<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8995" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8995?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T04:54:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19423">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2d84996d2f538a432f2b60dc5b651921.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c015aae0467e784ca527733d73df4a8f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28949">
                  <text>Weather

Now You Know
Tribolium confusWl), com·
monly called the confused Dour
beetle, received its Imposing
scientific name because
biologists mistook it for the red
Dour beetle,

VOL XXI1i NO. 48
THE.Y ..JUST COIJ'T
MAK.E GIRLS. (..It::£ 'I, ·.-' .

I CAIJ'T .SE€M TO
Fl f.JD OIJE -wl-\0 Sf-\ARES
MY VAUJES!

useD w!

.

Partly cloudy and cooler
!&lt;might with a low in the ··SU5.
Tuesday sunny ·and mild . with
highs from mid 71i! to low 80s.

Devoted To The lntflresta Of The Meigs-Mcuon Area
_POM~ROY- MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

H 1, Tf-\cR.'E,
CUTic!

C.OMt;;.::. Q/JS !

Races Climax 7th
Regatta

. Ll k.E. A.
. 1-\USBA~D ...

I \.00"'JD€R I\=" I COULD

I,\JTER.€ST "rt:u lf-J A
fE.\iJ ~I~GS ...

TOM CRISP received the highest rank in Boy Scouting that 'Of an Eagle -Sunday at the Langsville Church. Among
the scout officials taking part from the left were James
Council, Langsville Scoubnaster of Troop 239; William

Knig~t, Point Pleasant, M.{;.M District chairman; Crisp,
Chadds Hall, Gallipolis, district executive, and Tom Cassell,
Middleport, a Silver Beaver.

Boat racing- with the added
attraction of an excellent water
show at the Athens Boat and Ski
Club - took over the spotlight of
the seventh annual Big Bend
Regatta Weekend Sunday.
The banks of the Old Ohio
along the boat racing area in
Pomeroy and Mason were lined
with speclators watching the
water events. Traffic was heavy
in Pomeroy and parking spaces
near the scene of activity were
-

at a premium .
Some $800 in prize money was
paid out by the Pomer oy
Chamber of Comme rce,
sponsors of the annual weekend ,
to drivers of the races and
trophies were awarded to the
top t~ree drivers in each race.
Top money was $50, second was
$30 and third prize was $20.
Winners include, firs t through
third respectively :
Race 1: Craig DeLapp,

! ·~;:

~

~

GARAGE.. .

.JUST RUI.'JED

The rank of Eagle Scout, the
highest rank in Boy Scouting,
was conferred upon Thomas
Allen Crisp, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Crisp, Sunday afternoon
when a Court of Honor was held
at the Langsville Church.
William Knight, formerly of
Pomeroy and now of Point
Pleasant," presided over the
Court of Honor. Knight is
chairman of the Meigs • Gallia •
Mason Boy Scout District.
Crisp, a senior at .Meigs High
School this fall, was presented
by James Council, scoutmaster
of Explorer Troop 239. In a talk
before friends and relatives,
Council referred to young Crisp
as a "Scoutmaster's dream."
Chadds Hall,
district
executive, Gallipolis, gave the
charge to young Crisp and Tom
Cassell, Middleport, a Silver
Beaver, delivered the oath.
George Haul, a neighborhood
commissioner; Walter Walker,
a Silver Beaver, and Emmett
Morrison, a district com·
missioner, all of Gallipolis, also
took part in the ceremonies.
They presented the three
piece~ of jewelry used in the
ceremony - a pin for Mrs.
Crisp, a tie tack for Mr. Crisp
and a pin for the new Eagle
Scout. He is the second son of
Mr. and Mrs. Crisp to become
an Eagle Scout. Glen Crisp
received the honor a couple of
years ago.
Eagle Scouts assisting with
the escorting were Marshall
Kimmel, Rio Grande, and Omar
Henry of Jackson.
Carl Gorby, committeeman of
Langsville Troop 239, conducted
the opening and closing including the prayer.
Mr. and Mrs. Crisp served
refreshmentS in the fellowship
hall at the close of the Court of .
Honor.

--......· . FRIEf.JDSt-\11~ .I .
I

,.
. I . ..

u

••
, __

.. ,

Th'AT

HOW·5
F011: A BAR.6AIN.S
Wl-lAT DID
I GOTTr!AT WHOLE _RIG F'Oi2..1395! Tt1AT INCLUDE?
~-~-~~

·,

.

.

THE TRAlLER HiTCH, .

HE SA!D IT Gf",VE tJIM
P~06LISMS ·1-\E · . . .
~~~~-~COULD~•T Wf-\IP f .

PoP,.W!o-lY'D_THE fORMER
OWNER:~ELL tr SO CHEAP(

THE TRAILER AND
ALL 'THE' INTERIOR
FiJr&lt;l\liSHINGS! LET-S

TRY IT OUT!

l;i:i~

looK, TrlEr&lt;E .

LET•S !='OttOW
GOES ONE JUsT .ITA!JD 1ALK To

HE DID~J.· TSAY! BUT
PRO~LE'MS 1 ~ .f,JQT, l

l:iKE'OOr&lt;SI
~~-· · ... ~ ...,.....,. ' .

STILL SAY WE GoT A
BARGAIN •f

lD UKETOASK

POP, THAT TRAILER .
THAT: Jusr P.o.c.·c:.~,..,

AN.Y PROBLEMS

!JS IS ' \JI.II'I

l-frM IF l-lf EVEr&lt;: HAS

DRIVe~!

.: WITH IT.'

.

I

••

Roy Holter ~nd his mother,
Mrs. Ada Holter, were named
Frog King and Queen a\ the
Jaycee Frog Ball held Saturday
night at the Pomeroy Junior
High School. They received
cash awards of $25 each. This is
the second year for Holter to be
named king. Contestants in frog.
theme costuming must be 30 or
older to take part. .

l. DARE YOlJ

·STEP
Oi..:ITStDE AND CALL Mf

Money Action,
~

I';"

:'-

-·-

'\

.

Divorce Filed

'

.

.

. ··-

....... ~....,

~

.,

•'

-~c&gt; ~~··;:•'~.,&gt;,•

!

'

'

~-

1

. ,.
•

'

.'

·,' ,,,...,.,,'

,r

•

•

f

.• J

..

l

' ,e
.I
i

,;.·

.

QUtrE AFATHER'S DAY gift_for Jack Cril!p; Jeft, Whose' scltl, Torrr;wasma~e 'lurEagle
Scout Sunday afternoon at the Langsville Church. Mr. Crisp looks on as Mrs. Crisp pins on

·.............

'

An action for money and a
suit for divorce have been filed
in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
The Davis·Warn~r Insurance
se~tce has flied Bll!lfor $1056.~
agamsl Kennetli D. and Arlene.
Williams of Rutland.
. James Edward Qualls,
Pomeroy, has filed suit for
divorce from Marcia Elaine
Qualls,
charging
gross
neglect of duty and' extreme
cruelty. The plaintiff is.seelting
eustody of one minor rhiM

THIS WAS THE scene at~ Pomeroy levee Sunday as
racing boats were put into the water constantly to take part

in various races which were stated by the Lorain Boat Club ·

the Eagleawardgivenher son aspartoftheceremony.
By United Press International
Extended Ohio Outlook
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair Wednesday and
Thursday with a warming
trend. A chance of thun·
dershowers and warm
Friday. Highs ln the low and
mid 80s Wednesday, rlslng to
the upper 80s and low 90s
Thursday and Friday. Lows
In the 50s Wednesday mor·
ning and In the 60s Thursday
and Friday mornings.

KEN STEVENSON, Cleveland, center, driver of boat 418 in the speedy, heavier boats of
the final races Sunday, receives his first place money and trophy from Bill Grueser, left,
president of the Pomeroy Chambf!' of Commerce and Jack Carsey, past chamber president
and chairman of the boa tracing program of Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

Meigs Ministry
Becomes
Reality
Named Queen,King

~

. '

THAT!

..-::-,.·- ----

Made
Eagle

I,.U-\AT CbCJLD f4AV€
BEEIV A. BEAUIIFUL

.

Bucyrus;
Terry
Blake,
Springfield; Wayne Kimmel ,
Lakeview.
Race VI: Mike Quayle Huron ;
Steve Wa gyar, Wilmington;
Dave Hopkins, Portsmouth .
Race Vll : Dick Martin,
Cov ington; Tom Mi tzer,
Cleveland; Pat Marlin, Piqua.
Race Vlll : Ken Stevenson,
Cleve lan d ; Keith McClead,
Man sfi eld ;
Jim Flood,
Columbus.

"

'

A DCG. T\.UO CARS

Sandu sky; John Filburn ,
Min ster, Ralph Fraley ,
Lucasville.
Race II : Michael Quayle.
Huron ; Tim Totl1, . .Bedford,
and Steve Magyer, Wilmington.
Race Ill : Warren Walansky,
Parma ; Jerry Hopkins,
Goshen; Randy Minch, Parma.
Race IV : Jerry Hopki ns,
Boshen; Randy Minch, Parma;
D. J. Mackey, Fairport.
Race V: Mike Comb s,

"*""·

Crisp

IIJ

TEN CENTS

. AH,~....-HtRE:

' .

.-. ~. . ~~
\

PHONE 992-2156 .

MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1971

The Meigs Cooperative
Parish, to be known as the
Meigs Ministry, became a
reality shortly after noon
Friday, according to ap an·
nouncement by Bishop Francis
Gerald Ensley at the Ohio
Annual Conference of the
United Methodist Church held
at Lakeside.
The Rev. Robert R. Card will
serve as director of the Meigs
Ministry and will be the leader
in the Pomeroy cluster. He will
continue to serve the Pomeroy
and Chester churches.
The Rev. F. Stan ten Smith,
moving from East Fulthonham,
will serve Enterprise, Rock
Springs and Flatwoods. This is
'also part of the Pomer~y
Cluster.
The Middleport, Rutland., and
Salem Center Cluster will have
the Rev. Robert T. Ba11111garner
1rom th e To1edo .Bancro ft
Church in charge wtth a lay
speaker helping to serve the
Salem Center church.
The Rev. Forrest Donley will
serve the Syracuse Cluster. He
will continue to serve the
A•h•Jry Church in Syracuse, the

Forest Run Church in Minersville and, in addition, wUI
serve the Syracuse fonner EUB
Church.
The Southern Cluster wiD be
served by the Rev. W. Dale
McClurg, leader. He wiD serve
the Racine Welleyan, · East
Letart, Letart Falls and Apple
Grove churches. The Rev.
Frank Cheesebrew wUI be one
of the associates in the cluster
and will serve Bethany, SUtton,
Carmel and Portland. The Rev.
Mr. Cheesebrew will move from
the Cheshire church to the
Racine area. 'Miss Martha Ann
Mattner will serve the Southern
Cluster as ·student associate,
She is in school' at the Methodist.·
Theological School of Ohio at
Delaware. She will serve
Morning Star, Morse Chapel
and Great Bend churches.
The Northeast Cluster of the
county will have the Rev. Jacob
L. Lehman as leader. He will be
moving to Tuppers Plains from
Junction City. Associate,
Stanley Brandum of Pennsville,
a· part-time "associate, will
_assist him. They will serve
(Continued on pageS).

The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile wlll visit
Pomeroy from I to 6 p.m.
Tuesday.
The unit will be set up at the
Pomeroy Elementary school
and residents are asked to
report during the designated
hours as walk in donors to the
blood program.
Everyone expecting to use
blood within the next two
months should have donors
report to the unit or there
may not be blood available
except for emergency purposes,
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy E·R answered a
call at 4:23p.m. Saturday to the
Everett Dailey home on Anne
St., Pomeroy. Dailey, who has
THE "LITILEST ANGEL"
become ill, was taken to with a frog hitting pay dirt In
Veterans Memorial Hospital Saturday's frog jumping
where he was admitted.
contest at Pomeroy was tlny
Susan Thoma of Pomeroy ·
SERVICES TUESDAY
All members of the Ladies who won a second place in the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post youth division with her frog,
39 American Legion, and "8111. 11
members of the units Past
Presidents Club will meet at the
Ewing Funeral Home between
MEET WEDNESDAY
6:30 and 7 p. m. Tuesday to A slate conclave of Ohio
conduct memorial services for Valley Commandery, Knights
tht.lale Mrs. ' Mayme Holmes. Templar, will lie held at 7:30 p:
m. Wectnesday at the Pomeroy
SEEK LICENSE
Clean Reginald Pratt, Jr., 26, Masonic Temple . All . Sir
New Haven, and Sharon K. Knights are askea to be present.
Election of officers will be held .
Carter; 20, Middleport.

HONORARY GRAND CROAKERS- The 21 persons who were initiated as "Honorary
Grand Croakers" of the Ohio Society for the Promotion of Bull Frogs, Inc. Saturday in
Pomeroy are shown as they boarded a fire truck to travel from a reception at the home of
Attorney Fred W. Croaker, charter grand croaker, in Syracuse to Pomeroy for the formal
initiation. Pt. Pleasant Mayor Jon M. Leighty, seated on the step of truck, was one of those
inducted. Other inductees were Earl F. Ingels, Jr., Pomeroy; Roger'Morgan, Middleport ;
Stanley Plattenburg and Bernard Krajocovic, Pomeroy; Don Stone, Chesterhill; Dr. Tom
Morgan and Judge Ronald Calhoun, Gallipolis; Bill. Hess and Fred Swearingen, Athens ;
Larry Ussner, Washington, D. C.; George W. Nace, Michigan ; Ed Bunstein, Chillicothe,
Edward M. Brown, Athens; Dr. T. Kawamura and Mashai Ryuzaki, both of Hiroshima,
Japan; Charles I. Adkins, Jr., Gallipolis; Charles Dautel, Cincinnati; Fred Johnson,
Columbus; Mary Lou Johnson, RDRAcine, and Eleanor Crow, Syracuse.

Four Are

Fine~,

Two Bonds Taken

Two defendants forfeited
bonds and ' four others were
fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Charles Legar Saturday
night.
Forfeiting bonds of $200 each
posted on charges of driving
while intoxicated .were William
Edwards, 24, Pomeroy, and
Kenneth Darst, Middleport. ·

Weather

The temperature in downtown
Fined were Joe Neal, no Pomeroy at ll a. m. Monday
address on court records, $10 was 75 degrees under cloudy
and costs, intoxication, Bernard skie~ .
Lavalley, no address on court
records, $10 and costs, on a
FRACTURES LEG
charge of lit~ring a highway, Robeo·t L. Forrest, 47, Rt. 3,
Ronald Hanson, 2R, Mldllleport, Pomerpy, fractured his left let:
$10 and cos ts, reckless
in a fall Saturday morning,at hill
operplion, and William Reeves,
Pomeo·oy , $;!0 and costs, in • home. He, is reported in good
condilion at the Holzr!' l.l~dic~l
tox icatii,n.
Cci1tPr.

I

I
'

.

.

.

�2 _ The Datly Sentinel, Mtddlep\)rt-Pomeroy, 0 , June 21,1971

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

EDITORIAL

1

Thorny Questions
In Times' Case

Tragedy Taking Shape

{(

I

r----~----------------------1

!Helen Help Us i
I

I

,

I

,I

By Helen Sattel

,. IT ISN'T EASY,

:. HAVING AN AFFAIR
;, Dear Helen:
Are there really as many extra-martial affairs gomg on as
people assume, from all the talk and stuff wntten about them ' I
_,mean, how do unfaithful mates manage tl? I can see where a
~ traveling salesman m1ght go m for hanky.panky, but at home•
~ Even 1f I have a very mnocent lunch w1th a business acquam~ lance, I'm bound to see a ''fnend" who 1s qutck wtth the raiSed
,.::eyebrows
'.;
I'm sure I'd know the minute my husband tried a little
.:: something on the stde - because hiS conung-ltome pattern would
.~ change - and most men can't take off from work dunng the
·~ day time.
Ukewise, 1f I fell for another man, where and when could we
:.
~: meet, what Wlth children to care for , my job, the neighbors and
-;: vartous people-watchers always getting m the way?
::
I'm not askmg for a gutde to double~IVfng , Helen. I just
•
~~ wonder whether trying to have an affair would be worth all the
• trouble, and tf 11 remams "secret," IS tt simply because the other
!; partJler knows but keeps eyes closed? - CURIOUS
••
:;: Dear Curtous :
•:;
The man who asks Ute pnce of a yacht can't afford one.
~;
The woman who wonders whether an affatr would be worth
:;' Ute trouble ISn't the type to have one. Infidelity IS for people who
~ etther enjoy hvmg dangerously or don't care whom they hurt; and
•" you're probably nght: Ute "secret" - seldom IS.
~•
I doubt that you and your husband need worry about the
~ other's unfatthfulness, lucky you! - H.
':
P.S... And then there are those who "see" what may not be
1' there, to w1t.
;: Dear Helen
::
We started renting to a couple and, as our houses are on the
;: same Jot, we see them often She IS about 55 and her husband IS
•: much older and retired
'•
:;
My husband couldn't do enough for them - always making
lJ reprurs etc. Satd he wanted to be "a good landlord."
~
I went away for a day and when I came back I saw my
!i husband commg from lhetr garage (where there IS also an old
"'' sofa) I swear he smelled like the cologne he got for ChriStmaS
:!; two years ago and never used because he dtdn't "want to put on
l""...t a1rs "
,,;
I asked him what he was domg over there and he satd he had
~ to fiXa cupboard door. He doesn't go over so much now, BUT ?.j
Ever smce then thts woman has worn dresses instead of the
;:: bagg)l old pants she used to hve m. And my husband keeps on
~~ havmg Jots of excuses when I try to get him interested in ME,
::; except maybe every week or so (I'm also 55, and better looking
~~ tllan she 1)
~·
My husband ts 73 but very young for hts age, with an eye for
the ladies. I'm home most of the lime and so ts her old man, but
where there's a wlil . Do you suppose there's a way• SUSPICIOUS MRS S
Dellr Mrs. S
'No way ' Or, at least, tt's very doubtiul Even if there was a
1
will,'youryoung man of 73mtghtfmd two women one too many.-

·"

il
Dear Helen
Can you or your readers tell me tf lliere Is a shoe exchange for
one-le~ged people' My mother lost her leg ftve years ago, and
ptefel'l! not 10 wear an arhfwtalltmb. So she has a whole closet of
bro~~nd new shoes, all for the left foot Is there an agency tllat
would take them and distnbute tllem to people of the same shoe
ljle who have lost thetr nght foot ?- DAUGHTER
fjerr Daullhter
' the .J~he~ of ~ uch an &lt;organlutlton but•] don 't know
anyh&lt;xly'1 - I'
'
'

'

Bridge Wizard of Ozzie
got credtt lor everythmg you
NORTH (D)
21
made m auctwn "
.KJ6
Jtm " He m u s t have
.AJ
grabbed dummy's ace of
.AJ964
hearts and led a low dta·
• 854
mond at trtck two "
EAST
WEST
Oswald "Exactly W e s t
• 7 52
won the queen, cashed a
• 7 54 3
.KQ1086
heart, and led a club Father
• QS
• K 108 2
won, Jed a diamond to
.KJ76
.Q10 2
dummy's ace, ruffed a dia·
SOUTH
mond high, p I a y e d two
.AQ1094 3
rounds
of trumps. stoppmg
.92
m dummy, ruffed another
• 73
d
1am on d htgh: entered
.A93
dummy
wtth the last htgh
Auct•on Br1dge
trump and dtscarded a club
West North East South
on the last dtamond "
I •
Pass
Jim " Perfect techmque
Pass
Pass
Pass
He could not afford to play
Openmg lead- • K
ace and another dtamond because he would be one entry
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby short Nor could he start by
takmg e v e n one round of
Jtm · " You wouldn't teach trumps smce a s e c o n d
me br1dge at home and I trump lead by West would
dtdn't learn the game unttl also leave htm one entry
I was a freshman at Notre short "
Dame You learned at home
1NEW5PAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
dtdn't you?"
Oswald " Y e s, although
my mother never approved
The b1ddmg has been
of brtdge Austm Tomes , West North East South
our fanuly doctor, and my
1•
Dble Redble
fa t h e r played whtst and Pass Pass
1 NT Dble
bndge together They taught
Pass
Pass Dble
me auctton brtdge wtth my 2 •
Pass
Pass
•
Aunt Mabel rung m as a
You, South, hold
fourth Here IS a hand that •K
132 •A 2 • K 93 "'QJG%
father played "

•8

1.

needs
Pnvate fund-raismg efforts,
tf undertaken quickly on a
masstve scale, may yet make
some contributwn. But the
scope of the a1d required and
the need for sw1ft action before
cholera gets out of hand md~eate this is a job which can be
done adequately only by
governments
Provl(ling money and supplies to help Ind1a care for the
pathetic horde of refugees
gathermg around Calcutta IS
only part of the job.
The Umted States and other
nahons also must bring
dtplomalic pressure on the
government of Pakistan (a
steady recipient of U. S.
economtc and milttary aid) to
permtt the United Nations or
tlle lnternaltonal Red Cross to
move mto war-torn East
Pakistan itself and mimster to
the mtlltons who've not yet fled
across the border.
Golden Hamsters
All golden hamsters are
dertved from a 1930 litter
captured m Aloppo, Syna
and ratsed at the Hebrew
Umverstty m Israel, accord
mg to E:ncyclopaedta Bntanmca

'SHOW BOAT' SAIUI ON
A SEA OF MEMORY
NEW YORK - NOSTALGIA - It's Wonderful! ... With Broadway and H'wood awash
with r~olored rearview nurrors as a montage of our yearnmgs for retroactive goodies,
bere's a slice of Manhattan nostalgia on three
levels of time : 1927, 1946 and 1911 :
Taking that nuddle date 1946, we tllen func·
tioned as a first-string (and youngest) N. Y.
drama crttic, and m purswt of that splendid
slavecy we trudged to the Ziegfeld Theater on the
night of Jan. 6 to appra1se the much touted
rev1val of "Show Boat" ... !twas one of the great
openmg nights, its p\)SJtlon as a revlVal notwtthstandlng.
Jerome Kern had written a brand.new song
for tlle '46 production, which was to have tis thensmash-lilt start dimmed slightly by the almost
sunultaneous death of Kern, who bad been
discovered lying in a Bdwy sidestreet,
pronounced dead, taken to the morgue where he
Jay a whole week before anyone noticed his
absence, an ignominious farewell for a genUeman who had provided so much fine melody to
Ute musical comedy stage.
That chilly January 6th fll'St night, however,
was a triumph in many ways .... "Show Boat"
had been a landmark musical, not just hecause
of tis glortous mus1c and lyriCs (by Oscar
Hammerstein II). Its libretto (by Hanunersteln
and Edna Ferber) told a realistic story that
mcluded nuscegenatwn, a toptc never whispered
m the tr1vtal halls of Bdwy musicals until then ....
The rest was warm and welcome success for all
hands.
Our marg1nal mvolvement in this 1946
nostalgia came in our revtew: We noted the new
Jerome Kern song "No One but Me," lovely,
later dropped from the show in 1ts first week
because tis mood and the scenery.,o;hift it was to
have camouflaged didn't quite fit; it also
literally was edited out over Jerome Kern's dead
body. But 11 was worthy of the melodic champ
and we explamed m our revtew that 11 was sung
!herem by Jah Clayton, whose role m the 1927
original bad been created by "the late Norma
TerrlS."
And so we received a most amUSing note,
unp!Shly reprovmg, !rom "the late Norma
Terris," who was qwte current and m residence
as she still IS on Central Park South. This lovely
lady, marned to a famous New York doctor, m
her pre-"Show Boat" days had been a major star
m the honorable practice of vaudeville, In which
she was smger, comedienne and witty im·
pressionlSt ... To shift that 1927 "Show Boat"
last-act scene, she had come "down In one,"
mearung before the closed curtains, to do her
own act; where in the 1946 revival, Jan Clayton
lacked Miss Tems' iml&gt;fesstonistic wallop, so
Kern and Hammerstem provtded the br1efly
beard "No One· but Me." Thus our transtent
exaggeration of Mtss Terris' death.
Comes herein our latest conununication
from the durably lively Norma Terris just a few
days ago after she had heard tis mention her
"Show Boat" triumphs on a radio program
dedicated to nostalgia.
"I have a book to write some day," says this
elegant lady of, says Who's Who in the Theatre,

'

"We became seasoned performers when
most girls and boys were In college, knocking
about the country, packing and unpackb)g,
hanging our cyclorama, rehearsing orchestras,
giving ltght cues, etc. Hence when Florenz
Ziegfeld chose me fot the beauUful part of
Magnolia m 'Show Boat,' I had attained a pretty
good knowledge of showmanship. lam happy to
say dear Oscar Hallllllersteln and Jerome Kern
became my friends.
"During rehearsals Jerry Kern wrote a
completely new song for me to sing when I came
back as 'Kim,' my own daughter at the end of the
show. Somehow it did not seem right so I went to
Mr. Kern and pointed oothe couldn'tJ)ollalbly top
his great songs earlier in !be show - 'Make
Believe,' 'Old Man River,' 'Wlly Dol Love You,'
'Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man.' He looked over the
top of his glasses and eountered, 'Have you a
better idea'' Yes, said I, 'let me do my lm·
personations- pretend I'm a yoWig Elsie Janis.'
I did them for him, and I also did Ted Lewis,
Ethel Barrymore, Bea Llllle, Garbo.
" 'Not bad,' Jerry said, 'and you could do them
to a chorus of "Why Do I Love You." 'I told blm
I could do them to a chorus of anything, and my
impersonations went into the show opening night
in Philadelphia, and I modestly report
historically : 'They stopped the show at 11
o'clock.' They stayed m the show and That Was
the Wayoflt(good tltleforNorma'sbook?).
"There are so many things about the
begmnings and the makings of 'Show Boat' what
itwas.Soyouseelmustwrite that book. Did you
know that 'Why Do I Love You' was written for
me, overnight, in Pittsburgh?
"I could go on and on and I shaD, in the book,
but enough for now. !live a busy active U!e. I
wmter in Florida and I am a trustee of the very
beauUful Godspeed O)lera In East Haddam,
Conn. I make occasional appearances there plan to repeat 'An Evening with Norma Terrla'
this coming Oct. 2, 1911. Last summer I had a
romp playing Mme. Ernestine Von Uebedlch in
'Uttle Mary Sunshine.' On May Ill I sang the
Star.Spangled Banner at the Fiesta Ball !Ql'
Polyclinic Hospital (a Bdwy. Institution) at the
Waldorf. So you see, I may have retired but not
completely."
Miss Terris was not a onuole star even If
"Show Boat" was her clincher Ill" International
stardom. She starred In many1'mllllcalt• and
movies, faded with planned grace&lt;from the show
biz scene rather than flopped Into lnltant Obacurity and keepa her elegant handll In her
treasured vocation, betimes quleUy performing
philanthropies (the Blind: the Norma Terris
Education and Nature Center benefiting the
Humane Society of the U. S., to which she has
do~ated valuable acreage etc.) .
"The late Norma Terrla," Indeed!

Vegetable Fats Safe in Diet

the polyunsaturated dtet developed cancer, and only 17
Dear Dr. Lamb-In your on the regular dtet developed
newspaper art 1c I e s you cancer
stress omttting ammal fats
But watt 1 A revtew of the
from our dtets Have you any data revealed that nine ol
comments on the enclosed
artiCle reportmg vegetable the men counted on the polyunsaturated diet who defats as a cause of cancer•
veloped cancer had NOT
Dear Reader - The da1ry stayed on the dtet Now you
pubhcation you forwarded can state the results another
reports mforma!Jon out of way. Of the men who stayed
context and mtsleads the
publlc There was a rash of on the polyunsaturated dtel
stmilar scare reports about only 22 developed cancer
the possible relatiOn of poly· while m the men on regular
unsaturated fats to cancer diets who d1d not stay on the
and I think they were not m polyunsaturated dtet, 26 men
the public's mterest
developed cancer You could
What do you do now?
as well say that unless
Jtm. "Smce the game was
A-Keep right on doubting
' Let's look at the facts . A JUst
vou
staved on a polyun.
auction he played m one
study was done on unly 846
saturatea
fat diet you would
spade He would have been
TODAY'S QUESTION
men, half on regular dtets
be
more
bkely to develop
m game today "
You do double and your part- and the rest on a diet con·
cancer
and
that statement
Oswald " He played to ner btds two hearts What do ta.mmg large amounts of
polyunsaturated fats It was would be more valid than the
make four , JUSt as any good you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
ftrst reported that 31 men on publication from the datry
player would do today You
assoclatlon you sent me. I
r------::H::-d-:-':",-Th:::::--:,1:-:l~Do=-"-:1;--=E::---::T:::---------, don't think this is so, but it
a 0 s ey
t very ime
®
shows you what you can do
~===:::;;
with statisllcs.
rr'S AN INCOME ThX
I KNCN\1111\lAT ~E
Keep your eye on the big
GIMMICk- " HE'LL CLAIM
COULP.PO FOR HIS
picture The Amertcan Heart
HE Sl&lt;VE /&gt;.WAY ~
OL.D "'l-IN&lt;" Plo.'V 1411
l-ISA AND WHISTLER'S
' ,t.I.UMNIOUH•"
AS s n.'s recommendations
and the recent recommendallons by the federally funded
Jntersociety Commission on
Heart Dlsease are based on
more than 20 years of studtes
:\-'--~,, 1 on a worldwtde basts involving populations of whole
nahons and changes noted
durmg enforced wartime
diets. The milhons of people
studied over many years provide the basts for most of
these recommendahons.
People With low levels of
heart disease have been eat·
lng diets rich In polyunsaturated fat for centuries with·
out any evidence of increased cancer. In fact the
LOOt&lt;.ING,.. GIFT
~BETWEEN
hiRhest rate of cancer of the
THE l-INES·· •
colo~ and rectum m the
world I• In the United States
and Canada by a wide maJI(ln, wh1le Africans on thP
IP!Irtan diet or natural !mill
components and wts or bulk
have a ver\' luw mctdt• nc~ ul

2"'

66 years, "but until! do I should like you to 'know
the way of it. '
"At a very early age it became apparent! had
a flau; for mimicry - I studied sli1ging and
dancmg and also at a very early age I el~
with the son of the famous dancer Gertrude
Hoffman, Max Hoffman Jr. We were both under
age but mstead of having our marriage annulled,
they, Max Sr. and Gertrude, put us out In a
marvelous vaudeville act. We were headlined
'Junior - Terris.'

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AM8
Links With' Cancer Not Valid

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

e s Take Two From Braves, 5-4, 2-0

'
BY JACK O'BRIAN

The New Yot k Ttmes mtends to ftght-all the way up
to the Supt eme Court tf necessary-for vmdtca!ton of tis
dectswn to publlsh excerpts from a secret Pentagon study
of the ongms and escalahon of the Vtetnam war whtch
somehow tell mto tis hands
The Ttmes was 1estramed by a government-requested
cou1 t 01der from further pubhcatwn of the material after
lht ee of ftve planned mstallments had been pnnted This
was the ftrst !tme m U S htstory that a newspaper had
been legally prevented from publishmg a story
Slow as Jlldtctal processes are , the constltutlonal tssue
of [I eedom of the pt ess m thts case wtll be resolved long
befm e 01ny number of other questwns ra1sed by or consequences ensumg from the decisiOn of the Ttmes that th1s
was not only "news that's Itt to prmt" but that, in tis own
edttonal words ·
"A fundamental 1esponstbtlity of the press m this
democracy ts to publish mformatwn that helps the people
of the Umted States to understand the processes of their
own government, espectally when those processes have
been clouded over m a vetl of public dJsstmulation and
even deceptwrr;"
It may be questiOned how an expose of dtsstmulatwn
and deceptwn (mcludmg self-decepllon) by President
Lyndon Johnson and htgh offtcJals and adviSors m hts
admmtstratwn can help anyone to "understand the processes" of the government- unless dtsSJmulation and de·
ception are normal accepted parts of those processes.
Unfortunately, a great many people are all too ready
to believe that they are, mcludmg some who would never
have believed tl pno1 to the Ttmes sertes.
But tl 1s a queshon whether " the truth shall make you
free" or whether m thts case the truth wlil further weaken
the already shaky fatth M many persons In the justice and
mot ahty of thts country's form of government and in the
baste trustworthmess of tls elected and appomted offtctals
It 1s also a questwn of whether or not publication mtght
better have been delayed unlll the Umted States was past
the pomt of bemg not all the way m and not all the way out
of VIetnam As yet, however, the revelabons appear to
have gtven no great new tmpetus to the congressional
shelter agamst the fastBy LOUIS CASSELS
dnve to set a ftrm date lor complete Withdrawal from
approachmg monsoon season
UP! Senior Editor
V1etnam
One of the greatest human would be a suf!ICJently
Ttmes Vtce Pres tdent James Reston, while admittlng
the vahdtty of one of the government's arguments that 11 tragedies m h1story 1s taking staggermg task.
But the problem doesn't
has a right to pnvate commumcations, both internally shape m East Pakistan and
end there. An epidemic of
and wtth foret gn governments, subordmate th1s nght to lnd1a
the htgher n ght of the people to know what goes on m thetr
Addthonal refugees are cholera has broken out
govemment He rejects the government's claim that "Ir- rep\)rted to be amvmg from among the ragged masses of
reparable m]ury" would be done to the defense mterests East Pakistan at a rate of humanity huddled outside
of the Umted States
100,000 a day.
Calcutta. Cholera kills-and
The study was ougmally ordered by former Defense
Such
an
influx
of
hungry
and
It's a ghastly way to die.
Secretary Robert McNamara and covers events from the
Although thts disaster has
Truman adm1mstrat10n up to mtd·1968 The government's homeless people would stram
been
shapmg up for months,
chtel lear ts that the verbabm prmtmg of radio messages the resources of a ncb countrv
and cables may enable other eountrtes to break the codes But these refugees are pourmg only recently has tis magmtude
used duung this pertod and hence perm1t them to tran s· mto a country that has a hard been understood in the West.
late other dtplomabc messages they may have mtercepted hme feedmg and housmg 1\s
Church and chantable
and filed
" You may rest ass ured that no one 1s readm ~ this senes own populahon And they are orgamzations m the Umted
any more closely than the Sovtet embassy, ' satd one congregatmg around a c1ty - States now are hegmmng to
Calcutta - where poverty and respond But the unmedtate
OffiCial
The affan has put the Ntxon admimstration m a strange dtsease already prevad on a allocatwns they are able to
posttwn
scale that boggles western make out of !herr alwaysIn the name of nallonal defense and security 1t fmds rmnds
sktmpy reserve funds are
Itself attempltng to suppress an instde story 1t did not
To keep the Pasktstam measured m thousands of
wnte abo ut a wa1 11 had no part m making
By madvertently shteidmg Lyndon B Johnson from full refugees frpm starvmg and dollars, whtch ts not even a drop
scrutmy of dectstons made dunng hts term, Rtchard M provtde them with rudtmentary m the bucket of the refugees'
Ntxon •unavotdably ass umes part of the responsibtiltysome .would say culpabthty- for those decisions
WIN AT BRIDGE

'

Voice along Broadway I

I

cancer
Most news reports of the
polyunsaturated d1et study
failed to mention that the
men on diets high in polyunsaturated fat had only 48
fatal heart attacks while the
other group had 70 People
have a habit of dymg of
something If you prevent
heart disease the second
most common cause of death
IS cancer, so what do you expect? As ll)ore people live
to older ages because they

~[RRl'S

did not have heart attacks
there will be more people
die of cancer unless we lick
that problem. But In the
meantime there are large
numbers of YOUNG American men needlessly dying of
heart disease because of
poor livmg patterns-including their iliet.
Industrial accidents conservatively cost employers
about fl billion per year, according t o Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

WORLD

'

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middie(l\)ft-Pomeroy, 0., June 21, 1971

GINCINNATI (UP!) - The word is that the Cincinnati Reds
passed along a hunk of cash to San Francisco when they Jured
George Foster from the Giants in e~change for infielder Frank
Duffy and •pitcher Vern Gelschert.
"I don't know anything about that,'' Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson says. "Butilwedid,l'dsayhe was worth tl."
It seems like a little bit more than a comcrdence that the Red
upr.lsing began after Foster donned a Cincinnati uniform less than
a month ago.
"Foster has delivered more than a few key hits recently,"
admitted Anderson SUnday after the Reds swept a doubleheader
from the Atlanta Braves before a turnout of 37,488.
Johnny Bench's no-out smgle in the nmth mnmg brought
home pinch-runner Jimmy Stewart to give the Reds a iH victory

m the first game. Don Gullett and Clay Carroll teamed up to blank
the Braves on flVe hits In the second game 2-4.
Foster, batting .344 since joining the Reds, homered in one of
the two runs in the second game.
More Squeakers
The victory gave the Reds II in their last 16 games and the iH
opener was !herr filth In a row by a one-run margin.
"That's the big difference now," said Anderson . "We're
winning the games we were losmg earlier in the season."
The Reds now have a 14-12 win-loss mark on one..-un
decisions. At one time this season, their record stood at 4-9.
"We're playing better ball, moving runners over and taking
extra bases," Anderson said as the Reds prepared to meet the
Philadelphia Phillies tonight In the start of a lour-game series.

Nicklaus-Trevino Tied
ARDMORE, Pa. (UP!) Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevmo
meet in a playoff for the U.S.
Open Golf Championship today
sounding like a mutual admiration society rather than rivals
for the most treasured prtze m
thetr sport
Nicklaus, who may be the
best golfer m the world, and
Trevino, who has been the
hottest, fmished !herr regulation
72 holes Sunday deadlocked at
280 over the short but tricky
East course at Menon Golf
Club -the second straight time

an Open at Merton had
produced a playoff.
In the mterview room later,
Trevino called Nicklaus "the
greatest golfer who ever held a
golf club in his hands "
. "He'll set records no one wUI
break," Trevino said.
Simons Drew Notice
But Ntcklaus, not to be
outdone, recalled a conversation he had wtth Trevmo when
they played an exhJbttlon match
m February.
"Lee, you don't realize how
good a player you are,"

Liquori Wins
3rd NCAA Title
SEATTLE (UP!) -Marty anxtous to make amends for his
Uquorlls right on schedule.
loss to Uquor1 last month but
The good-looking VIllanova he Is bavtng health problems
senior, now generally regarded and probably won't decide
as the world's greatest nuler, about the AAU championships
won his third consecutive until the last possible minute.
NCAA title Saturday and now
"If I'm healthy I'll run,''
shoots lor the year's AAU title Ryun satd. "I'll try a couple of
workouts away from the
as well.
That would he at Eugene, Willamette Valley (Ore.) and
Ore , this weekend when the see what happens. If I haven't
NCAA heroes struggle with the lost any of my speed I'll
post-grads and club stars lor probably run "
spots on the American team
Ryun suffers from May fever
which will compete against the and the Wlllamette Valley is no
Russians and a world team, place to he at this time of the
and for berths on the Pan year for anyone with the
, ;.merl~ O.ID8~J!Quad. , , .. .probJel)l, That's why Ryun 1s
''Right along I've had it In procrastinating until he sees
min~ to win the NCAA title and how he feels. He broke down
the AAU title, too, ti I can,' two weeks ago while competing
Uquori said alter taking the In a meet at Eugene and wound
~ollegtate mile record to 3:57.6. up lOth.
"Then I'd like to compete Uquori's mile performance
against the Russians, go to a was one of eight meet records
meet' in Milan, Italy, and then set at the NCAA championon to Colombia for a the Pan- ships. The others were m the
Am Games"
three mile (Steve Prefontame
Uquori has won stx IC4A of Oregon in 13-20.1), six mile
mile titles and the NCAA (Garry Bjorklund of Minnesota
outdoor mile title three times 1n in 27:43.1) , Decthlon (Ray Hupp
addition to a flock of other of Ohio State with 7,456 pomts),
championships and a btg Hammer (Jacques Accambray
v1ctory over world record of Kent State m 227-10),
holder Jim Ryun In the Steeplechase (Sid Sink of
· 8 30 9) th
Freedom Games last month.
Bowli ng Green m : · • e
Uquori says there is nothmg long jump (Reynaldo Brown of
he would like more than to Cal Poly SLO with 7-3), and the
mee t R"""
,_, again and he may trlple jump (Denny Rogers of
get his wish this week. Ryun is UCLA 53-7'h).
_.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _...,

forest fires destroy
beauty.
It takes nearly a century to grow the
green beauty of a tree
And only a ca reless second w1th a match
to leave only black ugl1ness
Only you can prevent forest f1res

Nicklaus said "You can htt
every shot out of the bag."
The 18-hole battle for the
$30,000 first pnze, generally
ftgured to be worth hundreds of
thousands of dollars m endorsements and side benefits, was
scheduled for 1 45 p.m. EDT.
Until Ntcklaus and Trevmo
fmuhed m a tie, however, most
of the attention focused on Jim
Simons, a 21-year-old amateur
from Butler, Pa., who was
unknown until he reached the
f1nals of the British Amateur
Champwnshtp earlier thts
month
Simons Finally Lost
Stmons, who shot m front of
the pack wtth a 65 m
Saturday's third round, kept the
lead through nme holes SUnday
before wtltlng in the IJO.degreeplus heat and the pressure of
the Open.
"It built up so much It tired
me out," Stmons said. "! felt
pretty weak most of the day. I
was restless and pretty nervous."
The last time the Open was
held at Merton, m 1950, Bethn
Hogan hit a one-tron shot to e
18th green which smce has been
immortahzed m golf history,
two-putted for a par and
fmished in a tie wtth George
FaziO and Uoyd Mangrum.
Hogan then won the playoff,
just a litUe more than a year
after his near-fatal auto acCident
' '1
' '" "

Of course, May's booming bat also had a Jot to do w1th the
recent surge
May's 17th homer of the season, coming wtth a runner on base
m the third mning of the first game, was a tremendous wallop to..,
the seats m left center.
"I would have hked to have seen that same ball hlt out In a
pasture where yoo could have seen where 11 landed i11t had kept
gomg," said Anderson.
Wayne Sunpson, l)lalting hu first start since hiS recall from
Indianap\)lls last Monday, was breezmg along w1th a 3-0 two · hit
shutout when the Braves erupted in the sixth innmg, takmg a 4-3
lead on Earl Williams' grand.,o;iam home run.
"Simpson of Old"
Doubles by Tolllllly Helms and pmch-llttter Berme Carbo !ted

the score mthe eighth and set the stage for Bench's game winning
hit m the nintll.
Anderson was pleased with Simpson's performance even
though the btgrtghthander did notgotbe route.
"He IS the Simpson of old,'' said the manager. "In fact, I
thought be mtght even have thrown harder than last year "
Gullett, while not throwmg his best stuff, went 7 1-3 Innings
before givmg way to Carroll after smgles by Ralph Garr and
Hank Aaron m the eighth mmng of the second game.
Carroll , who proceeded to strtke out the next two batters and
p1tch a httless runth, preserved the shutout and p1cked up hu
seventh save tl11s season
Lowell Palmer ( ~)was scheduled to p1tch for the Phillies
tomght agamst the Reds' Jun McGlothlin (3-4 )

Stargell Paces Bucs
In Doubleheader Sweep

By Un1ted Press International
Nahonal League

East

W L, Pel

Amer1can League
East

W L Pet. GB

GB Balt tmore 42 22
Pittsburgh
43 25 632 Detroi!
37 29
New Vorl&lt;
37 26 587 3'h Boston
35 29
St LouiS
37 32 536 6°1&gt; Cleveland 30 34
34 33 507 B'h New York 30 36
Chicago
Montreal
26 35 .426 13'12 Washington
Phdadelphla 26 39 400 15 012
23 39
West
West
W L. Pet GB
W L
San FranCisco 46 25 648
Oak land
44 22
Los Angeles 37 30 552 7
Kansas City
Houston
32 35 478 12
35 27

645

561

5

547 6
469 11
455 12

yet h1t •n Three Rtvers and Stone pitched a three-httter
Stadtum Hts second game m the second game
371 17
homer was a grand slam in the Johnny Bench smgled home
seventh on the lrrst ptlch by Jmuny Stewart m the mnth
Pet. GS
667
Mtke Marshall that snapped a inning to gtve Cmcmnatt the
vtctory
over
Atlanta
m
the
f1rsl
1-1 tie
565 7
Montreal manager Gene game and Don Gullett and Clay C1nc mnatl
31 37 456 13 1h Mmnesota 34
501 10112
33
31 40 431 '15
Ca l1forn 1a 31 38 449 14lh
fa~rgell collected three hits Mauch satd, "1 don't know 1f Carroll teamed up on a ftve-htt At lanta
26 46 333 22
Milwaukee
including two homers -one a he's the strongest player In the shutout m the second game San D1ego
Sunday's
Results
23 38 377 18'/2
grand slam -Sunday to pace league but I do know he has the Gullett, 6-2, went 7 1-3 mmngs New York 7 Philadelphia 6 Ch1cago 23 38 317 181h
Sunday's Results
t 1stl
the Pittsdurgh Pirates to a 7-1 fastest hat around. That's what and Carroll fmtshed up
Phdadelphla
9
New
York
7
Chicago
18 Mmnesota 8
and 7-3 doubleheader sweep makes hun such a btg threat.''
I
2nd)
Oakland
11 Milwaukee 4 (lstl
New York and Phtladelphla P1ttsburgh 7 Montreat 1 (lstl
over the Montreal Expos and Stargell said, "I've had two
Milwaukee 7Oakland 4 (2nd)
increase their National League other years ( 1964 and 1965) had a see-saw doubleheader Pittsburgh 1 Montreal 3 t2ndl Cleveland 7 Detroit 6 (lstl
Cleveland 7 Detroit 6 (2nd
In the 51 Louis 5 Chicago 4
East lead to 3'h games.
when I've had great starts like The Mets blew a 4-0h lead
game suspended, 1 Inn, power
d
•
,
b
t
Houston
9
Los
Angeles
1
The two homers and five this but I had to have knee ftrs t game, feII be m ,....,, u Clnc1nna11 5 Atlanta 4 (1 st)
failure
RB!s boosted Stargell's maJor operaltons both times. I just won 11 when Duffy Dyer's two- Cmcmnat• 2 Atlanta o (2ndl
Baltimore 10 New York 4
league leading totals to 24 hope my legs hold out this run smgle climaxed a three-run San Franc iSco 6 San Diego 2 Boston 4 Washington 3
Kansas City 5 California I (1stl
homers and 65 RB!s. But time."
mnth lnmng. The Mets blew a ~~~I Franmco 2 San Diego o Call1qrnla a Kan City 4 l2ndl
despite the records, Stargell is In other games, St. Louis 5-l lead m the second game as 12nd 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
th1s
ttme
the
Phlis
tied
it
and
Oakland
I Blue 14·21 at
third m tlle National League downed Chicago 5-I, Houston
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Minnesota
(Corbin
night
All.Star outfield balloting with edged Los Angeles 9·7, San won 1t m the lith on Deron New York IKoosman 3 4) at Ca lifornia (May4 3).3·51
at
143,121 votes. He trails two of Franctscoswept a doubleheader Johnson's grand slam off Ron Pittsburgh (E llis 10 31. night
Milwaukee (Pattln6 71. night
Phdadelph1a (Palmer 0 01 at
Kansas C1ty IRooker 0 5) at
the fans' favontes -Willie from San Diego 6-2 and 2-0, Taylor.
Cmcmnat1
(McGlothlin
3
41.
Chicago
tJohn 3 8) , night
Mays (284,800) and Hank Aaron New York heat Phtladelphia 7~
night
Baltimore I Dobson 4 4) at
(28l,S44).
Joe Torre, taking over the 51 Louts IG1bson 4 5) at Los Washlngtu" IMcLa1n 4 • 12),
but lost the second game 9-7 in
Stargell stJU seems to have a 11 mmngs and Cmcmnalt swept Naltonal League battmg lead Angeles (0 ' Brten I 1), night
night
Montrea
i
(StrohmayerO
land
Cleveland (McDQwelt 7 6) at
starting berth all but natled a doubleheader from Atlanta, 5- w1th a .358 average, collected
Reed 1 1) at Atlanta I Nash 5 4) Boston I Lonborg 2·31, night
down smce he has a healthy 4 and 2-0.
four straight htls to pace St and Barber 0 01. 2, twl night
tOnty Games Scheduled)
lead over fourth place Lou In the American League, Louts past Chicago It was only tOnly games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Brock, who has 118,194 votes. Boston edged Washington 4-3, St. Louts' second wm m the last
Tuesday's
Games
Oakland
at Minnesota tnlght)
But Stargell, who hasn't ap- Baltimore routed New York 10- 13 games.
New York at Pittsburgh (night) California at Milwaukee (night
peared m an AJi..Star game 4, Cleveland edged Detrmt 7~
Montreal at Atlanta (night)
Kansas City at Chicago (night)
smce 1966, 1s taking nothmg for m 11 mnmgs and the second Doug Rader collected four Philadelphia at Cincinnati night Baltimore at Wash 2 llwmlghtl
St Louis at Los Angeles (night) Detroit at New York (2)
granted
game was suspended by a hits to drive in three runs as Chicago at San Francisco night Cleveland at Boston lnlghtl
"I was leading the league m power failure with Cleveland Houston downed Los Angeles.
• Satur~oy's Rosul1s
S.turdoy'• RHulls
1969 (he was actually third at leadmg 7~ m the eighth, T)le ,t\stros scored five unNew
York
6 Philo' 5 115 Inns) California 7 Kan Cltv 4
.349 on July 4, 1969 but wasn't Kansas Ctty beat California 5-1 earned runs in the third when Montreat 10 Pittsburgh 1
Minnesota 2 Chicago 1 t 10 Inn~)
leading In homers or RB!s) and but lost the second game 8-1, Bobby Valentine and Btll C~lcago 1 St Louis 1
Oakland 2 Milwaukee o
1 didn't even make tl!e All.Star Oakland routed Milwaukee 11-1 Buckner comnutted costly er- San FranCISco 7 San Diego 4
Detroit 5 Cleveland 3
Atlanta
9
Cincinnati
3
New
York 6 Baltimore 4 (ll tnn)
team, let alone start. So 1 have but lost the second game 7-1, rors.
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0.
Washington 2 Boston 0
no reason to believe I will be and Chicago outslugged Minnethere this year.'' But Stargell, sota 18-3
who's batting .309, seems to be Wlihe McCovey and Steve
a gond bet to start in DetrOit on Stone were the key players m
July 13 .
men to grace the center court
San Francisco's sweep over San
today before an audience of
Hts ftrst homer Sunday was a D1ego. McCovey capped a five0I
I
1 430-foot shot mto the upper run
15,000 fans He goes against
e1ghth mnmg wtth a threedeck that was the longest shot run homer m the ftrst game
young Spaniard Manuel OrBy Untied Press tnternatoonal
antes .
WIMBLEDON, England does not need a tie-breaker. I
Leadtng Batters
Nat1ona I Leaaue
(UP!) - A new era begms at do not like it It Is not tenms.
G. AB R H. Pet
Wimbledon today.
The conventtonal scoring stlllts
Torre. St I
69 268 42 96 358
The world's oldest and most best," he says.
DaviS. LA
66 263 43 94 357
Pptn, Chi
50 183 25 64 350
conservative tennis tournament,
Gonzales , one of the best
Bckrt, Chi
66 263 42 90 342
the All-England Tennis Cham- players never to win Wlmble·
Garr, Atl
68 283 47 95 336
ptonshtps, begins its 85th don, IS remembered for his 112Brock. St L 66 270 53 90 333
Staub,
Mont 62
73 .322
326
renewal by mtroducmg the tie- game marathon in the first
May, Cln
55 224
199 39
30 64
round against Charhe Pasarell
Alou, Hou
52 187 14 60 .321
By JOE CARNICELLI
Dave McNally pitChed seven breaker for the first time.
Alou, St L
65 265 28 84 m
UP! Sp\lrts Writer
Innings to record his 11th Wimbledon, to date, has of Santurce, Puerto Rico, In
American League
The Chicago White sox didn't vtctory agatnst four losses.
reststed all attempts at spon- 1969.
G.
AB
R.
H. Pet
Pin
h
h'tte
And
K
•
Gonzales will be one of etght
Ollva,Minn 59 236 46 90 381 act like "The Hitless Wonders"
c•1 r
Y osco s sorship, but the club was forced
Murcer."NY 65 234 38 81 346 Sunday.
three-run homer In the seventh to bow to the march of time by
Yo~r
Ro1'as 'sal
KC
61 229 34 73 319
Bfrd,
The Wh1te sox, notortous m 1nmng of the second game introducmg the lie-breaker on
50 193 51 61 316
The Daily Sentinel
Kallne,Det 57 183 36 57 311 recent years for thetr lack of capped a ftve-run rally that popular demand by the circuli
DEVOTED TO THE
Rchrdt, Ch1 so 188 20 58 309 power, erupted for 18 rUIIS gave Milwaukee tis vtctory over stars.
INTEREST DF
FRbnsn, Batt 50 176 33 54 307 Sunday to rout the Minnesota Oakland. Homers by Mtke
Still, Wimbledon remains
MEIGS
MASON AREA
BRbnsn, Bat 62 242 33 74 306
ks D
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Ohs, KC
59 236 40 12 305 Twtns 18-8.
Epstein, Reggte Joe on, ave different, The tie-breaker wtll
Euc Ed
Tovar,Min
65 269 41 81 301
Walt Wilhams, who went 4- Duncan and Sal Bando helped be Introduced at tl.all, as
ROBERT HOE~LICH,
Clly Editor
Hwrd, Wash 60 229 22 69 301 for-li crashed a three..-un the Athletics wm the opener, opposed to tl.all at other
Published dedy except
Home Runs
'
•
tournaments; it wUJ be over 12 Sa turday by The Ohio Valley
Nahonat League. stargell, homer to htghlight a nine-run !herr fifth victory m a row.
points
with a change of ends Publ•sh1ng Company , 111
Pitt 24 , Aaron, All 19 , Bench stxth mrung after Minnesota Tom Murphy's two-run double
St , Pomeroy , Oh•O ,
and May. C1n 17, Bonds, SF 16 had taken a 4-0 lead and Rick in the fourth and Jim Spencer's after six, and will not operate Court
45169 Business Office Phone
Amencan
League:Det Olivo,
99 2 2156 , Editor1al Phone 992
Mlnn
16, Cash,
and Reichardt,s grand s1am homer two-run sing1e an In nj ng later in the filth and fmal set.
Pancho Gonzales, the 4~year­ 2157
Jackson, Oak 15, Horton, Det capped a six-run seventh. The helped the Angels beat Kansas
Seco nd class postage peud at
13, Smith, Bos. Melton, Khl and White Sox added a smgle run m Qty In the second-game. Bruce old veteran from Los Angeles, Pomero y , Oh10
a horrible co m·
Nat1onal adverf1s1ng
Murder, Runs
NY 12Batted In
d
tw
in
th
Dal
Ca
to
'"hed
f
h'tter
btnat1on of words . Let
who 1s now resident pro at a repre sentallve BotllneiH
the eighth an
o more
e
n n p1..a tve- 1
Gallagher,
Inc
,
12
East
42nd
Las
Vegas
club,
figures
Wunus take away those
Nattonal League: Stargell, ninth to humillate the Twms
before needmg rehef In the
St New York C1tv , New Yol"k
P1tl 65 , Aaron. Att 54, Santo.
Elsewhere m the American ninth and had a two-run single bledon bungled by introducmg
first five leiters
Subscription rates
De
vered
by
carrier
where
Insure -- be sure!
~~t' ~~·/~~~~~~~~\~' Lc~fda, League, Baltimore routed New as the Royals won the opener to the tie-breaker.
available 50 cents per week ,
Amertcan League. Killebrew, York 10-4, Milwaukee beat keep pace with front.runnlng One would think the one- By Motor Route where earner
Consult Us &amp;otr
time stormy personality of serv1ce not available One
Mlnn 51 , White, NY 44 , Oakland 7-1, after Josmg· the Oakland m the AL West.
month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh10
Petrocelli, Bosand Olivo, Mlnn opener 11-4 Kansas Ctty beat JohnKennedy'stwo-outsmgle the tour would welcome the lie- and W Va , One year $14 00
43
' before bowmg .-.
" ln the nt' nth hfted Boston past breaker now that he 1s S1x months $l.25 Three
40 , Horton, Det and Bondo, Oak Calilorma 5-l
months $A 50 Suj)scr1pt1on
Pitching
1n the second game, Boston the Senators. Washmgton bwlt advancing in years. Not so.
Phone 192·2966
pr ice m cludes Sunday Times
114
Court
St.
Sentmel
"If
a
man
is
physically
lit
he
Nallonol League: Dierker, edged Washington 4-3 and a 3-0 lead before the Red Sox
Hou, ElliS, Pitt and Carlton, Kl
th
th
L 10·3, Jenkins, Chi 10·6• Cleveland shaded Detroit 7-ll tied the game ln e seven on
Marlchat, SF 9-4; Stoneman, The second game of the Billy Conlgharo's two-run douMont 9 5
Cleveland-Detroit doubleheader ble and Phil Gagliano's two-&lt;Jut
Amerlun League: Blue, Oak,
1d
14·2 ; C~ellor,At l 11 . 1 , McNally, was suspended after seven pmchsmge .
Batt IH, Hunter, Oak 10·4, mnings because of a power
Pete Broberg, the No. 1
Perry, Mlnn 10 5, Lollch, Det failure with the Indians lead- choice in last week's free agent
10·6
ing 7~
draft, made his major league
In Nallonal League play, debut for the Senators, allowing
Ptttaburgh swept Montreal 7·1 ou:, three hits and striking out
and 7,1, St. Louis edged seven before faltering in the
Chicago 5-I, San Francisco seventh.
swept San Diego 6-2 and 2-0, • Chuck Hmton's lith inning
m -20?4
Houston trimmed Los Angeles homer hfted Cleveland over
606 E. Main
Pomeroy 9-7, New York beat Phlladel- Detroit in the ftrst game of
phaa 7~ liefore bowing 9-7 in an their scheduled doubleheader
n-ulning second game and Roy ' Foster bad a pa1r of
Clncmnati defeated Atlanta homers and drove m four runs
twice, 5-I and 2-0.
for the Indians.
Mark Belanger bad a tw&lt;rrun • The second game was sussingle and Dave Johnson stole pellded when a bank of ltghts
home to pjghhght a five-run behind home plate went out.
And
first inning In the Orioles' rout Cleveland 's Chrts Chambhss
of New York. The Yankees cut singled In the go-ahead run m
ALSO OTHER
the lead to 5-I m the seventll ' the seventh before Detrott
992-2171 .
before Baltimore put the game manager Billy Martin pomted·
C L CO LOANS OF ,
Pomeroy, 0.
125 E. Matn
Stop in and see our out of reach on Don Buford's out that the lights were out.
$
AND MORE
run-producmg double and a tw&lt;r The game will be completed on
floor display.
I '
run smgle by Brooks Robinson Sept 28
By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
Willie Stargell may be the
major league's No. 1 slugger
but he's still only No. 3 In the
hearts of the nation's haseball

New Era Begins Today

At Wimbledon, England

iOiii:iiiiii:::;====J

Hitless Wonders
Slam Twins, 18-8

INSURED

..
v t1'
"" '

Davis-Warner Ins.

FAST ONE-DAY SERVICE

on loans up to

POMEROY
HOME &amp;AUTO

OFFICE
SUPPLIES·

"My feeling is -thor it mor&amp; men would siKirtl In some ol
the houstholtl respon•ibilities, like this, there wouldn't
be such o hossle about woro ~ .,·! libl"

Reduce monthly payments with ...

FURNITURt

l'u~hshe~ as a public
111~

serv1ce m .cooperalton 'lfilh lhe Ad'IC!\ISIOil Couocil the State
U S fflre st Serv1r.es 11nd The lnterna1u1nal Newspaper AdvertiSing F,xecuhves
f

I

5QQQ

�2 _ The Datly Sentinel, Mtddlep\)rt-Pomeroy, 0 , June 21,1971

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

EDITORIAL

1

Thorny Questions
In Times' Case

Tragedy Taking Shape

{(

I

r----~----------------------1

!Helen Help Us i
I

I

,

I

,I

By Helen Sattel

,. IT ISN'T EASY,

:. HAVING AN AFFAIR
;, Dear Helen:
Are there really as many extra-martial affairs gomg on as
people assume, from all the talk and stuff wntten about them ' I
_,mean, how do unfaithful mates manage tl? I can see where a
~ traveling salesman m1ght go m for hanky.panky, but at home•
~ Even 1f I have a very mnocent lunch w1th a business acquam~ lance, I'm bound to see a ''fnend" who 1s qutck wtth the raiSed
,.::eyebrows
'.;
I'm sure I'd know the minute my husband tried a little
.:: something on the stde - because hiS conung-ltome pattern would
.~ change - and most men can't take off from work dunng the
·~ day time.
Ukewise, 1f I fell for another man, where and when could we
:.
~: meet, what Wlth children to care for , my job, the neighbors and
-;: vartous people-watchers always getting m the way?
::
I'm not askmg for a gutde to double~IVfng , Helen. I just
•
~~ wonder whether trying to have an affair would be worth all the
• trouble, and tf 11 remams "secret," IS tt simply because the other
!; partJler knows but keeps eyes closed? - CURIOUS
••
:;: Dear Curtous :
•:;
The man who asks Ute pnce of a yacht can't afford one.
~;
The woman who wonders whether an affatr would be worth
:;' Ute trouble ISn't the type to have one. Infidelity IS for people who
~ etther enjoy hvmg dangerously or don't care whom they hurt; and
•" you're probably nght: Ute "secret" - seldom IS.
~•
I doubt that you and your husband need worry about the
~ other's unfatthfulness, lucky you! - H.
':
P.S... And then there are those who "see" what may not be
1' there, to w1t.
;: Dear Helen
::
We started renting to a couple and, as our houses are on the
;: same Jot, we see them often She IS about 55 and her husband IS
•: much older and retired
'•
:;
My husband couldn't do enough for them - always making
lJ reprurs etc. Satd he wanted to be "a good landlord."
~
I went away for a day and when I came back I saw my
!i husband commg from lhetr garage (where there IS also an old
"'' sofa) I swear he smelled like the cologne he got for ChriStmaS
:!; two years ago and never used because he dtdn't "want to put on
l""...t a1rs "
,,;
I asked him what he was domg over there and he satd he had
~ to fiXa cupboard door. He doesn't go over so much now, BUT ?.j
Ever smce then thts woman has worn dresses instead of the
;:: bagg)l old pants she used to hve m. And my husband keeps on
~~ havmg Jots of excuses when I try to get him interested in ME,
::; except maybe every week or so (I'm also 55, and better looking
~~ tllan she 1)
~·
My husband ts 73 but very young for hts age, with an eye for
the ladies. I'm home most of the lime and so ts her old man, but
where there's a wlil . Do you suppose there's a way• SUSPICIOUS MRS S
Dellr Mrs. S
'No way ' Or, at least, tt's very doubtiul Even if there was a
1
will,'youryoung man of 73mtghtfmd two women one too many.-

·"

il
Dear Helen
Can you or your readers tell me tf lliere Is a shoe exchange for
one-le~ged people' My mother lost her leg ftve years ago, and
ptefel'l! not 10 wear an arhfwtalltmb. So she has a whole closet of
bro~~nd new shoes, all for the left foot Is there an agency tllat
would take them and distnbute tllem to people of the same shoe
ljle who have lost thetr nght foot ?- DAUGHTER
fjerr Daullhter
' the .J~he~ of ~ uch an &lt;organlutlton but•] don 't know
anyh&lt;xly'1 - I'
'
'

'

Bridge Wizard of Ozzie
got credtt lor everythmg you
NORTH (D)
21
made m auctwn "
.KJ6
Jtm " He m u s t have
.AJ
grabbed dummy's ace of
.AJ964
hearts and led a low dta·
• 854
mond at trtck two "
EAST
WEST
Oswald "Exactly W e s t
• 7 52
won the queen, cashed a
• 7 54 3
.KQ1086
heart, and led a club Father
• QS
• K 108 2
won, Jed a diamond to
.KJ76
.Q10 2
dummy's ace, ruffed a dia·
SOUTH
mond high, p I a y e d two
.AQ1094 3
rounds
of trumps. stoppmg
.92
m dummy, ruffed another
• 73
d
1am on d htgh: entered
.A93
dummy
wtth the last htgh
Auct•on Br1dge
trump and dtscarded a club
West North East South
on the last dtamond "
I •
Pass
Jim " Perfect techmque
Pass
Pass
Pass
He could not afford to play
Openmg lead- • K
ace and another dtamond because he would be one entry
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby short Nor could he start by
takmg e v e n one round of
Jtm · " You wouldn't teach trumps smce a s e c o n d
me br1dge at home and I trump lead by West would
dtdn't learn the game unttl also leave htm one entry
I was a freshman at Notre short "
Dame You learned at home
1NEW5PAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
dtdn't you?"
Oswald " Y e s, although
my mother never approved
The b1ddmg has been
of brtdge Austm Tomes , West North East South
our fanuly doctor, and my
1•
Dble Redble
fa t h e r played whtst and Pass Pass
1 NT Dble
bndge together They taught
Pass
Pass Dble
me auctton brtdge wtth my 2 •
Pass
Pass
•
Aunt Mabel rung m as a
You, South, hold
fourth Here IS a hand that •K
132 •A 2 • K 93 "'QJG%
father played "

•8

1.

needs
Pnvate fund-raismg efforts,
tf undertaken quickly on a
masstve scale, may yet make
some contributwn. But the
scope of the a1d required and
the need for sw1ft action before
cholera gets out of hand md~eate this is a job which can be
done adequately only by
governments
Provl(ling money and supplies to help Ind1a care for the
pathetic horde of refugees
gathermg around Calcutta IS
only part of the job.
The Umted States and other
nahons also must bring
dtplomalic pressure on the
government of Pakistan (a
steady recipient of U. S.
economtc and milttary aid) to
permtt the United Nations or
tlle lnternaltonal Red Cross to
move mto war-torn East
Pakistan itself and mimster to
the mtlltons who've not yet fled
across the border.
Golden Hamsters
All golden hamsters are
dertved from a 1930 litter
captured m Aloppo, Syna
and ratsed at the Hebrew
Umverstty m Israel, accord
mg to E:ncyclopaedta Bntanmca

'SHOW BOAT' SAIUI ON
A SEA OF MEMORY
NEW YORK - NOSTALGIA - It's Wonderful! ... With Broadway and H'wood awash
with r~olored rearview nurrors as a montage of our yearnmgs for retroactive goodies,
bere's a slice of Manhattan nostalgia on three
levels of time : 1927, 1946 and 1911 :
Taking that nuddle date 1946, we tllen func·
tioned as a first-string (and youngest) N. Y.
drama crttic, and m purswt of that splendid
slavecy we trudged to the Ziegfeld Theater on the
night of Jan. 6 to appra1se the much touted
rev1val of "Show Boat" ... !twas one of the great
openmg nights, its p\)SJtlon as a revlVal notwtthstandlng.
Jerome Kern had written a brand.new song
for tlle '46 production, which was to have tis thensmash-lilt start dimmed slightly by the almost
sunultaneous death of Kern, who bad been
discovered lying in a Bdwy sidestreet,
pronounced dead, taken to the morgue where he
Jay a whole week before anyone noticed his
absence, an ignominious farewell for a genUeman who had provided so much fine melody to
Ute musical comedy stage.
That chilly January 6th fll'St night, however,
was a triumph in many ways .... "Show Boat"
had been a landmark musical, not just hecause
of tis glortous mus1c and lyriCs (by Oscar
Hammerstein II). Its libretto (by Hanunersteln
and Edna Ferber) told a realistic story that
mcluded nuscegenatwn, a toptc never whispered
m the tr1vtal halls of Bdwy musicals until then ....
The rest was warm and welcome success for all
hands.
Our marg1nal mvolvement in this 1946
nostalgia came in our revtew: We noted the new
Jerome Kern song "No One but Me," lovely,
later dropped from the show in 1ts first week
because tis mood and the scenery.,o;hift it was to
have camouflaged didn't quite fit; it also
literally was edited out over Jerome Kern's dead
body. But 11 was worthy of the melodic champ
and we explamed m our revtew that 11 was sung
!herem by Jah Clayton, whose role m the 1927
original bad been created by "the late Norma
TerrlS."
And so we received a most amUSing note,
unp!Shly reprovmg, !rom "the late Norma
Terris," who was qwte current and m residence
as she still IS on Central Park South. This lovely
lady, marned to a famous New York doctor, m
her pre-"Show Boat" days had been a major star
m the honorable practice of vaudeville, In which
she was smger, comedienne and witty im·
pressionlSt ... To shift that 1927 "Show Boat"
last-act scene, she had come "down In one,"
mearung before the closed curtains, to do her
own act; where in the 1946 revival, Jan Clayton
lacked Miss Tems' iml&gt;fesstonistic wallop, so
Kern and Hammerstem provtded the br1efly
beard "No One· but Me." Thus our transtent
exaggeration of Mtss Terris' death.
Comes herein our latest conununication
from the durably lively Norma Terris just a few
days ago after she had heard tis mention her
"Show Boat" triumphs on a radio program
dedicated to nostalgia.
"I have a book to write some day," says this
elegant lady of, says Who's Who in the Theatre,

'

"We became seasoned performers when
most girls and boys were In college, knocking
about the country, packing and unpackb)g,
hanging our cyclorama, rehearsing orchestras,
giving ltght cues, etc. Hence when Florenz
Ziegfeld chose me fot the beauUful part of
Magnolia m 'Show Boat,' I had attained a pretty
good knowledge of showmanship. lam happy to
say dear Oscar Hallllllersteln and Jerome Kern
became my friends.
"During rehearsals Jerry Kern wrote a
completely new song for me to sing when I came
back as 'Kim,' my own daughter at the end of the
show. Somehow it did not seem right so I went to
Mr. Kern and pointed oothe couldn'tJ)ollalbly top
his great songs earlier in !be show - 'Make
Believe,' 'Old Man River,' 'Wlly Dol Love You,'
'Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man.' He looked over the
top of his glasses and eountered, 'Have you a
better idea'' Yes, said I, 'let me do my lm·
personations- pretend I'm a yoWig Elsie Janis.'
I did them for him, and I also did Ted Lewis,
Ethel Barrymore, Bea Llllle, Garbo.
" 'Not bad,' Jerry said, 'and you could do them
to a chorus of "Why Do I Love You." 'I told blm
I could do them to a chorus of anything, and my
impersonations went into the show opening night
in Philadelphia, and I modestly report
historically : 'They stopped the show at 11
o'clock.' They stayed m the show and That Was
the Wayoflt(good tltleforNorma'sbook?).
"There are so many things about the
begmnings and the makings of 'Show Boat' what
itwas.Soyouseelmustwrite that book. Did you
know that 'Why Do I Love You' was written for
me, overnight, in Pittsburgh?
"I could go on and on and I shaD, in the book,
but enough for now. !live a busy active U!e. I
wmter in Florida and I am a trustee of the very
beauUful Godspeed O)lera In East Haddam,
Conn. I make occasional appearances there plan to repeat 'An Evening with Norma Terrla'
this coming Oct. 2, 1911. Last summer I had a
romp playing Mme. Ernestine Von Uebedlch in
'Uttle Mary Sunshine.' On May Ill I sang the
Star.Spangled Banner at the Fiesta Ball !Ql'
Polyclinic Hospital (a Bdwy. Institution) at the
Waldorf. So you see, I may have retired but not
completely."
Miss Terris was not a onuole star even If
"Show Boat" was her clincher Ill" International
stardom. She starred In many1'mllllcalt• and
movies, faded with planned grace&lt;from the show
biz scene rather than flopped Into lnltant Obacurity and keepa her elegant handll In her
treasured vocation, betimes quleUy performing
philanthropies (the Blind: the Norma Terris
Education and Nature Center benefiting the
Humane Society of the U. S., to which she has
do~ated valuable acreage etc.) .
"The late Norma Terrla," Indeed!

Vegetable Fats Safe in Diet

the polyunsaturated dtet developed cancer, and only 17
Dear Dr. Lamb-In your on the regular dtet developed
newspaper art 1c I e s you cancer
stress omttting ammal fats
But watt 1 A revtew of the
from our dtets Have you any data revealed that nine ol
comments on the enclosed
artiCle reportmg vegetable the men counted on the polyunsaturated diet who defats as a cause of cancer•
veloped cancer had NOT
Dear Reader - The da1ry stayed on the dtet Now you
pubhcation you forwarded can state the results another
reports mforma!Jon out of way. Of the men who stayed
context and mtsleads the
publlc There was a rash of on the polyunsaturated dtel
stmilar scare reports about only 22 developed cancer
the possible relatiOn of poly· while m the men on regular
unsaturated fats to cancer diets who d1d not stay on the
and I think they were not m polyunsaturated dtet, 26 men
the public's mterest
developed cancer You could
What do you do now?
as well say that unless
Jtm. "Smce the game was
A-Keep right on doubting
' Let's look at the facts . A JUst
vou
staved on a polyun.
auction he played m one
study was done on unly 846
saturatea
fat diet you would
spade He would have been
TODAY'S QUESTION
men, half on regular dtets
be
more
bkely to develop
m game today "
You do double and your part- and the rest on a diet con·
cancer
and
that statement
Oswald " He played to ner btds two hearts What do ta.mmg large amounts of
polyunsaturated fats It was would be more valid than the
make four , JUSt as any good you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
ftrst reported that 31 men on publication from the datry
player would do today You
assoclatlon you sent me. I
r------::H::-d-:-':",-Th:::::--:,1:-:l~Do=-"-:1;--=E::---::T:::---------, don't think this is so, but it
a 0 s ey
t very ime
®
shows you what you can do
~===:::;;
with statisllcs.
rr'S AN INCOME ThX
I KNCN\1111\lAT ~E
Keep your eye on the big
GIMMICk- " HE'LL CLAIM
COULP.PO FOR HIS
picture The Amertcan Heart
HE Sl&lt;VE /&gt;.WAY ~
OL.D "'l-IN&lt;" Plo.'V 1411
l-ISA AND WHISTLER'S
' ,t.I.UMNIOUH•"
AS s n.'s recommendations
and the recent recommendallons by the federally funded
Jntersociety Commission on
Heart Dlsease are based on
more than 20 years of studtes
:\-'--~,, 1 on a worldwtde basts involving populations of whole
nahons and changes noted
durmg enforced wartime
diets. The milhons of people
studied over many years provide the basts for most of
these recommendahons.
People With low levels of
heart disease have been eat·
lng diets rich In polyunsaturated fat for centuries with·
out any evidence of increased cancer. In fact the
LOOt&lt;.ING,.. GIFT
~BETWEEN
hiRhest rate of cancer of the
THE l-INES·· •
colo~ and rectum m the
world I• In the United States
and Canada by a wide maJI(ln, wh1le Africans on thP
IP!Irtan diet or natural !mill
components and wts or bulk
have a ver\' luw mctdt• nc~ ul

2"'

66 years, "but until! do I should like you to 'know
the way of it. '
"At a very early age it became apparent! had
a flau; for mimicry - I studied sli1ging and
dancmg and also at a very early age I el~
with the son of the famous dancer Gertrude
Hoffman, Max Hoffman Jr. We were both under
age but mstead of having our marriage annulled,
they, Max Sr. and Gertrude, put us out In a
marvelous vaudeville act. We were headlined
'Junior - Terris.'

DR. LAWRENCE E.I.AM8
Links With' Cancer Not Valid

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

e s Take Two From Braves, 5-4, 2-0

'
BY JACK O'BRIAN

The New Yot k Ttmes mtends to ftght-all the way up
to the Supt eme Court tf necessary-for vmdtca!ton of tis
dectswn to publlsh excerpts from a secret Pentagon study
of the ongms and escalahon of the Vtetnam war whtch
somehow tell mto tis hands
The Ttmes was 1estramed by a government-requested
cou1 t 01der from further pubhcatwn of the material after
lht ee of ftve planned mstallments had been pnnted This
was the ftrst !tme m U S htstory that a newspaper had
been legally prevented from publishmg a story
Slow as Jlldtctal processes are , the constltutlonal tssue
of [I eedom of the pt ess m thts case wtll be resolved long
befm e 01ny number of other questwns ra1sed by or consequences ensumg from the decisiOn of the Ttmes that th1s
was not only "news that's Itt to prmt" but that, in tis own
edttonal words ·
"A fundamental 1esponstbtlity of the press m this
democracy ts to publish mformatwn that helps the people
of the Umted States to understand the processes of their
own government, espectally when those processes have
been clouded over m a vetl of public dJsstmulation and
even deceptwrr;"
It may be questiOned how an expose of dtsstmulatwn
and deceptwn (mcludmg self-decepllon) by President
Lyndon Johnson and htgh offtcJals and adviSors m hts
admmtstratwn can help anyone to "understand the processes" of the government- unless dtsSJmulation and de·
ception are normal accepted parts of those processes.
Unfortunately, a great many people are all too ready
to believe that they are, mcludmg some who would never
have believed tl pno1 to the Ttmes sertes.
But tl 1s a queshon whether " the truth shall make you
free" or whether m thts case the truth wlil further weaken
the already shaky fatth M many persons In the justice and
mot ahty of thts country's form of government and in the
baste trustworthmess of tls elected and appomted offtctals
It 1s also a questwn of whether or not publication mtght
better have been delayed unlll the Umted States was past
the pomt of bemg not all the way m and not all the way out
of VIetnam As yet, however, the revelabons appear to
have gtven no great new tmpetus to the congressional
shelter agamst the fastBy LOUIS CASSELS
dnve to set a ftrm date lor complete Withdrawal from
approachmg monsoon season
UP! Senior Editor
V1etnam
One of the greatest human would be a suf!ICJently
Ttmes Vtce Pres tdent James Reston, while admittlng
the vahdtty of one of the government's arguments that 11 tragedies m h1story 1s taking staggermg task.
But the problem doesn't
has a right to pnvate commumcations, both internally shape m East Pakistan and
end there. An epidemic of
and wtth foret gn governments, subordmate th1s nght to lnd1a
the htgher n ght of the people to know what goes on m thetr
Addthonal refugees are cholera has broken out
govemment He rejects the government's claim that "Ir- rep\)rted to be amvmg from among the ragged masses of
reparable m]ury" would be done to the defense mterests East Pakistan at a rate of humanity huddled outside
of the Umted States
100,000 a day.
Calcutta. Cholera kills-and
The study was ougmally ordered by former Defense
Such
an
influx
of
hungry
and
It's a ghastly way to die.
Secretary Robert McNamara and covers events from the
Although thts disaster has
Truman adm1mstrat10n up to mtd·1968 The government's homeless people would stram
been
shapmg up for months,
chtel lear ts that the verbabm prmtmg of radio messages the resources of a ncb countrv
and cables may enable other eountrtes to break the codes But these refugees are pourmg only recently has tis magmtude
used duung this pertod and hence perm1t them to tran s· mto a country that has a hard been understood in the West.
late other dtplomabc messages they may have mtercepted hme feedmg and housmg 1\s
Church and chantable
and filed
" You may rest ass ured that no one 1s readm ~ this senes own populahon And they are orgamzations m the Umted
any more closely than the Sovtet embassy, ' satd one congregatmg around a c1ty - States now are hegmmng to
Calcutta - where poverty and respond But the unmedtate
OffiCial
The affan has put the Ntxon admimstration m a strange dtsease already prevad on a allocatwns they are able to
posttwn
scale that boggles western make out of !herr alwaysIn the name of nallonal defense and security 1t fmds rmnds
sktmpy reserve funds are
Itself attempltng to suppress an instde story 1t did not
To keep the Pasktstam measured m thousands of
wnte abo ut a wa1 11 had no part m making
By madvertently shteidmg Lyndon B Johnson from full refugees frpm starvmg and dollars, whtch ts not even a drop
scrutmy of dectstons made dunng hts term, Rtchard M provtde them with rudtmentary m the bucket of the refugees'
Ntxon •unavotdably ass umes part of the responsibtiltysome .would say culpabthty- for those decisions
WIN AT BRIDGE

'

Voice along Broadway I

I

cancer
Most news reports of the
polyunsaturated d1et study
failed to mention that the
men on diets high in polyunsaturated fat had only 48
fatal heart attacks while the
other group had 70 People
have a habit of dymg of
something If you prevent
heart disease the second
most common cause of death
IS cancer, so what do you expect? As ll)ore people live
to older ages because they

~[RRl'S

did not have heart attacks
there will be more people
die of cancer unless we lick
that problem. But In the
meantime there are large
numbers of YOUNG American men needlessly dying of
heart disease because of
poor livmg patterns-including their iliet.
Industrial accidents conservatively cost employers
about fl billion per year, according t o Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

WORLD

'

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middie(l\)ft-Pomeroy, 0., June 21, 1971

GINCINNATI (UP!) - The word is that the Cincinnati Reds
passed along a hunk of cash to San Francisco when they Jured
George Foster from the Giants in e~change for infielder Frank
Duffy and •pitcher Vern Gelschert.
"I don't know anything about that,'' Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson says. "Butilwedid,l'dsayhe was worth tl."
It seems like a little bit more than a comcrdence that the Red
upr.lsing began after Foster donned a Cincinnati uniform less than
a month ago.
"Foster has delivered more than a few key hits recently,"
admitted Anderson SUnday after the Reds swept a doubleheader
from the Atlanta Braves before a turnout of 37,488.
Johnny Bench's no-out smgle in the nmth mnmg brought
home pinch-runner Jimmy Stewart to give the Reds a iH victory

m the first game. Don Gullett and Clay Carroll teamed up to blank
the Braves on flVe hits In the second game 2-4.
Foster, batting .344 since joining the Reds, homered in one of
the two runs in the second game.
More Squeakers
The victory gave the Reds II in their last 16 games and the iH
opener was !herr filth In a row by a one-run margin.
"That's the big difference now," said Anderson . "We're
winning the games we were losmg earlier in the season."
The Reds now have a 14-12 win-loss mark on one..-un
decisions. At one time this season, their record stood at 4-9.
"We're playing better ball, moving runners over and taking
extra bases," Anderson said as the Reds prepared to meet the
Philadelphia Phillies tonight In the start of a lour-game series.

Nicklaus-Trevino Tied
ARDMORE, Pa. (UP!) Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevmo
meet in a playoff for the U.S.
Open Golf Championship today
sounding like a mutual admiration society rather than rivals
for the most treasured prtze m
thetr sport
Nicklaus, who may be the
best golfer m the world, and
Trevino, who has been the
hottest, fmished !herr regulation
72 holes Sunday deadlocked at
280 over the short but tricky
East course at Menon Golf
Club -the second straight time

an Open at Merton had
produced a playoff.
In the mterview room later,
Trevino called Nicklaus "the
greatest golfer who ever held a
golf club in his hands "
. "He'll set records no one wUI
break," Trevino said.
Simons Drew Notice
But Ntcklaus, not to be
outdone, recalled a conversation he had wtth Trevmo when
they played an exhJbttlon match
m February.
"Lee, you don't realize how
good a player you are,"

Liquori Wins
3rd NCAA Title
SEATTLE (UP!) -Marty anxtous to make amends for his
Uquorlls right on schedule.
loss to Uquor1 last month but
The good-looking VIllanova he Is bavtng health problems
senior, now generally regarded and probably won't decide
as the world's greatest nuler, about the AAU championships
won his third consecutive until the last possible minute.
NCAA title Saturday and now
"If I'm healthy I'll run,''
shoots lor the year's AAU title Ryun satd. "I'll try a couple of
workouts away from the
as well.
That would he at Eugene, Willamette Valley (Ore.) and
Ore , this weekend when the see what happens. If I haven't
NCAA heroes struggle with the lost any of my speed I'll
post-grads and club stars lor probably run "
spots on the American team
Ryun suffers from May fever
which will compete against the and the Wlllamette Valley is no
Russians and a world team, place to he at this time of the
and for berths on the Pan year for anyone with the
, ;.merl~ O.ID8~J!Quad. , , .. .probJel)l, That's why Ryun 1s
''Right along I've had it In procrastinating until he sees
min~ to win the NCAA title and how he feels. He broke down
the AAU title, too, ti I can,' two weeks ago while competing
Uquori said alter taking the In a meet at Eugene and wound
~ollegtate mile record to 3:57.6. up lOth.
"Then I'd like to compete Uquori's mile performance
against the Russians, go to a was one of eight meet records
meet' in Milan, Italy, and then set at the NCAA championon to Colombia for a the Pan- ships. The others were m the
Am Games"
three mile (Steve Prefontame
Uquori has won stx IC4A of Oregon in 13-20.1), six mile
mile titles and the NCAA (Garry Bjorklund of Minnesota
outdoor mile title three times 1n in 27:43.1) , Decthlon (Ray Hupp
addition to a flock of other of Ohio State with 7,456 pomts),
championships and a btg Hammer (Jacques Accambray
v1ctory over world record of Kent State m 227-10),
holder Jim Ryun In the Steeplechase (Sid Sink of
· 8 30 9) th
Freedom Games last month.
Bowli ng Green m : · • e
Uquori says there is nothmg long jump (Reynaldo Brown of
he would like more than to Cal Poly SLO with 7-3), and the
mee t R"""
,_, again and he may trlple jump (Denny Rogers of
get his wish this week. Ryun is UCLA 53-7'h).
_.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _...,

forest fires destroy
beauty.
It takes nearly a century to grow the
green beauty of a tree
And only a ca reless second w1th a match
to leave only black ugl1ness
Only you can prevent forest f1res

Nicklaus said "You can htt
every shot out of the bag."
The 18-hole battle for the
$30,000 first pnze, generally
ftgured to be worth hundreds of
thousands of dollars m endorsements and side benefits, was
scheduled for 1 45 p.m. EDT.
Until Ntcklaus and Trevmo
fmuhed m a tie, however, most
of the attention focused on Jim
Simons, a 21-year-old amateur
from Butler, Pa., who was
unknown until he reached the
f1nals of the British Amateur
Champwnshtp earlier thts
month
Simons Finally Lost
Stmons, who shot m front of
the pack wtth a 65 m
Saturday's third round, kept the
lead through nme holes SUnday
before wtltlng in the IJO.degreeplus heat and the pressure of
the Open.
"It built up so much It tired
me out," Stmons said. "! felt
pretty weak most of the day. I
was restless and pretty nervous."
The last time the Open was
held at Merton, m 1950, Bethn
Hogan hit a one-tron shot to e
18th green which smce has been
immortahzed m golf history,
two-putted for a par and
fmished in a tie wtth George
FaziO and Uoyd Mangrum.
Hogan then won the playoff,
just a litUe more than a year
after his near-fatal auto acCident
' '1
' '" "

Of course, May's booming bat also had a Jot to do w1th the
recent surge
May's 17th homer of the season, coming wtth a runner on base
m the third mning of the first game, was a tremendous wallop to..,
the seats m left center.
"I would have hked to have seen that same ball hlt out In a
pasture where yoo could have seen where 11 landed i11t had kept
gomg," said Anderson.
Wayne Sunpson, l)lalting hu first start since hiS recall from
Indianap\)lls last Monday, was breezmg along w1th a 3-0 two · hit
shutout when the Braves erupted in the sixth innmg, takmg a 4-3
lead on Earl Williams' grand.,o;iam home run.
"Simpson of Old"
Doubles by Tolllllly Helms and pmch-llttter Berme Carbo !ted

the score mthe eighth and set the stage for Bench's game winning
hit m the nintll.
Anderson was pleased with Simpson's performance even
though the btgrtghthander did notgotbe route.
"He IS the Simpson of old,'' said the manager. "In fact, I
thought be mtght even have thrown harder than last year "
Gullett, while not throwmg his best stuff, went 7 1-3 Innings
before givmg way to Carroll after smgles by Ralph Garr and
Hank Aaron m the eighth mmng of the second game.
Carroll , who proceeded to strtke out the next two batters and
p1tch a httless runth, preserved the shutout and p1cked up hu
seventh save tl11s season
Lowell Palmer ( ~)was scheduled to p1tch for the Phillies
tomght agamst the Reds' Jun McGlothlin (3-4 )

Stargell Paces Bucs
In Doubleheader Sweep

By Un1ted Press International
Nahonal League

East

W L, Pel

Amer1can League
East

W L Pet. GB

GB Balt tmore 42 22
Pittsburgh
43 25 632 Detroi!
37 29
New Vorl&lt;
37 26 587 3'h Boston
35 29
St LouiS
37 32 536 6°1&gt; Cleveland 30 34
34 33 507 B'h New York 30 36
Chicago
Montreal
26 35 .426 13'12 Washington
Phdadelphla 26 39 400 15 012
23 39
West
West
W L. Pet GB
W L
San FranCisco 46 25 648
Oak land
44 22
Los Angeles 37 30 552 7
Kansas City
Houston
32 35 478 12
35 27

645

561

5

547 6
469 11
455 12

yet h1t •n Three Rtvers and Stone pitched a three-httter
Stadtum Hts second game m the second game
371 17
homer was a grand slam in the Johnny Bench smgled home
seventh on the lrrst ptlch by Jmuny Stewart m the mnth
Pet. GS
667
Mtke Marshall that snapped a inning to gtve Cmcmnatt the
vtctory
over
Atlanta
m
the
f1rsl
1-1 tie
565 7
Montreal manager Gene game and Don Gullett and Clay C1nc mnatl
31 37 456 13 1h Mmnesota 34
501 10112
33
31 40 431 '15
Ca l1forn 1a 31 38 449 14lh
fa~rgell collected three hits Mauch satd, "1 don't know 1f Carroll teamed up on a ftve-htt At lanta
26 46 333 22
Milwaukee
including two homers -one a he's the strongest player In the shutout m the second game San D1ego
Sunday's
Results
23 38 377 18'/2
grand slam -Sunday to pace league but I do know he has the Gullett, 6-2, went 7 1-3 mmngs New York 7 Philadelphia 6 Ch1cago 23 38 317 181h
Sunday's Results
t 1stl
the Pittsdurgh Pirates to a 7-1 fastest hat around. That's what and Carroll fmtshed up
Phdadelphla
9
New
York
7
Chicago
18 Mmnesota 8
and 7-3 doubleheader sweep makes hun such a btg threat.''
I
2nd)
Oakland
11 Milwaukee 4 (lstl
New York and Phtladelphla P1ttsburgh 7 Montreat 1 (lstl
over the Montreal Expos and Stargell said, "I've had two
Milwaukee 7Oakland 4 (2nd)
increase their National League other years ( 1964 and 1965) had a see-saw doubleheader Pittsburgh 1 Montreal 3 t2ndl Cleveland 7 Detroit 6 (lstl
Cleveland 7 Detroit 6 (2nd
In the 51 Louis 5 Chicago 4
East lead to 3'h games.
when I've had great starts like The Mets blew a 4-0h lead
game suspended, 1 Inn, power
d
•
,
b
t
Houston
9
Los
Angeles
1
The two homers and five this but I had to have knee ftrs t game, feII be m ,....,, u Clnc1nna11 5 Atlanta 4 (1 st)
failure
RB!s boosted Stargell's maJor operaltons both times. I just won 11 when Duffy Dyer's two- Cmcmnat• 2 Atlanta o (2ndl
Baltimore 10 New York 4
league leading totals to 24 hope my legs hold out this run smgle climaxed a three-run San Franc iSco 6 San Diego 2 Boston 4 Washington 3
Kansas City 5 California I (1stl
homers and 65 RB!s. But time."
mnth lnmng. The Mets blew a ~~~I Franmco 2 San Diego o Call1qrnla a Kan City 4 l2ndl
despite the records, Stargell is In other games, St. Louis 5-l lead m the second game as 12nd 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
th1s
ttme
the
Phlis
tied
it
and
Oakland
I Blue 14·21 at
third m tlle National League downed Chicago 5-I, Houston
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Minnesota
(Corbin
night
All.Star outfield balloting with edged Los Angeles 9·7, San won 1t m the lith on Deron New York IKoosman 3 4) at Ca lifornia (May4 3).3·51
at
143,121 votes. He trails two of Franctscoswept a doubleheader Johnson's grand slam off Ron Pittsburgh (E llis 10 31. night
Milwaukee (Pattln6 71. night
Phdadelph1a (Palmer 0 01 at
Kansas C1ty IRooker 0 5) at
the fans' favontes -Willie from San Diego 6-2 and 2-0, Taylor.
Cmcmnat1
(McGlothlin
3
41.
Chicago
tJohn 3 8) , night
Mays (284,800) and Hank Aaron New York heat Phtladelphia 7~
night
Baltimore I Dobson 4 4) at
(28l,S44).
Joe Torre, taking over the 51 Louts IG1bson 4 5) at Los Washlngtu" IMcLa1n 4 • 12),
but lost the second game 9-7 in
Stargell stJU seems to have a 11 mmngs and Cmcmnalt swept Naltonal League battmg lead Angeles (0 ' Brten I 1), night
night
Montrea
i
(StrohmayerO
land
Cleveland (McDQwelt 7 6) at
starting berth all but natled a doubleheader from Atlanta, 5- w1th a .358 average, collected
Reed 1 1) at Atlanta I Nash 5 4) Boston I Lonborg 2·31, night
down smce he has a healthy 4 and 2-0.
four straight htls to pace St and Barber 0 01. 2, twl night
tOnty Games Scheduled)
lead over fourth place Lou In the American League, Louts past Chicago It was only tOnly games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Brock, who has 118,194 votes. Boston edged Washington 4-3, St. Louts' second wm m the last
Tuesday's
Games
Oakland
at Minnesota tnlght)
But Stargell, who hasn't ap- Baltimore routed New York 10- 13 games.
New York at Pittsburgh (night) California at Milwaukee (night
peared m an AJi..Star game 4, Cleveland edged Detrmt 7~
Montreal at Atlanta (night)
Kansas City at Chicago (night)
smce 1966, 1s taking nothmg for m 11 mnmgs and the second Doug Rader collected four Philadelphia at Cincinnati night Baltimore at Wash 2 llwmlghtl
St Louis at Los Angeles (night) Detroit at New York (2)
granted
game was suspended by a hits to drive in three runs as Chicago at San Francisco night Cleveland at Boston lnlghtl
"I was leading the league m power failure with Cleveland Houston downed Los Angeles.
• Satur~oy's Rosul1s
S.turdoy'• RHulls
1969 (he was actually third at leadmg 7~ m the eighth, T)le ,t\stros scored five unNew
York
6 Philo' 5 115 Inns) California 7 Kan Cltv 4
.349 on July 4, 1969 but wasn't Kansas Ctty beat California 5-1 earned runs in the third when Montreat 10 Pittsburgh 1
Minnesota 2 Chicago 1 t 10 Inn~)
leading In homers or RB!s) and but lost the second game 8-1, Bobby Valentine and Btll C~lcago 1 St Louis 1
Oakland 2 Milwaukee o
1 didn't even make tl!e All.Star Oakland routed Milwaukee 11-1 Buckner comnutted costly er- San FranCISco 7 San Diego 4
Detroit 5 Cleveland 3
Atlanta
9
Cincinnati
3
New
York 6 Baltimore 4 (ll tnn)
team, let alone start. So 1 have but lost the second game 7-1, rors.
Los Angeles 4 Houston 0.
Washington 2 Boston 0
no reason to believe I will be and Chicago outslugged Minnethere this year.'' But Stargell, sota 18-3
who's batting .309, seems to be Wlihe McCovey and Steve
a gond bet to start in DetrOit on Stone were the key players m
July 13 .
men to grace the center court
San Francisco's sweep over San
today before an audience of
Hts ftrst homer Sunday was a D1ego. McCovey capped a five0I
I
1 430-foot shot mto the upper run
15,000 fans He goes against
e1ghth mnmg wtth a threedeck that was the longest shot run homer m the ftrst game
young Spaniard Manuel OrBy Untied Press tnternatoonal
antes .
WIMBLEDON, England does not need a tie-breaker. I
Leadtng Batters
Nat1ona I Leaaue
(UP!) - A new era begms at do not like it It Is not tenms.
G. AB R H. Pet
Wimbledon today.
The conventtonal scoring stlllts
Torre. St I
69 268 42 96 358
The world's oldest and most best," he says.
DaviS. LA
66 263 43 94 357
Pptn, Chi
50 183 25 64 350
conservative tennis tournament,
Gonzales , one of the best
Bckrt, Chi
66 263 42 90 342
the All-England Tennis Cham- players never to win Wlmble·
Garr, Atl
68 283 47 95 336
ptonshtps, begins its 85th don, IS remembered for his 112Brock. St L 66 270 53 90 333
Staub,
Mont 62
73 .322
326
renewal by mtroducmg the tie- game marathon in the first
May, Cln
55 224
199 39
30 64
round against Charhe Pasarell
Alou, Hou
52 187 14 60 .321
By JOE CARNICELLI
Dave McNally pitChed seven breaker for the first time.
Alou, St L
65 265 28 84 m
UP! Sp\lrts Writer
Innings to record his 11th Wimbledon, to date, has of Santurce, Puerto Rico, In
American League
The Chicago White sox didn't vtctory agatnst four losses.
reststed all attempts at spon- 1969.
G.
AB
R.
H. Pet
Pin
h
h'tte
And
K
•
Gonzales will be one of etght
Ollva,Minn 59 236 46 90 381 act like "The Hitless Wonders"
c•1 r
Y osco s sorship, but the club was forced
Murcer."NY 65 234 38 81 346 Sunday.
three-run homer In the seventh to bow to the march of time by
Yo~r
Ro1'as 'sal
KC
61 229 34 73 319
Bfrd,
The Wh1te sox, notortous m 1nmng of the second game introducmg the lie-breaker on
50 193 51 61 316
The Daily Sentinel
Kallne,Det 57 183 36 57 311 recent years for thetr lack of capped a ftve-run rally that popular demand by the circuli
DEVOTED TO THE
Rchrdt, Ch1 so 188 20 58 309 power, erupted for 18 rUIIS gave Milwaukee tis vtctory over stars.
INTEREST DF
FRbnsn, Batt 50 176 33 54 307 Sunday to rout the Minnesota Oakland. Homers by Mtke
Still, Wimbledon remains
MEIGS
MASON AREA
BRbnsn, Bat 62 242 33 74 306
ks D
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Ohs, KC
59 236 40 12 305 Twtns 18-8.
Epstein, Reggte Joe on, ave different, The tie-breaker wtll
Euc Ed
Tovar,Min
65 269 41 81 301
Walt Wilhams, who went 4- Duncan and Sal Bando helped be Introduced at tl.all, as
ROBERT HOE~LICH,
Clly Editor
Hwrd, Wash 60 229 22 69 301 for-li crashed a three..-un the Athletics wm the opener, opposed to tl.all at other
Published dedy except
Home Runs
'
•
tournaments; it wUJ be over 12 Sa turday by The Ohio Valley
Nahonat League. stargell, homer to htghlight a nine-run !herr fifth victory m a row.
points
with a change of ends Publ•sh1ng Company , 111
Pitt 24 , Aaron, All 19 , Bench stxth mrung after Minnesota Tom Murphy's two-run double
St , Pomeroy , Oh•O ,
and May. C1n 17, Bonds, SF 16 had taken a 4-0 lead and Rick in the fourth and Jim Spencer's after six, and will not operate Court
45169 Business Office Phone
Amencan
League:Det Olivo,
99 2 2156 , Editor1al Phone 992
Mlnn
16, Cash,
and Reichardt,s grand s1am homer two-run sing1e an In nj ng later in the filth and fmal set.
Pancho Gonzales, the 4~year­ 2157
Jackson, Oak 15, Horton, Det capped a six-run seventh. The helped the Angels beat Kansas
Seco nd class postage peud at
13, Smith, Bos. Melton, Khl and White Sox added a smgle run m Qty In the second-game. Bruce old veteran from Los Angeles, Pomero y , Oh10
a horrible co m·
Nat1onal adverf1s1ng
Murder, Runs
NY 12Batted In
d
tw
in
th
Dal
Ca
to
'"hed
f
h'tter
btnat1on of words . Let
who 1s now resident pro at a repre sentallve BotllneiH
the eighth an
o more
e
n n p1..a tve- 1
Gallagher,
Inc
,
12
East
42nd
Las
Vegas
club,
figures
Wunus take away those
Nattonal League: Stargell, ninth to humillate the Twms
before needmg rehef In the
St New York C1tv , New Yol"k
P1tl 65 , Aaron. Att 54, Santo.
Elsewhere m the American ninth and had a two-run single bledon bungled by introducmg
first five leiters
Subscription rates
De
vered
by
carrier
where
Insure -- be sure!
~~t' ~~·/~~~~~~~~\~' Lc~fda, League, Baltimore routed New as the Royals won the opener to the tie-breaker.
available 50 cents per week ,
Amertcan League. Killebrew, York 10-4, Milwaukee beat keep pace with front.runnlng One would think the one- By Motor Route where earner
Consult Us &amp;otr
time stormy personality of serv1ce not available One
Mlnn 51 , White, NY 44 , Oakland 7-1, after Josmg· the Oakland m the AL West.
month Sl 75 By mall tn Oh10
Petrocelli, Bosand Olivo, Mlnn opener 11-4 Kansas Ctty beat JohnKennedy'stwo-outsmgle the tour would welcome the lie- and W Va , One year $14 00
43
' before bowmg .-.
" ln the nt' nth hfted Boston past breaker now that he 1s S1x months $l.25 Three
40 , Horton, Det and Bondo, Oak Calilorma 5-l
months $A 50 Suj)scr1pt1on
Pitching
1n the second game, Boston the Senators. Washmgton bwlt advancing in years. Not so.
Phone 192·2966
pr ice m cludes Sunday Times
114
Court
St.
Sentmel
"If
a
man
is
physically
lit
he
Nallonol League: Dierker, edged Washington 4-3 and a 3-0 lead before the Red Sox
Hou, ElliS, Pitt and Carlton, Kl
th
th
L 10·3, Jenkins, Chi 10·6• Cleveland shaded Detroit 7-ll tied the game ln e seven on
Marlchat, SF 9-4; Stoneman, The second game of the Billy Conlgharo's two-run douMont 9 5
Cleveland-Detroit doubleheader ble and Phil Gagliano's two-&lt;Jut
Amerlun League: Blue, Oak,
1d
14·2 ; C~ellor,At l 11 . 1 , McNally, was suspended after seven pmchsmge .
Batt IH, Hunter, Oak 10·4, mnings because of a power
Pete Broberg, the No. 1
Perry, Mlnn 10 5, Lollch, Det failure with the Indians lead- choice in last week's free agent
10·6
ing 7~
draft, made his major league
In Nallonal League play, debut for the Senators, allowing
Ptttaburgh swept Montreal 7·1 ou:, three hits and striking out
and 7,1, St. Louis edged seven before faltering in the
Chicago 5-I, San Francisco seventh.
swept San Diego 6-2 and 2-0, • Chuck Hmton's lith inning
m -20?4
Houston trimmed Los Angeles homer hfted Cleveland over
606 E. Main
Pomeroy 9-7, New York beat Phlladel- Detroit in the ftrst game of
phaa 7~ liefore bowing 9-7 in an their scheduled doubleheader
n-ulning second game and Roy ' Foster bad a pa1r of
Clncmnati defeated Atlanta homers and drove m four runs
twice, 5-I and 2-0.
for the Indians.
Mark Belanger bad a tw&lt;rrun • The second game was sussingle and Dave Johnson stole pellded when a bank of ltghts
home to pjghhght a five-run behind home plate went out.
And
first inning In the Orioles' rout Cleveland 's Chrts Chambhss
of New York. The Yankees cut singled In the go-ahead run m
ALSO OTHER
the lead to 5-I m the seventll ' the seventh before Detrott
992-2171 .
before Baltimore put the game manager Billy Martin pomted·
C L CO LOANS OF ,
Pomeroy, 0.
125 E. Matn
Stop in and see our out of reach on Don Buford's out that the lights were out.
$
AND MORE
run-producmg double and a tw&lt;r The game will be completed on
floor display.
I '
run smgle by Brooks Robinson Sept 28
By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
Willie Stargell may be the
major league's No. 1 slugger
but he's still only No. 3 In the
hearts of the nation's haseball

New Era Begins Today

At Wimbledon, England

iOiii:iiiiii:::;====J

Hitless Wonders
Slam Twins, 18-8

INSURED

..
v t1'
"" '

Davis-Warner Ins.

FAST ONE-DAY SERVICE

on loans up to

POMEROY
HOME &amp;AUTO

OFFICE
SUPPLIES·

"My feeling is -thor it mor&amp; men would siKirtl In some ol
the houstholtl respon•ibilities, like this, there wouldn't
be such o hossle about woro ~ .,·! libl"

Reduce monthly payments with ...

FURNITURt

l'u~hshe~ as a public
111~

serv1ce m .cooperalton 'lfilh lhe Ad'IC!\ISIOil Couocil the State
U S fflre st Serv1r.es 11nd The lnterna1u1nal Newspaper AdvertiSing F,xecuhves
f

I

5QQQ

�t-.The Daily Sentinel, Middle~otrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., June.21, 1971
•

Mrs. Carpenter Hosts
Bend 0 ' the River Club
Mrs. Howard Nolan

of make yourself from clippings
picture~ from newspapers
atralll' at a meeUng of the Bend and magazines. Members
'0 the River Garden Club named their favorite garden
Thursday night at the Pomeroy club· book or magazine in
home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter. response to roll call.
. The meeting was preceded by
During the business meeting,
a patio dinner. Mrs. Carpenter the Ohio Associl!tion of Garden
UBed flowers from her garden to Clulll' annual convention to be
make centerp~s for the patio held In Colum!&gt;UB, Aug. 111-12,
tables.
was announced. Also noted was
· Mrs. Nolan spoke on how to an Invitation from the Rutland
make collages and other pic- Garden Club for an open
tures from dried plant meeting to be held June 28at the
materials and other things. She Rutland United Methodist
said that now is the time to start Church.
collecting materials and
suggested barley, weeds, ferns, Members were reminded that
blue · grass, dock, and the open meeting of the Rutland
hydrangea blossoms.
Friendly Gardeners Club will be
Hints on preparing the held Wednesday night at 7:30
flowers for collages and p.m. at the Rutland Church of
methods of fastening them on Christ.
the material to make framed Devolions were given by Mrs.
pictures were given by Mrs. Robert Kuhn. Mrs. James Diehl
Nolan. She also suggested that was welcomed as a new
seeds be collected for use In member. Guests were Mrs.
mliklng collages and displayed James Carpenter of the Rutland
a madonna which had won a Friendly Gardeners, . Mrs.
blue ribbon at a recent flower Bradford Maa~ and members of
show.
the Wildwood Garden Club. At
· Mrs. Nolan also demon· the meeting besides those
strated for the group the named were Mrs. Andrew
technique of making grapefruit Cross, Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Mrs.
r011e8. On behalf of the club, Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Clifford
Mrs. Nolan' was presented a gift Phillips, Mrs. Mse Holter, Mrs.
by Mrs. Bert Grimm.
Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. W. 0.
She suggested that the best Barnitz and Mrs. Grella Simp·
garden club book Is one you son.

Syr•cuse was guest demon- and

Closing V.BS Program Held at
Middleport First Baptist

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
THEODORUS Council 17, D.
of A., Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
IOOF Hall. Important issues
concerning national benefit
department to be voted upon.
TUESDAY
LADIES Auxiliary, Racine
American Legion Post,
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at hall with
revisions in constitution and by·
laws planned.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at hall.
Installa lion of officers by
Gladys Cummings.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND FRIENDLY
Gardeners, open meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Rutland
Church of Christ. Mrs. Earl
Dean, guest demonstrator.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, noon Wednesday,
United Methodist Church.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
Thursday night, 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs.
Elsie Chsmbers, b\ .1; study;
Mrs . ·carolyn Satterfield,
devotions, Mrs. Satterfield,
Mrs. Jean Ellen l(olly, Mrs.
Herman Bailey, •••d Mr~.
Garen Stansbury, hostesses.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
An ice cream social will be
staged Saturday evening at 6:30
p.m. at the Forest Run
Methodist Church. The ice
cream will be homemade.

Alpha Holtz Weds George· Moss
Green Thumb
Notes • •..
A weekly ·feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

BY MRS. BETI'Y ClJNE
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
June is wonderful gardep month, but many chores must he
done.
Pansies, sweet peas and calendulas will begin to turn brown
and Dower Jess, so pull them out and replant wit)! new stock for
suinmer and fall color. Sow of portulaca, balsam, celosia, and
bachelor buttons in sunny location.
All these are quick to germinate and come Into bloom, so you
will hai'dly miss the blooms of the old plan Ill removed.
In shade plant beds of wax begonias, in multioolors. They
bear a parade of blooms until frost and you can dig and' keep them
blooming through the winter in a sunny window.
Use plants or seedS of. coleus In semi shade locations. Along
border of green and white coleus planted In front of varigated
green and white caladiums give a coo), fresh look to the gal')len.
Put out softWOod cuttings of shrubs, roses, or bedding plants
now. Almost every thing will root. Choose a shady place away
from· trees, under an eave overhang or on the east side of the
house.
Make a sand bed of coarse sand (the kind builders use In
masonry) at least 41nches deep. Use an inch or two of pea gravel
In the bottom if surrounding soil is clay.
To make cuttings, cut the slips about 4 inches long from new
semi hardened growth . Cut clean at a leaf node; remove all leaves
except the top four. Dip In rooting hormone and set Into the sand
to the base of the leaves. Keep rooting bed moist at all times.
Roses and evergreen shrubs take about four weeks.
Take care of rose bushes for continued flower production
throughout the summer and fall. Continue to use a disease and
insect control program. A preventive spray of folpet (phaltan)
every seven or ten days will prevent blackspot, and help mildew.
You may want to try the new Benlate. It is a systemic fungicide
and controls diseases with fewer applications. You can buy it at
your garden supply store.
Apply a complete fertilizer (1().8.6) or (16-20-0) over the rose
bed at the rate of 2lbs. per IOOsquare feet every four weeks.

attendance of 61. Certificates
ENTERS WEST POINT
were presented to each of the
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark,
children by teachers of the
Barbara Anne and Brent, will
respective classes following
leave on Tuesday morning for
their presentations. Special
Philadelphia for several days
recognition was given to those
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Claude
with perfect attendance.
Mrs. Powell, librarian at New Utile League Baseball, Girls Van Metre and visit many
The program opened with the Haven Public Library, has and Sex, Boys and Sex, Best historical places.
students and staff singing the released the names of 106 new Photos of the Civil War, Science
From Phiadelphia, the family
theme song Jesus Speaks to Our books purchased from funds in Magic, Finders Keepers, Troy • will accompany Brent to West
World and Uke a Seed. Other the door to door ~anvas on AStory,AStory, Black In White Point where he wiU enter the
selections by the group were behalf of the library.
America.
academy on July 1.
Where He Leads Me and Sing
She expressed appreciation to Violence In America, The .Brent, a 1971 graduate of
and Shout.
the public for contributions and Drug Beat, Come Back to the Wahama High School, received
The teaching staff was for their cooperation this past Farm, My Life with Martin L. · c ongr at ul at I on s from
recognized and presented year.
King, Jr ., Wildflowers, Field Congressman Ken Hechler,
certificates by the Rev. Simons. She reported that there is an Guide, River to the West, Don't Jennings Randolph and Robert
In the group were Mrs. Linda increase of 523 more borrowers shoot, We Are Your Children; Byrd, for having been accepted
Fredericks, Mrs. Ann Zirkle, of books than In the previous Myths and Legends, Everyday at West Point.
David Swisher, Barbara An·
Science, Faces From the Past,
ATTEND FUNERAL
thony, Patty Fridley, Peggy ye:e~t Thursday the library Action Games for Boys, Action
Imboden • nursery; Brenda workshop committee will place Games for Girls, Playbook for Out of town relatives and
Edwards, Martha King, the new books on shelves for Small Fry, All About Cats, Baby friends who attended the
Darla Neutzllng, Venida borrowers.
Animals, Take Another Look, funeral of Mrs. Nellie Schwarz
Gibbs, and Shieia Edwards,
Also among the new additions Native Sons, The American In Mason were Mr. and Mrs.
beginners; Mrs. Faye Wal· was a much needed new electric Past, Picasso's, Put Me in the Henry Schwarz, Mr. and Mrs.
lace, Mrs. Nola Swisher, typewriter.
Zoo, Old Hat, New Hat, Little Emmett Simpson and children,
Marla Neutzllng, Becky · Another Improvement which League, Big League, Star White Sulphur Springs, W.Va.;
Skaggs, and Jack Kauff, adds to the cheerfulness of the Pitchers, To Teens With Love, Mr. Earl Schwarz, Miami, Fla.,
Jrimary;andMrs.SarahOwen, library is a new glass door How to Punt, Pass and Kick, Mr. and Mrs. Olarles Sheets,
Mrs. Ullie Hubbard, Tami which replaced a wooden one. Ceramics Color and Pottery Pomeroy; Mrs. Stanley
The John Newberry and Gold Decorations, Old Ben, Pen· Saunders and family, Mrs .
Hoffman, and Judy Owen,
juniors.
Meadal Award liooks are as nyworth of Olaracter, Stories James Loyd and family,
A picnic was planned for July Recognition was also given follows: Secret of the Andes, From Shakespeare, Mr. Brown Colwnbus; Mrs. Marilyn Hetzer
8 at noon on the lawn of the Kent Kloes for general . Carry on Mr. Berraditch, A Can Moo, My Teddy Bear, and Tod, Parkersburg; Katie
Chester United Methodist assistance during the week, Wrinkle in Time, The SnowY Revolutionary War, Army Lafferty, Mr. and Mrs. George
Church when the Women's BarbaraAnthonywhoservedas Day, Sun, Bangs and Moon- Moves In, Ramona the Pest, W. Knapp, Steubenville, 0.
Society of Christian Service met pianist, and Mrs. Bob shine, Nine Days Til Christmas, What's Your Calorie Nwnber,
recently at the church.
Richardson who handled A Tree Is Nice, May I Bring a Zelda, Anthology of American
Special Invited gueslll for the refreshments.
Friend, Babaushka and the Stories, and American People .
plcnlc will be the women of the
Three Kings, Sylvesters and the -Landmark History.
Pomeroy United Methodist
HOSPITAL NEWS Magic Pebble, Cinderella
Olurch. Theyarebelngaskedto Holzer Medical Center, First Brown, Drummer Hoff, The
SAMt: DAY
Q-By what name was the
take a covered dish and their Ave. and Cedar St. General Feel of the World and the Flying
SERVICE
southern
hemisphere
known
own table service.
visiting hours 11-4 and 7-13 p.m. Ship, Where the Wild Things
In At 9-0ut At 5
during
the
Coal
Age?
Arrangements were made to Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Are, Madeline's Rescue, Time
A-Gondwanaland, a suU$e'Our:Free Perking Lol
fill a mission box and it was 4:30 p.m. Parents only on of Wonder, The Biggest Bear, I, percontinent . composed of
noted' that new program books Pediatrics Ward .
Juan de Pareja, The Door In the parts of South America, Afhave been ordered. Nineteen
Births
Wall, Rlfles.for Watie, From the rica, Peninsular India, Aus216 E. 2nd, P~mtroy
sick calls were reported during Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eugene Mixed up Files of Mrs. Basil E. tr~lia and Antactita.
•
the past month.
Harper, Gallipolis Ferry, a son; Frankweiler, And Now Miguel,
Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs. · Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Lee Shadow of a Bull, The Summer
Mabel Van Meter were Tucker, Grimms Landing, a of the Swans, The High King,
chairmenfortheprogramuslng son; and Mr. and Mrs. Craig Sounder, Up a Road Slowly,
. TheMiddleYearsastheirtopic. Elswick, Rt. 2, Jackson, a Giants of Inventions, Worlt!s of
COME TO THE MOUNTAIN STATE
The group sang Praise HUn, daughter·
Nature, Americans to the Moon,
Praille Him, Mr. Van Meter had
Discharges
Wild Flowers - How and Why,
scripture, and Mrs. Altona Ksrr Henry W. Allison, Mark R. Crafts and Hobbies, America
gave the prayer. Mrs. Roush Bennett, Mrs . Raymond Golden Book, Someone Else.
served as group leader for the Broyles, Mrs . Woodrow R.
Helen Keller, Why the Sun
topic. discussion with Mrs. Burnett, Mrs. Arthur K. and the Moon, Emberleys Book
Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs. Ethel Chann~ll Jr., and son, Charles - Drawing, Lost Island,
Orr Mrs Pauline Rice Mrs P. Chapman, Kenneth G. Clark, Charity Girl, History of W. Va.
·
d Mr Ka' thry · Chsrles , A. Cordell, Virgil L.
Mai'die Mora,
an
s.
n cra1g,
· Joan Ka y De. weese, Mrs. Education, Amelia Earhart
Mora par tielpa tin g.
James D. .Durbin, Arthur A. Uves, American Surnames,
• ENTERTAINMENT IN
~s . Le~a Woods r~ad an Espenscheid, Reed H. Eynon, Daughters of the Promised
AMPHITHEATER
TWICE
article on higher education for Mrs . Harold K. German, Land, The 28 Letters, Crime In ·
DAILY
2:00PM
&amp;
9:15
PM
older women; and Mrs. Ada Denver F. Griffith , Mrs. America, The Amateur
Morrl8 presented one on Msttle Raymond w. Grover, Mrs. Astronomer's Hand Book, Build
• AGE-OLO CRAFTS
Miles, founder of vacation Bible Donovan L. Hal Ierman and son, it Your~ Science Laboratory,
&amp; SPACE-AGE ARTS
echools. The hymn, Anywhere Mrs. Lily Kerr, Mrs . .Everett D. Twelve Events that Changed
~-...~. ~;"tBANK AMERICARD
with Jesus concluded the Kerwood, Mrs. Charles E. King Ouf World, The Conflict of ,
HONORED
Ja'OIII'llD. Members were asked and daughter, George R. Lewis, Convictions, The New Sevento pve"a Bible verse in response Russell M. Little, Mrs. Clarence teen Book of Etiquette and Your
to roD call next month.
E. McCormick, Mrs. Lawrence Uving, The Book of Health,
Ousley, Jr., Dewey C. Queen, Ginger Pye, Miracles on Maple
•BOOTHS
Mrs . Harry J. Roush and , Hill, The Witch of Blackbird
OPEN
daughter, Mrs . William J. Pond.
DAILY
Steph~nson, Mrs. Donald
Dogs of the World In Color,
Vance, Mrs. Frank A. Vaughan, Suns, Myths and Men, Amos
Wayne K. Whaley' Mr~. Lona B. Fortune Tree Man, bland of the
White, Hobert C. Wi!eman, and Blue Dolphins, Lady Bird
Isaiah Smith.
Johnson, A White House Diary,
Craft items were displayed
and recitations and songs were
presented at the Middleport
Firat Baptist Church Daily
Vacation Bible school closing
JrOgram Sunday night.
JeSWI Speaks to Our World
was the theme of the two-week
school directed by the Rev.
Charles Simons. Devotional
programs featuring puppets
were Jresented by Mrs. Simons.
Donna Boyd served as
secretary-treasurer for the
school.
The offering taking during the
tw~weekawill go to !he children
at the Meigs County Children's
Home. Reporting on the school
at the cloalng program, the Rev.
!~mons noted that 77 students
were enrolled with an average

Library Receives Books

Chester
WSCS Plans
Picnic

In a candlelight ceremony at
the Heath United Methodist
Church of Middleport Saturday
evening, Miss Alpha Holtz,
daughter of Mrs: Jessie Holtz,
Minersville, and Mr. George
Moss, Gallipolis, were united in
marriage.
The Rev. Max Donahue
performed the double ring
ceremony at 7:30p.m. following
a program of nuptial music by
Mrs. L. W. McComas, organist.
Her selections included I Love
You Truly, 0 Promise Me, and
0 Love Divine and Golden.
Arrangement of hydrangea
and spirea decorated the altar.
For her wedding the bride was
attired in an A-line embroidered
faille floor length gown with
accent trim of Alencon lace.
Her veil of iUusion tenninated
In a chapel train, and she
carried a white lace-covered
Bible topped with an

Middleport
Personal Notes
. 1.
La ura SI'dd aII of c·mcmna
I
and Robe.rta. Smart of. Toledo
are vacabonmg here wtth therr
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kioes and children.
.Brent George has returned to
hiS h~me m Gallipolis after
spendmg the past week here
With his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. W. McComas.
VISIT OU
Miss Opal Berry and Miss
Jane Thomas, students at Meigs
High School, are at Ohio
University attending the Up·
ward Bound six week pre·
college course.
The two were taken to Athens
by Miss Mildred Hawley who
was accompanied by Mrs .
Thelma Berry. Opal, a senior
this fall, attended the Upward
Bound program last year. Jane,
a junior, is attending for the.
first time.

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Wise
of Waverly, were at Mount
Hope, W. Va . recently for the
funeral of Olarles ~ttle. He
was a brother of the late Mrs.
Charles Wise, Sr. of Middleport.
Services were at the Tyree
Funeral Home.
Helium, evidence or which
was found in the sun in 1868,
was discovered outside the
earth's atmosphere .

arrangement or yellow roses.
Mrs . Harold George or
Gallipolis served as matron or
honor.,She wore a floor length
gown of yellow dotted swiss
featuring bands of lace, and a
matching headdress of net and
dotted swiss: She also carried a
lace~overed Bible topped with
yellow roses.
Mr. Roger Hines of Gallipolis
was best man. The bride's
sisters, Miss Kay Holtz and
Miss May Holtz, lighted the
candles.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room. The bride's lable
featured a three tiered cake
topped with the traditional

Pomeroy ....
Personal Notes
Mr . and Mrs . Gardner
Mankin and three children of
Caroii, Iowa, and Kenneth
Mankin of Philadelphia, Pa.
have been here visiting Mrs.
Mabel Mankin.
Mrs. Charles Lochary '
Margaret and Robert, of Eden
Prairie, Minn. have arrived for
a month's visit . with Mrs .
Lochary's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Story, and Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary. In early
July they will be joined by
Charles Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Nicholson and Mrs. Richard
Van Nest of Athens were
Father's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and
daughter, Jayne Lee .
Airman I~ George Ginther,
who will report to the Air Force
Academy at Colorado Springs,
Colo., on July 3, and his brother,
Philip, came today (Monday)
for a several days visit with
their grandmother, Mrs. Oris
Ginther.

3

miniature bride and.Groom. '!'he
cake was ~erved with punch,
coffee and mints. Asister of the
bridegroom presided at the
punch bowl.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Moss reside on
Slate St. in Gallipolis. The bride
recently graduated from ~e
Jackson Manpower Training
School where she took a course
in secretarial work, and Mr .
Moss is employed at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The wedding arid reception
was attended by the immediate
' families of the couple and a few
close friends.

for expenses
while you're in
the hospital
NEW HOSPITAL

Indemnity

Plan :
• Pays

10 $200 a

you $50

115'111, BIRTHDAY CElEBRATED - The town of
MaSon began an ali-day celebration, in recognition of its
ll~th birthday, withah entertaining parade. The photo at left

week (dependina upon the
basic hospitalization you

presenlly carry) to use as
you see fil.
• ilays you cash while you're

Mason

in the hospital.

Call me todav for details.

P. J. PAULEY
992-2318
307 Spring Ave.

·

Pomeroy, Ohio
The man from Nal ionwi dc is nn yo ur i

Na1ionwidc MutuallnsuranC'e C&lt;-.
Home Office: Col umbus. Oh io

NEW

RJ~NinJRE

. 'l,t9.95

SJS.OQ Down....: .
Balance On

.lo";.~
~ .•·~

Conve'Aient

.;

...

"

~~-· ¢~-·

•
.

-·-.

. •

OPTOMETRIST

.)FFICE HOLIRS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TU 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,'
p

RIPLEY 1 WEST VIRGINIA
ONE MILE OFr US 21 AND l-:f7

~ . .... .
. .... l~ l

HOME OF.rmst iiiSrORIAN - Mason was the home of Virgil A. Lewis (11148-1912) who
Is regarded as the slate's first historian and archivist. Lewis served as slate superintendent of
schools and founded the Southern Historic Mi!gazine and wrote several books. This historical
plaque honoring Lewis overlooks the business sector of Mason.

Terms.

M'ASON
FURNITURE
Mason, w. vci.
.

Johnson, D. D. Jenks, Robert Rolie and Tom Ingels. The
center picture shows members of VFW Post serving as Color
Guard In the parade from the Mason Drive-In to Wahama

---.....

High School. At far right, the Wahama High marching band
performs while participating in the parade.

......

Mr. and Mrs. Earle Kocher of
New Matamoras spent Friday
evening with Mr . and . Mrs.
Herbert Roush . Mr. and Mrs.
the United Slates Air Force, and Kocher are former residents.
will receive his basic training at
Mrs. Erma Wilson attended a
San Antonio , Texas . Mrs. products party at the home of
Fenter was the daughter of the Mrs. Roy Van Meter at Morning
late Mr. and Mrs. John Hayman Slar Friday afternoon. ·
and graduated from Racine
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm and
High School, class of 1935. ' children of Columbus spent
Mrs. Harold Roush of Port· Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Don
land and grandson, Michae.l Bell and Lorna .
Euler of Charleston, W. Va.,
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Bostick
visited Monday evening with . and children of Dunbar , W. Va .,
Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair Hill .
spent the weekend with Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Wiggington Mrs. Robert Wood and Debbie
and children of St. Albans, ·w. and Waid Johnson .
Va., spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr . and Mrs . Raymond
Mrs. Jess Anderson .
Hensler or Racine spent
Mrs. Carl Moore or Pomeroy Saturday evening with Mr . and
spent Friday with Mrs. Mildred Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
Spencer.
Miss Sandra Taylor of
Robert Varian of Dorcas was Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
a dinner guest Friday of Mrs. Stone and children or Leon, W.
Iva Orr.
Va., were weekend guests of

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
George Donohue of Colwnbus
visited Thursday through
Saturday with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Donohue.
Jeff Donohew and Steve
Shuler wiU leave Monday for
Columbus where they will ~nd
the night and then go to
Lockland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Texas Tuesday where
they wiU receive their basic
training. Jeff is the son of Mr.
· and Mrs. Roy Donohew and
Steve is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Shuler.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Pam took Mr. and Mrs. Don
Beegle and Tracy to Colwnbus
Sunday evening where they
went by plane to their home in
Marietta, Ga., after spending
the weekend with the Bucks and
Lawrence Beegle at . Dorcas.
The ,Beegles' son, Zane, is
· 'visiting 'hill' 'graridparerits, Mr.
and Mrs. Buck, for the summer.
Frederick Fenter, son of the
former Mattie ·Hayman, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Fenter of
Tuscon , Arizona, gra.duated
from Shady Side High School at
Tuscan in June and enlisted in

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor al
Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Taylor and son, J . D. of
Gallipolis spent Sunday with the
Taylors.

POMEROY
HOME &amp;AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Ma in
Pomeroy

,

WHERE
toU SAVE

DOES MAlE A

DIFFERENCE
We pay you to save
(and the pay is good).

PASSIOOK
IATI
,~. Co.. Bl•lCh

HAVEIII
GUARDIAN
PREMIUM

Passenger Tires
and

Truck Tires
At low , low prices.

rho Athens Covnty
Sovlngs &amp; Lolln Co.
2f4Soconl51.

Pomtrov. Ohio
Member Federal

Hom• Loan Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corporation .
All accounts Insured up to
120.000.00

'

.

'
'
, hllntl?. ."'ail .,I\U '1{11 i!9..l"~o • :.. , •. 1 ,,,fll1tlno,'t 110 ~H u ,_,.11 \11w ..,.;: ~ .....
'·

·'

&lt;

, 1t. I

LOSE UP TO
20POUNDS
Social Notes IN 14 DAYS!

Old Salem

Famo1H U.S. k!omen Ski Team Diet

During th e non-snow off season
U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team
lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Randolph
of Toledo were recent weekend members go on the "Ski Team" diet
guests with her sister and to lose 20 pounds in two weeks.
That's right - 20 r ound s in 14 days!
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Til~
bas is of t h~ diet i!' chemic ill food
Lawrence Chapman.
ai.: tion and was devised by u famou s
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stout Colorado physichm cspct'ially fo r the
who have sold their farm to the U.S. Ski Team . Normal t:nergy is
Ohio Power Co., have pur· maint ained {very import an t! ) while
chased property near Pomeroy. red ucing. You ~ cep '' full " . no starvu·
on, be~:ausc thl' diet is dl'Sii!:ned that
Mr. Lauren Hoffman, who tiway!
It's u dkJ that is easy to follow
recently had a stroke, is slowly whe ther you wo rk, travel or sta y ut
improving at the Holzer homt: . For me n. too.
This is, honestly, u fant astkull y
Medical Center. He is expecting
sucrcssfu
l diel. If it wcrcn'l. th e U.S.
to be able to come home soon.
W
omen'
s
Ski Tcum wu uldn' l bt: pe r·
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Hoffman
mittcd to usc it ! R igh i ~ So, give you r·
were called here by the serious ~elf the sarn c b r ~uk the U.S. Ski Tc:m1
illness of his father. ·
ge ts. Lose we ight the sden lifk . pro.w n
Steven Nelson is enjoying a way . Ewn if you've tried a tl th~· otl11.:1
vacation with his grandparents, d id ~, yuu owe it to }' l.Jtlr~df to try
the U.S. Women\ Ski Tcu m Dic t.lN ~lt
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stout.
C rapt· fruit Di1:·tJ. Tha t is, if yo u reall y
Mr. and Mrs. Couvin Smith do wunl to lo~ c 20 pu u m.l ~ in two !
· and daughters, Kathy and weeks. Oufc r IOllu y. 'I ea r this qut a~ a

4RT &amp;CRAFT
F41R

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

Mason Volunteer Fire Department
prepsrlng cl!lcken for a barbecue held Saturday. Shown,
from left, are Howard Johnson, David Johnson, Mike

Apple Grove News, Events

Robinson's Ceaners

TO JULY .4
CEDAR LAKES

~· members ~ .~

Celebrates Its 115th Birthday

SHIRT
FINISHING

J E30

is

Susan of Columbus were
weekend visitors .with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Wilson. Kathy and · Susan
remained for a week's visit with
their grandparents. ·
Mrs. Effie Hoosier is ill and is
under the care of Dr. Tell.

EACH DAY WE
ENDEAVOR~ TO
PUBLISH ONLY
THE VERY BEST

FIRST WOMAN MAYOR- The town of Mason was way
ahead of its time in the women's lib movement. It had the
first woman mayor in the State of West Virginia from 1932-34
when Joanne F. Strode served In the position. This sign ,
proclaiming Mason as having had the first woman mayor, is
located along the highway In the north end of the town which
will celebrate its 115th birthday this Saturday. Two of
Mason's many youngsters, April and Jeffie Cundiff, children
cl Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cundiff, play In front of the sign.

What you expect from a Newspaper you can expect
from us. To find out exactly what, when, where and

.

'

who, read our newspaper. Join the thron_g of well

LOROBI'S PIZZA •••

informed readers, have it home delivered or visit

Seeking a couple to own and operate a
Lorobi's Piua shop in the MiddleportPomeroy area. Call Jackson, Ohio,
Phone.286-4633 for further information
o.r write.:

our nearest newsstand.

The /Daily Sentinel
Now Going Into Over 5,400 Homet1

Lorobl'• Pizza

''
•··
·,

206 Dawson St.
Jackson, Ohio 45640
'

rcm i n d ~r .

Send on!}• S\. 25 I S\ 50 fu r R u ~h
Servin•) , l'a'\ h h O.K., to: ·Ski Tc:1m
Diet. nq Sh&lt;ffid d Or. , D&lt;pt. RC.
Sanl' Bar bm. (,Ji[. 93 10 3. Don' t
order unless yo u cxpel't to lo~ 20
pound s in two wee ks! Be'-'a usc !hat 's
wh;it the Ski Te:1m Diet will do !©
- adv.

Need a
caterer who'll
dish it out?

\

Seve yourself a lot 'of money and -sleepless nights.
Because right now, we're t11klng $40 off the price
ot the Bemco Sacropedic and Bemco Sacropedlc
Imperial mattress sets.
Think of It, Save $40 per set for a limited time only,
and still get the benelits of Bemco's exclusive
Unlfused~ Construction, healthful sup pori and rest·

Yellow

Pages

And ktep

.

.

your ''" open l~r

"Tht World'• Greattal Sleeping Pilla*"
IMPERIAL QUILTORAMA $8$.75
PRI!STIGE QUILTORAMA '98.75
·

•

(lu{lttllld rei•UPrltu .)

ful comfort. So restful even Alp van Winkle would
have approved ils comfort. Such a terrific sale
price even Scrooge would have praised the value.
Be sure to ask about the great savings on Bemco
Sacropedic and Sacropedic Imperial king and
queen sizes, too. Sacropedlc makes Jailing asleep
as easy as A, B, Zzzzzzzzzz.

-· Ingels Furniture

OPEN FRI ."&amp; SAT. NIGttTS
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

'~

1_,

�t-.The Daily Sentinel, Middle~otrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., June.21, 1971
•

Mrs. Carpenter Hosts
Bend 0 ' the River Club
Mrs. Howard Nolan

of make yourself from clippings
picture~ from newspapers
atralll' at a meeUng of the Bend and magazines. Members
'0 the River Garden Club named their favorite garden
Thursday night at the Pomeroy club· book or magazine in
home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter. response to roll call.
. The meeting was preceded by
During the business meeting,
a patio dinner. Mrs. Carpenter the Ohio Associl!tion of Garden
UBed flowers from her garden to Clulll' annual convention to be
make centerp~s for the patio held In Colum!&gt;UB, Aug. 111-12,
tables.
was announced. Also noted was
· Mrs. Nolan spoke on how to an Invitation from the Rutland
make collages and other pic- Garden Club for an open
tures from dried plant meeting to be held June 28at the
materials and other things. She Rutland United Methodist
said that now is the time to start Church.
collecting materials and
suggested barley, weeds, ferns, Members were reminded that
blue · grass, dock, and the open meeting of the Rutland
hydrangea blossoms.
Friendly Gardeners Club will be
Hints on preparing the held Wednesday night at 7:30
flowers for collages and p.m. at the Rutland Church of
methods of fastening them on Christ.
the material to make framed Devolions were given by Mrs.
pictures were given by Mrs. Robert Kuhn. Mrs. James Diehl
Nolan. She also suggested that was welcomed as a new
seeds be collected for use In member. Guests were Mrs.
mliklng collages and displayed James Carpenter of the Rutland
a madonna which had won a Friendly Gardeners, . Mrs.
blue ribbon at a recent flower Bradford Maa~ and members of
show.
the Wildwood Garden Club. At
· Mrs. Nolan also demon· the meeting besides those
strated for the group the named were Mrs. Andrew
technique of making grapefruit Cross, Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Mrs.
r011e8. On behalf of the club, Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Clifford
Mrs. Nolan' was presented a gift Phillips, Mrs. Mse Holter, Mrs.
by Mrs. Bert Grimm.
Hilda Yeauger, Mrs. W. 0.
She suggested that the best Barnitz and Mrs. Grella Simp·
garden club book Is one you son.

Syr•cuse was guest demon- and

Closing V.BS Program Held at
Middleport First Baptist

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
THEODORUS Council 17, D.
of A., Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
IOOF Hall. Important issues
concerning national benefit
department to be voted upon.
TUESDAY
LADIES Auxiliary, Racine
American Legion Post,
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at hall with
revisions in constitution and by·
laws planned.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at hall.
Installa lion of officers by
Gladys Cummings.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND FRIENDLY
Gardeners, open meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Rutland
Church of Christ. Mrs. Earl
Dean, guest demonstrator.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club, noon Wednesday,
United Methodist Church.
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
Thursday night, 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church. Mrs.
Elsie Chsmbers, b\ .1; study;
Mrs . ·carolyn Satterfield,
devotions, Mrs. Satterfield,
Mrs. Jean Ellen l(olly, Mrs.
Herman Bailey, •••d Mr~.
Garen Stansbury, hostesses.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
An ice cream social will be
staged Saturday evening at 6:30
p.m. at the Forest Run
Methodist Church. The ice
cream will be homemade.

Alpha Holtz Weds George· Moss
Green Thumb
Notes • •..
A weekly ·feature of Meigs
County Garden Club members.

BY MRS. BETI'Y ClJNE
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
June is wonderful gardep month, but many chores must he
done.
Pansies, sweet peas and calendulas will begin to turn brown
and Dower Jess, so pull them out and replant wit)! new stock for
suinmer and fall color. Sow of portulaca, balsam, celosia, and
bachelor buttons in sunny location.
All these are quick to germinate and come Into bloom, so you
will hai'dly miss the blooms of the old plan Ill removed.
In shade plant beds of wax begonias, in multioolors. They
bear a parade of blooms until frost and you can dig and' keep them
blooming through the winter in a sunny window.
Use plants or seedS of. coleus In semi shade locations. Along
border of green and white coleus planted In front of varigated
green and white caladiums give a coo), fresh look to the gal')len.
Put out softWOod cuttings of shrubs, roses, or bedding plants
now. Almost every thing will root. Choose a shady place away
from· trees, under an eave overhang or on the east side of the
house.
Make a sand bed of coarse sand (the kind builders use In
masonry) at least 41nches deep. Use an inch or two of pea gravel
In the bottom if surrounding soil is clay.
To make cuttings, cut the slips about 4 inches long from new
semi hardened growth . Cut clean at a leaf node; remove all leaves
except the top four. Dip In rooting hormone and set Into the sand
to the base of the leaves. Keep rooting bed moist at all times.
Roses and evergreen shrubs take about four weeks.
Take care of rose bushes for continued flower production
throughout the summer and fall. Continue to use a disease and
insect control program. A preventive spray of folpet (phaltan)
every seven or ten days will prevent blackspot, and help mildew.
You may want to try the new Benlate. It is a systemic fungicide
and controls diseases with fewer applications. You can buy it at
your garden supply store.
Apply a complete fertilizer (1().8.6) or (16-20-0) over the rose
bed at the rate of 2lbs. per IOOsquare feet every four weeks.

attendance of 61. Certificates
ENTERS WEST POINT
were presented to each of the
Mr. and Mrs. Mel Clark,
children by teachers of the
Barbara Anne and Brent, will
respective classes following
leave on Tuesday morning for
their presentations. Special
Philadelphia for several days
recognition was given to those
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Claude
with perfect attendance.
Mrs. Powell, librarian at New Utile League Baseball, Girls Van Metre and visit many
The program opened with the Haven Public Library, has and Sex, Boys and Sex, Best historical places.
students and staff singing the released the names of 106 new Photos of the Civil War, Science
From Phiadelphia, the family
theme song Jesus Speaks to Our books purchased from funds in Magic, Finders Keepers, Troy • will accompany Brent to West
World and Uke a Seed. Other the door to door ~anvas on AStory,AStory, Black In White Point where he wiU enter the
selections by the group were behalf of the library.
America.
academy on July 1.
Where He Leads Me and Sing
She expressed appreciation to Violence In America, The .Brent, a 1971 graduate of
and Shout.
the public for contributions and Drug Beat, Come Back to the Wahama High School, received
The teaching staff was for their cooperation this past Farm, My Life with Martin L. · c ongr at ul at I on s from
recognized and presented year.
King, Jr ., Wildflowers, Field Congressman Ken Hechler,
certificates by the Rev. Simons. She reported that there is an Guide, River to the West, Don't Jennings Randolph and Robert
In the group were Mrs. Linda increase of 523 more borrowers shoot, We Are Your Children; Byrd, for having been accepted
Fredericks, Mrs. Ann Zirkle, of books than In the previous Myths and Legends, Everyday at West Point.
David Swisher, Barbara An·
Science, Faces From the Past,
ATTEND FUNERAL
thony, Patty Fridley, Peggy ye:e~t Thursday the library Action Games for Boys, Action
Imboden • nursery; Brenda workshop committee will place Games for Girls, Playbook for Out of town relatives and
Edwards, Martha King, the new books on shelves for Small Fry, All About Cats, Baby friends who attended the
Darla Neutzllng, Venida borrowers.
Animals, Take Another Look, funeral of Mrs. Nellie Schwarz
Gibbs, and Shieia Edwards,
Also among the new additions Native Sons, The American In Mason were Mr. and Mrs.
beginners; Mrs. Faye Wal· was a much needed new electric Past, Picasso's, Put Me in the Henry Schwarz, Mr. and Mrs.
lace, Mrs. Nola Swisher, typewriter.
Zoo, Old Hat, New Hat, Little Emmett Simpson and children,
Marla Neutzllng, Becky · Another Improvement which League, Big League, Star White Sulphur Springs, W.Va.;
Skaggs, and Jack Kauff, adds to the cheerfulness of the Pitchers, To Teens With Love, Mr. Earl Schwarz, Miami, Fla.,
Jrimary;andMrs.SarahOwen, library is a new glass door How to Punt, Pass and Kick, Mr. and Mrs. Olarles Sheets,
Mrs. Ullie Hubbard, Tami which replaced a wooden one. Ceramics Color and Pottery Pomeroy; Mrs. Stanley
The John Newberry and Gold Decorations, Old Ben, Pen· Saunders and family, Mrs .
Hoffman, and Judy Owen,
juniors.
Meadal Award liooks are as nyworth of Olaracter, Stories James Loyd and family,
A picnic was planned for July Recognition was also given follows: Secret of the Andes, From Shakespeare, Mr. Brown Colwnbus; Mrs. Marilyn Hetzer
8 at noon on the lawn of the Kent Kloes for general . Carry on Mr. Berraditch, A Can Moo, My Teddy Bear, and Tod, Parkersburg; Katie
Chester United Methodist assistance during the week, Wrinkle in Time, The SnowY Revolutionary War, Army Lafferty, Mr. and Mrs. George
Church when the Women's BarbaraAnthonywhoservedas Day, Sun, Bangs and Moon- Moves In, Ramona the Pest, W. Knapp, Steubenville, 0.
Society of Christian Service met pianist, and Mrs. Bob shine, Nine Days Til Christmas, What's Your Calorie Nwnber,
recently at the church.
Richardson who handled A Tree Is Nice, May I Bring a Zelda, Anthology of American
Special Invited gueslll for the refreshments.
Friend, Babaushka and the Stories, and American People .
plcnlc will be the women of the
Three Kings, Sylvesters and the -Landmark History.
Pomeroy United Methodist
HOSPITAL NEWS Magic Pebble, Cinderella
Olurch. Theyarebelngaskedto Holzer Medical Center, First Brown, Drummer Hoff, The
SAMt: DAY
Q-By what name was the
take a covered dish and their Ave. and Cedar St. General Feel of the World and the Flying
SERVICE
southern
hemisphere
known
own table service.
visiting hours 11-4 and 7-13 p.m. Ship, Where the Wild Things
In At 9-0ut At 5
during
the
Coal
Age?
Arrangements were made to Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Are, Madeline's Rescue, Time
A-Gondwanaland, a suU$e'Our:Free Perking Lol
fill a mission box and it was 4:30 p.m. Parents only on of Wonder, The Biggest Bear, I, percontinent . composed of
noted' that new program books Pediatrics Ward .
Juan de Pareja, The Door In the parts of South America, Afhave been ordered. Nineteen
Births
Wall, Rlfles.for Watie, From the rica, Peninsular India, Aus216 E. 2nd, P~mtroy
sick calls were reported during Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eugene Mixed up Files of Mrs. Basil E. tr~lia and Antactita.
•
the past month.
Harper, Gallipolis Ferry, a son; Frankweiler, And Now Miguel,
Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs. · Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Lee Shadow of a Bull, The Summer
Mabel Van Meter were Tucker, Grimms Landing, a of the Swans, The High King,
chairmenfortheprogramuslng son; and Mr. and Mrs. Craig Sounder, Up a Road Slowly,
. TheMiddleYearsastheirtopic. Elswick, Rt. 2, Jackson, a Giants of Inventions, Worlt!s of
COME TO THE MOUNTAIN STATE
The group sang Praise HUn, daughter·
Nature, Americans to the Moon,
Praille Him, Mr. Van Meter had
Discharges
Wild Flowers - How and Why,
scripture, and Mrs. Altona Ksrr Henry W. Allison, Mark R. Crafts and Hobbies, America
gave the prayer. Mrs. Roush Bennett, Mrs . Raymond Golden Book, Someone Else.
served as group leader for the Broyles, Mrs . Woodrow R.
Helen Keller, Why the Sun
topic. discussion with Mrs. Burnett, Mrs. Arthur K. and the Moon, Emberleys Book
Elizabeth Hayes, Mrs. Ethel Chann~ll Jr., and son, Charles - Drawing, Lost Island,
Orr Mrs Pauline Rice Mrs P. Chapman, Kenneth G. Clark, Charity Girl, History of W. Va.
·
d Mr Ka' thry · Chsrles , A. Cordell, Virgil L.
Mai'die Mora,
an
s.
n cra1g,
· Joan Ka y De. weese, Mrs. Education, Amelia Earhart
Mora par tielpa tin g.
James D. .Durbin, Arthur A. Uves, American Surnames,
• ENTERTAINMENT IN
~s . Le~a Woods r~ad an Espenscheid, Reed H. Eynon, Daughters of the Promised
AMPHITHEATER
TWICE
article on higher education for Mrs . Harold K. German, Land, The 28 Letters, Crime In ·
DAILY
2:00PM
&amp;
9:15
PM
older women; and Mrs. Ada Denver F. Griffith , Mrs. America, The Amateur
Morrl8 presented one on Msttle Raymond w. Grover, Mrs. Astronomer's Hand Book, Build
• AGE-OLO CRAFTS
Miles, founder of vacation Bible Donovan L. Hal Ierman and son, it Your~ Science Laboratory,
&amp; SPACE-AGE ARTS
echools. The hymn, Anywhere Mrs. Lily Kerr, Mrs . .Everett D. Twelve Events that Changed
~-...~. ~;"tBANK AMERICARD
with Jesus concluded the Kerwood, Mrs. Charles E. King Ouf World, The Conflict of ,
HONORED
Ja'OIII'llD. Members were asked and daughter, George R. Lewis, Convictions, The New Sevento pve"a Bible verse in response Russell M. Little, Mrs. Clarence teen Book of Etiquette and Your
to roD call next month.
E. McCormick, Mrs. Lawrence Uving, The Book of Health,
Ousley, Jr., Dewey C. Queen, Ginger Pye, Miracles on Maple
•BOOTHS
Mrs . Harry J. Roush and , Hill, The Witch of Blackbird
OPEN
daughter, Mrs . William J. Pond.
DAILY
Steph~nson, Mrs. Donald
Dogs of the World In Color,
Vance, Mrs. Frank A. Vaughan, Suns, Myths and Men, Amos
Wayne K. Whaley' Mr~. Lona B. Fortune Tree Man, bland of the
White, Hobert C. Wi!eman, and Blue Dolphins, Lady Bird
Isaiah Smith.
Johnson, A White House Diary,
Craft items were displayed
and recitations and songs were
presented at the Middleport
Firat Baptist Church Daily
Vacation Bible school closing
JrOgram Sunday night.
JeSWI Speaks to Our World
was the theme of the two-week
school directed by the Rev.
Charles Simons. Devotional
programs featuring puppets
were Jresented by Mrs. Simons.
Donna Boyd served as
secretary-treasurer for the
school.
The offering taking during the
tw~weekawill go to !he children
at the Meigs County Children's
Home. Reporting on the school
at the cloalng program, the Rev.
!~mons noted that 77 students
were enrolled with an average

Library Receives Books

Chester
WSCS Plans
Picnic

In a candlelight ceremony at
the Heath United Methodist
Church of Middleport Saturday
evening, Miss Alpha Holtz,
daughter of Mrs: Jessie Holtz,
Minersville, and Mr. George
Moss, Gallipolis, were united in
marriage.
The Rev. Max Donahue
performed the double ring
ceremony at 7:30p.m. following
a program of nuptial music by
Mrs. L. W. McComas, organist.
Her selections included I Love
You Truly, 0 Promise Me, and
0 Love Divine and Golden.
Arrangement of hydrangea
and spirea decorated the altar.
For her wedding the bride was
attired in an A-line embroidered
faille floor length gown with
accent trim of Alencon lace.
Her veil of iUusion tenninated
In a chapel train, and she
carried a white lace-covered
Bible topped with an

Middleport
Personal Notes
. 1.
La ura SI'dd aII of c·mcmna
I
and Robe.rta. Smart of. Toledo
are vacabonmg here wtth therr
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kioes and children.
.Brent George has returned to
hiS h~me m Gallipolis after
spendmg the past week here
With his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. W. McComas.
VISIT OU
Miss Opal Berry and Miss
Jane Thomas, students at Meigs
High School, are at Ohio
University attending the Up·
ward Bound six week pre·
college course.
The two were taken to Athens
by Miss Mildred Hawley who
was accompanied by Mrs .
Thelma Berry. Opal, a senior
this fall, attended the Upward
Bound program last year. Jane,
a junior, is attending for the.
first time.

ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Wise
of Waverly, were at Mount
Hope, W. Va . recently for the
funeral of Olarles ~ttle. He
was a brother of the late Mrs.
Charles Wise, Sr. of Middleport.
Services were at the Tyree
Funeral Home.
Helium, evidence or which
was found in the sun in 1868,
was discovered outside the
earth's atmosphere .

arrangement or yellow roses.
Mrs . Harold George or
Gallipolis served as matron or
honor.,She wore a floor length
gown of yellow dotted swiss
featuring bands of lace, and a
matching headdress of net and
dotted swiss: She also carried a
lace~overed Bible topped with
yellow roses.
Mr. Roger Hines of Gallipolis
was best man. The bride's
sisters, Miss Kay Holtz and
Miss May Holtz, lighted the
candles.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room. The bride's lable
featured a three tiered cake
topped with the traditional

Pomeroy ....
Personal Notes
Mr . and Mrs . Gardner
Mankin and three children of
Caroii, Iowa, and Kenneth
Mankin of Philadelphia, Pa.
have been here visiting Mrs.
Mabel Mankin.
Mrs. Charles Lochary '
Margaret and Robert, of Eden
Prairie, Minn. have arrived for
a month's visit . with Mrs .
Lochary's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Story, and Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary. In early
July they will be joined by
Charles Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Nicholson and Mrs. Richard
Van Nest of Athens were
Father's Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and
daughter, Jayne Lee .
Airman I~ George Ginther,
who will report to the Air Force
Academy at Colorado Springs,
Colo., on July 3, and his brother,
Philip, came today (Monday)
for a several days visit with
their grandmother, Mrs. Oris
Ginther.

3

miniature bride and.Groom. '!'he
cake was ~erved with punch,
coffee and mints. Asister of the
bridegroom presided at the
punch bowl.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Moss reside on
Slate St. in Gallipolis. The bride
recently graduated from ~e
Jackson Manpower Training
School where she took a course
in secretarial work, and Mr .
Moss is employed at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The wedding arid reception
was attended by the immediate
' families of the couple and a few
close friends.

for expenses
while you're in
the hospital
NEW HOSPITAL

Indemnity

Plan :
• Pays

10 $200 a

you $50

115'111, BIRTHDAY CElEBRATED - The town of
MaSon began an ali-day celebration, in recognition of its
ll~th birthday, withah entertaining parade. The photo at left

week (dependina upon the
basic hospitalization you

presenlly carry) to use as
you see fil.
• ilays you cash while you're

Mason

in the hospital.

Call me todav for details.

P. J. PAULEY
992-2318
307 Spring Ave.

·

Pomeroy, Ohio
The man from Nal ionwi dc is nn yo ur i

Na1ionwidc MutuallnsuranC'e C&lt;-.
Home Office: Col umbus. Oh io

NEW

RJ~NinJRE

. 'l,t9.95

SJS.OQ Down....: .
Balance On

.lo";.~
~ .•·~

Conve'Aient

.;

...

"

~~-· ¢~-·

•
.

-·-.

. •

OPTOMETRIST

.)FFICE HOLIRS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TU 5 (CLOSE'
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST.,'
p

RIPLEY 1 WEST VIRGINIA
ONE MILE OFr US 21 AND l-:f7

~ . .... .
. .... l~ l

HOME OF.rmst iiiSrORIAN - Mason was the home of Virgil A. Lewis (11148-1912) who
Is regarded as the slate's first historian and archivist. Lewis served as slate superintendent of
schools and founded the Southern Historic Mi!gazine and wrote several books. This historical
plaque honoring Lewis overlooks the business sector of Mason.

Terms.

M'ASON
FURNITURE
Mason, w. vci.
.

Johnson, D. D. Jenks, Robert Rolie and Tom Ingels. The
center picture shows members of VFW Post serving as Color
Guard In the parade from the Mason Drive-In to Wahama

---.....

High School. At far right, the Wahama High marching band
performs while participating in the parade.

......

Mr. and Mrs. Earle Kocher of
New Matamoras spent Friday
evening with Mr . and . Mrs.
Herbert Roush . Mr. and Mrs.
the United Slates Air Force, and Kocher are former residents.
will receive his basic training at
Mrs. Erma Wilson attended a
San Antonio , Texas . Mrs. products party at the home of
Fenter was the daughter of the Mrs. Roy Van Meter at Morning
late Mr. and Mrs. John Hayman Slar Friday afternoon. ·
and graduated from Racine
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm and
High School, class of 1935. ' children of Columbus spent
Mrs. Harold Roush of Port· Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Don
land and grandson, Michae.l Bell and Lorna .
Euler of Charleston, W. Va.,
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Bostick
visited Monday evening with . and children of Dunbar , W. Va .,
Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair Hill .
spent the weekend with Mr . and
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Wiggington Mrs. Robert Wood and Debbie
and children of St. Albans, ·w. and Waid Johnson .
Va., spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mr . and Mrs . Raymond
Mrs. Jess Anderson .
Hensler or Racine spent
Mrs. Carl Moore or Pomeroy Saturday evening with Mr . and
spent Friday with Mrs. Mildred Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
Spencer.
Miss Sandra Taylor of
Robert Varian of Dorcas was Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
a dinner guest Friday of Mrs. Stone and children or Leon, W.
Iva Orr.
Va., were weekend guests of

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
George Donohue of Colwnbus
visited Thursday through
Saturday with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Donohue.
Jeff Donohew and Steve
Shuler wiU leave Monday for
Columbus where they will ~nd
the night and then go to
Lockland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Texas Tuesday where
they wiU receive their basic
training. Jeff is the son of Mr.
· and Mrs. Roy Donohew and
Steve is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Shuler.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and
Pam took Mr. and Mrs. Don
Beegle and Tracy to Colwnbus
Sunday evening where they
went by plane to their home in
Marietta, Ga., after spending
the weekend with the Bucks and
Lawrence Beegle at . Dorcas.
The ,Beegles' son, Zane, is
· 'visiting 'hill' 'graridparerits, Mr.
and Mrs. Buck, for the summer.
Frederick Fenter, son of the
former Mattie ·Hayman, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Fenter of
Tuscon , Arizona, gra.duated
from Shady Side High School at
Tuscan in June and enlisted in

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taylor al
Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Taylor and son, J . D. of
Gallipolis spent Sunday with the
Taylors.

POMEROY
HOME &amp;AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Ma in
Pomeroy

,

WHERE
toU SAVE

DOES MAlE A

DIFFERENCE
We pay you to save
(and the pay is good).

PASSIOOK
IATI
,~. Co.. Bl•lCh

HAVEIII
GUARDIAN
PREMIUM

Passenger Tires
and

Truck Tires
At low , low prices.

rho Athens Covnty
Sovlngs &amp; Lolln Co.
2f4Soconl51.

Pomtrov. Ohio
Member Federal

Hom• Loan Bank
Member Federal Savings &amp;
Loan Insurance Corporation .
All accounts Insured up to
120.000.00

'

.

'
'
, hllntl?. ."'ail .,I\U '1{11 i!9..l"~o • :.. , •. 1 ,,,fll1tlno,'t 110 ~H u ,_,.11 \11w ..,.;: ~ .....
'·

·'

&lt;

, 1t. I

LOSE UP TO
20POUNDS
Social Notes IN 14 DAYS!

Old Salem

Famo1H U.S. k!omen Ski Team Diet

During th e non-snow off season
U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team
lhe
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Randolph
of Toledo were recent weekend members go on the "Ski Team" diet
guests with her sister and to lose 20 pounds in two weeks.
That's right - 20 r ound s in 14 days!
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Til~
bas is of t h~ diet i!' chemic ill food
Lawrence Chapman.
ai.: tion and was devised by u famou s
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stout Colorado physichm cspct'ially fo r the
who have sold their farm to the U.S. Ski Team . Normal t:nergy is
Ohio Power Co., have pur· maint ained {very import an t! ) while
chased property near Pomeroy. red ucing. You ~ cep '' full " . no starvu·
on, be~:ausc thl' diet is dl'Sii!:ned that
Mr. Lauren Hoffman, who tiway!
It's u dkJ that is easy to follow
recently had a stroke, is slowly whe ther you wo rk, travel or sta y ut
improving at the Holzer homt: . For me n. too.
This is, honestly, u fant astkull y
Medical Center. He is expecting
sucrcssfu
l diel. If it wcrcn'l. th e U.S.
to be able to come home soon.
W
omen'
s
Ski Tcum wu uldn' l bt: pe r·
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Hoffman
mittcd to usc it ! R igh i ~ So, give you r·
were called here by the serious ~elf the sarn c b r ~uk the U.S. Ski Tc:m1
illness of his father. ·
ge ts. Lose we ight the sden lifk . pro.w n
Steven Nelson is enjoying a way . Ewn if you've tried a tl th~· otl11.:1
vacation with his grandparents, d id ~, yuu owe it to }' l.Jtlr~df to try
the U.S. Women\ Ski Tcu m Dic t.lN ~lt
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Stout.
C rapt· fruit Di1:·tJ. Tha t is, if yo u reall y
Mr. and Mrs. Couvin Smith do wunl to lo~ c 20 pu u m.l ~ in two !
· and daughters, Kathy and weeks. Oufc r IOllu y. 'I ea r this qut a~ a

4RT &amp;CRAFT
F41R

N. W. COMPTON. 0. D.

Mason Volunteer Fire Department
prepsrlng cl!lcken for a barbecue held Saturday. Shown,
from left, are Howard Johnson, David Johnson, Mike

Apple Grove News, Events

Robinson's Ceaners

TO JULY .4
CEDAR LAKES

~· members ~ .~

Celebrates Its 115th Birthday

SHIRT
FINISHING

J E30

is

Susan of Columbus were
weekend visitors .with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Wilson. Kathy and · Susan
remained for a week's visit with
their grandparents. ·
Mrs. Effie Hoosier is ill and is
under the care of Dr. Tell.

EACH DAY WE
ENDEAVOR~ TO
PUBLISH ONLY
THE VERY BEST

FIRST WOMAN MAYOR- The town of Mason was way
ahead of its time in the women's lib movement. It had the
first woman mayor in the State of West Virginia from 1932-34
when Joanne F. Strode served In the position. This sign ,
proclaiming Mason as having had the first woman mayor, is
located along the highway In the north end of the town which
will celebrate its 115th birthday this Saturday. Two of
Mason's many youngsters, April and Jeffie Cundiff, children
cl Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cundiff, play In front of the sign.

What you expect from a Newspaper you can expect
from us. To find out exactly what, when, where and

.

'

who, read our newspaper. Join the thron_g of well

LOROBI'S PIZZA •••

informed readers, have it home delivered or visit

Seeking a couple to own and operate a
Lorobi's Piua shop in the MiddleportPomeroy area. Call Jackson, Ohio,
Phone.286-4633 for further information
o.r write.:

our nearest newsstand.

The /Daily Sentinel
Now Going Into Over 5,400 Homet1

Lorobl'• Pizza

''
•··
·,

206 Dawson St.
Jackson, Ohio 45640
'

rcm i n d ~r .

Send on!}• S\. 25 I S\ 50 fu r R u ~h
Servin•) , l'a'\ h h O.K., to: ·Ski Tc:1m
Diet. nq Sh&lt;ffid d Or. , D&lt;pt. RC.
Sanl' Bar bm. (,Ji[. 93 10 3. Don' t
order unless yo u cxpel't to lo~ 20
pound s in two wee ks! Be'-'a usc !hat 's
wh;it the Ski Te:1m Diet will do !©
- adv.

Need a
caterer who'll
dish it out?

\

Seve yourself a lot 'of money and -sleepless nights.
Because right now, we're t11klng $40 off the price
ot the Bemco Sacropedic and Bemco Sacropedlc
Imperial mattress sets.
Think of It, Save $40 per set for a limited time only,
and still get the benelits of Bemco's exclusive
Unlfused~ Construction, healthful sup pori and rest·

Yellow

Pages

And ktep

.

.

your ''" open l~r

"Tht World'• Greattal Sleeping Pilla*"
IMPERIAL QUILTORAMA $8$.75
PRI!STIGE QUILTORAMA '98.75
·

•

(lu{lttllld rei•UPrltu .)

ful comfort. So restful even Alp van Winkle would
have approved ils comfort. Such a terrific sale
price even Scrooge would have praised the value.
Be sure to ask about the great savings on Bemco
Sacropedic and Sacropedic Imperial king and
queen sizes, too. Sacropedlc makes Jailing asleep
as easy as A, B, Zzzzzzzzzz.

-· Ingels Furniture

OPEN FRI ."&amp; SAT. NIGttTS
992-2635
MIDDLEPORT

'~

1_,

�I

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 21,1971

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Sentinel Oassifieds
--------------~--

BY ADA SLACK
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
Butcher have moved from the
former Rizer property to
Winston Salem, N. C.
Mrs. Wanda Guinther spent a
recent weekend with her aunt,
Mrs. Ellen :Newland of Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Scafflde
of Freeport were Sunday guests
of their daughter and son-In·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Slack, Suzanne and Philip.
Randy Friend of Racine, R.D.
spent a few days with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Holly Friend, Darren and
Karren.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hubbard
and children of Lancaster
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Hubbard recently.
Mr. and Mrs. R. s. Corson of
Morgantown, w. va ., were
guests of their daughter and
son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
McPhail.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Hall
spent a day with relatives In
Logan, W. Va. and visited a
·
cemetery there.
Mrs. Max Folmer and
daughter, Pam, were joined
here by her husband who Is
attending a achoolln Cincinnati
and they attended a wedding of
a friend In Wheeling.
Mr. and Mrs. John Guinther
of Winter Haven, Fls., and Mrs.
Joe Cook of Pomeroy visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Guy A.
Guinther and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Slack,
children Robert Jr., David, and
Robyn, spent a weekend with
hia mother, Mrs. Ada Slack.
They were joined for a Sunday
dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson, T~y. Cheryl and
Terry of WoH Pen Road and Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Slack,
Suzanne and Philip.
Kenneth, Karen and Terry
Guinther and Darlene Duncan
spent a day with the George
Staats children of Chester, RD.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gibbs
have moved from the
Leadingham property to the
~r property.
.
I ~ . and Mrs. Larcyc-Eberslili!h and David spent 8 few
days with Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Roberts of Ostrander.
Recent guests of Mrs. Pauline
Morarlty were Mrs. oma Truax
and Mr . Earl Morris of
Marietta;
Mrs.
Marty
Miss
Connie
Morarity,
Morarity, Mr. Bob Hansford,
Mr. and Mrs. Marty Hansford,
and son Steve, of Columbus;
Mrs. Lena Bunce, of Mid·
dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Harris and Mrs. Harold Smith,
local.
.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Eichinger
1 d and
b MJohn ac-

Pomeroy
Motor .Co.

2 SIINS
Of
QUAliTY ·

1968 ~HEVROLET
sms
Impala 2 se~t St. Wagon. local I owner car, maroon finish .
vinyl . lntenor, V-8 engine, automatic 1rans .• power
steermg &amp; brakes. new w-w tires, radio. Sharp Inside &amp;

out.

1967 CHEVROLET
$1695
Impala Cpe., ~- 8 engi~e. standard trans., local 1 owner
car, good w-w fires, radro, blue finish &amp; matching interior . .
1967 FORD
11695
4 Doo~ sedan L.T.D., power steering, power brakes, air
conditioning. Vln~llnterlor , blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish
radio, new w-w trrec;
'

fonreroy Motor Co.
· OP.EN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
-N)!AEROY, OHIO

Minersville. Accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Rose and Michael
and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton'
they attended the graduati~
exercises of the Rose daughter
Diana, at the Southern
School, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
Sellers visited recently with her
brother, Robert Flanagan. They
also visited the Letart Falls
cemetery. .
Mr. and Mrs. William Clndiff
Sr. and family of Walbridge
spent a weekend with relatives
here.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Jones of
Galesburg, Md., visited Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Duck·
worth, of Huntington, visited
with his sister, Mrs. Agnes
White and brother, Richard
White . They attended the
graduation exercises of the
former's grandson, Garry
McComas of Ravenswood and
spent the night with · the MeComases, then accompanied the
Duckworths home for a visit.
Mr. Russell Radcliffe of
Pennsylvania has purchased
and moved Into the Nial Salser
home.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. James
Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Sampson
Hall, and Mrs. Janice Lawson
and David were Mrs. Vada
Teaford, and son, Delbert, of
Racine RD.
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth visited with his
bro~.rA»~I)ll Hudson .a!ld his
mother;'My Ia Hudaon, a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He also participated In the
hymn sing held at the First
.United Presbyterian Church.
Memorial Day weekend
guestsofMrs.DalsyRoush,Mr.
and Mrs. George Schneider, and
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Duckworth, Jr. and daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Donahue,
of Rittman; a.nd Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brubaker and family of
Wadsworti). Mrs. Roush accompanied them home for a
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Hall Frost of

High

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
Cancellation &amp;Corrections
Will be accepted until9a .m. for
Day of Publication
REGIJ.LATIONS
· . The Publisher reserves the
nght to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one '"correct
Insertion .
RATES
For W~nt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one inserfion

Minimum Char:;, 75c
12 cents per w• . d three

consecutive Insertions.

18 cen'ts per word six consecutive insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for -50 word minimum .

~:~~~~

LOCAL MEN
TRAIN now to drive semi
cleaner. Electro
hygiene new demOnstrator
tractor trailers. You can earn
has all cleaning attachment'
high wages after short
plus the new electro suds for
training . For application and
shampooing carpet. Only
Interview, call304-344-8843, or
$27.50 cash price, or terms
write School Safety Division,
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Advance Systems, Inc.. c-o
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland -::---- - - - - . . :6:..:.:
·15-6tc
Drive, Charleston , West
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
VIrginia 25306 .
machine, 1971 model, in new
6·21 -2tc
walnul stand. All features

Female Help Wanted
EXCELLENT opportunity for
housew i ve s.

Mornings or
afternoons at your con venience In your own neigh -

MEIGS COUNTY
FISH &amp; GAME
ASSN.

Annual Fish Fry and
Trap Shoot Thursday,
June 24 all he Pomeroy
Gun Club.
, Rain or shine.

built -in

to

make

price

or

terms

---:

Roofing &amp;Carpenter

wen

Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW

&amp;

OLD WORK

available.

Phone 992-5641 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:6:..:.:
·15-6tc

bedroom, 1112 -baih mobile

Wanted
WANTED
DISTRICT
DISTRIBUTOR
NO INVESTMENT
tN INVENTORY
OR FEES
Ambi1ious
Cosmetic

woman with
or
selling

background .
Unique
program offers full 60 per

cent Distributor profits. All
orders and paper work for

your sales group handled

direct from our factory. For
ful ,l information -samples
wnte:
R.
J.
Lusher ,

President , Robinette
Cosmetics. 8900 Aetna Rd.,
Cleveland, Ohio 44105.

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES :

dishes,

For Rent

home. Phone New Haven 882·
2052 or write Bob Ashley, Box
476, New Haven, W. Va.
· 6-20-12tc
COLONIAL maple stereo-radio
combination, AM-FM radio
four speakers, ' .4-speed ln~
termixed changer, separate

controls. Balance $78.60. Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085.
___________6:..:.:·
20-6tc
MODERN walnut stereo-radio
combination, dual volume
control, 4 speakers, 4-speed
changer, separate controls.

· All Weafher Roofing &amp;
Cons·t rucfion co.

0. 45726
PHONE 742-3945

DEXTE~.

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

___,;__

ATTENTION PROSPECTiVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Wetl Be the Most Profliable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
'•'WINSOR
.tcBUDDY
~EE

-It CHAMPION

..

.. AUO

DOUBLE-WlDES

,-fr.VAN DYKE

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

VOU SET· UP AN
...'IOU APPROVED A
•ACADEMIC • QUIET" "CULTUAAL· ASCE-TIC "
DOIUI FOR. TWii EGl&gt;• I&gt;OIUI FOR. OTHER.
f.I&amp;Ai&gt;S TO LIVE. IN ..,
STUDeNTS ...

TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

PA.RKERSBUR~ MOBILE HOMES, INC.

...SO

W~AT

·-··So I SAID To TH'e GuY:'J.Iow Oto
.ARE YOu~·~ AND 1-1!! SAYS:•l:D BE f!6
IN MA 11Ci-l ,EXCEPf fOit.. 0-l! 'TFIINe•""-I
WAS 90~~ IN OCToB!R. •
·

AIJOUT US
SWINGiNG

StNG~ES~

,

I-IA-1-lA-~A-HA!

MEMORIAL BRIDGI!' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSIIURG, W. VA.

2 BEDROOM mobile home air
conditioning in Racine area .

Phone 992-6329.

6-17 -6tc

2 BEDROOM . house at Rock
Springs.

Furnished

or

un furnished . Call992-6887 after 5

p. m.

REGISTERED Quarter stud TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33,
service, Hank's Rock 209498
1l2-mlle north of new Meigs
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3:
High School. Phone 992.2941.
Pomeroy, Ohio,. Phone 9923-5-llc
6880.
6·17-12tc FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992·5434.
SMALLEY'S
Gift Shop
10-18-t!c
Chester, Ohio. Bottles, Blink~
glassware, Sequoia ware,
jewelry, flowers, small items, 2 BEDROOM trailer All
and larg_e collection of Avon
utilities paid . Phone 992-713J
bottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. daily.
or 992-7384.
6-18-121c
6-18-3tc

GIVE AWAY to good home, a
long haired male dachshund, TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse
about 4 years old. Phone 985·
Ohio. 992-2951.
'
4226.
4-2·
tfc
20-3tp
________ ___6·::.:
compan e
Y rs. Roger Englewood, Fla., visited Mr. t'HIL AND JIM'S Restaurant EXTRA large trailer lots, good
location. Velma G. Zuspan,
Hubbard, and two children,
and Pizza In Middleport 773-5750.
Mason, W. Va.
local, and Mr. and Mrs. Freddie and Mrs. William Eichinger and
across from Firestone. Phone
6-1S-12tc
992·2236 for carry out pizza.
Boyd and Mandy of Parkers· John.
·
6·20-6tc
burg, attended a family picnic Mr. and Mrs. George (Petie)
TRAILER for 10 weeks. Adults
and open house ln observance of Cundiff and family have .moved REDUCE safe and fasl with only. Phone 992-3181.
the 50th wedding anniversary of from Charleston, W. Va. to the
Gobese tablets and E-Vap- _______________6:..::
·20-tfc
Wat,er
pills.
Nelson
Drugs.
Mrs. Eichinger's aunt and William Cundiff home.
5·26-30fp EXTRA LARGE trailer lots on
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. John Bohram visited her
State Route 7, one mile north
niece, Mrs. John Roach and SAVE UP to one half. Bring ol Eastern High School.
Forbes of Logan, Ohio.
Phone 985-4106 .
Mr.andMrs.JohnCrooksand family and her sister-In-law,
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop,
151
Butternut
Ave.,
6-20-6tc
.daughters, Barbara and Mrs. Thomas Carroll of HartPomeroy.
Patricia of Columbus spent a ford. She accompanied them
4-2J.tfc FURNISHED 5-room house,
recent weekend with his and Mrs. Lollis Scarbe, Mr. and
two-bedroom mobile home.
One bedroom apartment
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Mrs. John Hall Sr. to the Fair REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service. Klrafl No. 050481.
M&amp;G Food Market, 3 Ml:
Crooks and other. relatives.
View Cemetery.
Rich Raffles blood lines. Fee· south Middleport, Rt. 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Quick
Mr. and Mrs. James R. White
SSO. Phone 9'12·6880, E. J. Hill,
6·20-31p
Pomeroy, Ohio.
of Columbus were supper and daughter, Mary Beth, of
6-13-12tc 3 ROOMS and bath, nicely
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donsld Dunbar, W. Va., spent a week
furnished. Modern in town.
Cottrill and family. They at- with his mother, Mrs. Agnes
Ideal for one or two persons.
tended the commencement White and uncle, Richard Duck· Help Wanted
Phone 992-2623.
__:_::
6·20-tfc
exercises, of the Southern Local worth. While here they visited
High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones, Mr.
William and Charles Duck- and Mrs. Emil Eynon, and Mr.
Auto Sales
worth of Rittman, spent a week and Mrs. Dennis Eynon of
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
here with their mother, Mrs. Nease Settlement. Mary Beth
hardtop, power steering,
p~wer brakes , air, 18,000
Daisy Roush and Mr. and Mrs. remamed for a week with her
m1les. Excellent condition.
George Schneider and Mr and' grandmother.
Phone 992-2288.
Mrs. Marvin McKelvey. They Mrs. Fred :Jenkins Sr. has
6·3-llc
enjoyed Ohio River fishing returned home from Holzer
1970 CUTLASS 4 door Custom
while here.
Medical Center following eye
and
Sedan, all power, air con.
John Carroll of South surgery.
ditionlng. Phone 992·5164.
Mrs. William Eichinger spent
Charleston, w. va., while on
6-17-Stc
vacation from the Penn Ceniral a.weekend with her brother and
Phone 992-2156·
Railroad, visited his sisters and Sl~te~-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs.
For Sale
families, Mr. and Mrs. John Vtrgtl Co)lins, of Nelsonville
for high styling in GRAVELY TRACTOR and
Bohram, local, and Mr. and RD. She a.lso attended her OP!:RATOR
mower, excellent condition
local beauty salon . For lnPhone 9'12-3702.
'
Mrs. Herachel Rose, Michael alumm reumon .
tormation, write Box 30 5
Racine, Ohio.
' ___ _ _ __ __:6...:..:_
·17-6tc
and Diana, or' Minersville.
Mrs . Roy Winebrenner,
. Mr. Larry Ebersbach has grandson Tommy Weaver, Jean ______ _____.:_6·2::0·6fc
IF CARPETS look dull and
returned home alter having Sauvage, and Susie Provo spent
drear, remove spots as they
surgery at the Jane M. ease a Sunday with the former's Real Estate For Sale
appear with Blue Lustre.
HOipllalln Delaware. ,
daughter and son-In-law, Mr. HOUSE In Syracuse. 2 lots.
Rent electric shampooer Sl
Baker Furniture Compan/
Mn. Ellen Newland of Athens and .Mrs. Harold Weaver, and Sl ,800.00. Phone 992-2806.
6- 16-~lc
spent from Saturday until famtly of St. Louisville.
· 6-21 -6tc
Tuelday with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Myla Hudson has returned to
BUILDING LOTS for sale.
Q-How does a butlafl tJ Newly approved in restricted
A. Gulnlller and family: On her h~me from Veterans
hou~lng district. Near Rock
SUnday, accompanied by Mrs. Memonal Hospital after having taste sweetness?
Sprmgs.
Phone 992-6887 after
A-With its feet.
·
Guinther and IIOQ Terry, and surgery there.
5 p. m., or on weekends.
Q-What new military :-:-:--::-~--------=-~·.::17. t(c
Mn. Malcolm Guinther, they
reyulatior&amp;
was establU.hetl
flllled a· cemetery at Success.
120 BASS Universal accordion
by the U.S. Army in 1970?
and case. like new. Phone 247 .
Mr.. and Mn. WIUiam Barton
Apostle's l&gt;eath
A-Beer can nqw be 2166.
Ill JIIIClll have moved Into a . Saint Peter may have been served legally in Arn1y mess
tra111r home at Se\lenth and ktlled during the persecu· · halls.
::-::-:-~'-::-----_:::_
6·:.:_17-6tp
Iaiii 8&amp;1. •
. .
.
,!tons of Em per o·r Nero
1910 MAV.ERICK , standard.
Q-In the U.S . Army, who radio,_ S1550 ; 1965 Ford
Mn. Jolin ,Bohr*'" Ylated a around A.D. 64. According to
•,-.., willt her lljltef atid tradttu,n. he was crucified L! thi!l only person ta have GalaXIe, automatic, factory
atr, nice, S650. Coolville 667·
'I'
llld Mn h&lt;•ml downward a~ his own helrl the rank of "Genemlof 6214,
~~ ~~ •-...Oiu of• l'~lllll'SI , Jll'ubably in lh~ I.he Armie~"?
A-fien ..John ;f. Pershing. . ·- - - -... _ _ _ 6·17-6fp
~ .~
IUN 11111•~
~t'I' IJnJan Gal'(h.ms.

- -- - --

STOP PAYING RENT and own
your rent money.

See
Dale Dutton

Tom Crow

992-2580

992-2534

Pomeroy

Middleport

EXPERIENCED

IOHNSON MASONRY

Radiator Service

Co11lplete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
,Smallest Heater Core.

26" Rl DING lawn mower . Bob
Trussell. Chester. Phone 985·
3929.
6·20-3tp

. Bl.AETTNARS
Ph. 992·2143

- -- - --

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

For Sale
36" X23 11 X.009

Aluminum
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20*
The
·Daily Sentinel
8 tor $1.00

lll Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
and accessories. Call us for
your needs . We deliver
distribuiors, Brown's, Phone

992-5113.

6-2-tfc

Air Conditioning
lnspectkm and
Re-Charge

6, 98

~OL.D

Plus
Parts

D. BROWN

Blaettnar's

ARRIVES!!

PHONE 997-2143

Real Estate For

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

742-4902

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

'5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 ·

Pomero, Home &amp;Auto

W.tNPY
7RAT 'HER M011fER
AlfO 8Rr:fl!IER !'tAN 71.J SPENO 7RE EN·
TIRE 8/JMMER IN NEW &gt;ORK CITY.

Open8Til s
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pom&lt; Jy, 0.

UNICO TIRES
Buy 1 tire at regular priceget 2nd tire at

_ ___

L TOOK A

LEAVE OF

10 BEWI'TH
YOU AND

5EEIN6 'THE
616 TOWN!

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER· O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
Complete
front en ! service,
Pomeroy .
S-30-tfc
tune up and brak : service.
Wheels balanced elec· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tronically.
All
work
Reasonable
rates.
Ph.
4-46-4782,
Sale
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Gallipolis. John Russell,
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Owner &amp; Operator.
S-20-30tc
5-13-lfc

Cleland Realty

EXPERT lawn mower and INTER lOR. exterior decorator
tiller repair. Free pickup and
and barn roots: Phone 742·
608 Easl Main
delivery
. Warren 1 S Mower
5683 .
Pomeroy
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
6·20-JOtc
992-7357.
POMEROY
FAMILY
5-18-lfc
HOME. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
garden space, garage, lot SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Insurance
fenced, apartment in lower
service, all makes, 992·2284,
part of house. ALL IN GOOD
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
CONDITION $10,000.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Authorized Singer Sales and
operator's license? Call 992·
Service.
We
Sharrn
Scissors.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
2966.
3·29-lfc
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story home,
. 6·1$-tf;c
7 rooms, bal.h, 4 bedrooms,
CONCRETE
porches. galiage, well water, READY-MIX
delivered right to your
city water, A NICE PLACE
project. Fast and easy . Free
TO LIVE. Just $8,900.
LEGAL NOTICE
est1mates. Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
NOTICE OF
ORIVE-lN - LOCATED IN
Middleport,
Ohio.
APPOINTMENT
SMALL COMMUNITY AND
cue No. 20510
6·30-tfc
ON STATE ROUTE - InEstate of Lucy A. Bolen.
cludes all equipment and
.
ESTIMATE on general Deceased
building .
INTERESTED FREE
Notice
is hereby given that
remodeling, roofing and Marjor ie E.
parties call for price and
Stanley, of Route 2.
painting . Phone 992-7729, 9 Albany , Ohi01
has been duly
showing .
a.m . to 6 p.m.
appointed ~dmlnistrat.riK of the
6·9·30tc Estate of Lucy A. Bolen,
OUR ONLY BUSINESS IS
deceased, late of Meigs County,
REAL ESTATE - CALL
Ohio.
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
TODAY
Creditors are required to file
Complete
Service
HENRY CLELAND
their claims with sold fiduciary
Phone
949-3821
REALTOR
within four months .
Racine, Ohio
Office f92-2259
Dated this 2nd dey of June
Crltt Bradford
1971 .
Residence 992·2548
5-1 -ttc
F . H. O'Brlen
Probate
Judge
THE FREP CADLE real estate SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
of.
said
County
east of Racine village. Con·
(617, H. 21 . 31
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
tact Frank Cleland at 811 Vine
662-3035.
St . in Racine. ·
2-12-tfc
6-18-3tc
_.:.:
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
NEIGLER Construction. For
Cue No. ZO,S16
building or remodeling your
Estate
of
Lea Marshall,
home. Call Guy Nelgler, Deceased.
Racine, Ohio.
Notice Is hereby given thai
7-31-tfc Bessie Wise, of Rutland, Ohio,
has been duly appointed Ad·
RALPH'S CARPET - Up- ministratrlx of the Estate of Leo
holstery Cleaning Service. Ma:shall, deceased . lete of
Free estimates. Phone Me1gs County, Ohio.
c.reditors are required to file
Gallipolis 4-46-0294.
the~r claims with said fiduciary
· Broker
3-12-tfc within four months.
110 Mechanic Street
Dated fhis 9th day of June
Pomeroy, Ohio
•
I!ACKHOE AND DOZER work 1971.
F. H. O'BRIEN
Septic tanks Installed. George
57 ACRES - Nice country
Probate Judge of said County
I
Bill)
Pullins,
Phone
992·2478.
home, modern bath and
4·25-tfc (61 14, 21 , 28, Jtc
kitchen, 4 bedrooms with
closets. Gas forced air fur.
nace, Drilled well, small HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA' SERVICE . Phone
barn. Only $10.000.00.
NOTICE OF FILING
992-2522.
OF INVENTORY
6·10-lfc
AND APPRAISEMENT
RUTLAND - · 2 bedroom
PROBATE COURT
paneled home. bath, utility
room. large lot, fenced . Low AWNINGS, storm doors and The State ' Ot" ()h-10, Meigs
windows, carports, County.
iaxes. Asking $9,599.99.
To the Administratrix of the
marquees, aluminum siding
to such of the following
and railing. Call A. Jacob, estate;
MIDOLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
as are residents .of the State of
sale• representative. For free Ohio, viz: - the surviving
bath, large living, dining
est1mates, phone Charles spousa, the next Of kin, the
room , nice side porch.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. v. beneficiaries under the will;
garage, fenced yard. Asking
Johnson Md Son, tnc.
ll'ld to the at torney or attorneys
$10,500.00. Want to make an
representing
any of the
5-27-tfc
offer .

V'AIN'T NO PING·DONG
VEGETARIAN, THI&gt;IS.

FOtt SURE I

.

.. •

HOIST ETTER

JOII'! HY

TEIIM QF

AERIAL

f:::::::::LA~CRoBATS ···

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

ACJB088
].··-

HE WAS TO MEET ME HERE.
I WONDER WHO ~ ARE.

•

10. Began
ngaln
18. Prong
22. COlorado

Merchanl'o
word

43. Poverty

B·l!.2
11. Airport
~.

(C 1111 Xlnf l'eaturea Syndicate, lac.)

Indian

DOWN

28.60oeco.
1.-be•r
24. Benedict
12. Threatening 2. Scene of
Amold,
acUon
worde
for
13. Bhakeopear· 3. .\ct
example
demunly
eo:nklns
(4 wdJ.)
211. Left In
a. EnUre
4. SeotU.h
the
county
lurch
U.Pronoun
32. Path
5.1951 Ooear 28. Boat·
16.Makelace
for
IW&amp;in'l
winner
17. Old Chlneoe
8D&gt;wn
6.Declalm
whlaUe
klJIIdom
ss. Pull!
7. Cardholder 28. II that
!8.Joe
88.Actreaa,
(abbr.)
101
Collep's
-Scala
(2 wdJ.)
8. Newlywed
yell
39. C&amp;rd
(2 wdJ,)
30. Str1116le&lt;l
19. Angar
game
inltrumenta
9. Art lover
20. Border
21. Ethel, to
JoiiJI.John
n~arParls

.........

..

23. Woeblt
24. 0erman·

TERRY
ANP I 5UPP05f HER
Of AVANT·GARPE

CI~CLE

GAtL ~R,

OF A COURT·

MARTIALE[} AIR OFFICE!?, ANil
SNAPPER ~R~55ARP, HIS F!11ENP,
~ECML HOW HER LATE HU5SAN17,
PRIVEN PAST HIS PHY51CAI. AN!l
MeNTAL LIMITS ~y THE I'ESPERATE EARLY 'WORL[} WAR JI
RGHTING, HAl' SOMSEP A
JAPAN~'SE HOSPITAL SHIP. FOR
THI$, HE'll SEEN 5cNTcNCEP 70
PRISON, WHERE HE' lltE!l.

Inventory and

Appraisement will be for

hearing before this Court on the

30th day of June, 191'1. at 10:00
o'clock A. M.
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file

FRIEND5 INFLUENCE[}

HOW GALEE'S WRITTEN

Tlfl5 f'I.AY ABOUT HER
FATHER.

THE

TRUTH WAS ijA[} ENOUGH- SUT

C~fATEPA

MAN 1 NEVER KNEW-

MON5W~!

JJ~Mmlbrn;::.::::~::~c

jJnRtWII

tJ

~

tJ

.
,I

'

iHE ACC,U5E:D
MAN eSCAPED THE
HAN6h\AN'5 NOOSE.

I
I
l 'f nu :u:
~~;.:.:..;;;::..rl--.,-...,---,
' Now arranp the circled leltel'll

atyleeake
28. Lanptllhed

n. Dlaeourte·
OUI

Lo form lht aurpriM anawer, u
auuealed by lhe abon cartoon.

28. Bell oound
29. Il&amp;l' IDem·
btr (abbr.)

so.Oullllhoe

jPrilliheSUPJIIISUHSWIRmjBY

31. Nallfbty
34. Wordeuoo·
dated with
8Down
36. Partlllan

A[ll II I II)
(AuwiP'n tom.,rru•·)

Jumlol•··' JUUP KHAKt CHillY LIAVIN
:-&gt;ntunf,,,, ·~

wrnmer

36. Ialet
37. Type Of

·\"""; l'r: ."itif'l,·,. mil j11~1 " IWI,.

m·n u jimr- THE ANKLE

,,

WHAT IF ~ AJ:NiCE.
DOESN'T 1\ELP ME? 00 I
. 6ET M'( MONf'( e,I,Ct&lt; ?

Chrlltle"

EABYi ..

'

] II

0

. -40. "Alma

. CAPTAIN

,];,klawy"·

f ROPEA

01Pitch

MOBILE HOMES

I

Unicramble these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each equare, to
rorm four ordinary wordo.

3ir. :.enee

MILLER

· - - -- - -

DO YOU FELLOWS
SMELL CIGI\R

, 5COI'IN 1'5 NOT AMONG HI EM,

of said County, was flied In this

'

42.

-Doc"

Duvaller

Rutland Town$hlp. '
Yo,u are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Appraisement~ of the estate of the
aforementioned, decnsed, tate

WMP0/,1390

· 8a1Urd&amp;J'o ~ton IN DIVINO TO THE BO'I'l'OM OF ·
PLICABU!Ul Wll BRING \JP MORI!l ORAVEL THAN
PEARL8.-BO!fORE DE BALZAC

DAILY CROSSWORD

No. 20486, Rutland, Ohio,

them at least five days prior to
the
dote set for hearing .
•
•
WIDE
. Given under my hand and
NICE HOME IN COUNTRY_
GeorgeS. HobsteHtr Jr.
seal of said Court , this llth day
One acre, nicely finished two
Bro~tr
of June, 1971.
' F. H. O'Brien
bedroom home.with fireplace
Phone 985-41U
Judge and ex -officio Clerk of
built-in
kitchen, wood
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
c o u r t :"·
paneling, carpeted, clly TWO story frame, 3 bedrooms, s a i d
By Ann B. Watson
water. Localed on Athens
bath, kitchen, dining room
· Deputy Clerk
l220 Washington Blvd.
County Road C-6.4, Vanderhoff
and living room, partial (6) 14, 21. 2tc
Bt tpre, Ohio
Rd., one mile from Rt. 7 and
basement, storm windows,
three miles from Rt . .so.
gas circulating heat, lof . .- - - - - - - - - .
Twenty minutes to Parkers100x120, level corner lot
ReaTEstate For Sale
burg, Athens, or Pomeroy; 20
trailer space with all. utilities.
miles {18 miles 4 lane high.
Located In Chester, Ohio, In
ITEM: Morning: A
5 ROOM with bath, 'brick home
way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
f1ne neighborhood. Price zestful time for some
with carpeting, In Middleport. · respectively; 3112 miles from · $10,600.
Phone 992-2540.
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup- ________________ 6:..·:..:18·3fc people. Double dismal
6-16-5tc 11ers Plains . $14,500 by
for others. Jim Mees
own.e rs, Frank and Pat
1
MIDDLE PORT: Stewart home, somehow gets us. all
Goobel,
667-3838
.
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His .•
S. 4fh St., 2-story brick and together every day.
6·6-tfc
Pomeroy. Phone 9'12·2293.
garage, 3 bedrooms, steeping
·~
10·25-lfc
porch, 2112 baths, hill ·
3 BE OROO/yl brick home.
basement, hot water heat, 2
Choice locat1on In Middleport.
HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights.
lots. Shown by appointment
Seen · by appolntmenf only .
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
only. Rodney Downing, real
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.n, .
2196.
I .
estate broker .
. s.7-lfc
'
6-20-3tc
'I
, 5·26-tfc

• •

MOOliAH'!!

aforementioned persons :
Armett M. $heets, deceased.

Said

THE BORN LOSER

..

IHVITED TO

Virgil B.

Court.

oO

TAIIE A OEEP .
BRfATH AND JUMP,·
A/1D'(! Tiff LINE
WIU l!RfAK YOIJR
FALL!

_____

LOGAN FIRE and safety
equipment. Sales and service.
All types and sizes of fire
extinguishers. Special prices
on extinguishers for boats,
campers, homes.
Also
discount prices on other sizes.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
frame home, bath, forced air Real Estate For Sale
992-3821. Owner Dwight
furnace, nice. front porch,
Logan.
basement, dnlled well and SIX ROOM house, bath, full
6·16-30ic
nice tot at Letart. Storm doors
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave.,
and
windows.
Asking
lUSt walking distance from
$7,000.00 .
downt.own Pomeroy. Contact
Ed, Hedrick, 2)37 Wadsworth
THINK BIG, INVEST IN REAL
Dnve, Columbus, Ohio, phone
ESTATE. •
237-4334, Columbus.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
5·9-tlc
ASSOCIATE
992-2371
6·20-61c
1
1

12 14 24' ·

I COULDN'T
PABB UP 'THE:
Ai3&amp;ENCE ... CHANCE OF

WRONG, OH 5URE 1 MOM . 11'5
. AREN'T uU5T 'fH)Ij' ... f:R .. 'THIB
15 5~ A 611/lP/?I.SE
YOU HAPPY
'lOME .
10 5EE U~?

BILLY!

.....----- 'TEAFORD
Big Tire Sale
sR.
All Our First Line

•t+WA'ISOF
DISCDI.lP..QGtloJG
OMAR SHARIF~

THOSE eiOOKS
UI\ITil. MISS

.

motor, trailer. Good ski boat.

EVERYBODY

with

Special
AI

$600. Ca II 992-2003 . Will
demonstrate.
6·8-llc
_:__

COAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main st.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-ttc

a house

NO DOWN PAYMENT

------------~6_::.:·
20-6tc
REGATTA Special , 17-ft .
Thompson boat, dock covers,
extras, 75 HP newly rebuilt

_____

Have Your seasonal

WANT A NEW HOUSE?

Balance $63.70. Use our time
payment plan . .Call 992-7085.

TRAILER AT Brown's Trailer SIX-MONTH-old Hereford bull .'
Court, Minersville. Phone 992·
Phone 843-2778.
3324.
6-20-5tc
6-16-61c

6·17·1tc

HARTFORD

Business Services__

- -- - --

- - ----

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAllEN

I'

fancy

designs. Also buttonholes ,
blind hems, elc .• $43.35 cash

borhood. For details write
Personal Shopper Dept., Box USED LUMBER. all sizes.
10, · Watkins Products, Inc .,
Phone 992-6418.
Winona. Minnesota 55987.
_ __ _ _ _ __:6:_::
·18·5fp
6-21 -ltc
MOBILE home 43'12 ft . x 8, In
excellent condition . Cheshire
RETAIL SALES position.
Call 367-7502.
·'
Qualify for some respon ·
slblllty . Good health . 40 hour _ _ _________.:_6·::20-3tc
week . Reply to Box 729, Daily
Sentinel.
6-15-tfc 1966 ELCONA 60xl2, two ·

Each additional word 2c.
telephones, clocks, brass
BLIND ADS
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudis ill,
Addltlona I 25c Charge per
Phone 992-3403.
Advertisement.
5-27·30tc
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally,
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon TELEPHONES, brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture
Saturday.
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4;
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
4-27-tfc
Notice
- - - - -- - - - - - - - -- ,

J(F!OI:E

IY'\6, TOO .

LOWEElV··

· Instruction
'

IT AlMJST

FROG HAIR,

1

Syracuse
News, Society

'

FINE AS

~ht

41. UIMJn·
Plo;..l

. DAILY QRYPI'OQUOTE __;Here's how tG work It:
AXYDLBAAXB

LONGFELLOW
OM letter olmply, atandl tor another. In thl! ~~&amp;~~~pie A II
ultll for till thno L'o, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slncle !etten. 1':=:=;:;
apootrophel, the len(th and formation ot the word• .... all r
hlnta. ll:ach day the code !etten an different.
NO, !ECAU~E M 5()()1 A&lt;;
lo

•

Q

N

YJN

GR

II:

R 0 .M

N Y

IQCANGMC

__ TOCAN,

LAZQZ

DJRNODZ
p J y 0 ll N,

OM
·.

LZ

NAZ

V· G H Z

LGNA

II:QZ.

PA'( ME I R\hll R1611T

OUT AND ~PEND IT

'

'THAT'S ONE Of 1liE Fl~
lHIN6S 1HeV TEACH 1tW
IN N.EOICAL SCHOOl.!

L 0 N A·

l!l"VV

IY ,Q

1(()1.1

DOcTO~

YJQ

TY.QZ

LYQVX ...-' r .GO .AZY

~===~~:f::::::::iJL.:~~~

�I

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 21,1971

Bargains, Bargains and More Bargains In The Sentinel Oassifieds
--------------~--

BY ADA SLACK
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond
Butcher have moved from the
former Rizer property to
Winston Salem, N. C.
Mrs. Wanda Guinther spent a
recent weekend with her aunt,
Mrs. Ellen :Newland of Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Scafflde
of Freeport were Sunday guests
of their daughter and son-In·
law, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Slack, Suzanne and Philip.
Randy Friend of Racine, R.D.
spent a few days with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Holly Friend, Darren and
Karren.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hubbard
and children of Lancaster
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Hubbard recently.
Mr. and Mrs. R. s. Corson of
Morgantown, w. va ., were
guests of their daughter and
son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
McPhail.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Hall
spent a day with relatives In
Logan, W. Va. and visited a
·
cemetery there.
Mrs. Max Folmer and
daughter, Pam, were joined
here by her husband who Is
attending a achoolln Cincinnati
and they attended a wedding of
a friend In Wheeling.
Mr. and Mrs. John Guinther
of Winter Haven, Fls., and Mrs.
Joe Cook of Pomeroy visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Guy A.
Guinther and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Slack,
children Robert Jr., David, and
Robyn, spent a weekend with
hia mother, Mrs. Ada Slack.
They were joined for a Sunday
dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson, T~y. Cheryl and
Terry of WoH Pen Road and Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Slack,
Suzanne and Philip.
Kenneth, Karen and Terry
Guinther and Darlene Duncan
spent a day with the George
Staats children of Chester, RD.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gibbs
have moved from the
Leadingham property to the
~r property.
.
I ~ . and Mrs. Larcyc-Eberslili!h and David spent 8 few
days with Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Roberts of Ostrander.
Recent guests of Mrs. Pauline
Morarlty were Mrs. oma Truax
and Mr . Earl Morris of
Marietta;
Mrs.
Marty
Miss
Connie
Morarity,
Morarity, Mr. Bob Hansford,
Mr. and Mrs. Marty Hansford,
and son Steve, of Columbus;
Mrs. Lena Bunce, of Mid·
dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Harris and Mrs. Harold Smith,
local.
.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Eichinger
1 d and
b MJohn ac-

Pomeroy
Motor .Co.

2 SIINS
Of
QUAliTY ·

1968 ~HEVROLET
sms
Impala 2 se~t St. Wagon. local I owner car, maroon finish .
vinyl . lntenor, V-8 engine, automatic 1rans .• power
steermg &amp; brakes. new w-w tires, radio. Sharp Inside &amp;

out.

1967 CHEVROLET
$1695
Impala Cpe., ~- 8 engi~e. standard trans., local 1 owner
car, good w-w fires, radro, blue finish &amp; matching interior . .
1967 FORD
11695
4 Doo~ sedan L.T.D., power steering, power brakes, air
conditioning. Vln~llnterlor , blk. vinyl roof, maroon finish
radio, new w-w trrec;
'

fonreroy Motor Co.
· OP.EN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
-N)!AEROY, OHIO

Minersville. Accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Rose and Michael
and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton'
they attended the graduati~
exercises of the Rose daughter
Diana, at the Southern
School, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
Sellers visited recently with her
brother, Robert Flanagan. They
also visited the Letart Falls
cemetery. .
Mr. and Mrs. William Clndiff
Sr. and family of Walbridge
spent a weekend with relatives
here.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Jones of
Galesburg, Md., visited Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Duck·
worth, of Huntington, visited
with his sister, Mrs. Agnes
White and brother, Richard
White . They attended the
graduation exercises of the
former's grandson, Garry
McComas of Ravenswood and
spent the night with · the MeComases, then accompanied the
Duckworths home for a visit.
Mr. Russell Radcliffe of
Pennsylvania has purchased
and moved Into the Nial Salser
home.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. James
Teaford, Mr. and Mrs. Sampson
Hall, and Mrs. Janice Lawson
and David were Mrs. Vada
Teaford, and son, Delbert, of
Racine RD.
The Rev. Ralph Hudson of
Portsmouth visited with his
bro~.rA»~I)ll Hudson .a!ld his
mother;'My Ia Hudaon, a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He also participated In the
hymn sing held at the First
.United Presbyterian Church.
Memorial Day weekend
guestsofMrs.DalsyRoush,Mr.
and Mrs. George Schneider, and
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McKelvey
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Duckworth, Jr. and daughters,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Donahue,
of Rittman; a.nd Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brubaker and family of
Wadsworti). Mrs. Roush accompanied them home for a
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Hall Frost of

High

WANT AD
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
Cancellation &amp;Corrections
Will be accepted until9a .m. for
Day of Publication
REGIJ.LATIONS
· . The Publisher reserves the
nght to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one '"correct
Insertion .
RATES
For W~nt Ad Service
5 cents per Word one inserfion

Minimum Char:;, 75c
12 cents per w• . d three

consecutive Insertions.

18 cen'ts per word six consecutive insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 for -50 word minimum .

~:~~~~

LOCAL MEN
TRAIN now to drive semi
cleaner. Electro
hygiene new demOnstrator
tractor trailers. You can earn
has all cleaning attachment'
high wages after short
plus the new electro suds for
training . For application and
shampooing carpet. Only
Interview, call304-344-8843, or
$27.50 cash price, or terms
write School Safety Division,
available. Phone 992-5641 .
Advance Systems, Inc.. c-o
Terminal Bldg., 5517 Midland -::---- - - - - . . :6:..:.:
·15-6tc
Drive, Charleston , West
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
VIrginia 25306 .
machine, 1971 model, in new
6·21 -2tc
walnul stand. All features

Female Help Wanted
EXCELLENT opportunity for
housew i ve s.

Mornings or
afternoons at your con venience In your own neigh -

MEIGS COUNTY
FISH &amp; GAME
ASSN.

Annual Fish Fry and
Trap Shoot Thursday,
June 24 all he Pomeroy
Gun Club.
, Rain or shine.

built -in

to

make

price

or

terms

---:

Roofing &amp;Carpenter

wen

Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW

&amp;

OLD WORK

available.

Phone 992-5641 .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:6:..:.:
·15-6tc

bedroom, 1112 -baih mobile

Wanted
WANTED
DISTRICT
DISTRIBUTOR
NO INVESTMENT
tN INVENTORY
OR FEES
Ambi1ious
Cosmetic

woman with
or
selling

background .
Unique
program offers full 60 per

cent Distributor profits. All
orders and paper work for

your sales group handled

direct from our factory. For
ful ,l information -samples
wnte:
R.
J.
Lusher ,

President , Robinette
Cosmetics. 8900 Aetna Rd.,
Cleveland, Ohio 44105.

Wanted To Buy
ANTIQUES :

dishes,

For Rent

home. Phone New Haven 882·
2052 or write Bob Ashley, Box
476, New Haven, W. Va.
· 6-20-12tc
COLONIAL maple stereo-radio
combination, AM-FM radio
four speakers, ' .4-speed ln~
termixed changer, separate

controls. Balance $78.60. Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085.
___________6:..:.:·
20-6tc
MODERN walnut stereo-radio
combination, dual volume
control, 4 speakers, 4-speed
changer, separate controls.

· All Weafher Roofing &amp;
Cons·t rucfion co.

0. 45726
PHONE 742-3945

DEXTE~.

Insured-Experienced
Work Guaranteed

___,;__

ATTENTION PROSPECTiVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Wetl Be the Most Profliable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
'•'WINSOR
.tcBUDDY
~EE

-It CHAMPION

..

.. AUO

DOUBLE-WlDES

,-fr.VAN DYKE

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

VOU SET· UP AN
...'IOU APPROVED A
•ACADEMIC • QUIET" "CULTUAAL· ASCE-TIC "
DOIUI FOR. TWii EGl&gt;• I&gt;OIUI FOR. OTHER.
f.I&amp;Ai&gt;S TO LIVE. IN ..,
STUDeNTS ...

TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

PA.RKERSBUR~ MOBILE HOMES, INC.

...SO

W~AT

·-··So I SAID To TH'e GuY:'J.Iow Oto
.ARE YOu~·~ AND 1-1!! SAYS:•l:D BE f!6
IN MA 11Ci-l ,EXCEPf fOit.. 0-l! 'TFIINe•""-I
WAS 90~~ IN OCToB!R. •
·

AIJOUT US
SWINGiNG

StNG~ES~

,

I-IA-1-lA-~A-HA!

MEMORIAL BRIDGI!' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSIIURG, W. VA.

2 BEDROOM mobile home air
conditioning in Racine area .

Phone 992-6329.

6-17 -6tc

2 BEDROOM . house at Rock
Springs.

Furnished

or

un furnished . Call992-6887 after 5

p. m.

REGISTERED Quarter stud TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33,
service, Hank's Rock 209498
1l2-mlle north of new Meigs
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3:
High School. Phone 992.2941.
Pomeroy, Ohio,. Phone 9923-5-llc
6880.
6·17-12tc FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992·5434.
SMALLEY'S
Gift Shop
10-18-t!c
Chester, Ohio. Bottles, Blink~
glassware, Sequoia ware,
jewelry, flowers, small items, 2 BEDROOM trailer All
and larg_e collection of Avon
utilities paid . Phone 992-713J
bottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. daily.
or 992-7384.
6-18-121c
6-18-3tc

GIVE AWAY to good home, a
long haired male dachshund, TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court. Rt. 124, Syracuse
about 4 years old. Phone 985·
Ohio. 992-2951.
'
4226.
4-2·
tfc
20-3tp
________ ___6·::.:
compan e
Y rs. Roger Englewood, Fla., visited Mr. t'HIL AND JIM'S Restaurant EXTRA large trailer lots, good
location. Velma G. Zuspan,
Hubbard, and two children,
and Pizza In Middleport 773-5750.
Mason, W. Va.
local, and Mr. and Mrs. Freddie and Mrs. William Eichinger and
across from Firestone. Phone
6-1S-12tc
992·2236 for carry out pizza.
Boyd and Mandy of Parkers· John.
·
6·20-6tc
burg, attended a family picnic Mr. and Mrs. George (Petie)
TRAILER for 10 weeks. Adults
and open house ln observance of Cundiff and family have .moved REDUCE safe and fasl with only. Phone 992-3181.
the 50th wedding anniversary of from Charleston, W. Va. to the
Gobese tablets and E-Vap- _______________6:..::
·20-tfc
Wat,er
pills.
Nelson
Drugs.
Mrs. Eichinger's aunt and William Cundiff home.
5·26-30fp EXTRA LARGE trailer lots on
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. John Bohram visited her
State Route 7, one mile north
niece, Mrs. John Roach and SAVE UP to one half. Bring ol Eastern High School.
Forbes of Logan, Ohio.
Phone 985-4106 .
Mr.andMrs.JohnCrooksand family and her sister-In-law,
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop,
151
Butternut
Ave.,
6-20-6tc
.daughters, Barbara and Mrs. Thomas Carroll of HartPomeroy.
Patricia of Columbus spent a ford. She accompanied them
4-2J.tfc FURNISHED 5-room house,
recent weekend with his and Mrs. Lollis Scarbe, Mr. and
two-bedroom mobile home.
One bedroom apartment
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Mrs. John Hall Sr. to the Fair REGISTERED Arabian Stud
Service. Klrafl No. 050481.
M&amp;G Food Market, 3 Ml:
Crooks and other. relatives.
View Cemetery.
Rich Raffles blood lines. Fee· south Middleport, Rt. 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Quick
Mr. and Mrs. James R. White
SSO. Phone 9'12·6880, E. J. Hill,
6·20-31p
Pomeroy, Ohio.
of Columbus were supper and daughter, Mary Beth, of
6-13-12tc 3 ROOMS and bath, nicely
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donsld Dunbar, W. Va., spent a week
furnished. Modern in town.
Cottrill and family. They at- with his mother, Mrs. Agnes
Ideal for one or two persons.
tended the commencement White and uncle, Richard Duck· Help Wanted
Phone 992-2623.
__:_::
6·20-tfc
exercises, of the Southern Local worth. While here they visited
High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones, Mr.
William and Charles Duck- and Mrs. Emil Eynon, and Mr.
Auto Sales
worth of Rittman, spent a week and Mrs. Dennis Eynon of
1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
here with their mother, Mrs. Nease Settlement. Mary Beth
hardtop, power steering,
p~wer brakes , air, 18,000
Daisy Roush and Mr. and Mrs. remamed for a week with her
m1les. Excellent condition.
George Schneider and Mr and' grandmother.
Phone 992-2288.
Mrs. Marvin McKelvey. They Mrs. Fred :Jenkins Sr. has
6·3-llc
enjoyed Ohio River fishing returned home from Holzer
1970 CUTLASS 4 door Custom
while here.
Medical Center following eye
and
Sedan, all power, air con.
John Carroll of South surgery.
ditionlng. Phone 992·5164.
Mrs. William Eichinger spent
Charleston, w. va., while on
6-17-Stc
vacation from the Penn Ceniral a.weekend with her brother and
Phone 992-2156·
Railroad, visited his sisters and Sl~te~-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs.
For Sale
families, Mr. and Mrs. John Vtrgtl Co)lins, of Nelsonville
for high styling in GRAVELY TRACTOR and
Bohram, local, and Mr. and RD. She a.lso attended her OP!:RATOR
mower, excellent condition
local beauty salon . For lnPhone 9'12-3702.
'
Mrs. Herachel Rose, Michael alumm reumon .
tormation, write Box 30 5
Racine, Ohio.
' ___ _ _ __ __:6...:..:_
·17-6tc
and Diana, or' Minersville.
Mrs . Roy Winebrenner,
. Mr. Larry Ebersbach has grandson Tommy Weaver, Jean ______ _____.:_6·2::0·6fc
IF CARPETS look dull and
returned home alter having Sauvage, and Susie Provo spent
drear, remove spots as they
surgery at the Jane M. ease a Sunday with the former's Real Estate For Sale
appear with Blue Lustre.
HOipllalln Delaware. ,
daughter and son-In-law, Mr. HOUSE In Syracuse. 2 lots.
Rent electric shampooer Sl
Baker Furniture Compan/
Mn. Ellen Newland of Athens and .Mrs. Harold Weaver, and Sl ,800.00. Phone 992-2806.
6- 16-~lc
spent from Saturday until famtly of St. Louisville.
· 6-21 -6tc
Tuelday with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Myla Hudson has returned to
BUILDING LOTS for sale.
Q-How does a butlafl tJ Newly approved in restricted
A. Gulnlller and family: On her h~me from Veterans
hou~lng district. Near Rock
SUnday, accompanied by Mrs. Memonal Hospital after having taste sweetness?
Sprmgs.
Phone 992-6887 after
A-With its feet.
·
Guinther and IIOQ Terry, and surgery there.
5 p. m., or on weekends.
Q-What new military :-:-:--::-~--------=-~·.::17. t(c
Mn. Malcolm Guinther, they
reyulatior&amp;
was establU.hetl
flllled a· cemetery at Success.
120 BASS Universal accordion
by the U.S. Army in 1970?
and case. like new. Phone 247 .
Mr.. and Mn. WIUiam Barton
Apostle's l&gt;eath
A-Beer can nqw be 2166.
Ill JIIIClll have moved Into a . Saint Peter may have been served legally in Arn1y mess
tra111r home at Se\lenth and ktlled during the persecu· · halls.
::-::-:-~'-::-----_:::_
6·:.:_17-6tp
Iaiii 8&amp;1. •
. .
.
,!tons of Em per o·r Nero
1910 MAV.ERICK , standard.
Q-In the U.S . Army, who radio,_ S1550 ; 1965 Ford
Mn. Jolin ,Bohr*'" Ylated a around A.D. 64. According to
•,-.., willt her lljltef atid tradttu,n. he was crucified L! thi!l only person ta have GalaXIe, automatic, factory
atr, nice, S650. Coolville 667·
'I'
llld Mn h&lt;•ml downward a~ his own helrl the rank of "Genemlof 6214,
~~ ~~ •-...Oiu of• l'~lllll'SI , Jll'ubably in lh~ I.he Armie~"?
A-fien ..John ;f. Pershing. . ·- - - -... _ _ _ 6·17-6fp
~ .~
IUN 11111•~
~t'I' IJnJan Gal'(h.ms.

- -- - --

STOP PAYING RENT and own
your rent money.

See
Dale Dutton

Tom Crow

992-2580

992-2534

Pomeroy

Middleport

EXPERIENCED

IOHNSON MASONRY

Radiator Service

Co11lplete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endloader Work

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
,Smallest Heater Core.

26" Rl DING lawn mower . Bob
Trussell. Chester. Phone 985·
3929.
6·20-3tp

. Bl.AETTNARS
Ph. 992·2143

- -- - --

Shops the

WANT AD WAY

For Sale
36" X23 11 X.009

Aluminum
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20*
The
·Daily Sentinel
8 tor $1.00

lll Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
and accessories. Call us for
your needs . We deliver
distribuiors, Brown's, Phone

992-5113.

6-2-tfc

Air Conditioning
lnspectkm and
Re-Charge

6, 98

~OL.D

Plus
Parts

D. BROWN

Blaettnar's

ARRIVES!!

PHONE 997-2143

Real Estate For

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds.

742-4902

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

'5.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094 ·

Pomero, Home &amp;Auto

W.tNPY
7RAT 'HER M011fER
AlfO 8Rr:fl!IER !'tAN 71.J SPENO 7RE EN·
TIRE 8/JMMER IN NEW &gt;ORK CITY.

Open8Til s
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pom&lt; Jy, 0.

UNICO TIRES
Buy 1 tire at regular priceget 2nd tire at

_ ___

L TOOK A

LEAVE OF

10 BEWI'TH
YOU AND

5EEIN6 'THE
616 TOWN!

O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER· O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
VICE. Phone 949-4551.
Complete
front en ! service,
Pomeroy .
S-30-tfc
tune up and brak : service.
Wheels balanced elec· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
tronically.
All
work
Reasonable
rates.
Ph.
4-46-4782,
Sale
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Gallipolis. John Russell,
rates. Phone 992-3213.
Owner &amp; Operator.
S-20-30tc
5-13-lfc

Cleland Realty

EXPERT lawn mower and INTER lOR. exterior decorator
tiller repair. Free pickup and
and barn roots: Phone 742·
608 Easl Main
delivery
. Warren 1 S Mower
5683 .
Pomeroy
Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
6·20-JOtc
992-7357.
POMEROY
FAMILY
5-18-lfc
HOME. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
garden space, garage, lot SEWING MACHINES. Repair
Insurance
fenced, apartment in lower
service, all makes, 992·2284,
part of house. ALL IN GOOD
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
CONDITION $10,000.
cancelled?
Lost
your
Authorized Singer Sales and
operator's license? Call 992·
Service.
We
Sharrn
Scissors.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1
2966.
3·29-lfc
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story home,
. 6·1$-tf;c
7 rooms, bal.h, 4 bedrooms,
CONCRETE
porches. galiage, well water, READY-MIX
delivered right to your
city water, A NICE PLACE
project. Fast and easy . Free
TO LIVE. Just $8,900.
LEGAL NOTICE
est1mates. Phone 992-3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
NOTICE OF
ORIVE-lN - LOCATED IN
Middleport,
Ohio.
APPOINTMENT
SMALL COMMUNITY AND
cue No. 20510
6·30-tfc
ON STATE ROUTE - InEstate of Lucy A. Bolen.
cludes all equipment and
.
ESTIMATE on general Deceased
building .
INTERESTED FREE
Notice
is hereby given that
remodeling, roofing and Marjor ie E.
parties call for price and
Stanley, of Route 2.
painting . Phone 992-7729, 9 Albany , Ohi01
has been duly
showing .
a.m . to 6 p.m.
appointed ~dmlnistrat.riK of the
6·9·30tc Estate of Lucy A. Bolen,
OUR ONLY BUSINESS IS
deceased, late of Meigs County,
REAL ESTATE - CALL
Ohio.
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
TODAY
Creditors are required to file
Complete
Service
HENRY CLELAND
their claims with sold fiduciary
Phone
949-3821
REALTOR
within four months .
Racine, Ohio
Office f92-2259
Dated this 2nd dey of June
Crltt Bradford
1971 .
Residence 992·2548
5-1 -ttc
F . H. O'Brlen
Probate
Judge
THE FREP CADLE real estate SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
of.
said
County
east of Racine village. Con·
(617, H. 21 . 31
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
tact Frank Cleland at 811 Vine
662-3035.
St . in Racine. ·
2-12-tfc
6-18-3tc
_.:.:
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
NEIGLER Construction. For
Cue No. ZO,S16
building or remodeling your
Estate
of
Lea Marshall,
home. Call Guy Nelgler, Deceased.
Racine, Ohio.
Notice Is hereby given thai
7-31-tfc Bessie Wise, of Rutland, Ohio,
has been duly appointed Ad·
RALPH'S CARPET - Up- ministratrlx of the Estate of Leo
holstery Cleaning Service. Ma:shall, deceased . lete of
Free estimates. Phone Me1gs County, Ohio.
c.reditors are required to file
Gallipolis 4-46-0294.
the~r claims with said fiduciary
· Broker
3-12-tfc within four months.
110 Mechanic Street
Dated fhis 9th day of June
Pomeroy, Ohio
•
I!ACKHOE AND DOZER work 1971.
F. H. O'BRIEN
Septic tanks Installed. George
57 ACRES - Nice country
Probate Judge of said County
I
Bill)
Pullins,
Phone
992·2478.
home, modern bath and
4·25-tfc (61 14, 21 , 28, Jtc
kitchen, 4 bedrooms with
closets. Gas forced air fur.
nace, Drilled well, small HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
TENNA' SERVICE . Phone
barn. Only $10.000.00.
NOTICE OF FILING
992-2522.
OF INVENTORY
6·10-lfc
AND APPRAISEMENT
RUTLAND - · 2 bedroom
PROBATE COURT
paneled home. bath, utility
room. large lot, fenced . Low AWNINGS, storm doors and The State ' Ot" ()h-10, Meigs
windows, carports, County.
iaxes. Asking $9,599.99.
To the Administratrix of the
marquees, aluminum siding
to such of the following
and railing. Call A. Jacob, estate;
MIDOLEPORT- 4 bedrooms,
as are residents .of the State of
sale• representative. For free Ohio, viz: - the surviving
bath, large living, dining
est1mates, phone Charles spousa, the next Of kin, the
room , nice side porch.
Lisle, Syracuse. V. v. beneficiaries under the will;
garage, fenced yard. Asking
Johnson Md Son, tnc.
ll'ld to the at torney or attorneys
$10,500.00. Want to make an
representing
any of the
5-27-tfc
offer .

V'AIN'T NO PING·DONG
VEGETARIAN, THI&gt;IS.

FOtt SURE I

.

.. •

HOIST ETTER

JOII'! HY

TEIIM QF

AERIAL

f:::::::::LA~CRoBATS ···

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

ACJB088
].··-

HE WAS TO MEET ME HERE.
I WONDER WHO ~ ARE.

•

10. Began
ngaln
18. Prong
22. COlorado

Merchanl'o
word

43. Poverty

B·l!.2
11. Airport
~.

(C 1111 Xlnf l'eaturea Syndicate, lac.)

Indian

DOWN

28.60oeco.
1.-be•r
24. Benedict
12. Threatening 2. Scene of
Amold,
acUon
worde
for
13. Bhakeopear· 3. .\ct
example
demunly
eo:nklns
(4 wdJ.)
211. Left In
a. EnUre
4. SeotU.h
the
county
lurch
U.Pronoun
32. Path
5.1951 Ooear 28. Boat·
16.Makelace
for
IW&amp;in'l
winner
17. Old Chlneoe
8D&gt;wn
6.Declalm
whlaUe
klJIIdom
ss. Pull!
7. Cardholder 28. II that
!8.Joe
88.Actreaa,
(abbr.)
101
Collep's
-Scala
(2 wdJ.)
8. Newlywed
yell
39. C&amp;rd
(2 wdJ,)
30. Str1116le&lt;l
19. Angar
game
inltrumenta
9. Art lover
20. Border
21. Ethel, to
JoiiJI.John
n~arParls

.........

..

23. Woeblt
24. 0erman·

TERRY
ANP I 5UPP05f HER
Of AVANT·GARPE

CI~CLE

GAtL ~R,

OF A COURT·

MARTIALE[} AIR OFFICE!?, ANil
SNAPPER ~R~55ARP, HIS F!11ENP,
~ECML HOW HER LATE HU5SAN17,
PRIVEN PAST HIS PHY51CAI. AN!l
MeNTAL LIMITS ~y THE I'ESPERATE EARLY 'WORL[} WAR JI
RGHTING, HAl' SOMSEP A
JAPAN~'SE HOSPITAL SHIP. FOR
THI$, HE'll SEEN 5cNTcNCEP 70
PRISON, WHERE HE' lltE!l.

Inventory and

Appraisement will be for

hearing before this Court on the

30th day of June, 191'1. at 10:00
o'clock A. M.
Any person desiring to file
exceptions thereto must file

FRIEND5 INFLUENCE[}

HOW GALEE'S WRITTEN

Tlfl5 f'I.AY ABOUT HER
FATHER.

THE

TRUTH WAS ijA[} ENOUGH- SUT

C~fATEPA

MAN 1 NEVER KNEW-

MON5W~!

JJ~Mmlbrn;::.::::~::~c

jJnRtWII

tJ

~

tJ

.
,I

'

iHE ACC,U5E:D
MAN eSCAPED THE
HAN6h\AN'5 NOOSE.

I
I
l 'f nu :u:
~~;.:.:..;;;::..rl--.,-...,---,
' Now arranp the circled leltel'll

atyleeake
28. Lanptllhed

n. Dlaeourte·
OUI

Lo form lht aurpriM anawer, u
auuealed by lhe abon cartoon.

28. Bell oound
29. Il&amp;l' IDem·
btr (abbr.)

so.Oullllhoe

jPrilliheSUPJIIISUHSWIRmjBY

31. Nallfbty
34. Wordeuoo·
dated with
8Down
36. Partlllan

A[ll II I II)
(AuwiP'n tom.,rru•·)

Jumlol•··' JUUP KHAKt CHillY LIAVIN
:-&gt;ntunf,,,, ·~

wrnmer

36. Ialet
37. Type Of

·\"""; l'r: ."itif'l,·,. mil j11~1 " IWI,.

m·n u jimr- THE ANKLE

,,

WHAT IF ~ AJ:NiCE.
DOESN'T 1\ELP ME? 00 I
. 6ET M'( MONf'( e,I,Ct&lt; ?

Chrlltle"

EABYi ..

'

] II

0

. -40. "Alma

. CAPTAIN

,];,klawy"·

f ROPEA

01Pitch

MOBILE HOMES

I

Unicramble these four Jumbleo,
one letter to each equare, to
rorm four ordinary wordo.

3ir. :.enee

MILLER

· - - -- - -

DO YOU FELLOWS
SMELL CIGI\R

, 5COI'IN 1'5 NOT AMONG HI EM,

of said County, was flied In this

'

42.

-Doc"

Duvaller

Rutland Town$hlp. '
Yo,u are hereby notified that
the
Inventory
and
Appraisement~ of the estate of the
aforementioned, decnsed, tate

WMP0/,1390

· 8a1Urd&amp;J'o ~ton IN DIVINO TO THE BO'I'l'OM OF ·
PLICABU!Ul Wll BRING \JP MORI!l ORAVEL THAN
PEARL8.-BO!fORE DE BALZAC

DAILY CROSSWORD

No. 20486, Rutland, Ohio,

them at least five days prior to
the
dote set for hearing .
•
•
WIDE
. Given under my hand and
NICE HOME IN COUNTRY_
GeorgeS. HobsteHtr Jr.
seal of said Court , this llth day
One acre, nicely finished two
Bro~tr
of June, 1971.
' F. H. O'Brien
bedroom home.with fireplace
Phone 985-41U
Judge and ex -officio Clerk of
built-in
kitchen, wood
Box 101, Pomeroy, Ohio
c o u r t :"·
paneling, carpeted, clly TWO story frame, 3 bedrooms, s a i d
By Ann B. Watson
water. Localed on Athens
bath, kitchen, dining room
· Deputy Clerk
l220 Washington Blvd.
County Road C-6.4, Vanderhoff
and living room, partial (6) 14, 21. 2tc
Bt tpre, Ohio
Rd., one mile from Rt. 7 and
basement, storm windows,
three miles from Rt . .so.
gas circulating heat, lof . .- - - - - - - - - .
Twenty minutes to Parkers100x120, level corner lot
ReaTEstate For Sale
burg, Athens, or Pomeroy; 20
trailer space with all. utilities.
miles {18 miles 4 lane high.
Located In Chester, Ohio, In
ITEM: Morning: A
5 ROOM with bath, 'brick home
way), 19 miles, and 18 miles,
f1ne neighborhood. Price zestful time for some
with carpeting, In Middleport. · respectively; 3112 miles from · $10,600.
Phone 992-2540.
Coolville. 1 mile from Tup- ________________ 6:..·:..:18·3fc people. Double dismal
6-16-5tc 11ers Plains . $14,500 by
for others. Jim Mees
own.e rs, Frank and Pat
1
MIDDLE PORT: Stewart home, somehow gets us. all
Goobel,
667-3838
.
HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln His .•
S. 4fh St., 2-story brick and together every day.
6·6-tfc
Pomeroy. Phone 9'12·2293.
garage, 3 bedrooms, steeping
·~
10·25-lfc
porch, 2112 baths, hill ·
3 BE OROO/yl brick home.
basement, hot water heat, 2
Choice locat1on In Middleport.
HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights.
lots. Shown by appointment
Seen · by appolntmenf only .
Call Danny Thompson, 992.
only. Rodney Downing, real
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.n, .
2196.
I .
estate broker .
. s.7-lfc
'
6-20-3tc
'I
, 5·26-tfc

• •

MOOliAH'!!

aforementioned persons :
Armett M. $heets, deceased.

Said

THE BORN LOSER

..

IHVITED TO

Virgil B.

Court.

oO

TAIIE A OEEP .
BRfATH AND JUMP,·
A/1D'(! Tiff LINE
WIU l!RfAK YOIJR
FALL!

_____

LOGAN FIRE and safety
equipment. Sales and service.
All types and sizes of fire
extinguishers. Special prices
on extinguishers for boats,
campers, homes.
Also
discount prices on other sizes.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
frame home, bath, forced air Real Estate For Sale
992-3821. Owner Dwight
furnace, nice. front porch,
Logan.
basement, dnlled well and SIX ROOM house, bath, full
6·16-30ic
nice tot at Letart. Storm doors
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave.,
and
windows.
Asking
lUSt walking distance from
$7,000.00 .
downt.own Pomeroy. Contact
Ed, Hedrick, 2)37 Wadsworth
THINK BIG, INVEST IN REAL
Dnve, Columbus, Ohio, phone
ESTATE. •
237-4334, Columbus.
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
5·9-tlc
ASSOCIATE
992-2371
6·20-61c
1
1

12 14 24' ·

I COULDN'T
PABB UP 'THE:
Ai3&amp;ENCE ... CHANCE OF

WRONG, OH 5URE 1 MOM . 11'5
. AREN'T uU5T 'fH)Ij' ... f:R .. 'THIB
15 5~ A 611/lP/?I.SE
YOU HAPPY
'lOME .
10 5EE U~?

BILLY!

.....----- 'TEAFORD
Big Tire Sale
sR.
All Our First Line

•t+WA'ISOF
DISCDI.lP..QGtloJG
OMAR SHARIF~

THOSE eiOOKS
UI\ITil. MISS

.

motor, trailer. Good ski boat.

EVERYBODY

with

Special
AI

$600. Ca II 992-2003 . Will
demonstrate.
6·8-llc
_:__

COAL , limestone. Excelsior
Salt Works, E. Main st.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-ttc

a house

NO DOWN PAYMENT

------------~6_::.:·
20-6tc
REGATTA Special , 17-ft .
Thompson boat, dock covers,
extras, 75 HP newly rebuilt

_____

Have Your seasonal

WANT A NEW HOUSE?

Balance $63.70. Use our time
payment plan . .Call 992-7085.

TRAILER AT Brown's Trailer SIX-MONTH-old Hereford bull .'
Court, Minersville. Phone 992·
Phone 843-2778.
3324.
6-20-5tc
6-16-61c

6·17·1tc

HARTFORD

Business Services__

- -- - --

- - ----

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAllEN

I'

fancy

designs. Also buttonholes ,
blind hems, elc .• $43.35 cash

borhood. For details write
Personal Shopper Dept., Box USED LUMBER. all sizes.
10, · Watkins Products, Inc .,
Phone 992-6418.
Winona. Minnesota 55987.
_ __ _ _ _ __:6:_::
·18·5fp
6-21 -ltc
MOBILE home 43'12 ft . x 8, In
excellent condition . Cheshire
RETAIL SALES position.
Call 367-7502.
·'
Qualify for some respon ·
slblllty . Good health . 40 hour _ _ _________.:_6·::20-3tc
week . Reply to Box 729, Daily
Sentinel.
6-15-tfc 1966 ELCONA 60xl2, two ·

Each additional word 2c.
telephones, clocks, brass
BLIND ADS
beds, lamps, etc. Lee Rudis ill,
Addltlona I 25c Charge per
Phone 992-3403.
Advertisement.
5-27·30tc
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally,
8:30 a.m . to 12 :00 Noon TELEPHONES, brass beds,
clocks, dishes, old furniture
Saturday.
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4;
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271.
4-27-tfc
Notice
- - - - -- - - - - - - - -- ,

J(F!OI:E

IY'\6, TOO .

LOWEElV··

· Instruction
'

IT AlMJST

FROG HAIR,

1

Syracuse
News, Society

'

FINE AS

~ht

41. UIMJn·
Plo;..l

. DAILY QRYPI'OQUOTE __;Here's how tG work It:
AXYDLBAAXB

LONGFELLOW
OM letter olmply, atandl tor another. In thl! ~~&amp;~~~pie A II
ultll for till thno L'o, X for the two 0'1, etc. Slncle !etten. 1':=:=;:;
apootrophel, the len(th and formation ot the word• .... all r
hlnta. ll:ach day the code !etten an different.
NO, !ECAU~E M 5()()1 A&lt;;
lo

•

Q

N

YJN

GR

II:

R 0 .M

N Y

IQCANGMC

__ TOCAN,

LAZQZ

DJRNODZ
p J y 0 ll N,

OM
·.

LZ

NAZ

V· G H Z

LGNA

II:QZ.

PA'( ME I R\hll R1611T

OUT AND ~PEND IT

'

'THAT'S ONE Of 1liE Fl~
lHIN6S 1HeV TEACH 1tW
IN N.EOICAL SCHOOl.!

L 0 N A·

l!l"VV

IY ,Q

1(()1.1

DOcTO~

YJQ

TY.QZ

LYQVX ...-' r .GO .AZY

~===~~:f::::::::iJL.:~~~

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o:,June 21, 1971

Pictured Here: Big Bend Regatta Activities

Pollution Control Recommendations Released
By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Citizens Task Force on Environmental Protection today recommended a series of sweeping
polluti9n controls including ereation of a Department of Environmental Protection. The
Tasii Force said the controls
are needed because Ohio had
the "unique and dubious distinction" of having every type of
pollution possible.
The Task Force, headed by
former astronaut John Glenn,

also recommended tighter air
and water pollution controls,
tougher strip mine laws, better
enforcement including fines of
up to $10,000 a day for polluters
and private citizens be given
the right to sue polluters.
Glenn, in a 163-page report to
Gov. John J. Gilligan and Iegislative leaders, said the Task
Force became increasingly
aware of the "immense compiexity" of environmental prob!ems facing Ohio.
"With Ohio having the unique

and dubious distinction of having
at least some degree of every
type of pollution," Glenn said,
"environmental improvement
and protection becomes even
more complex than that faced
by most states."
But, Glenn said, no matter
how complex the problems may
be, they must be solved.
"Adying Lake Erie, the burning Cuyahoga River, the airi)Olluted city of Steubenville and
the giant 'Gem of Egypt' strip
mine shovel are nationally rec-

ognizedsymbols of environmental degradation;; said Glenn.
"This kind of degradation must
lie stopped."
The Task Force's pincipal
recommendations included:
- Establislunent of a cabinetlevel Department of Environmental Control. All current and
new activities relating to environmental protection, development and management shall be
consblidated in this department.
It wotild replqce the Department
of Natural Resources.

- A limitation on lhe discharge of pollutr.nll Into the
state's air· and water and enforcementoflhOR limitations by
establislunentof c«nprehensive
penni! and monitoring sy1tems.
- A stringent enforcement
program that during the second
half of the 1970s would charge
polluters for their discharge of
pollutantsintolhestate'swaters
and'alr. Tbe fines would range
up to $10,000 a day .
- Establishment of a statewide land u.1e allocation plan

whieb w9Wd glve priority to the
protection af the 111\W'al ~nvir­
onment from irreparable damage -both physical and visual.
-The state encourage the use
of recycled materials and set
standards and enforcement for
all soHd waste management activities.
Tbis recommendation ineluded the ~nt to the
cost of each new automobile,
borne appliance or other bulk
durable consumer product
which would cover the cost of

recycling or of finally disposing
of that product.
- The stale regulate the iocalion of power plants and transmission lines according to envlronmental protection criteria,
- The state prohibit strip
strip mining in certain specified
circumstances, require more effective reclamation and charge
the miner for each acre strip
mined.
- Citizens be authorized to
bringdamageorinjunctlonsuits
against any polluter, including

.
units of stale and local govern'
ment. 'J'he ci~ns would not be·
required to' show pefl!orial dam'.
age.
··
"To r.olve Ohio's diverse en'
vironmental problems, the state
musthavemore authority, more
manpower and more money,"
the Task Force said. "The ...
recommendations reflect the be·
life that the state must command greater resources If there
is to be control over processes
which have never been brought
(Continued on Page 8)

Weather

Now You Know

Partly cloudy and little
change in temperature tonight.
Low 50 to 60. Partly cloudy ·
Wednesday and a chance of
showers. Highs in upper 70s and
lower 80s.

Mandarin Chinese, spoken by
580 million persons, is the
principal language of the world.

. Devoted To The lnteresll Of'I'Iw Meigs·MOIOIJ Area
IHP:SE THREE individuall raced their frogs at

Saturday afternoon's frog activitio;s at the Big Bend Regatta
Weekend.

Ifhotos By
Bob Hoeflich

VOL. XXIV.

RODNEY SMITH, left, of Canal Winchester, received a
$~0 pri~e from Grand Croa k~r Dale Warner for having the
champiOn frog m the youth dtvtston of Ute Big Bend Regatta.
Smith's "Peggy" jumped 13 feet and eight and one-half inches. Second place went to Susan Thoma, Pomeroy, with
"Bill" for a $30 prize jumping 13 feet and six inches and Beth
Ludwig of Gahanna was third with "Jack-in-the-Box" for a
$20 prize. Her frog jumped 13 feet, five and a half inches.

NO. 49

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
By United Press International ·.
Oblo Extended Weather
Outlook Thursday Through
Saturday:
A slow warming trend with
fait weather Thursday and
Friday and a chance of
showers Saturday. Highs
Thursday from mid 70s to mid
80s, rising by Saturday to
upper 80s. Lows at night In
the upper 50s and 80s.

'

Strippers

~

£

Man Is meant for hap.
plness. This happiness is
In him .
-Leo Tolstoy

i

BILL BRYANT of Portland is pictured with "Jumpin' " the grand champion of the adult
division of the frog jumping competition Saturday evening. "Jumpin' " jumped 13 feet and
nine inches-in three jumps, that is- to win a $100 prize. The frog was entered by Ronald
Wilcoxen of Gallipolis. Second place in the adult division went to Donna Reeve of Ml. Gilead
whose frog jumped 13 feet and two inches for a $50 prize and third place went to "Ebner"
entered by Joe Gibbs of Gallipolis jumping for 12 feet and 10 inches. Grand Croaker Roy
Holter presents the prize.
·

* * *i

t If~~:~~:~~

'-tc BANKING

tt

tt ·The Fridays
Only
Drive-In Window:

iC

t

.t.
...:

is Open
:
9 A. M. to 7 P. M.
ic
(Continuously l
Other Banking Hours 9 to
3 and 5 to 7 as usual on

Fridays.

iC

t FARMERS BANK

i
i
t

and SAVINGS 00. t

t

POMEROY. OHIO
Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reser ve System

Mrs. H0 1mes
(Continued from page
Dies Sunday
Alfred, Bethel, Tuppers Plaips,

Meigs

£

iC

!
:

c••••••••••••••-tc

'""""'

•

........................
A Thought
For Today

,

I)

Joppa , Reedsville, Long Bottom
and Soutlt Bethel.
Mrs. Mayme Holmes, 76,
Ministers who have been in Syracuse, died Sunday morning
Meigs County that were at Veterans Memorial Hospital
following a lingering illness.
reassigned include the Rev . Mrs. Holmes was born Oct.
Randy Lavender who will be 29 , 18 94, in Syracuse, the
living in Athens where he wiJl be .daughter of the late Morgan and
attending college and serving as Miriam Dean. Besides her
a student associate on the parents, she was preceded in
Bartlett circuit. The Rev. Earl death by her husband, Roy, a
Shuler and the Rev. Freeland daughter, Miriam Anna, an
Norris have resigned. The Rev. infant son, Dean Leroy, two
William A. Airson has been brothers and three sisters.
assigned to the Union Furnace A member of the First United
circuit near Logan and the Rev. Presbyter ian Church, Mrs.
Max Donahue has been Holmes was active in the Star
assigned to the Coal Grove Class and the Emily Missionary
Church in Ironton. The Rev. Circle of the church. She was a
Paul A. Sellers has been member of the Ladies Auxiliary
assigned to the Hamden charge of Drew Webster Post 39,
near Wellstol). The Rev. Eugene American Legion, and of the
Brundige has been assigned to p~st president club G! that
the Wilkesville church.
group, and the auxiliary of the
Disabled American Veterans.
Surviving are a daughter and
Pleasant Valley Hospital
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
ADMISSIONS : Mrs . John (Katie) Crow of Syracuse, with
. RACING BOATS along the Ohio River in Pomeroy took over the spotlight Su da t th
McCarty, Ashton; Jen" Stover, whom she made her home, two
B1g Bend Regatta Weekend.
n Ya e
Apple Grove; Belva Smith, grandsons, Jim and Bob Crow,
Point Pleasant; James Spears, Syracuse; a sister, Mrs. Helen
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Maurice Wetzel of Columbus; a nephew,
Pe.ndleton, Point Pl~.asant; Don Wetzel, Columbus; three
Reba Woodrum, New Haven; nieces, Mrs. Joseph (Margaret)
Clifton Bowles, Robertsburg; Kelley, columbus; Mrs. Mel
Hy United Press International corded in the state Sunday was Mrs , John Huber, Point (Dorothy) Jones, Chicago, Ill.;
. The till of the earth's axis, a muggy 92 degrees al Toledo Pleasant; Mrs. Darrell Herdd
with respect to the sun, deter- Airport while Portsmouth was man, Leon; Mrs. ArthurGheen, an Mrs. George (Marjorie)
Dean of Seattle, Wash., several
mines our seasons and today the cool.est city in Ohio with ar. Point Pleasant; Mrs. Yvonne other
nieces and nephews and
mw·ks what is called the sum- 85-&lt;legree reading. Temperature
Wright, Cheshire.
two sisters-in-law , Mrs .
mer solstice: in simpler terms, Monday afternoon was only ex- DISCHARGES: Mrs. Ed- Dorothy Roller of Middleport
summer officially begins at 9: pected to reach into the low mond Grimes, Robert Holley, and Mrs. Alice Freeland ' of
20 tonighl.
80s.
Marjorie, Gillispie, Joseph Syracuse.
And a cold front brought coolNational Weather Service Kayser, Arnold Blankenship,
Funeral services will be held
er weather to Ohio on the final forecasters called for clearing James Williamson, Debor~h at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
hours of spring after a very hot skies and mild conditions
Eaton, Mr~. Rolan?. Morns, Syracuse
First
United
and humid weekend .
Tuesday with temperatures Mrs. Wilham ~ Batrd and . Presbyterian Church with the ·
Tile highest tempera ture re- below normal for summer.
daughter, Mrs. D&lt;&gt;rsil McCoy .- tfev. Linson Stebbins and the
Jr., Jesste Maynard, John Rev. Russell Lester officiating.
'
Wtls~n , Curney Hleb, Jr., Monty Burial will be in Beech Grove
•
DaVIS, Jacob Garrison, Roste Cemetery. Friends may call at
Tonight and Tuesday
Dodson.
the Ewing Funeral Home until
Jun e 21 -22
BIRTHS - June 19 - Son to .. noon Wednesday when the body
Jerry Lewis
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fetty • · will be taken to the ch r h
You Viii See
June !1-22
Point Pleasant; June 19 - Son
uc ·
WHICH WAY
Double Feature P.rogram
to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Willett,
TO THE FRONT?
" JOE''
Point Pleasant.
G
Also
Dens~~;~;t~ick
ERROR NOTED
Due to ·a typogt·aphical error.
Valuable E"''ort
THE: TRAVELING
PeIer Boyle
EXECUTIONER
Rated R
The island s of Micronesia the name of Mrs . Bertha Mab
(Technicolorl
- Plusare littered with so much . Milhoan, 77, Middl~port Route
Stacy Keach
"ME DIUM CQOL"
debris from World Wat: II · I, who died Friday at Holzer
Mariana Hill
Verna Bloom
that scrap metal ra nks as
.
·
R
RobertFoster
the U.S. ti'US\ tel'fitol' y's MediCal
Center
was
SHOWSTARTS'7 P.M.
H~rold Blankenship
most valuable export. aftet erroneously reported as Mrs.
..,_ _ _ _""':::"=~~topra.
Mertha Mae Milhoan,

SIX-YEAR.OLD Terri Evans of Kent, Ohio, WBIJ
presented these two large trophies at the conclusion of the
Big Bend Regatta Baton Twirling Contest at the Meigs Junior
High School, Middleport Saturday by Mrs. Judy Riggs,
director. Miss Evans is being presented the high point trophy
for compiling more points than any other contestant during
the day. The other trophy is for traveling the most distance to
take part in the contest.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS William Witte, Pomeroy;
Everett J. Dailey, Pomeroy;
Laura Holt, Hartford. ·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Cheryl Coe, George Cundiff,
Gertrude Drake, Pearl Cole,
Thoma~ Filch, Kimberly Klein,
Ernes\tne Faber, Audrey

A test well In Syracuse lor
supplying Pomeroy with water
is salisfactory from tbe standpoint of quality aod quantity
and Pomeroy will proceed
toward a plan of securing funds
from the Economic Development Administration for a new
water system.
This was the gist Monday
night when Pomeroy Village
council met in regular session.
Mayor Charles Legar read the
report on the test well from the
Burgess and fiiple Engineering
Firm. The village will need
about $200,0Dq for the welb
which would . be located In
Syracuse to supply Pomeroy.
Included in the projeCt would

Elberfelds 3rd Floor
Furniture Department
Is Headquarters For

Am bU l an Ce F Un

VISIT ·BAKER'S Summer Begins

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middle rt, 0.

I

'

Refrigerators- Freezers · Washer~ - Dryers Electric Ranges - Dishwasl)ers "· Air Conditioners - Trashmashers · DeHulnidifiers. .
'

I

Save on Whirlpool and a 11 ar.
· pliances
now on the Jrd floor during our June
· sale.
.
.
r

"

Prompt Delivery and In~tallation ·
' ·and Sensible Credit. .
'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

''d
.dS OK

Racine Celebration
Scheduled· 'uly 5th

)

moving the lines is excessive .
and the vlllage plans to take no
action on the project et this
time. Mayor Leger explained
that the Meigs Water Co. at the
time the lines were laid bad
agreed that the tines would be
moved at the company's expense lf ever necessary. In the
meantime, Pomeroy purchased
that portion of the company
which includes· the tines along
Route 33 and so inherited lhe
terms of the agreelll'ent.
However, the village had indicated that it would only pay
approxhnately $15,000 for the
changing of the lines and was to
be permitted to repay lhe state
(Continued on page 8)

-

Cost Of Living
Goes Up .A gain ·

'
AcademY

irlpoo

I

of zoning regulations in
Pomeroy. The commission had
asked if the council would be
beh ind it il some zoning
regulations were suggested.
Members of the new commission are Theodore T. Reed,
Jr., Mayor Legar, Counclbnan
Franklin Rizer, Richard
Follrod and E. F. Robinson.
It was announced that the
state department of highways
had received a bid for $41,000 on
Ute moving of some 1,400 feet of
water lines along Route 33 near
the Salisbury Elementary
School. Only about a dozen
customers are served by the
line, the mayor said.
·The cost, officials said, of

Cases . Go Before. .
Appellate Courts

•
T
I.Zer
0
R
Enter AF

P-------------------~

MEIGS THEATRE

also be new storage tanks to
update the water system. Tbe
present water plant in Pomeroy
would be by-passed If the
village is able to go to the
system of wells thereby
eliminating the costly phase of
treatment of the water for
consumption.
Mayor Legar said that he is
attempUng to set an early
appointment witlt EDA officials
in HunUngton for the project.
EDA could supply as much as
$170,000 toward the total cost
involved, the mayor said.
Council informally gave the
green light for the newly
organized Pomeroy Planning
Commission to study some sort

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Citizen'sTaskForceonEnvironmental Protection today reco111mended that strip mine operators prove that reclamation is
possible before being granted
· mining permits and also recommended a severance tax on
strip mined coal.
PAST PRESIDENTS- Recognition of past presldrilts was a feature of tile silver an·
The Task Force also recomnlversary observance of the Middleport BPW last night. Present for the occasion were Mrs.
mended that permits not be
EsSie Russell and Mrs. Grace Pratt, seated, Mrs. Jean Moore, Mrs. John Werner, Mrs. Pearl
granted where the land has 1
Reynolds, Mrs. Rose Reynolds, Mias Freddie Houdashelt, and Mrs. Betty Conkle.
. .'
"unique value" for recreation;..
atockholdefll,officersandagenta
' ...
in strip mine firms be Identified
in the permit and to be a mat.
ter of public record.
The severance tax would be
levied on the basis of gross receipts or where this is impotlBy UJllted Prifl lnle11111Uonal that burden being met, the vened on tlie government's
sible, on gross production. The
The federal government, in First Amendment remains su- request and ordered the Post
money would be used by local
two aeparate cases which may preme," Gesell said. "Any not to conUnue Its series on the
government units and for
be before the Supreme Court effort to preserve the status report until It ruled on the case
strip mining of exempt land
within
a week, went into the quo under these circumstances today. The Post was told not to
such as state forests and parka
appellate courts today to keep would be contrary to the pubUc publish anything on the report
or within a protective zone adThe Washington Post and The interest."
until 5 p.m. EDT today. The
jacent to the same or to an adNew
York
Times
from
publisbBut the appeals court inter(Continued on page ·a)
joining property. The exempt
lnc
any
more
of
a
.
secret
land should include the first
Pentagon report on Indochina.
ridge and visible slOPes facing
The Post case was to be
the Ohio River in order to preF.M.RIZER
heard In the U.S. Court of
serve the scenic beauty of the
Appeals ln Washingto~ and the
Ohio River Valley.
Times
case by the u.s. Court of
- A minimum bond of $500
Appeals ln New York. Both
per acre and up to an amount
cases were scheduled to start
sufficient to reclaim lhe strip
at 2 p.m. EDT.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nixon administration
mined property.
'
U.S.
District
Judge
Gerhard
- Levy of an undetermined
A. Gesell In Washll)gton Mon- economists hope the sharpest increase in the cost of
permit charge per acre.
day ruled in favor of the Post, living in 15 months is an exception instead of a new
The Task Force also recommended Ute operators test for Franklin M. Rizer, II, 800 of saying publication of the report trend. But they concede recent claims of victory
national over inflation may have been prema. ture.
.water, show the methods of min- Mr. and · Mrs. Franklln M. did not threaten.
tha f ed
of
(Continued on page 8)
Rizer, E. Main st., Pomeroy, sethecurity and twt rehedomth
The Labor Department reported Monday that
CHARTER MEMBERS - Charter members honored during Monday nigllt's silver an1
will report to Colorado Springs,
preu ou e g
e the cost of living advanced by a seasonally adjusted
niversary observance of the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club were, left to
Colo., to begin his ttainlh&amp; at government's objections to the .6 per cent in May - the largest increase since
rlgbt, Mrs. Edith Forrest, Mrs. Essie Russell, Mias Freddie Houdashelt, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
the United States Air Foree ca.;he government has falled February, 1970 - after four months of comand Mrs. Rose Reynolds. They were each presented a sliver &amp;Miversary spoon. (See story on
Academy.
to meet its burden and without paratively stable prices.
Page Four.)
A graduate of Meigs High
A spokesman for Preslllcu•
School this spring, Rizer was
Nixon's Council of Economic
Pearl P: Cole, 76, Reedsvllle salutatorian In a claY of 181
Advisers said the council "tried
Route 1, died Tuesday morning membefll. He was a tWo year J'
to be cautious" about claiming
at Holzer Medical Center member of the National Honor
too 'much for the favorable
following a brief Ulness.
Society, a member of the Arts
reports in January throUj!h
He
was
the
son
of
the
late
and
Crafts
Club,
a
three-Ume
April
and he said the council
MASON - Final approval of oxygen, splints, backboards and building between 9 a.m. and 3
Albert - and Elizabeth Bailey winner in the American Legion
alao will be wary of pushing the
*13,000 in matching funds for other equipment.
p.m. on Thursday.
SAIGON (UPI)-Communlst IruDII8UI~u " " " o1mbushed In panic button following the May
the purchase of two ambulances An ambulance will be on There will be a fund drive to Cole and besides his parents, Americanism ahd government
was
preceded
in
deatlt
by
his
con'test,
a
National
Merit
forces
ambushed a South marshlands three miles from increase.
- one to be located at New display for lnspecUon by the raise the local matching funds.
Haven and the other at Mason squad members and the general Industry, business concerns and first wife, Ethel, and a son, Scholarship aeml-flnallat, Vlelname&amp;e relle! unit In lhe the town. Thirteen of the He said the council recOil·
photographer lor the t1t:hool Meton,'Oelta early today after troopers were killed and seven nlzed that the pace o! Inflation
-was announced today by Don public. On Wednesday, June 23, individuals of the two com- Dorset.
Mr. Cole was a construction annual, resWng team captain, itormlrig through a nearby wounded. Communist 1081leS In the fll'st four months of the
Clay of the West Virginia the ambulance will be at the munities will be given the opyear-an annUal rate of 3 par
Governor's High Safety Bureau. Jack Flesher Service Station In portunity to help raise the worker and a farmer for most of an Eagle Seoul. He wu the village and destroying a num- were undel4:rmlned.
his
Ufe.
He
was
a
member
of
the
principal
nominee
from
the
lOth
'ber
of
homes.
MUltary
spokesIt
was
one
of
the
worst
cent,
lowest since 1967-was too
The ambulances will cost New Haven between 1 and 8 required local money.
Tuppers Plains Christian Congressional 0181rict for the men said 52 persons were killed defeats dealt to South Vietna- low to be maintained.
between $12,000 and $13,000 p,m.lt will be at the Mason City
Church.
appointment to the U. S. Air or wounded.
mese militiamen in months. But if the council was
each with the government
Surviving
are
his
wife
,
Ruby
Force
Academy.
Rizer
Is
an
ComiDunlques
from
Phnom
Militia
forces make up half the cautious, some olher admlni8paying half the cost and the
Mae Cole, three daughters, active member o! lhe Asbury Penb sald North VIetnamese 1.1 million South Vietnamese !ration officials were not.
balance being raised by the
Mrs. Angie Craig, Riclunond, United Methodllt Church at troops carried out three shell- under arms.
Commerce Secretary
communities. These two amVa.;
Mrs.
Margie
Mercer
ol
SyraCUJe.
lngs
against
Cambcldlan
forces
Allied
spokesmen
and
reports
Maurice
H. Stans, speaking jllll
bulances will cover the area
~oolvllle and Miss Enid Cole, at His parents, and
. . his sister, early today In the battle for from the field today Indicated six boors before lhe cost fA
· now being served by tht
~e; six sons, H. J. Cole of Milila, 'Ifill •ecompany him to marahlancll juat east of lhe continued fighting below the living report was lss11ed,
Foglesong Funeral Home.
J
j
.
Tuppers Plains; Orville and · Colorado Sprln&amp;i. He II to Cambodian Cllpltr.l. The Cambo· DemUltarized Zone (DMW) at argued: "The rate of lilflaU011
When Ute new ambulances are
dian ~ommand alao aald Its the other el)d of South Vietnam. chas now come within ct!lput into service, the funeral
The annual July 4th Box 213, Racine, or call Simp- Bernard of Dayton; Otis of report for duty on July 5.
s,ooo.man, drive against the U.S. B52 bombers carried out trollable boundaries . and lhll
home will no longer be In the celebration of the Racine son at 949-4292 after 5 p.m. so Cincinnati; Dwight of Athens
Communlits made only 500 three more missions In the has been ach!eved without I
ambulance business .
Volunteer Fire Department has that details of the line of march and Floyd of Gallipolis. A
c.
a
n
be
worked
out.
·
brother,
Gerald
Cole
of
Lanyards Mondsy.
·mountainous region below the majordls!~ationintheDitidl'l ,
The . operation of the am: been set for Mondjy, July 5,
caster, three sisters, Mrs. Ola Vetera01 Memorial Hosplllll
The South Vietnamese com- DMZ in the 24 hours eoded at economy.
bulances will be by the with a flag raising ceremony
Campbell and Mrs . Josle ADMITTED
Bessie mand 8ald the Communists noon today. Two of the raids After the living coat flcuna
emergency squads already and parade to start the day's
Humphrey,
both
'
o
f
Columbus,
Douglas,
Shade;
Norma
attacked the vlllage of Hieu Tu, were within one to five miles were announced, Democrllle
organized in the two towns. The acUvities.
and Mrs. Nona Awalt, Snead, Grueser, Pomeroy; Ralph so milea soutliwest of Saigon from the South Vietnamese National 01alnDin LAwaenc.
sqbd members will bave All organizations, businesses
MARRIAGE UCENSES
Fla. Nineteen· grandchildren, F'oster, Mlner.avllle; Vernon jlllt after 11 p.m. Monday, Fire Base Fuller, which with- ~·O'Brien urged tile l'P"kllal
special training In the care of and individuals are invited to
Kennetlt Arli,- Dinguss, 24, nine great-grandchildren and Blevins, Pomeroy; George overrunntna militia defenses stood a ncket, mortar Rnd to conftne lmaMdlaiiiJ a
the sick and injured in order to take part in the parade which
Langsville
Route I, and Lyla . severalniecesandnephewaalao Sellers, Long Bottom; ,Antltony and destroying several homes. ground attack by the North emergency ecGilOIIIlc ~­
better serve the needs of the will leave Ute junior high school
Fierro, Naplu! Italy; Dana Four mllllllmen were killed, Vietnamese Monday and anoth- ence to draft CGIIlpl'tlw..W
area. The ambulances will be area in Racine at 10 a.m. and Pearl Garnes, ,18, Rutland ; survive
1
Ronald
Mitchell
Orr,
21,
Reedarune.:al
services
will
be
held
McCain, Lall&amp; Bottom; Allee nine lfounded and three miss- .er early today.
action plans to .~ve tile
fully equipped to render fifl!t move through town. Out-of-town
ing. one civilian was killed and Tbe U.S. commllnd said since American ~aid an~ sale transpor'tation to judges will select the three best ville, and Edne Louise McCoy, at 2 p.m. Friday at the While Rairden, Long Botto!l\.
May 15 the B52s ,have droppe&lt;l The ~- pricll ladll,
hospitals of !be area.
.
patriotic floats which wiU be 21.' Reedsville, Route 1; Ronnie Funeral Home In Coolvllle DISCHARGED _ David !hounded.
Rtchard Wtlt, 28, Lancaster, where friends may call after ,Darst, Juanita Lievlng, Charles
Less than four hours later, a at least 14 million pounds of the gauge fA the C!CIIIt fA lMN
Specifications for the am- awarded trophies.
and
Marilyn
Sue
Atkins,
.18,
noon
on
Wednesday.
Burial
wUI
Kitchen,
Bertha
Clark,
Vernon
unit
of regional force and bombs on Quang Tri province for lhe average arbl" .f'lmqr,
bulances will meet f~deral Those wishing to take part are
be ln lhe Success Cemetery.
Blevins.
, ·POPUlar forc,e (Ruff .Puffs) below tre DMZ.
.(Co•Unued on Pl8t ,,
·
.regulations as to interior h~ight, asked to notify Pete Simpson, Pomeroy, Route 4. 11 • ~
'

Slater, Kathleen Cain, Arnold
Stump.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS James Werry, Pomeroy; Mary
Klein, Middleport; Charles
Kitchen, Mason; Larry Lee,
Clifton; Zehna Grody, Long
Bottom.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
otto Lohn, Etltel Johnson.

TEN CENTS

yracuse Test
•
atzs actory
Foun

Must Prove
•
·
R ecIamatiOfi
SEVERAL HUNDRED PERSONS were on hand Saturday night to see Miss Bernadette
Hennessy, center, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hennessy of Pomeroy, crowned Miss
Big Bend Regatta at the Frog Ball held in the Pomeroy Junior High School. On the left is
Mias Peggy Story, Pomeroy, first runner-up, and on the right is Miss Renee Burke, Racine,
second runner-up. The three girls received trophies and the two runners-up received $50
bonds whUe Miss Hennessy received a $75 bond. The bonds were donated .by the Citizens
National Bank, Middleport; The Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy; Pomeroy
National Bank and the Racine Home-National Bank. Trophies for the three winners plus
mWI.er remembrances for the other contestants, Lu Ann French, Middleport; Sandra
Sayre, Racine; Rhea Mora, Pomeroy Route 3, and Jennifer Gobel, Middleport, were
provided by the Meigs Branch of the Athens ColUlty Savings and Loan Assn . Ingels made the
presentation and Mias Hennesay was crowned by Vikki Gloeckner, president of Ohio Eta Phi
Olapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, which conducted the voting for the queen during Big
Bend Regatta Weekend. Music for dancing at the ball was by the Jan Haddox orchestra.

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1971

p p Col
• • e,
76, Claimed

ret

J ;:,•

c0 ng smas.h

l1ln z.t,
• 5. 2 K l•lled

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="77">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1795">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28951">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28950">
              <text>June 21, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="568">
      <name>holmes</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
