
In the mghtcap Skipper
Johnson and Stan Perry
comb10ed to hve-h1t the New
Haven team and complete the
sweep
Johnson gave up three
stra1ght, first 10mng smgles
that produced the Mason
Counbans' only run From there
on he shut the door
After bemg held scoreless
over the first f1ve 10mngs,

Me1gs lied rt up 10 the s1xth on
Bobby Werry's smgle and
New Haven error
Wtlh Perry p1tchmg, Metgs
check the Mason Counbans 10
the seventh but was unable to
push any runs across m 1ts half
Then tn extra mmngs once
agam Perry threw bullets and
Uus t1me he got some support
Boyd was safe on a passed ball,
Ash went m to run for Boyd, and
U1at s whal he d1d, as Kevm
Sheets doubled to nght Ash was
held up at thtrd on the thro11 but
lhe peg was wtld, allowmg Ash
to tally the wmn10g run
Johnson and Perry collec
lively KO d II and passed only
three tn the e1ght mmngs they
worked Perry got the wm,
ra1smg hts record to 2-1 on the
season
Hunt was the losmg pttchet ,
gomg the entire game
Bob Werry slapped a pau of
smgles to lead Me1gs Sheets
had a double, and Gar) Hart,
John Roush, and Ho1"e Ta)ior
each smgled
PORTSiv.OUTH tst
PORTS
BOl 302 {)- 14 15 1
MEIGS
000 ooo o- 0 55
Perr y ILP I Harl Ill
Johnson ( 5) and D1 xo n Rogers

and Hanes

PORTSMOUTH 2nd
PORTS
030 003 0- 6 7 2
MEI GS
200 202 1- 7 9 4
Demoskey IWPI Perry 171
and D1&gt;:0n

Lowenguth

HopkinS 161 ILP)
McGlone
(41

Welch

and

NEW HAVEN tsl
000 100 0- 1 7 2
MEIGS
000 002 x- 2 4 0
N H

Sm1 th and Romeo VanMatre

and D1 xon

NEW HAVEN 2nd
N H
100 000 00- 1 5 3
MEIGS
000 001 01 - 2 6 1
Hun I and Romeo

Perry (6)
D~&gt; on

(WP)

Johnson

and Perroud

(7}

Lollch ,

-

Brabham 1urbo-charged Offenhauser followed by Wally
Dallenbach, East Brunswtck,
N J 10 a Kusma turbo-charged
Ford and Art Pollard, Medford ,
Ore , m a Scorpton turbocharged Ford before a crowd of
36,104

starter m left field but could
not be found at game ltme So
Dodger Manager Walter Alston
mserted Btl! Russell, battmg
207, m Allen's slot and he
responded wtlh a tnple, double
and smgle to hfl Los Angeles to

of the mmng and the youn ~
outfielder drove across the
wmnmg run m the fifth whe n
he followed Wtlhe Dav1s' mfleid
h1t wtlh a tnple
Elsewhere m the NL, San
Franc1sco beat PhtladelphJa 4·3
m 12 1nnmgs after losmg the
Allen explamed h1s absence, doubleheader opener 1-0, Cmcmclaumng lle had duckeJI mt&lt;&gt; ,a ~ n~\1 ~a\ ~\ .. -. l.Jl\11\!o,, o\-2,
hallway dunng old ttmers' day Pittsburgh edged Houston 9·8,
ceremomes and d1d not realize Chicago defeated Atlanta 6 3
the game had started
and San Dtego swept Montreal
Russell's double 1gmted a 1\.0 and 84
three·run rally m the fourth
In the Amertcan League,
mntng after New York had Oakland drubbed Washmgton 8t&lt;tken a 2.0 lead m the top half I as V1da Blue won h1s 12th
game, New York stopped
Kansas Ctty 5-2, Cahforma
downed Boston 5-2, Balltmore
shaded M1lwaukee 4·3, Mmnesota mpped Cleveland 4-3 and
Chtcago bombed Detrmt 8-2 m
twtce 6.Q and 8-4
Oakland got 14 h1ts off four the first game of a scheduled
Washmgton pttchers, mcluding doubleheader The second was
e1ght off McLam, 4-10 Rtck ramed oul
Mondsy hit a two-run homer m Wtlhe Mays ' 13th homer of
llle fourth mmng and Gene the year and 641st of hts career
Tenace h1t another w1th the wtth one ou( m the bottom of
lhe 12th gave the G1ants thetr
bases empty 10 the etghth
v1ctory
over Ph1ladelph1a and
A pa1r of towermg 400-foot
homers by Frank Robmson and snapped a five-game losmg
Elite Hendricks' second homer streak
of the year powered the Ortoles Phtladelphta led 3·1 m the
to VJctory over the Brewers mnth mmng but a double by
Robmson's f~rst homer- hit off Mays and smgles by Ken
Mtlwaukee starter Marly Pattm Henderson and Bobby Bonds
-came m the fourth mrung and !ted the score
gave the Ortoles a 1.0 lead H1s Rtck Wtse pttched a threesecond m the seventh mmng hitler m the opener and Wtlhe
tied the score at 2-2 and Hen- Mon ta nez double and Ron
dricks unmedl8teiy gave the Stone's stngle provtded the only
run
Orwles theJT fmallead
a 4·3 vJclOry over the Mets
The Loss dropped New York
to th1rd place m the NL East
belund St Louts and Ptttsburgh
and brought the second·olace
Dodgers to wtthm etghl games
of San Franc1sco 1n the West

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sporls Writer
If statisbcs are a valid yardstick by which to compare
ptlchers, then recent suggestions that V1ds Blue JS another
Sandy Koufax are more than
1dle speculation
Blue, Oakland's sensational
young southpaw pttcher, allowed only four ht!B 10 wmmng
his 12th game of the season
Sunday as the Oakland Athletics routed the Washmgton
Senawrs, 8-1
Blue, who has lost only two
games, struck out seven and
walked two m avenging h1s 6.Q
opemng-day loss to the Senawrs
Wtth a thtrd of the baseball
season gone, the hard-throwmg
Blue has g1ven up an average of
5 3 h• tB per game as he conbnues to amaze Amencan
League batters wtth h1s blazmg
fastball Koufax, who m 1965
enJoyed h1s best season m
posting 25 VICWrleS With 382
str1keouts, allowed 58 hits per
game that year Bob G1bson,
another of baseball's all-bme
great pitchers, also allowed an
average of 58 htls per game m
his best season, 1968, when h~
won 22 games and had a 1 12
earned run average
Only once d1d Blue allow
more than s1x hits m any one
game, that bemg on Ma~ 28
when he suffered hts only other

loss of the season at the hands of
Boston
Blue 1sn't gomg out on a lunb
by makmg any guesses as to
how many games he'll wm thts
year "I'd Like to wm 20 but I'm
not gomg to make any
predictions," sa1d the 21-yearold lefthander
The Senators hsd knocked
Blue out m the third mmng on
openmg day to wm the1r fJrsl
home opener m e1ghl years B~t
revenge was sweet for Blue, as
he beat the Senators and thetr
ace pitcher, Denny McLam, for
his 12th WID, to~ In the lll3JOrS
He now has a 14-3 lifetime
record m the ma1ors and has
never been beaten tw1ce by the
same club
In other Amencan League
action, Califorma defeated Bos·
ton, 5-2, Baltimore edged
Milwaukee, 4·3, Mmnesota
downed Cleveland, 4-3, New
York defeated Kansas Ctty, 5-2,
and Chicago whipped DetrOit, 82 1n the first game of a
doubleheader w1th the second
game bemg postponed because
of ram
In the Natwnal League,
Pittsburgh mpped Houston, 9-ll,
Chtcago tr1pped Atlanta, 6-3,
Cmcmnatt defeated St Louts, 42, Los Angeles edged New York ,
4·3, San Francisco edged
Ph1ladelphta, 4-3 m 12 mmngs
after the Phils won the opener I·
oand San D1ego beat Montreal

INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Ed11or
Publ1shed daily except
Sa turday by The Ohto Valley

PubltSh1ng Company
111
Court St
Pomer oy Ohto
45769

Bu st ness Off1ce Phone

992 2156 Edttortal Phone 992

2157

Second class postage pa•d at
Pomeroy Oh 10
Nat to nal advertlstng

Scn t 1nc1

I

e

'

Reds

Win, 4 - 2
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
word rest Isn' t m Lee Mays '
vocabulary
I know Lees shoulder IS
ktlhng him , ' satd CincmnatJ
Red• manager Sparky Anderson "And I know his knee hurt
him
So Anderson offers May a rest
Sundsy
May
scoffed at
the
suggestiOn
"Rest he snorted ' I'm be·
'
hmd alread}
I've already missed three weeks of the season "
May, you 'll remember,
stramed a knee hgament m the
!mal week of sprmg tratrung
and was on the dtsabled hst
when the season opened
He's m pam w1th a taped knee
eve1 smce he1ng reactivated
and then the other day he tam·
med his shoulder on a play at
second base
"They gave Lee a shot of cortosonc m the shoulder," satd
Anderson, ' and he still 1ns1sts
on playmg even though about all
he could do was lob the hall un.
derhanded '
Batting Not Hurl
But b1g Lee's aches and pams
obvtously haven't affected hts
battmg eye He's the only Reds
regular h1 tbng ~00 and Sundsy
his three-run homer off Reggte
Cleveland earned the Reds to a
4·2 VIctory over lhe St Loms
Cardinals
The homer also gave 26-year.
old Don Gullett SIX VICtOrieS tn
e1ght decJSJons as the Reds closed out their homestand at
Riverfront Slad1um before
20,189 fans, whtch boosted the
season total to , 501,213 for 29

hib1tion game and then w1ll continue on w Houston for a three·
game senes wtth the Astros
Thursday the Reds stop off "'
Indtanapobs for an exhtbJtJon
game wtth their Hoos1er farm
club enroule to ChiCago
May's homer was one of 10
hits the Reds made off Cleveland, a rookie Cardtnal nghl·
bander, and hts two successors,
Frank Lmzy and Moe Drabowsky

Nationwide

will1•ag ...
your bills
when you can't
I f SICKNESS or InJUry left you

d1 sab\ed and out of work,
... a u ld you pay your b il ls?
Nat1 o nw1de s Income Pro
teet or Plan guarantees you a

monthl y w~ h mcome for one
year f1ve years, or, 1f yo u

quahfy for ltfe
Call me today for detaals

P. J. PAULEY
992-2318
307 Spr10g Ave
Pomeroy, Oh\0

dales .

"You can bet Lee won't play lh e 1111 mn N ll l l ll \1 1 &lt;.1~ ' ' "'" 'r 1
Monday mght," sa1d"'!\nderson
after Sunday's game "And yoo
can bet too he won't play on
N 1 t1 •t~ 11 11, M 1tu til hU r l n ~ C 1
Thursday "
It 11 ( O t h~ ( 1 l um l'lt l ~ Oh1 1
The Reds meet the Cleveland
Indtans tomght there m an ex- '--- - -- -- - ----'

nationwide

Blue Records 12th Victory

SOMETHING IMPORTANT
IS HAPPENING HERE

DEVOTED TO THE

M.nn 47 Pelrocelll, Bo• 40
Sando Oak 36 While NY 35
Bofttnetl t
Powell Ball and Murcer NY representattve
Gallagher Inc 12 East 42nd
32
St New York C1fy New York
Pttchlng
Subscrtptton rates
De
Na11onal League D•erker, livered by carrter where
Hou 10 1 Carll on 51 L 10 2, ava•labte SO cents per wee~
Jenk1ns Ch• 9 5 Ellis, Pill and By Motor Route where carr1er
serv1ce not a~o~adable
One
Marlchal SF 8 3
month
Sl
75
By
ma11
In
Ohto
Amencah League Blue, Oak
W va One ryear 114 00
112 S•eberl Bos 9 2, t'unter and
S1x months S7 25
Three
Oak 9 3 Cuellar Billl 8 1 months 54 50 Subscr1p1 10n
Palmer Ball 8 3 McNally Ball pru.: +: 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
and Perry

Ftrst Wtlh New Haven
w,th lwo out m the s1xth,
Me1gs
pmchttter
Tim
Demoskey hned a sharp smgle
to center to score Bobby Werry
and g1ve the Me1gs boys a hard
fought v~etory over the New
Haven Legwn coached by Mel
Clatk
New Haven broke the tee m
lhe fourth mmng when Brent
Clark tr1pled and scored on
Randy Clark's smgle to n ght
Lambert Lined a sk1mmer to
Bob Werry , who made a
beauttful play on the ball , and
started a double play that got

Allen was penc1led m as a

Cal!forma
26 29 473 II
WEST ALLIS, Wts (UP!)Ch1cago
20 28 417 1311&gt; ' 'You can't keep up WIth brother
M•lwaukee
20 29 408 14
Al, he's got the mach1ne ,"
Sunday's Results
Minnesota 4 Cleveland 3
Bobby Unser satd after the
Baltim ore 4 Mdw 3
ftmsh of the 150-mile Rex Mays
Ch•cago 8 Detroit 2 lsi
Del at Ch• 2nd gm ppd ram ClassiC Sundsy
Al Unser, the Albuquerque,
Oakland 8 Wash•ngton I
New Yore 5 Kan Ctfy 2
N M , dnver who won h1s
California 5 Boston 2
second successiVe lnd1anapohs
Today's Probable Pitchers
500 a week earLier, matched the
INo games scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
record purse of $86,350 wtth a
Boston at Oakland night
record performance of hts
New York al Calif n1ght
own- an average speed of
Wash at Kan C•ly n1ght
M!lw al Detro!l n1ght
114 858 m1Les per hour on the
Ch•cago al Cleve n•ght
one·mlle paved oval
M•nne at Ball n1ght
He won $17,485 for hJS Johnny
L1ghtmng race team and
Saturday's Results
Cleveland 10 M1nnesota 2
partner Joe Leonard, who
Balttmore 12 Milwau kee 4
hmshed
JUSt hve seconds
Delrod 7 Ch•cago 3
behind AI, won $9,867 for second
Kansas C!ly 11 New York 7
Cahfornta J Boston 2
place
Oakland 6 Washmgton 1
"When you have the two best,
most dependable engmes
around and a great crew bke we
have, 11 1s hard to lose," Al sa1d
The v1ctory was his fourth 10
f1ve U.S Auf&lt;:&gt; Club Speedway
car events th1s year and gave
him a conunandmg lead m the
USAC pomt standmgs w1th the
season barely underway
;;01j;,Z:,iil•i:zlPtl
Al started the race m moth
"
pos1tion whtle older brother
Bobby, also of Albuquerque ,
Nat1onal League
G AB R H Pet had the pole pos1bon
Leonard, San Jose, CaLif ,
Brock St L 54 222 49 81 365
Dav •s LA
54 214 34 77 360 who won the Mays race last
Torre Sf L 55 208 34 74 351&gt; year, started the race m the
Cash P!l
46 ISO 37 64 351&gt;
Bckrt Ch1 53 214 35 76 355 front row next to Bobby Both
• Garr All
56 236 39 83 352 Leonard and Al piloted Colt
Alou Hou
43 152 I 1 53 349
Mays SF
50 Ill 535 57 333 turbo-charged Fords from the
Sngln P1f
50 189 16 62 328 stable of Vel M•letich and
Staub Mil 49 172 30 5I&gt; 326 Parnelh Jones
Amencan League
"We orgamzed like a bus•·
G AB R H Pet
ness,"
Miletich sald, "and we
Ol•va Mm
46 181 34 68 376
Murcr NY 53 187 31 68 364 spent a lot of money Last year,
Kaine Del 45 149 26 48 322 m fact, we spent $653,000 on our
RojaS KC
49 187 28 60 321
B Rbsn Bal 50 193 28 61 316 cars and took m $500,000 tn pnze
Sm• lh Bos 53 21 0 38 65 310 money ''
Rchrdl Ch1 39 143 14 44 JOB
Billy Vukovich, Fresno, Ca·
Tovar Mm 52 216 34 66 306 hf , came m thtrd m h1s
Oils KC
46 186 31 56 301
Yaz Bos
53 181 39 54 298
F Rbsn Bat 40 141 24 42 298
The Dai~ Sentinel

American

Perry, who came m for
Demoskey to pttch the fmal
mnmg, walked the first batter
he faced, but struck out the
second for out number one
Then, w1th a deft move, he
p1cked lhe runner off ftrst to get
the second out Another walk
put a man on f1rst, but all
threats ended when the next
batter popped up to end the
game
Demos key showed great potse
m h1s handhng of the Iough
TroJans for SIX mmngs as he
stJ uck out moe and passed mne
Ttm, cred1ted wtth the wm, got
h1s f1rst dectswn m h1s f1rst
start of the new season In
rebel, Perry KO'd two and
walked two
Portsmouth hurlers combmed
to KO 12 and walk stx Hopkms
was charged wtth the loss
Dave Boyd contmued to lead
Me1gs at the bat as he had a
smgle and a double and two
RB!s Lon me Bush homered,
Roger Dtxon slapped two
smgles, and Bob Werry, Perry,
Powell and R1tch1e all had
smg les

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Wrtter
Rtclue Allen, the Los Angeles
verswn of the mvtsible man,
11ent mto hts d1sappearmg act
agam Sunday and wound up
makmg the New York Mets
Nahonal League Eastern DIVI
swn lead vamsh

GB

620
585 1'12

Home Runs

In the combmed problem

on Gene Powell 's smgle, and
b'otted home on Dave Boyd's
one bagger
R1ck Ash sacnftced Powell
and Boyd along w1th Portsmouth's starter Jon Lowenguth bore down to fan the
next two batters and snuff out
Ute Me1gs attack
Portsmouth came back m the
second w1th three unearned
runs on two Metgs errors a
walk and a h1t
After the second mmng,
Metgs starter, lefthander Ttm
Demoskey really sparkled as he
shut out the TroJans through the
fourth H1s mates got hun two
more runs m the fourth w1thout
~ethng a htt
W1th one out m the stxth,
Me1gs leadmg 4-3, Dtxon
smgled, Powell fanned, Boyd
doubled to nght sconng Dtxon,
Ash walked and Perry smgled
Boyd home to glve Me1gs a 6-3
lead
Demoskey tired m the stxth
when he walked three men and
gave up two htts, wh1ch combmed w1th another Me1gs error,
sent m three Portsmouth runs to
tie t! up at 6-4) 1
Bret Hart Leadmg off the
sevel)th, was h1t by a p1tch,
Gary Hart was passed, and
Lonme Bush s ftelder s chotce
forced Bret Hart at th1rd But
D1xon hned a smgle through the
rruddle, Gary Hart takmg off for
home Portsmouth's cenlerflelder made a great play
and a p1cture perfect peg to the
plate that caught Hart Literally
only mches from the plate
Bush went to th1rd on the
play Portsmouth reliever Ron
Hopkms thereupon uncorked a
wild p1tch that let Bush race
home WIth the wmmng run

Dodgers Oose In On Giants

St Lout s 5 Cmcmnall 3

Natoonal League Stargell ,
P1tl 18 Aaron All 17 Bench
C1n 14 Cepeda All Williams
Chi Bonds and Mays, SF 13

of ulcer and high cholesterol

you can not rely on eatmg
I
lots of food to neutrahze the
actd In the stomach That •s
not really good treatmen(
anyway One of the usual
causes for fa1lure m tre~t
lng an ulcer 1s falltn e lo
take enough antac1d It 1s .11

Sf LOUIS
Plltsburgh
New York

~

lasts

copped a 7-4l vtctory m the
mghtcap after they dropped the
first contest 14.0 The team
came to the1r home park m
Syracyse Sunday and took two
from New Haven by tdenhcal 2·
I scores
Ftrst At Portsmouth
Portsmouth Legwn JUSI about
put Ute game out of reach m the
ftrst mnmg as they poured
across e1ght runs on f1ve htts,
four walks, and two Metgs

By Untied Press tnternat1onal
Nahonal League
East

When a body meets a body
gom' through the rye, there'll

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Cut Down on fats and Calories

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

The Metgs Amencan Legwn
Baseball team ratsed tts 1971
record to 4·1 over the weekend,
sphthng a doubleheader at
Portsmouth and sweepmg two
games m New Haven
At Portsmouth Saturday
mght George Nesselroad's crew

NERVOUS BREAKDOWN
IS NOT AN "ACT"
Dear Helen
Many years ago a relative suffered a nervous breakdown. We
tr1ed sympathy, then bemg stern Nothmg helpell. Finally we
gave up In diSgust and 1gnored her,as we felt most of 11 was an act
andshewasn'ttrymg to get well We were angry because she was
rummg the happiness of all of us
" I can now understand what she suffered, for m the past 12
years r have had two breakdowns Only those who have gone
through thi~ hell on earth can comprehend what it's like.
Worst of all, you're aware of what IS happening and can't
conb'ol 1t Your emotions TIID wild and the harder you fight them,
the more exhausted you are, so m your weakened condition, they
really take over
There's a fear so mtense It's terrifymg, and death would seem
a blessing Sometimes you appear calm to others, but instde a
hattie rages You s1t still from pamc: If you start screammg, you
IDight never stop 1
Psychtalry d1dn'thelp I had to got! alone, and I made tt, just
barely But there's always that fear It wjll happen again -that
"hangmg on toyoorself," watchmg for theftrst symptom.
I'm writing this, Helen, because I see others "on the verge,"
and see thetr confused and often resentful families lurnlilg away.
These (we) people need sympathy as much as we need air We
need someone to understand and love us, to put therr arms around
us and let us know they'll stand by
Mental illness IS a terrifymg thmg We can't cope, hope, or
fight it alone Yet more often than not, we're forced to. -A D
Dear A
Let's take your excellent letter one step further If Love,
understanding and real conunumca lion were ALWAYS present In
the faiDily, the mctdence of nervous breakdowns IDight decrease
by at leut three-fourths - H
Dear Helen
I was healthy, pretty and 2il when my mother became Ill The
other ftve children were mamed or about to be, so that left me to
care for her and Dad I qutl my JOb and became a nurse at home
After her death, my father was ailing, so for seven years I
cared for hun I had no social life and no fnends
Dad'sdeath turned me toward a Job, but by now the years had
taken therr toll Due tomypoorhe~~lth, I am wtthout work for long
penods, and my mcome won't sb'etch
What do 1hear from my mamed siSters and brotll•rs? "You
can't expect us to support you'" "Why on earth don't you find a
husband?" They forget that durmg the "man-fmdmg" years I
was domg my duty - which they neglected
Am I to be tossed astde like an orpha!!; now when I need their
belp? - WEARY
Dear Weary
You dtdn't say, but I'm guessmg you're under 40- with haU
of your life still to hve True, the frrst half wasn't roses, but tbe
fulure needn't be all thorns
What you need IS "adjustment tune" - a year perhaps to
build up your phystcal and mental health so that you can face
freedom and enJOY tt
I believe your fanuly wtll fmance thiS sabbattcal, if you show
your determination to become a new woman Why not ask them?
-H.

1

.K732 .54 tK93 .QJ62

then "'""weeps 2
aBzg Bopper
n ero

I:Helen Help Us!

Take along plenty of
McCLURE'S

da/iy/s/e

'

Come as you are Eat in the car
• sandwiches
• short orders
• biggest beefburgers m town
Sounds good...
let's eat at-

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

M1dd leport, 0

Call for Cash
125 E Mam

wtth a NEWSPAPER
992 2171

Pomeroy, Ohto

Mark Peters was lalkrng about hrs busrness w1th hrs
father last n1 ght Dad, sellrn g newspape rs IS 1mpor
tant Mark emphas1zed W1thout newspapers-free
to pnn t the truth abcut publi C affatrs-peo ple would
not know enough to govern themselves So, when I hand
a newspaper to a oi.Jstomer I am dorng somethrng to
ward protectrng our democratiC way of life'
Marks father was pleased but not surpnsed at the
way hr s son was relatrng what he had been taught tn
school about government to what he was dorng tn h1s
own newspaperboy bus1ness Of course rt also was hap
pen•ng w•th other subtects Marks route collectrons and
bookkeepmg were helprng h1m wrth math Approachmg
customers and deatrn g wrth them made hrs publrc
speakrng easrer
Mark's father knew I hat rn no other way could hrs son
learn so much wh1le earnrng money at the same t1me

BUSINESS of his own

and his parents behmd htm
he LEARNS while he EARNS

�'
3- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, June 7, 1971

2-The natly Senhnel, Midnieport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 7, 1971

I

WIN AT BRIDGE r----------------------------1

"You Must Understand, Russia Cannot
Afford to Lose Face in Egypt!"

EDITORIALS

Weak Two-

-

Firebug in Cloak
Of Righteousness
Arson has mcreased dramatically m the Umted States
m recent years, and especially m Califorma, where the
21st firebomb attack on a Bank of America off1ce occurred
the other day
Frre off1c1als attnbute much, 1[ not most, of the Increase
to the fact that arson has come mto 1ts own as a form of
"SOCial protest "
According to the National Fire Protectwn AssocJatwn,
known mcend1ary or suspiCIOUS fires accounted for 58 per
cent of all fires m the Umted States m 1969, the last year
for Which complete ligures are avallable. Th1s compares
w1th a percentage of 2.3 m 1959
Accordmg to the Califorma Governor's Arson Information Study Group, the rate of mcend•ary fires m that state
mcreased an estimated 87 per cent In the last three years
At the same time, the total number of fires, both crlmmal
and accidental, rose only 19 rer cent
In other words, the rate o arson mcreased more than
four times as fast as the combmed lire total
"Begmnlng With the Watts rwts of 1965," states the
Callforma group, "the factor of fire bombmgs and arson
as a means of dissent became a dommant and significant
motive for mcend1ary fires
"Orgamzed groups have already dlstnbuted leaflets,
pamphlets, 'underground' newspaper articles and have
furn1shed speakers and demonstrators to mstruct and
advise on the construction of var1ous kmds of mcendlary
and explosive devices "
There was a time when the firebug was cons1dered a
sick, deranged person Today he can cloak himself m the
garb of righteousness and be cons•dered by some m1s·
guided people as a brave fighter agamst the forces of
repression

BI'd .m Act'100 lI
NORm
.A953
.875

'

t103
.AQJ4

Better Than Money
With apologies to Rudyard Kipling, 1f you can keep your
cool In a monetary crls1s while all about you are Losmg
therrs, you must have a credit card, my son
It seems that during the recent "dollar cris1s" m
Europe, when many American tour1sts suddenly d1scov.
ered that thetr greenbacks or travelers' checks were con·
sldered so much funny money by the local populace, hold·
ers of credit cards had no such problem •
~he cards had to be of the International vanety, of
wh1ch there are three maJor ones- American Express
'
Diners' Club and Carte Blanche
The reason IS that the Issuers of these cards pay mer·
chants, Innkeepers, etc , 10 thetr own currency when they
present the chits Thus It ls 1mmatertal to propnetors how
much the value of the dollar may be fluctuating m relation
to !hell' national currency In fact, they are eager to do
buslness
There comes the day of reckonmg, of course, when the
toumt gets back home and has to re•mburse the company
In good(?) old Amer1can dollars
•
}W

BRUCE BIOSSAT

McCarthy 'Party'
Jars Democrats
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

"'

• J72
.AKH2
.72
soum

'

.Q1096
tQJ864
.. K963

tK95

(D)

•at

.KQ10864

A72

.1085

West
Pass

Both vulnerable
North East South
4•

2.

Pass Pass

Pass

Opentng lead- • K

8&lt;,wJtlj-

{jJ

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

1

Voice along Broadway

BY JACK O'BRIAN
SENSUAUTY RUMORED
A FAMILY TRAIT
NEW YORK - The !ella who wrote the
smut-book "The Sensuous Man" ts rumored the
real~ife brother of the dame who inflicted the
best.smeller, "The Sensuous Woman"
Even
sedate dentls!B' offtces m Radio City can't
escape VIolence One madman gun-wh1pped a
dental assistant because she couldn't give the
VICIOUS 1diot a lot of cash she didn't have Brod
crawford's richly deserved Oscar can't keep
him In stylish tippling money, so he's now the TV
vo1ce of Brlllo Pads Howard Samuels (head of
N Y 's Off-Track Betting) JS coDSJdered a mce,
decent, mtelligentgent ''who ISII't street.smart,"
considered a fatal lack in any bookie, biz, even
legal
Old time star Ftfi D'Orsa) 's not too choked
up about her reduced - stnce- the- tryout - tour
role m "Follies," a fabulously fine mustcal liB
success (and that of "Company," ''West S•de
Story" and several of his other shows) hasn't
seemed to make t!B agmg bachelor songwriter
Steve Sondhelm cheery His mtervtews stress
his show btz negatives; not to mention occasiOnal
swatB at the late Larry Hart, who wtth Richard
Rodgers tlirned out the great standard show
blnes and remains mfact Sondheun 's superior m
therr shared sphere . Which doesn't mean
Sonhelm Isn't a flrsk:lass songsnllth . Maybe
with songs more brilliantly fabncated than
creatively Imaginative
Long..ago screen child-actress Glori&amp; Jean
now Is 43 and a happy Califorrua swttchboard
opera 1m'; she'd love another flick .career tho ..
Under the Go Ju School's Sign advertising tis
Karata instruc!Jon IS the menacmg notice,
"Beware of tbe Dog" (a black belt retrtever?)
IriSh pubs m Dingle, where "Ryan's
Daughter" was halfiihot, feature his photos wtth
the captions, "Bob Mitchum Drank Here" (and
here and here and here and there)
The msulting ''Oh r Calcutta'" has a grubby secondary
attraction. Streetwalkers convene at tts extts at
finale-times flgurtng the ero!Jc nonsense should
inspire the males

Today'•

AlrntUUJC

1
f

I

WASHINGTON (NEAl
Good old Eugene McCarthy has 'em twittering agam,
with his talk of a "new party," even though he qwckly
said the press was makmg too much of 11
Organization Democrats get the shakes when they hear
stuff like that Many prtvately say Pres•dent Ntxon may
not be all that easy to beat in 1972, even tf his opposition
IS umfted They can do wtthout the splltoffs
Regular party people can't qwte make up their minds
about Gene In polls, he's down m the small print with
Senators Henry Jackson, Btrch Bayh and Harold Hughes
Some appratsers agree w1th the wag who said "The
McCarthy wing of the party just went by In a Flat station
wagon " Others fear he mtght rise fairly high as rallymg
symbol for those who say they hate "the system "
No doubt about It, the young folk ln overalls are caught
by his style as the amused monk delivering oblique
thrusts agamst the grubby, contemptible, secular world
of polittcs He lends constant encouragement to the tdea
that "the system •s not workmg" unless It elects mav·
erlcks, outstders and other untradtllonal types.
In their frustration over "thmgs as they are," the anttestabhshment people love Gene's marvelous put-downs
Without nammg them, he took care of such as National
Chairman Lawrence O'Bnen and 1972 contenders Edmund
By United Press International
Muskte and Hubert Humphrey
Today IS Monday, June 7, the
With those who are turned on by the btg rap, httle more
ls needed to stir the old legend It's all In the name of !58th day of 1971.
The moon JS between 1ts ftrst
love, isn't It? Gene's applauders never have Looked hard
quarter
and full phase
to see how much real love of people there Is In his Life
McCarthy has been puttmg down men he knows In pubThe morning stars are
lic life since forever H1s roster of unworthtes Is long
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Elected to the U S Senale from Mmnesota m 1958 he Saturn.
,
used to buddy tt up 10 those early days wtth h1s "classThe evening star ts Juptler
mates"-fellows like Senators Musk1e, Ph1lip Hart of
Those born on th1s date are
Mlchtgan. Frank Moss of Utah, Gale McGee of Wyommg
under
the sign of Gemini
But In private chats, he lore those chaps apart
Br1tlsh fashion expert George
In his 1968 prestdenttal campa•gn, two reporters Late m
the sprmg were busy comptlmg examples of McCarthy's
wasptsh wit They both gave up wnbng about it\when
Hado's
looking at it m the large, they concluded 90 per cent of tt
'
simply put the knock on other people
A man mvolved m hts campa1gn told me then that In
Gene's more astnngent moments be even slapped down
some of the eager k1ds who were among h1s chtef sup.
porters They bored h1m, and they annoyed him
Recently some people who know McCarthy were casting
back to 1968 I asked them what motivated him Prefacmg
therr response by saymg they Liked him very, very much
they answered, almost m umson "Hate "
'
A harsh JUdgment, but qmte a common one among those
who have taken the longer, deeper VIew The testimony
would flll a shelf
Yet the legend rides rtght over such Judgments Demo·
cratlc Drofesstonals wtll tell you t~at, for at least a yeat
after the 1968 battle, national party headquarters got a
steadY. stream of complaints The song was always the
same The Chicago convention was 'ngged " and Me·
Certhy thereby done out of tbe nomlnatton
Truth IS, there wasn't a thmg wrong with McCarthy's
campaign that wouldn't have been cured by h1s w!Ming a
whole batch of the primarJes h~ entered
Even so, he could have had huge otrsets had he done
well In his f1eld VISlls to convention delegations In popu·
" , loua statea Like Michigan There and In other Important
-, places. he bombed He Just plain blew It
Harold Hughes says that at Chicago McCarthy wouldn't
go to most of the major state delegation caucQses to plead.o
for Uteir vntH. Hu~hes, a McCarthy man by then; often
went to hts surro~ah• The Iowan uys Gene had to be
hountle&lt;l to gn hun"'" hclore lhf vital New York and
Cellfm nla caocuSI•s !low's Ihat al(aln about being
"rigged" out of 1!?

•

EAST
• Votd

WEST

Making News Understandable
West Germany's government-owned televJSton system 1s
planning a news broadcast especially designed for chll·
dren from about the age of 10 on up
Tentatively schediJ)ed to start early next year, the program wlll constst of three to five news 1tems, Illustrated
With films and photos and written to make events under·
standable to children
If the tdea proves successful, American networks may
want to copy Come to thmk of It, wtth the world sltuatwn
as complicated as 1t ts these days, a news program at
chlld's-eye level would probably have a huge adult follow.
lng, too

7

The Shelton Towers Hotel on Lex. at 49th St.
IS closmg The management pleaded wtth umons
that they had to reduce the staff or flop- and got
a flat oo, so the 75 per cent that were to be
retamed, weren't
Faye Dunaway has more
new beaus than Zsa Zsa Her latest, HarrJS
Yulm, took her to The Ground Floor spot .
ASCAP (the songwrtters-pubhshers group)
moved from gray flannel Madison Ave to
Broadway where Tm Pan Alley really belongs;
between 63rd - 64th Sts (oppOSite Uncoln
Center)
Hans Courted dined at Walsh's
steaker1e and several diners mJStook tbe elegant
Hans for Howle (The Horse) Samuels; now Hans
is Street Smart - but for Bdwy , not racetracks
Harper's Magazme copy editor Edith Schur
weds Brooklyn ass't D A Peter Leavitt any
ed1tion
So many empty Manhattan offiCe
bulldings led a realty lad at the 1407restaurant to
note that they don't msiSt on solid signatures at
the bottom of leases any more: "We now accept
doodling"
Rod Reed, the Pine Bush N Y sage, notes
sensttive tehmc groups complainmg about slurs
that aren't even there and wonders if he IDight
start a WASP Anti-Defamabon League· Not a
chance, Rod - a ma)ortty can't get anything
done, you gotta be a nmsy mmor!ty, attack the
U.S or J Edgar Hoover (a redundancy?) and
you're set for life.
Back ln the days wben we revtewed TV,
assorted mlnortties screamed at every fancted
shght m the tube, and the solution seemed to be
to change a v1llamous character, gangster or
whatever, to an Irish name, which didn't really
rankle but made us laugh wtth the scriptwriters'
good old artistic rtght to fright; so we would
mention such scaredy1!011celts and suggest we
were blrnmg the matter over to "The Irish AntiDefamation League", there never was one - tt
was our own joke . But you shoold've seen the
hundreds of pieces of mall flood In written m
brogues urgmg us to "go-go-go" get the
omadhauns . An mtelligent eye or ear out for
VIcious, reckless and unnecessary slurs always
Is In order -but tbe s1lly professtonal thinskins
ruin everyone's fun.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
J•m "We have certamly
had a wonderful response to
the JACOBY MODERN weak
two- btd How about some
more d1scusston on 11 "
Oswald "We use two clubs
as our only forcmg opemng
btd The other su1t two·btds
show a s1x-card su1t headed
by at least two of the four
top honors, 7-10 pomts m
h1gh cards and m general a
6·3-2·2 or 6.3-3·1 dtstr1butwn "
Jtm "South's hand 1s a
classic example of a weak
two b•d He has 9 h1gh-card
pomts, the nght dJstnbubon
•nd the r1ght sutt holdmg
North's JUmp to four spades
" a gamble He doesn't know
1! South can make t! but he
knows he won't be doubled
and he 1s pretty sure that
h1s opponents can do well m
one of the red sUJts "
Oswald "Everyth1r g turns
out fine South loses the club
finesse, but sbll scores game
and rubber wh1le East and
West have had to stt back
and watch South operate "
Jtm "Wtthout weak two·
b1ds South would pass West
would open one heart and
East would take stron~ ac·
twn South mtght back m or
mtght stay e n t 1r e I y out
Should he stay out West
would make four hearts wtth
an overtrtck Should he back
m East and West would take
the push to five hearts and
the best North and South
could do would be to sacn·
fice at five spades "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

The b1dd•ng has been
West North East South
, 1¥

Db1e

By Helen Bottel

You, South, hold
What do you do now?
.,.. A-Bid one no .. trump You
want to show some values while
you can do so cheaply

II

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
He who

. .
lau~hs ,
~

The fellow who gets
taken to the cleaners
every ttme he goes to the
track should cut out the
horseplay

be two hangovers m the
mormng

Diets and Cholesterol

Dear Dr. Lamb-Although
htgh cholesterolm blood has
been discussed many limes
m dtlferent arhcles I am still
confused I have h•gh cho
lesterol w1th an ulcer and
have found no doctor w•th a
prescnbed dtet to control
etther Is there any help for
me? I dtd take Atrom1d for
months, but have stopped be
cause of s1de effects Any
"Beau" Brummell was born hower became president of answer would be of help
June 7, 1778
Columbia Unlverstty ln New
Dear Reader-The btggest
On this day m htstory
York City
problem
most people have 1s
In 1864 delegates meeting m
m
understandmg
that cho.
Baltimore nommated Abraham
A thought for today Ralph le~terol 1s not a fat People
Uncoln and Andrew Johnson to Waldo Emerson satd, "Beauty who eat too much fat, or too
head the Republican prestden- wtthout grace ts the hook many calones, often manuttal ttcket
facture more cholesterol m
w1thout the ba1t "
the body The cholesterol
In 1933 Great Brttam, France,
•
wtth fat particles ends up m
Italy and Germany Signed a 1().
Feeltng run·down• the artenes causmg athero
year peace pact
E1ther see the doctor or sclerosis or heart and vas
In 1939 King George VI and get the lrcense number
cular problems Then tf you
Queen Elizabeth became the
eat foods that are ncb m
first Bntish monarchs to vtstt
Swttzerland uses tis an· cholesterol (not necessarily
the Umted States
c1ent name, Helvetia, on 1ts fat) thts adds to the prob
In 1948 Gen Dwtght E1sen- postage stamps
lem Egg yolks are a good
example
They'll Do It Every Time ®
You can have a diet that 1s
useful for treatmg ulcers,
hyperaetdtty or sJmllar d1s
LIST'CN TO 0t: ~A/M\ER
RICf.lE6T ANO Tf.lli
orders, and still follow rec
ANO TI:Jt,i;5. THEY'RE THE
TIGf.IT'EST'! THEY HAD
ommendations made for pa·
ONES ~'Me f.li'.D THE SAONA
THREE WI\ITER5 FIREO
t1ents · w1th a htgh choles.
AND THE INDOOR SKATING
I'OR NOT 80+/ING FOR
terol
Ne1ther fat nor choles
DIME TIP
· "''·"'\ RINK PfJT IN
terol are necessary for d•·
etary ireatment of ulcers at
I DON'T LIKE AN
all Unless you are one of
AS5E5SMENT EITHER,
those
people who can not to!
BI.IT T]oiOSe TWO ARE THE
erate
milk (and there are
RIOIEST'GIJYS IN THE
quite
a
few of them) you can
C~llB"·
us,e skim m1lk or low fat
milk-you don't need cream
A moderate amount of lean
beef, like round steak wtth
all excess fat removed, ts ac.
ceptable Creamed vege.
tables made w1th a whtte
sauce Without fat IS fme
Low fat or uncreamed cottage cheese 1s good

• •

most tmposs1ble to take too
much of most commerc1al
preparations One or two
tablets every two or four
hours ts usually not enough
Ac1d that IS not neutraLized
keeps the ulcer acltve The
second group of medtcmes
that are helpful block the
nerve stimulus to the stomach to form ac1d pepsm
JUICe None of these or the
antactds wdl mterfere wt!h
controlling your htgh choles·
terol
Often h 1g h cholesterol
Levels can be lowered by suf
f1c1ent reduction of body fat
It ts a bad lime to try to
reduce whtle an ulcer ts ac
twe, but once tt ts under con·
trol, wtth contmued support
from ulcer medtcmes and

careful ch01ce of foods, you
should be able to reduce 1f
1! •s needed An ulcer by the
way doesn't keep one from
exerctsmg and t~at could
help a good deal '
Med1cmes used to lower
cholesterol are often less ef·
fecltve than dtet, exercise
and adequate reduction of
body fat To lower choles·
lerol levels to destrable
ranges m o s t medicmes
cause undemable side ef.
feels JUSt as you have ex·
penenced
So eat bland foods, Low tn
calones, often and take
enough antactd, exercise,
and you may do somethmg
useful for both your ulcer
and htgh cholesterol

8[RRY'S WORlD

errors
Thts barrage knocked out
Metgs starter Stan Perry and
brought on Gary Hart who got
the last two outs of the ftrst
Hart stayed on the mound until
the ftfth, g1vmg way then to
Sktpper Johnson In hts three
and two th1rds mnmgs Gary
gave up four earned runs on
seven h1ts Johnson m the fmal
three mmngs, was reached for
three h1ts good for two s1xth
mmng runs
Portsmouth's Ralph Rodgers
picked up hiS [Jrst VIctory wtth
his seven frames of shutout ball
m wh1ch he allowed only f1ve
h1ts He fanned seven and
passed two
Perry was charged w1th the
loss, h1s record droppmg to the
500 mark at 1-1 Me1gs pttchers
combmed to walk four and KO
SIX
Me1gs hitters were Lonme
Bush, Gene Powell, RICk Ash,
Roger D1xon and Stan Perry,
each w1th a smgle
Second at Portsmouth
Metgs came out ready m the
second game, showmg tt when
the game's leadoff man , Lonme
Bush, smacked a towenng
home run over the centerfteld
wall Roger Dtxon, next up, was
hit by a p1tch, got to thtrd base

W

L

Pet

GB

W

~

Pet

GB

34 21 618
33 21 611 1/ 2
30 20 600 1'12
Ch~eago
26 28 481 7'12
Montreal
21 27 43B 9'12
Philadelphia 20 32 385 12'12
West
San Fran
Los Angeles
Houston
Allanla
Cmc•nnat1
San D1ego

38
29
27
25

19
26
28
31
22 33
18 37

667
527
491
446
400
327

8
10
12'12
15
19

Sunday 1 s Games

Ch•cago 6 Atlanta 3
P•flsburgh 9 Houston 8
Ctnctnnatt

4

St Louts 2

Los Angeles 4 New York 3
Ph!la 1 San Fran 0 lsi
San Fran 4 Ph1la 3 2nd
San D1ego 8 Mon treal 0 lsi
San D1090 8 Montrea l 4 2nd
Today's Probable Pitchers
P•ffsburgh ( Bnles 3 11 at
Ch•cago (Pappas 6 5 or Holtz
man 3 61
Sf LouiS (Torrez 1 21 al
Atlanta I Reed 6 31 mght
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

San Fran al Mil mght
San D•ego at New York n•ghl
Los Ang al Ph1la n•g ht
P!ltsburgh at Ch1cago
Clnct at Houston ntght

Sl LouiS at Atlanla, mght
Saturday's Results
Philadelphia 5 San Fran 3
Mon!real 2 San D•ego 1
Allan fa 6 Ch1cago 4 I 11 mnsl
Houst on 4 Pit tsburgh 1

Los Angeles 3 New York 0
Amencan League

East

W L Pet

31
31
Boston
De tr ot!
28
23
Cle-eland
New York
23
19
Wash1ngton
West
Balltmore

19
22

25
28
30
33

528

41 2

451

B1h

27 27

Mmnesota

Al Unser Cops

434 91/ 2

365 13

W L f'ct GB

Oakland
737 18
Kansas C!ly 26 23

673
531 8

Rex Mays Classic

500 9lf2

:::::::::51

League

Ol1va,

M•nn 12 Cash and Horton Del,
OilS, KC and Jackson Oak
Runs Batted tn
Naltonal League Slargell,
P1ll 49 Aaron At! and Torre,

Sl L 41, Sanlo
Cardenal St L 38

Cho

40

Amencan League Killebrew,

"Your monuswpt exposoQg the Ltttle Leogue IS sensotiono/
but I'm olrood ot's a lottie too hot lor us to handlel" '

Del 8 5

M1nn 8 4

ClarA\ at second base and
Lambert al f~rst Randy Smith
smgled, but Me1gs hurler Rick
Van Maire got Curt1s Roush on
lhree Z1ppmg fastballs to end
the threat
Van Matre bore down m the
fifth and stxlh but gmng mto
Me1gs' hall of the s1xth, he still
b'atled l.Q
Roger D1xon opened that
uuung wtth a walk, and aftet the
next two batters fanned, Wet ry
trtpled deep to cente1 to tte 1t
up, and set the stage lot
Demoskey 's game wtnnmg
pmch smgle
Van Matre, grven h1s ltrst
lead of the game, wasn't about
wblow 1! as he sat the Mason
Counllans down m order to end
the game
R1ck exh1b1ted excellent
control, walkmg only one, m
gammg hts f1rst vtctorv He
whtffed four
Loser Randy Sm1th also
pttched a !me game as he held
llle Me1gs team to only four h1ts
Metgs h1tters were Rtch Ash,
two smgles, We1ry, a tpple,
and Demoskey, a smgle For
Ne11 Haven , Haymaker, Randy
Clark, Randy Sm1th, and
Romeo each had s10gles Brent
Clark had the only extra base
h1t a tnple
Second WJth Ne11 Haven
In the mghtcap Skipper
Johnson and Stan Perry
comb10ed to hve-h1t the New
Haven team and complete the
sweep
Johnson gave up three
stra1ght, first 10mng smgles
that produced the Mason
Counbans' only run From there
on he shut the door
After bemg held scoreless
over the first f1ve 10mngs,

Me1gs lied rt up 10 the s1xth on
Bobby Werry's smgle and
New Haven error
Wtlh Perry p1tchmg, Metgs
check the Mason Counbans 10
the seventh but was unable to
push any runs across m 1ts half
Then tn extra mmngs once
agam Perry threw bullets and
Uus t1me he got some support
Boyd was safe on a passed ball,
Ash went m to run for Boyd, and
U1at s whal he d1d, as Kevm
Sheets doubled to nght Ash was
held up at thtrd on the thro11 but
lhe peg was wtld, allowmg Ash
to tally the wmn10g run
Johnson and Perry collec
lively KO d II and passed only
three tn the e1ght mmngs they
worked Perry got the wm,
ra1smg hts record to 2-1 on the
season
Hunt was the losmg pttchet ,
gomg the entire game
Bob Werry slapped a pau of
smgles to lead Me1gs Sheets
had a double, and Gar) Hart,
John Roush, and Ho1"e Ta)ior
each smgled
PORTSiv.OUTH tst
PORTS
BOl 302 {)- 14 15 1
MEIGS
000 ooo o- 0 55
Perr y ILP I Harl Ill
Johnson ( 5) and D1 xo n Rogers

and Hanes

PORTSMOUTH 2nd
PORTS
030 003 0- 6 7 2
MEI GS
200 202 1- 7 9 4
Demoskey IWPI Perry 171
and D1&gt;:0n

Lowenguth

HopkinS 161 ILP)
McGlone
(41

Welch

and

NEW HAVEN tsl
000 100 0- 1 7 2
MEIGS
000 002 x- 2 4 0
N H

Sm1 th and Romeo VanMatre

and D1 xon

NEW HAVEN 2nd
N H
100 000 00- 1 5 3
MEIGS
000 001 01 - 2 6 1
Hun I and Romeo

Perry (6)
D~&gt; on

(WP)

Johnson

and Perroud

(7}

Lollch ,

-

Brabham 1urbo-charged Offenhauser followed by Wally
Dallenbach, East Brunswtck,
N J 10 a Kusma turbo-charged
Ford and Art Pollard, Medford ,
Ore , m a Scorpton turbocharged Ford before a crowd of
36,104

starter m left field but could
not be found at game ltme So
Dodger Manager Walter Alston
mserted Btl! Russell, battmg
207, m Allen's slot and he
responded wtlh a tnple, double
and smgle to hfl Los Angeles to

of the mmng and the youn ~
outfielder drove across the
wmnmg run m the fifth whe n
he followed Wtlhe Dav1s' mfleid
h1t wtlh a tnple
Elsewhere m the NL, San
Franc1sco beat PhtladelphJa 4·3
m 12 1nnmgs after losmg the
Allen explamed h1s absence, doubleheader opener 1-0, Cmcmclaumng lle had duckeJI mt&lt;&gt; ,a ~ n~\1 ~a\ ~\ .. -. l.Jl\11\!o,, o\-2,
hallway dunng old ttmers' day Pittsburgh edged Houston 9·8,
ceremomes and d1d not realize Chicago defeated Atlanta 6 3
the game had started
and San Dtego swept Montreal
Russell's double 1gmted a 1\.0 and 84
three·run rally m the fourth
In the Amertcan League,
mntng after New York had Oakland drubbed Washmgton 8t&lt;tken a 2.0 lead m the top half I as V1da Blue won h1s 12th
game, New York stopped
Kansas Ctty 5-2, Cahforma
downed Boston 5-2, Balltmore
shaded M1lwaukee 4·3, Mmnesota mpped Cleveland 4-3 and
Chtcago bombed Detrmt 8-2 m
twtce 6.Q and 8-4
Oakland got 14 h1ts off four the first game of a scheduled
Washmgton pttchers, mcluding doubleheader The second was
e1ght off McLam, 4-10 Rtck ramed oul
Mondsy hit a two-run homer m Wtlhe Mays ' 13th homer of
llle fourth mmng and Gene the year and 641st of hts career
Tenace h1t another w1th the wtth one ou( m the bottom of
lhe 12th gave the G1ants thetr
bases empty 10 the etghth
v1ctory
over Ph1ladelph1a and
A pa1r of towermg 400-foot
homers by Frank Robmson and snapped a five-game losmg
Elite Hendricks' second homer streak
of the year powered the Ortoles Phtladelphta led 3·1 m the
to VJctory over the Brewers mnth mmng but a double by
Robmson's f~rst homer- hit off Mays and smgles by Ken
Mtlwaukee starter Marly Pattm Henderson and Bobby Bonds
-came m the fourth mrung and !ted the score
gave the Ortoles a 1.0 lead H1s Rtck Wtse pttched a threesecond m the seventh mmng hitler m the opener and Wtlhe
tied the score at 2-2 and Hen- Mon ta nez double and Ron
dricks unmedl8teiy gave the Stone's stngle provtded the only
run
Orwles theJT fmallead
a 4·3 vJclOry over the Mets
The Loss dropped New York
to th1rd place m the NL East
belund St Louts and Ptttsburgh
and brought the second·olace
Dodgers to wtthm etghl games
of San Franc1sco 1n the West

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sporls Writer
If statisbcs are a valid yardstick by which to compare
ptlchers, then recent suggestions that V1ds Blue JS another
Sandy Koufax are more than
1dle speculation
Blue, Oakland's sensational
young southpaw pttcher, allowed only four ht!B 10 wmmng
his 12th game of the season
Sunday as the Oakland Athletics routed the Washmgton
Senawrs, 8-1
Blue, who has lost only two
games, struck out seven and
walked two m avenging h1s 6.Q
opemng-day loss to the Senawrs
Wtth a thtrd of the baseball
season gone, the hard-throwmg
Blue has g1ven up an average of
5 3 h• tB per game as he conbnues to amaze Amencan
League batters wtth h1s blazmg
fastball Koufax, who m 1965
enJoyed h1s best season m
posting 25 VICWrleS With 382
str1keouts, allowed 58 hits per
game that year Bob G1bson,
another of baseball's all-bme
great pitchers, also allowed an
average of 58 htls per game m
his best season, 1968, when h~
won 22 games and had a 1 12
earned run average
Only once d1d Blue allow
more than s1x hits m any one
game, that bemg on Ma~ 28
when he suffered hts only other

loss of the season at the hands of
Boston
Blue 1sn't gomg out on a lunb
by makmg any guesses as to
how many games he'll wm thts
year "I'd Like to wm 20 but I'm
not gomg to make any
predictions," sa1d the 21-yearold lefthander
The Senators hsd knocked
Blue out m the third mmng on
openmg day to wm the1r fJrsl
home opener m e1ghl years B~t
revenge was sweet for Blue, as
he beat the Senators and thetr
ace pitcher, Denny McLam, for
his 12th WID, to~ In the lll3JOrS
He now has a 14-3 lifetime
record m the ma1ors and has
never been beaten tw1ce by the
same club
In other Amencan League
action, Califorma defeated Bos·
ton, 5-2, Baltimore edged
Milwaukee, 4·3, Mmnesota
downed Cleveland, 4-3, New
York defeated Kansas Ctty, 5-2,
and Chicago whipped DetrOit, 82 1n the first game of a
doubleheader w1th the second
game bemg postponed because
of ram
In the Natwnal League,
Pittsburgh mpped Houston, 9-ll,
Chtcago tr1pped Atlanta, 6-3,
Cmcmnatt defeated St Louts, 42, Los Angeles edged New York ,
4·3, San Francisco edged
Ph1ladelphta, 4-3 m 12 mmngs
after the Phils won the opener I·
oand San D1ego beat Montreal

INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
C1ty Ed11or
Publ1shed daily except
Sa turday by The Ohto Valley

PubltSh1ng Company
111
Court St
Pomer oy Ohto
45769

Bu st ness Off1ce Phone

992 2156 Edttortal Phone 992

2157

Second class postage pa•d at
Pomeroy Oh 10
Nat to nal advertlstng

Scn t 1nc1

I

e

'

Reds

Win, 4 - 2
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
word rest Isn' t m Lee Mays '
vocabulary
I know Lees shoulder IS
ktlhng him , ' satd CincmnatJ
Red• manager Sparky Anderson "And I know his knee hurt
him
So Anderson offers May a rest
Sundsy
May
scoffed at
the
suggestiOn
"Rest he snorted ' I'm be·
'
hmd alread}
I've already missed three weeks of the season "
May, you 'll remember,
stramed a knee hgament m the
!mal week of sprmg tratrung
and was on the dtsabled hst
when the season opened
He's m pam w1th a taped knee
eve1 smce he1ng reactivated
and then the other day he tam·
med his shoulder on a play at
second base
"They gave Lee a shot of cortosonc m the shoulder," satd
Anderson, ' and he still 1ns1sts
on playmg even though about all
he could do was lob the hall un.
derhanded '
Batting Not Hurl
But b1g Lee's aches and pams
obvtously haven't affected hts
battmg eye He's the only Reds
regular h1 tbng ~00 and Sundsy
his three-run homer off Reggte
Cleveland earned the Reds to a
4·2 VIctory over lhe St Loms
Cardinals
The homer also gave 26-year.
old Don Gullett SIX VICtOrieS tn
e1ght decJSJons as the Reds closed out their homestand at
Riverfront Slad1um before
20,189 fans, whtch boosted the
season total to , 501,213 for 29

hib1tion game and then w1ll continue on w Houston for a three·
game senes wtth the Astros
Thursday the Reds stop off "'
Indtanapobs for an exhtbJtJon
game wtth their Hoos1er farm
club enroule to ChiCago
May's homer was one of 10
hits the Reds made off Cleveland, a rookie Cardtnal nghl·
bander, and hts two successors,
Frank Lmzy and Moe Drabowsky

Nationwide

will1•ag ...
your bills
when you can't
I f SICKNESS or InJUry left you

d1 sab\ed and out of work,
... a u ld you pay your b il ls?
Nat1 o nw1de s Income Pro
teet or Plan guarantees you a

monthl y w~ h mcome for one
year f1ve years, or, 1f yo u

quahfy for ltfe
Call me today for detaals

P. J. PAULEY
992-2318
307 Spr10g Ave
Pomeroy, Oh\0

dales .

"You can bet Lee won't play lh e 1111 mn N ll l l ll \1 1 &lt;.1~ ' ' "'" 'r 1
Monday mght," sa1d"'!\nderson
after Sunday's game "And yoo
can bet too he won't play on
N 1 t1 •t~ 11 11, M 1tu til hU r l n ~ C 1
Thursday "
It 11 ( O t h~ ( 1 l um l'lt l ~ Oh1 1
The Reds meet the Cleveland
Indtans tomght there m an ex- '--- - -- -- - ----'

nationwide

Blue Records 12th Victory

SOMETHING IMPORTANT
IS HAPPENING HERE

DEVOTED TO THE

M.nn 47 Pelrocelll, Bo• 40
Sando Oak 36 While NY 35
Bofttnetl t
Powell Ball and Murcer NY representattve
Gallagher Inc 12 East 42nd
32
St New York C1fy New York
Pttchlng
Subscrtptton rates
De
Na11onal League D•erker, livered by carrter where
Hou 10 1 Carll on 51 L 10 2, ava•labte SO cents per wee~
Jenk1ns Ch• 9 5 Ellis, Pill and By Motor Route where carr1er
serv1ce not a~o~adable
One
Marlchal SF 8 3
month
Sl
75
By
ma11
In
Ohto
Amencah League Blue, Oak
W va One ryear 114 00
112 S•eberl Bos 9 2, t'unter and
S1x months S7 25
Three
Oak 9 3 Cuellar Billl 8 1 months 54 50 Subscr1p1 10n
Palmer Ball 8 3 McNally Ball pru.: +: 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
and Perry

Ftrst Wtlh New Haven
w,th lwo out m the s1xth,
Me1gs
pmchttter
Tim
Demoskey hned a sharp smgle
to center to score Bobby Werry
and g1ve the Me1gs boys a hard
fought v~etory over the New
Haven Legwn coached by Mel
Clatk
New Haven broke the tee m
lhe fourth mmng when Brent
Clark tr1pled and scored on
Randy Clark's smgle to n ght
Lambert Lined a sk1mmer to
Bob Werry , who made a
beauttful play on the ball , and
started a double play that got

Allen was penc1led m as a

Cal!forma
26 29 473 II
WEST ALLIS, Wts (UP!)Ch1cago
20 28 417 1311&gt; ' 'You can't keep up WIth brother
M•lwaukee
20 29 408 14
Al, he's got the mach1ne ,"
Sunday's Results
Minnesota 4 Cleveland 3
Bobby Unser satd after the
Baltim ore 4 Mdw 3
ftmsh of the 150-mile Rex Mays
Ch•cago 8 Detroit 2 lsi
Del at Ch• 2nd gm ppd ram ClassiC Sundsy
Al Unser, the Albuquerque,
Oakland 8 Wash•ngton I
New Yore 5 Kan Ctfy 2
N M , dnver who won h1s
California 5 Boston 2
second successiVe lnd1anapohs
Today's Probable Pitchers
500 a week earLier, matched the
INo games scheduled I
Tuesday's Games
record purse of $86,350 wtth a
Boston at Oakland night
record performance of hts
New York al Calif n1ght
own- an average speed of
Wash at Kan C•ly n1ght
M!lw al Detro!l n1ght
114 858 m1Les per hour on the
Ch•cago al Cleve n•ght
one·mlle paved oval
M•nne at Ball n1ght
He won $17,485 for hJS Johnny
L1ghtmng race team and
Saturday's Results
Cleveland 10 M1nnesota 2
partner Joe Leonard, who
Balttmore 12 Milwau kee 4
hmshed
JUSt hve seconds
Delrod 7 Ch•cago 3
behind AI, won $9,867 for second
Kansas C!ly 11 New York 7
Cahfornta J Boston 2
place
Oakland 6 Washmgton 1
"When you have the two best,
most dependable engmes
around and a great crew bke we
have, 11 1s hard to lose," Al sa1d
The v1ctory was his fourth 10
f1ve U.S Auf&lt;:&gt; Club Speedway
car events th1s year and gave
him a conunandmg lead m the
USAC pomt standmgs w1th the
season barely underway
;;01j;,Z:,iil•i:zlPtl
Al started the race m moth
"
pos1tion whtle older brother
Bobby, also of Albuquerque ,
Nat1onal League
G AB R H Pet had the pole pos1bon
Leonard, San Jose, CaLif ,
Brock St L 54 222 49 81 365
Dav •s LA
54 214 34 77 360 who won the Mays race last
Torre Sf L 55 208 34 74 351&gt; year, started the race m the
Cash P!l
46 ISO 37 64 351&gt;
Bckrt Ch1 53 214 35 76 355 front row next to Bobby Both
• Garr All
56 236 39 83 352 Leonard and Al piloted Colt
Alou Hou
43 152 I 1 53 349
Mays SF
50 Ill 535 57 333 turbo-charged Fords from the
Sngln P1f
50 189 16 62 328 stable of Vel M•letich and
Staub Mil 49 172 30 5I&gt; 326 Parnelh Jones
Amencan League
"We orgamzed like a bus•·
G AB R H Pet
ness,"
Miletich sald, "and we
Ol•va Mm
46 181 34 68 376
Murcr NY 53 187 31 68 364 spent a lot of money Last year,
Kaine Del 45 149 26 48 322 m fact, we spent $653,000 on our
RojaS KC
49 187 28 60 321
B Rbsn Bal 50 193 28 61 316 cars and took m $500,000 tn pnze
Sm• lh Bos 53 21 0 38 65 310 money ''
Rchrdl Ch1 39 143 14 44 JOB
Billy Vukovich, Fresno, Ca·
Tovar Mm 52 216 34 66 306 hf , came m thtrd m h1s
Oils KC
46 186 31 56 301
Yaz Bos
53 181 39 54 298
F Rbsn Bat 40 141 24 42 298
The Dai~ Sentinel

American

Perry, who came m for
Demoskey to pttch the fmal
mnmg, walked the first batter
he faced, but struck out the
second for out number one
Then, w1th a deft move, he
p1cked lhe runner off ftrst to get
the second out Another walk
put a man on f1rst, but all
threats ended when the next
batter popped up to end the
game
Demos key showed great potse
m h1s handhng of the Iough
TroJans for SIX mmngs as he
stJ uck out moe and passed mne
Ttm, cred1ted wtth the wm, got
h1s f1rst dectswn m h1s f1rst
start of the new season In
rebel, Perry KO'd two and
walked two
Portsmouth hurlers combmed
to KO 12 and walk stx Hopkms
was charged wtth the loss
Dave Boyd contmued to lead
Me1gs at the bat as he had a
smgle and a double and two
RB!s Lon me Bush homered,
Roger Dtxon slapped two
smgles, and Bob Werry, Perry,
Powell and R1tch1e all had
smg les

By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Wrtter
Rtclue Allen, the Los Angeles
verswn of the mvtsible man,
11ent mto hts d1sappearmg act
agam Sunday and wound up
makmg the New York Mets
Nahonal League Eastern DIVI
swn lead vamsh

GB

620
585 1'12

Home Runs

In the combmed problem

on Gene Powell 's smgle, and
b'otted home on Dave Boyd's
one bagger
R1ck Ash sacnftced Powell
and Boyd along w1th Portsmouth's starter Jon Lowenguth bore down to fan the
next two batters and snuff out
Ute Me1gs attack
Portsmouth came back m the
second w1th three unearned
runs on two Metgs errors a
walk and a h1t
After the second mmng,
Metgs starter, lefthander Ttm
Demoskey really sparkled as he
shut out the TroJans through the
fourth H1s mates got hun two
more runs m the fourth w1thout
~ethng a htt
W1th one out m the stxth,
Me1gs leadmg 4-3, Dtxon
smgled, Powell fanned, Boyd
doubled to nght sconng Dtxon,
Ash walked and Perry smgled
Boyd home to glve Me1gs a 6-3
lead
Demoskey tired m the stxth
when he walked three men and
gave up two htts, wh1ch combmed w1th another Me1gs error,
sent m three Portsmouth runs to
tie t! up at 6-4) 1
Bret Hart Leadmg off the
sevel)th, was h1t by a p1tch,
Gary Hart was passed, and
Lonme Bush s ftelder s chotce
forced Bret Hart at th1rd But
D1xon hned a smgle through the
rruddle, Gary Hart takmg off for
home Portsmouth's cenlerflelder made a great play
and a p1cture perfect peg to the
plate that caught Hart Literally
only mches from the plate
Bush went to th1rd on the
play Portsmouth reliever Ron
Hopkms thereupon uncorked a
wild p1tch that let Bush race
home WIth the wmmng run

Dodgers Oose In On Giants

St Lout s 5 Cmcmnall 3

Natoonal League Stargell ,
P1tl 18 Aaron All 17 Bench
C1n 14 Cepeda All Williams
Chi Bonds and Mays, SF 13

of ulcer and high cholesterol

you can not rely on eatmg
I
lots of food to neutrahze the
actd In the stomach That •s
not really good treatmen(
anyway One of the usual
causes for fa1lure m tre~t
lng an ulcer 1s falltn e lo
take enough antac1d It 1s .11

Sf LOUIS
Plltsburgh
New York

~

lasts

copped a 7-4l vtctory m the
mghtcap after they dropped the
first contest 14.0 The team
came to the1r home park m
Syracyse Sunday and took two
from New Haven by tdenhcal 2·
I scores
Ftrst At Portsmouth
Portsmouth Legwn JUSI about
put Ute game out of reach m the
ftrst mnmg as they poured
across e1ght runs on f1ve htts,
four walks, and two Metgs

By Untied Press tnternat1onal
Nahonal League
East

When a body meets a body
gom' through the rye, there'll

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Cut Down on fats and Calories

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

The Metgs Amencan Legwn
Baseball team ratsed tts 1971
record to 4·1 over the weekend,
sphthng a doubleheader at
Portsmouth and sweepmg two
games m New Haven
At Portsmouth Saturday
mght George Nesselroad's crew

NERVOUS BREAKDOWN
IS NOT AN "ACT"
Dear Helen
Many years ago a relative suffered a nervous breakdown. We
tr1ed sympathy, then bemg stern Nothmg helpell. Finally we
gave up In diSgust and 1gnored her,as we felt most of 11 was an act
andshewasn'ttrymg to get well We were angry because she was
rummg the happiness of all of us
" I can now understand what she suffered, for m the past 12
years r have had two breakdowns Only those who have gone
through thi~ hell on earth can comprehend what it's like.
Worst of all, you're aware of what IS happening and can't
conb'ol 1t Your emotions TIID wild and the harder you fight them,
the more exhausted you are, so m your weakened condition, they
really take over
There's a fear so mtense It's terrifymg, and death would seem
a blessing Sometimes you appear calm to others, but instde a
hattie rages You s1t still from pamc: If you start screammg, you
IDight never stop 1
Psychtalry d1dn'thelp I had to got! alone, and I made tt, just
barely But there's always that fear It wjll happen again -that
"hangmg on toyoorself," watchmg for theftrst symptom.
I'm writing this, Helen, because I see others "on the verge,"
and see thetr confused and often resentful families lurnlilg away.
These (we) people need sympathy as much as we need air We
need someone to understand and love us, to put therr arms around
us and let us know they'll stand by
Mental illness IS a terrifymg thmg We can't cope, hope, or
fight it alone Yet more often than not, we're forced to. -A D
Dear A
Let's take your excellent letter one step further If Love,
understanding and real conunumca lion were ALWAYS present In
the faiDily, the mctdence of nervous breakdowns IDight decrease
by at leut three-fourths - H
Dear Helen
I was healthy, pretty and 2il when my mother became Ill The
other ftve children were mamed or about to be, so that left me to
care for her and Dad I qutl my JOb and became a nurse at home
After her death, my father was ailing, so for seven years I
cared for hun I had no social life and no fnends
Dad'sdeath turned me toward a Job, but by now the years had
taken therr toll Due tomypoorhe~~lth, I am wtthout work for long
penods, and my mcome won't sb'etch
What do 1hear from my mamed siSters and brotll•rs? "You
can't expect us to support you'" "Why on earth don't you find a
husband?" They forget that durmg the "man-fmdmg" years I
was domg my duty - which they neglected
Am I to be tossed astde like an orpha!!; now when I need their
belp? - WEARY
Dear Weary
You dtdn't say, but I'm guessmg you're under 40- with haU
of your life still to hve True, the frrst half wasn't roses, but tbe
fulure needn't be all thorns
What you need IS "adjustment tune" - a year perhaps to
build up your phystcal and mental health so that you can face
freedom and enJOY tt
I believe your fanuly wtll fmance thiS sabbattcal, if you show
your determination to become a new woman Why not ask them?
-H.

1

.K732 .54 tK93 .QJ62

then "'""weeps 2
aBzg Bopper
n ero

I:Helen Help Us!

Take along plenty of
McCLURE'S

da/iy/s/e

'

Come as you are Eat in the car
• sandwiches
• short orders
• biggest beefburgers m town
Sounds good...
let's eat at-

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

M1dd leport, 0

Call for Cash
125 E Mam

wtth a NEWSPAPER
992 2171

Pomeroy, Ohto

Mark Peters was lalkrng about hrs busrness w1th hrs
father last n1 ght Dad, sellrn g newspape rs IS 1mpor
tant Mark emphas1zed W1thout newspapers-free
to pnn t the truth abcut publi C affatrs-peo ple would
not know enough to govern themselves So, when I hand
a newspaper to a oi.Jstomer I am dorng somethrng to
ward protectrng our democratiC way of life'
Marks father was pleased but not surpnsed at the
way hr s son was relatrng what he had been taught tn
school about government to what he was dorng tn h1s
own newspaperboy bus1ness Of course rt also was hap
pen•ng w•th other subtects Marks route collectrons and
bookkeepmg were helprng h1m wrth math Approachmg
customers and deatrn g wrth them made hrs publrc
speakrng easrer
Mark's father knew I hat rn no other way could hrs son
learn so much wh1le earnrng money at the same t1me

BUSINESS of his own

and his parents behmd htm
he LEARNS while he EARNS

�-------·---~-~-

'i'

!
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1971

Bowlers in the leagues playing

t

al the Pomeroy Lanes capped

'·

their 1970-71 season Friday

••

evening .at the Eagles Ouh in

..

'·

conference.

•

Pomeroy with a banqUet and
trophy presentations to winning

,

Gatewood·, Progressive
Mothers ; Mrs. Lawrence Barry
anp Mrs. Mark Gay, French
City Club; and Mrs. Ray Davb
and Mrs. Roher! Brandenberi'y,
Rio Grande Club.
· Attending from the Mid·
dleport Club which )losted the
district meeting were Mrs.
Arthur Arnold , Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mrs. Walter Morris,
Mrs. Louis Osborne, Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy, Mrs. Robert
Schmoll, Mrs. John Blaker,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Don Mullen, Mrs. Pat Ouffy,
Mrs. Bradbury, and Mrt. Dan
While.
Mrs. Kenneth Scites, Mrs.
Mullen and Mrs. Houdashelt
were general chairmen for the

TRI.COUNTY LEAGUE CHAMPIONS, the Davis-Warner team, Ed Voss, Paul Harris,
Tommy Reuter, Dale Davis and Homer Smith; and Freeman Williams not present.
\

'

I

teams. Pictures of howlers

'

MEMORY TABLE - Past South Central District presidents surround a memory table
prepared in tribute to the late Mrs. Mary June Hood, member of the Middleport League. They
are Mrs. Lester Plymale, Gallipolis; Mrs. Jesse Merry, Rio Grande, and Mrs. Kenneth Scites,
Jr., Pomeroy.

.I

winning special awards were
EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED League champions at the Pomeroy Bowlin~ Lanes this
past season was Zide's Sports Shop team, Charles Winebrenner and Linda Winebrenner, Betty
&amp;nlth and Charles Smith.

•1•
'

ac~mpanying

·.'''

•
',

Mrs. ames Gilliam
d
•
New CCL Presl ent

published Sunday. The
pictures--left to

right in each are of the league

'•''••
'•

~··
r:·
,'
••
o'

.

champions present at the dinner.

'r:

••'''

r.

l

Iil

~

r

,'

r

I[

•'•

EARLY SUNDAY MIXED LEAGUE champions, Junior Ph"lps, Maxine Dugan, Dorothy
Rife and Larry Dugan.

•

~;
~

Children Have Day at Pafk

,

•'

•'

Pomeroy kindergarten
children were taken by Meigs
Local school bus Wednesday to
Camden Park.
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley,
. teacher, was assisted by Miss
Polli Costein who had been a
student teacher during the

INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE champion was the K&amp;C Jewelers, Tom Clelland, Larry Wolfe,
Charles Boyles and Bob Bowen; absent were Rich Bailey, Bill Wilford and Joe Bailey.
CHAMPIONS OF THE LATE SUNDAY MIXED
LEAGUE were the BB's, Betty Batey, Charles Boyles and
Linda Boyles, with Andy Batey, the fourth member of the
team, absent.

winter months, and several

mo the rs of the . children. Mrs.
Wiley , Miss Coste in and Mrs.
Larry Morrison rode the bus

with the 44 children while the
uther mothers went in private
'

Apple Grove News, EventS

MONDAY LATE MIXED LEAGUE champs were the Lamplighters, Larry Dugan, Maxine
Dugan, Mary Voss and Ed Voss.

Stiversville News Notes
•
an~r. ~nd Mrs. Delbert Bissell Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moorhead
we k ~mlly were recent and Mrs. Minnie Pickens were
e end guests of her parents
Mrs· Donald Brewer'
and sons.
M
hav;· and Mrs. Leon Donahue
Ea moved here from near
1
me~ Liverpool, They 'are formunit residents of this com.
y,
Mr. an

recent guests of Mrs. Sylvia
Allen.
Mrs. Raymond Kerns v1..
s1ted
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson
Friday afternoon .
Mrs. Ada Van Meter is the
new advisor of the local 4-H
club.

Leota Birch was a Thursday
afternoon visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Brewer and David.
Maxine Powell was a recent
guest of Mrs . Ruby Bryant.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkerson
and son, Columbus, were
weekend guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
Mr. and Mrs. George Souders,
Xenia, spent the past week with
her mother, Mrs. Olive Talbott.

SPEND YOUR SUMMER WIT~ US
Summer '71, the Rio Grande College Summer Terms
program, ~as offerings that will fit everyone's plans this
season - mcluding community-interest, recreational and
College credit programs. Hours are arranged, so students
can take full or partial loads and enjoy the summer months
while attending classes.
·
Courses will be offered in:
Ftne Arts
Hea lth &amp; Phys. Ed .
Hi s lory
Math
Music
Nalural Science
Ouldoor Education

Art
Biology
Chemistry
Economics
Education
English

Philosophy &amp; Religion
Physics
...---....:.
Pohlical Science
Psychology
Sociology
Speech

So. if you want to take a recreatioilal course, do some advanced work. accelerate your
graduation or get an early start on your college education ',

PLAN TO SPEND YOUR SUMMER WITH US.

'

First Term- Registration- June 14
Classes June 15- July 16
Second 1errn- July 19- August 20

•

1

I

RIO.GRANDE COLLEGE
•';'_

1

' ,;:;

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Casper
and grandchildren, Billy and
Brian Dye, of Columbus spent
Memorial weekend with Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Scarberry of Evergreen Hills, W.
Va., spent Saturday with Mrs.
Ruth Donohew and visited Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Hill and family .
Dale Wallace Hill of Moore
Haven , Fla., was a weekend
guest of Mr . and Mrs. Marshall
Roush and attended the alumni
banquet at Southern Local High
School. Michael Hill of
Columbus spent the weekend
with the Roushes and called on
other relatives.
George and Roger Parsons of
Ashland spent the Memorial
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll White and called on
other relatives.
Mr . and Mrs. Theron Johnson
spent Thursday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler at
Wheelersburg. Misses Ruth and
Grace Ellis of Columbus were
Memorial weekend ·guests of the
Johnsons and attended the
alumni at Southern Local High
School.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Riffle at Ravenswood, W.
Va .
M•·. Howe Leonard of
Ravenswood and daughter,
Mary Elizabeth of Charleston
were Saturday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Quillen.
Mt·. and Mrs. Milford
Frederick and children and
Debbie Bostick attended the
races at Athens Monday . Toney
and Juanita Frederick of
Dorcas spent Monday with their
grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wood.
Miss Brenda Hawkins of
Salem spent Memorial weekend
with Mr. anq Mrs. Jim Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
McKelvey of Belpre called
· Sunday afternoon on Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Pearson, Mr.
McKelvey is recuperating
satisfactorily from recent
Surgery.
·
Mr. and Mts . Clarence Story
and daught.e r, Rosalee of
Darwin, Mr. and Mrs. Richartl
Fisher of Charleston, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Badgely, Danny and
Christi, of Fairfax, Va., were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr, and
Mrs. J&gt;rwin Gloeckner and
David. Mr.and Mrs. Paul Davis

,illi',~' IJili!-llllil-------------------------..1 and
1

children of

Par~ersburg

HOSPITAL NEWS
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Holzer Medieal Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
! :30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth C.
BelcheJ', Patriot, a daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R.
Webb, South Webster, a son.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Ruth Branham, Chilton
Cadle, Mrs. Lawrence Cheatwood, Mrs. Harold Copley, Mrs.
James R. Doss, David Lee
Edwards, Mrs . Thomas I.
Evans, Mrs. Harold K. German,
Mrs. Ray E. Gibbs, Brooks C.
Glover, Oak Grimm, Robert A.
Grube , Allyss D. Harvey ,
Joseph P. Hatfield, Mrs . Dean
C. Hickman and daughter,
Edwin A. Hixson, Mrs. Margery
Howard, Kenneth W. Ingalls,
Carl B. Jennings, Glen R. Long,
Beth Ann Pierce, Mrs. Richard ·
L. Richmond, Mrs. Theodore R.
Slinker, Nathan E. Vanaman ,
Scott D. Walton, James R.
White , Walter M. Windsor, Mrs.
William T. Woodall, Rhonda K.
Youug, Mrs. Wm. Glen Dash,
Mrs. Debbie A. Johnson, Mrs.
Maxine McGuire aqd Robert
Vince.

called at the Gloeckner home
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Swartz of
Dixon, Ill. , spent Memorial
weekend with Mrs. Eula Wolfe
and Aaron . The group enjoyed a
cookout at the cabin of Thomas
Wolfe and daughter on Horse
Cave.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Badgely,
Danny and Christi, of Fairfax,
Va ., spent the Memorial
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Badgely at
Racine . Mrs. Badgely and
children will remain for a two
weeks visit.
Memorial weekend guestS of
Mr . and Mrs. Marshall Adams
were Mrs. Millie Norris, Mr.
and Mrs . . Charles Norris and
son, Jimmy , Mr . Franklin
Norris and children, Penny and
Randy, of Laurel, Md., Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Cady and children
of West Jefferson, Mrs. Flossie
Church of Masion, Mrs. Freda
Evans of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Poland and children of
Menford Center, Mr. and Mrf
Butch Donohe and Brian of
Prospect, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
O'Brien and children of Antiquity, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
O'Brien and Jimmy, Linda and
Carol, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Webb of Delaware , with only three.
Mansfield spent Memorial has the fewest counties of
any state in the Union .
weekend with Mrs. L. D. Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade
...
and Gene Early of Troy, Mr.
and Mrs . Howard Roush of
Mansfield spe nt Memorial
weekend with Mrs. Edna Roush
and Mrs. Gladys Shields and
called on relatives.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Connolly
and Brian of Syracuse spent
Saturday in Columbus and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle
and Missy.
Mrs. Eula Bracken of Pennsylvania, Harold Hayman of
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Norris. of Junction City were
Memorial weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris.
Mrs. Vera Craig of Athens,
Alabama, spent Thursday thru
Sunday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Norris. Herschel Norris and son, Clarence,
accompanied her to Huntington
Sunday evening where she left
by plane for her home..
Mr. and J'.trs. Benny Boggess
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. JiiCk Ables.
Don Johnson of Columbus
visited with Wayne Roseberry
reccittly.

ca rs. Mrs. William Airson
stayed on the bus during the
stay at the park to administer
first aid , if needed , to the
children , although they got
through the day without a
mishap.
Norman Wood was bus driver
for the group and the expenses
for each child was assumed by
his or her parents . This was the
first time that the kmdergarten
children have gone on a long
trip.
Mothers making the trip were
Mrs. James WiJI, Mrs. Jack
Pickcos, Mrs. Kenneth Me·
Cullough, Mrs. Phyllis Greer,
Mrs. Morrison, Mrs. Herschel
McClure, Mrs. Glen Roush,
Mrs . Charles Gloeckner and
Mrs. Al'thur Arnold.
Children in the group were
John Porter, Craig Hesson,
Rusty Clark, Mark Roush ,
Arthur Wiley, Steven Simonton,
B[ian Wil) , Eddie Curtis, Mike
Hawk, Scott Harrison, Lisa
Pickens, Gena Airson, Misti

Gandee, Terry Worley, Ken
McCullogh, Robby Gibbs, Anna
Marie Baxter, Jackie Blake,
John Greer, Keith King, John
Lyons, John McKinney, John
Queen, Vicki Morrison, Deanna
Pullins.
Priscilla Herdman, Lana
Burris, Ruth Ann Yoder, Billy
McClure, Todd Grover, Brill
King, Rod Manley , Tommy
May, Tammy Roush, Kim
Salser, Abby Woodruff, Beth
Gloeckner, Laura James, Cindy
Curtis, Ronnie Arnold, John
Smith, Matt VanVranken,
Chuck Bailey, and Brett Carl.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use'Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd,

P~merov

Looking for a piano
tuner who strikes
the right chord?
Yellow
Pages

Stewart, Middleport, South Central District president; Mrs.
William Woolf, East Rochester, OCCL state vice president;
Mrs. Russell Lowe, Marysville, OCCL treasurer, and Mrs.
Betty Seiter, Marion, West Central District President.

Your
Independent
Insurance
Agent

f

address and there were two
A memory Ia ble honoring including Joseph Haydn's Weber.
Invocation to open the workshops, " Questions and Dal~ Warner(
Mrs. Harold (Mary June) Hood Sonola, The Youth and Beauty
Answers," conducted by Mrs .
Policy is
was prepared by Mrs. Charles Dance by Will Porter, and meeting was given by the Rev . Clark, and "Scholarship Loan
• Bradbury. It featured an open Second Arabesque, by Claude Mr. Perrin . The welcome was Fund," by Mrs. Woolf .
tailored to needs.
extended by Mrs. Robert Sch.
Bible, a white rose, and a tall Debussy.
Mrs.
Donald
Mullen , Whether you want
lighted taper with a card of Jayne Lee played Sunshine moll, Middleport League , and president of the Middleport auto,'
life
or
and Shadows, Raindrops and Mrs. Ricahrd Brown of the
district
president
at
the
State
tribute.
In
Mrs.
Hood's
honor,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH topic, "Values," by the Rev. W.
homeowners
in·
Spinning Wheel on the piano and Progressive Mothers' Club gave CCL, presided at the afternoon
Election of Mrs. James H. Perrin, highlighted the Child Conservation League the Middleport CCL made a
session.
It
was
noted
Utat
the
surance,
we
will
design
then sang, If I Had Rhythm in the response.
Gilliam president of the South district spring conference in convention this fall in Colum· ·contribution to the scholarship
Mrs. Clark, stale president, Middleport Club is observing its a policy to fit your
My Nursery Rhymes, acbus.
loan
fund
of
the
Ohio
League.
Central District of the Ohio Pomeroy Saturday.
silver anniversary as a member
Individual
She succeeds Mrs. Raymond
"Every Cloud Has A Silver companied by Mrs. Olive made an official visitation of the OCCL this year.
Child Conservation League, Mrs. Gilliam, a member of
requirements
presentation of program book the Progressive Mothers Club of Stewart of the Middleport Child Lining" was the theme of the
Representing leagues at the
Discuss your speclflc
Conservation
League
who
has
meeting
which
featured
silver
Gallipolis,
will
be
installed
the
awards, and· an address on the
conference were Mrs. Carl needs with us .
been district president the past glittered clouds in the
Gillispie, Mrs. Charles Bostic
two years. Mrs. Stewart was decorations of Trinity Church.
and Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Toddlers
presented a gift of luggage.
Cherubs were given as favors at
to Tassels ; Mrs. Mark Hard·
Pllonom-Leaders were elected Wed- teacher, with Glen Deeter as
The program book award Ute luncheon served by women
way, Mrs. Richard Brown,
14Court
St.
nesday night by the United her
assistant ;
Dorothy
went to the Toddlers to Tassels of Trinity Church.
Mrs. Gilliam, Mrs. Charles
Club of Gallipolis with an
Providing afternoon en- Faith non-denominational Coleman, primary-junior
honorable mention to the Rio tertainment were Miss Glenna church on the Middleport· teacher, with Hope Drake,
assistant, and Hope Drake,
Grande Mothers Club. Both Sprague and Jayne Lee Pomeroy bypass.
Elected were Leo Hill, class kindergarten teacher, with Mrs.
were presented certificates by Hoeflich. Miss Sprague
leader
; Bob Ba~ber, Sunday Hill, assislant.
·
Mrs. Stewart which · denoted presented piano selections,
school superintendent; Glen Sunday school reporters are
that contributions has been sent
FU~NITURE
Deeter, assistant superin· Debbie Samsel ·and Sharon
to
the
scholarship
loan
fund
in
A weekly feature of Meigs
tendent; Eloise Smith, song Drake. Patty Hysell was elected
their names. During the past 10
County Garden Club members.
leader; Dorothy Coleman, secretary; Rosemary Samsel,
years the OCCL has granted
$35.00. Downassistant song leader ; Mrs. treasurer; and Fred Samsel,
more than $60,000 in scholarship
Balan!=e On
Helen Hill , pianist; Carol Junior Coleman, and Norman
loans. All leagues in the district
ConveRient
Coleman , assistant pianist; Hysell, custodians.
contributed to the scholarship
Terl]ls.
Robert Smith and Junior A request for a leave of ab·
fund.
Coleman , ushers; Dorothy sence due to ill health was
In his talk, the Rev. Mr.
BY MRS. BRUCE MAY
Coleman, cradle roll superin· granted the Rev. Robert E.
Perrin ·used "Serendipity" as
MONDAY
Ru Gaud Friendly Gardeners
his topic. He spoke of gaining MEIGS CHAPTER, Ord.er of tendent; Leo Hill, adult Smith, pastor . The · Rev. Mr.
Because of today's emphasis on Ute. conservation of natural Ute important things in life DeMol&amp;y, 7:30 p.m. Monday, teacher; Rev. Denn\s Weaver,'~Weavtlr o£ Leon, W, ~ V•...- 8.C·
Mason; W. Va.
beauty and environment, preserving trees and oUter plants ac- while seeking the simple things, Middleport Masonic Temple. assistant adult teacher ; cepted the church responcompanying them has a special meaning. Establishing a wild and made reference to ac· Regular meeting and election of Rosemary Samsel, teenager sibility.
flower garden around your ·own home is one way you can involve cidental discoveries and in- junior counselor.
ventions that proved far more POMEROY GARDEN Club, •
yourself personally with conservation.
A wildflower garden may involve as much or as litUe effort valuable than the objective Monday, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Dor Schaefer. Mrs. Richard
as you wish to expend. It can be completed in one or two seasons, originally sought.
"Our children will find far Jones, assisting hostess.
or it can become a pleasant pastime for all seasons.
In some cases a wild flower garden may be well underway greater treasures when they MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
because many of the wanted plants are already there, or you may seek the kingdom of God - this Cl u b, Mon day, 7 :30 p. m .
find desirable plants along your property boundaries, or close to result being serendipity," the Columbus and southern Ohio
trees. For those you wish to add, Ute best source is the nurseries pastor of Trinity Church said. Electric Co. social room. Mrs.
Distinguished guests at the Marion French, Miss Hallie
that specialize in native plants.
conference
were Mrs. Walter Zerkle, and Mrs. Norma Hecox,
Digging of plants from private property or sanctuaries is
completely contrary to the conservation code; but from roadsides Clark, Jr., Dayton, OCCL state hostesses.
Mrs. William Wooif,
TUESDAY
or other·areas subject to mowing is usually permissible and in the president;
East Rochester, state vice HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
true spirit of conservation. Spring or fall is the best time to president; Mrs. Russell Lowe, OES, will have their regular
collect, especially after a soaking rain. Slip plants into plastic Marysville, state treasurer; meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
bags to prevent Uteir roots from drying, and replant as quickly as Mrs. Betty Seiter, Marion, West Ute lodge hall.
you can.
Central District president.
If you have a shaded spot under some trees or on the north . Past South Central District
WEDNESDAY
•
side of the house give it serious thought as the site of your wild presidents introduced were POMEROY -MIDDLEI'ORT
~
garden.ln fact, if you have any spot, in sun or shade, where you Mrs.
••
Plymale , Lions Club noon, Wednesday,
Lester
don't want or can't grow conventional things, a wild garden might Gallipolis; Mrs. Jessy Merry, United Methodist . Church,
.
be ideal, for, onee established, it needs little care.
Rio Grande, and Mrs. Kenneth Pomeroy.
pOMEROY
CHAPTER
80,
For the shaded or woodsy garden the important thing is to Scites, Jr., Pomeroy.
RAM, stated meeting, Wed·
make the soil right. With your shovel or spade work into the top 8
nesday, 7:30 p. m. Pomeroy
or 9 inches as much well-decayed leafmold or peatmoss as you
Masonic Temple, to elect new
can get. Twice the usual two inch layer is none too much. Then
officers. Rituals are to be
add on top as a mulch another couple of inches of rotted leaves returned to the desk.
or of pine needles if you want a decidedly acid garden (only a soil
test will prove acidity, which you can get through your extension
service),
You can stlll plant this fail, buying such plants as white and
purple lrilliums (which are easy to grow), white baneberries,
bloodroot, eximia belledinghearts, wild ginger for a ground cover,
jack~n-the.pulpits, turtleheads, and flaming earinal flowers.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller
TrilliumS and jack-in-the-pulpit grow from bulbs. Put them entertained with a chicken
six or more inches deep. Put the others the same depth they grew barbecue and homemade ice
The Meigs Co . Branch
before.
cream at their home on Chester
If you don'tcare for color, you can set ostrich, cinnamon, and Road over the Memorial Day
of the Athens Co.
interrupted ferns. Then for lower growing plants add Christmas weekeffir.
Savings &amp; Loan Co. is a
ferns, graceful maidenhairs or six-inch rock polypods. In no case
safe profitable in Guests on Sunday were Mr.
plant hay-scented ferns, unless you want them to lake over the and Mrs. Julian Bates, son
vestment.
Chris, and Mrs . Esther
whole place.
In the pine needle.eovered garden the selection is narrower DeWolfe, and daughter, Lisa, of
but, especially if your soil is sandy, you can grow dwarf junipers, Delaware, Wisconsin ~ here to Current passbook rate .
low buSh blueberries, lupines from seed, birdfoot violets, wm· attend the Chester Alumni, who
Begin savings here ...
tergreen and partridge-berry vines. But don't· try pink were the weekend guests of Mr. any amount ... any
and Mrs. Norrilan G. Rose.
Jadyslipp~rs. They are very difficult and only for experts.
time .
Jn a sunny, more meadow type area dig Ute soil as directed Monday guests for the barbecue
for a shady garden but omit the mulch. Here try lavendar and at the Keller home were Miss
$66''1css than
ft3
white liatrises, tall and moss phlox, daisies, black-eyed Susans, Hilda Weber, Columbus, Mr.
The Simple Machine. Maverick's price makes it simpler
and Mrs. Ralph Keller, Mr. and
The JIHie carefree car. Pinto is sized small, like the
lynchis, spirellke spireas, golden coreopsis and gaillard.ias.
to own than Nova. But that's not the only reason we ca'l
Mrs.
Floyd
Weber,
Ernest
economy import, but it's bigger on value. And price Is
on dry, gravely banks little grows, but you can .add flfeweed Weber, Chester area, and Al
it the Simple Machine. Maverick's simple to drive and
only the beginning . Pinto calls for only half as many oil
from seed non-flowering sweetfern and orange mlikweed (but·
park because of its shorter wheelbase !lnd sm!lller turn•
Weber of Akron.
changes as VW. One-sixth the chassis lubes. So easy to
· terfly weed) which roots very deeply. For the latter, especially,
ing
circle. Simple to service because it's been designed
Meigs ~ounty Branc~ of The
service that you can do most routine maintenance your·
Athens
County
Savlnps
&amp;
that way. Maverick offers a 4-door sedan for a low price
dig deeply.
sell. 'And Pinto is bigger on performance. It has a 75-hp
Loan Co.
of
$2235' ($145" Jess than Nova 4 dodr) . Or choose the
These are but a few of the many types of wild gardens you can
TO OBSERVE 91st
engine that has averaged over 25 mpg in simulated city/
296 Second St.
sporty Grabber model. A choice of an economical 11-8
Mrs. Hetty Williams who
Pomeroy. Ohio
suburban driving . Sports-car type rack-and-pin ion steerplant yourself.
.
and three thrilty Sixes.
· ·
The Idea of propagating native plants may seem novel to makes her home here with a
ing. Wider stance and lower silhouette.
some gardeners who are famili,ar with ways of increasing daughter, Mrs. Mildred Schorn,
cultivated plants. Methoos are the same: seeds, cuttings and 127 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
.. Ford 's suggested retail price for Pinto and Maverick. How'3over. the models s~own are equipped With
'
~
... ,:\
accenl group (Pinto $60; Maverick $52) and white sidewall tires ($29) . Destinalion charges,
will
observe
her
9lst
birthday
divisions. ·
dealer p• eparation charges lil any). state and 'lncat tMOS aro cll:tra .
The easiest natives to propagate by simply lifting and Wednesday.
separating, eiUter in fall or just alter blooming, are violets, false
.. •comparison based on manufacturers' sl•ggested retoil prices for clc-~oz.t comparab le
..
body styles of lowEJ:St priced models. co mt"•ri"bly equipped.
lily·of-the-vally (or Canadian mayflower), Maianthemum
canadense); blue phlox (phlox divaricata and P. stolonifers);
partrldseberty (Mitchells repens); Jacob's ladder (Polemonium
OPTOMETRIST
rep tans); most asters and other members of the daisy family, and .
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
many ferns .
.
.
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
SleW divisions must be planted at once into freshly prepared
-P- ER Y.
. .
•
I
•'
soil, water well and thereafter as necessary.

Leaders Elected

Green Thumb

Davis-WII1Mf ·Ins.

.3

.NEW

Notes . ...

SJ49.95

Social
Calendar

Try a Wild Garden

MASON

EURKttUR£

..

Kellers
Entertain
May 31

YOUR

Savings Account
At

FORD

~------- ~~------------,;;,;._ _,;;,;._ _::._...

..

DJSTINQUJSHED GUESrS - Mrs. Walter Clark, Jr.,
Dayton, state president of the Ohio Child Conservation
League, at tbe podium, conducted a workshop on CCL pur·
pose at the district meeting. Other state officers and district
presidents attending were, left to right, Mrs. Raymond

Frigidaire
.Skinny .Mini.

· 4%%

Fits almost

Pinto I door
vw

anywhere.

(Only 2 feet wide)
• Install it where the wash iskitchen, bath. nursery ... anywhere .
¥ou can get .adequate wi~i ng, plumb ·

mg and venttng.
.• ~asher and dryer each do a ram ·
tly·stze load at the same time or in·
dependently.

• 2·Speed Washer. Rejjular plus

Deli~ate settmgs for the flexibility a
famt ly washer rnust have

• Permanent PresS
Wash er and Dryer.

C~re

in

b~ lh

MDdellC ·2
launory Cenl@r

BAKER

•

N. W. COMPTON', 0. D.

FURNI.TURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

..

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC:.

461 S. THIRD .ST.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,,

�-------·---~-~-

'i'

!
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 7, 1971

Bowlers in the leagues playing

t

al the Pomeroy Lanes capped

'·

their 1970-71 season Friday

••

evening .at the Eagles Ouh in

..

'·

conference.

•

Pomeroy with a banqUet and
trophy presentations to winning

,

Gatewood·, Progressive
Mothers ; Mrs. Lawrence Barry
anp Mrs. Mark Gay, French
City Club; and Mrs. Ray Davb
and Mrs. Roher! Brandenberi'y,
Rio Grande Club.
· Attending from the Mid·
dleport Club which )losted the
district meeting were Mrs.
Arthur Arnold , Mrs. Don
Thomas, Mrs. Walter Morris,
Mrs. Louis Osborne, Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy, Mrs. Robert
Schmoll, Mrs. John Blaker,
Mrs. Eugene Houdashelt, Mrs.
Don Mullen, Mrs. Pat Ouffy,
Mrs. Bradbury, and Mrt. Dan
While.
Mrs. Kenneth Scites, Mrs.
Mullen and Mrs. Houdashelt
were general chairmen for the

TRI.COUNTY LEAGUE CHAMPIONS, the Davis-Warner team, Ed Voss, Paul Harris,
Tommy Reuter, Dale Davis and Homer Smith; and Freeman Williams not present.
\

'

I

teams. Pictures of howlers

'

MEMORY TABLE - Past South Central District presidents surround a memory table
prepared in tribute to the late Mrs. Mary June Hood, member of the Middleport League. They
are Mrs. Lester Plymale, Gallipolis; Mrs. Jesse Merry, Rio Grande, and Mrs. Kenneth Scites,
Jr., Pomeroy.

.I

winning special awards were
EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED League champions at the Pomeroy Bowlin~ Lanes this
past season was Zide's Sports Shop team, Charles Winebrenner and Linda Winebrenner, Betty
&amp;nlth and Charles Smith.

•1•
'

ac~mpanying

·.'''

•
',

Mrs. ames Gilliam
d
•
New CCL Presl ent

published Sunday. The
pictures--left to

right in each are of the league

'•''••
'•

~··
r:·
,'
••
o'

.

champions present at the dinner.

'r:

••'''

r.

l

Iil

~

r

,'

r

I[

•'•

EARLY SUNDAY MIXED LEAGUE champions, Junior Ph"lps, Maxine Dugan, Dorothy
Rife and Larry Dugan.

•

~;
~

Children Have Day at Pafk

,

•'

•'

Pomeroy kindergarten
children were taken by Meigs
Local school bus Wednesday to
Camden Park.
Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley,
. teacher, was assisted by Miss
Polli Costein who had been a
student teacher during the

INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE champion was the K&amp;C Jewelers, Tom Clelland, Larry Wolfe,
Charles Boyles and Bob Bowen; absent were Rich Bailey, Bill Wilford and Joe Bailey.
CHAMPIONS OF THE LATE SUNDAY MIXED
LEAGUE were the BB's, Betty Batey, Charles Boyles and
Linda Boyles, with Andy Batey, the fourth member of the
team, absent.

winter months, and several

mo the rs of the . children. Mrs.
Wiley , Miss Coste in and Mrs.
Larry Morrison rode the bus

with the 44 children while the
uther mothers went in private
'

Apple Grove News, EventS

MONDAY LATE MIXED LEAGUE champs were the Lamplighters, Larry Dugan, Maxine
Dugan, Mary Voss and Ed Voss.

Stiversville News Notes
•
an~r. ~nd Mrs. Delbert Bissell Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moorhead
we k ~mlly were recent and Mrs. Minnie Pickens were
e end guests of her parents
Mrs· Donald Brewer'
and sons.
M
hav;· and Mrs. Leon Donahue
Ea moved here from near
1
me~ Liverpool, They 'are formunit residents of this com.
y,
Mr. an

recent guests of Mrs. Sylvia
Allen.
Mrs. Raymond Kerns v1..
s1ted
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Lawson
Friday afternoon .
Mrs. Ada Van Meter is the
new advisor of the local 4-H
club.

Leota Birch was a Thursday
afternoon visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Brewer and David.
Maxine Powell was a recent
guest of Mrs . Ruby Bryant.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Wilkerson
and son, Columbus, were
weekend guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Durst.
Mr. and Mrs. George Souders,
Xenia, spent the past week with
her mother, Mrs. Olive Talbott.

SPEND YOUR SUMMER WIT~ US
Summer '71, the Rio Grande College Summer Terms
program, ~as offerings that will fit everyone's plans this
season - mcluding community-interest, recreational and
College credit programs. Hours are arranged, so students
can take full or partial loads and enjoy the summer months
while attending classes.
·
Courses will be offered in:
Ftne Arts
Hea lth &amp; Phys. Ed .
Hi s lory
Math
Music
Nalural Science
Ouldoor Education

Art
Biology
Chemistry
Economics
Education
English

Philosophy &amp; Religion
Physics
...---....:.
Pohlical Science
Psychology
Sociology
Speech

So. if you want to take a recreatioilal course, do some advanced work. accelerate your
graduation or get an early start on your college education ',

PLAN TO SPEND YOUR SUMMER WITH US.

'

First Term- Registration- June 14
Classes June 15- July 16
Second 1errn- July 19- August 20

•

1

I

RIO.GRANDE COLLEGE
•';'_

1

' ,;:;

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Casper
and grandchildren, Billy and
Brian Dye, of Columbus spent
Memorial weekend with Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Scarberry of Evergreen Hills, W.
Va., spent Saturday with Mrs.
Ruth Donohew and visited Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Hill and family .
Dale Wallace Hill of Moore
Haven , Fla., was a weekend
guest of Mr . and Mrs. Marshall
Roush and attended the alumni
banquet at Southern Local High
School. Michael Hill of
Columbus spent the weekend
with the Roushes and called on
other relatives.
George and Roger Parsons of
Ashland spent the Memorial
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll White and called on
other relatives.
Mr . and Mrs. Theron Johnson
spent Thursday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Wheeler at
Wheelersburg. Misses Ruth and
Grace Ellis of Columbus were
Memorial weekend ·guests of the
Johnsons and attended the
alumni at Southern Local High
School.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Anderson
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Riffle at Ravenswood, W.
Va .
M•·. Howe Leonard of
Ravenswood and daughter,
Mary Elizabeth of Charleston
were Saturday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Quillen.
Mt·. and Mrs. Milford
Frederick and children and
Debbie Bostick attended the
races at Athens Monday . Toney
and Juanita Frederick of
Dorcas spent Monday with their
grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wood.
Miss Brenda Hawkins of
Salem spent Memorial weekend
with Mr. anq Mrs. Jim Roush.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert
McKelvey of Belpre called
· Sunday afternoon on Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Pearson, Mr.
McKelvey is recuperating
satisfactorily from recent
Surgery.
·
Mr. and Mts . Clarence Story
and daught.e r, Rosalee of
Darwin, Mr. and Mrs. Richartl
Fisher of Charleston, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Badgely, Danny and
Christi, of Fairfax, Va., were
dinner guests Sunday of Mr, and
Mrs. J&gt;rwin Gloeckner and
David. Mr.and Mrs. Paul Davis

,illi',~' IJili!-llllil-------------------------..1 and
1

children of

Par~ersburg

HOSPITAL NEWS
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Holzer Medieal Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
! :30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth C.
BelcheJ', Patriot, a daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R.
Webb, South Webster, a son.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Ruth Branham, Chilton
Cadle, Mrs. Lawrence Cheatwood, Mrs. Harold Copley, Mrs.
James R. Doss, David Lee
Edwards, Mrs . Thomas I.
Evans, Mrs. Harold K. German,
Mrs. Ray E. Gibbs, Brooks C.
Glover, Oak Grimm, Robert A.
Grube , Allyss D. Harvey ,
Joseph P. Hatfield, Mrs . Dean
C. Hickman and daughter,
Edwin A. Hixson, Mrs. Margery
Howard, Kenneth W. Ingalls,
Carl B. Jennings, Glen R. Long,
Beth Ann Pierce, Mrs. Richard ·
L. Richmond, Mrs. Theodore R.
Slinker, Nathan E. Vanaman ,
Scott D. Walton, James R.
White , Walter M. Windsor, Mrs.
William T. Woodall, Rhonda K.
Youug, Mrs. Wm. Glen Dash,
Mrs. Debbie A. Johnson, Mrs.
Maxine McGuire aqd Robert
Vince.

called at the Gloeckner home
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Swartz of
Dixon, Ill. , spent Memorial
weekend with Mrs. Eula Wolfe
and Aaron . The group enjoyed a
cookout at the cabin of Thomas
Wolfe and daughter on Horse
Cave.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Badgely,
Danny and Christi, of Fairfax,
Va ., spent the Memorial
weekend with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner and
Mr . and Mrs. Ralph Badgely at
Racine . Mrs. Badgely and
children will remain for a two
weeks visit.
Memorial weekend guestS of
Mr . and Mrs. Marshall Adams
were Mrs. Millie Norris, Mr.
and Mrs . . Charles Norris and
son, Jimmy , Mr . Franklin
Norris and children, Penny and
Randy, of Laurel, Md., Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Cady and children
of West Jefferson, Mrs. Flossie
Church of Masion, Mrs. Freda
Evans of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Poland and children of
Menford Center, Mr. and Mrf
Butch Donohe and Brian of
Prospect, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
O'Brien and children of Antiquity, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
O'Brien and Jimmy, Linda and
Carol, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Webb of Delaware , with only three.
Mansfield spent Memorial has the fewest counties of
any state in the Union .
weekend with Mrs. L. D. Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade
...
and Gene Early of Troy, Mr.
and Mrs . Howard Roush of
Mansfield spe nt Memorial
weekend with Mrs. Edna Roush
and Mrs. Gladys Shields and
called on relatives.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Connolly
and Brian of Syracuse spent
Saturday in Columbus and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle
and Missy.
Mrs. Eula Bracken of Pennsylvania, Harold Hayman of
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Norris. of Junction City were
Memorial weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Norris.
Mrs. Vera Craig of Athens,
Alabama, spent Thursday thru
Sunday with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Norris. Herschel Norris and son, Clarence,
accompanied her to Huntington
Sunday evening where she left
by plane for her home..
Mr. and J'.trs. Benny Boggess
spent Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. JiiCk Ables.
Don Johnson of Columbus
visited with Wayne Roseberry
reccittly.

ca rs. Mrs. William Airson
stayed on the bus during the
stay at the park to administer
first aid , if needed , to the
children , although they got
through the day without a
mishap.
Norman Wood was bus driver
for the group and the expenses
for each child was assumed by
his or her parents . This was the
first time that the kmdergarten
children have gone on a long
trip.
Mothers making the trip were
Mrs. James WiJI, Mrs. Jack
Pickcos, Mrs. Kenneth Me·
Cullough, Mrs. Phyllis Greer,
Mrs. Morrison, Mrs. Herschel
McClure, Mrs. Glen Roush,
Mrs . Charles Gloeckner and
Mrs. Al'thur Arnold.
Children in the group were
John Porter, Craig Hesson,
Rusty Clark, Mark Roush ,
Arthur Wiley, Steven Simonton,
B[ian Wil) , Eddie Curtis, Mike
Hawk, Scott Harrison, Lisa
Pickens, Gena Airson, Misti

Gandee, Terry Worley, Ken
McCullogh, Robby Gibbs, Anna
Marie Baxter, Jackie Blake,
John Greer, Keith King, John
Lyons, John McKinney, John
Queen, Vicki Morrison, Deanna
Pullins.
Priscilla Herdman, Lana
Burris, Ruth Ann Yoder, Billy
McClure, Todd Grover, Brill
King, Rod Manley , Tommy
May, Tammy Roush, Kim
Salser, Abby Woodruff, Beth
Gloeckner, Laura James, Cindy
Curtis, Ronnie Arnold, John
Smith, Matt VanVranken,
Chuck Bailey, and Brett Carl.

SHIRT
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9-0ut At 5
Use'Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd,

P~merov

Looking for a piano
tuner who strikes
the right chord?
Yellow
Pages

Stewart, Middleport, South Central District president; Mrs.
William Woolf, East Rochester, OCCL state vice president;
Mrs. Russell Lowe, Marysville, OCCL treasurer, and Mrs.
Betty Seiter, Marion, West Central District President.

Your
Independent
Insurance
Agent

f

address and there were two
A memory Ia ble honoring including Joseph Haydn's Weber.
Invocation to open the workshops, " Questions and Dal~ Warner(
Mrs. Harold (Mary June) Hood Sonola, The Youth and Beauty
Answers," conducted by Mrs .
Policy is
was prepared by Mrs. Charles Dance by Will Porter, and meeting was given by the Rev . Clark, and "Scholarship Loan
• Bradbury. It featured an open Second Arabesque, by Claude Mr. Perrin . The welcome was Fund," by Mrs. Woolf .
tailored to needs.
extended by Mrs. Robert Sch.
Bible, a white rose, and a tall Debussy.
Mrs.
Donald
Mullen , Whether you want
lighted taper with a card of Jayne Lee played Sunshine moll, Middleport League , and president of the Middleport auto,'
life
or
and Shadows, Raindrops and Mrs. Ricahrd Brown of the
district
president
at
the
State
tribute.
In
Mrs.
Hood's
honor,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH topic, "Values," by the Rev. W.
homeowners
in·
Spinning Wheel on the piano and Progressive Mothers' Club gave CCL, presided at the afternoon
Election of Mrs. James H. Perrin, highlighted the Child Conservation League the Middleport CCL made a
session.
It
was
noted
Utat
the
surance,
we
will
design
then sang, If I Had Rhythm in the response.
Gilliam president of the South district spring conference in convention this fall in Colum· ·contribution to the scholarship
Mrs. Clark, stale president, Middleport Club is observing its a policy to fit your
My Nursery Rhymes, acbus.
loan
fund
of
the
Ohio
League.
Central District of the Ohio Pomeroy Saturday.
silver anniversary as a member
Individual
She succeeds Mrs. Raymond
"Every Cloud Has A Silver companied by Mrs. Olive made an official visitation of the OCCL this year.
Child Conservation League, Mrs. Gilliam, a member of
requirements
presentation of program book the Progressive Mothers Club of Stewart of the Middleport Child Lining" was the theme of the
Representing leagues at the
Discuss your speclflc
Conservation
League
who
has
meeting
which
featured
silver
Gallipolis,
will
be
installed
the
awards, and· an address on the
conference were Mrs. Carl needs with us .
been district president the past glittered clouds in the
Gillispie, Mrs. Charles Bostic
two years. Mrs. Stewart was decorations of Trinity Church.
and Mrs. Arthur Rupe, Toddlers
presented a gift of luggage.
Cherubs were given as favors at
to Tassels ; Mrs. Mark Hard·
Pllonom-Leaders were elected Wed- teacher, with Glen Deeter as
The program book award Ute luncheon served by women
way, Mrs. Richard Brown,
14Court
St.
nesday night by the United her
assistant ;
Dorothy
went to the Toddlers to Tassels of Trinity Church.
Mrs. Gilliam, Mrs. Charles
Club of Gallipolis with an
Providing afternoon en- Faith non-denominational Coleman, primary-junior
honorable mention to the Rio tertainment were Miss Glenna church on the Middleport· teacher, with Hope Drake,
assistant, and Hope Drake,
Grande Mothers Club. Both Sprague and Jayne Lee Pomeroy bypass.
Elected were Leo Hill, class kindergarten teacher, with Mrs.
were presented certificates by Hoeflich. Miss Sprague
leader
; Bob Ba~ber, Sunday Hill, assislant.
·
Mrs. Stewart which · denoted presented piano selections,
school superintendent; Glen Sunday school reporters are
that contributions has been sent
FU~NITURE
Deeter, assistant superin· Debbie Samsel ·and Sharon
to
the
scholarship
loan
fund
in
A weekly feature of Meigs
tendent; Eloise Smith, song Drake. Patty Hysell was elected
their names. During the past 10
County Garden Club members.
leader; Dorothy Coleman, secretary; Rosemary Samsel,
years the OCCL has granted
$35.00. Downassistant song leader ; Mrs. treasurer; and Fred Samsel,
more than $60,000 in scholarship
Balan!=e On
Helen Hill , pianist; Carol Junior Coleman, and Norman
loans. All leagues in the district
ConveRient
Coleman , assistant pianist; Hysell, custodians.
contributed to the scholarship
Terl]ls.
Robert Smith and Junior A request for a leave of ab·
fund.
Coleman , ushers; Dorothy sence due to ill health was
In his talk, the Rev. Mr.
BY MRS. BRUCE MAY
Coleman, cradle roll superin· granted the Rev. Robert E.
Perrin ·used "Serendipity" as
MONDAY
Ru Gaud Friendly Gardeners
his topic. He spoke of gaining MEIGS CHAPTER, Ord.er of tendent; Leo Hill, adult Smith, pastor . The · Rev. Mr.
Because of today's emphasis on Ute. conservation of natural Ute important things in life DeMol&amp;y, 7:30 p.m. Monday, teacher; Rev. Denn\s Weaver,'~Weavtlr o£ Leon, W, ~ V•...- 8.C·
Mason; W. Va.
beauty and environment, preserving trees and oUter plants ac- while seeking the simple things, Middleport Masonic Temple. assistant adult teacher ; cepted the church responcompanying them has a special meaning. Establishing a wild and made reference to ac· Regular meeting and election of Rosemary Samsel, teenager sibility.
flower garden around your ·own home is one way you can involve cidental discoveries and in- junior counselor.
ventions that proved far more POMEROY GARDEN Club, •
yourself personally with conservation.
A wildflower garden may involve as much or as litUe effort valuable than the objective Monday, 7:30p.m. home of Mrs.
Dor Schaefer. Mrs. Richard
as you wish to expend. It can be completed in one or two seasons, originally sought.
"Our children will find far Jones, assisting hostess.
or it can become a pleasant pastime for all seasons.
In some cases a wild flower garden may be well underway greater treasures when they MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
because many of the wanted plants are already there, or you may seek the kingdom of God - this Cl u b, Mon day, 7 :30 p. m .
find desirable plants along your property boundaries, or close to result being serendipity," the Columbus and southern Ohio
trees. For those you wish to add, Ute best source is the nurseries pastor of Trinity Church said. Electric Co. social room. Mrs.
Distinguished guests at the Marion French, Miss Hallie
that specialize in native plants.
conference
were Mrs. Walter Zerkle, and Mrs. Norma Hecox,
Digging of plants from private property or sanctuaries is
completely contrary to the conservation code; but from roadsides Clark, Jr., Dayton, OCCL state hostesses.
Mrs. William Wooif,
TUESDAY
or other·areas subject to mowing is usually permissible and in the president;
East Rochester, state vice HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
true spirit of conservation. Spring or fall is the best time to president; Mrs. Russell Lowe, OES, will have their regular
collect, especially after a soaking rain. Slip plants into plastic Marysville, state treasurer; meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
bags to prevent Uteir roots from drying, and replant as quickly as Mrs. Betty Seiter, Marion, West Ute lodge hall.
you can.
Central District president.
If you have a shaded spot under some trees or on the north . Past South Central District
WEDNESDAY
•
side of the house give it serious thought as the site of your wild presidents introduced were POMEROY -MIDDLEI'ORT
~
garden.ln fact, if you have any spot, in sun or shade, where you Mrs.
••
Plymale , Lions Club noon, Wednesday,
Lester
don't want or can't grow conventional things, a wild garden might Gallipolis; Mrs. Jessy Merry, United Methodist . Church,
.
be ideal, for, onee established, it needs little care.
Rio Grande, and Mrs. Kenneth Pomeroy.
pOMEROY
CHAPTER
80,
For the shaded or woodsy garden the important thing is to Scites, Jr., Pomeroy.
RAM, stated meeting, Wed·
make the soil right. With your shovel or spade work into the top 8
nesday, 7:30 p. m. Pomeroy
or 9 inches as much well-decayed leafmold or peatmoss as you
Masonic Temple, to elect new
can get. Twice the usual two inch layer is none too much. Then
officers. Rituals are to be
add on top as a mulch another couple of inches of rotted leaves returned to the desk.
or of pine needles if you want a decidedly acid garden (only a soil
test will prove acidity, which you can get through your extension
service),
You can stlll plant this fail, buying such plants as white and
purple lrilliums (which are easy to grow), white baneberries,
bloodroot, eximia belledinghearts, wild ginger for a ground cover,
jack~n-the.pulpits, turtleheads, and flaming earinal flowers.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Keller
TrilliumS and jack-in-the-pulpit grow from bulbs. Put them entertained with a chicken
six or more inches deep. Put the others the same depth they grew barbecue and homemade ice
The Meigs Co . Branch
before.
cream at their home on Chester
If you don'tcare for color, you can set ostrich, cinnamon, and Road over the Memorial Day
of the Athens Co.
interrupted ferns. Then for lower growing plants add Christmas weekeffir.
Savings &amp; Loan Co. is a
ferns, graceful maidenhairs or six-inch rock polypods. In no case
safe profitable in Guests on Sunday were Mr.
plant hay-scented ferns, unless you want them to lake over the and Mrs. Julian Bates, son
vestment.
Chris, and Mrs . Esther
whole place.
In the pine needle.eovered garden the selection is narrower DeWolfe, and daughter, Lisa, of
but, especially if your soil is sandy, you can grow dwarf junipers, Delaware, Wisconsin ~ here to Current passbook rate .
low buSh blueberries, lupines from seed, birdfoot violets, wm· attend the Chester Alumni, who
Begin savings here ...
tergreen and partridge-berry vines. But don't· try pink were the weekend guests of Mr. any amount ... any
and Mrs. Norrilan G. Rose.
Jadyslipp~rs. They are very difficult and only for experts.
time .
Jn a sunny, more meadow type area dig Ute soil as directed Monday guests for the barbecue
for a shady garden but omit the mulch. Here try lavendar and at the Keller home were Miss
$66''1css than
ft3
white liatrises, tall and moss phlox, daisies, black-eyed Susans, Hilda Weber, Columbus, Mr.
The Simple Machine. Maverick's price makes it simpler
and Mrs. Ralph Keller, Mr. and
The JIHie carefree car. Pinto is sized small, like the
lynchis, spirellke spireas, golden coreopsis and gaillard.ias.
to own than Nova. But that's not the only reason we ca'l
Mrs.
Floyd
Weber,
Ernest
economy import, but it's bigger on value. And price Is
on dry, gravely banks little grows, but you can .add flfeweed Weber, Chester area, and Al
it the Simple Machine. Maverick's simple to drive and
only the beginning . Pinto calls for only half as many oil
from seed non-flowering sweetfern and orange mlikweed (but·
park because of its shorter wheelbase !lnd sm!lller turn•
Weber of Akron.
changes as VW. One-sixth the chassis lubes. So easy to
· terfly weed) which roots very deeply. For the latter, especially,
ing
circle. Simple to service because it's been designed
Meigs ~ounty Branc~ of The
service that you can do most routine maintenance your·
Athens
County
Savlnps
&amp;
that way. Maverick offers a 4-door sedan for a low price
dig deeply.
sell. 'And Pinto is bigger on performance. It has a 75-hp
Loan Co.
of
$2235' ($145" Jess than Nova 4 dodr) . Or choose the
These are but a few of the many types of wild gardens you can
TO OBSERVE 91st
engine that has averaged over 25 mpg in simulated city/
296 Second St.
sporty Grabber model. A choice of an economical 11-8
Mrs. Hetty Williams who
Pomeroy. Ohio
suburban driving . Sports-car type rack-and-pin ion steerplant yourself.
.
and three thrilty Sixes.
· ·
The Idea of propagating native plants may seem novel to makes her home here with a
ing. Wider stance and lower silhouette.
some gardeners who are famili,ar with ways of increasing daughter, Mrs. Mildred Schorn,
cultivated plants. Methoos are the same: seeds, cuttings and 127 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
.. Ford 's suggested retail price for Pinto and Maverick. How'3over. the models s~own are equipped With
'
~
... ,:\
accenl group (Pinto $60; Maverick $52) and white sidewall tires ($29) . Destinalion charges,
will
observe
her
9lst
birthday
divisions. ·
dealer p• eparation charges lil any). state and 'lncat tMOS aro cll:tra .
The easiest natives to propagate by simply lifting and Wednesday.
separating, eiUter in fall or just alter blooming, are violets, false
.. •comparison based on manufacturers' sl•ggested retoil prices for clc-~oz.t comparab le
..
body styles of lowEJ:St priced models. co mt"•ri"bly equipped.
lily·of-the-vally (or Canadian mayflower), Maianthemum
canadense); blue phlox (phlox divaricata and P. stolonifers);
partrldseberty (Mitchells repens); Jacob's ladder (Polemonium
OPTOMETRIST
rep tans); most asters and other members of the daisy family, and .
OFFICE HOURS 9: 30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE'
many ferns .
.
.
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.,
SleW divisions must be planted at once into freshly prepared
-P- ER Y.
. .
•
I
•'
soil, water well and thereafter as necessary.

Leaders Elected

Green Thumb

Davis-WII1Mf ·Ins.

.3

.NEW

Notes . ...

SJ49.95

Social
Calendar

Try a Wild Garden

MASON

EURKttUR£

..

Kellers
Entertain
May 31

YOUR

Savings Account
At

FORD

~------- ~~------------,;;,;._ _,;;,;._ _::._...

..

DJSTINQUJSHED GUESrS - Mrs. Walter Clark, Jr.,
Dayton, state president of the Ohio Child Conservation
League, at tbe podium, conducted a workshop on CCL pur·
pose at the district meeting. Other state officers and district
presidents attending were, left to right, Mrs. Raymond

Frigidaire
.Skinny .Mini.

· 4%%

Fits almost

Pinto I door
vw

anywhere.

(Only 2 feet wide)
• Install it where the wash iskitchen, bath. nursery ... anywhere .
¥ou can get .adequate wi~i ng, plumb ·

mg and venttng.
.• ~asher and dryer each do a ram ·
tly·stze load at the same time or in·
dependently.

• 2·Speed Washer. Rejjular plus

Deli~ate settmgs for the flexibility a
famt ly washer rnust have

• Permanent PresS
Wash er and Dryer.

C~re

in

b~ lh

MDdellC ·2
launory Cenl@r

BAKER

•

N. W. COMPTON', 0. D.

FURNI.TURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

..

KEITH GOBLE FORD INC:.

461 S. THIRD .ST.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

,,

�•

1

•
'BARNEY
TELL IT

UI&lt;E IT AIR ,
DOC

BRACE 'IORESELF,

~~~~~~I
GOT
TERRIBLE

I~

BAD NEWS FER

2 SIM
OF
QUALITY

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Laudermilt and two children of
Columbus spent Memorial Day
weekend with the latter's
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Howard
Donohue . Mr. and Mrs . Albert
Blackwell of Letart were guests
Sunday ·or the Donohues.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
and Tim, spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hupp of
Portland called Thursday on
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hupp and
sons.
Mrs. Katie Young and Mrs.
Elva Hudson of Minersville
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel.
Memorial weekend guests of
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada were
Mrs . Jessie Parsons, George
and Roger, of Ashland, Mr. and
Mrs . Don Hupp and sons, Mr .
and Mrs. Carroll White, Darla,
Deanna and Keith, Sherd Cline
of New Brighton, Pa., Mr. and
Mrs. Michael ·Sleeper and sons
of New York, Mrs. Gerald Wells
and Mandy and Amy, Syracuse .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
family called on Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp Sunday.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. lloyd Nice were Mr . and
Mrs. Clarence Skinner of
Columbus, Eloise Adams of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Nice of Chester.
Memorial weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hayman
were Mrs . Herman Sayre of
Eaton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Grant of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hayman and son, Tate, of
Columbus, Mrs. Blanch Steele
·and daughter of Gallipolis and
Harold Hayman of Westerville.
Mrs. Louise Dulaney of
Mansfield, Mr. and Mrs. Hsrold
Lawson and C. J. of Letart, W.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
and family were Memorial

weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family.
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Roush,
David and Edward, visited Mrs.
Edna Roush and Mrs. Gladys
Shields Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Ruby Hupp and sons,
Mrs. Carroll White, Darla,
Deanna and Keith, called on
Mr . and Mrs. Herber t Roush
Friday.
Mr . and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va., and· Ronnie
Russell of Pomeroy spen t
Monday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and famil y.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
returned home Tuesday after a
visit with their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Sayre at Harrisburg,
Pa.
Thursday Mrs. Glenn Wolf of
Washington, D. C., was a dinner
guest of the Sayres. Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas and son of Mid·
dleport and Mrs. James Sayre
of Kanauga called on the Sayres
also Thursday. Friday gues.ts of
the Sayres were Mr . and Mrs .
Weldon Kimmey of Brokard, W.
Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Chesler
Simpson of Racine, Max Wolfe
of Sandusky, and Danny Sayre
of Columbus spent the
Memorial weekend here .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Focie Hayman attended the
aOth wedding anniversa ry
observance of Mr. and Mrs.
Rufus Coe at the home of their
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Leehman at Carbonhill, Ohio,
Sunday. Mrs. Coe is a sister of
Mrs. Robin son an d Mrs.
Hayman .
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Gerald Hayman visited graves
of loved ones at Creston
Cemetery Monday. They also
visited Mr . Bert Stover,
Margaret and Marshall, Mrs.
Focie Stover, and Mrs. Cleo
Casto at Evans, W. Va.

Racine Social Events
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Philson, E thel Johnson. Other Memorial
Erich and Sarah, spent the Day guests were Mr. and Mrs.
weekend with her parents in · Daryl Johnson of Lynchburg,
Westfield, ·N. J. Mrs. Philson Va .; Mr . and Mrs . John
and children remained for a ( Clarys) Johnson of Lorain, Mr.
.
and
Fr~ S~~r,re and B?OS of
longer visit.
Mrs. Sybil Mlles and Mrs. Lee Bowerston, Mrs. !toy Dowell
Jackson of Pickerington spent and Mr. and Mrs. Hsnk Johnthe weekend with Mrs. Ruth son, local.
Simpson and Steve.
Mrs. Marion Knighlslep and
Alicia and Mr. Jack Hickman of
LEGAL NOTICE
Columbus were weekend guests
NOTICE OF
of Mrs. Lavinia Simpson. A
APPOINTMENT
case No. 20510
sister-In-law from Florida was
Esta te of Lu cy A . Bolen .
at..o a guest.
Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby given tha t
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Walters and
Marjori e E. Stanley, of Rou te 2,
sons of Veto, Ohio were guests Alban y , Ohio, has been du ly
of her mother, Mrs. Dixie Smith lllppointed Administratrix of the
Estate of l,.u cy A . Bolen,
.and Mrs. Ann Coe.
d eceased , l ate of Meigs County,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvert Allen of Ohio.
Cred itors are r equ i red to til e
Charleston spent the holiday th eir
c laim s with said f iduciary
weekend with her mother, Mrs. within four months .
Dated thi s 2nd day of June
Mabel Roush.
1971.
F . H . O' Brie n
E-6 Rita Johnson, stationed in
Probate J ud ge
New Jersey, is spending a
of sa id Co un t y
(6 17, 14. 21,31
furlough with her mother, Mrs.

M_..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1968 OPEL 1 OR .

$10?5

Loc al owner, less th an 19,000 miles, origina l tires &amp; rea l
good blk . vinyl interior, 4 speed, cream fi ni sh.

1968 CHEVY II

$1565 .

Nova - 2 Or., 1 own er car, clean interior, li ll;e new w-w
tires , white fini sh, 6 cyl. engine, automatic trans. Rad io.

See it today.

·

1965 BUICK

$845

Spec ial De~uxe .4 door, local owner , good tir es,· V-8 engin e.

I

i

•
•

.
&gt;

I

•

·''

•

"•

•

NICE GENTLE spoiled mare
pony , 3 years old . broke to
ride . See James Hollon, one
mile off Rl. 7 at Fl ve Points .

betwee n
Ra cine
and
Pomeroy. Phone Bill Hardin,

pub lisher will not be res ponsible
for more than one incorrect
inser tion .

OBITUARY

$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charge per

2 NICE medium.sized western ·
saddles . Call Rutland Fur.
ni ture 742 ·4211.

6·4·31c

Advertise ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily,
8: 30a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

YOUNG coupfe looking to buy
farm. Contact Jim Nally, P.
0. Box 603, Athens.
5·25-121p
TELEPHONES, bra ss beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,

elc. Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271.
4·27·ffC
ANTIQUES :

dishes,

AIR CONDITIONERS

$178.95 up

RE G ISTERED quarter stud
serv ice, Hanks Rock 209498.

Contact Mi ke Jones, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
6880.
6.2.12tc
I WILL no! be responsible for

any debts con tra cted by any
one olher !han myself. Signed
John T. Reilm ire.

H -3tn

-------

REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·
Water pil ls. Nelson Drugs.
.. . . . 5·26-JOtp
- :•

·-

Come See Us AI ?7'12 N. Second 51., Middleport.
. .
PH. 991-7129 _

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Evenings Caii991-25J4, Dale Dutton

CHEST FREEZERS
19 cu. lt.
22?.95
Reg. $285. Limited supply.

L

POMEROY

6·4-31 c

BLACK and tan hound, lost in

Ra~iator

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time '(ou Ever Spent.

'f:WINSOR
oii:BUDDY

:j(CHAMPION
,-jr.VAN DYKE

Service

BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Air Conditioning
lnspectij)n and
Special
At

698
1

Plus

.

Parts

992 ·3497 .
6J.61c

For Rent
Riv er across from Mid dlepor l. En joy a rela xing
summer of cam ping, boating ,
and swimm ing . Call fv\a xine

Griffith al 992·5782 after 5
p.m.
6-6·31c

8 ROOM HOUSE, 4 bedrooms,

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

ni ce ki lchen, 145 Butternu t
Ave ., Pomeroy . Phone 992- 1971 DIAL N' SEW zig.zag
7170.
sewing ma chi ne left in
6.6.61c
layaway . Beautiful pastel
co lor, full size model. All
bui lt-In to buttonhole, ove r TRAILER SPACE on old Rt . 33,
casta nd fancy sti tc h. Pay just
112-mi le north of new Meigs
$48.75
cas h or
term s
High School. Phone 992·2941.
ava i labl e. Tr ade -ins ac 3·5·1fc
ce pted. Phone 992-5641.
---~---

6·Hic

FURNI SHED and unfurnished

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY -

limestone Driveways

NEARLY NEw-3 bedrooms,
hot water heating, bath, nice
kitchen, di shwasher, dining
area . Large llving. Lots of
cl ose ts. Basemen !. Carport.

{

"-

• l

'

~'

'

•

'

'•

• '

..t .•

,

f

• &lt;';'f~

loca ted at Crossroads, Rt . 124 .
Complete front end ser v ice,
tune up and brak e serv ice .
Whe els
balanced
elec tronically .
All
wo rk
Reasonable
guaranteed.

rates . Phone 992-3213 .
5·22·30ic

-

.

HARRISON 'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE . Ph one
992-2522.
6·10·1fc
O'BR IEN ELE CTRIC SER .
VICE . Phone 949·4551.
s.JO.Ifc

Hayman , Reedsville 667-3041.
5·19·301p
•
C. BRADFORD, Au ctioneer
Complete Service

Roofing &amp; carpenter
Wotil
Spouting, Roof
Painting

~

GASOUNE ALLE_Y

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

You ~ot GawduGt
up m'
mind,Joel!
Gonna a,;k

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Con 5truction Co.

Ma de

DEXTER , 0 . 45126
PHONE 142·3945

for brain,;, bo4?

Look

What aoout

he

her poor ol'
5ick papa?

Experienced
Work Guarant eed

in

t' marru

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782
Gallipolis . John Russell,

__ _ _ _

Sheets

Cleland Realty

The
_Daily Sentinel

' . -:
----.

..

·.

~~

.·.

~.

~ -- -.

:

-:·-

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

~Rlllll
HIR 8AIJ.rt

Wl'l'l'tW!TK
\lOME

RfMEMfiER ..·NOU HAROFTliE
QIRt!S ~~IR I&amp; 10 Bf · ~!.
ME!!aY PREVEKT HER. 1'1!(51,!'
COMMUNIMTIHG H!l! l&lt;rto•ILI!OQf
'Cf MY 11!lf.pURPOSE. TO HEI!

FAT!tEif!

RAGGIO !OY'S
CLOTHIIlG ,

AI!HlE

!!AS

liSCAPBD
i'ROM VR.
]'[O ..

Jio ...

WMP0/1390
'

•

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

- ~WJWIDM;Ik.t=!tt.-Jc

17. Tennlte ,
delicacy
16. Bowling
alley
20. P.M.'s

2. Orinoco

AOROSS

tributary
3. Hebrew
letter
4. Repeatedly
Item
addreBS
10. Irish Islands 5, Brightest
otar
. 22. Spectat
11. Far East
gl!\
8. Survivor
laborer
ota 1'new
2f.Ledger
12. COngreve
entry
brooM"
comedy
7. SouthMri· 25. BlcUtan
(3 wds.J
can plant
volcano
H. Tookthe
8. Subslot
26.Garb
prize
28. Nothlng
15. Low-pitched 9. Maintain
11.
Bidders
and
32.
Natural
16. Leathersuppl(ers
re1oun:e
worker's
3'. Shoo!
13.Chtnese
tool
department 35, Theater
, · 19. Cartoonist
16. "Rule
· Soglow
box
38.Muacat
Brt.~a''
21. Species ot
1 '1logu
composer
and·- ·
23. Theater·
goer'o gutde
27. 1971 Broad·
1. Computer
Input
5. Blackboard

DICK TRACY
BUT-

36. Norwegian
aalnt
40. That (Fr.l
U. Wrath
42. Snakelike
flab
~- ­
chal)ce !

~~ t'!'i'('{ ,'/,

IF YOU VON 'T KEEP
THIS IN SOCIETY
YOU'RE SUNK.

WJit'JI"I N

Now ...-nre the circled Jetton
to form the aurpriH a~~~wer, u
IUJIOited by the above eartoon.

23. Like that

t.118U110R PlfS,
· :5M0111ERW ~y THe Ill.!:=~
OW~, THU$
GU,t,RANTE~ING

TltAT l'Ul76eoH'S
51(111 SHAlL NOT

J1l5T
JTIWlllWtlf

HANIIY F THE

110Cla!'S pp

Prill llle SUIIPRISE AIISWIBiere

f-+--+-1f-t--+-1

37. Gold (Bp.l
39. Cheetah'•
role In
Tarzan (Urns

ll5 REPAIR

PlfOlON6 mOlD

SM iurd.~ay'•

/

u.century
ptanta
45. Field
46. Principle

DOWN
l . Plgeon pea

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It: ~....."-==
.t.XYDLBAAXB
to LONGFELLOW
One letter simply otalldl tor another. In IIIIa l&amp;lllplo A 1• .
used lor the three L'o, X tor tile two O'o, etc. Slft(to 1ot(ora,
apostrophes, the Jenrth and formation Ot the words are all
htnto. Each clay tho code letters ore dtttorenl.
A Cryptornm Quolatlon
XB
BL
PUA

THE (

I I I)

Tlw1 rf&gt;rrflin [t&gt;f&gt;li11g .' -"NO POUlT"

fT. Hat
material

CAP!' AIN EASY

rn

Jumbl'"' BLOOM DAUNT CEMENT JA1LID

(2 wds.) • · ·

MI\Jj'S FATED LIFE
SPAN.

I

(Anewer• !OatOrrow)

~. Opening

JO!I Dtl&gt;H'T

wh,.:.::'i

I () I I I

(Swdo.)

glll'ilen
· 30. Call!.
ro&lt;ktlsh
3!. Volee In a
choir
33. Deface

'::'"'------..io.

Vnscramble these four lumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

way revlva.l

Carmel News

.

ORD

DAILY C

- -- - --

I

l i~e

il r&gt;&lt;..I UU~ I

MiGG Elva

1nsured-

Aluminum

•

CAlli YOU TELL ME
THii WAY 10 iHii .
POST OFFICE?

CITY. ...

· .... _......_ . . . . . .

CALL GEORGE 9&amp;5,3837
OR DON 992-6883

For Sale

- - - - - - --

t, ..

• I

l o.l.

Free Estimates

Owv ner &amp; Operator.
Phone 949·3821
apartments. Close to school.
SAVE UP to one hal f. Bring
_,___
5·13·1fc
Racine,
Ohio
VACUUM clea ner, brand new
Phone 992-5434.
$23,000.00.
your sick TV lo Ch uck's TV
Crill
Bradford
1971
model.
Complete
wit
h
all
10·18-ff c
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
CONCRETE
5·1-lfc READY·MI X
cleaning tools. Small paint 80 ACRES - Moslly lraclor
Pomeroy .
-delivered
ri
ght
to your
shi
pping.
Will
take
damage
in
tillable on schoo l an d mail
4·23.1fc FURNISHED modern Ranch
projecl.
Fast
~nd
easy
. Free
$27 cash or budget plan
routes . 6 room house. Several AWNINGS, slorm doors and
hou se , 5 rooms, doubl e
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284
.
windows,
ca
rport
s,
mar
.
avai
lable.
Phone
991.5641.
outbuildings. ALL Ml Ngilt age . 12 x 65 mobile home. 1
HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
Goeglein
Ready
-Mi
x
Co.,
que
es,
a
luminum
siding
6·2·61
c
ERALS. Asking $25,000.00.
child accepled in either . M &amp;
,
5-9·301p
and ra iling . Carl A. Jacob, Middlepor t, Ohio.
G Food Market, 3 mi. sou th ::-::-:-::--:~---:-­
6·30.ffc
REMOVE car pet paths and
sales representative. For free
:;:;Rc;;E;;;D;:;:U;:;C;;E::=s"'
at;=e- an- d-:-:f:-as-:t- wllh
Middleport, Rl . 7.
RAClN E- Large 7 room home,
spot
s,
f
luff
beaten
down
nap
estimates,
phone
Charles
-~---6·6·31c
large bath, ni ce kitchen and
Gobese lablets and E-Vap
with Blu e Lustre. Rent
Lisle, Sy ra cuse . V. V. s'EWING MACHINES. Repai r
dining
room . Nearly full
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
Shampooer $1, Bak er FurJohn son and Son, Inc.
service, all makes. 992-2284
ba se men t . Garage with
4-14-60tp 3 ROOM FURNISHED a part- ni ture Compa ny.
5·27-lfc
The Fabric Shot,~ Pomeroy.
carport . Concrete drive. 3
ment. Ut ilities paid, $17 per
6·H ic
Aulhor ized Sing r Sales and ·
porches .
Aski ng
only
week. 356 N. 4th St., Mid·
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
Service.
We Shar- en Scissors.
EXPERT
law
n
mower
and
$1 2,500.00 .
dl eport.
service;
550 regi stered
3·~9-lfc
Iiiier repa ir . Free pickup and li'.
6·2 Sic
mares, any breed ; $40 grade
deli
ve
r
y.
War
re
n'
s
Mower
IF YOU WANT TO SELL OR
mares . Fran cis Benedum .
Shop, 248 Condor Sl. Phone SE PTIC tanks Cll!flned . Miller
SEE, THE BEST CALL ??2·
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
36" X23" X.009
TRA ILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
992·7357.
Sanitati on, Stewart . Ohio. Ph .
3325 '
5·16-30fp
Cour t, Rl . 124, Syracuse,
5·18·ffc
H~LEN L. TEAFORD
662·3035.
Ohio. 992·2951 .
0 "2 ~2378
2·12·1fc
SWIMMING lessons sta rling at
4·1·1fC
BACKHOE AND DOZER work~
6·6-61c
Maplewood Lake. Phone 949Septic tanks insta lled. George NEIGLER Conslruction . ~or
=c-:-::-::c::-::-::::-:-:-. , . - - 4074 .
I
Bill) Pulli ns, Phone 992·2478.
TRA ILER for rent. Brown's
TWO• BEDROOM house, large
or remodeling your
6·6) 1c
4·2S.ff c building
Tra i ler Park , Minersville,
lol,lassume FHA loan of 5 per
USED OFFSET PLATES
home,
Ca
ll Guy Neigl • r ,
- - - -- Ohio. Phone 992·3324.
cent. Phone 992·2619.
Racine , Ohio.
HAVE
6·J.61c
6-Htp Real .Estate For Sale
Help Wanted
7·3J.Ifc
MANY USES
- - - -- =
R~
A~L=P~H'~S---C~AR_
P_
E_
T __
BEAUTICIAN with manager's
BY OWNER, House, In Mason, 5
license. Phone 992-2890 or 992- For Rent or Sale
room s and bath down, 3 small
Uphol sfery Cleaning Service.
6347 .
rooms
up.
lot
size
77'12
x
100
ft
.
Free
estimates.
Phone,
S for Sl.OO
IL ABLE June 15, two new
608 East Main
5·30·6tc AVA
Wou
ld
take
farm
tractor
or
Gallipolis
446·0294.
Pomeroy
sox 12 two -bedroo m mobile
truck as part payment. For
3·12·1fc
homes tor rent or sale, on lot
inf ormati on phon e 773 -5249 or WANT TO RETIRE? HERE IS
BARMAID. Apply in pe rson .
in Ma son, W.Va. Ca ll Robert
write Box 317, Mason , W. Va ..
HiHo Bar .
YOUR HOME. - 2 bedrooms,
Dixon collec l at 614-667·3891.
6·3-5tp
6·J.61c
bath.
nice kitchen, utility
They kill life. Of all kinds,
5·30·IIc
---c-c-:----:c - - room
,
NEW forced air fur of all ages. When fire sweeps through
HOUSE. ..:_ i642 Lincoln Heigh ts.
EXCELLENT opporlunily for
nace and hot water tank ,
a forest, it spares nothing.
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
111 Court St.
about •;, acre of Nt CE ·
housewives. Mornings or For Sale
2196.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
GARDEN SPACE OR YARD,
aft
ern
oons
at
your
con
And noth ing is al l that remai ns.
1964 JOHN DEERE dozer,
5·26·ffc
ve nience in your own neigh LOCATED . ON QUIET
winch and blad e; 1964
- - - - -Only you can prevent fore st fires.
borhood . For details write
LOW UTILITIES..
STREET,
Chev rol et live tandem . Phone
'HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His.,' $5,300.
Personal Shopper Depl., Box
Auto
Sales
Chester 985.4132.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293. ·
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
5·30-61c 1961 DODGE tor paris, $50.
10-Z$-IIc RECENTLY REMODELED Aayoae kaowlnt lht
Winona, Minnesota 55987.
Phone 992·5972.
NICE 1 story frame, 2
6-7·1fC - - - -- - - - whernbouta of an IDd.IYid1967 TAGALO NG camper .
6·6-31p 24 ACRE FAR M, [ong-·Bollom ,
bedroo m s, c losets , bath ,
ual who fila the tonowtn9
with
or wilhoul
farm
Exce ll ent condit ion . F ull y
NICE kitchen, range and ret. ,
deaerlptlon:
equipped. Phone 247·2554.
machinery. House with 3
carpeting, air conditioner,
• Haa own car and 8 Ia I
Instruction
6·3-6tc 1961 OLDS 96. Good condi tion. bedroom s, dining room , living
fu ll basement with garage,
apart hours WHkly
Mo to r co mpletely ove r INSTRUCTIONAL
room , 1112 baths, enclosed
NEW forced air gas furnace ,
•
VIH'f lnter.. ted lft extra
hauled. Phone 992-3494.
TRUCK LINES - City and road FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
back porch, wall to wall
$1Q,900.
bu:omt oppar1\lnltr
6·4-4fc
dr iver !ra ining . Call or write
car peting. Aluminum siding,
- won't rust , rot, or l•ak . Call
• Not lnttlnattd. lD maklaf
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
992·6256 after 5 p.m. Also, 1969 BUICK LeSab re , 2dr . all,'ning, storm windows and
-,.raOao:l aalea calli
Corwin Avenue, 51J.863·6404,
slorm door s. City vlater. A,HOME FOR YOUR FAMlL Y
fiberg lass 15 foot ca no•s.
•
WIJh" to ••tabllah own
hardtop,
pow
er
steer
ing
,
Hamillon, Ohio, 450 15.
Selling due to iII health. Phone
- 2 story frame, 7 rooms , .4
.
5·16-301c
builDI l l
r.
18
,000
power
brakes,
a
i
6.7-2tc
614-98~· 3938 .
b•drooms, 1'1&gt; bath s, full
•
Haa
saoo lo St.ooo O:YOll·
miles. Excellent · condition .
5-18·301p
basement, large front porch,
able
to lnnat In Jut~
Phone 992.2288.
NEW 4 FT. or 5 Ft. brush hog.
garage with renovated room
Plea1e
JUI
In coupon below.
Lost
6·3·ff c
Phone 992-6329.
over (COULD BE UTILITY
3
BEDROOM
brick
home
.
We
are
a
rapidly tliPGDd·
6·2-6fc
LOST, Vicinity of Hemlock
APARTMENTI, close to
Choice
local
ion
In
Middleport.
laq
national
corporation
1961
'h·
lon
Dodge
pickup,
$195.
Grove, black and rust
school. A BUY AT
Seen by appointment only. grade.
Phone
949·4560.
lookbav
lor
lutt
1uch a I *·
JUST $18,500.
Doberma n Pi nscher pup . KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m.
6·3·l
lc
laD, Our dlatrl.buton who.
Reward . Phone 992-7291.
and accessories. Ca ll us for
5-7·1fc WANT TO SELL? WE HAVE
purehaae and Ml'Yiet our ua.
6·7-i&gt;lc
your needs . We deliver
BUYERS' FORYOURFARM
- ----usual talktD., Vndbat Ma.
distributors, Brown' s, Phone Insurance
1 OR HOME.
NICE HOME IN COUNTRYohbl" ""' ..,ptdlr 9r&lt;&gt;wlb'
992·5113 .
HENRY CLELAND
lrom. liart·tlme to hall-time
One acre, nicely finished two
6-1-tfc AUTOMOBILE insuran ce been
REALTOR
op•rcuora. Wt ltCur• all
bedroom home with fire-place,
ca ncelled?
Losl
.your
Office 991-225?
your loca:Hona and train a:a.d
built.in
kit chen,
wood
opera tor's license? Call 991Residence
992-2568
BE STLINE PRODUCTS . Call
COUIIH) YOU 10 tllat YOU may
paneling, carpeted, city
2966.
. 6-J.6fc
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327.
btvln to Oofoy a prolllablo
waler. Localed on Athens
6·15-lfc
5·4-30
Mr. an d Mrs. George Circle
County road C·64, Vanderhoff
~-tlmt bu1lnau lmmtcU.
Rd. , one mile from Rt. 7 and ' HOUSE. slory and halt, 6
atel,. Vendlnt Ia a trowm,
and daughter, Cheryl, and Mr. COAL, limestone. Excels ior' Real Estate For Sale.
rooms, bath, Rutland. Phone
lhree mll•s from Rt . 50.
*5-biiUOD m.atht aad w.
and Mrs. James Circle, all of
Salt Works, E. Main St., 24 ACRE FARM, Long B9flom ,
742·5613.
Twenty minutes to Parkers,
would. llb lo help you . .,._
POmeroy . Phone 992-3891.
New Haven, were at the home of
5·12·fft
burg, Athens, or Pomeroy ;
eornt a part ot thl1 proUt.
wilh
or
wilhout
farm
·
4·9-lfc
20 miles (18 miles 41ane high .
Mary Circle on Sunday.
maChinery . House with 3
ablt area and tcda a h111
way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
reward.
roOm
,
living
bedrooms
,
dining
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ran- MODERN WALNUT srereo ·
respeclively ; JV2 miles from
room , 11/2 ba ths, enclosed
dolph and family of Rock
radio combina tion , .4-speaker
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup·
ITEM: Morning.' A
back porch, wa ll lo wall
sound sys tem, 4-speed
Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Milford
pers Plains. $14,500 by
ca rpeting . Aluminum siding,
zestful time for ·some
cha nger, separate controls.
owners , Frank and Pat
awning , slorm windows and
Frederick, Jr., and family,
Dallts.
people. Double dismal
Ba lance $68 .31. Use our
Goebel, 667 ·3838.
s torm s:toors. City water.
I
em
lnll,.ltH
111 Mon lntonft.tioa
Racine , and Ralph Lee, local,
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
6-6·11C
Selling due to ill heallh . Phone
for others. Jim Mees
•flout m••lnl mon., 111 tlile -.ndh-.
6·6·6fc
called at the home of Arthur E.
614-985-3938.
Millftl. I hm • Clr IIMI B-1 houf1
somehow gels ·· us all
,_ . . . 11 IPifl 111M. ·
.
5·18-lOtp SIX ROOM house, ba th, full
Johnson and family and Betty
MAPLE STER EO · radio
together·.every
day. •
0 I etn IIIYnt ont $9po.
.·
Van Meter a recent Sunday.
basement, 133 Bullernul Ave.,
comblnalion, AM&amp;FM radio,
0 I Cln IIIWII 'M r $9000.
v.2
just wa,king distance from
four speakers, 4·speed NEW BRI.CK home pn &gt;;,.acre
Noma, _ _ __,_....;:_
lot
'
In,
Tvppers
Plains
.
Contact
downtown
Pomeroy.
aulomatic
changer
,
dual
Eddie and David ¥ owig of
vo lum e coritrol. Use bur . Feat~res buill-In kitchen, • Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
Sidney spent a lew days' with
wall to wall carpel, bath and o
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone .
bvdgel lerms or pay balance
City - - -- Stitt
IJ_
t'ubh,shed ii$1 public SfHVi1:1~ 111 codpe•ahnn witlt lhr; ArlVr) tf i~.i riY. Cotiuct!, ti1e Stil l their · grandparents, Mr, and
basement.
'
Calf
•
half.,
'full
·
237·4334,
Columbus.
·
of $83.29. Call 992-7085.
.
Chesler 985-3598.
:
1nd U.$. fmesl Sc rvir.'l&lt;. ~ nd T ~tl lntunt~tlnni!l N•"l'' t•:t!•''' ~rt vi'I II '.J il P, I· ~ •:(, ufi vfl::. Mrs. Edson Roush,
S-9-lfc
6-6·6fc
5·5·301&lt;

20~

BUGS BUNNY

Septic Tanks and Leach

Ge neral store wi th all mer chand ise and fixlures . 2
houses, double garag e.
Several buildings. Excellent EXPERT TREE service . Call
chance for you . Aski ng onl y
collect after 5 p.m ., Richard

$30,000.00.

.,_,

Beds

'O'DELL WHEEL alignment .

.

Pomeroy,

and Hauling

FLOWER SHOP ·
RACINE, 0.

SUMPTHIN'!!

Backhoe Service

VILLAGE

PHONE ?92-2143

IT t..IEVAH
FAILS!!

&amp;

Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

Blaettnar's
Real Estate For Sale

Reward for safe r eturn.

Ph. 992-2143

Wreaths

OpenHil5
Thurs.. Fri .. Sat .
Or Phone 949-2223

DO?

, , BlAETTNARS

Artificia I Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements
Flowers
Cemetery

Re-Charge

MAH ''METHOD" 15

&amp;01\IN; SON- BUT

WONDERS WHY
'10' DON'T DO

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

MEMO~lAL

Have Your seasonal

WHAT
D0'/0'

Tl-l'i.ONGER. '/0'
DOES NOTHlN'TH' IJOF\E THE'/

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

•

THE'/'LL-C'V'KL£!· DO
IT f.VEAY TIME!.'-

THEN

-lii\LSO
DOUBLE--' WIDES

Lea ding Creek area. Phone

or

EXPERIENCEQ

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE . HOME. ~UYERS!

.tEE
TOM CROW, GUY SHilLER
OR BOB CROW
'
.

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

Call 992·5262 even ings.

Lost and Found

CHOICE lois for rent on Ohio

Notice

And Conventional Loans.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Wanted To Buy

304·67 5·1159

ANI&gt; IF YOU DON'T
I':NOI/J WH"'T MY $15Te~
l-OOKS UKE',L COULD Do
'(OU A !IIG FAVO';?.I

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's ·Home, V.A., F.H.A.•

742-4902

Geraldine

,
J . W.Coi'H)',Mg
. r.
RATES
te lephon es, cl ocks, bra ss
:
Phont fft·tJI1 ,
For Want Ad Servi ce
beds, lamps, etc. Lee RudisilL
sce nt s per Word one insertion
Phone 992·3403.
·Minimum Charge 75c
5-27·30tc 10X50
TWO
BEDROOM
12 cents per word three - - - - - c - - - housetrai ler . $2,000. Phone
consec utive inserti ons.
992·3954.
18 cents per word six con - 300 BALES of red clover or
hay.
Phone
304-895
6·H ip
allalfa
secutive insertions.
3972.
25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
6·J.61c OFF ICE DE SK, lwo filin g
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
-cabinets, typewriter stand.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;

You will have something of value to show for th~ SSS you
spend when you buy your home - p!us, you gam an Income Tax benefit. you bu ild an equ1ty and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

6·3·12tc

-·- -

The Publ isher r eserves t he
right to edit or r eject any ads
The
deem ed objec tional.

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS-RECEIPTS! ! *

· Cle land, Ra cine, Ohio.

Ol'l!M EVES. 8:00 I' .M.
"*EROY, OHIO

REGULATIONS

llaths

~

What Do You Have For The SSS'You Pay In Rent?

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

949-4445.

6-1·61C

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wlll be accepted unti I 9 a .m. for
Day of Publication

Kitchens~

Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

6·6·31p

STRAWSER RIES.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Comp'lete
Remodeling

6·6-61c

automatic trans. , rad io, wh ite fini sh.

L_

JOHNSON MASONRY

ONE ACRE lot on Ohio River

Forest fires burn
more than trees.

''

High Sl. , Midd leporl.

· ~JJi.

.

.

.

'•

!

TO DO NO DADBURN .

Business ·Services.

YARD SALE, Salurday, Juno
12, 10 a.m. Most all antiques.
posler beds and olher types
d is_hes, five,leg dining table .
stands, loy· trai n, pool table,
many other ilems . Not
responsible for accidents. 541

:Sf6ll:S

PLOWIN' FER TWO-THREE
WEEK?

'IE

For Sale

THAT PORE OL' MULE
OF 'IOR'N IS WORE TO
A FRAZZLE·· SHf AIN'T

XIC

QUBBUA

GXAAN

BPMR.

M
M

BLA

QMR
GMR

M

ELGMR.

lllPL

WLJUK

KPU

WLJUK .··

,c A L J u A Q
L..::::=~~~~-~:"':.
. l!aturday'o Cryploquoto: GRATITUDE IS N07' ONLY THE

X AM Q

GQATEST OF VIRTUES, 'BUT THE PARENT

m·

ALl.

'I'Hi: OTHER8.--CICERO
~c

lt'21 Klnl

'J'rr.hn'\'~
' . 8yl\d\l"$tt. In&lt;". )

"

•

�•

1

•
'BARNEY
TELL IT

UI&lt;E IT AIR ,
DOC

BRACE 'IORESELF,

~~~~~~I
GOT
TERRIBLE

I~

BAD NEWS FER

2 SIM
OF
QUALITY

Fairview News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Edward
Laudermilt and two children of
Columbus spent Memorial Day
weekend with the latter's
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Howard
Donohue . Mr. and Mrs . Albert
Blackwell of Letart were guests
Sunday ·or the Donohues.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
and Tim, spent Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hupp of
Portland called Thursday on
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hupp and
sons.
Mrs. Katie Young and Mrs.
Elva Hudson of Minersville
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel.
Memorial weekend guests of
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada were
Mrs . Jessie Parsons, George
and Roger, of Ashland, Mr. and
Mrs . Don Hupp and sons, Mr .
and Mrs. Carroll White, Darla,
Deanna and Keith, Sherd Cline
of New Brighton, Pa., Mr. and
Mrs. Michael ·Sleeper and sons
of New York, Mrs. Gerald Wells
and Mandy and Amy, Syracuse .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
family called on Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp Sunday.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. lloyd Nice were Mr . and
Mrs. Clarence Skinner of
Columbus, Eloise Adams of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Nice of Chester.
Memorial weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hayman
were Mrs . Herman Sayre of
Eaton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Grant of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hayman and son, Tate, of
Columbus, Mrs. Blanch Steele
·and daughter of Gallipolis and
Harold Hayman of Westerville.
Mrs. Louise Dulaney of
Mansfield, Mr. and Mrs. Hsrold
Lawson and C. J. of Letart, W.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
and family were Memorial

weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family.
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Roush,
David and Edward, visited Mrs.
Edna Roush and Mrs. Gladys
Shields Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Ruby Hupp and sons,
Mrs. Carroll White, Darla,
Deanna and Keith, called on
Mr . and Mrs. Herber t Roush
Friday.
Mr . and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va., and· Ronnie
Russell of Pomeroy spen t
Monday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and famil y.
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
returned home Tuesday after a
visit with their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Sayre at Harrisburg,
Pa.
Thursday Mrs. Glenn Wolf of
Washington, D. C., was a dinner
guest of the Sayres. Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas and son of Mid·
dleport and Mrs. James Sayre
of Kanauga called on the Sayres
also Thursday. Friday gues.ts of
the Sayres were Mr . and Mrs .
Weldon Kimmey of Brokard, W.
Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Chesler
Simpson of Racine, Max Wolfe
of Sandusky, and Danny Sayre
of Columbus spent the
Memorial weekend here .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Focie Hayman attended the
aOth wedding anniversa ry
observance of Mr. and Mrs.
Rufus Coe at the home of their
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Leehman at Carbonhill, Ohio,
Sunday. Mrs. Coe is a sister of
Mrs. Robin son an d Mrs.
Hayman .
Mrs. Bertha Robinson, Mrs.
Gerald Hayman visited graves
of loved ones at Creston
Cemetery Monday. They also
visited Mr . Bert Stover,
Margaret and Marshall, Mrs.
Focie Stover, and Mrs. Cleo
Casto at Evans, W. Va.

Racine Social Events
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Philson, E thel Johnson. Other Memorial
Erich and Sarah, spent the Day guests were Mr. and Mrs.
weekend with her parents in · Daryl Johnson of Lynchburg,
Westfield, ·N. J. Mrs. Philson Va .; Mr . and Mrs . John
and children remained for a ( Clarys) Johnson of Lorain, Mr.
.
and
Fr~ S~~r,re and B?OS of
longer visit.
Mrs. Sybil Mlles and Mrs. Lee Bowerston, Mrs. !toy Dowell
Jackson of Pickerington spent and Mr. and Mrs. Hsnk Johnthe weekend with Mrs. Ruth son, local.
Simpson and Steve.
Mrs. Marion Knighlslep and
Alicia and Mr. Jack Hickman of
LEGAL NOTICE
Columbus were weekend guests
NOTICE OF
of Mrs. Lavinia Simpson. A
APPOINTMENT
case No. 20510
sister-In-law from Florida was
Esta te of Lu cy A . Bolen .
at..o a guest.
Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby given tha t
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Walters and
Marjori e E. Stanley, of Rou te 2,
sons of Veto, Ohio were guests Alban y , Ohio, has been du ly
of her mother, Mrs. Dixie Smith lllppointed Administratrix of the
Estate of l,.u cy A . Bolen,
.and Mrs. Ann Coe.
d eceased , l ate of Meigs County,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvert Allen of Ohio.
Cred itors are r equ i red to til e
Charleston spent the holiday th eir
c laim s with said f iduciary
weekend with her mother, Mrs. within four months .
Dated thi s 2nd day of June
Mabel Roush.
1971.
F . H . O' Brie n
E-6 Rita Johnson, stationed in
Probate J ud ge
New Jersey, is spending a
of sa id Co un t y
(6 17, 14. 21,31
furlough with her mother, Mrs.

M_..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1968 OPEL 1 OR .

$10?5

Loc al owner, less th an 19,000 miles, origina l tires &amp; rea l
good blk . vinyl interior, 4 speed, cream fi ni sh.

1968 CHEVY II

$1565 .

Nova - 2 Or., 1 own er car, clean interior, li ll;e new w-w
tires , white fini sh, 6 cyl. engine, automatic trans. Rad io.

See it today.

·

1965 BUICK

$845

Spec ial De~uxe .4 door, local owner , good tir es,· V-8 engin e.

I

i

•
•

.
&gt;

I

•

·''

•

"•

•

NICE GENTLE spoiled mare
pony , 3 years old . broke to
ride . See James Hollon, one
mile off Rl. 7 at Fl ve Points .

betwee n
Ra cine
and
Pomeroy. Phone Bill Hardin,

pub lisher will not be res ponsible
for more than one incorrect
inser tion .

OBITUARY

$1.50 for 50 word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.

BLIND ADS
Add itional 25c Charge per

2 NICE medium.sized western ·
saddles . Call Rutland Fur.
ni ture 742 ·4211.

6·4·31c

Advertise ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da ily,
8: 30a. m. to 12 : 00 Noon
Saturday .

YOUNG coupfe looking to buy
farm. Contact Jim Nally, P.
0. Box 603, Athens.
5·25-121p
TELEPHONES, bra ss beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture,

elc. Wrile M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca ll 992-6271.
4·27·ffC
ANTIQUES :

dishes,

AIR CONDITIONERS

$178.95 up

RE G ISTERED quarter stud
serv ice, Hanks Rock 209498.

Contact Mi ke Jones, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 992·
6880.
6.2.12tc
I WILL no! be responsible for

any debts con tra cted by any
one olher !han myself. Signed
John T. Reilm ire.

H -3tn

-------

REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E.Vap·
Water pil ls. Nelson Drugs.
.. . . . 5·26-JOtp
- :•

·-

Come See Us AI ?7'12 N. Second 51., Middleport.
. .
PH. 991-7129 _

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.
Evenings Caii991-25J4, Dale Dutton

CHEST FREEZERS
19 cu. lt.
22?.95
Reg. $285. Limited supply.

L

POMEROY

6·4-31 c

BLACK and tan hound, lost in

Ra~iator

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable
Time '(ou Ever Spent.

'f:WINSOR
oii:BUDDY

:j(CHAMPION
,-jr.VAN DYKE

Service

BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Air Conditioning
lnspectij)n and
Special
At

698
1

Plus

.

Parts

992 ·3497 .
6J.61c

For Rent
Riv er across from Mid dlepor l. En joy a rela xing
summer of cam ping, boating ,
and swimm ing . Call fv\a xine

Griffith al 992·5782 after 5
p.m.
6-6·31c

8 ROOM HOUSE, 4 bedrooms,

12' · 14' · 24' · WIDE

MILLER

MOBIL£ HOMES
1220 Washington Blvd.
Be Ipre, Ohio

ni ce ki lchen, 145 Butternu t
Ave ., Pomeroy . Phone 992- 1971 DIAL N' SEW zig.zag
7170.
sewing ma chi ne left in
6.6.61c
layaway . Beautiful pastel
co lor, full size model. All
bui lt-In to buttonhole, ove r TRAILER SPACE on old Rt . 33,
casta nd fancy sti tc h. Pay just
112-mi le north of new Meigs
$48.75
cas h or
term s
High School. Phone 992·2941.
ava i labl e. Tr ade -ins ac 3·5·1fc
ce pted. Phone 992-5641.
---~---

6·Hic

FURNI SHED and unfurnished

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.
Broker

110 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY -

limestone Driveways

NEARLY NEw-3 bedrooms,
hot water heating, bath, nice
kitchen, di shwasher, dining
area . Large llving. Lots of
cl ose ts. Basemen !. Carport.

{

"-

• l

'

~'

'

•

'

'•

• '

..t .•

,

f

• &lt;';'f~

loca ted at Crossroads, Rt . 124 .
Complete front end ser v ice,
tune up and brak e serv ice .
Whe els
balanced
elec tronically .
All
wo rk
Reasonable
guaranteed.

rates . Phone 992-3213 .
5·22·30ic

-

.

HARRISON 'S TV AND AN TENNA SERVICE . Ph one
992-2522.
6·10·1fc
O'BR IEN ELE CTRIC SER .
VICE . Phone 949·4551.
s.JO.Ifc

Hayman , Reedsville 667-3041.
5·19·301p
•
C. BRADFORD, Au ctioneer
Complete Service

Roofing &amp; carpenter
Wotil
Spouting, Roof
Painting

~

GASOUNE ALLE_Y

NEW &amp; OLD WORK

You ~ot GawduGt
up m'
mind,Joel!
Gonna a,;k

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Con 5truction Co.

Ma de

DEXTER , 0 . 45126
PHONE 142·3945

for brain,;, bo4?

Look

What aoout

he

her poor ol'
5ick papa?

Experienced
Work Guarant eed

in

t' marru

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446·4782
Gallipolis . John Russell,

__ _ _ _

Sheets

Cleland Realty

The
_Daily Sentinel

' . -:
----.

..

·.

~~

.·.

~.

~ -- -.

:

-:·-

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

~Rlllll
HIR 8AIJ.rt

Wl'l'l'tW!TK
\lOME

RfMEMfiER ..·NOU HAROFTliE
QIRt!S ~~IR I&amp; 10 Bf · ~!.
ME!!aY PREVEKT HER. 1'1!(51,!'
COMMUNIMTIHG H!l! l&lt;rto•ILI!OQf
'Cf MY 11!lf.pURPOSE. TO HEI!

FAT!tEif!

RAGGIO !OY'S
CLOTHIIlG ,

AI!HlE

!!AS

liSCAPBD
i'ROM VR.
]'[O ..

Jio ...

WMP0/1390
'

•

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

- ~WJWIDM;Ik.t=!tt.-Jc

17. Tennlte ,
delicacy
16. Bowling
alley
20. P.M.'s

2. Orinoco

AOROSS

tributary
3. Hebrew
letter
4. Repeatedly
Item
addreBS
10. Irish Islands 5, Brightest
otar
. 22. Spectat
11. Far East
gl!\
8. Survivor
laborer
ota 1'new
2f.Ledger
12. COngreve
entry
brooM"
comedy
7. SouthMri· 25. BlcUtan
(3 wds.J
can plant
volcano
H. Tookthe
8. Subslot
26.Garb
prize
28. Nothlng
15. Low-pitched 9. Maintain
11.
Bidders
and
32.
Natural
16. Leathersuppl(ers
re1oun:e
worker's
3'. Shoo!
13.Chtnese
tool
department 35, Theater
, · 19. Cartoonist
16. "Rule
· Soglow
box
38.Muacat
Brt.~a''
21. Species ot
1 '1logu
composer
and·- ·
23. Theater·
goer'o gutde
27. 1971 Broad·
1. Computer
Input
5. Blackboard

DICK TRACY
BUT-

36. Norwegian
aalnt
40. That (Fr.l
U. Wrath
42. Snakelike
flab
~- ­
chal)ce !

~~ t'!'i'('{ ,'/,

IF YOU VON 'T KEEP
THIS IN SOCIETY
YOU'RE SUNK.

WJit'JI"I N

Now ...-nre the circled Jetton
to form the aurpriH a~~~wer, u
IUJIOited by the above eartoon.

23. Like that

t.118U110R PlfS,
· :5M0111ERW ~y THe Ill.!:=~
OW~, THU$
GU,t,RANTE~ING

TltAT l'Ul76eoH'S
51(111 SHAlL NOT

J1l5T
JTIWlllWtlf

HANIIY F THE

110Cla!'S pp

Prill llle SUIIPRISE AIISWIBiere

f-+--+-1f-t--+-1

37. Gold (Bp.l
39. Cheetah'•
role In
Tarzan (Urns

ll5 REPAIR

PlfOlON6 mOlD

SM iurd.~ay'•

/

u.century
ptanta
45. Field
46. Principle

DOWN
l . Plgeon pea

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It: ~....."-==
.t.XYDLBAAXB
to LONGFELLOW
One letter simply otalldl tor another. In IIIIa l&amp;lllplo A 1• .
used lor the three L'o, X tor tile two O'o, etc. Slft(to 1ot(ora,
apostrophes, the Jenrth and formation Ot the words are all
htnto. Each clay tho code letters ore dtttorenl.
A Cryptornm Quolatlon
XB
BL
PUA

THE (

I I I)

Tlw1 rf&gt;rrflin [t&gt;f&gt;li11g .' -"NO POUlT"

fT. Hat
material

CAP!' AIN EASY

rn

Jumbl'"' BLOOM DAUNT CEMENT JA1LID

(2 wds.) • · ·

MI\Jj'S FATED LIFE
SPAN.

I

(Anewer• !OatOrrow)

~. Opening

JO!I Dtl&gt;H'T

wh,.:.::'i

I () I I I

(Swdo.)

glll'ilen
· 30. Call!.
ro&lt;ktlsh
3!. Volee In a
choir
33. Deface

'::'"'------..io.

Vnscramble these four lumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

way revlva.l

Carmel News

.

ORD

DAILY C

- -- - --

I

l i~e

il r&gt;&lt;..I UU~ I

MiGG Elva

1nsured-

Aluminum

•

CAlli YOU TELL ME
THii WAY 10 iHii .
POST OFFICE?

CITY. ...

· .... _......_ . . . . . .

CALL GEORGE 9&amp;5,3837
OR DON 992-6883

For Sale

- - - - - - --

t, ..

• I

l o.l.

Free Estimates

Owv ner &amp; Operator.
Phone 949·3821
apartments. Close to school.
SAVE UP to one hal f. Bring
_,___
5·13·1fc
Racine,
Ohio
VACUUM clea ner, brand new
Phone 992-5434.
$23,000.00.
your sick TV lo Ch uck's TV
Crill
Bradford
1971
model.
Complete
wit
h
all
10·18-ff c
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
CONCRETE
5·1-lfc READY·MI X
cleaning tools. Small paint 80 ACRES - Moslly lraclor
Pomeroy .
-delivered
ri
ght
to your
shi
pping.
Will
take
damage
in
tillable on schoo l an d mail
4·23.1fc FURNISHED modern Ranch
projecl.
Fast
~nd
easy
. Free
$27 cash or budget plan
routes . 6 room house. Several AWNINGS, slorm doors and
hou se , 5 rooms, doubl e
estimates
.
Phone
992-3284
.
windows,
ca
rport
s,
mar
.
avai
lable.
Phone
991.5641.
outbuildings. ALL Ml Ngilt age . 12 x 65 mobile home. 1
HOME sewing. Phone 992·5327.
Goeglein
Ready
-Mi
x
Co.,
que
es,
a
luminum
siding
6·2·61
c
ERALS. Asking $25,000.00.
child accepled in either . M &amp;
,
5-9·301p
and ra iling . Carl A. Jacob, Middlepor t, Ohio.
G Food Market, 3 mi. sou th ::-::-:-::--:~---:-­
6·30.ffc
REMOVE car pet paths and
sales representative. For free
:;:;Rc;;E;;;D;:;:U;:;C;;E::=s"'
at;=e- an- d-:-:f:-as-:t- wllh
Middleport, Rl . 7.
RAClN E- Large 7 room home,
spot
s,
f
luff
beaten
down
nap
estimates,
phone
Charles
-~---6·6·31c
large bath, ni ce kitchen and
Gobese lablets and E-Vap
with Blu e Lustre. Rent
Lisle, Sy ra cuse . V. V. s'EWING MACHINES. Repai r
dining
room . Nearly full
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
Shampooer $1, Bak er FurJohn son and Son, Inc.
service, all makes. 992-2284
ba se men t . Garage with
4-14-60tp 3 ROOM FURNISHED a part- ni ture Compa ny.
5·27-lfc
The Fabric Shot,~ Pomeroy.
carport . Concrete drive. 3
ment. Ut ilities paid, $17 per
6·H ic
Aulhor ized Sing r Sales and ·
porches .
Aski ng
only
week. 356 N. 4th St., Mid·
REGISTERED Appaloosa stud
Service.
We Shar- en Scissors.
EXPERT
law
n
mower
and
$1 2,500.00 .
dl eport.
service;
550 regi stered
3·~9-lfc
Iiiier repa ir . Free pickup and li'.
6·2 Sic
mares, any breed ; $40 grade
deli
ve
r
y.
War
re
n'
s
Mower
IF YOU WANT TO SELL OR
mares . Fran cis Benedum .
Shop, 248 Condor Sl. Phone SE PTIC tanks Cll!flned . Miller
SEE, THE BEST CALL ??2·
Phone Coolville 667-3856.
36" X23" X.009
TRA ILER LOTS . Bob's Mobile
992·7357.
Sanitati on, Stewart . Ohio. Ph .
3325 '
5·16-30fp
Cour t, Rl . 124, Syracuse,
5·18·ffc
H~LEN L. TEAFORD
662·3035.
Ohio. 992·2951 .
0 "2 ~2378
2·12·1fc
SWIMMING lessons sta rling at
4·1·1fC
BACKHOE AND DOZER work~
6·6-61c
Maplewood Lake. Phone 949Septic tanks insta lled. George NEIGLER Conslruction . ~or
=c-:-::-::c::-::-::::-:-:-. , . - - 4074 .
I
Bill) Pulli ns, Phone 992·2478.
TRA ILER for rent. Brown's
TWO• BEDROOM house, large
or remodeling your
6·6) 1c
4·2S.ff c building
Tra i ler Park , Minersville,
lol,lassume FHA loan of 5 per
USED OFFSET PLATES
home,
Ca
ll Guy Neigl • r ,
- - - -- Ohio. Phone 992·3324.
cent. Phone 992·2619.
Racine , Ohio.
HAVE
6·J.61c
6-Htp Real .Estate For Sale
Help Wanted
7·3J.Ifc
MANY USES
- - - -- =
R~
A~L=P~H'~S---C~AR_
P_
E_
T __
BEAUTICIAN with manager's
BY OWNER, House, In Mason, 5
license. Phone 992-2890 or 992- For Rent or Sale
room s and bath down, 3 small
Uphol sfery Cleaning Service.
6347 .
rooms
up.
lot
size
77'12
x
100
ft
.
Free
estimates.
Phone,
S for Sl.OO
IL ABLE June 15, two new
608 East Main
5·30·6tc AVA
Wou
ld
take
farm
tractor
or
Gallipolis
446·0294.
Pomeroy
sox 12 two -bedroo m mobile
truck as part payment. For
3·12·1fc
homes tor rent or sale, on lot
inf ormati on phon e 773 -5249 or WANT TO RETIRE? HERE IS
BARMAID. Apply in pe rson .
in Ma son, W.Va. Ca ll Robert
write Box 317, Mason , W. Va ..
HiHo Bar .
YOUR HOME. - 2 bedrooms,
Dixon collec l at 614-667·3891.
6·3-5tp
6·J.61c
bath.
nice kitchen, utility
They kill life. Of all kinds,
5·30·IIc
---c-c-:----:c - - room
,
NEW forced air fur of all ages. When fire sweeps through
HOUSE. ..:_ i642 Lincoln Heigh ts.
EXCELLENT opporlunily for
nace and hot water tank ,
a forest, it spares nothing.
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
111 Court St.
about •;, acre of Nt CE ·
housewives. Mornings or For Sale
2196.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
GARDEN SPACE OR YARD,
aft
ern
oons
at
your
con
And noth ing is al l that remai ns.
1964 JOHN DEERE dozer,
5·26·ffc
ve nience in your own neigh LOCATED . ON QUIET
winch and blad e; 1964
- - - - -Only you can prevent fore st fires.
borhood . For details write
LOW UTILITIES..
STREET,
Chev rol et live tandem . Phone
'HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His.,' $5,300.
Personal Shopper Depl., Box
Auto
Sales
Chester 985.4132.
Pomeroy . Phone 992-2293. ·
10, Watkins Products, Inc.,
5·30-61c 1961 DODGE tor paris, $50.
10-Z$-IIc RECENTLY REMODELED Aayoae kaowlnt lht
Winona, Minnesota 55987.
Phone 992·5972.
NICE 1 story frame, 2
6-7·1fC - - - -- - - - whernbouta of an IDd.IYid1967 TAGALO NG camper .
6·6-31p 24 ACRE FAR M, [ong-·Bollom ,
bedroo m s, c losets , bath ,
ual who fila the tonowtn9
with
or wilhoul
farm
Exce ll ent condit ion . F ull y
NICE kitchen, range and ret. ,
deaerlptlon:
equipped. Phone 247·2554.
machinery. House with 3
carpeting, air conditioner,
• Haa own car and 8 Ia I
Instruction
6·3-6tc 1961 OLDS 96. Good condi tion. bedroom s, dining room , living
fu ll basement with garage,
apart hours WHkly
Mo to r co mpletely ove r INSTRUCTIONAL
room , 1112 baths, enclosed
NEW forced air gas furnace ,
•
VIH'f lnter.. ted lft extra
hauled. Phone 992-3494.
TRUCK LINES - City and road FOR A Meyers aluminum boat
back porch, wall to wall
$1Q,900.
bu:omt oppar1\lnltr
6·4-4fc
dr iver !ra ining . Call or write
car peting. Aluminum siding,
- won't rust , rot, or l•ak . Call
• Not lnttlnattd. lD maklaf
Sheridan Truck Lines, 1255
992·6256 after 5 p.m. Also, 1969 BUICK LeSab re , 2dr . all,'ning, storm windows and
-,.raOao:l aalea calli
Corwin Avenue, 51J.863·6404,
slorm door s. City vlater. A,HOME FOR YOUR FAMlL Y
fiberg lass 15 foot ca no•s.
•
WIJh" to ••tabllah own
hardtop,
pow
er
steer
ing
,
Hamillon, Ohio, 450 15.
Selling due to iII health. Phone
- 2 story frame, 7 rooms , .4
.
5·16-301c
builDI l l
r.
18
,000
power
brakes,
a
i
6.7-2tc
614-98~· 3938 .
b•drooms, 1'1&gt; bath s, full
•
Haa
saoo lo St.ooo O:YOll·
miles. Excellent · condition .
5-18·301p
basement, large front porch,
able
to lnnat In Jut~
Phone 992.2288.
NEW 4 FT. or 5 Ft. brush hog.
garage with renovated room
Plea1e
JUI
In coupon below.
Lost
6·3·ff c
Phone 992-6329.
over (COULD BE UTILITY
3
BEDROOM
brick
home
.
We
are
a
rapidly tliPGDd·
6·2-6fc
LOST, Vicinity of Hemlock
APARTMENTI, close to
Choice
local
ion
In
Middleport.
laq
national
corporation
1961
'h·
lon
Dodge
pickup,
$195.
Grove, black and rust
school. A BUY AT
Seen by appointment only. grade.
Phone
949·4560.
lookbav
lor
lutt
1uch a I *·
JUST $18,500.
Doberma n Pi nscher pup . KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m.
6·3·l
lc
laD, Our dlatrl.buton who.
Reward . Phone 992-7291.
and accessories. Ca ll us for
5-7·1fc WANT TO SELL? WE HAVE
purehaae and Ml'Yiet our ua.
6·7-i&gt;lc
your needs . We deliver
BUYERS' FORYOURFARM
- ----usual talktD., Vndbat Ma.
distributors, Brown' s, Phone Insurance
1 OR HOME.
NICE HOME IN COUNTRYohbl" ""' ..,ptdlr 9r&lt;&gt;wlb'
992·5113 .
HENRY CLELAND
lrom. liart·tlme to hall-time
One acre, nicely finished two
6-1-tfc AUTOMOBILE insuran ce been
REALTOR
op•rcuora. Wt ltCur• all
bedroom home with fire-place,
ca ncelled?
Losl
.your
Office 991-225?
your loca:Hona and train a:a.d
built.in
kit chen,
wood
opera tor's license? Call 991Residence
992-2568
BE STLINE PRODUCTS . Call
COUIIH) YOU 10 tllat YOU may
paneling, carpeted, city
2966.
. 6-J.6fc
Myron Bailey, Phone 992·5327.
btvln to Oofoy a prolllablo
waler. Localed on Athens
6·15-lfc
5·4-30
Mr. an d Mrs. George Circle
County road C·64, Vanderhoff
~-tlmt bu1lnau lmmtcU.
Rd. , one mile from Rt. 7 and ' HOUSE. slory and halt, 6
atel,. Vendlnt Ia a trowm,
and daughter, Cheryl, and Mr. COAL, limestone. Excels ior' Real Estate For Sale.
rooms, bath, Rutland. Phone
lhree mll•s from Rt . 50.
*5-biiUOD m.atht aad w.
and Mrs. James Circle, all of
Salt Works, E. Main St., 24 ACRE FARM, Long B9flom ,
742·5613.
Twenty minutes to Parkers,
would. llb lo help you . .,._
POmeroy . Phone 992-3891.
New Haven, were at the home of
5·12·fft
burg, Athens, or Pomeroy ;
eornt a part ot thl1 proUt.
wilh
or
wilhout
farm
·
4·9-lfc
20 miles (18 miles 41ane high .
Mary Circle on Sunday.
maChinery . House with 3
ablt area and tcda a h111
way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
reward.
roOm
,
living
bedrooms
,
dining
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ran- MODERN WALNUT srereo ·
respeclively ; JV2 miles from
room , 11/2 ba ths, enclosed
dolph and family of Rock
radio combina tion , .4-speaker
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup·
ITEM: Morning.' A
back porch, wa ll lo wall
sound sys tem, 4-speed
Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Milford
pers Plains. $14,500 by
ca rpeting . Aluminum siding,
zestful time for ·some
cha nger, separate controls.
owners , Frank and Pat
awning , slorm windows and
Frederick, Jr., and family,
Dallts.
people. Double dismal
Ba lance $68 .31. Use our
Goebel, 667 ·3838.
s torm s:toors. City water.
I
em
lnll,.ltH
111 Mon lntonft.tioa
Racine , and Ralph Lee, local,
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
6-6·11C
Selling due to ill heallh . Phone
for others. Jim Mees
•flout m••lnl mon., 111 tlile -.ndh-.
6·6·6fc
called at the home of Arthur E.
614-985-3938.
Millftl. I hm • Clr IIMI B-1 houf1
somehow gels ·· us all
,_ . . . 11 IPifl 111M. ·
.
5·18-lOtp SIX ROOM house, ba th, full
Johnson and family and Betty
MAPLE STER EO · radio
together·.every
day. •
0 I etn IIIYnt ont $9po.
.·
Van Meter a recent Sunday.
basement, 133 Bullernul Ave.,
comblnalion, AM&amp;FM radio,
0 I Cln IIIWII 'M r $9000.
v.2
just wa,king distance from
four speakers, 4·speed NEW BRI.CK home pn &gt;;,.acre
Noma, _ _ __,_....;:_
lot
'
In,
Tvppers
Plains
.
Contact
downtown
Pomeroy.
aulomatic
changer
,
dual
Eddie and David ¥ owig of
vo lum e coritrol. Use bur . Feat~res buill-In kitchen, • Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth
Sidney spent a lew days' with
wall to wall carpel, bath and o
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone .
bvdgel lerms or pay balance
City - - -- Stitt
IJ_
t'ubh,shed ii$1 public SfHVi1:1~ 111 codpe•ahnn witlt lhr; ArlVr) tf i~.i riY. Cotiuct!, ti1e Stil l their · grandparents, Mr, and
basement.
'
Calf
•
half.,
'full
·
237·4334,
Columbus.
·
of $83.29. Call 992-7085.
.
Chesler 985-3598.
:
1nd U.$. fmesl Sc rvir.'l&lt;. ~ nd T ~tl lntunt~tlnni!l N•"l'' t•:t!•''' ~rt vi'I II '.J il P, I· ~ •:(, ufi vfl::. Mrs. Edson Roush,
S-9-lfc
6-6·6fc
5·5·301&lt;

20~

BUGS BUNNY

Septic Tanks and Leach

Ge neral store wi th all mer chand ise and fixlures . 2
houses, double garag e.
Several buildings. Excellent EXPERT TREE service . Call
chance for you . Aski ng onl y
collect after 5 p.m ., Richard

$30,000.00.

.,_,

Beds

'O'DELL WHEEL alignment .

.

Pomeroy,

and Hauling

FLOWER SHOP ·
RACINE, 0.

SUMPTHIN'!!

Backhoe Service

VILLAGE

PHONE ?92-2143

IT t..IEVAH
FAILS!!

&amp;

Also Arrangements made to
your specification.

Blaettnar's
Real Estate For Sale

Reward for safe r eturn.

Ph. 992-2143

Wreaths

OpenHil5
Thurs.. Fri .. Sat .
Or Phone 949-2223

DO?

, , BlAETTNARS

Artificia I Flowers
Single Flowers
Arrangements
Flowers
Cemetery

Re-Charge

MAH ''METHOD" 15

&amp;01\IN; SON- BUT

WONDERS WHY
'10' DON'T DO

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

MEMO~lAL

Have Your seasonal

WHAT
D0'/0'

Tl-l'i.ONGER. '/0'
DOES NOTHlN'TH' IJOF\E THE'/

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

•

THE'/'LL-C'V'KL£!· DO
IT f.VEAY TIME!.'-

THEN

-lii\LSO
DOUBLE--' WIDES

Lea ding Creek area. Phone

or

EXPERIENCEQ

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE . HOME. ~UYERS!

.tEE
TOM CROW, GUY SHilLER
OR BOB CROW
'
.

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

Call 992·5262 even ings.

Lost and Found

CHOICE lois for rent on Ohio

Notice

And Conventional Loans.

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

Wanted To Buy

304·67 5·1159

ANI&gt; IF YOU DON'T
I':NOI/J WH"'T MY $15Te~
l-OOKS UKE',L COULD Do
'(OU A !IIG FAVO';?.I

We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's ·Home, V.A., F.H.A.•

742-4902

Geraldine

,
J . W.Coi'H)',Mg
. r.
RATES
te lephon es, cl ocks, bra ss
:
Phont fft·tJI1 ,
For Want Ad Servi ce
beds, lamps, etc. Lee RudisilL
sce nt s per Word one insertion
Phone 992·3403.
·Minimum Charge 75c
5-27·30tc 10X50
TWO
BEDROOM
12 cents per word three - - - - - c - - - housetrai ler . $2,000. Phone
consec utive inserti ons.
992·3954.
18 cents per word six con - 300 BALES of red clover or
hay.
Phone
304-895
6·H ip
allalfa
secutive insertions.
3972.
25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
6·J.61c OFF ICE DE SK, lwo filin g
ads and ads paid within 10 days .
-cabinets, typewriter stand.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;

You will have something of value to show for th~ SSS you
spend when you buy your home - p!us, you gam an Income Tax benefit. you bu ild an equ1ty and you are not
bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner -

6·3·12tc

-·- -

The Publ isher r eserves t he
right to edit or r eject any ads
The
deem ed objec tional.

* A STACK OF WORTHLESS-RECEIPTS! ! *

· Cle land, Ra cine, Ohio.

Ol'l!M EVES. 8:00 I' .M.
"*EROY, OHIO

REGULATIONS

llaths

~

What Do You Have For The SSS'You Pay In Rent?

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

949-4445.

6-1·61C

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Wlll be accepted unti I 9 a .m. for
Day of Publication

Kitchens~

Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endtoader Work

6·6·31p

STRAWSER RIES.

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections

Comp'lete
Remodeling

6·6-61c

automatic trans. , rad io, wh ite fini sh.

L_

JOHNSON MASONRY

ONE ACRE lot on Ohio River

Forest fires burn
more than trees.

''

High Sl. , Midd leporl.

· ~JJi.

.

.

.

'•

!

TO DO NO DADBURN .

Business ·Services.

YARD SALE, Salurday, Juno
12, 10 a.m. Most all antiques.
posler beds and olher types
d is_hes, five,leg dining table .
stands, loy· trai n, pool table,
many other ilems . Not
responsible for accidents. 541

:Sf6ll:S

PLOWIN' FER TWO-THREE
WEEK?

'IE

For Sale

THAT PORE OL' MULE
OF 'IOR'N IS WORE TO
A FRAZZLE·· SHf AIN'T

XIC

QUBBUA

GXAAN

BPMR.

M
M

BLA

QMR
GMR

M

ELGMR.

lllPL

WLJUK

KPU

WLJUK .··

,c A L J u A Q
L..::::=~~~~-~:"':.
. l!aturday'o Cryploquoto: GRATITUDE IS N07' ONLY THE

X AM Q

GQATEST OF VIRTUES, 'BUT THE PARENT

m·

ALl.

'I'Hi: OTHER8.--CICERO
~c

lt'21 Klnl

'J'rr.hn'\'~
' . 8yl\d\l"$tt. In&lt;". )

"

•

�'

I

'

'

I

I

'

•

~I

'

•II

No Asset; this Generation, an All.:.Time.First
------~

URBANA,Ollio (UPI )-Philip ed by court martial of multiple
R. B,radley, a former law pro- slayings in the Vietn village,
lessor and military lawyer, said was "simply a murderer."
Sunday at commencement cere- "The Calley case by itself
monies at Urbana College that does not seriously shock or surapJll!rent public approval of Lt. prise me ... but for the popuWilliam Calley's actions at My lace to applaud, condone or tol·
Lai "is saddening beyond de- erate mass murder is saddenscription."
ing beyond description,'' BradBradley, who formerly taught . ley said.
here and now practices law in Those who accept the mur·
Columbus, said Calley, convict- ders, Bradley said, "have

OU Student Found·Dead
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Gallipolis , enrolled at OU,
Cecilia Marie Armstrong, a 23- refused to answer questions
year-old graduate art student at ' about the death of his wife,
Ohio University, was found Shields said, and also refused
dead Sunday in her Guysville permission to search his car
apartment about 10 miles from and aparlment.
here . Authorities said she ap"His refusal has resulted in
parently had been slain.
what we believe to be an un·
Athens County Sheriff Harold · necessary delay,'' Shields said.
Shields said the woman's nude
"The investigation is conbody was discovered in her qnuing anl! the results of the
bedroom by her roommate. An official aulopgy still pending."
autophsy was to be performed
The couple's one-year-old
loday to confirm the cause of daughter, Chris,lived with Mrs.
death. Shields said she had been Armstrong. She was found
beaten about tbe head.
unharmed in a room adjoining
Mrs. Armstrong's estranged tlle bedroom where the woman
husband, David, 22, of was found dead.

News... in Briefs

adopted a stance which con- WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
dones the abandonment of mar- lml3ll white wood cross was
ali ty and law, and the accep- banked by roses and mwns as
tance of absolutism or repres- the sun dropped behind the
sion ."
·
rolling hills of Arlington Nation"This constitutes a societal al Cemetery. The family was
crime far graver than that of there, carrying candles, tbeir
an individual,'' he said. "To faces serene.
deny a rule of law even in war On the third anniversary of
is to deny the virtue of law.
the death of Robert F.
" If violence is your bag then Kennedy, those who loved him
you must know that to resort to and admired him came to
it will ultimately result in your celebrate a guitar Mass.
loss of freedom and liberty,'' he It was. like a festival of
said.
children.
The Kennedy youngsters
stood along the edge of the
grave, so many of them that
their parents seemed almost
(Continued from Jll)ge I)
Vinton Lodge at the Waugh- hidden.
Rory Kennedy, with whom
Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be at 2 Ethel Kennedy was pregnant at
p. m. Wednesday at the Grace the time of the death three
United Methodist ChurCh with years ago, lay on the grass and
Rev. Paul Hawks officiating. kicked her feet. Patrick KenneBurial will be in Sutton dy, who was standing by his
Methodist Church Cemetery mother Joan, broke his candle
and was swinging it by the
near Racine.
The body will be taken to the wick. But most of them stood
church one hour prior to the erect and proper, occasionally
se.Vices Wednesday· to lie In tossing their . heads to get the
state. Friends may call at the hair out of their eyes.
Several of them stepped
waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
forward
to take the part of the
Home between U and 7-9 on
lector in the Mass. Caroline
Tuesday.
In lieu of flowers, the famlly Kennedy, the daughter of the
requests donations to the slain President, prayed. Chris·
renovation program of Grace top her Kennedy, one of
Robert's younger sons, had to
United Methodist Church.
stand on tiptoes to reach the
microphone and say: "This is

Dr. Roush

the word -of the Lord."
Ethel Kennedy wore a simple,
sleevless while dress. Pat
Lawford and Jean Smith and
Eunice Shriver and their
husbands were there. Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy stood
silently under a tree in the
back of the group, his head
bowed.
Folk singers from Robert
Kennedy's parish at McLean,
Va ., sang the Mass and some
songs not usually identified with
a Catholic service- "The Battle
Hymn of the Republic, "
uAmazing Grace," and "This
Little Light of Mine."
The priest lighted a candle
and the children swarmed
around to light theirs. All 3,000
people had been given candles
and soon the hillsides glowed.
It was the end of a hot
muggy day in Washington, and
the people had come in shirt
sleeves, in suits, in nWls'
habits.
There were the mighty and
the once mighty- former Gov.
W. Averell Harriman, who
offered the prayer of .St.
Francis of Assisi during the
ceremony; Sen. John V. Tunney, .D-Calif., a best friend of
Edward Kennedy; former De·
fense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara, now president of
the World Bank; former White
House aide Arthur Schlesinger
Jr., the historian; Peter G.
Edelman, an aide to Robert
Kennedy, and his wife, Marian,
a black attorney.
After about 45 minutes, the
family began to file out. Ethel
Kennedy knelt and put a rose
on the grave.
Then Robert Kennedy's
sisters knelt, crossed themselves, and rose. And finally,
Joseph P. Kennedy III, knelt by
himself at the grave of his
father.
A few moments later the
wind picked up and it began to

(Continued from page 1)
heart attack while taking his regular 2G-Iap morning swim in his
aJll)rtment pool, was listed in critical condition loday. The veteran
Pleasant Valley Hospital
.character actor had no pulse and was not breathing, witnesses
ADMISSIONS - Hattie
said, when the fire department rescue crew arrived Sunday
Radcliff, Leon; Mrs. Danny
Stanley, Southside; Mrs.
morning. Rescuers administered oxygen and external heart
Sammy Clatworthy, New
massage and Heflin began breathing.
Joseph Everett Hysell, 69, Haven; Pauline Reynolds,
A spokesman at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital said early today
Pomeroy,
Rt. 2, died this Point Pleasant; Charles
that Heflin remained in critical condition In the intensive care
morning at Holzer Medical . Frazier, Carla Harrison,
ward.
Center .
,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Effie Turner,
Mr. Hysell is survived by his Mrs. Monroe Deal, Jr., Ashton;
wife, Mary Morris Hysell; two Joseph Kinnaird, Gallipolis
sons, Dale Albert, Middleport, Ferry; Mrs. Delbert Nichols,
MASON - Mrs. Sarah Jane Homer, Las Vegas, Nev. ; and Vernon, of Pomeroy; a Leon; Mrs. Carl Mattox, Point
Brinker, 84, Mason, died Ferrell, East St. Louis, Ill.; daughter, Roberta Irene Jef- Pleasant; Mrs. William Roush, rain.
Saturday evening at Pleasant !;toy, Mason, and Jesse, of fers, Minersville; two grand- .New Haven; Mrs . Robert
Valley Hospital.
Racine; 21 grandchildren, and a sorl!l, William Everett! Hysell Bateman, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
The daughter of the late John number of great-grandchildren. and Bobby Jeffers Hysell; a Carla Staats, Clifton; Mrs.
and Sarah Jane Quillen Mrs. Brinker was born at An- grandcaughter , Debbie Kay Donald Fry, West Colwnbia;·
Roberts, Mrs. Brinker was a tiquity, Ohio, on May 17, 1887. Jeffers, and two sisters, Mrs. Houston Brannon, Southside;
member of the First Church of
Anna Franks and Gertrude Mrs. James Johnson, Mason;
God at New Haven 40 years.
Funeral services will be held Stivers.
Mrs. Earl Wamsley, Point
She is survived by her at 11 a. m. Wednesday at the . Mr. Hysell was preceded in Pleasant; Michael Carlisle,
husband, Orion Edwin Brink· Foglesong Funeral Home with death by his parents, Filarider Henderson; Penny Burris,
er; three daughters, Mrs. the Rev . Tommy Reynolds and Lilly Powell Hysell, and two Apple Grove; Mrs. Ernest
VIrginia Roush, Kirkland, nt.; o!llel~\lhg .'Burlalwlll be In the children, Nancy Belle and Carter, Gallipolis; Mrs. George
Mrs. Frances Gibbs Roman, Letart Falls, Ohio, cemetery. Sammy.
Bailes, Grimms Landing; Mrs.
Hartford, and Mrs. Anna Faye Friends may call at the funeral Funeral services will be held Thomas Jennings, Dennis Park,
Roush , Mason; five sons, home from 2to 4and from 7 to 9 Thursday at 1 p. Ill .. at Ewing Point Pleasant; Mrs. Raymond
_Elmer, of Kirkland. Ill.; p. m. Tuesay.
Funeral Home with the Rev. Long, Wilkesville, Ohio.
Cecil Wise officiating. Burial
DISCHARGES - Willi.am
will be in Rock Springs Cern- Bryan, Leon Thompson,
tery. Friends may call after Timothy Ross, Cathy Stevens,
Jacob Baer, 85, Died on Sunday
noon Tuesday.
Karen Martin, Mrs. Marsha
Harrison, Harry Flowers, Mrs.
Surviving are his wife ,
Jacob Baer, 85, died Sunday
Homer Bonecutter, Mrs. Dennis
afternoon at his residence in Magdalena Rhodes Baer ; two Carrie Turnbull,
Stranaham
and daughter; Mrs.
Minersville. Mr. Baer, a daughters, Mrs. Kerns (Mary
Franklin Laudermilt, Mrs. Joe
charter member of the Forest Kay) Roush, and Helen Frances Died on Sunday
Bray, ·Tony a Randolph.
Run Mthodist Church, was the Baer, both of Minersville; a
BIRTHS- June 5, a daughter
son of the late George and brother, Albert, Minersville; HARTFORD, W.VA.- Mrs.
Catherine Grueser Baer.
two sisters, Mrs. U. S. Nease, Carrie Frances Turnbull, 93, to Mr. and Mrs. Torres
Besides his parents, he was Minersville, and Mrs. Purley Hartford, died Sunday at Williamson, Southside; June 5,
preceded in death by three Karr. Chester; three grand· Veterans Memorial Hospital. a son to Mr. and Mrs. Ammy
brothers, Charles, Joseph, and children, and seven great- Surviving are seven sons, Clatworthy, New Haven.
Dana, and a sister, Mrs. Anna grandchildren.
William, Paul and Richard, all
Funeral services will be at 1 of Mason; George, of Hartford;
Veterans MemorlalHospltal
Bailey.
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing John of Clifton· Howard of SATURDAY ADMISSIONSFuneral Home with the Rev. Windsor, Ohio, ~nd Harry, of None .
Forrest Donley officiating. ·Albuquerque, N. M.; 13 grand- SATURDAY DISCHARGES
Burial will be in Gilmore children, and 18 .great- - Ray Sears, Vernon Nease,
Cemetery. Friends may call at grandchildren. Preceding her in Clifford Jenkinson, Marvin C.
the funeral home anytime.
death were her parents, James Walker.
and Martha Jane Proffitt ntffle,
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Audry Smith and Jessie
and
her
husband,
Richard
Joseph
Hood, Minersville; Jane
~derer spent several days
MEETING CALLED
James Burnbull, who died in Miller, Pomeroy; Barbara Ann
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Howard The Meigs County Tuber· 1946.
Lyons, Mason; Diana Nease,
Young of Paden City, W. Va. culosis and Health Assn. will
Funeral services will be held Syracuse; Anna Williams,
While there they toured several meet~~ 7:30p.m. Thursday at
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy; Bertha Clark, Letart,
interesting points of West the Pomeroy United Methodist
Foglesong Funeral Home with W. Va.; Margaret Seidenabel,
Virginia.
Church .. All officers and board the Rev. David Fields, Jr., Pomeroy; Cheryl Dillon,
Clara Friend, MI. Alto, W. members are urged to attend.
officiating. Burial will be in Reedsville,
Va., spent severai' days with
Graham
Cemetery. Friends SUNDAY DIIICHARGES Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hensley.
THREE FINED
Sunday they all visited Mr. and Three defendants were fined may call at the funeral home James Pape, Leonard Lun·
Mrs . Lloyd McPeek of in Pomeroy Mayor Charles from 2 to 4 p. m. and from 7 to 9 sford, Linda Schultz, Tamara
p.m . Tuesday.
Mossman, Earl Riggs.
Belleville, W. Va.
Legar's Court Saturday night.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith They were Marvin D. Wise, 28,
LAD BmEN
~¥-¥¥-¥-¥¥¥.\i.¥¥¥-¥¥-l:
were at Columbus recently to Pomeroy, $10, for squealing
SYRACUSE - Roger A.
A THOUGHT
attend the nursing band tires and $15 and costs for Sellers, six-year-old son 9f Mr.
. ceremony for their daughter, reckless operation; Otis Ray and Mrs. Paul Sellers,
.FOR TODAY
Pat.
~
VanMatre, West Columbia, $10 Syracuse, was bitten Saturday
Neva German is a patient at and costs, reckless operation, on the left leg by a dog owned by
More men fall through
Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis. and Albert Eugene Hess, Mrs. John Willbarger. The lad · ' lack of purpose than it
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe Albany, $5 and costs, improper was taken to Veterans
through lack of talent. it
Bissell were Mr. and Mrs. Ted backing.
Memorial Hospital, treated and
.
i~.
Hayman and family, Janet
released. The dog was im- ~
-Billy Sunday
Bissell and Tom Groenveld of
pounded by County Dog Warden
Columbus, Joe Bissell and Tim
THEFT REPORTED
Lowell Greer, according to
~
of Mason, w. va ., Mr. and !Yh'S.. The Meigs County Sheriff's
Otis Casto of Reedsville, Violet Dept., is investigating the theft Milton Varian, Syracuse · lfs Quick! Easy
,.
:
li ·
Smith and Orva Jean Holter. of 15 stereo tapes and chrome Marshall.
LOCALTEMPS
:
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Dean speaker taken from a vehicle
of Columbus were visiting Mr. driven by Tom Kerns, Rt. 1,
Temperature in downtown ~
anq Mrs. Wayne Prince.
· Shade, Sunday between 2 and Pomeroy Monday at n. a. m.
Fridays Only
~
Mr and Mrs c B H
of 3:30 p. m. The veh1cle was was 74 d.~grees, under partly
The Drive-In Windo :
Col~ bus wer~ visiUn::~~d parked at Royal Oak Park.
cloudy sk1es.
~
- 0
wic..,
15
.
ic
pen
Mrs. Guy Hayman.
· Pllllllllllllllllil----•
~
9 A.M, to7 P,M, ...
Pat Smitll of Columbus spent
I Continuously&gt;
..,
r&gt;1AION
several days with Mr. and Mrs.
David Smith.
Othtr Bonlilng Hours 9 to
Tonight&amp; Tueidly
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Young
«
~nd 5 to 7 II USUII on
June 7-1
MON.- TUES,
of Paden City spent several .
: Fridlys:
.., .
days with Mr. and Mrs. Gartll
MEPHISTO WALTZ
"HONEY MOON
(Teehnleolor)
Smith.
Alan' Aida
WIUMEETATlPM
11
Jacqueline
Bl'sset
.KILLER"

Joseph Hysell

Died Monday

Sarah Brinker Died Saturday

COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Schools Superintendent. Martin
W. Essex said today the current
teenage generation is the first
in history to be an economic
liability ·to its parents rather
than an economic asset.
Essex, in remarks prepared
for delivery before the Colum·
bus Rotary Club, said this was
true of children from both rich

' "-•

and poor families.
He said he believes the break·
do~n of the work ethic was the
basic ca,use and suggested that
youth be given the Chance to get
work experience in such jobs as
,harvesting crops, caring lor the
sick, aged and mentally ill and
combating pollution.
"Ours is the first teenage
in the
of the

t.iunan race to be an economic
liability to its parents ratber
than an economic asset," Essex
said. ·
"To be an integral Jll)rt of
American society, young people
need genuinely usefullllld prac·
tical work experience which
characterized the teenage y.ears..
of all prior generations."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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JUNE

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TUPPEilS PLAINS ...- Tbe

Tuppers Plain~ Community
Club wUl meet W~nesday at I
p.Jn.lnslelid of at 108. m. at the
hllme of Onelta Cole,
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ALSO ·
"CHANGES"

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Coloreartoons:
Wunder·Bar
Groat D•y
SHOW STARTS7 P,M.

·: FARMERS BANK
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Membtr Federal
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COLUMBUS (UP!( - The ed to raise the excise tax on Jefferson, chairman of the Ways
House Ways and Means Com- financial institutions and Intan- and Means Committee, said he
mitte was to meet today to gibles dealers by one mill,' in· was dissatisfied with the flat
study the initial draft of Repub- creasing revenues by $6 million. rate of the personal income tax.
lican legislation proposing to -Public utilities would be The proposed income tax
raise $1.2 billion in net new tax- granted property tax relief, but would be levied at 1.75 per cent
es over the biennium, chiefly also would pay I per cent more on the adjusted gross income of
through a flat 1.75 per cent per· than originally planned in excise all Ohio residents, with exemptaxes.
sonal income tax.
tions of $1,200 allowed for perGOP Alternatives
The bill, made public for .the
sons with no dependents and
The
plan
was
the
latest
in
a
first time Monday, was an ap$2,400 for persons with depenparent attempt by the GOP lea- series of proposed Republican dents.
dership to refine earlier propo- alternatives to the tax package The revenues, estimated at
sals and eliminate objections to of Gov. John J. Gilligan, which slightly more than $1 billion for
language on a state or county would raise $1.6 billion in net a two-year period, would be renew taxes, primarily through a turned to counties for school aid,
income tax.
The new plan was basically graduatedstatepersonalincome library aid, local government
the same as the one that exist- tax of I to 8 per cent.
aid, property tax relief and
ed May 27 before the Republi· Republicans in the House have homestead exemptions.
can leadership gave up on it been unable to agree on all pro- The bulk of the revenues, $555
temporarily to concentrate on visions of any of the GOP al· million over two years, would
Jll!ssing a $7.8 billion appropria· ternatives, and there was no in· go for school aid. The rest would
dication they would do so on the be divided as follows: $300 mil·
lions bill.
However, these changes were latest plan.
lion for property tax relief, $94
Even Rep. E.W. Lampson, R·
made in the new draft:
Continued on Page 2
- The new language would allow a taxpayer to file his per·
. s~nal income tax return with
J
hiS county or w1th the state,
making the tax a "state" or
"county" income tax, whichever
COLUMBUS(UP!)-Ohioans, from one-half gallon to five galanyone pref~rs to call 1t.
drinking more water but ap· lons, have been skyrocketing
- An additlonal! per cent has parenUy enjoying it less, are during the past few months.
been added to the ce1hng of the turning in larger numbers to Nearly all grocery spokesmen
fl&lt;lt income tax proposed for bottled spring water, a survey surveyed agreed one of the
corpora lions w1th an annual net by United Press International prime factors in the bottled w~ ­
income of more than $25,000, in- reveals.
ter sales increase is the emphacreasing revenues by about $200
Ohio supermarket officials re· sis placed during the past two
million.
port sales of bottled spring water years on ecology and water pol-A provision has been includ- in containers usually ranging lution.

•

ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING GOES AT A FLEA MARKET! That's what has been
added to the annual Big Bend Regatta Weekend activities. Above, Mrs. Rita Lewia, Chairman
of the market, on behalf of Ohio Eta Pill Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, exhibits antique
glassware typical of the wares at a flea market. Persons Interested In selling antiques at the
market from one to three days during regatta weekend should notify Mrs. Lewia, or simply
come with tbelr merchandise to the Pomeroy junior high sChool. Some of the booths of the
market will be Inside; others will be at the rear of the junior high auditorium.

Ca1~ival Fun Will Launch Regatta Day Early

EMPERIQR GROUP
Designed especially to capture Spanish influence featuring custom
designed hardware, oak veneers, oak so lids , and simulated wood
components, multl~step hand padded finish, Micarta plastic tops.

The 1971 Big Bend Regatta,
coming on for Its seventh time
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
June 18-19-20, actually will
begin playing to the thousands
of visitors expected in the
county a day early.
Members of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Monday, reviewing the completed
plans for the regatta, learned
that the Nolan Amusement
Company rides will be. in place
and hwnming Thursday afternoon and evening. a day
early. Tbe Carnival will be
located behind the old Pomeroy
JWlior High School.
Friday's events-the Big
Weekend itself-&lt;~tart at 9 a.m.
with a flea market, also located
behind the junior high building
with some exhibits inside the
gym. Its hours will be 9 a.m. to 9
p.m. At six o'clock the Jll!rade

.. .
will move from Middleport to
Pomeroy, non-stop.
The queen float belonging to
the Ohio .Festival Assn. and
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber, will carry the seven
candidates for Regatta Queen.
Persons attending the
Regatta may vote on the queen
of their choice at the Pomeroy
Junior High where a booth will
be provided. Votes may be cast
until Saturday at 4 p.m. The
winner will be announced at
10:15 p.m. at the Frog Ball.
The queen will receive a $75
bond and first and second
runnersup will each receive $50
bonds. All girls will receive
trophies.
The Pomeroy National Bank,
Citizens National Bank, The
Farmers Rank &amp; Savings Co.,
and the Racine Home National
will provide the bonds.

At 8:30 p.m. The Grand
Squares from Gallipolis will
present an hour of entertainment which includes
western and fQik dancing in the
gym at the Pomeroy Junior
High. Admission is 50 cents per
person. At 9:30 an open-air teen
dance will be held.
On Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. the National O~n Class A,
All Trophy Baton Twirling
Contest, sanctioned by the
National Baton Twirling
Association will be held at
Meigs Junior High in Middleport. Judy Riggs is the
director . The Meigs Band
Boosters will serve refresh·
ments during the baton event.
The flea mart will be open
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a
garden tractor pull from 10 to 11
a.m.
An art show will be on exhibit

.
_, .. .
\
.
from 12 nbon to 8 p.m. from a the Frog event.
school bus on the upper parking Fred W. Crow, past Grand
lot. Aflower show and ceramics Croaker, reported that all
display will be held .from 12 members of the Ohio Supreme
noon to 5 p.m. in the Pomeroy Court are members of the Frog
Senior High' building. At 2 p.m. Assn. and will attend the jwnps.
practice runs for the boat races On Sunday, church services
will be held.
at local churches will be held
The preliminary events for from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Carnival
the Frog jumping contest rides begin at 11:30 and consponsored by the Ohio .tinue to 5:30, and the art show
Association for the Promotion runs from noon to 8 p.m. The
of Bull Frogs will be held at the flower 'show and ceramics
Meigs Football stadium in display is open from noon to 4
Pomeroy from 5 to 8 p.m. Finals p.m. and the flea mart from
in the junior and senior division noon to 6 p.m.
will be held from 8 to'9:30 p.m., Boa traces under the auspices
with approximately 10 con- of the American Power Boat
testants in each division.
Assn., Lorain Outboard Racing
During the frog event there Club, will be held from 1 to 2:30
will be a frog on a bicycle race, . p·m·
' !ted
ladies backwards race, frog
Local ~ontestants are mv
polo and a fat ladies race.
to parllc1pate. Qualifying boats
. The initiation of 24 honorary must be 13-16 feet in length with
Grand Croakers will conclude 60 to 180 horsepower. There wUI

r---------------------------, ~
•
·! News .•• in Briefs ! aggmg
By United Press International
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Summertime Detection
WASHfNGTON -TINY LIGHTNING bugs are being trained
to turn on to heroin, and the government is betting $29,012 this will
tielp police nab users and pushers. "The first tests have proved
successfUl," Richard W. Velde, associate administrator of the
Law Enforcement Assistance Agency, told Congress.
Veliie'b agency has a $29,012 contract with Huntington
Laboratories, aimed at developing herOin-aensitive fireflies
which will light up when they encounter a police suspect with
heroin on his person. The test involves a miniature version of the
common firefly. Rep. John J: Rooney, 0-N.Y., said skeptically his
recollection was that lightning bugs operated only In summer.
Velde ci:mceded thei~ "biouminescent agent&gt;~ wasn't good in cold
weather.

30 maybe 50 to a Grave

~IMPUR, INDIA - THEm ROAD began ifi East

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A new municipally-owned water system in Pomeroy, based :
on a new well completed In Syracuse, may depend on the quality '·
of tbe water in the ,well and upon winning a federal grant of
$170,000.
.
.
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar told council in a regular
meeting Monday ni~ht the State Departnoent of Health will
conduct tests ·soon. If these prove satisfactory, the mayor in·
dicated, application will be made for the grant.
It has been estimated the cost of the new system would be
$200,000, the grant covering all but $30,000.
Tests by the health depart- disclosed.
men! will certify as to the ln other business, the
mineral and bacteria content of resignation of policeman David
the water. Minerals often Jeffers was accepted. Jeffers
present in Meigs County wells has taken employment at the
include calcium, manganese new Gavin electric plant as a
and iron, all of which can he security guard. Jeffers will \«! ·
removed or neutralized- if retained as a bonded policen..,a ·
desired-&lt;!ither at the well-site in Pomeroy, however, as an
or in the home. Another factor extra officer.
involved in water quality is its Fire Chief Henry Werry
acidity, which has to do with its asked council to replace a • •
corrosiveness.
hydrant on West Main St. near
The new well is ap• Dannie's Trailer Sales and put a
proximately 100 to !50 feet new hydrant ·an Lincoln Hill
upriver from the present near the A. R. Knight property.
Syracuse well .
·council agreed to install the
The new water system would new hydrant within two weeks.
eliminate the present water The replacement on West Main
treatment plant In Pomeroy. will be done later.
Pollee Chief Jed Webster
Pomeroy's present system
supplies 400 gallons a rillnute asked that a "no left turn" sign
and the Syracuse system pumps be placed at the intersection of
only 100 gallons ·a minute, the Butternut and West Main St.,
mayor said.
for drivers pulling from Butternut onto Mali!. The matter
Middleport has three wells of was turned over to the safety
its own that it is not using, it was
Continued on Page 2

]i I.IYIYed Drinking Water Gaining
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Committee Takes
GOP's TaX Idea

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Sleeveless undershirts - solid color
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Social Notes

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Nn "(XIV NO. 39

80"~

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Federal Grant of
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If Water is . Good

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Pakistan and en~d In a lush green field a few miles inside India,
where cholera struck them down. About 900 civil war refugees
from Pakistan lie here in mass graves dug during the past 10 days
as the disease ravaged the men, women and Children fleeing to
·safety in India.
·
Some of them were brought to the improvised graveyard
from the town dispensary. But most of the corpses were picked up
along the road where they collapsed from weakness and died as
'their relatives continued to plnd along in search of shelter. The
·local pollee commandant, Sgt. Inspector Amal Bhattarcharjee,
has the job of collecting the bodies and surpervising their burial.
He has had time for nothing else.
"You can't imagine what it was like," he said. How many
bodies in each gtave'?" Thirty here," he said. "Maybe 50 t)lere.
We just put them In as the trucks brought them."

Charge Leveled at President

MIDDLEPORT

I

WASHINGTON- SEN, EDWARD M. KENNEDY, D·Mass,,
Monday accused President Nixon of prolonging the war iri In·
dochma to gain JDBxlmuf!l political impact for the re~lection bi~
Continued on Page 2

For Body
Resumed
Dragging operations resumed
this morning for the body of
Scott Simms, 16, Rt. 2, Crown
City, a junior at Gallia
Academy High School, who is
presumed to have drowned
Sunday evening in a farm pond
near the James Merry Stone
Quarry in the Rodney area.
Simms, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Simms, has not ·been
seen since late Sunday evening.
He had gone swimming with
friends during a party following
tlle annual Gallia Academy
High School graduation.
A member of the party told
CD officials loday that Simms
was swimming and suddenly
began yelling for help,
However, no one responded to
his calls; apparently assuming
he was ,·,joking". He was not
seen after that.
Others apparently thought
Simms had left the pond when
the party began dispersing.
Simms was not reported
.missing until Monday allj!rnoon
when his car, bill!~ and
clotnes were found near the
Merry pond.
Gallia Couhty sheriff's
deputies, assisted by the local
Civil Defense and Mason

too early for hard figures, have
been good."
Ben Bucell, a buyer for Pick·
'n,Pay Supermarkets in Cleveland said bottled spring water
wasjustplacedonhiscompany's
shelves in Ohio during the past
17 weeks.
"It's selling quite well," said
Bucell, "about 200 to 250 cases
a week."
Most bottled spring water Ia ·
used in preparing foods, coffee,
tea and other bevera.es . .
. ~l ~I\ •llmrJI,..,"
Bueell added. "I can't personal·
ly see paying 69 cents a gallon,
but some people· say it does
'make a really good un-polluted
drink and it does give a drink
a different taste."
.
Although supermarket of,
Continued on Page 2

... . .~ ···'"''!
be eight races, two heats per
race. ,First prize is $50, second
prize $30 and third $20 with
lrophies In each class.
From 2:30 to 3:30 a ski show
will be held by the Atbens Boat
and Ski Club. From 3:30 to 5:30
the final boat races.
Earl Ingels reported that the
Frog King and Queen will be
annoWlced at II p.m. at the
Frog Ball·which will be held in
the Pomeroy gym.
A chicken barbecue will be
held on the upper parking lot
Saturday,and Sunday sponsored
by members of Drew Webster
By Bob Hoeflich
Post 39 of the American Legion
and Pomeroy Firemen
Refreshment stands will be •
located throughout. the area of
Char1es (Chuck) Down!e, son of Mr . and Mrs. T, A. Downle,
:Regatta
actlv1t1es. The- Pomeroy leftovertheweekendforNewHampshlrewherehewlll
Chamber will meet again next spend his'ntnth summer as an advisor and le~r at eamp Robin
Monday at noon at Bowers
Drive-In.
Hood.
This week, Chuck, a teacher in the Meigs Local School District,
is attending a leadership training camp stresaing ecology at
Ossipee, N.H. Tbe training Is sponsored by the American Youth
Foundation for the ChrlsUan Leadership of American Youth at
Merra Vista Camp.
Then he will g~ to Center Ossipee to begin his duties as a
Two persons were treated and Bailey and Lucas ·were taken counselor at Camp Robin Hood. Chuck won't be returning home
· released at Veterans Memorial to the hospital for treatment by until near time for school to start In August.
Hospital for facial· lacerations the Pomeroy E!'lergency
suffered · in a three vehicle Squad. The Lucas and Batley
KERMIT WALTON COUNTINUES remodeling his the New
collision at 11:10 p.m. Monday vehicles were demolished ,
at tbe intersection of Rt. 7 and There was slight damage to York Clothing Stoce -certainly turned into a real swinging shop
County Rd. 5 In Meigs County. Walls' semi. Lucas was charged over the past few weeks. The latest addition at the back of the
According to the Gallia-Meigs witll excess speed for con- store area is the "slack shack".
Post State ' Highway Patrol, ditions.
Leslie
T.
Lucas,
36, A Gallia County mishap Oc·
EIGHTH GRADERS of the Chester Elementary School
Chesapeake, traveling south curred at 6:50 a.m. on Rt. 35,
five
tenths
of
a
mile
west
of
Rt.
honored
their teacher and principal, Gerald Rupe, upon hll
lost control, skidded left of the
retirement.
•
.
center striking a semi operated 588.
Aided by the room mothers, the class staged a Jll)fty In !tit
by William C. Walls, Rt. 4, Officers said Janet Ruth
Jackson. Lucas' car continued Hogan, 33, Gallipolis, attempted . former Meigs County Courthouse at O&gt;ester. There were g8Diel
on, striking another nprthbound to pus a truck, cut back in too and the youngsters recounted highlights of the past etgbt years.
auto driven by James Bailey, sharply, lost control and ran off Ponch, potato chips, soft drinks and a cOke Inscribed "Belt
the right side of the highway Wishes to Mr: Rupe" were served and the guest of honor wu
43, Rt. I, Longbottom.
SCOTI' SIMMS
into an embankment. ·
presented with a gift certificate by Mary' Lou Mills, clau
There was moderate damage president.
County Civil Defense, contO her car. She was cited for
ducted a thorough search
having
no operator's ljcense.
Monday evening until dark but
their efforts were fruitless.
IF YOUR'RE ENJOYING Meigs County's "green" lbla
DANCE PLANNED
Three boa Is and ap·
spring, think what It means to Forrest (Butch) Bachtel, MlclA.benefit dance will be held dleport, who has spent the past s!J: months In Alaska.
proximately a dozen CD
from 9 p.m. until midnight
volunteers were involved in
Butch arrived at the Lockborne Air Force Base in Colwnbul
Seven-year
old
Cindy
Smith
Saturday
at the Rutland
today's operations.
escaped serious injury Monday gymriasiwn · urider the span- Friday evening where he was met by his wife, Carol. It took !be
at 5:45p.m, when she rode her . sorshlp of the· Ladies Auxiliary plane- an Air Force jet- only six hours to reach Loctbome
'
MOTO-CROSS SET
bicycle into the side of a car that of tlie Rutland Fire Depart- from Fairbanks, Alaska,
Home
for
30
days,
liu'ch
wlll
then
return
to
Alaska
for
five
The Meigs Motorcycle Club
was s!;ltionary at a stop sign on menI. All proceeds will go to the
will hold 118 second "''otaThird St. in SyrliCUie.
y 115 t family funeral expense more months service at the Campion Air Force Radar site -.r
Cross of the year SUDday at
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. funll : Music will be provided by Galena. Galena hils a popbiation of some 300 persons. Butch flew
the club grounds locaied live Gene Smith, Cindy suffered Tex Harrl!ion and the Valley from Galena to Fairbanks via commercial airline.
Butch and Carol will :,. taking a two week trip any day IMIW
miles north of Pomeroy on abrasions to both knees and her Boys. Refreshments will be
ahd you can bet your bottom boola they'll be heading south. Cl·rol,
Route 33.
right arm. She was not lm, available. ..
mediately treated. David D.
. Practice will be held from
incidentally, a registered nurse, has been put!lng in some bDy
Parsons, 25, Syracuse, was the
11 a.m. to 1 p,m,, the races
days and nights nt the Holzer Medical Center d~ ' LOCAL TEMPS
Sll\rling ai 1:30 p.m. Tropbles driver of the car.
.
Temperature in downtown husband's absence.
There
was
minor
damage
to
will be awarded In all clas'"s,
Butch .reports that tbe snow and Ice of Aluka Is juat bejll.
Pomeroy Tuesday ·at. 11 a.m.
the bike, none to the car and no
a~d refreshments wUl be
ning tothaw.Hewas delighted Iosee something green apin.la'l
avallail)le at the club bouse, citation was issued, Marshall was 1i degrees., under sunny everybody?
, ..
·
skies,
Milton Varian reported. ·

Of the Bend

3 in Collision

Child Suffers ·
Minor Hurts
Jn Bike Mishap

I

•.

Although state and local waler quality standards are usual·
ly strict, tap water flows through
underground mains sometimes
50 years old and along miles of
rusted, corroded pipe before arriving in the home.
The water along the way often
picks up sand, dirt, silt and al·
gae which not only offends the
eye and nose but also gives the
water a brackish taste.
AspokeSJllan for A &amp; P stores
in Ohio 1 West Vlrglrlia dn4 Ken·
-tuclty· aald ·-•~· ,.:bo\11~
spring water is not a ''new"
item, many persons'were, until
lately, unaware such water was
available on the retail level.
"We have been offering lines
of bottled spring water in the
past couple of months," he said,
"and sales, although it still is

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