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8- The Daily Sentinel, ~ddle}l('rt-Pomeroy, 0., June 22. 1971

Kr:JPITAL
NEWS

·-------------~---~---------i

Syracuse ... I· Beat....
I
(Continued from pa1Je
for
project over a. period
New Double ~~~d ~! t~~~~r five years.
1
Of the Bend
I
The bid of $41,000
far
1)

•....... ,1 visiting hours 2-4 and

7-8 p.m. Maternity visiting
hours 2:30 to 4:30p.m. Parents
only on Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donald
Betz, Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and
Mrs . Bruce H. Doss, Pt.
Pleasant, a daughter, and Mr.
and Mrs. Oda Martin, Crown
City, a daughter.
Discharges
Eddie Camp, Mrs. Charles.E.
Coburn, Mrs. R. V. Durst, Mrs.
William Fannin, Mrs. Walter
::Coli Lucas and son, Robert
&gt;".tathias, Mi's. Jack D. MeClellan and son, Mrs. Emory A.
Proffitt, Mrs. Bobby L. Riehle
and daughter, Mrs. Brenton J.
Rider and son, Mi's. Edward S.
Saunders and son, Molly A.
Staala, Mi's, Danny R. Tillls,
Mrs. Hershel G. Wills, and Mrs.
Charles R. Wolfe and son.

n

NOR111
• A7
• 10 8'7 2
t Q 93

•KJIOS
WEST
EAST

•QI0864

•53
¥ K Q J 9 54

¥3

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Ea.!t..west vulnerable
Wosl North Eut South

soum

2•

IN.T.

Pass
Pass

2•
3 N.T.

Pass

Pass

Pass
Dble Pass

1•_•_d•_3_ __,

L_o_pe_n_in_g_

to open hearts. .
It is new in contract. but
If you were to go back to
1904 you 1\'0uid find this dOU·
ble suggested by J , B. El·
well in his book entitled "Ad;
vancedBridge:"
This book was on the game
o! "Bridge" and the Elwell
bid called "The American
Convention" disappeared
when auction bridge made
its debut around 1908.
Today's hand shows the
Lazard double in operation.
North's two-club response is
Stayman and South bids two
spades to show his four-card
suit. North jumps to three
no-trump and East doubles
in spite of the fact North
probably holds four hearts.
Without a h e a r t lead,
South wlll make at least
three no-trump. The heart
lead sets him two tricks.
Why did Sidney decide that
the Lazard double should call
for a heart lead? No particular reason. You can't have
everything.
Couldn't E a s t bid · two
hearts and insure a · heart
lead? Certainly, but if he did
bid two hearts South would
pass; North would double
and set East two to three
tricks .

of

being

above the estimated ~ost,
village officials have decided to
take no aclion.
Council also discussed an
agreement between Pomeroy
and Middleport through which
Pomeroy sells water to Middleport each month. Middleport
is paying not the amount
registered on a meter between
the two conununltles but is
paying a flat contract rate, Jesa
than the amount the meter
would indicate, II was reported.
It was decided to meet with the
Pomeroy Board of Public Affairs on the matter and to insist
that Middleport village pay the
higher amount. It was
suggested that the water at the
'lneter be shut off when Middleport had received the contract amount each month.
However, Mayor Legar said
that closing the valve apparently causes water tines to
break in the Pomeroy system.
Councll discussed the
establishment of a policy
prohibiting left hand turns from
Butternut Ave. onto West Main
st. They discussed also the
danger area at the foot of
Lincoln Hill Road where
motorists make "U" turns
traveling to and from the hill
from Butternut Ave. The
matters were referred to the
d'
safety and or mance .committees for further studies.
It was decided to remove one
post from an entrance to a
parking lot near the PomeroyMason Bridge so that employes
of a business near the lot can get
onto and off the lot with Jess
diff'culty
1
•
Mayor Legar
reported• that he
has been advised that the Southeastern Ohio Council of
Government will be sending
funds in the near future to assist
with the cost of a new police
·
cruiser and a radio. The amount
of the cruiser alone will be
about $I,800, the mayor said.
ted
The mayor further repor
that the final inspection of the
sewage disposal Aystem will be
. held on Thursday. Bills were
approved for payment.
Le
Attending were Mayor gar,
Clerk Jane Walton, Treasurer
Phyllis Hennessy and council
nkl' Riz Do
members, Fra In er, n
Collins, Lucien Poulin, Mrs.
Elma Russell and Jim Mees.

r------------'

I

l By Bob Hoeflich
I

·u s!

1, pleasures, their troubles and fun. As with the ~ of Helen Help

"'·

You can npect to see Frea Sisson around the old hometown
quite a bit over the next 10 weeks. .
.
.
.
Fred -a teacher at Galion - is attending Ohio Umverstty
completing work on hia Master's Degree and is staying with_his
parents,Mr.andMrs. Leland Sisson, Pomeroy,durlng the pertod.
Fred's wlfe, Alice, is working for the summer and is
remaining In Galion. Fred will be going to Galion on the
weekends.

TWO MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL majorettes were absent for the
photograph taken following Friday's Big Bend Regatta and for
good reason.
Absent were Milisa Rizer who was a delegate to Girls' State
and Brenda Taylor, newly installed honored queen ol Bethel 62,
Job's Daughters, who was attending a state Job's Daughter affair
in Colwnbus.
.
Incidentally, Miss Rizer, daughter of Mr. and Mi's. Franklin
Rizer of Pomeroy, was elected to the office of state treasurer at
Girls State and Is the only local representative through the years
to be named to a state office as near as anyone can recall. Milisa
was presented with an arm bouquet of yellow roses and a charm
bracelet significant to her office.
Speaking of bouquets of roses, Karen Griffith of Pomeroy also
received long stem red roses Friday after she had appeared as
guest artist with the Columbus Youth Symphony at the 4-H Club
Congress in Columbus. Karen went from the sublime to the
ridiculous. Friday night she played her trumpet with the symphonic accompaniment. Salllrday evening, she was the official
trumpeter for the races at the frog jumping contest In Pomeroy.
And Karen made It sound just like Churchill Downs. ·

Us! it welcomes Jaugha but won't dodge a serious queatlon with a
!rush-off.
Send your teenage questiOIIB to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper·
HELP FOR "HELPLESS"
IS ON '~:HE WAY
TO THE MANY who sent notes
j)( encoUragement for "Helpless":
·
,
This lonely girl wrote"! want to talk, but no one listens .... I m
dying inside for someone to really know me .... It's such a dull
world when you can't reach anybody ... " Yet she was so afraid to
''reach out" that her flrstresponae to me was,
"Dear Helen: Thanks so much for printing my letter - and
for your answer, but I guess I'd rather not have the mall your
· readers sent me."
Then, in a P.S. she added,
"Disregard what I just said. I WANT the letters PLEASE!" And she gave me her name and a.tldrestl.
So .... Abig bundle of mall went out to "Helpless" this month,
and perhaps some of you will be hearing from her soon.
·
1 shouldn't be amazed any more (but I always am) at the
tremendous will for good displayed in a world about which we .
hear so much that is bad. Whenever a correspondent needs a :
special lift, my readers - business and profesalonal people,
parents, teenagers -are right in there offering their friendshl~.
Here are a few samples of the many, many letters which will
slU'ely prove to "Helpless" that she is no longer alone:
Dear Helpless:
Quietly
I walk

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
There are all sorts of lead
directing doubles. Perhaps
the newest one is the Lazard
double invented by Sidney
Lazard of New Orleans for
use against a no-trump game
RAMSEY PROMOTED
contract where your partner
Ernest L. Ramsey, 20, son of must make a blind lead. The
Mrs. Mildred Blevins, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, recently was
promoted to army specialist
four . He Is now serving near
(ConUnued from page 1)
Chu Lal, Vietnam, in Battery A, The Times also received a
!NEWSPAPER !NnRPRISE ASSN.)
3rd Batlalion, 18~ Artillery, favorable .'ruling from U.S.
23rd Infantry Dtvislon. His District Judge Murray Gurfein
father, George C. Ramsey, lives Saturday but the appeals court
MRS. AARON (IRIS) KELTON has returned to her home
The bia.ding has been:
at 717 Dlmson Ave., Columbus. In New York prohibited publicaa
here
from Cincinnati where she underwent her six month checkup
.East South
His wife, Sarah, lives at 728 lion until after a panel of three West 1North
silent
scream
¥
Dble Redble
at Christ Hospital.
Sycamore St., Columbus.
of its members could rule on Pass Pass
I N.T. Dble
among
While in Clncinnali, Iris attended the graduation of Jayne Ann
24
Pass
Pass Dble
the
the case.
2+
Pass
Pass Dble
Shiveler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Shlveler, Jr., former
deafening
f:.ost •••
Because of. the Issues in- Pass 2 •
Pass
?
residents, from Mt. Airy Grade School to Swab Junior High
laughter.
11
volved in the case,
was
You, South, hold:
School. Jayne Ann received a scholastic award for an average of
That's you -now.
(Continued from page 1)
decided Monday that the entire •K 732 ¥AZ +KU •QJ12
"B" or better in her school work, the music award and the
That WAS !De, for 16longyears. I washed my hair and did my_,
advanced in 1ifiiy to 120.8 per eight members of the appeals
What do you do now?
physical achievement award.
homework
and wrote my poems and listened for hours to the
cent of the 1967 average.
court should hear the arA-Bid four hearts. Don't
Jayne's
father
Is
a
teacher
in
the
Cincinnati
school
system.
That means it cost fl2.08 In . guments and the hearing was · stop below game. your trump
radio, and waited, drawing farther and farther inside myaeH. And .
'Ma y to buY the same variety of postponed un til todaY• If the support lo adequate.
no one cared!
·
JAMES
PARSONS
of
Racine
is
wondering
lf
there
is
a
new
goods and services that could court decides an odd number of
Then, in my sophomore year, I discovered the "me" that was :
type of snake in Meigs County these days.
have been obtsined for fl1.94 In judges is needed it could call a Girl Found
hidden by the frightened, self-centered "me." Because ONE :
Working- around \lis yard Monday, Parsons came upon a person encouraged me, I learned to llslel\, and care for people, :
April, f11.57 a year earlier and senior retired jurist to sit in.
.
snake- black with blue underneath. He killed the snake. Noticing and my shell apened Into a doorway so the others could come Into :
flO In 1967.
The two cases have received Along Riverbank
that the four foot snake had a "bulge" he investigated and found my life. It can happen to you too, "Helpless." Please write! -C. :
Food prices rose .2 per cent in speeded treatment in the courts The Pomeroy Emergency
May, lest~ than in February, beCause the Issues involvedthat the dead reptile had apparentiy eaten about a two foot house VV.
.
·
March and April. But the cost of national
security and freedom Squad answered a call to Cllfton
snake. Parsons ssys that he is familiar with snakes of this area De8r Helpless:
at 11:02 p.m. Monday night for
Your letter could have been written by me fiv~ monthB ago.
but has not encountered any black snakes which looked like the
apparel, automobiles, gasoline of the press-are so great the Patricia Crossan, IB, of Midand service~~ increased sharply. cases will almost certainly go
one he killed Monday. The snake was extremely_ vicious, he But I've found a key that helps turn off my shyneas. It's in trying
""e bo..... in the cost of clothing
c t Th dleport, who was found Ill along
to help others, letting them know you'll really listen. Soon they'll .
reports.
... ""'
to the Supreme our·
e. theriverhank.Shewastakento
was the highest since August, Supreme Court is expected to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Any authoritie~ out there in Sentinel land?
be wanting to help you, too.
1968.
end Its current session Monday, where she was admitted. She
It's In enjoying the beauty of life -a flower just starting to
bloom, a colony of hard-working anta, a toddler with an Ice cream ·
necessitating the haste.
was in satisfactory condition
The government has argued .
MASON
th
000- Tuesday morning.
·
cone.
· .
.
that publication of e 7•
At 1,58 a.m. Tuesday, tlie
It's In learning how toamlle,a big, welcoming smUe that says :
page report which was ordered Pomeroy Fire Department was
"I care." And It's also in being able to "say It" when yo11're ead or .
Tonight, June 22
In 11167 by Defense Secretary
loneiy
so that peoPle wW knoW' you arl!ll't just 1011' on the world . .
R~t s. McNamara· could called to . the Pomeroy
.
'Norman ·W. (Tip) Ohlinger,
Double Feature Program
· It's in knowing that most people feel just as you do aometlmes
damage national security and Elementary School area where
e'
71, 159 Greenwood Road,
"JOE 0
·
relations with other countries. · a car owned by Don Sheets,
Starring
Charleston, W. Va., formerly of and they need help too.
It's in getting involved in a good project so that you'll work
Dennis Patrick
The newspapers have argued Pomeroy, caught fire. Fire
meigs County, died Monday at
Peter Boyle
that the report may embarrass Chief Henry Werry said that
'
Charleston General Hospital with others.
Rated R some persons but could not be damages were about fiOO to the
It's
in
knocking
self'!llty.
When you feel a spell cominl! on,
Summer basketball play following an extended illness.
- Piusconsidered dangerous to the motor portions ol the car.
DIVORCE GRANTED
"MEDIUM COOL"
Mr. Ohlinger was a retired write it all down in a diary - that way you can be your own
opened at the Middleport Park
verna Bloom
Barbara Claudine Brown has Monday evening with The Daily driver for the Skyline Cab .Co. psychiatrist. - OORI
national security.
Robert Foster
WERRY IN HOSPITAL
been granted a divorce from Sentinel upending the Ohio He left Pomeroy at the age of 20, Oear·HelpleBB:
Harold Blankenship
Pomeroy Councilman Ralph Larry D. Brown on grounds of Valley Bakery 50 to 44, and moving to Charleston.
The new religious movement among teens has a slogan,
Werry is confined to Veterans gross neglect of duty and ex- Adolph's Daily Valley defeating
"SMILE
-Jesus loves you I" You can find true friends in this
He is survived by his wife,
Wed., Thu. &amp; Fri.
Memorial Hospital as the result treme cruelty, according to an Mark V, 49 to 46.
Julia, twll daughters, Mrs. new ,loving kind of life. I did I -G.B.
June 23·24-25
of
a
severe
sunburn
and
heat
entry
filed
in
the
Meigs
County
In the first game, The Sen- Norma Barker, Sumter, S. C., Dear Helpless:
Double Feature Program
·
(ConUnued from psge I)
exhaustion which he received Common Pleas Court. The tinel's Larry Harmon hit a and Mrs. Jinnie · Kautz, Elk. THEY SHOOT
To be sensitive is pain but it's also a gift. The majority of the
HORSES.
lng that wlll be used, outline a while boating at the Regatta maiden name of the plaintiff
bucket
win
the
first
minute
of view, W.Va.; two sisters, Mrs. world's writers and arttats have felt just as you do. You bave
DON'T THEY?
program for reclamation and Sunday. Werry was one of (Bass) was restored.
play to give the newspaper a 2~ Edith Young, Denmar, W. Va., talent, "Helpless," to be able to see YoiD'self ao clearly. Use it! GP
conservation
and
that
reclamaseveral
persons
in
one
of
the
lead. The Sentinel led all the and Miss Freda Ohlinger, MRS. 0. A.
Gig Young
tion begin within six montha aft- boats which was asaisting In the
Susannah York
SPECIAL MEETING
way after and coasted to vic- · Cleveland, and a brother, Harry Dear Helpeleas:
- Pluser the mining operation has racing area.
The New Haven Park and tory. The Bakers came within of Columbus.
As a businessman, I work with corporation officials, bankers,
TOO LATE
ceased.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
one
point
at
the
end
of
the
third
Recreation
Commission
will
THE HERO
people who drive large black limousines and sit behind fancy
The report said the effects of
(Color)
meet with the Advisory Board quarter, but clutch baskets by at I p.m. Wednesday at the desks. It might help and surprise you to know, little "Helpless,"
reclamation shall be evaluated
Michael Caine
and any interested citizen on Kinuny French, Steve Dunfee, Bartlett - Burdette Funeral that these people (including me) who appear ao secure also suffer
Henry Fonda
by the state to determine the
(Continued from Page I)
Tuesday evening, June 29, at 7 and Harmon pushed the Sen- Home in Charleston with the the pains of "eloneness." You are in good company I -ALEX
Cliff Robertson
success of the methods that have under a system of environment- p.m. at the New Haven Ubrary. tinel into a comfortable lead. Rev . Bobby Sizemore ofGP
been used.
All S.E.O.A.L. Jeff Morris, a ficiating. Burial will be in Tyler
al controls in Ohio."
The speaker will be Mr. Thpmas
member
of the Bakery squad, Mountain Memorial Garden.
"We have tried to develop Long of the Slate Outdoor
FINED flO, COSTS
Pomeroy, charged with
Jed
all
scorers
with
17
points.
sensible recommendations that Recreation Conunisaion of West
One defendant was fined and speeding, and Unda L. Boyles,
...l'~
LOCAL TEMPS
will get the job done," said Virginia. Plan to attend this Teammate Ron Ferguson
another forfeited a bond in the 29, Middleport, forfeited a $15
The temperature in downtown court of Syracuse Mayor bond posted on the ume
chipped in with II, all in the first
Glenn. "If our suggestions be- Important meeting.
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Tuesday Herman London Monday night. ch8rge, Both defendants were
haH.
come law, Ohio will stand first
was
· 74 degrees under sunny Fined $10 and costs was cited to court by Syracuse
Steve Dunfee, held down in
in the nation in pollution abateMEETING POSTPONED
skies.
ment. The federal government
Hubert M. Settle, Jr., 23, Marshal· Milton Varian.
The Holiday Crafts Club, the first half, came back strong
could learn r,·om Ohio's expert- which meets regularly on the In the second to lead the winners
ence."
fourth Thursday of each month with 15. Rich Bailey and Doxie
at the bookmobile headquar- Walters added 14 apiece.
Visit Elberfelds 3rd Floor Furniture Department and
Morris
and
Ferguson
led
the
ters, will not meet this week.
The June session will be post- rebounders for the losers while
take advantage of the sale prices on furniture for
Tonight, June 22
poned unUl a later date, to be the 6'7" Walters and Harmon
took honors for the winners.
announced later.
Mark V Vs. Adolpbs
Jerry Lewis
every room in your home
You \/ill See
TO MEET THURSDAY
Adolph's Dairy Valley, with
WHICH WAY
Un of th quick Rick Van Matre in !he
TO THE FRONT?
The annual mee .g
e rtosecone, slipped past Mark v,
G
Meigs .County Amencan Red . 49 to 46. van Matre took an
.
Also
Cross will he held at ?:30 p.m. early lead in the league scoring
THE TRAVELING
Thursday ln the . cafete~ o( race as he ripped the nets for 25
EXECUTIONER
Veterans Memonal Hospttal. . points. Rick Ash scored 14
tTechnlcolorl
Stacy
Keach
The
(!!lblic Is invited.
points. ·
One of the most
Mariana Hili
popular
b~rgaln
' Jeff Tyo led the losers with 17,
R
GOP
WOMEN
TO
MEET
buys this year is a
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
vasUy improved Mike Sayre
The Meigs County Republican
personal checking
pwnped in 12 points, all from
Women's Club will meet at the way outside. Sayre and Mark
account. It not only
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
second ward firehouse in V's Mark Werry were cited for
June 23·14
eliminates
PomerO)I at 7 p.m. Thursday. A excellent defensive work, while
carrying cash, but
, NOTOPEN
covered dish supper will be Bill Vaughan and Ash played
he Ips keep ·an
. __ _....,......... held.
fine Door games,
accurate account
SENTINEL - Bai)ey 1).2-14;
of your money.
Open Your
Dunfee 6-3-15; French 1-6-2;
Harmon, 2-l.S; and Walters 7-6-

Cases .•. .

m

"

' •

DRIVE·IH
I

'

'

Summer
Ca ae P''UJY
d
Un en.vay

Mr. Ohlinger
Dies Monday

Strippers

Pollution •••

t~

I

.

.

SMART
SHOPPERS

PAY BY
CHECK!

Acco(lnt
Today!
: •· H ! r~

MEIGS THEATRE

.

r 0 lJ

Y I ', I 1 P fl P ~

f IJ I !

.

HOMEMADE
HMI lalacl
ChM.. Spreacl

,..,.,. Ttlll •••,,..

&gt;'C'IH. Ot.IO
............. Dl!lilll . _ _ c.r,enu..

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Senate
leaders from both parties have
set the stage for quick adoption
ol a one - month Interim state
budget to keep the government
operating into the next fiscal
year, just one week away.
The stopgap fiscal proposal,
containing $297 million worth of
appropriations funded by existing taxes, was hustied to the
Senate Finance Committee
Tuesday in hopes it can be sent
over to the House Thursday and
enacted by June 30. .
Introduction followed agreement by Senate Republicans and

Democrats to move ahead with
an interim budget covering the
period frorn J!Jly 1-31, indicating a formal concession by legislative leaders they will be unable to adopt a two-year budget
and tax package by the end of
the month.
Major sponsors of the bill
were Sen. Robert R. Shaw, RColwnbus, chairman of the Finance Committee, and Senate
Democratic Whip Oliver Ocasek
of Akron.
The action was taken without
approval from the office of Gov .
John J. Gilligan, although the
governor has said be would not

Pays State Debll;
The one - month budget, if
adopted, would 8Jiow the st8te
to . continue to operate at cur.
rent spending levels In hopes an
agreement can be reached on
taxes in July.
Also included in the appropriation measure was $316 million

to pay state debts during the
entire biennium. The leadership
said this item could not be dealt
with on a one-month basis.
The bipartisan approach on
the temporary fiscal measure
did not carry over into other
endeavors of the House and Senate Tuesday.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee released without
Democratic support a bill requiring the governor to make
more of an effort to keep the
lieutenant governor advised of
urgent matters when the chief
executive is disabled or out of
the state.

The bill resulted from coin.
plaints by Lieutenant Gov. John
W. Brown, a Republican, about
the lack of precautions taken by
Dem6cratic Gov. John J. Gilligan when he is out of immf ilate contact with his office.
· In the House, a political hassle arose over legislation intended to give both Republican and
Democratic lawmakers more
control ·over emergency appropriations of state money.

Emergency Board from elected
administrative officials tomembers of the General Assembly.
The sponsor, Rep. David L.
Headley, D-Akron, urged passage even though the bill 1vould
remove two members of his .1wn
party - Attorney Gen . William
J . Brown and state Auditor '
Joseph T. Ferguson - from the
board and substitute four legislators.
The board currently contains
Brown, Ferguson, a representaSwitches Control
live of the governor and four
The bill, eventually cleared to legislators.
the Senate on a 61 - 31 vote, Rep. George D. Tablack, Dwould switch control of the state Campbell, was unwilling to let

VOL XXfV NO. 50

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

By United Press IDternational
WASHINGTON -FIRST RETURNS from a new government
testing program show no residues of a controversial synthetic
hormone in the nation's meat supply, it was learned today.
The reports come from a sampling program launched by the
Agriculture Department in April to detect In meat from beef
steers and Jambs any residues of ·DieThylstilbeSterol (DES),
which has been reported to cause cancer in laboratory animals.
Adepartment official said the new program got underway in
mid-April. By the end of that month reports showed 95 cattle and
85 lambs had been sampled with no "posi~ve" residue fmdings.

••

'

.

. The eeilGnil round lllllllllllleT
lel8utlll Wttlr~sday lit 7 p.m.
Tbe Stnllnelllbl on Mark v
and AtlGipll'llaiJIIel Willi the 0.

·ElBERFELDS.IN

ROY

I

I

,.

'
'

l
'

TEN CENTS

•

zon
.
zcts
'

HOLLYWOOI'! - MOVm AND TELEVISION actors and
actresses Tuesday night authorized a strllte lf they do not get an
"adequate contract" by June 30.
Of the more than 1,500 members of the Screen Actors G!lild
casUng votes at a mass meeting, only three were against strike
authorization, a guUd spokesman said.

PREVIOUS limited therapy at the Veterans Meinorlal Hospital will be .expanded through
the plotured facilities in a new physical tlierapy room located in the basement of the new additibri to the hospital. A phyalcallherapist, Tony Minard of Parkersburg is available at the
hospital thriil days weekly. ·
·

Electrical Expansion
Key in Pollution Control
. COLUMBUS (UP!)
for example, may be used to
Expansion of the electric indus- overcome theemlsslonprobleiilB
try may be necessary to help oftheinternalcombuslonenglne
clean up the environment be- they said.
.
cause pollution control systems
Without an economical source
are operated by electric pow- of energy from power plants to
er, researchers at Battelle Lab- recharge batteries, this solution
oratories said today,
toenvironmenlalpollutionwould
Dr. David L. Morrison, Don- be unattainable, they said.
aid E. Erb and William T. Reid
Morrison, Erb and Reid also
sal~ continued expansion of the said the nation should continue
Industry, though frequently at- . to increase its electric potential
tacked as detrimental to the en- because Americans would not be
vironment, is important In pro- willing to cut back their conviding an economical supply of sumption.
electricity to meet abatement "There is lillie evidence that
needs.
we as a na~on are willing to
"Even at constant levels of forego the standard of living ofenvironmental quality, greater fered to us by electricity," they
demands wlll be placed · upon said.
pollution control systems as the "Uterally, otir economy and
population increases In a given our way of life could not conurban area," they said. '
tinue without use of vase
The researchers sale! more amounts of energy," they addelectrical power will not only be ed. "In the United States, the
needed for abatement programs demandforelectricityisincreasbut may be able to solve other ing more than five times faster
problems. Electric automobiles, than the population." ,

•
l

17.1

I

LUXEMBOURG -BRITAIN AND THE European Common
Market - after 10 years of talking and two French vetoes agreed today on terms for British entry into the booming conUneAtal trading bloc.
With a predawn champsgne toast British negotiator Geoffrey
Rippon and the foreign ministers of the six Conunon Market
nations -France, Italy, Belgium, \Vest Gerinany, Holland and
LuxembOurg - celebrated their succesa in clearing the major
. , -obstacles to-1Brltain's plan to enter the European Economic
(Continued on page 16)

PHONE 992·2156

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23, 1971

r---------------------------.
! News •.. in Briefs · !

1

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The
House Appropriations Committee today approved $17.1 million
for President Nixon's program
to rehabilitate GJ drug addicts.
· It also boosted other White
House spending plans for
veterans' medical care by $120
million.
The funds were included in a
$18.1 billion money bill that
would support the Veterans
Administration, the bepartment
, of Housing and Urbari 'DevelOpment, the nation's space
program and a number of
small independent agencies for
the business year which starts
J'!ly I.

The conunittee's bill repre- million for another part of
sented a net increase of $871 Nixon's program to identify GI
million over what the President addicts.
·
asked, some of his requests
The 32 rehabilitation centers,
being increased but others cut. five of which are now operating
The White House requast for with the remaining 27 to be
an additional $14 million, on top opened by Oct. 1, would each
of the $3.1 million Nixon have IS beds plus outpatient
originally sought to step up factlttiea to treat 200 palienta.
treatment of Gl drug aqdtcla,
The commitlee in all-added
was approved to pay for 32 $~34 mllllon 1o Nixon's request
drug rehabilitation centers for VA medlcal care, ~l.udlna
which the VA Tuelday eald the drll8 c!eill4r liD~;.•-. II
would be 'openad"lhia yeaf:"' · • 1Uk'1t'tbit~,.,.. ·
Tqe VA rehabililatlon pro- care for an U:JM~"~ . JII,IOQ ~
gram dovetailed with a Penla- pstlepla •per day rather . than
gon announcement, also made 79,000 IJle. · a~alion ,;
Tuesday, that it wlll spend $40.6 plan[\ed for.
·

59 Replacements Are Madfl

ERMA M. SMITH, Pomeroy Route 2, is pictured with a commercial type flatwork Ironer in
the laundry room of the ba8ement section of the new addition at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She is laundry manager. The laundry is being operated for the first time with the new addition
and about BOO pounds of laundry is done daily. Previously, laundry was sent out to be done
professionally. The facility is equipped with commercial type washers and a commercial type
dryer. The laundry facility is one of many new features at the hospital which will be open to
public inspection from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday.

Eighty-three persons
reported to an American Red
Cross bloodmobile at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
Tuesday to contribute 66pints of
blood to the Meigs County blood
program.
Fifty-nine pints of the blood
were given as replacements and
17 persons were first time
donors. During the visit, Emma
Adams became a five-gallon
donor; Oris Hubbard, a fourgallon donor, and Milton Hood,
a two-gallon donor.
The medical staff was
composed of Dr. Seliin J .
Blazewicz, Dr. Lewis D. Telle,
Dr. Roger Daniels and Dr. Ray
R. Pickens. Nurses were Mary
Armes,
LPN:
Marlene
Winebrenner, RN, and Marilyn
Davis, RN.
· Included in the clerical staff
were Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Marybelle . Warner, Joyce
Hoback, Grace Drake, Jean
Sayre, Juanita Sayre, Beulah
Strauss, Eloise White, Becky
Anderson, Dorothy Smith,
Jeanette Lawrence, Elva

Dailey, Martha Lou Beegle,
Vernon Nease, Mary Sllllth,
June Epple and Candy Hoback.
The Meigs County 4-H Junior
Leaders with Debbie Conklin as
advisor, served the canleen and
Boy Scout Troop 249 loaded and
unloaded the unit.
Donatlons'were by the Quality
Print Shop, Meigs Local School
District, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, the Ewing Funeral
Home and the Pomeroy Street
Deparlment.
Reporting as donors were:
POMEROY - Nancy Collins,
Gene Mitch, John M. Thomp.
son, Harlan Welirung, Nellle M.
Parker, Joseph Gloeckner,
Carol Hall, Howard P. Logan,
Larry E. May, Henry E.
Cleland, Jr., Robert Couch,
Perry Riggs, Raymond .Jewell,
Donald Hunnel, Mrs. Evelyn
Clark, C. E. Clark, N. S. White,
Kenneth Harris, Ivan Wood,
Homer Smith, Mary Alice
Samuels, James Gilmore,
Charles Saler, Brenda Turner,
Wallace Hatfield, Aaron Hysell,
Darlene Bahr, Candy Brothers,

Norman Bahr, June MJU:phy,
Richard Collins, Robt~rt E.
Barton.
MINERSVILLE
Herbert
Mcintyre, E. G. Ash, Ross
Stewart,
RUTLAND
Donna
Davidson.
MIDDLEPORT - ~ence
R. BWiklrk, John Harriaon,
Russell Carson,
McDaniel, Robert King, ~oward
W. Russell, Dollie Woods Belay
Horky, Jerry McDani~l. Ed- ·'
ward Durst, Linda Haley, Paul
Carper, Albert Roush, Ernest
Kauff, Don Erwin, Linda
Frederick, Rhoda Hall, Milton
Hood, Daniel Ray Ellis.
SYRACUSE
Nathan
Roush, Oris A. Hubbard, John
Eynon, Don Guinther.
RACINE
Jeanette
Lawrence, Mrs. Dorothy Sllllth,
Dorothy Badgley, Ralph
Badgley, Emma Adams,
Martin Wilcoxen, Michael
Brown,
LONG BOTTOM .- Ada
Bissell, Howard Parker, Susan
, (Continued on page 16)

••

I

Connlt

Commissioners Seek Bids On 3 New Trucks
Plans for accepting bids on were approved when the Meigs 1966 models to be traded.
three new dump trucks for the County Commissioners met Specifications are to be adco~nty highway department Tuesday at the courthouse.
vertlsed Thursday on the three

'''-"*'''·';'''''""'~'''~''''@''' ' ' '"' ' ' "' ' ' ':N!i;: : :;: ' ' "'"''' ac~~~t . ~~sm ~~~io~:!s th~~~ ~e;o~~~~::~ners
Ohio Extended Weather
Outlook - Friday through
Sunday:
'
Mild with hlghsln the upper
70s and 80s. Lows tn the 50s
·and lower 80s. Chance of
showers Saturday.

MARK V- Tyo 8-1~17; Price

.~-· .

- The House refused to go
along withaSimate recommendation to allow the citizens Committee on the State Legislature
until Jan. 1, 1973, to complete
its study of legislative operations.

Lows tonight 5S to 65. Mostly
north. and partly cloudy south
Thursday with a ~hance of
thundershowers in the extreme
south and southwest. Highs
Thursday in the upper 70s to the
lower 80s.

Devoted To The lnlerests Of The Meigs·MWJOn Area

•

'

horse races in Ohio, with some
of the proceeds going for urban
ald in cities operating betting
parlors.
- The Senate unanimously
adopted legislation extending to •
one year the period during
which the $60 limit may apply for prosecution on credit card
frauds.

Weather

1

:' ' '~;~' ' ' : '~i'i::':~~~~:gt~'J' ' W'* ' ' '

o.o-o; Sayre 6-3-12; Werry 4-1~;

Brown and Ferguson leave the
board, and his motion to retain
them was defeated on a narrow
45-48 vote.
Rep. C. J. McUn, D-Dayton,
also was unsuccessful ~. in
his attempt to let Brown and
Ferguson serve out their terms
on the board until January 1975.
Rep. Richard F. Celeste, DCleveland ,lost a motion to eliminate the board altogether, .3().
61.
In other legislative developments Tuesday :
- Sen. Ronald M. Mottle, DParma,introducedlegislation to
legalize off-track wagering on

The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police in 1874 had 300 men to
police a · 300,000 square mile
wilderness area between
Manitoba and the Rockies.

J-6-:i; Ault 0-0-0; Morris 8-1-17;
Ferguson 4-3-11; and Cooke ,3-66.
I

Chaney 2-0-4; and B. Vaughan 12-4·.
ADOLPH'S - VanMatre 11-325· Werner 2-0-4; Ash 7~14; 1'.
V~ughan 1-t-e; and A. Vaughan

veto .an interim budget If it
were the only alternative to cur-·
tailing state qperations.
House Republicans have been
unable to agree on a tax package to finance a $7.8 billion twoyear appropriations bill already
passed and sent to the Senate.

· . Now You Know

14. .
. ON .B. - Boggs 4-0.8; Childs

0-0-0.

MIDOL~

Senate Leaders Set For Interim BUdget Vote

.

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

II !Helen Help
I
·
.
I
.
I
I'l II
By Helen Bottel
I·
·1 I
ASKED FOR IT!
•
l YOUTH
nils column is for young people, their problema and

WIN AT BRIDGE

the

.

THIS l!la part of a patient room in the new addition .Of
Veterans Memorial Hoapltal at Pomeroy. There are four
private rooma and 18 seml.private r001111 in the new f91)(),000
addition where open houae will be otllerved from 2 to 5 p.m.
&amp;mday. Each' room has pati~nt controlled lighting,
television, air conditioning, wall-ki4all carpetjng, restroom
facilities, a lavatory and lJBtlent lockets, two way com.
municatlon with the nursing statf, aU electric beds and
1
examination }jghting:
I

COLUMBUS (UP!) · _ The
• Ohio House of Representatives
has given its approval to
Jegislalion providing protective
care for . the mentally handicapped if their parenls are no
•
!onger able to care for them.
The House pas'led the bUI92-l
DONALD DIENER, admlnlatrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, stands at the nurses
and sent it to the Senate
station in the new to-bed addition where open house will be held from 2 tO 5 p.m. Sunday with
T sd The services written
guided tolD's to be held and refruhments served by the Women's Auxlllary of the hospital.
. ue ay · .
.
.
1 ~to the boll ~ould be provtded
Visitors to the open houae wW be Ull&amp;ted In parking and art to uile a door leading directly to
dorectly by the Division of
the new addition rather than to use the lobby of the hospital. A sign wlll mark the open house
Mental Retardation or through
entr.ance. Of the total coat of tooi,OGO for the new addition, ,286,000 was provided by the local
a c~ntract with a publ,lc or
hoflllltal while the balancewaaproylded fromHlll-B!D'ton fUnds and Appalachia monies.
private agency:

,'

vehicles until 10 a.m. on
Tuesday, July 13, at their office.
The bids will be with trade-ins
with one 1967 model and two
'

''''''''''''''':~&lt;:,:l':';''l''l':!:::i;,,1'::i:@:'! '':::%:!1&gt;!;!%!''''1''

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Supreme ,::ourt ruled
IOday that the city of CiDclnnati could grant pay raises
to city employes after they
went ou strike In January,
1970, because the city Dever
officially invoked the
Ferguson Act.
The Sooprcp1e Court upheld
the Hamilton County COmmon Pleas Court aad
l revened a decision of an
appelate court lu a IUpllyen
sull bnqht by Mitchell II.
, Goldher of Clntlanall who
ht bl 11 the
bile
soug
oc . pay
s.

J

otherwise
conducted routine · business
which included payment_· of
bills.
Attending were
commissioners Warden •Ours and
Bob Clark, and Clerk Martha
Chambers.
The third connmi~loner,
Charles R. Karr, Sr., Is a
patient at University Hoapital in
Colwnbus.

'·

OPEN HOUSE JULY 1
Open house will be held at the
new.ly remodeled Tuppers
Plains Post Office from 1:38 · ;;
a.m. to 5:30p.m. on ThurldaJ,
July I, in obaerviii1Ce 411 thll
inaugur~tion of the neW U. S.
p tal Se l ........_
05
rv Ct, ... ,.~ Willi
the first lstiue·of a lltlr slz"'ll
denoUng the Dpelli11a Cl( 1111 •
aervlce will be avallablt, . _
Walker, pc:atrnaater. ,.,,a ta. ~
__;_...
.:......
___......_._

____ ___ ___

:.:::*:::·i~::;~~:::~·:::-:;~::·~:;~::::::·:·;::,;:;;:::·:?:·~:~:~~:::1=:~:~::::;@~

,

�3- 'nle DIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PuDeroy, 0., kne23, Ir71

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1971

EDITORIAL

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

Monkey on His Back

~\:X:~::;:~;:;:::;:::;:::::~:~::;:~;::: ~::~:~::~::;::::~::?.

! Voice along Broadway !

Can Laws Curb
The Litterbug?

.I
I

.

I
'

BY JACK O'BRIAN

'

Beginning October 1, 1972, sales of all nonreturnable ,
beer and soft drink cans and bottles will be prohibited in
Oregon. Also banned are cans opened by pulling rings in
their tops.
. The recently passed law will require customers to pay
•:-. a deposit on all beer an'd soft drink containers, in most
:• cases five cents. But all other types of containers, includ; lng milk, whisky and wine bottles, are exempted.
:: · The legislation has been hailed as a "landmark" and
~ as a resounding victory for conservationists. It will be at
·; least a couple of years, however, before anyone will really
!; • know how much a victory it was, if any.
:: · • Container manufacturers, who have generally converted
:: to the production of lightweight cans and bottles in place
:: nf the heavier and more durable old-time returnables ,
:· l~ustered a lot of facts and figures in opposition to the law.
;:
In the first place, they pointed out, metal cans and one;: way bottles comprise only 1.3 per cent of the nation's
·: total solid waste, and even if banned would still leave 98.7
;; per cent of the solid waste problem to be solved.
!; They cited a 1969 study by the National Academy of
:: ' Sciences of roadside litter in 29 states which showed that
:; . almost 60 per cent of litter is paper and about 20 per cent
;. is beverage cans and bottles. Most interesting, along
;: .every ·mile of highway checked, there were almost as
-: many returnable bottles as nonreturnables.
:; ; "For the American who doesn't care about his sur::, roundings, a few ·cents deposit apparently makes no dent ·
:· en his environmentally deficient conscience," says Judd
·: H. Alexander, vice-president for environmental affairs of
;: the American can company.
:: . Oregon legislators were not persuaded by the argu:: ments.
·' In. view of this, and in view of the fact that at latest
:; count there were some 204 pieces of pending legislation
:-· in 44 states, 29 proposed ordmances in cities and counties
;:·; and 14 bills In Congress aimed at cans and bottles the
:::. container industry is taking a positive approach to try to
·:· prove another of lis arguments. I
:;, This is that · public education, enforcement of realistic
· . antilittering laws and recycling are better answers to the
waste disposal problem than bans on nonreturnable cans
a.nd bottles.
As of mid-June, the Carbonated Beverage Container
Manufacturers Association, representing four major can
companies, had established' more than 200 reclamation
centers from coast to coast (including five in Oregon) .
The ultimate solution to the nation's solid waste problem may lie in recycling, says Alexander. He notes that
~-billion worth of metals alone are lost each year in unreclaimed waste, as compared to $4-billion spent annually
to collect waste.
·
·
The reclamation centers will accept all types of cans,
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
both aluminum and steel or combmatlons. Money received
from scrap metal dealers will be returned to the local
community. I Scrap steel currently brings about $11.1 a ton·
WASHINGTON (NEA)
aluminum about $200.)
'
The attempt to destroy some of the " myths" surround~nyone who thinks the can people have got a good thing
ing the Social Security system appears to be creating new
gomg and who would hke to know the location of the cenones.
ter nearest him can find out by writing to: The Can PeoSome Americans cling tenaciously to the idea t~at
The first U.S. naval vesple; Suite 1200, 110 E. 59th St., New York, N.Y. 10022.
workers whli retire under Social Security never get back
sel with a plural name was
what they pay into it in taxes deducted over the years
the destroyer The Sullivans,
from their pay checks. That's just plain wrong.
launched April 4, 1943. The
Suppose you have been working under Social Security
World Almanac recalls that
since it began in 1937. The most you could have contrib·
the ship was named for the
uted through 1971 would be $4,171 in taxes . It must be
five Sullivan brothers of
remembered that the levy once was one per cent and was Waterloo, Iowa, who died
taken only from the first $3.000 of income.
when their crUiser was
,11 ¥QU pappeq~d . ~Q ~~&lt;!l!h . 6~ t~is, ~e.~r ,an&lt;\ ~ hose to sunk ne~r Guada,~~an.al o.n.
retire, y'ou'd get back that $4,!7l'h!'a little more !hiin !if .· Nov. 15, 1942.
~
II'
r
, r .1 • • ·
ltidnths or recetving•benefit•payments,"lf yoar wife ·~l s o
attained 65 and could draw benefits, your total
· Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D. that deceived the consumer had
monthly
benefits would give you your money back in
for 12 years .
just under 13 months .
Dear Dr. Lamb - You
The American Medical
wrote a column on the best
Let's go again , however, to the case or a man and wife
Assn.,
the
American
Heart
who will not reach 65 until 1985, with the man having what
oils to use in cooking, but
didn't mention coconut Assn. , the American Diabetic are called "maximum creditable earnings" for some 42
BARBS
Could you indicate the Assn. all favor the newly years, through 1984.
By PHIL PASTORET
.
fat and polyunsatu- proposed FDA ruling that the
You can presume a bit conservatively that the man
; rated qualities of coconut oil amounts and types of fat would live 13 years drawing retirement benefits, and his
Many more people keep
and tell how it compares to should be put on food labels. wife would live three years after his death. The actual
busy
than the number who
,. other vegetable oils? T hi s WE NEED A TRUTH IN average, officials say, is a lillie longer.
keep
working.
•:: information Is of great lm· CONTENTS LAW JUST AS
In the man's retirement span and the wife's later sur• • •
:• portance to millions of read- BADLY AS WE NEED A vivorship period, the total benefits that would be paid out
Show
us
a woman look·::. era who are using imitation TRUTH IN PACKAGING to them under present law would come to $67,754. And
ing for ' a hu.s band and
··~·
that must be set against the man's lifetime Social Security
., milk made with coconut oil. LAW.
we'll take odds he's out
golfing.
I doubt that most Ameri- payroll deductions of just $16,798.
Dear Reader-Coconut oil
• • •
If
the
pendin~
House
Ways
and
Means
bill,
with
its
••· is almost all saturated fat. cans realize that the reason
for
higher
benefits,
were
to
become
law
,
then
provisions
have trouble finding out
=• Natives with simple living they
how
much
saturated fat, and the same couple in the same time span would draw
:;: patterns conducive to large
in retirement money- with the man having paid
!•. amounts of coconut oil have polyunsaturated fat, is in the $137,407
in
$15,666
in his working years under Social Security.
products
they
buy
is
because
r!. a high incidence of heart (\isFDA
previously
prohib·
the
Moreover, what he and his wife can draw now or in
·:· ease. Imitation milk, artifi1985 or whenever in retirement benefits is not the whole
:;· cia! creams or coffee whit-. ited so labeling foods.
story. If the man becomes disabled or dies before retire:• eners and imitation whipped
One wonders just what in- ment age; his widow and children are entitled to substanNow is the time when those
.;: cream- often use coconut oil fluence caused the FDA to
"you
don't have to pay till
;:· exclusively. The label will take such a position. To me tial benefits. And Social Security taxes also provide both ... " bills begin to come in.
•: say "vegetable oil." These it is a bit like free speech. the worker and his wife with Medicare hospital insurance
• • •
:: products contain far more I am not nearly so concerned at age 65.
Friend who plans to
It is pretty commonly argued these days, of course, that
:• saturated fat than natural about whether people should
hitchhike
cross-country is
.;: cream or whole milk. Any- or should not eat saturated the worker pays not only the Social Security tax levied
gomg to thumber school
:: one wishing to limit satu- or polyunsaturated fat in directly a~amst his check, but also the matching contrifirst .
.; a·ated fat intake would be this instance as the suppres- bution levied against his employers.
•:. better off using the natural sion of information by the
The contention is that the employer gets it out of the
:. products. Coconut ~il is . a FDA. Whether I approve of worker's hide either by hiking prices or by keeping his
:· favorite of the food mdustry what anyone says or not I wages correspondingly lower .
...-.~-=:-:==;:::'
;: because of its long shelf life . defend the right to say it and
WIN AT BRIDGE
Sorry, men, but that's just too glib. Undoubtedly, the
argument is true in part. But there is no way to prove
;: As long as the Food and whether a person should or that
an employer freed of that tax would automatically be
•: Drug Administration refused should not eat saturated fat, paying
workers a correspondingly higher' wage. Or,
,:; to allow the actual contents 1 defend the right or the con- indeed, his
that
the whole burden shows up in higher prices.
,:: of foods to be put on the sumer to know WHAT he is
As a matter of fact, it Is the employer's contributions
·• labels there was no way the eating .
NORTH
23
which
help to broaden Social Security beyond a retire.;: consumer could protect him·
.K86
In my judgment the FDA
¥K94
:·: self completely from such ruling was a gross and pur- ment system, to permit payments to disabled workers or
to
surviving
widows
and
children
when
a
man
dies
before
+KJ 107
;:; deceptions as labels that poseful infringement on in· retirement age .
.
olo842
::: read vegetable oil and mean dividual rights. If you agree
A last point. Critics like to say Social Security is not an
WEST
EAST
~;: coconut oil.
) 'OU could write to the FDA, insurance system .but, of course, it is. No matter that the
.J1092
.,54
:; : I had no sympathy lor the W a s h i n g ton, D.C., and moneys are shuffled about, with today's workers paying
¥10 8 6 5
¥A3
:;: FDA's position on this mat· strongly endorse their pro- benefits for the presently retired. The key fact is that
• 9 43
+ABZ
. :.: ter and am shocked that an posed regulations on label· what you get bears a relationship to what you earn •and
o!oKJ 1097
olo53
pay tax. upon) under Social Security.
'
::: ngency of the federal govern- ing roods for fat content.
soum (DJ
::: men!
a practice
(NEWSPAPER ENTEKPRISE ASSN.)
.AQ3
·:::·
¥QJ72

BRUCE SIOSSAT

You DO Win With "
Social Security

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Coconut Oil Tops.
In·
"Saturated~ . Ftah . ::: .
..
~

'

.

;!:

FROM VAGABOND LOVER
- TO 'IHRIFI'Y ~F

NEW YORK - NOSfALGIA .... In the
thirties, playwright W'Illiarn Saroysn wrote : "On
Broadway every pa8Sing glance is a romance."
He was referring, of course, to the Imagery of
such eccentric press agents as the late Milan 0 .
Welch, ex-newspaperman from a small-town
Maine newspaper who was Rudy Vallee's spacestealer .... One of ·Welch's Inventions was that
Rudy was tightfisted, only a sllght exaggeration
of Rudy's legendary thrift- Rudy's IJJrjft never
extended to crooked meanness; It was simply
that he knew the price of everything and did not
believe his celebity status meant he should
Increase the tariH.
One night years ago Walter' Winchell and I
arrived at the Temple garage on W. 56th St. to
see Rudy driving away mad; whst happened
ViW asked the night garageman .... "Mr. Vallee
asked the price to park all night and I told hlrri a
buck and a balf," the man said. "He said that's
· ridiculous, he coUld park ~own on 45th St for a
buck and a quarter." Two-bits always was worth
saving to Rudy.
Milan Welch's other Invention was that Rudy
never dated any girl who wasn't a brunette; In
time Rudy came to believe it himself as he later
admitted ,.... Big hints of a romance Wlth Alice
Faye crept Into the Wlnchell-Sobol-&amp;lllivan
gossip colwnns when Alice sang.With his band at
the old Hollywood Restaurant, but the
''romance" floundered when Alice refused to
dsrken ·tier beautiful tresses.
Rudy once was to attend an opening at Sid
Solomon's !allied Central Park Cu.no, but had
no date .... A friend arranged a bliod date With
beautiful Ziegfeld doll Agnes O'Loughlin .... Next
night the headline In the Daily News had
upgraded that casual meeting to Its front-paged,
"Vallee Woos Ziegfeld Beauty"; asked about it
1be Almanac
By United Press International
Today ls Wednesday, June 23,
the !74th dsy of 1971.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Jupiter
· and Mercury.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Cancer.
The Duke of Windsor, Edward VIII, was born June 23,
1894.

On this day in history:
In 1845 the Congress of Texas
agreed · to the territory's
annexation · by•· the United
States. '
.,
In 1~47 the Hou~ enacted the
Taft-Hartley Act over the veto
of President Harry S Truman.
In 1964 Gen. Maxwell Taylor
was appointed U.S. ambassador
tO · Saigon, replacing Henry
Cabot Lodge.
In 1967 the Senate censured
Sen. Thomas Dodd for misusing
campaign fuilds.

next day, Agnes said : '"The romance never got a
chance to start. All he talked about were his
grosses at the Paramount Theater. He never
even asked me up to see his press books." .
It was a diverting onway story; as for that
durable thrift lore - Rudy had a big 1o4ge' on a ·
Maine lake where, between stein song11, he In·.
vited his orc~stra up for a weekend; graduite
members still laugh as they tell it: On return,
Rudy !old them he was charging them only $20
per person for the food, transporta_tlon and
lodging ... Not a bad buy 1!1 !Oday's weekendmarket, but a double..sawbuck In those daya wu
Real Mooey to Boys in the Band .... As for his
press clippings, Rudy would spend hours
penlSlng the fan magazine at the 57th St. &amp; 3rd
Ave. corner newsstand, buying only those that
menUoned hlrri.
Down In Nassau, the Bljhamas, Rudy .,as
singing some 15 years ago at the British Colonist
Hotel .... The orchestra was a tiny, four;~~lece
Pickup group imported by the hotel from London
at abnost slave wages .... Rudy's bonhomie
warmed the cockles of the cockney quartet,
especially when the erstwhile Vagaboild Lover
advised them he was so delighted With their
mlnl~ymphony, he would give them a "terrific
gift" when he left; he did Indeed - each got a
ballpoint pen With Rudy's name on It, which
Rudy bought In thousand-lots .... But they ap.
JWeclated the thought, bassist Ron Palumbo
mted .... Aod mted.
Rudy doesn't JWetend he sings well any
more, but he does lnslst, as he bad for decade&amp;,
111at he was a superb comedian; and then, on the
wave of abnost everyone's sustained ridicule, he
JWOved In "How to Succeed in Buslneas Without
Really Trying" that he is .... Rudy also took
pride In his Feclse pronunciation and enlDI·
elation of·the English language; here, too, he
was ridiculed - until an Ollford don said Rudy
was the American whose speech he conshiered
finest. So there.

r---------------------------1
!I Helen Help Us!I
I
1

By Helen Bottel

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

:..:
:::
":·

..•:..

:·:.·
:·

...:::
::

\'wvt%ZiT"':)

HOSPITAl. oePr.,
Mfo;rERNirY DIVISION,
OBSERVATION

WINDOW···

®

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A thought for today: Poet
James Stephens said, "Women
are wiser than men because ladl•'
I don't think he's funny. And I don't like to be ignored. Don't
they know less and understand
more. "
you think It's gauche, joking With people who serve you? - N&lt;Yr
AMUSED
,
QUICK QUIZ Dear Not:
Pleasant,
kindly
humor
is
never
gauche.
Perbaps
If
you
had
Q-What type of phobia
appreciated it in your husband more, you would bave served hlrri
is ornithophobw? ,
A- Fear of birds in gen· better.- H.
·
era!.
Dear Helen:
Could I, too, offer my friendship to "Helpless" who felt so
Q-What Brazilian shrub
has flowers nearly a foot alone? I waan 't as Wise as she is: I DID cover up the real me With
long?
drugs. Tbank goodness she knoWll better.
A-The an g e 'I' s-trumpet.
I !Did myself no one cared or llstened, but now I realize I was a
The f I ower s are solitary,
white and nearly one foot plasUc dummy who pushed people away. I held so much In and
soon I couldn't talk unless I had a shot of dope. Betw,een fins I
long.
was dying lnslde to get tbe load off my back. At 171 was pregnant ·
and married; a jlDiky living With another addict. .
Now at 20, I'm expectlilg another baby. My husband is In prlaon
for possession of heroin, but we are both going straight. When he
gels out, we'll be clean, I swear It, because we love each other and
we know how to stand up to life, flna11y.
I've been off drugs ever since I found one strong person who
The diamond lead set three freed me from this slavery. To have my mind back again is a
no-trump. At the other table, wonderful feeling you wouldn't believe.
.
Oswald Jacoby made fourIf "Helpless" can find just one person to talk to, she'll be
odd aga_inst the lead of an- okay,Allittakeaistheon~RIGliThelperonyourside.IImo'w!other su1t.
· MRS. S. M.
Today's hand shows the - - - - -- - - -Fisher double at its best.
South has a normal no-trump
opening and North a perfect
raise to three. East is looking at 12 hlgh-&lt;:ard points
and knows his partner may
not hold even a jack. It
doesn't
matter, He expects
• Q85
•
to
beat
three
if a club is led
oloAQ6
and sees no chance if any
North-South vulnerable
The countries of Western
other suit is opened.
Europe . . . are not movie West North Eosl South
No guarantee goes with
stars who change f i a n c e s Pass 3 N.T. Dble 1N.T.
this
double. Give South the
Pass
every six months. If we get Pass Pass
Jack of clu)ls Instead of the
married, it is forever. So we
jack of hearts and even the
Opening iead- tfo 5
must be serious about it.
club lead won't beat three
-f'rench President Pompi·
no-trump. There are very
do:u, o.n the e&gt;1try of Bri· By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby few sure-things In bridge,
tazn mto the li:ZLropean
but this time the Fisher douThe Fisher d o u b I e in- ble costs South game and
Common Market.
vented by Dr" John Fisher of rubber.
Dallas is better known than
(NlWSPAPil ENTUPRIU ASSN:!
The law will never move the Lazard double. It is also
as rapidly as a bullet nor designed to assist rour partwill its dispositions ever' be ner make a bhnd lead
as demolishing as
bomb against no-trump . The bid ,
Justice sh~uld be reasoned: received considerable pubTh~ bidding hu betn: •
and reasoning takes a cer- ·ficily when James Jacoby, Wost North
Eut South
tain length of time.
playing with Dr. Fisher.
I¥
Dble
'
-. Edward L. Wrigl!t, presi· used it to help their team
You, South, hold:
dent of tl! e American Bar win the 1965 Vanderbilt Cup.
Association.
.A9t3 ¥Q782 +53 ···~
That time the double called
What do you do now?
.
t for a diamond lead. since
two !Marts. Ynu lu!•·e
Ame.ncans are not only dummy had ·used Stayman . a A-Bid
roloo
for
your ,.riner.
our neaghbors and allies, but . on · the way to three noTODAY'S QVIS110N
they are even our friends.
trump. Otherwise. the Fisher·
-Canadian Prime Minister double calls for a club lead.
You bid lwo heaf'lll. Weal hid&lt;
1'71 lr1 NIA 1.,.
Trudeau, to R~ ssiau Comlhe Stayman sequence .. two apades. your partner ·t~not·
mumst party leader Leo·
could have doubled heai'UI and Eut lhrre oped'"'·
"OK! Wh6's the wise ~uy with th lfiders?"
lud Brczl111ev .
'
if he wanted that Whal do you do now?

man.

Fisher Double Scores Set

"
•••

I

QUK'K, TilE "NO VACANCY" SIGN
Dear Helen:
My wife has an old school friend who never got married,
mainly because S!Je can't stand men, children and pets (the latter
giving her bay fever) .
Each yesr she expects
to spend her enUre vacation With us
'
mainly because we don't have children yet and the beach Is kind
to her allergies. ~estill can't stand me, but she is willing to put
up With a little pain In return for free room and board.
You guessed it: I don't like the situation, Neither does my
wife, but she's the kind-hearted type. How can we break this
pattern? - GEORGE
.
,; , rq .. (l"•n...,; ,t ,,,~~~u~~
Dear George:
. ~~~, '· ··-&gt;r •• • ,
,1 .,
You might win by a sneeze if you tell this allergic gsl you've
adopted a cat and a dog who sleep in thespsre bedroom, butyiru'd
"be glad to find her a beach cottage With cooking facWties at a
reasonable rent." -H.
Dear Helen:
Please answer fast, so I can show my husband.
.
He is 65 and still thinks it's cute to joke around and laugh with
waitresses, nurses, even elderly ladies. I think he should be
dignified and stop making a fool of himself. These women JWetend
to enjoy It, but I wou1dn 't.
A well educated person (In etiquette, that is) would'be quiet
and more Interested In his wife's lllnesses, !Mtead of playing tbe

.

~ ....

.

Gallipolis Will Host 46th SOGA Tournament
'

The Gallipolis GQif Club will inade Including Dave Frame
bost the 1971 Southeastern Golf and Herb McCorn)lck from
Association Tournament Falrgreens Country &lt;;lub,
beginning Friday, June 25.
Charles Stamm and Wlb Jerles
Action begins Friday at 10 from Canibrldge, Perry Lank·
a.m. ·with the . ~-am lour· · ford and John McAfee from
llliment. The pro-am is a best Hocking Hills Country Club, Joe
ball event covering 18 holes. Cardenas and Cliff Rhein and
Several entries are already Jan Reynolds and Dave Vance

.

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from La!)caster Country Club,
'and Jim .Cawley · and lloug'
Robinson from Marietta.
Defending champions
HowBrd B. Saunders and Jllhn
Shinn are representing
Gallipolis. Also entered from
GalliPGiia are &lt;llris Roderick,
former MAC chsmplon, aod his

.

'

father, RIChard C. Roderick.
The pros from , other
Southeastern clubs and. aeveral
good amateur teams are also
expected to enter.
The team and · individual

'

Cheshire Still Unbeaten
Rlghlhanders Johnny Baird
and Orland Cremeans combined for a one-hitter Tuesday
night as Cheshire defeated
Southwestern, 17~ In the GalliaMeigs Pony League.
It was Cheshire's sixth
straight league triumph and
ninth In nine outings. Southwestern's record dropped to 1-5.
The Redlegs erupted for six
runs in the first Inning and were
never headed. Marshall French
started the rally with a hsse ort
balls.
Terry Lucas singled after
French stole second; catcher

Dave Wise singled to left man and. two throwing errors.
scoring Lucas; Joe Stidham
Baird and Cremeans comshimmed a two run homer to bined to strike out 16
right field; Toni Kerns was safe Highlanders. Jenkins collected
on an error and scored on Clay the only Southwestern hit, a
Hudson's double. Hudson single .In the fourth.''
·· '
crossed the ·plate on Chris . In another league contest,
Preston's single.
Bidwell behind the strong
Four more runs came in the pitching of Keith Saunders
secood inning on an error, walk, pounded ·Pomeroy "B", 12-2.
Hudson's triple and Preston's Jeff Hash, Mike Russell and
double.
Bruce Runyon collected two bits
Cheshire scored four more in each. Bidwell scored four runs
the siXth inning, three on a In the fourth and added five In
homer by Jerry Bias. Their .the sixth Inning.
final runs scored on Baird's The Pirates wll1 play Racln~t
double, a walk to Jimmy Hock- at home Friday.

Torre's Bat Remains Hot
By United Press IDteruatlonal
St. Louis' Joe Torre insists he
isn'lthinking about the batting
title yet. He's too busy enjoying
the change of scenery.
TOITe became the first major
league player this season io
surpass 100 hits as he got three
in four limes at bat Tuesday
night to help lead the Cardinals
to a 6-5 victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The righthanded hitter also
moved farther abead of the
Dodgers' WUile Davis in the
batting. race In their face-toface confrontation, Torre is now
hitting .371 while Davis is next
at .359 after going hiUc'SS
Tuesday night.
In other games Tuesday
night, the New York Mets

defeated Pittsburgh 3-2, San
Francisco shut out the Chicago
Cuba 2-0, Houston defeated San
Diego 4-2, Cincinnati beat
Philadelphia 6-1, and Atlanta
beat Montreal ~In the American League, it
was Detroit over the New York
Yankees 7-4 in the first game
and the Yankees took the
second game 2-1; Washington
took a doubleheader opener
from Baltimore 6-5 but lost the
second game 2-0; ·Cleveland
won the opener ~ against
Boston but lost · the second
game 2-0; Minnesota crushed
Oakland 1~1, the Chicago White
Sox beat Kansas City 11~ and
California at Milwaukee was
postponed by rain.
Rookie Charlie Williams and

· Gallipolis Score,·
Positions In SOGA
Gallipolis, score and roslllon
In previous Southeastern Ohio
Golf Association tournaments
are listed here:
YEAR SCORE POSITION
1925
No Entry
1926
No Entry
1927 Third
1928 Third
1929 Sixth
1930 Unknown
1931 Third
1932- 1080
Seventh
1933-1058
Third
1934- 1036
Fifth
1935- 1032
Fifth
1936 Seventh
1937 Fifth
1938 Sixth
1939 - 979
Second
1940- 979
Sixth
1941 - 946
First
1942 - 989
Third
1943 No Tournament
1944-1022
Sixth
1945 - 1048
Fifth

1946- 917
1947 - 914
1948- 924
1949- 939
1950- 1015
1951 - 921
1952- 945
1953- 963
1954- 929
1955- 956
1956- 954
1957- 957
1958 - 962
1959-956
1960- 935
1961 ...:. 943
1962 - 879
1963- 954
1964- 969
1965- 957
1966- 935
1967 - 922
1968 - 919
1969- 980
1970 - 951

First
First
First
Third
Slx!h
Second
, Third
Fourth
Fourth
Fourth
Sixth
Third
Fourth
Third
First
Third
First
Sixth
Seventh
Third
Fifth
ASecond
Fourth
Sixth
Fifth

Previous SOGA Champs
PREVIOUS CHAMPIONS ' ,
YEAR -CHAMPION SCORE
1925 - Chillicothe
1926- Marlefla
1927 - Jackson
1928 - Portsmouth
1929- Chillicothe
1043
1930 - Chillicothe
985
1931 -Athens
1932 - Athens
1015
1933 - Athens
1020
f934- Marietta
942
1935- Marietta
941
1936 - Portsmouth
970
1937 - Chllllco\lle
969

BERRY'S WORLD

1938 1939 1940 1941·-

Chillicothe
Chillicothe
Portsmouth
Gallipolis
Portsmouth
1942- Marietta
1943 - No Tourney
1944 - Chillicothe
1945- Portsmouth
1946- Gallipolis
1947-Galllpolls
1948- Gallipolis
1949- Marietta
1950- Athens
1951 ~ Athens

969

935
946
946

962
(War)

1004

987
9i7
914
924
904
901
903

GOOD/YEAR
"MARATHON"

TIMELY QUOTES

*

'

735x14
blackwall
tubeless
plus $2.01
Fed. Ex. Tax
. and old lire

White Wall
735114~4 p~

'20.00
Fed. Ex. Tax '2.01

. • Tufsyn rubber Cor
durnblllly In lhe body ..•
long milcag•l in lllll trond
• Mot1! thon 8,000 llfiJJping

edge• ~ivc traction ...
rain or 1hino
• Modorn wrap-around trc11d
for stlble tlccriniJ conlrol
• in tbe turns

I"RlR SMALL CAR OWNERS"

FIH . . ., 1-

RIZER OIL 00.
992-2701
700 E. Mlln
POMEROY, 0.

Danny Frisella combined on a
~-hJtter to give New York its
victory over the Pirates.
Pittsburgh pitchers walked
eight batters with two coming
around to score, and the Mels
got their other run· off Bob
Moose in the eighth on Ken
Singleton's single, an infield out
and Jerry Grote's single.
Ron Reed pitched a three-hitter and the Atlanta Braves
took advantage of three walks
,aod three wild pitches by Steve
Renko to score four runs in the
third inning against Montreal.
Pete Rose got ,three hils and
George 'Foster and Lee May
drove home two runs apiece to
give Cincinnati the victory over
Philadelphia in support of Gary
Nolan's three-hit pitching. Nolan, 5-7, lost a shutout bid In the
ninth when Oscar Gamble
doubled and scored on Dave
Concepcion's boot of Roger
Feed's grounder.
Joe Morgan clouted a three·
run, two-out triple In ·the sixth
inpjqgytd"~~lief pile~ .fc~~q

Gladding came In to stop a San
Diego threat .. jp the ninth as
Houston handed the Padres
their seventh consecutive loss.
After starter Ken Forsch
walked Garry Jestadt to open
the ninth, Gladding carne in to
reUre the next three batters for
his eighth save.
John Cumberland, rushed into
service as a starter after Frank
Reberger cut a finger on his
pitching hsnd on Monday and
Jerry Johnson shutout the Cubs
on three hils for San Francisco.
Cwnberland reUred the first
two batters In the nlnth .before
Johnson came in to strike out
Ramon Webster on three
pitches.
1952 - Lancaster
1953 - Lancaster
1954- Marietta
1955- Athens
Lancas1er
1956- Athens
1957-Athens
1958- Marietta
1959- Marietta
1960- Gallipolis
Marl efta
1~61- Marietta
1962- Gallipolis
1963- Marietta
196.4- Marietta
1965- Marietta
1966- Circleville
t967 -'- Athens
1968- Marietta
1969- Lancaster
1970- Athens

921
943
899

945
945
906
906

913
929
935
935
912
879

916
919
900
903

914
876
943
925

CATCHER SOLD
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The
Washington Seniors Tuesday
sold catcher Frank Fernandez
to the Iowa Osks of the
American Association and recalled catcher Rick Stelmaszek
from Denver of the same
league.
CEPEDA·HOME
, ATLANTA (UPI) _:. Atlanta
Braves' first baseman Orlan\lo
Cepeds flew to hls home In
Puerto Rico Tuesday In hopes
of finding a cure for an ailing
knee. Cepeda will consult the
opinion of his own doctor.

.

.

ccmpetititll M&amp;l,. at 1 a.m.
·~ wltll eldl rl the
folloWinc cllibe enteiing a len
man lellli, Albena Country'
dilb, CJ!nbrldae Country Oub,
ChliUcothe Co~tiill'y Club,
Pictaway Country Club,
Fairgretna Country Club,
Hocldng HU1s Country Club,
Lancaster Country Club,

'

.

~ettaCountryClub,andhost

member Galllpolls.

.
Athenl is defending team
champion. The defending
medalilt, Marlon Hughes, of
Lancaater has been ill and will
not play this year. Former
SEOGA . champs entered are
Ron Ellis, Gallipolis, 1969, and
Wlb Jerles, Cambridge, 1968.
I

'

'

'

The annUal SEOGA meeting
will be beld Friday evening at
Oscar's followed by a stag party
for players and friends.
There will be a social hour,
dinner and dance at the
Gallipolis Elks' Club Saturdl!y
evening and tickets for these
events are available for all
members of league cluba.

Players will be treated to a
steak dinner following p)ay on
Sunday. After all players hsve
finished there will~
beg
contest and a drlvin contest.
The fmal event
be the
presentation of team and In·
divldual awards.
Ali members of SEOGA clubs
ll!'e invited to atten&lt;!.

,

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.Brewers Are Rained Out :j
By vt1'0 ·STELLINO
Press lnternatlonol
· By United
Amerieo~n Lugut
Eut
W. L. Pet. Gl
42' 23 .646
Baltimore
Detroit
38 30 .559 5'12
36 30 .545 ~·12
Boston
31 35 .470 11'12
Cleveland
New York
31 37 .456 12112
Washington 24 41 .369 18
West
W. L. Pet, Gl
Oakland
45 23 .662 ...
Kansas City 35 29 .547 8
Minnesota
35 34 .fjll7 10'12
California
31 39 .443 15
Chicago
25 38 .397 17'12
Milwaukee
24 33 .387 18
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 7 New York 4, lsi
New York 2 Detroit 1, 2nd
Wash 8 Ball 6, lst-t-n
Ball 2 Wash o, 2nd-nt
Cleveland 9 Boston 3, lst-t-11
Boston 2 Cleveland 0, 2nd-nt
Mlnne.sota 10 Oakland 1, night
Chicago 11 Kan City 6, night
Calli at Mllw. ppd-raln
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oakland IOdom 2-3) at
Minnesota 1Blyleven 7-aJ, night.
California (Messersmith 6-6
and Clark 0.0) · at Milwaukee
I Parsons 5-9 and Krausse 3-8),
2, twi-light.
Kansas City (Spllttorff 2-01 at
Chicago (Wood S-3) .
,Baltimore I Palmer 9-3) at
Washington I Bosman s · 8),
night.
Detroit (Coleman 6·3) at New
York I Peterson 6-6), night.
Cleveland (Foster S-4) at
Boston (Culp 7-5) .
Thursdl's Gomes
Oakland at Minnesota
California at Milwaukee
Baltimore at Washington, night
Detroit at New York; n[g~t

UPI stlOI'tl Wrtler

If, Into ..eli life, a little rain
must fall, Skip Lockwood has
had more lh8n his share In the
last month.
LockWood, t11e Milwaukee
Brewers' U.year~d rlghthan·
der who bail won only three
games this season, hid a
possible victorY washed out by
rain Tuesday night for the
second tlrrie In the last month.
Lockwood feU sb: outs lhort
Tuesday ntght whet\ he blaliked
the Califoriiia Anjela for three
lnrdngs I!J1d llncled ill two runs
In the second ~ for a 2-0
lea&lt;Hinly to have a taeavy rain
wash out the game With two out
In the bottom of the third. After
a delay of one hour and 28
minutes, l!!e game was called.
"I was just terribly dlsap·
potnteit tonl4ht because I bad
good stuff iDd I was keeping

the ball low," Lockwood said,
"but there's nothing I can do
about it. I can't pitch and
worry ·about the weather, too.
Actually, I feel worse for the
team ·than for myself because
we've been baving trouble
getting started this year and
last night we won a big comelrom.IJehlnd victory in the loth
Inning. We hojled that would he
the start of something big for
us and then this bad to happen .
For me, the other postponement was a lot worse because
there were just two outs to go."
The games that were played
Included three doubleheader
splits. Detroit beat New York 74 but lost the second game 2-1,
Cleveland downed Boston 9-3
but lost the second game 2-0,
Washington beat Baltimore ~
but lost the second game 2-0,
Chicago drubbed Kansas City
11~. and · Minnesota routed

Oakland 1~1.
In the National League,
AUanta blanked Montreal ~.
Cincinnati downed Philadelphia
&amp;-1, New York edged Pittsburgh
3-2, San Francisco blanked
Chicago 2-0, Houston downed
San Diego 4-2 and St. Louis
beat Los Angeles 6-~ .
Dave Nelson collected three
hils to pace a 15-hit attack as
Washington rallied from a ~
deficit to down Baltimore. But
Grant Jackson, who went 6 2-3
mmngs, and Tom Dukes
combined on a seven-hitter in
the second game to give the
Orioles the spilt.
Dick McAuliffe's two-run
horner started a five-run ninth
inning that lifted Detroit past
New .York. In the second game,
Stan Bahnsen pitched an eighthitter lor his sixth straight
victory to give the Yanks the
split.

East Line Said Tough
LUBBOC'K, 'tek. (UP!)Michigan blckle Dan Dierdorf
says the East offllllive line wll1
be "one smooth-operating rnachine" cOme Saturday wheh it
meets the West in the 11th
annual Coaches Ali·Amerlca.

fooUball game.
"Often you hear a lot about
this man or that man, and how
Important he is to the team,"
said the first team All,American from Canton, O~lo.
"But the o(fenslve line is kind

folalional League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
44 26 .629 ....
New York
38 27 .585 3112
St. Louis
38 33 .535 6'12
Chicago
34 34 .500 9
~ontreal
27 37 .422 14
Philadelphia 27 40 .&lt;103 15'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Pomeroy came up with a few loss of. players and he has
San Francisco 47 25 .653 ... surprises.I!' whip Ra~e 12 to 4 responde\! veri well; In the li)t
Los Angeles 38 31 .551 7112
In Gellil_,a Ptlly ' action ·Tuesday, Eastman went all.the
Houston
33 35 .485 12
Cincinnati
32 33 .457 u
Tuelday ~t.P6merO'y .
way· and 'struck out 14 while
Atlanta
33 41 .446 1s
Chuck
laitman
wu one of walking four. Another new
San Diego
23 47 .329 23
the big surpriSes. He ba1 been wrinkle In the Pomeroy attack
Tuesday's RHults
New York 3 Pills 2, nlght
pressed into service due to a Ia Charlie Marshall, a first-year
AtlaAla 4 Montreal 0. night
player, who hss been doing a
Cincinnati 6 Philo 1, night
great job lately. He led the team
St. Louis 6 Los Angl 5, night
Houston 4 'San· Diego 2. night lnternation.ll.t*tue Stal'lliinas over Ra~e with a long double
San Fran 2 Chicago O, night
8y United l"ress hlith!afltnal and a piir of singles, aod big
Todar's Proboblt !'llchets
'
W L l"ct. Gl Fred Bul1ley lhowed signs of at
Chicago (Pappas 6-71 at San Syracuse
41 22 .651 Francisco t Reberger 2-0L
Charleston
35 26 . 57~ 5 last breaking out of hls slump as
New York IGentry 6-41 at Tidewater
38 29 .567 5 he slammed a three-run homer.
Pittsburgh (Walker 2·6), night. Rochester
31 32 .492 10
Curfinan, the Racine pitcher,
Montreal !Morton 6-9) at Richmond
32 37 .464 12
went all the way to be charged
Atlanta (Jarvis 2·7l, ·night.
Louisville
30 35 .462 12
Philadelphia !Wise 7- ~) II Toledo
27 39 .409 15'12 With llle loss. He fanned seven
Cincinnati !Grimsley- ~ · 2) , Winnipeg
24 33 .387 16'12 and passed two.
night.
Tutsdly's Results
Other bitters for Pomeroy
St. Louis !Reuss 6-7) at Los Winnipeg 6 Toledo 4 (lsi, 9 InAngeles (Sulton 6-6), night.
nlng&amp;)
were Keith Wood, two singles;
Houston t Forsch 2-1 and · Toledo s Winnipeg 4 (2nd, 7 In· Mlck Alb and Jeff McKinney
Wilson 5-5) at San Diego t Kirby nlngs)
each a double; and Larry
5-Sand Arlln2-10). 2, Twl-nlght. Charleston 6 Roehe&amp;ter l
Thursday's Games . Richmond 3 ·Loulsvlllt 2 (lsi, 7 Fridley and Rob Eason with a
St. Louis at Los Angeles
• Innings!
single each.
New York at Mont~eal, night
Louisville 6 Richmond 3 !2nd,
Racine was held to five hits by
Phlla at Cin,clnna!L night
7 )nnlngs)
Eastman,
all singles, by Curl·
,Tidewater 9 Syracust 8 llst, 7 .
Innings) .
man, · Theiss, J. Jenkins,
Syracuse 2 Tidewater 1 (2nd, 7 Huddleston, and Jenkin!. ·
Meigs
Innings)
Racine
000 110 2- 4 5 4
Pomeroy 013 026 X-12 10 4
Curfman and Jenkins,
Eastman
and Mick Alh.
Sallsbury.
. . .,
Nickloil L. Leliiatd, EleanQr
E. Leonard to General
Telephone Co.,
·
clair Mlgllt, Patricia Mltht tD
Waid B. Hayman, Donna A. James L. Mohler, Wanjla
Hayman to Cbarles Edward Mohler, UO Acres, Salisbury.
Rhodes, Linda .Lou Rhodes,
James Weill, Geneva Wells to
Sam Hicks, Jr., Mattha Rhea
Parcels, Letart.
Horace Cbaney, dec. to Mae Hicks, .211 Actti, Slllm.
Frazier, Donald Cbaney, Cert.
Harold Carnahan, Isabel
for trans., Olive.
Carnahan to llonald T. tlolter,
William C. Kennedy, dec. to Unds L. Holter, 8 Acres, Sutton.
Arthur C. Gibson, Maye
Effie S. Kennedy, Cert. for
Glbaon tD ROckford Spurlock,
trans., Olive.
Charles J . Mullen, dec. to Ruby SiMirll)lllt, 2UI ,Acr•,
Phyllis A. Mullen, Helene B. Scipio.
Mullen, Cert. for trans
,,
I .
Pomeroy.
COAST QUAKE
Helen B. Mullen to Phyllis A.
Mullen, Lots, Pomeroy.
John R. Stout, Helen L. Stout
to Merlin Teets, Ida Teets, .511
Acre, Columbia.
Hugh P, Custer to General
Telephone
Co.,
Ease.,

Eastman Paces Pomeroy

Team In

12-4 / Vi~tory

of different. It has to be ..one
well-oiled piece of machinerynot a group of individuals."
The East will be out lor its
second victory in as many
years as Louisiana State coach
Charley McClendon trys to
duplicate hls winning performance of a year ago. The
series is now even at 5-5.
A crowd of 42,IJOO.plus is
expected to jam Texas Tech's
Jones Stadium for the 8:30 p,m,
(EDT) kickoff. Millions wll1
view via national television.
Dierdorf said the East bad
five. gr~t~(~§.li all fP.Ill't AAJ!
all usecf"f&lt;flilii !line ootilall !lie
said they bad already begun
polishing their work aa a unit.
"We are going to try aod
control the ball," Dlerdorf said.
"There is no question the We;!
will be throwing. The best
defense we can come up with is
to control the ball and not let
the west passers get it."
Dierdorf said the east would
mix running and paaalng. He
said the line would bave a full
night ahead to open up the
game.

· Frank Baker's three-run
pinch double started a sevenrun sixth and led Cleveland
past Boston. But the Red Sox
came back to win the second
game on George Scott's two-run
homer. Sonny Siebert; 111-4,
pitched a six-hitter for his tOOth
career victory in the nightcap.
The Minnesota Twins, handcuffed by Vida Blue Monday
night, exploded against Jlrri
Hunter, 10-5, and four relievers
for 13 hits to down Oakland.
Rich Reese hit two homers and
Tony Oliva and Harmon Killebrew added one each. Jim
Perry boosted his record tO 11-5
on a three-hitter, two by Reggie
Jackson who homered and
tripled.
Chicago won its third straight
game erupting for eight runs in
the second inning to down
Kansas City. Bill Melton's
second-inning homer, the first
off Kansas City pitcher Dick
Drago this season,' capped the
rally.

Transfers

FREE

At Your Certified Oil Company Station
"Your Gasoline Purchase Pree" If We Fail To
Clean Your Windshield, Weather PvrmiHing.
. No Other Compan~ Dares To Offer This
Policy.

Certified Gas .stations
992-9981

l!umtroy, Ohio

The hawthorn h a 1 the
amallest llilda of anY. tree.
The buda ana so tilly they are
beat . - wtth a maanilylng

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here and watch it
"bloom"! Earn at our
current annua I rate of

4%% or 5%
on 6-month savings
certificales.

Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
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296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
~e1mb•er Federal Home
Member Federal Savings
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ccounts insured up

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Middleport

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�3- 'nle DIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PuDeroy, 0., kne23, Ir71

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 23, 1971

EDITORIAL

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

Monkey on His Back

~\:X:~::;:~;:;:::;:::;:::::~:~::;:~;::: ~::~:~::~::;::::~::?.

! Voice along Broadway !

Can Laws Curb
The Litterbug?

.I
I

.

I
'

BY JACK O'BRIAN

'

Beginning October 1, 1972, sales of all nonreturnable ,
beer and soft drink cans and bottles will be prohibited in
Oregon. Also banned are cans opened by pulling rings in
their tops.
. The recently passed law will require customers to pay
•:-. a deposit on all beer an'd soft drink containers, in most
:• cases five cents. But all other types of containers, includ; lng milk, whisky and wine bottles, are exempted.
:: · The legislation has been hailed as a "landmark" and
~ as a resounding victory for conservationists. It will be at
·; least a couple of years, however, before anyone will really
!; • know how much a victory it was, if any.
:: · • Container manufacturers, who have generally converted
:: to the production of lightweight cans and bottles in place
:: nf the heavier and more durable old-time returnables ,
:· l~ustered a lot of facts and figures in opposition to the law.
;:
In the first place, they pointed out, metal cans and one;: way bottles comprise only 1.3 per cent of the nation's
·: total solid waste, and even if banned would still leave 98.7
;; per cent of the solid waste problem to be solved.
!; They cited a 1969 study by the National Academy of
:: ' Sciences of roadside litter in 29 states which showed that
:; . almost 60 per cent of litter is paper and about 20 per cent
;. is beverage cans and bottles. Most interesting, along
;: .every ·mile of highway checked, there were almost as
-: many returnable bottles as nonreturnables.
:; ; "For the American who doesn't care about his sur::, roundings, a few ·cents deposit apparently makes no dent ·
:· en his environmentally deficient conscience," says Judd
·: H. Alexander, vice-president for environmental affairs of
;: the American can company.
:: . Oregon legislators were not persuaded by the argu:: ments.
·' In. view of this, and in view of the fact that at latest
:; count there were some 204 pieces of pending legislation
:-· in 44 states, 29 proposed ordmances in cities and counties
;:·; and 14 bills In Congress aimed at cans and bottles the
:::. container industry is taking a positive approach to try to
·:· prove another of lis arguments. I
:;, This is that · public education, enforcement of realistic
· . antilittering laws and recycling are better answers to the
waste disposal problem than bans on nonreturnable cans
a.nd bottles.
As of mid-June, the Carbonated Beverage Container
Manufacturers Association, representing four major can
companies, had established' more than 200 reclamation
centers from coast to coast (including five in Oregon) .
The ultimate solution to the nation's solid waste problem may lie in recycling, says Alexander. He notes that
~-billion worth of metals alone are lost each year in unreclaimed waste, as compared to $4-billion spent annually
to collect waste.
·
·
The reclamation centers will accept all types of cans,
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
both aluminum and steel or combmatlons. Money received
from scrap metal dealers will be returned to the local
community. I Scrap steel currently brings about $11.1 a ton·
WASHINGTON (NEA)
aluminum about $200.)
'
The attempt to destroy some of the " myths" surround~nyone who thinks the can people have got a good thing
ing the Social Security system appears to be creating new
gomg and who would hke to know the location of the cenones.
ter nearest him can find out by writing to: The Can PeoSome Americans cling tenaciously to the idea t~at
The first U.S. naval vesple; Suite 1200, 110 E. 59th St., New York, N.Y. 10022.
workers whli retire under Social Security never get back
sel with a plural name was
what they pay into it in taxes deducted over the years
the destroyer The Sullivans,
from their pay checks. That's just plain wrong.
launched April 4, 1943. The
Suppose you have been working under Social Security
World Almanac recalls that
since it began in 1937. The most you could have contrib·
the ship was named for the
uted through 1971 would be $4,171 in taxes . It must be
five Sullivan brothers of
remembered that the levy once was one per cent and was Waterloo, Iowa, who died
taken only from the first $3.000 of income.
when their crUiser was
,11 ¥QU pappeq~d . ~Q ~~&lt;!l!h . 6~ t~is, ~e.~r ,an&lt;\ ~ hose to sunk ne~r Guada,~~an.al o.n.
retire, y'ou'd get back that $4,!7l'h!'a little more !hiin !if .· Nov. 15, 1942.
~
II'
r
, r .1 • • ·
ltidnths or recetving•benefit•payments,"lf yoar wife ·~l s o
attained 65 and could draw benefits, your total
· Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D. that deceived the consumer had
monthly
benefits would give you your money back in
for 12 years .
just under 13 months .
Dear Dr. Lamb - You
The American Medical
wrote a column on the best
Let's go again , however, to the case or a man and wife
Assn.,
the
American
Heart
who will not reach 65 until 1985, with the man having what
oils to use in cooking, but
didn't mention coconut Assn. , the American Diabetic are called "maximum creditable earnings" for some 42
BARBS
Could you indicate the Assn. all favor the newly years, through 1984.
By PHIL PASTORET
.
fat and polyunsatu- proposed FDA ruling that the
You can presume a bit conservatively that the man
; rated qualities of coconut oil amounts and types of fat would live 13 years drawing retirement benefits, and his
Many more people keep
and tell how it compares to should be put on food labels. wife would live three years after his death. The actual
busy
than the number who
,. other vegetable oils? T hi s WE NEED A TRUTH IN average, officials say, is a lillie longer.
keep
working.
•:: information Is of great lm· CONTENTS LAW JUST AS
In the man's retirement span and the wife's later sur• • •
:• portance to millions of read- BADLY AS WE NEED A vivorship period, the total benefits that would be paid out
Show
us
a woman look·::. era who are using imitation TRUTH IN PACKAGING to them under present law would come to $67,754. And
ing for ' a hu.s band and
··~·
that must be set against the man's lifetime Social Security
., milk made with coconut oil. LAW.
we'll take odds he's out
golfing.
I doubt that most Ameri- payroll deductions of just $16,798.
Dear Reader-Coconut oil
• • •
If
the
pendin~
House
Ways
and
Means
bill,
with
its
••· is almost all saturated fat. cans realize that the reason
for
higher
benefits,
were
to
become
law
,
then
provisions
have trouble finding out
=• Natives with simple living they
how
much
saturated fat, and the same couple in the same time span would draw
:;: patterns conducive to large
in retirement money- with the man having paid
!•. amounts of coconut oil have polyunsaturated fat, is in the $137,407
in
$15,666
in his working years under Social Security.
products
they
buy
is
because
r!. a high incidence of heart (\isFDA
previously
prohib·
the
Moreover, what he and his wife can draw now or in
·:· ease. Imitation milk, artifi1985 or whenever in retirement benefits is not the whole
:;· cia! creams or coffee whit-. ited so labeling foods.
story. If the man becomes disabled or dies before retire:• eners and imitation whipped
One wonders just what in- ment age; his widow and children are entitled to substanNow is the time when those
.;: cream- often use coconut oil fluence caused the FDA to
"you
don't have to pay till
;:· exclusively. The label will take such a position. To me tial benefits. And Social Security taxes also provide both ... " bills begin to come in.
•: say "vegetable oil." These it is a bit like free speech. the worker and his wife with Medicare hospital insurance
• • •
:: products contain far more I am not nearly so concerned at age 65.
Friend who plans to
It is pretty commonly argued these days, of course, that
:• saturated fat than natural about whether people should
hitchhike
cross-country is
.;: cream or whole milk. Any- or should not eat saturated the worker pays not only the Social Security tax levied
gomg to thumber school
:: one wishing to limit satu- or polyunsaturated fat in directly a~amst his check, but also the matching contrifirst .
.; a·ated fat intake would be this instance as the suppres- bution levied against his employers.
•:. better off using the natural sion of information by the
The contention is that the employer gets it out of the
:. products. Coconut ~il is . a FDA. Whether I approve of worker's hide either by hiking prices or by keeping his
:· favorite of the food mdustry what anyone says or not I wages correspondingly lower .
...-.~-=:-:==;:::'
;: because of its long shelf life . defend the right to say it and
WIN AT BRIDGE
Sorry, men, but that's just too glib. Undoubtedly, the
argument is true in part. But there is no way to prove
;: As long as the Food and whether a person should or that
an employer freed of that tax would automatically be
•: Drug Administration refused should not eat saturated fat, paying
workers a correspondingly higher' wage. Or,
,:; to allow the actual contents 1 defend the right or the con- indeed, his
that
the whole burden shows up in higher prices.
,:: of foods to be put on the sumer to know WHAT he is
As a matter of fact, it Is the employer's contributions
·• labels there was no way the eating .
NORTH
23
which
help to broaden Social Security beyond a retire.;: consumer could protect him·
.K86
In my judgment the FDA
¥K94
:·: self completely from such ruling was a gross and pur- ment system, to permit payments to disabled workers or
to
surviving
widows
and
children
when
a
man
dies
before
+KJ 107
;:; deceptions as labels that poseful infringement on in· retirement age .
.
olo842
::: read vegetable oil and mean dividual rights. If you agree
A last point. Critics like to say Social Security is not an
WEST
EAST
~;: coconut oil.
) 'OU could write to the FDA, insurance system .but, of course, it is. No matter that the
.J1092
.,54
:; : I had no sympathy lor the W a s h i n g ton, D.C., and moneys are shuffled about, with today's workers paying
¥10 8 6 5
¥A3
:;: FDA's position on this mat· strongly endorse their pro- benefits for the presently retired. The key fact is that
• 9 43
+ABZ
. :.: ter and am shocked that an posed regulations on label· what you get bears a relationship to what you earn •and
o!oKJ 1097
olo53
pay tax. upon) under Social Security.
'
::: ngency of the federal govern- ing roods for fat content.
soum (DJ
::: men!
a practice
(NEWSPAPER ENTEKPRISE ASSN.)
.AQ3
·:::·
¥QJ72

BRUCE SIOSSAT

You DO Win With "
Social Security

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Coconut Oil Tops.
In·
"Saturated~ . Ftah . ::: .
..
~

'

.

;!:

FROM VAGABOND LOVER
- TO 'IHRIFI'Y ~F

NEW YORK - NOSfALGIA .... In the
thirties, playwright W'Illiarn Saroysn wrote : "On
Broadway every pa8Sing glance is a romance."
He was referring, of course, to the Imagery of
such eccentric press agents as the late Milan 0 .
Welch, ex-newspaperman from a small-town
Maine newspaper who was Rudy Vallee's spacestealer .... One of ·Welch's Inventions was that
Rudy was tightfisted, only a sllght exaggeration
of Rudy's legendary thrift- Rudy's IJJrjft never
extended to crooked meanness; It was simply
that he knew the price of everything and did not
believe his celebity status meant he should
Increase the tariH.
One night years ago Walter' Winchell and I
arrived at the Temple garage on W. 56th St. to
see Rudy driving away mad; whst happened
ViW asked the night garageman .... "Mr. Vallee
asked the price to park all night and I told hlrri a
buck and a balf," the man said. "He said that's
· ridiculous, he coUld park ~own on 45th St for a
buck and a quarter." Two-bits always was worth
saving to Rudy.
Milan Welch's other Invention was that Rudy
never dated any girl who wasn't a brunette; In
time Rudy came to believe it himself as he later
admitted ,.... Big hints of a romance Wlth Alice
Faye crept Into the Wlnchell-Sobol-&amp;lllivan
gossip colwnns when Alice sang.With his band at
the old Hollywood Restaurant, but the
''romance" floundered when Alice refused to
dsrken ·tier beautiful tresses.
Rudy once was to attend an opening at Sid
Solomon's !allied Central Park Cu.no, but had
no date .... A friend arranged a bliod date With
beautiful Ziegfeld doll Agnes O'Loughlin .... Next
night the headline In the Daily News had
upgraded that casual meeting to Its front-paged,
"Vallee Woos Ziegfeld Beauty"; asked about it
1be Almanac
By United Press International
Today ls Wednesday, June 23,
the !74th dsy of 1971.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Jupiter
· and Mercury.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Cancer.
The Duke of Windsor, Edward VIII, was born June 23,
1894.

On this day in history:
In 1845 the Congress of Texas
agreed · to the territory's
annexation · by•· the United
States. '
.,
In 1~47 the Hou~ enacted the
Taft-Hartley Act over the veto
of President Harry S Truman.
In 1964 Gen. Maxwell Taylor
was appointed U.S. ambassador
tO · Saigon, replacing Henry
Cabot Lodge.
In 1967 the Senate censured
Sen. Thomas Dodd for misusing
campaign fuilds.

next day, Agnes said : '"The romance never got a
chance to start. All he talked about were his
grosses at the Paramount Theater. He never
even asked me up to see his press books." .
It was a diverting onway story; as for that
durable thrift lore - Rudy had a big 1o4ge' on a ·
Maine lake where, between stein song11, he In·.
vited his orc~stra up for a weekend; graduite
members still laugh as they tell it: On return,
Rudy !old them he was charging them only $20
per person for the food, transporta_tlon and
lodging ... Not a bad buy 1!1 !Oday's weekendmarket, but a double..sawbuck In those daya wu
Real Mooey to Boys in the Band .... As for his
press clippings, Rudy would spend hours
penlSlng the fan magazine at the 57th St. &amp; 3rd
Ave. corner newsstand, buying only those that
menUoned hlrri.
Down In Nassau, the Bljhamas, Rudy .,as
singing some 15 years ago at the British Colonist
Hotel .... The orchestra was a tiny, four;~~lece
Pickup group imported by the hotel from London
at abnost slave wages .... Rudy's bonhomie
warmed the cockles of the cockney quartet,
especially when the erstwhile Vagaboild Lover
advised them he was so delighted With their
mlnl~ymphony, he would give them a "terrific
gift" when he left; he did Indeed - each got a
ballpoint pen With Rudy's name on It, which
Rudy bought In thousand-lots .... But they ap.
JWeclated the thought, bassist Ron Palumbo
mted .... Aod mted.
Rudy doesn't JWetend he sings well any
more, but he does lnslst, as he bad for decade&amp;,
111at he was a superb comedian; and then, on the
wave of abnost everyone's sustained ridicule, he
JWOved In "How to Succeed in Buslneas Without
Really Trying" that he is .... Rudy also took
pride In his Feclse pronunciation and enlDI·
elation of·the English language; here, too, he
was ridiculed - until an Ollford don said Rudy
was the American whose speech he conshiered
finest. So there.

r---------------------------1
!I Helen Help Us!I
I
1

By Helen Bottel

Hado's They'll Do It Every Time

:..:
:::
":·

..•:..

:·:.·
:·

...:::
::

\'wvt%ZiT"':)

HOSPITAl. oePr.,
Mfo;rERNirY DIVISION,
OBSERVATION

WINDOW···

®

1

.

.

A thought for today: Poet
James Stephens said, "Women
are wiser than men because ladl•'
I don't think he's funny. And I don't like to be ignored. Don't
they know less and understand
more. "
you think It's gauche, joking With people who serve you? - N&lt;Yr
AMUSED
,
QUICK QUIZ Dear Not:
Pleasant,
kindly
humor
is
never
gauche.
Perbaps
If
you
had
Q-What type of phobia
appreciated it in your husband more, you would bave served hlrri
is ornithophobw? ,
A- Fear of birds in gen· better.- H.
·
era!.
Dear Helen:
Could I, too, offer my friendship to "Helpless" who felt so
Q-What Brazilian shrub
has flowers nearly a foot alone? I waan 't as Wise as she is: I DID cover up the real me With
long?
drugs. Tbank goodness she knoWll better.
A-The an g e 'I' s-trumpet.
I !Did myself no one cared or llstened, but now I realize I was a
The f I ower s are solitary,
white and nearly one foot plasUc dummy who pushed people away. I held so much In and
soon I couldn't talk unless I had a shot of dope. Betw,een fins I
long.
was dying lnslde to get tbe load off my back. At 171 was pregnant ·
and married; a jlDiky living With another addict. .
Now at 20, I'm expectlilg another baby. My husband is In prlaon
for possession of heroin, but we are both going straight. When he
gels out, we'll be clean, I swear It, because we love each other and
we know how to stand up to life, flna11y.
I've been off drugs ever since I found one strong person who
The diamond lead set three freed me from this slavery. To have my mind back again is a
no-trump. At the other table, wonderful feeling you wouldn't believe.
.
Oswald Jacoby made fourIf "Helpless" can find just one person to talk to, she'll be
odd aga_inst the lead of an- okay,Allittakeaistheon~RIGliThelperonyourside.IImo'w!other su1t.
· MRS. S. M.
Today's hand shows the - - - - -- - - -Fisher double at its best.
South has a normal no-trump
opening and North a perfect
raise to three. East is looking at 12 hlgh-&lt;:ard points
and knows his partner may
not hold even a jack. It
doesn't
matter, He expects
• Q85
•
to
beat
three
if a club is led
oloAQ6
and sees no chance if any
North-South vulnerable
The countries of Western
other suit is opened.
Europe . . . are not movie West North Eosl South
No guarantee goes with
stars who change f i a n c e s Pass 3 N.T. Dble 1N.T.
this
double. Give South the
Pass
every six months. If we get Pass Pass
Jack of clu)ls Instead of the
married, it is forever. So we
jack of hearts and even the
Opening iead- tfo 5
must be serious about it.
club lead won't beat three
-f'rench President Pompi·
no-trump. There are very
do:u, o.n the e&gt;1try of Bri· By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby few sure-things In bridge,
tazn mto the li:ZLropean
but this time the Fisher douThe Fisher d o u b I e in- ble costs South game and
Common Market.
vented by Dr" John Fisher of rubber.
Dallas is better known than
(NlWSPAPil ENTUPRIU ASSN:!
The law will never move the Lazard double. It is also
as rapidly as a bullet nor designed to assist rour partwill its dispositions ever' be ner make a bhnd lead
as demolishing as
bomb against no-trump . The bid ,
Justice sh~uld be reasoned: received considerable pubTh~ bidding hu betn: •
and reasoning takes a cer- ·ficily when James Jacoby, Wost North
Eut South
tain length of time.
playing with Dr. Fisher.
I¥
Dble
'
-. Edward L. Wrigl!t, presi· used it to help their team
You, South, hold:
dent of tl! e American Bar win the 1965 Vanderbilt Cup.
Association.
.A9t3 ¥Q782 +53 ···~
That time the double called
What do you do now?
.
t for a diamond lead. since
two !Marts. Ynu lu!•·e
Ame.ncans are not only dummy had ·used Stayman . a A-Bid
roloo
for
your ,.riner.
our neaghbors and allies, but . on · the way to three noTODAY'S QVIS110N
they are even our friends.
trump. Otherwise. the Fisher·
-Canadian Prime Minister double calls for a club lead.
You bid lwo heaf'lll. Weal hid&lt;
1'71 lr1 NIA 1.,.
Trudeau, to R~ ssiau Comlhe Stayman sequence .. two apades. your partner ·t~not·
mumst party leader Leo·
could have doubled heai'UI and Eut lhrre oped'"'·
"OK! Wh6's the wise ~uy with th lfiders?"
lud Brczl111ev .
'
if he wanted that Whal do you do now?

man.

Fisher Double Scores Set

"
•••

I

QUK'K, TilE "NO VACANCY" SIGN
Dear Helen:
My wife has an old school friend who never got married,
mainly because S!Je can't stand men, children and pets (the latter
giving her bay fever) .
Each yesr she expects
to spend her enUre vacation With us
'
mainly because we don't have children yet and the beach Is kind
to her allergies. ~estill can't stand me, but she is willing to put
up With a little pain In return for free room and board.
You guessed it: I don't like the situation, Neither does my
wife, but she's the kind-hearted type. How can we break this
pattern? - GEORGE
.
,; , rq .. (l"•n...,; ,t ,,,~~~u~~
Dear George:
. ~~~, '· ··-&gt;r •• • ,
,1 .,
You might win by a sneeze if you tell this allergic gsl you've
adopted a cat and a dog who sleep in thespsre bedroom, butyiru'd
"be glad to find her a beach cottage With cooking facWties at a
reasonable rent." -H.
Dear Helen:
Please answer fast, so I can show my husband.
.
He is 65 and still thinks it's cute to joke around and laugh with
waitresses, nurses, even elderly ladies. I think he should be
dignified and stop making a fool of himself. These women JWetend
to enjoy It, but I wou1dn 't.
A well educated person (In etiquette, that is) would'be quiet
and more Interested In his wife's lllnesses, !Mtead of playing tbe

.

~ ....

.

Gallipolis Will Host 46th SOGA Tournament
'

The Gallipolis GQif Club will inade Including Dave Frame
bost the 1971 Southeastern Golf and Herb McCorn)lck from
Association Tournament Falrgreens Country &lt;;lub,
beginning Friday, June 25.
Charles Stamm and Wlb Jerles
Action begins Friday at 10 from Canibrldge, Perry Lank·
a.m. ·with the . ~-am lour· · ford and John McAfee from
llliment. The pro-am is a best Hocking Hills Country Club, Joe
ball event covering 18 holes. Cardenas and Cliff Rhein and
Several entries are already Jan Reynolds and Dave Vance

.

..

.

from La!)caster Country Club,
'and Jim .Cawley · and lloug'
Robinson from Marietta.
Defending champions
HowBrd B. Saunders and Jllhn
Shinn are representing
Gallipolis. Also entered from
GalliPGiia are &lt;llris Roderick,
former MAC chsmplon, aod his

.

'

father, RIChard C. Roderick.
The pros from , other
Southeastern clubs and. aeveral
good amateur teams are also
expected to enter.
The team and · individual

'

Cheshire Still Unbeaten
Rlghlhanders Johnny Baird
and Orland Cremeans combined for a one-hitter Tuesday
night as Cheshire defeated
Southwestern, 17~ In the GalliaMeigs Pony League.
It was Cheshire's sixth
straight league triumph and
ninth In nine outings. Southwestern's record dropped to 1-5.
The Redlegs erupted for six
runs in the first Inning and were
never headed. Marshall French
started the rally with a hsse ort
balls.
Terry Lucas singled after
French stole second; catcher

Dave Wise singled to left man and. two throwing errors.
scoring Lucas; Joe Stidham
Baird and Cremeans comshimmed a two run homer to bined to strike out 16
right field; Toni Kerns was safe Highlanders. Jenkins collected
on an error and scored on Clay the only Southwestern hit, a
Hudson's double. Hudson single .In the fourth.''
·· '
crossed the ·plate on Chris . In another league contest,
Preston's single.
Bidwell behind the strong
Four more runs came in the pitching of Keith Saunders
secood inning on an error, walk, pounded ·Pomeroy "B", 12-2.
Hudson's triple and Preston's Jeff Hash, Mike Russell and
double.
Bruce Runyon collected two bits
Cheshire scored four more in each. Bidwell scored four runs
the siXth inning, three on a In the fourth and added five In
homer by Jerry Bias. Their .the sixth Inning.
final runs scored on Baird's The Pirates wll1 play Racln~t
double, a walk to Jimmy Hock- at home Friday.

Torre's Bat Remains Hot
By United Press IDteruatlonal
St. Louis' Joe Torre insists he
isn'lthinking about the batting
title yet. He's too busy enjoying
the change of scenery.
TOITe became the first major
league player this season io
surpass 100 hits as he got three
in four limes at bat Tuesday
night to help lead the Cardinals
to a 6-5 victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The righthanded hitter also
moved farther abead of the
Dodgers' WUile Davis in the
batting. race In their face-toface confrontation, Torre is now
hitting .371 while Davis is next
at .359 after going hiUc'SS
Tuesday night.
In other games Tuesday
night, the New York Mets

defeated Pittsburgh 3-2, San
Francisco shut out the Chicago
Cuba 2-0, Houston defeated San
Diego 4-2, Cincinnati beat
Philadelphia 6-1, and Atlanta
beat Montreal ~In the American League, it
was Detroit over the New York
Yankees 7-4 in the first game
and the Yankees took the
second game 2-1; Washington
took a doubleheader opener
from Baltimore 6-5 but lost the
second game 2-0; ·Cleveland
won the opener ~ against
Boston but lost · the second
game 2-0; Minnesota crushed
Oakland 1~1, the Chicago White
Sox beat Kansas City 11~ and
California at Milwaukee was
postponed by rain.
Rookie Charlie Williams and

· Gallipolis Score,·
Positions In SOGA
Gallipolis, score and roslllon
In previous Southeastern Ohio
Golf Association tournaments
are listed here:
YEAR SCORE POSITION
1925
No Entry
1926
No Entry
1927 Third
1928 Third
1929 Sixth
1930 Unknown
1931 Third
1932- 1080
Seventh
1933-1058
Third
1934- 1036
Fifth
1935- 1032
Fifth
1936 Seventh
1937 Fifth
1938 Sixth
1939 - 979
Second
1940- 979
Sixth
1941 - 946
First
1942 - 989
Third
1943 No Tournament
1944-1022
Sixth
1945 - 1048
Fifth

1946- 917
1947 - 914
1948- 924
1949- 939
1950- 1015
1951 - 921
1952- 945
1953- 963
1954- 929
1955- 956
1956- 954
1957- 957
1958 - 962
1959-956
1960- 935
1961 ...:. 943
1962 - 879
1963- 954
1964- 969
1965- 957
1966- 935
1967 - 922
1968 - 919
1969- 980
1970 - 951

First
First
First
Third
Slx!h
Second
, Third
Fourth
Fourth
Fourth
Sixth
Third
Fourth
Third
First
Third
First
Sixth
Seventh
Third
Fifth
ASecond
Fourth
Sixth
Fifth

Previous SOGA Champs
PREVIOUS CHAMPIONS ' ,
YEAR -CHAMPION SCORE
1925 - Chillicothe
1926- Marlefla
1927 - Jackson
1928 - Portsmouth
1929- Chillicothe
1043
1930 - Chillicothe
985
1931 -Athens
1932 - Athens
1015
1933 - Athens
1020
f934- Marietta
942
1935- Marietta
941
1936 - Portsmouth
970
1937 - Chllllco\lle
969

BERRY'S WORLD

1938 1939 1940 1941·-

Chillicothe
Chillicothe
Portsmouth
Gallipolis
Portsmouth
1942- Marietta
1943 - No Tourney
1944 - Chillicothe
1945- Portsmouth
1946- Gallipolis
1947-Galllpolls
1948- Gallipolis
1949- Marietta
1950- Athens
1951 ~ Athens

969

935
946
946

962
(War)

1004

987
9i7
914
924
904
901
903

GOOD/YEAR
"MARATHON"

TIMELY QUOTES

*

'

735x14
blackwall
tubeless
plus $2.01
Fed. Ex. Tax
. and old lire

White Wall
735114~4 p~

'20.00
Fed. Ex. Tax '2.01

. • Tufsyn rubber Cor
durnblllly In lhe body ..•
long milcag•l in lllll trond
• Mot1! thon 8,000 llfiJJping

edge• ~ivc traction ...
rain or 1hino
• Modorn wrap-around trc11d
for stlble tlccriniJ conlrol
• in tbe turns

I"RlR SMALL CAR OWNERS"

FIH . . ., 1-

RIZER OIL 00.
992-2701
700 E. Mlln
POMEROY, 0.

Danny Frisella combined on a
~-hJtter to give New York its
victory over the Pirates.
Pittsburgh pitchers walked
eight batters with two coming
around to score, and the Mels
got their other run· off Bob
Moose in the eighth on Ken
Singleton's single, an infield out
and Jerry Grote's single.
Ron Reed pitched a three-hitter and the Atlanta Braves
took advantage of three walks
,aod three wild pitches by Steve
Renko to score four runs in the
third inning against Montreal.
Pete Rose got ,three hils and
George 'Foster and Lee May
drove home two runs apiece to
give Cincinnati the victory over
Philadelphia in support of Gary
Nolan's three-hit pitching. Nolan, 5-7, lost a shutout bid In the
ninth when Oscar Gamble
doubled and scored on Dave
Concepcion's boot of Roger
Feed's grounder.
Joe Morgan clouted a three·
run, two-out triple In ·the sixth
inpjqgytd"~~lief pile~ .fc~~q

Gladding came In to stop a San
Diego threat .. jp the ninth as
Houston handed the Padres
their seventh consecutive loss.
After starter Ken Forsch
walked Garry Jestadt to open
the ninth, Gladding carne in to
reUre the next three batters for
his eighth save.
John Cumberland, rushed into
service as a starter after Frank
Reberger cut a finger on his
pitching hsnd on Monday and
Jerry Johnson shutout the Cubs
on three hils for San Francisco.
Cwnberland reUred the first
two batters In the nlnth .before
Johnson came in to strike out
Ramon Webster on three
pitches.
1952 - Lancaster
1953 - Lancaster
1954- Marietta
1955- Athens
Lancas1er
1956- Athens
1957-Athens
1958- Marietta
1959- Marietta
1960- Gallipolis
Marl efta
1~61- Marietta
1962- Gallipolis
1963- Marietta
196.4- Marietta
1965- Marietta
1966- Circleville
t967 -'- Athens
1968- Marietta
1969- Lancaster
1970- Athens

921
943
899

945
945
906
906

913
929
935
935
912
879

916
919
900
903

914
876
943
925

CATCHER SOLD
WASHINGTON (UPI)-The
Washington Seniors Tuesday
sold catcher Frank Fernandez
to the Iowa Osks of the
American Association and recalled catcher Rick Stelmaszek
from Denver of the same
league.
CEPEDA·HOME
, ATLANTA (UPI) _:. Atlanta
Braves' first baseman Orlan\lo
Cepeds flew to hls home In
Puerto Rico Tuesday In hopes
of finding a cure for an ailing
knee. Cepeda will consult the
opinion of his own doctor.

.

.

ccmpetititll M&amp;l,. at 1 a.m.
·~ wltll eldl rl the
folloWinc cllibe enteiing a len
man lellli, Albena Country'
dilb, CJ!nbrldae Country Oub,
ChliUcothe Co~tiill'y Club,
Pictaway Country Club,
Fairgretna Country Club,
Hocldng HU1s Country Club,
Lancaster Country Club,

'

.

~ettaCountryClub,andhost

member Galllpolls.

.
Athenl is defending team
champion. The defending
medalilt, Marlon Hughes, of
Lancaater has been ill and will
not play this year. Former
SEOGA . champs entered are
Ron Ellis, Gallipolis, 1969, and
Wlb Jerles, Cambridge, 1968.
I

'

'

'

The annUal SEOGA meeting
will be beld Friday evening at
Oscar's followed by a stag party
for players and friends.
There will be a social hour,
dinner and dance at the
Gallipolis Elks' Club Saturdl!y
evening and tickets for these
events are available for all
members of league cluba.

Players will be treated to a
steak dinner following p)ay on
Sunday. After all players hsve
finished there will~
beg
contest and a drlvin contest.
The fmal event
be the
presentation of team and In·
divldual awards.
Ali members of SEOGA clubs
ll!'e invited to atten&lt;!.

,

.

.
I
1
1

,-'
;

ij
i

.Brewers Are Rained Out :j
By vt1'0 ·STELLINO
Press lnternatlonol
· By United
Amerieo~n Lugut
Eut
W. L. Pet. Gl
42' 23 .646
Baltimore
Detroit
38 30 .559 5'12
36 30 .545 ~·12
Boston
31 35 .470 11'12
Cleveland
New York
31 37 .456 12112
Washington 24 41 .369 18
West
W. L. Pet, Gl
Oakland
45 23 .662 ...
Kansas City 35 29 .547 8
Minnesota
35 34 .fjll7 10'12
California
31 39 .443 15
Chicago
25 38 .397 17'12
Milwaukee
24 33 .387 18
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 7 New York 4, lsi
New York 2 Detroit 1, 2nd
Wash 8 Ball 6, lst-t-n
Ball 2 Wash o, 2nd-nt
Cleveland 9 Boston 3, lst-t-11
Boston 2 Cleveland 0, 2nd-nt
Mlnne.sota 10 Oakland 1, night
Chicago 11 Kan City 6, night
Calli at Mllw. ppd-raln
Today's Probable Pitchers
Oakland IOdom 2-3) at
Minnesota 1Blyleven 7-aJ, night.
California (Messersmith 6-6
and Clark 0.0) · at Milwaukee
I Parsons 5-9 and Krausse 3-8),
2, twi-light.
Kansas City (Spllttorff 2-01 at
Chicago (Wood S-3) .
,Baltimore I Palmer 9-3) at
Washington I Bosman s · 8),
night.
Detroit (Coleman 6·3) at New
York I Peterson 6-6), night.
Cleveland (Foster S-4) at
Boston (Culp 7-5) .
Thursdl's Gomes
Oakland at Minnesota
California at Milwaukee
Baltimore at Washington, night
Detroit at New York; n[g~t

UPI stlOI'tl Wrtler

If, Into ..eli life, a little rain
must fall, Skip Lockwood has
had more lh8n his share In the
last month.
LockWood, t11e Milwaukee
Brewers' U.year~d rlghthan·
der who bail won only three
games this season, hid a
possible victorY washed out by
rain Tuesday night for the
second tlrrie In the last month.
Lockwood feU sb: outs lhort
Tuesday ntght whet\ he blaliked
the Califoriiia Anjela for three
lnrdngs I!J1d llncled ill two runs
In the second ~ for a 2-0
lea&lt;Hinly to have a taeavy rain
wash out the game With two out
In the bottom of the third. After
a delay of one hour and 28
minutes, l!!e game was called.
"I was just terribly dlsap·
potnteit tonl4ht because I bad
good stuff iDd I was keeping

the ball low," Lockwood said,
"but there's nothing I can do
about it. I can't pitch and
worry ·about the weather, too.
Actually, I feel worse for the
team ·than for myself because
we've been baving trouble
getting started this year and
last night we won a big comelrom.IJehlnd victory in the loth
Inning. We hojled that would he
the start of something big for
us and then this bad to happen .
For me, the other postponement was a lot worse because
there were just two outs to go."
The games that were played
Included three doubleheader
splits. Detroit beat New York 74 but lost the second game 2-1,
Cleveland downed Boston 9-3
but lost the second game 2-0,
Washington beat Baltimore ~
but lost the second game 2-0,
Chicago drubbed Kansas City
11~. and · Minnesota routed

Oakland 1~1.
In the National League,
AUanta blanked Montreal ~.
Cincinnati downed Philadelphia
&amp;-1, New York edged Pittsburgh
3-2, San Francisco blanked
Chicago 2-0, Houston downed
San Diego 4-2 and St. Louis
beat Los Angeles 6-~ .
Dave Nelson collected three
hils to pace a 15-hit attack as
Washington rallied from a ~
deficit to down Baltimore. But
Grant Jackson, who went 6 2-3
mmngs, and Tom Dukes
combined on a seven-hitter in
the second game to give the
Orioles the spilt.
Dick McAuliffe's two-run
horner started a five-run ninth
inning that lifted Detroit past
New .York. In the second game,
Stan Bahnsen pitched an eighthitter lor his sixth straight
victory to give the Yanks the
split.

East Line Said Tough
LUBBOC'K, 'tek. (UP!)Michigan blckle Dan Dierdorf
says the East offllllive line wll1
be "one smooth-operating rnachine" cOme Saturday wheh it
meets the West in the 11th
annual Coaches Ali·Amerlca.

fooUball game.
"Often you hear a lot about
this man or that man, and how
Important he is to the team,"
said the first team All,American from Canton, O~lo.
"But the o(fenslve line is kind

folalional League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
44 26 .629 ....
New York
38 27 .585 3112
St. Louis
38 33 .535 6'12
Chicago
34 34 .500 9
~ontreal
27 37 .422 14
Philadelphia 27 40 .&lt;103 15'12
West
W. L. Pet. GB
Pomeroy came up with a few loss of. players and he has
San Francisco 47 25 .653 ... surprises.I!' whip Ra~e 12 to 4 responde\! veri well; In the li)t
Los Angeles 38 31 .551 7112
In Gellil_,a Ptlly ' action ·Tuesday, Eastman went all.the
Houston
33 35 .485 12
Cincinnati
32 33 .457 u
Tuelday ~t.P6merO'y .
way· and 'struck out 14 while
Atlanta
33 41 .446 1s
Chuck
laitman
wu one of walking four. Another new
San Diego
23 47 .329 23
the big surpriSes. He ba1 been wrinkle In the Pomeroy attack
Tuesday's RHults
New York 3 Pills 2, nlght
pressed into service due to a Ia Charlie Marshall, a first-year
AtlaAla 4 Montreal 0. night
player, who hss been doing a
Cincinnati 6 Philo 1, night
great job lately. He led the team
St. Louis 6 Los Angl 5, night
Houston 4 'San· Diego 2. night lnternation.ll.t*tue Stal'lliinas over Ra~e with a long double
San Fran 2 Chicago O, night
8y United l"ress hlith!afltnal and a piir of singles, aod big
Todar's Proboblt !'llchets
'
W L l"ct. Gl Fred Bul1ley lhowed signs of at
Chicago (Pappas 6-71 at San Syracuse
41 22 .651 Francisco t Reberger 2-0L
Charleston
35 26 . 57~ 5 last breaking out of hls slump as
New York IGentry 6-41 at Tidewater
38 29 .567 5 he slammed a three-run homer.
Pittsburgh (Walker 2·6), night. Rochester
31 32 .492 10
Curfinan, the Racine pitcher,
Montreal !Morton 6-9) at Richmond
32 37 .464 12
went all the way to be charged
Atlanta (Jarvis 2·7l, ·night.
Louisville
30 35 .462 12
Philadelphia !Wise 7- ~) II Toledo
27 39 .409 15'12 With llle loss. He fanned seven
Cincinnati !Grimsley- ~ · 2) , Winnipeg
24 33 .387 16'12 and passed two.
night.
Tutsdly's Results
Other bitters for Pomeroy
St. Louis !Reuss 6-7) at Los Winnipeg 6 Toledo 4 (lsi, 9 InAngeles (Sulton 6-6), night.
nlng&amp;)
were Keith Wood, two singles;
Houston t Forsch 2-1 and · Toledo s Winnipeg 4 (2nd, 7 In· Mlck Alb and Jeff McKinney
Wilson 5-5) at San Diego t Kirby nlngs)
each a double; and Larry
5-Sand Arlln2-10). 2, Twl-nlght. Charleston 6 Roehe&amp;ter l
Thursday's Games . Richmond 3 ·Loulsvlllt 2 (lsi, 7 Fridley and Rob Eason with a
St. Louis at Los Angeles
• Innings!
single each.
New York at Mont~eal, night
Louisville 6 Richmond 3 !2nd,
Racine was held to five hits by
Phlla at Cin,clnna!L night
7 )nnlngs)
Eastman,
all singles, by Curl·
,Tidewater 9 Syracust 8 llst, 7 .
Innings) .
man, · Theiss, J. Jenkins,
Syracuse 2 Tidewater 1 (2nd, 7 Huddleston, and Jenkin!. ·
Meigs
Innings)
Racine
000 110 2- 4 5 4
Pomeroy 013 026 X-12 10 4
Curfman and Jenkins,
Eastman
and Mick Alh.
Sallsbury.
. . .,
Nickloil L. Leliiatd, EleanQr
E. Leonard to General
Telephone Co.,
·
clair Mlgllt, Patricia Mltht tD
Waid B. Hayman, Donna A. James L. Mohler, Wanjla
Hayman to Cbarles Edward Mohler, UO Acres, Salisbury.
Rhodes, Linda .Lou Rhodes,
James Weill, Geneva Wells to
Sam Hicks, Jr., Mattha Rhea
Parcels, Letart.
Horace Cbaney, dec. to Mae Hicks, .211 Actti, Slllm.
Frazier, Donald Cbaney, Cert.
Harold Carnahan, Isabel
for trans., Olive.
Carnahan to llonald T. tlolter,
William C. Kennedy, dec. to Unds L. Holter, 8 Acres, Sutton.
Arthur C. Gibson, Maye
Effie S. Kennedy, Cert. for
Glbaon tD ROckford Spurlock,
trans., Olive.
Charles J . Mullen, dec. to Ruby SiMirll)lllt, 2UI ,Acr•,
Phyllis A. Mullen, Helene B. Scipio.
Mullen, Cert. for trans
,,
I .
Pomeroy.
COAST QUAKE
Helen B. Mullen to Phyllis A.
Mullen, Lots, Pomeroy.
John R. Stout, Helen L. Stout
to Merlin Teets, Ida Teets, .511
Acre, Columbia.
Hugh P, Custer to General
Telephone
Co.,
Ease.,

Eastman Paces Pomeroy

Team In

12-4 / Vi~tory

of different. It has to be ..one
well-oiled piece of machinerynot a group of individuals."
The East will be out lor its
second victory in as many
years as Louisiana State coach
Charley McClendon trys to
duplicate hls winning performance of a year ago. The
series is now even at 5-5.
A crowd of 42,IJOO.plus is
expected to jam Texas Tech's
Jones Stadium for the 8:30 p,m,
(EDT) kickoff. Millions wll1
view via national television.
Dierdorf said the East bad
five. gr~t~(~§.li all fP.Ill't AAJ!
all usecf"f&lt;flilii !line ootilall !lie
said they bad already begun
polishing their work aa a unit.
"We are going to try aod
control the ball," Dlerdorf said.
"There is no question the We;!
will be throwing. The best
defense we can come up with is
to control the ball and not let
the west passers get it."
Dierdorf said the east would
mix running and paaalng. He
said the line would bave a full
night ahead to open up the
game.

· Frank Baker's three-run
pinch double started a sevenrun sixth and led Cleveland
past Boston. But the Red Sox
came back to win the second
game on George Scott's two-run
homer. Sonny Siebert; 111-4,
pitched a six-hitter for his tOOth
career victory in the nightcap.
The Minnesota Twins, handcuffed by Vida Blue Monday
night, exploded against Jlrri
Hunter, 10-5, and four relievers
for 13 hits to down Oakland.
Rich Reese hit two homers and
Tony Oliva and Harmon Killebrew added one each. Jim
Perry boosted his record tO 11-5
on a three-hitter, two by Reggie
Jackson who homered and
tripled.
Chicago won its third straight
game erupting for eight runs in
the second inning to down
Kansas City. Bill Melton's
second-inning homer, the first
off Kansas City pitcher Dick
Drago this season,' capped the
rally.

Transfers

FREE

At Your Certified Oil Company Station
"Your Gasoline Purchase Pree" If We Fail To
Clean Your Windshield, Weather PvrmiHing.
. No Other Compan~ Dares To Offer This
Policy.

Certified Gas .stations
992-9981

l!umtroy, Ohio

The hawthorn h a 1 the
amallest llilda of anY. tree.
The buda ana so tilly they are
beat . - wtth a maanilylng

,~
11
;·
,l

::1

i ·1
'·
1•

':
(
,

I

i·

,1
1

.
:,
'
1'

'I

I

,,
•,
·
1

'1
1

here and watch it
"bloom"! Earn at our
current annua I rate of

4%% or 5%
on 6-month savings
certificales.

Meigs County Branch of
The Athens County Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
296 Second 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
~e1mb•er Federal Home
Member Federal Savings
Insurance Corp.

ccounts insured up

OUTSIDE .LATEX

~·

PAINT
Fully Guaranteed
(Money Back)
Best Quality
Lowest Price •
Anywhere

5.95 GAL
White only (Compare to Latex selling for
$10.50 Per Gallon

H &amp; R FIRESTONE
N.2nd

t

YOUR
MONEY

Property

.FREE

538 W. Main

.

.

992-2238

Middleport

''

�5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., JU{le 23,1971

4- 'lbe Dally Sentlnei,Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0., June 23, 1971

Mrs.· Heaton Hosts ·Winding Trail Garden Club

Middleport

Soc·ial
Calendar

Aroae display by Mrs. Robert
Thompson and tips on growing
better roses by several members were features of the Jl!lle
meellng of the Winding Trail
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
Mrs. Thompson·~ display
included Queen Elizabeth,

Personal Notes
'

.WIIDNESDAY .
RUTLAND FRIENDLY
, Gardeners, open meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Rutland
Church of Christ. Mn . . Earl
%•t•Dean, guest dem911o1trator.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
.: ·. ; U0111 Club, noon Wednesday,
;.. 'l:Unlted MelhodistChurch.
. ~,!1 AMERICAN LEGION
. ~: :Mmdllary, Feeney-Bennett Poat
:: •: 128, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
~ ': hall. Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
· ;: .::1 Eighth District president, to
:: :: lnatall the new officers. Paul
:: J:zCucl. Middleport postmaster,
·! ••guesl lpMker. Refreshments
.
;. ;. !o11ow1ng meeting.
•: : OHIO VALLEY Com::,.: mandery, slated conclave, 7:30
;: .; p.m. Wednesday. ElecUon . .Sir
:: •; Knlchta, please Jttend. ·
;; ~.:
TIIURBDAy
:~f! 7GTH ANNUAL trap shoot of
:; '; Melp County Fish and Game
·•• I'.; .•-"
. . . . . . ......
&amp;u. ._..
. . . .y at. p omeroy
::J:; Gwt Club. Allday event, 50 door

t•

. ·,

'

·Mr. and Mn. James ClatW(l"thy and daughter, Twila,
and John Rltchhart, West Point
cadet, attended a ball game In
ClnclnnaU Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
Smith, Sr. of Bradbury have
returned following a several
days vtalt with their son-ln-blw
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Spires and daughter, Jill, in
Defiance. Also vtalting at the
Spires home were Mr. and Mra.
Lawrence Baughman and son,
Jeffrey. While In Defiance, Mr.
andMn. Smith a1ao vtalted Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Spires and son,
Brett, of Defiance.

~

·'l-'

:)!:;
• 1

The prize package was )VOn by
Mrs. Ella Smith, and Mrs.
Grueser served strawberry
shortcake and coffee.
Others attending were Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Edna
Reibel, Mrs. Ethel Stewart,
Miss Erna Jesse, Mrs. Georgia
Watson, Mrs. Bertrum Smith,
Mrs. Margaret Rose, Mrs .
Clara Heines, and Mrs. Ellen
Killinger.

Meigs 4-H Club News

;:1::

•

I

I

at Karen Werry's home on June
22. - Kimberly Grueser,
Reporter.
THE T.N.T. 4-H Club met
June 15 at the home of Mrs.
Kathryn Robson. There were
five advisors and nine members
in attendance. They discussed
and approved working at the
Bloodmobile. Kathryn Robson
served refreshments.
The next meeting is scheduled
for June 23 at Mrs. Faye
Schultz's home. - Julia
Schultz, Reporter.
FOUR-If CLUBS of the county
are in the process of selling
flower bulba as a way of makfng
money for the 4-H camp quota
and the Ohio and National 4-H
Cluti Foundation.
The bulbs are special
selections from Holland, Ineluding tulip, narcissus,
hyacinths, daffodils, crocus,
and muscarL Each package of
bulbs cost $1.25 with the
numbers per package ranging
from 20 of the muscari, 15
crocus, 10 tulip, and 6 and 5 of
the daffodils, narcissus and
hyacinths. The bulbs will 1M
delivered and paid for this falL
Anyone interested in ordering
bulbs can contact a local 4-H
club advisor or member or the
County Extension Office. Orders wlU be taken through this
week.
Special prizes are being
awarded to lhe clubs and
members selling the greatest
number of bulbs.
Bowling balls used in
leagues must weigh from 10
to 16 pounds.

OR
Uquid Dish Detergent

••
•OR•

THIS
ONE. ••

·

·

THREE PLEAD GUILTY
TOLEDO (UP!)-Three Toledo men were sentenced here
Monday on charges stemming
from the October 1970 slaying
of Frederick Ott, 29, Toledo.
David Vasquez and Pedro
Ruiz Jr., boUi :W, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in Lucas
County Common Pleas Court.
Judge George Kiroff sentenced
both to 1-20 years in the Mansfield Reformatory.
Manuel Vasquez, 22, pleaded
guilty to assault with a deadly
weapon and ·was sentenced to
1-5 years in prison, but Kiroff
referred his case to adult probation authorities.

or

,
.A·l BLEACH

.,.

$3S:on DownBalance On
ConveAienl

·

Ter{ll~

MASON

·

FOCKE'S

Fiberglass Roll
INSULATION

16" Width

1f4 SLICED

SPECIAL PRICES

773-5554

Va.

We Deliver

12

•

LOIN

LB. ·. ~.
'•

•''

MASON

STOCKTON
CALIFORNIA

TOMATOES

ears
for

APPLES

DAIRY SPECIAL!

22 Ol CAN.

u.s..·Na. ·1' ,
.,•.

' I

NEW RED

Potatoes

French City
TWIN POPS
SMOKED
12 pk. 4 ~
CALbiES

for

~

...

·. l ~: '1

6 '1
1
VAN c:::~$ . . . . .6 ~ •1
cans
for.

~~:.2

a0

. .

Thurs., Fri, Sat __ . 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

5to7
lb.
lherage

. I

BAKERY DEPT. SPECIAL!

Holsum Gay Nineties

lb.

-READ

Fresh Pork Shoulder.
,

ROAST!!!h
.

OHIO VALLEY

HOMEMADE

SLICED BACON

PORK SAUSAGE

.

lb.

'The Store With A Heart,
Rignt reserved to limit ~uantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps ·

OIIIJ

:!~.~~~ . . . . . ~ . . . . 4 ~ '1

5th and PEARL STS., ~NE

Prices Effective June 23-29
Mon. lues,, wed.... -9 to 7

loat

on~

.

29C

:---"""--- - - - - - - -'- - -1
I
TABLE ROYALE (With Butter)
I
I
MARGARINE
REG.98&lt;
I
With Plastic
lb
Re-Usable
•
I
Bowl
I
. Gcod Only At Racine Food Market
· EXPIRES: JUNE 29, 1911
I
I

2 6gc

---------

••••

SWEET
CORN
5 ears

10 lb.
bag

You
.
' WE LIKE"

FA~RMONT

oz.

PKG.

PORK

21A" Thick ...... !.~.~.~.$55
31A" Thick ......~.~~.~..$70
HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

fURN IJUR£.

IVORY

~

.

SALAD .........

992-5560

MATERIALS CO.

3 lb. bag

... With $5 Order or More

:0-::'!EAr...........
CAMPBELL'S
·
VEGETABLE SOUP.....

Middleport, Ohio

TABLE· TEMPTING, FLAVORFUL

will

S'J)I9.95

MATCH)

19C .

.

59 N, Second St.

WINESAP OR RED DEUCIOUS

(MIX

on~

Members .of five PTA units
attended the first session on the
study course of the PTA manual
held Monday night at Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Represented were Bradbury,
Chester, Middleport, Salem
Center and Pomeroy units. Mrs.
Harold 'Lohse, District 16
director, is course instructor.
A second meeting was
scheduled for Mon~y night, 7
to 9 p.m. at the Pomeroy school
and any PTA member is invited
to attend. Fi)m strips
be
shown and an informal
discussion on questions pertaining to PTA will be held.

ROOMS
NEW
fURNITURE

,

·· gal.

"'UUDLEY. flORISTS.

PTA Study Course
Well Attended

.---3---------~-----::--. -.

bots.

CHECK
THIS ONE•..

.

Have A Cooler Home!

22oz.

Phebe Saws:

llirs.. Heaton for a table
decoration of Dr. ·van Fleet
roses and
her
mass
arrangement of pinks.
It was reported that 25
arrangements were furnished '·
the Pomeroy Alumni Association for the annual
banquet.
Mrs. Heaton won the
traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Thomas. A dessert course was
served.
. .- - - - - - - •

FLORIDA SWEET CORN

YOUR CHOICE OF

JOY

Reyal Crown Bottling Co.
Thomas io.be the demonstrator.
· Announced .at the IJ,!eeting . Invitations to open meetings
was the Ohio Association .of were read froin the Rutland
Garden Club's annual con- Friendly Gardeners, tonight at
vention to be held Aug. 10-12 in 1:30 at the Rutland Church of
Columbus. A flower show ,and Christ; the Rutland Garden
workshop will be held in con- Club, June 28 at 8 p.m. at the
junction with this with Bob United MethodiSt Church, and
the Bend 0 ' the River Club, held
last Thursday night.
A report was given on work
done at the Meigs County 1~firmary and the Beech Grove
Cemetery before Decoration
Day. Mrs. Heaton, Mrs. John
Preliminary plans for the meeting to be held on July 21. Terrell, Mrs. Allard Pratt, Mrs .
observance of the 100th an- Cast Thy Bread Upon the Earl Thoma, Mrs, Don Thomas,
niversary of the Minersville Water was the scripture used by Mrs. Cora Beegle, Mrs.
Methodist Church were made Mrs. Forrest Donley for Thompson and. Mrs , Lewis
during the Monday night devotions. She also read an worked on the project.
meeting of the Women's Society article You Can See God
Blue ribbons for arof Christian Service.
Everywhere. Mrs. Bradford rangements went to Mrs.
The observance has been set Maag read God Give . Us Thoma for her arrangement of
for Sept. 19 with the WSCS to Friends, and other readings pink roses with honeysuckle
prepare for a dinner that day. were Let's Suppose We Had No vine and to Mrs. 'Heaton for a
Mrs. Karl Grueser was ap- Sorrow by Mrs. Brooks Sayre; mass buffet piece of pink
pointed io prepare a history of Wonders of a Quiet Room by peonies. Red ribbons went to
the church. ·
Mrs. Stella Grueser; Wisdom
Extended at the meeting wa's by Mrs. Macy Russell, Into My
a ·vote of thanks to the Rev. Garden by Mrs . Mildred
Forrest Donley pastor who · Phillips; Just Me, by Mrs. Ruby
donated paint fo; the ou~ide of Grueser; How Father's Day
the church. A card of thanks Began, by Mrs. Doris Grueser,
will be sent to him.
· and f Am Old Glory, by Mrs.
A bake sale was planned for Rhods Roush.
July 17 in the Hines building at
Minersville with the next
She conunented on stars and
their role and use to travelers
on·earth or on their way to the
moon.'
Mrs. Robert Lewis requested
that bottie caps be saved for the
junior garden club activities.
The caps are redeemed by the

Minersvilk Methodist Church
To Observe 1OOth Anniversary ·

Wekomes New Member

Mrs. Iris Kelton was
welcomed as a new member
when the Magnolia Club met
recently at the home of Mrs.
Carl Grueser.
During the meeting plans
were. made for a picnic to be
he.ld at the roadside park on
Route 33 at 6 p.m. on June 15.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Alsip and Mrs . Ellen Couch gave
Mr. and Mrs. Wl1llam Bland, devotions using A Loving Home
Carla arid Cathy, Akron, were and Special Prayer as her topic.
Sunday guests of Mra. Pearl
Reynolds and Mrs. Minerva
OtUdera.
Mr*. Robert Martin and
daughter, Brandl, of Dayton
):: prila.
·
·
have been the guesta of Mr. and The Green Hornets 4-H Club
FREE CLOTHING day from Mrs. Craig Reynolda of St. met June 17 at the home of Mrs.
:-·~: 10 a.m. to 12 noon, Thursday at Petersburg, Fla. but in Mid- Paula Rife. There were six
dl
t for the summ r
members ar.1 one advisor in
·.:· ••·• Salvation Army, Butternut epor
.
e·
.~,·. Ave.,Pomeroy.AnyonellOf(llng
ofMr J
de
attenc!Bnce.
:-'J:: clothing '1n area II Invited.
Guest
s. ames Sou rs
They· discussed who could
·:lr·
· ··
ill Mlaa Loretta Dura of near bring food for the bloodmobile.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Plt1ab1D'gh,Pa.Mlas0ursisthe Steve Peckham showed the
.jj•. Thursday night, 7:30p.m. at the lllll8lc IUpervisor at the Kyger members how to tie a square
:;f. Middleport First United Creek and Addison schools.
knot. Jeff Peckham was in
Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Lawrence Faulkner of St. charge of recreation and Mrs.
Ellie Chambers, book study; Alba118 visited SUnday with his Rife served refreshments.
. Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, mother, Mrs. James Faulkner,
Thenextmeetinglstobeheld
devotions, Mrs. Salterfleld, who remalnalll, and his sister, June 23 at the home of Ruth
Mrs. Jean Ellen Kelly, Mrs. Mrs. Eva Hartley.
Kirkham. - Roger Wamsley,
f Herman Batley, and Mrs. Mrs. Carla Klein and son, Rep(l"ter.
; &lt;laren Stansbury, hOBielaea.
Richard, of Arlington, Va.
THE HARRISONVIlLE Girls
.\NNUAL MEIGS American arrived Tuesday night for a 4-H Honor Club met June 15 at
Red Cro.u Chapter meellng, visit with Mr: and Mra. 0 . P. the Harrisonville Grange.
7:30p.m. Thursday, cafeteria of Klein.
There were two advisors and
Veterans Memorial HOBpllal. Mr. and Mrs. William B. ten members attending · the
HOLIDAY CRAFTS meeting Thomas of Belmont, Mass. are meeting.
scheduled '!-'hursday a~ Meigs here for a smnmer vtalt They They discussed selling flower
Bloodmobile Headquarters are at the Hartinger -home on bulbs, sponsoring the bloodpoatpolied.
Third Ave., Middleport.
mobile, and assignments were
MEIGS COUNTY Republican · Mrs. Lemma Lighter is given. Julie Gheen was in
Women's Club, Thursday, 7 confined to the Holzer Medical charge of recreation.
p.m. at Second Ward Flrehoule, ~ter In the Intensive care The next meeting is to be held
, Pomeroy, covered dish supper. unit. Mrs. Bettie Marls and June 29 at the Harrisonville
J
FRIDAY
l!l'andaon, Brad Schoenber of Grange. - Brends Donohue,
WOMEN AUXILIARY of Lea Alloll, Calif. visited here Reporter.
v:edns Mehamorlal Hklospltal recently with Mrs. Ughter and THE PINK Panthers 4-H Club
1 re
to . ve coo e.s and her aunt, Mrs. Zelia Pullin, met June 15 at 11w home of
1
111Ddwl clles at hbapltal by 10 Middleport, and slatere, Mrs. Karen Werry. TheM were nine
1
Saturday for Open house Miry Wingett, Pomeroy, an(! ·members and two advisors
oblervance.
Mra. Zelia Riley, Middleport. present. It was approved to
Bll:VIVAL IN progreas at
·
work on the bloodmobile. Kim
RarUord Christian Union
.
•
Grueser and Kay Jooes gave
Church through Wednesday ·previously an~ounced) with demonstrations on how to make
with Rev· Raymond Rice serving to begin at 6 p.m.
punch and the parts of a sewing
evangellat. Servlcea, 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
machine. Jody Grueser and
nightly. PaJtor O'Dell Manley , HYMN SING, Laurel Cliff Sandy Hamilton were in charge
mr:lenda Invitation to public.
Free Methodist Church, 2:30 of recreation. They played Red
. ICE CREAM Social, Forest Sundayafternoon.Spoosoredby Rover. Susie Grueser served
Run Methodist Church, Friday the choir. Singers especially refreshments.
nilbt (lnalead of Saturday as invited.
The next meeting is to be held
~~

Crimson Glory, Sweetheart,
and Americana roses. She also
exhibited seedling poppies.
Members in response to roll call
named their favorite flower
suitable for a June wedding.
Mrs. Heaton's devotions
stressed that God's greatness is
a greater guide than any star.

AMERICAN BEAUTY

38

oz.

CAN

�5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., JU{le 23,1971

4- 'lbe Dally Sentlnei,Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0., June 23, 1971

Mrs.· Heaton Hosts ·Winding Trail Garden Club

Middleport

Soc·ial
Calendar

Aroae display by Mrs. Robert
Thompson and tips on growing
better roses by several members were features of the Jl!lle
meellng of the Winding Trail
Garden Club at the home of
Mrs. Clarence Heaton.
Mrs. Thompson·~ display
included Queen Elizabeth,

Personal Notes
'

.WIIDNESDAY .
RUTLAND FRIENDLY
, Gardeners, open meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, Rutland
Church of Christ. Mn . . Earl
%•t•Dean, guest dem911o1trator.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
.: ·. ; U0111 Club, noon Wednesday,
;.. 'l:Unlted MelhodistChurch.
. ~,!1 AMERICAN LEGION
. ~: :Mmdllary, Feeney-Bennett Poat
:: •: 128, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
~ ': hall. Mrs. Ben Neutzling,
· ;: .::1 Eighth District president, to
:: :: lnatall the new officers. Paul
:: J:zCucl. Middleport postmaster,
·! ••guesl lpMker. Refreshments
.
;. ;. !o11ow1ng meeting.
•: : OHIO VALLEY Com::,.: mandery, slated conclave, 7:30
;: .; p.m. Wednesday. ElecUon . .Sir
:: •; Knlchta, please Jttend. ·
;; ~.:
TIIURBDAy
:~f! 7GTH ANNUAL trap shoot of
:; '; Melp County Fish and Game
·•• I'.; .•-"
. . . . . . ......
&amp;u. ._..
. . . .y at. p omeroy
::J:; Gwt Club. Allday event, 50 door

t•

. ·,

'

·Mr. and Mn. James ClatW(l"thy and daughter, Twila,
and John Rltchhart, West Point
cadet, attended a ball game In
ClnclnnaU Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
Smith, Sr. of Bradbury have
returned following a several
days vtalt with their son-ln-blw
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Spires and daughter, Jill, in
Defiance. Also vtalting at the
Spires home were Mr. and Mra.
Lawrence Baughman and son,
Jeffrey. While In Defiance, Mr.
andMn. Smith a1ao vtalted Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Spires and son,
Brett, of Defiance.

~

·'l-'

:)!:;
• 1

The prize package was )VOn by
Mrs. Ella Smith, and Mrs.
Grueser served strawberry
shortcake and coffee.
Others attending were Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Edna
Reibel, Mrs. Ethel Stewart,
Miss Erna Jesse, Mrs. Georgia
Watson, Mrs. Bertrum Smith,
Mrs. Margaret Rose, Mrs .
Clara Heines, and Mrs. Ellen
Killinger.

Meigs 4-H Club News

;:1::

•

I

I

at Karen Werry's home on June
22. - Kimberly Grueser,
Reporter.
THE T.N.T. 4-H Club met
June 15 at the home of Mrs.
Kathryn Robson. There were
five advisors and nine members
in attendance. They discussed
and approved working at the
Bloodmobile. Kathryn Robson
served refreshments.
The next meeting is scheduled
for June 23 at Mrs. Faye
Schultz's home. - Julia
Schultz, Reporter.
FOUR-If CLUBS of the county
are in the process of selling
flower bulba as a way of makfng
money for the 4-H camp quota
and the Ohio and National 4-H
Cluti Foundation.
The bulbs are special
selections from Holland, Ineluding tulip, narcissus,
hyacinths, daffodils, crocus,
and muscarL Each package of
bulbs cost $1.25 with the
numbers per package ranging
from 20 of the muscari, 15
crocus, 10 tulip, and 6 and 5 of
the daffodils, narcissus and
hyacinths. The bulbs will 1M
delivered and paid for this falL
Anyone interested in ordering
bulbs can contact a local 4-H
club advisor or member or the
County Extension Office. Orders wlU be taken through this
week.
Special prizes are being
awarded to lhe clubs and
members selling the greatest
number of bulbs.
Bowling balls used in
leagues must weigh from 10
to 16 pounds.

OR
Uquid Dish Detergent

••
•OR•

THIS
ONE. ••

·

·

THREE PLEAD GUILTY
TOLEDO (UP!)-Three Toledo men were sentenced here
Monday on charges stemming
from the October 1970 slaying
of Frederick Ott, 29, Toledo.
David Vasquez and Pedro
Ruiz Jr., boUi :W, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in Lucas
County Common Pleas Court.
Judge George Kiroff sentenced
both to 1-20 years in the Mansfield Reformatory.
Manuel Vasquez, 22, pleaded
guilty to assault with a deadly
weapon and ·was sentenced to
1-5 years in prison, but Kiroff
referred his case to adult probation authorities.

or

,
.A·l BLEACH

.,.

$3S:on DownBalance On
ConveAienl

·

Ter{ll~

MASON

·

FOCKE'S

Fiberglass Roll
INSULATION

16" Width

1f4 SLICED

SPECIAL PRICES

773-5554

Va.

We Deliver

12

•

LOIN

LB. ·. ~.
'•

•''

MASON

STOCKTON
CALIFORNIA

TOMATOES

ears
for

APPLES

DAIRY SPECIAL!

22 Ol CAN.

u.s..·Na. ·1' ,
.,•.

' I

NEW RED

Potatoes

French City
TWIN POPS
SMOKED
12 pk. 4 ~
CALbiES

for

~

...

·. l ~: '1

6 '1
1
VAN c:::~$ . . . . .6 ~ •1
cans
for.

~~:.2

a0

. .

Thurs., Fri, Sat __ . 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

5to7
lb.
lherage

. I

BAKERY DEPT. SPECIAL!

Holsum Gay Nineties

lb.

-READ

Fresh Pork Shoulder.
,

ROAST!!!h
.

OHIO VALLEY

HOMEMADE

SLICED BACON

PORK SAUSAGE

.

lb.

'The Store With A Heart,
Rignt reserved to limit ~uantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps ·

OIIIJ

:!~.~~~ . . . . . ~ . . . . 4 ~ '1

5th and PEARL STS., ~NE

Prices Effective June 23-29
Mon. lues,, wed.... -9 to 7

loat

on~

.

29C

:---"""--- - - - - - - -'- - -1
I
TABLE ROYALE (With Butter)
I
I
MARGARINE
REG.98&lt;
I
With Plastic
lb
Re-Usable
•
I
Bowl
I
. Gcod Only At Racine Food Market
· EXPIRES: JUNE 29, 1911
I
I

2 6gc

---------

••••

SWEET
CORN
5 ears

10 lb.
bag

You
.
' WE LIKE"

FA~RMONT

oz.

PKG.

PORK

21A" Thick ...... !.~.~.~.$55
31A" Thick ......~.~~.~..$70
HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

fURN IJUR£.

IVORY

~

.

SALAD .........

992-5560

MATERIALS CO.

3 lb. bag

... With $5 Order or More

:0-::'!EAr...........
CAMPBELL'S
·
VEGETABLE SOUP.....

Middleport, Ohio

TABLE· TEMPTING, FLAVORFUL

will

S'J)I9.95

MATCH)

19C .

.

59 N, Second St.

WINESAP OR RED DEUCIOUS

(MIX

on~

Members .of five PTA units
attended the first session on the
study course of the PTA manual
held Monday night at Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Represented were Bradbury,
Chester, Middleport, Salem
Center and Pomeroy units. Mrs.
Harold 'Lohse, District 16
director, is course instructor.
A second meeting was
scheduled for Mon~y night, 7
to 9 p.m. at the Pomeroy school
and any PTA member is invited
to attend. Fi)m strips
be
shown and an informal
discussion on questions pertaining to PTA will be held.

ROOMS
NEW
fURNITURE

,

·· gal.

"'UUDLEY. flORISTS.

PTA Study Course
Well Attended

.---3---------~-----::--. -.

bots.

CHECK
THIS ONE•..

.

Have A Cooler Home!

22oz.

Phebe Saws:

llirs.. Heaton for a table
decoration of Dr. ·van Fleet
roses and
her
mass
arrangement of pinks.
It was reported that 25
arrangements were furnished '·
the Pomeroy Alumni Association for the annual
banquet.
Mrs. Heaton won the
traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Thomas. A dessert course was
served.
. .- - - - - - - •

FLORIDA SWEET CORN

YOUR CHOICE OF

JOY

Reyal Crown Bottling Co.
Thomas io.be the demonstrator.
· Announced .at the IJ,!eeting . Invitations to open meetings
was the Ohio Association .of were read froin the Rutland
Garden Club's annual con- Friendly Gardeners, tonight at
vention to be held Aug. 10-12 in 1:30 at the Rutland Church of
Columbus. A flower show ,and Christ; the Rutland Garden
workshop will be held in con- Club, June 28 at 8 p.m. at the
junction with this with Bob United MethodiSt Church, and
the Bend 0 ' the River Club, held
last Thursday night.
A report was given on work
done at the Meigs County 1~firmary and the Beech Grove
Cemetery before Decoration
Day. Mrs. Heaton, Mrs. John
Preliminary plans for the meeting to be held on July 21. Terrell, Mrs. Allard Pratt, Mrs .
observance of the 100th an- Cast Thy Bread Upon the Earl Thoma, Mrs, Don Thomas,
niversary of the Minersville Water was the scripture used by Mrs. Cora Beegle, Mrs.
Methodist Church were made Mrs. Forrest Donley for Thompson and. Mrs , Lewis
during the Monday night devotions. She also read an worked on the project.
meeting of the Women's Society article You Can See God
Blue ribbons for arof Christian Service.
Everywhere. Mrs. Bradford rangements went to Mrs.
The observance has been set Maag read God Give . Us Thoma for her arrangement of
for Sept. 19 with the WSCS to Friends, and other readings pink roses with honeysuckle
prepare for a dinner that day. were Let's Suppose We Had No vine and to Mrs. 'Heaton for a
Mrs. Karl Grueser was ap- Sorrow by Mrs. Brooks Sayre; mass buffet piece of pink
pointed io prepare a history of Wonders of a Quiet Room by peonies. Red ribbons went to
the church. ·
Mrs. Stella Grueser; Wisdom
Extended at the meeting wa's by Mrs. Macy Russell, Into My
a ·vote of thanks to the Rev. Garden by Mrs . Mildred
Forrest Donley pastor who · Phillips; Just Me, by Mrs. Ruby
donated paint fo; the ou~ide of Grueser; How Father's Day
the church. A card of thanks Began, by Mrs. Doris Grueser,
will be sent to him.
· and f Am Old Glory, by Mrs.
A bake sale was planned for Rhods Roush.
July 17 in the Hines building at
Minersville with the next
She conunented on stars and
their role and use to travelers
on·earth or on their way to the
moon.'
Mrs. Robert Lewis requested
that bottie caps be saved for the
junior garden club activities.
The caps are redeemed by the

Minersvilk Methodist Church
To Observe 1OOth Anniversary ·

Wekomes New Member

Mrs. Iris Kelton was
welcomed as a new member
when the Magnolia Club met
recently at the home of Mrs.
Carl Grueser.
During the meeting plans
were. made for a picnic to be
he.ld at the roadside park on
Route 33 at 6 p.m. on June 15.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Alsip and Mrs . Ellen Couch gave
Mr. and Mrs. Wl1llam Bland, devotions using A Loving Home
Carla arid Cathy, Akron, were and Special Prayer as her topic.
Sunday guests of Mra. Pearl
Reynolds and Mrs. Minerva
OtUdera.
Mr*. Robert Martin and
daughter, Brandl, of Dayton
):: prila.
·
·
have been the guesta of Mr. and The Green Hornets 4-H Club
FREE CLOTHING day from Mrs. Craig Reynolda of St. met June 17 at the home of Mrs.
:-·~: 10 a.m. to 12 noon, Thursday at Petersburg, Fla. but in Mid- Paula Rife. There were six
dl
t for the summ r
members ar.1 one advisor in
·.:· ••·• Salvation Army, Butternut epor
.
e·
.~,·. Ave.,Pomeroy.AnyonellOf(llng
ofMr J
de
attenc!Bnce.
:-'J:: clothing '1n area II Invited.
Guest
s. ames Sou rs
They· discussed who could
·:lr·
· ··
ill Mlaa Loretta Dura of near bring food for the bloodmobile.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Plt1ab1D'gh,Pa.Mlas0ursisthe Steve Peckham showed the
.jj•. Thursday night, 7:30p.m. at the lllll8lc IUpervisor at the Kyger members how to tie a square
:;f. Middleport First United Creek and Addison schools.
knot. Jeff Peckham was in
Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Lawrence Faulkner of St. charge of recreation and Mrs.
Ellie Chambers, book study; Alba118 visited SUnday with his Rife served refreshments.
. Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, mother, Mrs. James Faulkner,
Thenextmeetinglstobeheld
devotions, Mrs. Salterfleld, who remalnalll, and his sister, June 23 at the home of Ruth
Mrs. Jean Ellen Kelly, Mrs. Mrs. Eva Hartley.
Kirkham. - Roger Wamsley,
f Herman Batley, and Mrs. Mrs. Carla Klein and son, Rep(l"ter.
; &lt;laren Stansbury, hOBielaea.
Richard, of Arlington, Va.
THE HARRISONVIlLE Girls
.\NNUAL MEIGS American arrived Tuesday night for a 4-H Honor Club met June 15 at
Red Cro.u Chapter meellng, visit with Mr: and Mra. 0 . P. the Harrisonville Grange.
7:30p.m. Thursday, cafeteria of Klein.
There were two advisors and
Veterans Memorial HOBpllal. Mr. and Mrs. William B. ten members attending · the
HOLIDAY CRAFTS meeting Thomas of Belmont, Mass. are meeting.
scheduled '!-'hursday a~ Meigs here for a smnmer vtalt They They discussed selling flower
Bloodmobile Headquarters are at the Hartinger -home on bulbs, sponsoring the bloodpoatpolied.
Third Ave., Middleport.
mobile, and assignments were
MEIGS COUNTY Republican · Mrs. Lemma Lighter is given. Julie Gheen was in
Women's Club, Thursday, 7 confined to the Holzer Medical charge of recreation.
p.m. at Second Ward Flrehoule, ~ter In the Intensive care The next meeting is to be held
, Pomeroy, covered dish supper. unit. Mrs. Bettie Marls and June 29 at the Harrisonville
J
FRIDAY
l!l'andaon, Brad Schoenber of Grange. - Brends Donohue,
WOMEN AUXILIARY of Lea Alloll, Calif. visited here Reporter.
v:edns Mehamorlal Hklospltal recently with Mrs. Ughter and THE PINK Panthers 4-H Club
1 re
to . ve coo e.s and her aunt, Mrs. Zelia Pullin, met June 15 at 11w home of
1
111Ddwl clles at hbapltal by 10 Middleport, and slatere, Mrs. Karen Werry. TheM were nine
1
Saturday for Open house Miry Wingett, Pomeroy, an(! ·members and two advisors
oblervance.
Mra. Zelia Riley, Middleport. present. It was approved to
Bll:VIVAL IN progreas at
·
work on the bloodmobile. Kim
RarUord Christian Union
.
•
Grueser and Kay Jooes gave
Church through Wednesday ·previously an~ounced) with demonstrations on how to make
with Rev· Raymond Rice serving to begin at 6 p.m.
punch and the parts of a sewing
evangellat. Servlcea, 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
machine. Jody Grueser and
nightly. PaJtor O'Dell Manley , HYMN SING, Laurel Cliff Sandy Hamilton were in charge
mr:lenda Invitation to public.
Free Methodist Church, 2:30 of recreation. They played Red
. ICE CREAM Social, Forest Sundayafternoon.Spoosoredby Rover. Susie Grueser served
Run Methodist Church, Friday the choir. Singers especially refreshments.
nilbt (lnalead of Saturday as invited.
The next meeting is to be held
~~

Crimson Glory, Sweetheart,
and Americana roses. She also
exhibited seedling poppies.
Members in response to roll call
named their favorite flower
suitable for a June wedding.
Mrs. Heaton's devotions
stressed that God's greatness is
a greater guide than any star.

AMERICAN BEAUTY

38

oz.

CAN

�'

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., June 23, 1971
•

Rutland Gardeners
Take .All -Categories
First places in all four classes
of the Big Bend Regatta flower
show were taken by members of
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Theflveexhiblt!lrswon a Mal
of eight ribbons. Taking best of
show was Mrs. Richard Fetty,
Jr., with Mrs. James Carpenter

In the busy days of promoting the frog jumping activities in
Pomerny as a part of the Big Bend Regatta Weekend over the
years, one lnyal SUpporter and promoter was overlooked Eleanor Crow, wife of Fred Crow who masterminds the annual
aetivity.
.
Over the weekend, however, Eleanor was included in the list
(){new Grand Croakers who were initiated. Nancy&amp;. Reed, a whiz
at verse, turned out the following poem·in tribute wEleanor:

Candystripers -

The aarne thing holds true In all human life
Which brings us wtellyouofone "Croaker's"wife
Who has labored beyond the eall of ali duty
With a smile on her face flit' she's never moody.

0

•Assistance at an open house
when the·new wing of Veterans
Memorial Hospital is opened
was planned during a meeting
~e works long and hard behind the scenes
Monday nig)jt of the CanTo make a success of herhusbaDd'swildscheme.
dystripers.
She runs hundreds of errands for the "frOg-jumping" cause
Girls who can assist on either
With small recognition and little applause.
Saturday or Sunday .with
~
refreshments are asked to wear
..
.
She puts up with many conuniltees and D)eetings
thetr.
umforms
. The July
And hears "Croakm" call out, "Knee~eep" as their greetings
meeting was cancelled and the
Her home has become a frog-lovers lair
·
ne~t meeUng was planned for
With zillions offrogs from here and from there.
Aug. 16.
.Members were reminded that
She's a patient, long suffering, but full of endu~ance
pms may be ordered through
She should get a medal -some kind of assurance
.Conme Grueser. The annual
That her efforts on behalf of the Bullfrog Society
hospital picnic was announced
¥e acclaimed as A-one, and of good notoriety,
for July 18 at Royal .oak Park
,.
and members plannmg w at.
She's long overdue wjoin the front ranks
tend are to register at the
Of the Grand Croak~;!' group- with all of our thanks
hospitaL
And now, In case anyone still doesn't know
Be~ky Wright presided at the
Here's the SupremlstGrand Croaker of all- Eleanor Crow!!
meeting.

-

~t with the regatta activities out of the way, thoughts and
labor turn wthe celebration of July 4th - which will be July 5th
this year.
The Racine Fire Deparbnent has made plans to hold its annual celebralion and will have a parade through the Wwn as an
opener. The three best floats carrying out the Independence Day
theme will receive trophies.
' The department ts Inviting participants and those interested
are asked wwrite wPete Simpson at Box 213 Racine or wphone
him at 949-4292 after 5 p.m.
'
'

Four Meigs County girls
attending Buckeye Girls' State
at Capital University, Columbus, retorned home Sunday.
Debra Jo May, sponsored by
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, was
appointed to the office of
aSSistant to the Bureau of Workmen's Compensation in the
mock government.
Milisa Rizer was elected state
treasurer. Daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. f ranklin Rizer, Pomeroy,
she . was ~sponsored at Girls'
State by the Middleport
Auxiliary unit.
Debra Kay West who attended under sponsorship of the
Racine American Legion unit

has undergone major surgery at Riverside Hospjtal in Columbus.
She has been returned wher home and is bnproving satisfactorily
th specijii11Pf8lpg care.
Manyhet/jl \.til remember Mrs. KrelnlilliUifd''iier·ft\lslland
o was a trustent Grace Episcopal Church.
· Those wishing to remember Mrs. Kreinblhl with a card may
send It to her home at 1!12:i Fiahinger Road; Columbus 43202.

l

MR. AND MRS. AARON KELTON have moyed their camper
to RoYal Oak Park in preparation for entertaining their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John (Kaaron Kelwn) Austin and
,dsi~~~~~~Ju~li~:e. and Mary, of Richmond, Va.
t
Austin will remain only a few days but Julie'and
"'arywitl stay untll around Aug. I with their grandparenta here.
Incidentally, Mr. and Mrs. KeiWn are moving their mobile
p.on~e from Aberdeen, Ohio, where they resided wSyracuse and
rent It now they .are back In their own residence here
JoUowung years of traveling about following the construction

ARE YOU REAlLY ready for this?
Through the many years - a_nd there have been many -I've
this Insane desire to be awarded a trophy, I've never been
wdo anything well enough, however. I mean, really, one just
tt:.:;,~lget a trophy for tlddty winks or being an expert at cal·
J!
on the couch. While the trophy shelves of others have
fle;:;:~c:l:u~l:te::red with the symbols of their personal ac~~
l'vegalned nothingformyshelf. To tell the truth,
don't eV-en have a shelf.
However, my star arose Saturday when Mrs. Judy Riggs,
llir'eck1r, presented me with a tall, gleaming trophy at the Regatta
llatnn Twirling Coolest In Middleport. Judy said it was a reward
being a good sport. Now -that's a kick in the head! Whenever
subject of good sp..-ts arises my name just doesn't pop wthe
In fact, It doesn't even make the "also ran" column.
Well, it all goes to prove that good things do come to him who
,..H,..,.,,r, perhaps, that you actually can.fool some of the people,
of the time.
Ata:nyrate,_wouldyou inlnd handing me that polishing cloth?
l!onleOile put a smudge on the side of my trophy. Now-who did

BV BERTHA PARKER

Sabbath School attendance
at the -Free Methodist
icht~rch was 116. The offering for
morning services was
24. Bible School closed
~~:;:evening
with a program
was well given. A large
attended.
Next Sunday a Hymn Sing
be held at the local church
2:30 p.m. The public is in.

~

Mrs. Thomas Dorst and
Milan, · spent the
lwel!telldwith her parents, Mr.
Mrs. Jame.s Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy R11111eli
M'atTell caUed on his sister,
Georgia Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alldre,

Parter.
lild Mn. Edward Biuer
..........,bter, Kelly

~~.:.=

Picnic Held At
Roadside Park
Fathers were honored and
June birthdays -observed at a
picnic supper Sunday evening
at the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending were Mrs . Iva
Singer, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Arnold, Gene and Vicki, Mason,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
E. Hysell, Bruce, Terry, Norma
Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, Rhonda and Bobby, Mr.
and Mrs. Jipl King, Nancy,
Debby, Kathy, Jo ~lien, Bobby
Joe, Timmy · and Pamela
Lawrence, and Mr: and Mrs.
Dares Arnold, all of Pomeroy.
- - -- -- - -Orlando. The four left for
Florida immediately following
J. C.'s graduation from the
School of Pharmacy at Ohio
State University·
Mrs, Olga Matthews of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. is here for a
visit with her sister and brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Sisson.
Regatta weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson, were Ed
Wahl of Galion and Carol
Ackerman of Gardin ton.

be

Personal Notes

The double ring ceremony - - - - - - . . - - willbean event of June 27,1:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Freeland Norris and the Rev.
Robert R. Card will officiate.
Miss Holter has selected Mrs.
Kaihy Johnson as her matrQn of
honor. Bridesmaids will be Miss
Alta Scrimsher and Miss
Debbie Jeffers.
Mr. R. Gary Holter, brother
of the bride-elect, will serve the
I
groom as best man, and ushers
will be Mr. Gordon Holter,
brother of the bride-elect, and
VOYAGE
SUO TO 22.!1
Mr. Domild Durst, nephew of .
WID lii:INQ
the prospective groom.
ea.ao
MAN'S I 211
Miss Rebecca Lee will serve
as flower girl and the ring
The Good Life
bearer will be Mr. Robert W.
'
Lee.
Begins With
Mrs. Carla Salser will be the

'""""

1

Keepsake

11

For your engaa:ement, choose
K.;cpsake- the beautiful begin ning of a li£etime together. Every
Keepsake is exquisitely crafted in

OBSERVANCE
Favors for the silver an- 14K gold and guaranteed •l•in&amp;t
niversary observance of the diamoHd lou.
/ ·
Middleport Business and
Professional were provided by ~(!_S(\k&lt;'
the Pomeroy National Ban'k,
The Farmer's Bank and
Savinbs Company and the
Citizen 's National Bank.
The observance was held
Monday night at the home of
'Mr. Bnd Mrs. John Werner.
I

,

I

•

We've Got 'Em All

SHIRl
FINISHING

FOR THE
FAMILY
The entire fun collection

for summer 1971. Come,
shop and save!

CHAPMAN'S

Robinson's Cleaners

Main St.

~~---

News, Event

...
......-

SERVICE

G-78-14
Or

. Twin White Stripes

$31 99'
'

H-78-15
.H-78-14
EJ~,.

.
Each

Each

Tax Included . : .

GENERAL TIRE SALES

FLOWERS
For That
Perfect

Wedding
ouo·LEY'.s FlORIST

SUMMERTIME SPECIAL PRICES
SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!

45" Wide

Misses Double Knit

SHORTS ~~~hing

ASSORTED
MATERIALS
Fashion
Patterns

The Eleventh Annual Con: County Jail, and Lutheran
vention of the Ohio District of Senior City.
The American Lutheran Church Another highpoint of the
met at Capital University, Convention was the honored
Columbus, recently. Those presence of the general
attending from St. ' Paul president of The American
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy Lutheran Church, Dr. Kent s.
were Pastor Arthur Lund and Knutson. Dr . Knu!son 1mdelegate, William Coffman. A pressed the delega~ with his
total of 803 pastors, delegates, clarity of thought and
and visitors were registered for presentation, and with his grasp
the Convention. The total In- of the issues and problems
eluded 23 official youth facing the church.
delegates chosen through .the Among other speakers
Luther League areas.
present were Dr. John Rilling,
A special feature of \his president of the Ohio Synod,
year's Convenoion was the Lutheran Church of America,
Encounter Groups. Each Dr. Cprl E. Reuss, and
delegate was assigned to a Reverend Forrest Monson.
group concerned .with some The business end of the
current social issue or problem. Convention consisted of apExamples of group meeting proving resolutions and
locations were Juvenile recommendations and the
Diagnostic Center, Huckleberry· pas!Jing of the 1972 Ohio District
House · for runaway youth! budget.

Special

LADIES

Purchase!

2-Way

Misses ·

TANK

39~

New

SPECIAL!·

SPECIAL!

LEVI'S
JEANS

TOP

Yd.

444

Attend Recent Convention ·- -- ·-

Val. to 7.99
Aorals
Solids

Stretch

KNIT

SHORTS
NOW

1.99

Sale! Famous Dan River Sheets

S.Pltc.

Chen lilt

BAlH SET

299

Val. to 39c

Towel Specials
Stoneswear

Solids
Fancies

SHIFTS
TWIN FITTED FULL FITTED
TWIN FLAT
FULL FLAT

Reg. 5.00

PILLOW
CASES

White, 1.88 ......... 1.99 ........... , 97•

LOROBI'S PIZZA • • •
Seeking a couple to own and operate a
Lorobi's Pizza shop in the MiddleportPo~~Y area. ~all .J,C!c;k~,n, Ohi~
Phone ~86~4633 for further information
or write:
·

22x44 Bath Towet .... 79c

Color, 2.22 ......... 2.47 ............ 1.22
Print, 2.33 .......... 2.59 ............ 1.57

Hand Towel ......... 49c
Wash Cloths ......... 25c

.

Lorobl's Pizza
206 Dawson St.

PERMA·
PRESS

9. 11t 5,.,, :,
DAILY
9 TIL 9
. SATURDAY

,SHOPr·IN -, tJ
AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT

..

Jackson, Ohio 45640

FOLGER'S

PORK CHOPS

COFFEE 21b.$

......
....- ·

-.....
--....
....; '

:~:~~~:.~.~~~~?:.z-49

*'

15":

SLICED BACON, Superior lb. 63'

-

LOCIEI

.

•

INGELS.
FURNITURE.
•

I

.OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

•

IUCIET

992·2635

MIDDLEPORT

FRESH

NEW CALIFORNIA
LONG 'WHITE

•

'

CORN
' '

FROZEN BUY

Bir~s

POTATOES

•

I

•

•

· cuCUMBERS
PERS

3rnR29~·

Frosty Acres

LEMONADE

2

JOY LIQUID
32

oz.

Bottle

59c

· With Coupon
, EXPIRES-6·26-71
Good At BIG 3 MARKETS

Eye

COOL

10~~ 6. 9~
6 oz.

cans

29$

_WHIP
9

5

oz . .

Can

BEEF B.B.Q.
can

WAG.NER

Bakery Dept.

RANGE &amp; GRAPE ORIN
3 ~~: 99~

WHOLE MfEAT OR
HONEY MEAL BROWN

25' Roll

BREAD
16 oz.
Loaf

'29~

. •'

VIEnl

10% Ol.

Whole Kernel or Cream

HOLSUM

•

IIIII
FIEEZER

TEE'N QUEEN

::~~~~~. . . . . . . . . . . ~ : 5 9e

:r....

ID.JUITIILE
CIIIIILII.a .
IHELVEI

lb.

CENTER RIB CHOPS• .............. lb. 79•
CENTER LOIN CHOPS ....... , .... lb. 89•

,..

can '

AU

FIRST CUTS

4 Ply Dynacor.

Twin White Stripes

first time in the history of the . .- - - - - - - - .
Postal Service that first day
covers have been available in
~11 United States Post Offices. ·
Posbnasters Jim Soulsby and
Pa~l Casci of Pomeroy and ·
Middleport have extended invitations to anyone· wishing to
visit their Post Offices on July t
and suggest ·that-persons liVhlt
in other Meigs communities
_cimtact their local Posbnaster
59 N. Second .St.
Middleport, Ohio
if they wish w visit their
99l•SS60
facility.

•

-----......
...
-

'

JumbV80 G!ass Belted

first Postmaster General under
the Continental Congress and it
may he ol interest to local
historical buffs w know that
Return Jonathan Meigs (from
whence came the· name of
Meigs cO'unty) served as
Postmaster General under
Presidents Madison and
Monroe. ·
.
AmQng the many important
events in th~ history of the Post
O(fice Deparbnent was the first
use of postage stamps in 1847,
the colorful era of the Pony
Express in 1860, Railway mail
service and postal money orders in 1864, rural delivery in
1896, village delivery in 1912,
airmail service In 19I8, highway
post offices in 1941 and the Zip
Code system in 1963.
The first Posbnaster General
under the United States Postal
Service will be Winton W. .
Blount, who, with a Deputy
PMG and nine other persons
appointed by the President with

Washington, 0. C. for members
of Congress, former Posbnaster
Generals, the Board of
Governors
and
other
dignitaries. Visitors to the
nation's post offices will be
· given a ·souvenir envelope
imprinted with the old and new
the advice and consent of the insignia of the Poiltal Service.
Senate, will compose the Board This envelope wiU also be
of Governors for the Postal made available in limited
Service.
numbers as first day canPoslmaster General Blount cellations for the cost of an 8
will host ceremonies in cent stamp. This will mark th~

_,

lUTTER
lEEPER

QUALITY

The Jnaugurallon of the new
United States Postal Service on
July 1 will be celebrated In
WashlngUin, D. C. and in many
other post offices across the
nation. This event will mark
what is considered to be the
biggest (or most major) change
in the history of the Post Office
Department since the Inception
of the Articles of Confederation
some 200 years ago.
At that time Congress was
given the "sole and exclusive
right and power of establishing
and regulating Post Offices
from one state w anil.ther and
exacting such postage on the
papers passing through the
same as may be requisite to
defray the expenses of the said
offices."
Benjamin Franklin was the
--------World's longest continuous
frontier is that between Can·
ada and the United States.
It extends for 3,987 miles.

.'

---·....
--............
-..,...

Beneficiary members of
Che!!ter Councll 323, Daugllters
of America, Chester, are asked
wattend the July 6 meeting of
the council. At that time
business regarding questiOilB of
benefits will be discussed.

WE INVITE YOU TO COMPARE
PRICE ·

l
rosta Service Will Undergo
Major Change First Of July.
D

""
...--

DAR CHESTER MEET

REGATTA WINNER
Kelly Thoma, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Thoma, Pomerny,
was the third place winner In
the boys' bicycle compelitlon at
the Regatta. He was previously
listed aa Kelly Thomas.

.Carpenter_

•

~=~• and Kaven;
11*11 the 11 utend
111'11. Alldre'a mother, Mn. Fed.

II

Plans have been completed
for the wedding of Miss Sharon
Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. ArvU Holter, Long Bottom,
Route 1, and Mr. Curtis Riffle,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Riffle,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Route 2.

SURPRISE PARTY
A surprise party was held
Saturday honoring Mrs. Lyda
Beach on her 79th birthday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Er-'
nest Van lnwagen, Bradbury.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs and Diane
'LeWis, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Nelson, Middleport;
Susie Jeffers, Dexter; Keith
and Jerry Van Inwagen and the
hosts. Calling later were Mrs.
Clyde Bing, Bradbury, and
Linda Grindstaff, Racine.

Laurel Oiff
Notes

Pomeroy....

provide the nuptial
music. Registering the guests .
will be Mrs. Paula White,
. Areception will be held in the
social room of the ·church Un·
mediaiely following the .
ceremony.

Sharon Holter to
Wed Curtis . Riffle·

· The Rutland Friendly Gar· Mrs. Joe Bolin. will present
dene~s will hold an op~n gardening tips for July and Mrs.
meeting tonight at 7:30p.m. .'n Bruce May will have the
the. Rutiand Church of Christ devotional period. Hostesses
soc1al rooms. The •meeting .is will be Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
open to the public and there IS president of the Rutland
ha
no c rge.
Friendly .Gardeners, Mrs.
Mrs. Earl Dean_of the Chester Robert Snowden, Mrs. Jerry
G d ct b will
t
·
ar en u fl
presen . a Eads,_Mrs. Richard Fetty' Jr.,
program on oral arrangrng_ and Mrs. Bill Brown.
with the theme, Interpretive
·Arranging . Mrs. Dean, a
talented artistic arranger, has
won numerous blue ribbons
with her floral pieces many of
which are arranged In con!;liners she has created
Special guests will
Mrs.
John Lohse , Ohio State
John Reese, Gallipolis, Region
University
student, has
11 Director of the Ohio
Association of. Garden Clubs returned to Columbus for
and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar' summer employment following
Pomeroy, Meigs County Con: a visit at his home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grueser of
tact Chairman.
Darwin are at Front Royal, 'va.
attending a wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gibbs
have returned following a
week's vacation in Florida.
was appointed w clerk of the
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Russell
City Board of Education, and and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Russell
Rebecca Sue Wright, the returned from Florida Sunday
SAME DAY
Pomeroy unit delegate, was after spend\ng a week's
SE~VICE
appomted to the office of civil vacation there. The Truman
In At 9-0ut At 5
defense.
Russells were guests of Mrs.
Mrs. Lloyd Wright, Mrs. Hattie Russell at St. PetersUse'Oui'Free Parking Lot
R1zer, and Mrs. Bruce May burg, and J. C. Russell and his
we~t to C~lumbus Thursday to wife, Debbie, visited her
ass1st m servmg the brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
inauguration dinner.
and Mrs. David Robey, at ....2.16•E•.•2n•d•,•Po.._m•ell!r•ov-~

Buckeye State Girls Return

MRS. 0. B. KREINBIHL,formerly Louise Geyer of Pomeroy,

ews

·

Rutland
Gardeners
.
Open House Meet Tonight

---

·

Parker taking second and Mrs.
Harold Wolfe, third. Mrs. Joe
Bolin received a blue ribbon for
her. entry in "Beautiful Ohio,"
and Mrs. carpenter, red. The
blue ribbon entry In the "Down
by the Riverside" class was
won by Mrs. Parker, with Mrs.
carpenter receiving se.cond
place.
·

url'1
A
.
t
YVt I
SStS

!lome frogs make a big splash wherever they go,
And some make small ripples without Wo much show
~ aome are content wbask In the sun
. · ~ othen are quietly getting jobs_c!one.

..

as runnerup. Mrs. Fetty's entry,a blue ribbon winner, was in
the "Froggie Went a Courtin 1 "
category. In the same category,
Beth Ann Wolfe, four-year-old
daughter of Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
club president, received an
honorable mention.
'
Mrs. Carpel\!er won a blue
ribbon for her entry in "The Big
Bend, 1971" with Mrs. Homer

~rganist and

University Hospital, Columbus,
where he is undergoing treat. ment for a neart ailment.
Mrs. Ethel Shell, Linda,
Greg, and Rolland, Steuben·
'
ville, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal JOrdan
and attended the Jordan-Gilkey
Mrs . Hazel Burke has wedl)lng on Satorday afternoon
in Albany.
returned. home following Mr. and Mrs. Carl Caster,
treatment · at O'Bleness Hilliards, are spending a few
Memorial Hospital in Athens. days with his brother-in-law and
Guests with her during the sister, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
weekend included Mr. and Mrs. Turner. The Castel's called to
Ollie Burke and famUy, Cln· see his cousona, Mr. and Mrs.
clnnatl; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Earl Starkey, and have been
!:lurke and 'family, Chlareston, visiting other. friends and
. W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs. relatives in the area.
Hebron Burke and family,
.HIIITJcane, W. Va . .The family •Jack Hess and son, David,
.
Springfield, were guests of his
members were here especially brother-in-law and· sister; Mr.
for_ the ~raduatlon exercises at •and Mrs. James Gaswn. David
Ohio Umverslty where-Marshall, will spend the summer with the
Burke, son of Mr. _and Mrs. Gaswns.
Hebron Burke, was a member Granville Stout suffered
of the graduation class.
Mr. -and Mrs. James Gaswn serious injuries in an accident
recently visited with her at Diamond Stone Quarries and
has now been transferred from
mother·, Mrs. Elizabeth Crowe, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
who Is ill and being cared for in Athena, to University Hospital,
the home Qf another daughter, Columbus for special treatMrs. Gary Gibson, Gnat
'
denhutten Ohio
men ·
.
' · ' -- ·
Sunday dmner guests of Mr.
Several mem~rs and guests and Mrs. Webster Facemyre
of the. Columbta Make-It 4-H were Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence
Club gU'ls and the Triple C 4-H Facemeyer, Trimble, and Mr.
club boys enjoyed a joint and Mrs George Keirns
skating party at the Nelsonville Glouster ·
'
skating rink on Friday evening. Vina Rutherford Columbus
Charles McVay, Lay Speaker was a weekend g~est of he;
from Athens, held services at mother Faye Jordan and other
Temple United ~ethodist relativ~s .
'
Church on Sunday mornmg m Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark,
the absence of . Reverend Tamara
and
Penny,
Howard Mayne who IS atte~g Harrisonville; and Mr. and
annual. conference at Lakes1de. Mrs . David· Wiseman and
Mr. ?"d Mrs. Earl Starkey children, Rutland, were guests
were dmner guests of Mr. a~d of their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Blackwood, St:. m Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Pomeroy.
TRAIL HIKE ENJOYED
Mrs. Dale Dye is seriously ill Family members were guests
and confined wHolzer Hospital. when Columbia Make-It 4-H
Her ~hlidren, Dale ~e, Jr., El Club girls enjoyed a trail hike at
Cernto, Callforma; Mrs. Lake Hope state Park. The
Chester . Baumgardner, group had a picnic and short
Coshocton, 0.: Mrs . Clyde business session after the hike .
Walker, Thurman; Mrs. -Glen Those attending included Mr.
Irwin, Mar~sviUe, and Mrs. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly, Vicky
Peter Kepnar, Hartford, have ·• and Bruce, Mrs. Clay Jordan
~II been called here by her and Barbara; Mr. and Mrs.
illness.
William Miller, Connie, Debbie,
Mr. and Mrs .. James Gaswn and Lori; Mrs. Gay Johnson
entertained falll.'ly In:embers Qn and Julia; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Satordsy honormg his nephew • Shiltz Keith Everett Cecile
William!}aston, Sr., w~owas a Sher~y , and Johnni~ ; Mrs:
•
member of the graduatmg class Rosella Birchfield Larry
at Ohio University. Those Patty,DebbieandJeff; Mr. and
presen) were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs Joe McWhorter Joan and
;; Wil~am _Gaston, Sr., Smyrna, Pauia: Mrs. Everett' Holcomb,
::" Delawate, Mr · and M~s- Pam and Marcia; Mr. and Mrs.
;..,.,.~}~ Gaston and . Debbie; Gene Jeffers, Margie, Lester,
~~astll~, Mr... and Mrs. Marco, ·and Robert, Mike and
.... · J tlcHard· GastOO, Mr. and Mn., Cheryl Lawson, Clay William
;: .. ~Clifford smith and Nelhe, Jordan, Mr. Gilbert Peerey,
:; Athens; Mr. and Mrs . . Paul Lisa and Tammy; Mrs. Lavern
: Gaston, Lois, Leah, and Joe, Jordan, Ruth, Jane, Betty, and
:;: Albany; aQd the honored guest, Jerrie Sue, Ruth Coen and
., WUllam Gaston, Jr.
.
Kimberly Allman.
:: Lyle Chapman is confmed w .

AT RACtn

.
59

ARtAOUR

TREET

12

oz.

can

TEEN QUEEN

PEACHES
No. 2'12
Cans

8

,•

AID CROSS SONS •·

~-

a;::::::~;~:···:·.jo:&lt;;:::::::~:-~:::~;.;.;~:~::~;:;::::-~:::::~:::~:~:::~::::::::~::~;:;~:::~::::~:::::~

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

;?

No

¥

t
~:::::~ ~~:::::::::::::::;::::::::~:;~:::~::::::~:::~{;::::::~:::~::;:::::::;,~:::~~:: ::::::::::::::::::::~
LYONS . MAR~ET

\i

..

Stamps! .
Rtahl

No
Games!

No
Gimmicks!

R-1(
To ·
Li•lt

Quldlts

�'

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., June 23, 1971
•

Rutland Gardeners
Take .All -Categories
First places in all four classes
of the Big Bend Regatta flower
show were taken by members of
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Theflveexhiblt!lrswon a Mal
of eight ribbons. Taking best of
show was Mrs. Richard Fetty,
Jr., with Mrs. James Carpenter

In the busy days of promoting the frog jumping activities in
Pomerny as a part of the Big Bend Regatta Weekend over the
years, one lnyal SUpporter and promoter was overlooked Eleanor Crow, wife of Fred Crow who masterminds the annual
aetivity.
.
Over the weekend, however, Eleanor was included in the list
(){new Grand Croakers who were initiated. Nancy&amp;. Reed, a whiz
at verse, turned out the following poem·in tribute wEleanor:

Candystripers -

The aarne thing holds true In all human life
Which brings us wtellyouofone "Croaker's"wife
Who has labored beyond the eall of ali duty
With a smile on her face flit' she's never moody.

0

•Assistance at an open house
when the·new wing of Veterans
Memorial Hospital is opened
was planned during a meeting
~e works long and hard behind the scenes
Monday nig)jt of the CanTo make a success of herhusbaDd'swildscheme.
dystripers.
She runs hundreds of errands for the "frOg-jumping" cause
Girls who can assist on either
With small recognition and little applause.
Saturday or Sunday .with
~
refreshments are asked to wear
..
.
She puts up with many conuniltees and D)eetings
thetr.
umforms
. The July
And hears "Croakm" call out, "Knee~eep" as their greetings
meeting was cancelled and the
Her home has become a frog-lovers lair
·
ne~t meeUng was planned for
With zillions offrogs from here and from there.
Aug. 16.
.Members were reminded that
She's a patient, long suffering, but full of endu~ance
pms may be ordered through
She should get a medal -some kind of assurance
.Conme Grueser. The annual
That her efforts on behalf of the Bullfrog Society
hospital picnic was announced
¥e acclaimed as A-one, and of good notoriety,
for July 18 at Royal .oak Park
,.
and members plannmg w at.
She's long overdue wjoin the front ranks
tend are to register at the
Of the Grand Croak~;!' group- with all of our thanks
hospitaL
And now, In case anyone still doesn't know
Be~ky Wright presided at the
Here's the SupremlstGrand Croaker of all- Eleanor Crow!!
meeting.

-

~t with the regatta activities out of the way, thoughts and
labor turn wthe celebration of July 4th - which will be July 5th
this year.
The Racine Fire Deparbnent has made plans to hold its annual celebralion and will have a parade through the Wwn as an
opener. The three best floats carrying out the Independence Day
theme will receive trophies.
' The department ts Inviting participants and those interested
are asked wwrite wPete Simpson at Box 213 Racine or wphone
him at 949-4292 after 5 p.m.
'
'

Four Meigs County girls
attending Buckeye Girls' State
at Capital University, Columbus, retorned home Sunday.
Debra Jo May, sponsored by
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, was
appointed to the office of
aSSistant to the Bureau of Workmen's Compensation in the
mock government.
Milisa Rizer was elected state
treasurer. Daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. f ranklin Rizer, Pomeroy,
she . was ~sponsored at Girls'
State by the Middleport
Auxiliary unit.
Debra Kay West who attended under sponsorship of the
Racine American Legion unit

has undergone major surgery at Riverside Hospjtal in Columbus.
She has been returned wher home and is bnproving satisfactorily
th specijii11Pf8lpg care.
Manyhet/jl \.til remember Mrs. KrelnlilliUifd''iier·ft\lslland
o was a trustent Grace Episcopal Church.
· Those wishing to remember Mrs. Kreinblhl with a card may
send It to her home at 1!12:i Fiahinger Road; Columbus 43202.

l

MR. AND MRS. AARON KELTON have moyed their camper
to RoYal Oak Park in preparation for entertaining their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John (Kaaron Kelwn) Austin and
,dsi~~~~~~Ju~li~:e. and Mary, of Richmond, Va.
t
Austin will remain only a few days but Julie'and
"'arywitl stay untll around Aug. I with their grandparenta here.
Incidentally, Mr. and Mrs. KeiWn are moving their mobile
p.on~e from Aberdeen, Ohio, where they resided wSyracuse and
rent It now they .are back In their own residence here
JoUowung years of traveling about following the construction

ARE YOU REAlLY ready for this?
Through the many years - a_nd there have been many -I've
this Insane desire to be awarded a trophy, I've never been
wdo anything well enough, however. I mean, really, one just
tt:.:;,~lget a trophy for tlddty winks or being an expert at cal·
J!
on the couch. While the trophy shelves of others have
fle;:;:~c:l:u~l:te::red with the symbols of their personal ac~~
l'vegalned nothingformyshelf. To tell the truth,
don't eV-en have a shelf.
However, my star arose Saturday when Mrs. Judy Riggs,
llir'eck1r, presented me with a tall, gleaming trophy at the Regatta
llatnn Twirling Coolest In Middleport. Judy said it was a reward
being a good sport. Now -that's a kick in the head! Whenever
subject of good sp..-ts arises my name just doesn't pop wthe
In fact, It doesn't even make the "also ran" column.
Well, it all goes to prove that good things do come to him who
,..H,..,.,,r, perhaps, that you actually can.fool some of the people,
of the time.
Ata:nyrate,_wouldyou inlnd handing me that polishing cloth?
l!onleOile put a smudge on the side of my trophy. Now-who did

BV BERTHA PARKER

Sabbath School attendance
at the -Free Methodist
icht~rch was 116. The offering for
morning services was
24. Bible School closed
~~:;:evening
with a program
was well given. A large
attended.
Next Sunday a Hymn Sing
be held at the local church
2:30 p.m. The public is in.

~

Mrs. Thomas Dorst and
Milan, · spent the
lwel!telldwith her parents, Mr.
Mrs. Jame.s Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy R11111eli
M'atTell caUed on his sister,
Georgia Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Alldre,

Parter.
lild Mn. Edward Biuer
..........,bter, Kelly

~~.:.=

Picnic Held At
Roadside Park
Fathers were honored and
June birthdays -observed at a
picnic supper Sunday evening
at the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending were Mrs . Iva
Singer, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Arnold, Gene and Vicki, Mason,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Norman
E. Hysell, Bruce, Terry, Norma
Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, Rhonda and Bobby, Mr.
and Mrs. Jipl King, Nancy,
Debby, Kathy, Jo ~lien, Bobby
Joe, Timmy · and Pamela
Lawrence, and Mr: and Mrs.
Dares Arnold, all of Pomeroy.
- - -- -- - -Orlando. The four left for
Florida immediately following
J. C.'s graduation from the
School of Pharmacy at Ohio
State University·
Mrs, Olga Matthews of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. is here for a
visit with her sister and brotherin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Sisson.
Regatta weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson at the
home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leland Sisson, were Ed
Wahl of Galion and Carol
Ackerman of Gardin ton.

be

Personal Notes

The double ring ceremony - - - - - - . . - - willbean event of June 27,1:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Freeland Norris and the Rev.
Robert R. Card will officiate.
Miss Holter has selected Mrs.
Kaihy Johnson as her matrQn of
honor. Bridesmaids will be Miss
Alta Scrimsher and Miss
Debbie Jeffers.
Mr. R. Gary Holter, brother
of the bride-elect, will serve the
I
groom as best man, and ushers
will be Mr. Gordon Holter,
brother of the bride-elect, and
VOYAGE
SUO TO 22.!1
Mr. Domild Durst, nephew of .
WID lii:INQ
the prospective groom.
ea.ao
MAN'S I 211
Miss Rebecca Lee will serve
as flower girl and the ring
The Good Life
bearer will be Mr. Robert W.
'
Lee.
Begins With
Mrs. Carla Salser will be the

'""""

1

Keepsake

11

For your engaa:ement, choose
K.;cpsake- the beautiful begin ning of a li£etime together. Every
Keepsake is exquisitely crafted in

OBSERVANCE
Favors for the silver an- 14K gold and guaranteed •l•in&amp;t
niversary observance of the diamoHd lou.
/ ·
Middleport Business and
Professional were provided by ~(!_S(\k&lt;'
the Pomeroy National Ban'k,
The Farmer's Bank and
Savinbs Company and the
Citizen 's National Bank.
The observance was held
Monday night at the home of
'Mr. Bnd Mrs. John Werner.
I

,

I

•

We've Got 'Em All

SHIRl
FINISHING

FOR THE
FAMILY
The entire fun collection

for summer 1971. Come,
shop and save!

CHAPMAN'S

Robinson's Cleaners

Main St.

~~---

News, Event

...
......-

SERVICE

G-78-14
Or

. Twin White Stripes

$31 99'
'

H-78-15
.H-78-14
EJ~,.

.
Each

Each

Tax Included . : .

GENERAL TIRE SALES

FLOWERS
For That
Perfect

Wedding
ouo·LEY'.s FlORIST

SUMMERTIME SPECIAL PRICES
SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!

45" Wide

Misses Double Knit

SHORTS ~~~hing

ASSORTED
MATERIALS
Fashion
Patterns

The Eleventh Annual Con: County Jail, and Lutheran
vention of the Ohio District of Senior City.
The American Lutheran Church Another highpoint of the
met at Capital University, Convention was the honored
Columbus, recently. Those presence of the general
attending from St. ' Paul president of The American
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy Lutheran Church, Dr. Kent s.
were Pastor Arthur Lund and Knutson. Dr . Knu!son 1mdelegate, William Coffman. A pressed the delega~ with his
total of 803 pastors, delegates, clarity of thought and
and visitors were registered for presentation, and with his grasp
the Convention. The total In- of the issues and problems
eluded 23 official youth facing the church.
delegates chosen through .the Among other speakers
Luther League areas.
present were Dr. John Rilling,
A special feature of \his president of the Ohio Synod,
year's Convenoion was the Lutheran Church of America,
Encounter Groups. Each Dr. Cprl E. Reuss, and
delegate was assigned to a Reverend Forrest Monson.
group concerned .with some The business end of the
current social issue or problem. Convention consisted of apExamples of group meeting proving resolutions and
locations were Juvenile recommendations and the
Diagnostic Center, Huckleberry· pas!Jing of the 1972 Ohio District
House · for runaway youth! budget.

Special

LADIES

Purchase!

2-Way

Misses ·

TANK

39~

New

SPECIAL!·

SPECIAL!

LEVI'S
JEANS

TOP

Yd.

444

Attend Recent Convention ·- -- ·-

Val. to 7.99
Aorals
Solids

Stretch

KNIT

SHORTS
NOW

1.99

Sale! Famous Dan River Sheets

S.Pltc.

Chen lilt

BAlH SET

299

Val. to 39c

Towel Specials
Stoneswear

Solids
Fancies

SHIFTS
TWIN FITTED FULL FITTED
TWIN FLAT
FULL FLAT

Reg. 5.00

PILLOW
CASES

White, 1.88 ......... 1.99 ........... , 97•

LOROBI'S PIZZA • • •
Seeking a couple to own and operate a
Lorobi's Pizza shop in the MiddleportPo~~Y area. ~all .J,C!c;k~,n, Ohi~
Phone ~86~4633 for further information
or write:
·

22x44 Bath Towet .... 79c

Color, 2.22 ......... 2.47 ............ 1.22
Print, 2.33 .......... 2.59 ............ 1.57

Hand Towel ......... 49c
Wash Cloths ......... 25c

.

Lorobl's Pizza
206 Dawson St.

PERMA·
PRESS

9. 11t 5,.,, :,
DAILY
9 TIL 9
. SATURDAY

,SHOPr·IN -, tJ
AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT

..

Jackson, Ohio 45640

FOLGER'S

PORK CHOPS

COFFEE 21b.$

......
....- ·

-.....
--....
....; '

:~:~~~:.~.~~~~?:.z-49

*'

15":

SLICED BACON, Superior lb. 63'

-

LOCIEI

.

•

INGELS.
FURNITURE.
•

I

.OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

•

IUCIET

992·2635

MIDDLEPORT

FRESH

NEW CALIFORNIA
LONG 'WHITE

•

'

CORN
' '

FROZEN BUY

Bir~s

POTATOES

•

I

•

•

· cuCUMBERS
PERS

3rnR29~·

Frosty Acres

LEMONADE

2

JOY LIQUID
32

oz.

Bottle

59c

· With Coupon
, EXPIRES-6·26-71
Good At BIG 3 MARKETS

Eye

COOL

10~~ 6. 9~
6 oz.

cans

29$

_WHIP
9

5

oz . .

Can

BEEF B.B.Q.
can

WAG.NER

Bakery Dept.

RANGE &amp; GRAPE ORIN
3 ~~: 99~

WHOLE MfEAT OR
HONEY MEAL BROWN

25' Roll

BREAD
16 oz.
Loaf

'29~

. •'

VIEnl

10% Ol.

Whole Kernel or Cream

HOLSUM

•

IIIII
FIEEZER

TEE'N QUEEN

::~~~~~. . . . . . . . . . . ~ : 5 9e

:r....

ID.JUITIILE
CIIIIILII.a .
IHELVEI

lb.

CENTER RIB CHOPS• .............. lb. 79•
CENTER LOIN CHOPS ....... , .... lb. 89•

,..

can '

AU

FIRST CUTS

4 Ply Dynacor.

Twin White Stripes

first time in the history of the . .- - - - - - - - .
Postal Service that first day
covers have been available in
~11 United States Post Offices. ·
Posbnasters Jim Soulsby and
Pa~l Casci of Pomeroy and ·
Middleport have extended invitations to anyone· wishing to
visit their Post Offices on July t
and suggest ·that-persons liVhlt
in other Meigs communities
_cimtact their local Posbnaster
59 N. Second .St.
Middleport, Ohio
if they wish w visit their
99l•SS60
facility.

•

-----......
...
-

'

JumbV80 G!ass Belted

first Postmaster General under
the Continental Congress and it
may he ol interest to local
historical buffs w know that
Return Jonathan Meigs (from
whence came the· name of
Meigs cO'unty) served as
Postmaster General under
Presidents Madison and
Monroe. ·
.
AmQng the many important
events in th~ history of the Post
O(fice Deparbnent was the first
use of postage stamps in 1847,
the colorful era of the Pony
Express in 1860, Railway mail
service and postal money orders in 1864, rural delivery in
1896, village delivery in 1912,
airmail service In 19I8, highway
post offices in 1941 and the Zip
Code system in 1963.
The first Posbnaster General
under the United States Postal
Service will be Winton W. .
Blount, who, with a Deputy
PMG and nine other persons
appointed by the President with

Washington, 0. C. for members
of Congress, former Posbnaster
Generals, the Board of
Governors
and
other
dignitaries. Visitors to the
nation's post offices will be
· given a ·souvenir envelope
imprinted with the old and new
the advice and consent of the insignia of the Poiltal Service.
Senate, will compose the Board This envelope wiU also be
of Governors for the Postal made available in limited
Service.
numbers as first day canPoslmaster General Blount cellations for the cost of an 8
will host ceremonies in cent stamp. This will mark th~

_,

lUTTER
lEEPER

QUALITY

The Jnaugurallon of the new
United States Postal Service on
July 1 will be celebrated In
WashlngUin, D. C. and in many
other post offices across the
nation. This event will mark
what is considered to be the
biggest (or most major) change
in the history of the Post Office
Department since the Inception
of the Articles of Confederation
some 200 years ago.
At that time Congress was
given the "sole and exclusive
right and power of establishing
and regulating Post Offices
from one state w anil.ther and
exacting such postage on the
papers passing through the
same as may be requisite to
defray the expenses of the said
offices."
Benjamin Franklin was the
--------World's longest continuous
frontier is that between Can·
ada and the United States.
It extends for 3,987 miles.

.'

---·....
--............
-..,...

Beneficiary members of
Che!!ter Councll 323, Daugllters
of America, Chester, are asked
wattend the July 6 meeting of
the council. At that time
business regarding questiOilB of
benefits will be discussed.

WE INVITE YOU TO COMPARE
PRICE ·

l
rosta Service Will Undergo
Major Change First Of July.
D

""
...--

DAR CHESTER MEET

REGATTA WINNER
Kelly Thoma, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Thoma, Pomerny,
was the third place winner In
the boys' bicycle compelitlon at
the Regatta. He was previously
listed aa Kelly Thomas.

.Carpenter_

•

~=~• and Kaven;
11*11 the 11 utend
111'11. Alldre'a mother, Mn. Fed.

II

Plans have been completed
for the wedding of Miss Sharon
Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. ArvU Holter, Long Bottom,
Route 1, and Mr. Curtis Riffle,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Riffle,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Route 2.

SURPRISE PARTY
A surprise party was held
Saturday honoring Mrs. Lyda
Beach on her 79th birthday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Er-'
nest Van lnwagen, Bradbury.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs and Diane
'LeWis, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Nelson, Middleport;
Susie Jeffers, Dexter; Keith
and Jerry Van Inwagen and the
hosts. Calling later were Mrs.
Clyde Bing, Bradbury, and
Linda Grindstaff, Racine.

Laurel Oiff
Notes

Pomeroy....

provide the nuptial
music. Registering the guests .
will be Mrs. Paula White,
. Areception will be held in the
social room of the ·church Un·
mediaiely following the .
ceremony.

Sharon Holter to
Wed Curtis . Riffle·

· The Rutland Friendly Gar· Mrs. Joe Bolin. will present
dene~s will hold an op~n gardening tips for July and Mrs.
meeting tonight at 7:30p.m. .'n Bruce May will have the
the. Rutiand Church of Christ devotional period. Hostesses
soc1al rooms. The •meeting .is will be Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
open to the public and there IS president of the Rutland
ha
no c rge.
Friendly .Gardeners, Mrs.
Mrs. Earl Dean_of the Chester Robert Snowden, Mrs. Jerry
G d ct b will
t
·
ar en u fl
presen . a Eads,_Mrs. Richard Fetty' Jr.,
program on oral arrangrng_ and Mrs. Bill Brown.
with the theme, Interpretive
·Arranging . Mrs. Dean, a
talented artistic arranger, has
won numerous blue ribbons
with her floral pieces many of
which are arranged In con!;liners she has created
Special guests will
Mrs.
John Lohse , Ohio State
John Reese, Gallipolis, Region
University
student, has
11 Director of the Ohio
Association of. Garden Clubs returned to Columbus for
and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar' summer employment following
Pomeroy, Meigs County Con: a visit at his home here.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Grueser of
tact Chairman.
Darwin are at Front Royal, 'va.
attending a wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. William Gibbs
have returned following a
week's vacation in Florida.
was appointed w clerk of the
Mr. and Mrs. Truman Russell
City Board of Education, and and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Russell
Rebecca Sue Wright, the returned from Florida Sunday
SAME DAY
Pomeroy unit delegate, was after spend\ng a week's
SE~VICE
appomted to the office of civil vacation there. The Truman
In At 9-0ut At 5
defense.
Russells were guests of Mrs.
Mrs. Lloyd Wright, Mrs. Hattie Russell at St. PetersUse'Oui'Free Parking Lot
R1zer, and Mrs. Bruce May burg, and J. C. Russell and his
we~t to C~lumbus Thursday to wife, Debbie, visited her
ass1st m servmg the brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
inauguration dinner.
and Mrs. David Robey, at ....2.16•E•.•2n•d•,•Po.._m•ell!r•ov-~

Buckeye State Girls Return

MRS. 0. B. KREINBIHL,formerly Louise Geyer of Pomeroy,

ews

·

Rutland
Gardeners
.
Open House Meet Tonight

---

·

Parker taking second and Mrs.
Harold Wolfe, third. Mrs. Joe
Bolin received a blue ribbon for
her. entry in "Beautiful Ohio,"
and Mrs. carpenter, red. The
blue ribbon entry In the "Down
by the Riverside" class was
won by Mrs. Parker, with Mrs.
carpenter receiving se.cond
place.
·

url'1
A
.
t
YVt I
SStS

!lome frogs make a big splash wherever they go,
And some make small ripples without Wo much show
~ aome are content wbask In the sun
. · ~ othen are quietly getting jobs_c!one.

..

as runnerup. Mrs. Fetty's entry,a blue ribbon winner, was in
the "Froggie Went a Courtin 1 "
category. In the same category,
Beth Ann Wolfe, four-year-old
daughter of Mrs. Harold Wolfe,
club president, received an
honorable mention.
'
Mrs. Carpel\!er won a blue
ribbon for her entry in "The Big
Bend, 1971" with Mrs. Homer

~rganist and

University Hospital, Columbus,
where he is undergoing treat. ment for a neart ailment.
Mrs. Ethel Shell, Linda,
Greg, and Rolland, Steuben·
'
ville, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal JOrdan
and attended the Jordan-Gilkey
Mrs . Hazel Burke has wedl)lng on Satorday afternoon
in Albany.
returned. home following Mr. and Mrs. Carl Caster,
treatment · at O'Bleness Hilliards, are spending a few
Memorial Hospital in Athens. days with his brother-in-law and
Guests with her during the sister, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
weekend included Mr. and Mrs. Turner. The Castel's called to
Ollie Burke and famUy, Cln· see his cousona, Mr. and Mrs.
clnnatl; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Earl Starkey, and have been
!:lurke and 'family, Chlareston, visiting other. friends and
. W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs. relatives in the area.
Hebron Burke and family,
.HIIITJcane, W. Va . .The family •Jack Hess and son, David,
.
Springfield, were guests of his
members were here especially brother-in-law and· sister; Mr.
for_ the ~raduatlon exercises at •and Mrs. James Gaswn. David
Ohio Umverslty where-Marshall, will spend the summer with the
Burke, son of Mr. _and Mrs. Gaswns.
Hebron Burke, was a member Granville Stout suffered
of the graduation class.
Mr. -and Mrs. James Gaswn serious injuries in an accident
recently visited with her at Diamond Stone Quarries and
has now been transferred from
mother·, Mrs. Elizabeth Crowe, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
who Is ill and being cared for in Athena, to University Hospital,
the home Qf another daughter, Columbus for special treatMrs. Gary Gibson, Gnat
'
denhutten Ohio
men ·
.
' · ' -- ·
Sunday dmner guests of Mr.
Several mem~rs and guests and Mrs. Webster Facemyre
of the. Columbta Make-It 4-H were Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence
Club gU'ls and the Triple C 4-H Facemeyer, Trimble, and Mr.
club boys enjoyed a joint and Mrs George Keirns
skating party at the Nelsonville Glouster ·
'
skating rink on Friday evening. Vina Rutherford Columbus
Charles McVay, Lay Speaker was a weekend g~est of he;
from Athens, held services at mother Faye Jordan and other
Temple United ~ethodist relativ~s .
'
Church on Sunday mornmg m Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark,
the absence of . Reverend Tamara
and
Penny,
Howard Mayne who IS atte~g Harrisonville; and Mr. and
annual. conference at Lakes1de. Mrs . David· Wiseman and
Mr. ?"d Mrs. Earl Starkey children, Rutland, were guests
were dmner guests of Mr. a~d of their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Blackwood, St:. m Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Pomeroy.
TRAIL HIKE ENJOYED
Mrs. Dale Dye is seriously ill Family members were guests
and confined wHolzer Hospital. when Columbia Make-It 4-H
Her ~hlidren, Dale ~e, Jr., El Club girls enjoyed a trail hike at
Cernto, Callforma; Mrs. Lake Hope state Park. The
Chester . Baumgardner, group had a picnic and short
Coshocton, 0.: Mrs . Clyde business session after the hike .
Walker, Thurman; Mrs. -Glen Those attending included Mr.
Irwin, Mar~sviUe, and Mrs. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly, Vicky
Peter Kepnar, Hartford, have ·• and Bruce, Mrs. Clay Jordan
~II been called here by her and Barbara; Mr. and Mrs.
illness.
William Miller, Connie, Debbie,
Mr. and Mrs .. James Gaswn and Lori; Mrs. Gay Johnson
entertained falll.'ly In:embers Qn and Julia; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Satordsy honormg his nephew • Shiltz Keith Everett Cecile
William!}aston, Sr., w~owas a Sher~y , and Johnni~ ; Mrs:
•
member of the graduatmg class Rosella Birchfield Larry
at Ohio University. Those Patty,DebbieandJeff; Mr. and
presen) were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs Joe McWhorter Joan and
;; Wil~am _Gaston, Sr., Smyrna, Pauia: Mrs. Everett' Holcomb,
::" Delawate, Mr · and M~s- Pam and Marcia; Mr. and Mrs.
;..,.,.~}~ Gaston and . Debbie; Gene Jeffers, Margie, Lester,
~~astll~, Mr... and Mrs. Marco, ·and Robert, Mike and
.... · J tlcHard· GastOO, Mr. and Mn., Cheryl Lawson, Clay William
;: .. ~Clifford smith and Nelhe, Jordan, Mr. Gilbert Peerey,
:; Athens; Mr. and Mrs . . Paul Lisa and Tammy; Mrs. Lavern
: Gaston, Lois, Leah, and Joe, Jordan, Ruth, Jane, Betty, and
:;: Albany; aQd the honored guest, Jerrie Sue, Ruth Coen and
., WUllam Gaston, Jr.
.
Kimberly Allman.
:: Lyle Chapman is confmed w .

AT RACtn

.
59

ARtAOUR

TREET

12

oz.

can

TEEN QUEEN

PEACHES
No. 2'12
Cans

8

,•

AID CROSS SONS •·

~-

a;::::::~;~:···:·.jo:&lt;;:::::::~:-~:::~;.;.;~:~::~;:;::::-~:::::~:::~:~:::~::::::::~::~;:;~:::~::::~:::::~

AT TUPPERS PLAINS

;?

No

¥

t
~:::::~ ~~:::::::::::::::;::::::::~:;~:::~::::::~:::~{;::::::~:::~::;:::::::;,~:::~~:: ::::::::::::::::::::~
LYONS . MAR~ET

\i

..

Stamps! .
Rtahl

No
Games!

No
Gimmicks!

R-1(
To ·
Li•lt

Quldlts

�J

·'
.,"
"""
plus six days of golf-108 holes.:;

1-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport; Pomeroy, 0., Jqne 23, 1971'' ,

•
IDS

olan
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Gary
Nolan loses with confidence
these days.
. And as far as Cincinnati Reds
Mansger Sparky Anderson is
concerned, you can forget
•
·

Ex-Diamond Star Faces Obstacles

Fifth

NEW YORK (UPI)- Ken
Harrelson, who gave up ,Jw;e.
bali for golf, faces a long series
of hurdles before he can qqalify
Nolan's ~7 win-loS&amp; record.
. tinued, "Gary's capable of reel- 3-7 and Carlton 16-3.
.
"Gary can pltch and he knows ing off 10 straight v~ctories. All "It's just a case oi one get.. for the pro tour.
The
former
Cleveland
first
it," said Anderson Tuesday we've got to do is give him a ling a lot of runs scored for ·
night after Nolan beat the UtUe hi tUng. "
him and the other isn't," said baseman, said to be heading for
Saratoga, Wyo.; to study under
Philadelphia Phillles 6-1 on a
Pete Hose rapped out three Anderson.
six-hitter.
hils and lA!e May and George Nolan lowered his earned run golf pro Bob Toski, wiD have to
"I'm telling you," he con- Foster drove home a pair of average to 2.70 Tuesday night, play his way onto the tour like
runs as the Reds liacked Nolan but lost a shutout when Oscar any other aspirant for fame
with a 10-hit attack while tag- ·Gamble doubled with two out and fortune on the'lairways.
Former major league pitcher
ging Ken Reynolds, a rookie out in the ninth inning and
Sammy
Ellis tried and failed
By United Press lnlerna1iona I PhiUy lefty, with his second scored when Dave Concepcion
American League
loss tn three decisions.
booted Roger Freed's grounder. last year. He tripped over the
lSI Game
"The real warm weather is
Rose's three hils boosted !lis first hurdle.
Detroit
101 000 005- 7 13 I
New York 000 120 001- 4 4 0 on its way," said Anderson hap •. season mark to .292 going into
•
Cain, Nlekro (5). Chance (6), pily. "That's Nolan's type of tonight's game which wiU pit
PATRIOT COACH
Scherman (9) and Freehan,
weather.
The
hotter
it
is,
the
Cincinnati's
Ross
Grimsley
Price (8) ; Stottlemyre, Jones
BOSTON. (UPI)- The Boston
(9). McDaniel (9) and Munson . better he is . Heat eats up a lot against the Phils' Rick Wise.
Patriots
announced Tuesday the
WP- Chance (3-6), LP--Stottle- of pitchers. Gary thrives on it."
Rose now has 75 hits for the addition of Mike Hickey, son o!
myre 17-6) . HRs- McAulllfe
Anderson went back to year, nine short of his mark for former San FranciSco Forty
{9th!. Cash I 16th), Woods (lsi).
Nolan's record ~ ~7.
the corresponding nlimber of Niner coach Red Hickey, to
2nd Game
"It's the season," he said. games last year.
their scouting staff.
Detroit
001 ooo ooo- ·1 8 1 "Take when we were over in
Foster's
two
hits
jumped
his
New York 200 ooo {)0)(- 2 7 2
mark to .354 since he joined the EXPOS SIGN
Coleman, Timmerman (8) St. Louis recenUy.
and Price, Freehan (5); Bahn·
"There was Steve Carlton Reds late in May.
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
sen and Munson . WP- Bahnsen with 10 victories and only three
"I'm happy, I'm surprised," Montreal Expos announced
(7-61. LP- Coleman (6-4) .
losses. Gary was only 3-7 at the said Foster. "I've always had Tuesday the purchase of
lsi Game
time, but he had given up less confidence in my hitting. All outfielder Stan Swanson from
Baltimore· 0.10 000 002- 6 9 0 hits thsn Carlton .... "
I've ever wanted was a chance their Winnepeg farm club in the
Washngtn 010 311 20x- 8 IS o
So
you
ask
how
Nolan
was
to play."
.International lA!ague.
Cuellar. Boswell (4), Hall (51,
Richert (7) and Hendricks,
Etchebarren (7) ; Janes k I,
Grzenda (2), Lindblad (3) , Plna
(9). Rlddleberger (9), Cox (9)
and Billings. WP-Lindblad 13·
1). LP- Bi&gt;swell (1 -11 . HRsBuford (loth), Mincher (5th) .

Linesoores

tMjor League L,eadon
By United Press lnltrnallonal
Leading Bailon
National Ltatue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre. St. L 71 275 43 102 .371
Davis, LA
68 270 45 97 .359
Pepl, Chi
51 187 25 64 .342
Brock,St.L 68 278 54 94 .338
Beck!, Chi
67 267 42 90 .337
Ga.r, All
71 296 49 . 97 .328
Staub, Mont 65 231 40 75 .325
' Alou, HCKJ
52 187 14 60 .321
Alou, SI.L
67 274 29 86 .314
Aaron. At!
67 229 44 72 .314
May, Cin ; 57 207 31 65 .314
·AmtriCin League
.
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min 61243 .48 94 .387
Murcer, NY 67 238 .10 82 .345
Reid, Chi
52 195 20 63 .323
Buford, Bit 51 198 52 63 .318
Rojas, KC
63 237 34 74 .312
Ka lne, Det 58 187 36 58 .310
Otis, KC
61 24.1 41 ~5 .306
FRbsn, Bit 53 186 34 57 .306
Hwrd, Wash 63 w 22 73 .303
cash, Det
s7 176 32 53 .301
· Home Runs
National Ltag.,., Stargell,
Pitt 25; Aaron, All 20; Bench
and May, Cin 17; Bonds, SF 16.
Amerl(an L01gue: Oliva,
. Mlnn 17; cash. Del and
Jackson, Ook 16; Melton, Chi
and Horton, Del 13.
Runs Balled In
National League: Stargell,
Pill .61; /Ia ron. At I 56; Santo,
Chi 52; Torre, St.L 50 ; May,
Cin 43. ·
•
American League: Killebrew,
Mlnn 55; Oilva, Mlnn 46; White,
NY .j.j; F. Robinson, Belt and
Petrocelli, Bos 43.
Pitching
National Ltatue: Ellis, Pitt
and carlton, St.L 11-3; Dierker,
Hou 10·31 Jenkins, Chi 10-7;
Marlchal, SF 9-4; Stoneman,
Mont 9-5,
- American League: Blue, Oak
15-2; Cuellar, Belt 11-i ; McNal:
ly, Bait 11 -4; Perry, Mlnn 11-5;
Siebert, Bos 10-4; Hunter, Qak
10-5; Lollch. Del 10·6.

606

E. Main

'

992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES

.OPEN DAILY 10 TO. 9 -SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY,JUNE 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
.

AND FURNITURE
.

.

0

DEADLINE TUESDAY
Friday, June 25, is the final
day for managers to enter their
litUe league teams in the Kyger
Creek tournament. Entries·are
to be mailed to BtU Fugate,
Kyger Creek, Box 81, Gallipolis.
There is no entry fee.

0

Stop In And See Our Floor Display

Save Like.Never Belore During A&amp;P's Big
RE-6137

2nd Game
Baltimore ooo 010 IDO- 2 8 o
Washngtn 000 000 ooo- 0 7 I
Jackson, Dukes (7) and
Etchebarren; Shellenback. Cox
(7) and casanova . WPJackson (1.0). LP- Shellenback
11-4). HR- Relfenmund (3rd).

·• .

BOHN
ELECfRIC ADDING
MACHINE

lSI Gamo

Cleveland 000 027 OOD- 9 13 I
Boston
110 010 ooo- 3 11 3
Hargan. Hennlngan (61 and
Suarez; Lee, Bolin (61. Brett
(7)
and Josephson. WPHargan {1-5) . LP- Lee (4-2) .

•

All Prices And Coupons Good·Thru Saturday, June 26th!

Cleveland 000 000 ODO- 0 6 0
Boston
000 200 oox- 2 2 0
Hand, Farmer (7) and
Suarez; Siebert (10-41 and
Montgomery . LP-Hand (1-4) .
HR- Scott (9th).

Shop A&amp;P For l.ow, Low Meat Prices!

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

rule tun ing . Engineered with dependable Solid State devices.

$

88

PANASONIC

AM RADIO

fM .-.f.! il OIIOrhtr f ltp iorwotclfrl poi'IO~ tO·
dio ......~. lt1 tv~-lo¥lnt lpht&lt;Kol ~-..~ ....;qw
Hll1•f tip -oh ond p(iflrl9 lltW CDtryi/19 (hOi"
COfiiiHio. 19 -kt up C1 redie lhot' l "jwll ti! Dhtly-

ohfodofitotiN."

HECK'S
REG.
$11 .88

TELEVISION

G. E.

St)88

Pl Pleasant Store On~

DEHUMIDIFIER
'

$79.88

t OE POIITA·COlOR Cha ..l•

t !: 1 y1cl AO C

• T.lo ... opin~ Oil&gt;l;&gt;io: Anlenmo
1 Dit·Ccnl Mikol M11ndl.•
I VMf ''P••·s.t" finelvni~9 CoPI!tol 1 T(i' DiotOfiOI, 60 tq . ln.
I Gf "In/lint" PiU11t1l v bt Sytllfll
e UHf Solid Stale'"""

e

~~oh

&amp;u1ton (~;~lot PvrHitt

Mw1ne 11,.0

$17988

HECK'S REG. $87.88

HEC«'S IIG, $198,88

Pl Pleasant Store

JEWEI.RY DEPT.
l

.WIIh Thh

K•loh•p
Lo¥m 18-eL

eo,... &amp;o""

sn.

"" 20.

&amp;oo4 ThN S.t., Jun• 26 If AJ.p

~

39C

I

Coupon

bGt;l;le

Goo~ Thn~

Limit One C.upon

V211

With
Thit

'

Sat.. Jun. 26 tat AI:P
Cou,Oft

li"'it

INLAND.Q¥NA,RONI.C:

o".

(•'

8-TRACK

Boneless Beef Roast

9~.

Cut From

Tender

Stlnl111 Wieners
&amp;oo~

FRESH PICNIC

BraUIIIhWIIIIr

Pork Rout

Post T1111

,,

With Thlt
CeMpoll Goocl

Thhl Set., June 26 If Alf'

SaUll£e

l-~lluM1

eo~,~
· FwlOl

. mop!

Chlppot.

-

Port ChoJII

Puk lo Pop

. lb.$139

BONELESS ENGLISH

Cllanoal Steaks
FRESH

fi'Jir Lep • •

~

Dl,.,-.n
C•p'n John

I

Stlud Bacon

'

. 1b·59'

"" 99'

2f••79C ~~

M-ol,

Ot

White • box

Coupon

Good Thrv S.t., June 26 et A&amp;f'
Lll'llit One Cau,.oR '

Ritht

Fresh, Yelow

Ripe

Sweet
Corn

California
Cantaloupes
0

C.IKomlo

2 =3&amp;
7-

W'rth Thl•
Coupon
&amp;6od

Fof IOc:

~~.h

&amp;loot .,b,

~....

. so.

C.pon

Goocl Thn~ S.t.. Jun• 26 et AlP
Umlt O~tt Coupo11

&amp;oocl

Valencia
Oranges

-1 o~r:79c. 3Pw$1 ° 1o. . sgc

Trull Cu Uners

li Srh

Htlly
'
Co•11t

This Cawi'Cift

&amp;oocl Thru S.t, Jun• 26
Limit

69C

Tllk
CGupon

lultoni 11-o&amp;.
""Vtrilfi•• jar

4fte
7-

~~=
Coupon

6oocl Thrv s.t.. Jun• 26 •• AlP
Limit OM Cou,on

Bir••re Awake

. . . .,4,

tNk ~

Q7 ....

. With
Th'

wah

lnlhllt
Nash1
•
Jar

••

Coupo11

...

Goo4 Thru S1t., Ju111 26 et A&amp;P
llll'llt On. CoMpon "

~

~:~
C6UPDII

&amp;ood Thrv S1t., June 26 1f AJII'
limit On• Coupon

Swl• Chilli
FROZIN AlP

Oranp 1•1• '

Chun• You
Style S.vt

lsc

On
A111y

mounted tone tu ning con trol.

Slice• Swl• Ch1111

·1sC r.:,.
...... s.,.

With
Ttlit

AU

f'itce Co11po11

&amp;.ocl Tlwu S.t., J.,.. Z6 1f AlP
LlmltO.. c..,,..

You ""

On
1.11..A With
This
C.llpofl

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LhnH Or!e Coupo11

CRISCO
.

....

-

PHONOGRAPH
e4·5pH d lu1 n1ablo
e 5Qr.d $10 .. ~tllormonc t

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• Rvo!l"d Pofy.t~~lt n, Co1t
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1

Tftn~ S.t.,

Jltfta 26 et Alf'
U...tt OM
~

c..,..

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY IJEPT.

POLICE BAND RADIO

·

Dhhw••hlllt
D•f•rt•nt

15c Ofl

L.~

JS.os.

49'

ll.e

"C" ull \ol!triel and hat o IMit·i.n .I.C Nnt

~ord . Hi po~&lt;t

1~1 · 11 •M( . I DW poli&lt;t

&lt;o-,n ·l0.$0 Me. Slrdt r..l.!vrlol'l'if ol\d ro10ry
~h &lt;D~Irol. MC , ft"ICopln'if On!tniiO. Sire• ~~ ~.9'· 1l "•3 -1!1 '',

•

S]488

Wl.._ .'
Thlt

CouttOn

Good Thrv S.t., June 26 d AlP
. Limit OM Co'!pon

t

HECK'S REG. $44.96

78C

2517

GENERAL ELECTRIC
'
FM-AM PORTABLE

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

8•TRACK

TAPES
Top artists end top tunes!
Rock, Country &amp; Western
and Show Tunes. Choose
f rom o large assort·
ment of recording
artists. Produced by

l ·band AM-fM .Aio, Polict
or ,1,( C~fltnt. Pwrh
'f*&gt;ktrl. rlidt , .... luninu,
bolltrit&gt;. fii..-nol on'-nna

&amp; S.W Uwr .A "C"

~til

WALKIE TALKIE

HECK'S
REG.

bat ·

bolTon band r.!Ktor. Twin
,.,.;..1 rod o~ltMa . ln&lt;ludt•

to •tctl ... ond pw~ b~ll&lt;ln to trommil,
dota ltl hnliti" 1w,., r-v-•ol... r..ct i&gt;tl', J "0~111 ·
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.,!on up 10

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&amp;ood Thn~ S~tt., Ju,.. 26 •f .UP '
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Tellet Tl••e
A""'
~
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~- .Al\e
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6oocl Thrw S.t., Jvn16 11t A.IP
Limit o... Cou,.,.

PANASONIC CASSETTE

TAPE RECORDER

9ollery·operated totseite . Simple~ lever
c;ofl tro ls. Automat[&lt; ~ec~r ding le.,el con·
trol. Pop up couette• lor instant chonge.
Vertical or ho rt zonfgl apetotion. Micro phol'lt ond occenorie1 .

1Gc Off Any 1Z.U.

,.,.
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...... ! .... Sot" .._ 16 " A»
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• E.

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BATTERIES

-::

l

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• Simple to operolt . Slide in ~how!film , put on record,
h.r•n twi!(h ond prutol
• It'' o 2·speed phono too . Ploys ...en 12" lP'1
• Tough polystyrene i:obinet
• Solid·tlote de ~i ;n . GE quolity lhroughoul ._

HECK.'S REG. $33.88 ·
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JIWII.IY /JilT.

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"

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&lt;o•d , tctrpho,..

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the leading man·
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t.lb.
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7Ck
u- ·c.u~...

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ep.r~oro ~

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HECK'S REG. $49.96

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ALL VARIETIES

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rf I

Mick'ey's here to plo y yo1.1r favorite record1.
t Exclusive, Mickey M01.1$e tone a rm d1u ig n
t 4 -~peed tvmta ble ploys a ll size reco rd s
t Rugged, $tuft re$istant, washable, polye thylel'le
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t Simple to operate, On/ 011 volume control
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it on ordinorv 119shligh t botteries or plug it int.o
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Calorie Watcllen

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IOINCH
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Stokely Golden Com ~;~ • • • 5=$1 00
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FURNITURE .

The Antique White cabinet provides the smart
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GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

Qakland 000 000 IOD- I 3 I
Minnesota
012 403 oox- 10 13 o
Hunter, Roland (4), Patterson
(6), Locker (7) and Duncan;
Perry (11 ·51 and Mltterwald.
LP- Hunter (10-5). HRs- Reese
2 (3rd &amp; 4th) , Oliva (171/1),
KIllebre-w (lith), Jackson
(16th).
.

Kan.City 201 201 ooo- 6 12 1
Chicago 080 100 o2x- 11 15 2
Drago, Burgmeler (2), York
~
(·4). f'.lltmorrls (6), Rooker (Bi
and May, Paepke (6), Br~dley,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver, . Johnson (61 and Egan. WP(7-6) . LP- Drago (7·31.
J o.h nny an d Eddl e of Bradley
HR- Melton (13th).
Bridgeman, Mich. and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Calli at Mil, ppd., rain
Patricia w:ere Sunday dinner
League
peals of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Phlla National
000 000 001- 1 6 I
Johll.lon.
Cincinnati 000 220 20x- 6 10 3
Reynolds, Champion (S) and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver
Mccarver
and family of Bridgeman, Mich. Bench. ; Nolan (5·71 ond
are "spending a few days .
vacation with her parents, Mr. New Yo.rk 001 100 Old- 3 10 1
000 000 002- 2 6 1
and Mra. Howard Thoma and Pittsbrgh
Williams, Frisella (9) and
Patricia.
Grote ; Nelson, Masse (3),
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell Veale (9), Giusti (9) and
WP- WIIIIams (3-1).
celebrated their 64th wedding Sangulllen.
LP- Nelson (1-21.
anniversary Sunday with a
cookout. There their children Montreal ooo ooo ooo- 0 3 0
famlll fri c1s d Atlanta
004 000 OOx- 4 7 1
and ·~·ir
w,.
es, en an
Renko, O'Donoghue (8) and
relatives attending.
Bateman; Reed (7-5) and King,
' Helen Johnson accompanied Boccabella (4). LP- Renko (7Mrs. Hamm to Columbus 61.
recenUy and she visited her 80n, Houston 001 003 ooo- 4 5 o
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray San Diego ooo ooo no- 2 8 2
Johnson also aunt and uncle,
Forsch, Gladdin~ 191 and
Edwards.
Arlin, Ke ley (8) and
Mr. and Mrs. Guemey Walker. Barton. WPForsch (3·1) . LP
' Mr. andMrs. EugeneHanlng, - Arlin (2-11) .
Rhonda and Ronald, were Chicago 000 000. ~ 0 3 0
Sunday vtsltors of Mr. and Mrs. San Fran ooo 001 lOx- 2 2 o
Brady Knotts, Terry, of King Jenkins, Tompkins (8) and
Hill
Cannizzaro ; Cumberland, John.
d
son (9) and Dietz. WPMr. an
Mrs. Eugene Cumberland (3-0) . LP- Jenklns
Thompson, Gina and Cyndla, (10-71 .
wereSundayvisitorsofMr.and St. Louis 110 121 ooo- 6 14 o
Mrs. Herman Warner.
Los Angl 300 001 IDO- 5 6 o
KaU, Charles, 'Kevin Knapp Carlton (11 -3) and McNert.
were Saturday evening vtsltors ney; Osteen. Moeller (51 , Pena
of their grandmother, Mrs. -l~l5 ~nd Ferguson . LP- Osteen
Lena Knapp of Langsville.
Mrs. S. A. Wyatt returned last
week where she is staying with and Mrs. Chase and Mr. and
her daughters in Columbus, Mr. Mrs. lA!o Smith.

$5.4.88

YOU SAVE 5519 WITH THE COUPONS BELOW!

2nd Game

W0rlfiI pen
·
•
.
N "" N.()•:n
U::S

-

compete in a 72-hole tour·
nsment against other candi·
dates at a site in North
Carolina, Dlinois or California.
U ·he is among the low scorers
in that totirnament, he moves
on to the school at the PGA
National Golf Club at Palm
Beach Gardens, Fla., Oct. 8-16.
At the school, candidates get.
two days of classroom lectures

These, roughly, are the rules
set down by the PGA's
tournament player division
under Conmtissloner J.oe Dey:
A player who hopell to join
the pro tour must apply for
admittance to the qualifying
school for approved tournament
players. The application documents must inClude character references from three golf
professionals, personal liability
insurance for two months in the
fall and assurance thst he has
the financial means to support
him for one year on !he tour.
The application fee is $50. By
signing it, he becomes a golf
professional though he might be
able to regain amateur standing
at a .later date.
The candidate then must

Low scorers in thst six rOI!lld .
tournament will be handed,
approved player cards.
~
But such a card is not an'
automatic qualiflcailon for '
those weekly tour tournaments. '
For a fledgling pro, all a nrd·:
does is to pennit him to'
compete in Monday tests with ·
the other "jackrabbit" for the
few spots in a tournament field '
not already occupied by an.:
established playing pro.

I
.

lh'-n IO l •t ol 'M onG AM , wi th big ·•p.ahr r o wn ~ , ttl full . foolut t~
cloclk-olcmrr ' Y"'"' con .. ft;.~ct. 100~ • S.OIId·r•olt Cll(l/ll dtt i9&lt;1 I
llo~ttd Cloc~ Dlol • .ii· iron t·fir.o' d~no"'l( IPfllk•r I ClocO 1p1hr111
ftotwtt Skr111btr Switch and WuOt•la Mu•u • • MuiiC I. AI"'"' t l uilt.
in AfC far rllrift·lt" FM a !hilt C:a"'~'" "''"'" • Awl ol!llllif Volumt
C•n!&lt;ol,

JEWElRY
DEPT.
HICK'S RIG.

$26.96

88

FM/AM clock radio in Antique
White . Features radium tipped
hands. Automatic music woke·up .
Slide-rule tuning . FM/ AM selector
switch . Built·in FM and AM onten·
nas. Solid-State engineertd.

HICK'SREG •
$29.96

•

�J

·'
.,"
"""
plus six days of golf-108 holes.:;

1-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport; Pomeroy, 0., Jqne 23, 1971'' ,

•
IDS

olan
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Gary
Nolan loses with confidence
these days.
. And as far as Cincinnati Reds
Mansger Sparky Anderson is
concerned, you can forget
•
·

Ex-Diamond Star Faces Obstacles

Fifth

NEW YORK (UPI)- Ken
Harrelson, who gave up ,Jw;e.
bali for golf, faces a long series
of hurdles before he can qqalify
Nolan's ~7 win-loS&amp; record.
. tinued, "Gary's capable of reel- 3-7 and Carlton 16-3.
.
"Gary can pltch and he knows ing off 10 straight v~ctories. All "It's just a case oi one get.. for the pro tour.
The
former
Cleveland
first
it," said Anderson Tuesday we've got to do is give him a ling a lot of runs scored for ·
night after Nolan beat the UtUe hi tUng. "
him and the other isn't," said baseman, said to be heading for
Saratoga, Wyo.; to study under
Philadelphia Phillles 6-1 on a
Pete Hose rapped out three Anderson.
six-hitter.
hils and lA!e May and George Nolan lowered his earned run golf pro Bob Toski, wiD have to
"I'm telling you," he con- Foster drove home a pair of average to 2.70 Tuesday night, play his way onto the tour like
runs as the Reds liacked Nolan but lost a shutout when Oscar any other aspirant for fame
with a 10-hit attack while tag- ·Gamble doubled with two out and fortune on the'lairways.
Former major league pitcher
ging Ken Reynolds, a rookie out in the ninth inning and
Sammy
Ellis tried and failed
By United Press lnlerna1iona I PhiUy lefty, with his second scored when Dave Concepcion
American League
loss tn three decisions.
booted Roger Freed's grounder. last year. He tripped over the
lSI Game
"The real warm weather is
Rose's three hils boosted !lis first hurdle.
Detroit
101 000 005- 7 13 I
New York 000 120 001- 4 4 0 on its way," said Anderson hap •. season mark to .292 going into
•
Cain, Nlekro (5). Chance (6), pily. "That's Nolan's type of tonight's game which wiU pit
PATRIOT COACH
Scherman (9) and Freehan,
weather.
The
hotter
it
is,
the
Cincinnati's
Ross
Grimsley
Price (8) ; Stottlemyre, Jones
BOSTON. (UPI)- The Boston
(9). McDaniel (9) and Munson . better he is . Heat eats up a lot against the Phils' Rick Wise.
Patriots
announced Tuesday the
WP- Chance (3-6), LP--Stottle- of pitchers. Gary thrives on it."
Rose now has 75 hits for the addition of Mike Hickey, son o!
myre 17-6) . HRs- McAulllfe
Anderson went back to year, nine short of his mark for former San FranciSco Forty
{9th!. Cash I 16th), Woods (lsi).
Nolan's record ~ ~7.
the corresponding nlimber of Niner coach Red Hickey, to
2nd Game
"It's the season," he said. games last year.
their scouting staff.
Detroit
001 ooo ooo- ·1 8 1 "Take when we were over in
Foster's
two
hits
jumped
his
New York 200 ooo {)0)(- 2 7 2
mark to .354 since he joined the EXPOS SIGN
Coleman, Timmerman (8) St. Louis recenUy.
and Price, Freehan (5); Bahn·
"There was Steve Carlton Reds late in May.
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
sen and Munson . WP- Bahnsen with 10 victories and only three
"I'm happy, I'm surprised," Montreal Expos announced
(7-61. LP- Coleman (6-4) .
losses. Gary was only 3-7 at the said Foster. "I've always had Tuesday the purchase of
lsi Game
time, but he had given up less confidence in my hitting. All outfielder Stan Swanson from
Baltimore· 0.10 000 002- 6 9 0 hits thsn Carlton .... "
I've ever wanted was a chance their Winnepeg farm club in the
Washngtn 010 311 20x- 8 IS o
So
you
ask
how
Nolan
was
to play."
.International lA!ague.
Cuellar. Boswell (4), Hall (51,
Richert (7) and Hendricks,
Etchebarren (7) ; Janes k I,
Grzenda (2), Lindblad (3) , Plna
(9). Rlddleberger (9), Cox (9)
and Billings. WP-Lindblad 13·
1). LP- Bi&gt;swell (1 -11 . HRsBuford (loth), Mincher (5th) .

Linesoores

tMjor League L,eadon
By United Press lnltrnallonal
Leading Bailon
National Ltatue
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre. St. L 71 275 43 102 .371
Davis, LA
68 270 45 97 .359
Pepl, Chi
51 187 25 64 .342
Brock,St.L 68 278 54 94 .338
Beck!, Chi
67 267 42 90 .337
Ga.r, All
71 296 49 . 97 .328
Staub, Mont 65 231 40 75 .325
' Alou, HCKJ
52 187 14 60 .321
Alou, SI.L
67 274 29 86 .314
Aaron. At!
67 229 44 72 .314
May, Cin ; 57 207 31 65 .314
·AmtriCin League
.
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min 61243 .48 94 .387
Murcer, NY 67 238 .10 82 .345
Reid, Chi
52 195 20 63 .323
Buford, Bit 51 198 52 63 .318
Rojas, KC
63 237 34 74 .312
Ka lne, Det 58 187 36 58 .310
Otis, KC
61 24.1 41 ~5 .306
FRbsn, Bit 53 186 34 57 .306
Hwrd, Wash 63 w 22 73 .303
cash, Det
s7 176 32 53 .301
· Home Runs
National Ltag.,., Stargell,
Pitt 25; Aaron, All 20; Bench
and May, Cin 17; Bonds, SF 16.
Amerl(an L01gue: Oliva,
. Mlnn 17; cash. Del and
Jackson, Ook 16; Melton, Chi
and Horton, Del 13.
Runs Balled In
National League: Stargell,
Pill .61; /Ia ron. At I 56; Santo,
Chi 52; Torre, St.L 50 ; May,
Cin 43. ·
•
American League: Killebrew,
Mlnn 55; Oilva, Mlnn 46; White,
NY .j.j; F. Robinson, Belt and
Petrocelli, Bos 43.
Pitching
National Ltatue: Ellis, Pitt
and carlton, St.L 11-3; Dierker,
Hou 10·31 Jenkins, Chi 10-7;
Marlchal, SF 9-4; Stoneman,
Mont 9-5,
- American League: Blue, Oak
15-2; Cuellar, Belt 11-i ; McNal:
ly, Bait 11 -4; Perry, Mlnn 11-5;
Siebert, Bos 10-4; Hunter, Qak
10-5; Lollch. Del 10·6.

606

E. Main

'

992-2094

OFFICE SUPPLIES

.OPEN DAILY 10 TO. 9 -SUNDAY 1TO 7-PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUNDAY,JUNE 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
.

AND FURNITURE
.

.

0

DEADLINE TUESDAY
Friday, June 25, is the final
day for managers to enter their
litUe league teams in the Kyger
Creek tournament. Entries·are
to be mailed to BtU Fugate,
Kyger Creek, Box 81, Gallipolis.
There is no entry fee.

0

Stop In And See Our Floor Display

Save Like.Never Belore During A&amp;P's Big
RE-6137

2nd Game
Baltimore ooo 010 IDO- 2 8 o
Washngtn 000 000 ooo- 0 7 I
Jackson, Dukes (7) and
Etchebarren; Shellenback. Cox
(7) and casanova . WPJackson (1.0). LP- Shellenback
11-4). HR- Relfenmund (3rd).

·• .

BOHN
ELECfRIC ADDING
MACHINE

lSI Gamo

Cleveland 000 027 OOD- 9 13 I
Boston
110 010 ooo- 3 11 3
Hargan. Hennlngan (61 and
Suarez; Lee, Bolin (61. Brett
(7)
and Josephson. WPHargan {1-5) . LP- Lee (4-2) .

•

All Prices And Coupons Good·Thru Saturday, June 26th!

Cleveland 000 000 ODO- 0 6 0
Boston
000 200 oox- 2 2 0
Hand, Farmer (7) and
Suarez; Siebert (10-41 and
Montgomery . LP-Hand (1-4) .
HR- Scott (9th).

Shop A&amp;P For l.ow, Low Meat Prices!

ANOTHER GOOD BUY FROM

rule tun ing . Engineered with dependable Solid State devices.

$

88

PANASONIC

AM RADIO

fM .-.f.! il OIIOrhtr f ltp iorwotclfrl poi'IO~ tO·
dio ......~. lt1 tv~-lo¥lnt lpht&lt;Kol ~-..~ ....;qw
Hll1•f tip -oh ond p(iflrl9 lltW CDtryi/19 (hOi"
COfiiiHio. 19 -kt up C1 redie lhot' l "jwll ti! Dhtly-

ohfodofitotiN."

HECK'S
REG.
$11 .88

TELEVISION

G. E.

St)88

Pl Pleasant Store On~

DEHUMIDIFIER
'

$79.88

t OE POIITA·COlOR Cha ..l•

t !: 1 y1cl AO C

• T.lo ... opin~ Oil&gt;l;&gt;io: Anlenmo
1 Dit·Ccnl Mikol M11ndl.•
I VMf ''P••·s.t" finelvni~9 CoPI!tol 1 T(i' DiotOfiOI, 60 tq . ln.
I Gf "In/lint" PiU11t1l v bt Sytllfll
e UHf Solid Stale'"""

e

~~oh

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Mw1ne 11,.0

$17988

HECK'S REG. $87.88

HEC«'S IIG, $198,88

Pl Pleasant Store

JEWEI.RY DEPT.
l

.WIIh Thh

K•loh•p
Lo¥m 18-eL

eo,... &amp;o""

sn.

"" 20.

&amp;oo4 ThN S.t., Jun• 26 If AJ.p

~

39C

I

Coupon

bGt;l;le

Goo~ Thn~

Limit One C.upon

V211

With
Thit

'

Sat.. Jun. 26 tat AI:P
Cou,Oft

li"'it

INLAND.Q¥NA,RONI.C:

o".

(•'

8-TRACK

Boneless Beef Roast

9~.

Cut From

Tender

Stlnl111 Wieners
&amp;oo~

FRESH PICNIC

BraUIIIhWIIIIr

Pork Rout

Post T1111

,,

With Thlt
CeMpoll Goocl

Thhl Set., June 26 If Alf'

SaUll£e

l-~lluM1

eo~,~
· FwlOl

. mop!

Chlppot.

-

Port ChoJII

Puk lo Pop

. lb.$139

BONELESS ENGLISH

Cllanoal Steaks
FRESH

fi'Jir Lep • •

~

Dl,.,-.n
C•p'n John

I

Stlud Bacon

'

. 1b·59'

"" 99'

2f••79C ~~

M-ol,

Ot

White • box

Coupon

Good Thrv S.t., June 26 et A&amp;f'
Lll'llit One Cau,.oR '

Ritht

Fresh, Yelow

Ripe

Sweet
Corn

California
Cantaloupes
0

C.IKomlo

2 =3&amp;
7-

W'rth Thl•
Coupon
&amp;6od

Fof IOc:

~~.h

&amp;loot .,b,

~....

. so.

C.pon

Goocl Thn~ S.t.. Jun• 26 et AlP
Umlt O~tt Coupo11

&amp;oocl

Valencia
Oranges

-1 o~r:79c. 3Pw$1 ° 1o. . sgc

Trull Cu Uners

li Srh

Htlly
'
Co•11t

This Cawi'Cift

&amp;oocl Thru S.t, Jun• 26
Limit

69C

Tllk
CGupon

lultoni 11-o&amp;.
""Vtrilfi•• jar

4fte
7-

~~=
Coupon

6oocl Thrv s.t.. Jun• 26 •• AlP
Limit OM Cou,on

Bir••re Awake

. . . .,4,

tNk ~

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. With
Th'

wah

lnlhllt
Nash1
•
Jar

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Coupo11

...

Goo4 Thru S1t., Ju111 26 et A&amp;P
llll'llt On. CoMpon "

~

~:~
C6UPDII

&amp;ood Thrv S1t., June 26 1f AJII'
limit On• Coupon

Swl• Chilli
FROZIN AlP

Oranp 1•1• '

Chun• You
Style S.vt

lsc

On
A111y

mounted tone tu ning con trol.

Slice• Swl• Ch1111

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...... s.,.

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Ttlit

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LlmltO.. c..,,..

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1.11..A With
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....

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e4·5pH d lu1 n1ablo
e 5Qr.d $10 .. ~tllormonc t

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• Rvo!l"d Pofy.t~~lt n, Co1t
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1

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JEWELRY IJEPT.

POLICE BAND RADIO

·

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D•f•rt•nt

15c Ofl

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~ord . Hi po~&lt;t

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~h &lt;D~Irol. MC , ft"ICopln'if On!tniiO. Sire• ~~ ~.9'· 1l "•3 -1!1 '',

•

S]488

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Thlt

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Good Thrv S.t., June 26 d AlP
. Limit OM Co'!pon

t

HECK'S REG. $44.96

78C

2517

GENERAL ELECTRIC
'
FM-AM PORTABLE

JEWEI.IY DEPT.

8•TRACK

TAPES
Top artists end top tunes!
Rock, Country &amp; Western
and Show Tunes. Choose
f rom o large assort·
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artists. Produced by

l ·band AM-fM .Aio, Polict
or ,1,( C~fltnt. Pwrh
'f*&gt;ktrl. rlidt , .... luninu,
bolltrit&gt;. fii..-nol on'-nna

&amp; S.W Uwr .A "C"

~til

WALKIE TALKIE

HECK'S
REG.

bat ·

bolTon band r.!Ktor. Twin
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to •tctl ... ond pw~ b~ll&lt;ln to trommil,
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ro• 1. r.olid nort cj•t ~••• r , io• u llfl rtceprlan, on 1f&gt;t bt&lt;l"' uonlll'll• ·

Only rwo

$2488

.,!on up 10

JEWELRY
DPET.

HECK'S REG. $34.96

JEWEliY DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$5.99

JEWElRY DEPT.

P-1791

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~
lr~ncl 2 !;.~
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6oocl Thrw S.t., Jvn16 11t A.IP
Limit o... Cou,.,.

PANASONIC CASSETTE

TAPE RECORDER

9ollery·operated totseite . Simple~ lever
c;ofl tro ls. Automat[&lt; ~ec~r ding le.,el con·
trol. Pop up couette• lor instant chonge.
Vertical or ho rt zonfgl apetotion. Micro phol'lt ond occenorie1 .

1Gc Off Any 1Z.U.

,.,.
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P!!Sil¥15

...... ! .... Sot" .._ 16 " A»
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• E.

EVEREADY
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RADIO
BATTERIES

-::

l

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• Simple to operolt . Slide in ~how!film , put on record,
h.r•n twi!(h ond prutol
• It'' o 2·speed phono too . Ploys ...en 12" lP'1
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HECK.'S REG. $33.88 ·
HECK'S RIG. $24.96

JIWII.IY /JilT.

~

EACH
HECK'S REG.
594 EACH·

oollt .

HECK'S
REG.
$15.88

JEWElRY IJEPT.

I' .

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PANASONIC
FM-AMCLOCK

GENERAL ELECTRIC

RADIO

1

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SHOW AND TELL

"

'.

~ 11
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$12.88

&lt;o•d , tctrpho,..

Coupon

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the leading man·
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PORTABLE RADIO
~t•hrr

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I

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With
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HECK'S REG. $15.81

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Sl1e
t.lb.
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Big 6" oval dynoc9u~t ic 1peohrs prod~ct a full
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I Wtl9~1 Clf.l, $ ~ovndr

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. Hl-LO

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$1377

7Ck
u- ·c.u~...

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3·SPlED

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fi'Ji•c Macle

ca ..•I

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RADIO

J

51.1,.,.

HECK'SREG. $19.97

2443

ep.r~oro ~

•

AUT'O TAPE PLAYER

HECK'S REG. $49.96

W'olll
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e 8uolt-lo ol3 APM R..:ord r.t.,rn~o

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ALL VARIETIES

• DrOll
rf I

Mick'ey's here to plo y yo1.1r favorite record1.
t Exclusive, Mickey M01.1$e tone a rm d1u ig n
t 4 -~peed tvmta ble ploys a ll size reco rd s
t Rugged, $tuft re$istant, washable, polye thylel'le
cobin1t
t &amp;ig 3 ~" dynomk speolcer
t Simple to operate, On/ 011 volume control
t Cry1tol o::ar tridge stylus

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REG.
$89.96

Limit One Cou,.,.

Good Thru Sat., Ju111 26 1t A&amp;P
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&amp;.,ocl Thru Set., June 26 •• A.,

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- 59'

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from

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it on ordinorv 119shligh t botteries or plug it int.o
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6ood fhn~ Set., June 26 1f AlP
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wnh

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pier.

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- A I ' P COUPONs?f•'T'
I

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1oo4 1yer pkr.

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IOINCH
PORTACOLO!l

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Stokely Golden Com ~;~ • • • 5=$1 00
Stokely Green Beans s~ • • • 5~S100
Stokely Fruit Cocktail • • • • 4=$1 00

FURNITURE .

The Antique White cabinet provides the smart
look of today . Enjoy sensitive re ce ption in

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Goocl Thrv S.t., June 26 d Alf'

•

5 ~~ 39C

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HECK'S
REGULAR
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Good Thru Sat., JuH 26th.
ol A&amp;~ - Limit One Coupon

PANASONIC

JEWELRY
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $59.96

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

Qakland 000 000 IOD- I 3 I
Minnesota
012 403 oox- 10 13 o
Hunter, Roland (4), Patterson
(6), Locker (7) and Duncan;
Perry (11 ·51 and Mltterwald.
LP- Hunter (10-5). HRs- Reese
2 (3rd &amp; 4th) , Oliva (171/1),
KIllebre-w (lith), Jackson
(16th).
.

Kan.City 201 201 ooo- 6 12 1
Chicago 080 100 o2x- 11 15 2
Drago, Burgmeler (2), York
~
(·4). f'.lltmorrls (6), Rooker (Bi
and May, Paepke (6), Br~dley,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver, . Johnson (61 and Egan. WP(7-6) . LP- Drago (7·31.
J o.h nny an d Eddl e of Bradley
HR- Melton (13th).
Bridgeman, Mich. and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Calli at Mil, ppd., rain
Patricia w:ere Sunday dinner
League
peals of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Phlla National
000 000 001- 1 6 I
Johll.lon.
Cincinnati 000 220 20x- 6 10 3
Reynolds, Champion (S) and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver
Mccarver
and family of Bridgeman, Mich. Bench. ; Nolan (5·71 ond
are "spending a few days .
vacation with her parents, Mr. New Yo.rk 001 100 Old- 3 10 1
000 000 002- 2 6 1
and Mra. Howard Thoma and Pittsbrgh
Williams, Frisella (9) and
Patricia.
Grote ; Nelson, Masse (3),
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell Veale (9), Giusti (9) and
WP- WIIIIams (3-1).
celebrated their 64th wedding Sangulllen.
LP- Nelson (1-21.
anniversary Sunday with a
cookout. There their children Montreal ooo ooo ooo- 0 3 0
famlll fri c1s d Atlanta
004 000 OOx- 4 7 1
and ·~·ir
w,.
es, en an
Renko, O'Donoghue (8) and
relatives attending.
Bateman; Reed (7-5) and King,
' Helen Johnson accompanied Boccabella (4). LP- Renko (7Mrs. Hamm to Columbus 61.
recenUy and she visited her 80n, Houston 001 003 ooo- 4 5 o
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray San Diego ooo ooo no- 2 8 2
Johnson also aunt and uncle,
Forsch, Gladdin~ 191 and
Edwards.
Arlin, Ke ley (8) and
Mr. and Mrs. Guemey Walker. Barton. WPForsch (3·1) . LP
' Mr. andMrs. EugeneHanlng, - Arlin (2-11) .
Rhonda and Ronald, were Chicago 000 000. ~ 0 3 0
Sunday vtsltors of Mr. and Mrs. San Fran ooo 001 lOx- 2 2 o
Brady Knotts, Terry, of King Jenkins, Tompkins (8) and
Hill
Cannizzaro ; Cumberland, John.
d
son (9) and Dietz. WPMr. an
Mrs. Eugene Cumberland (3-0) . LP- Jenklns
Thompson, Gina and Cyndla, (10-71 .
wereSundayvisitorsofMr.and St. Louis 110 121 ooo- 6 14 o
Mrs. Herman Warner.
Los Angl 300 001 IDO- 5 6 o
KaU, Charles, 'Kevin Knapp Carlton (11 -3) and McNert.
were Saturday evening vtsltors ney; Osteen. Moeller (51 , Pena
of their grandmother, Mrs. -l~l5 ~nd Ferguson . LP- Osteen
Lena Knapp of Langsville.
Mrs. S. A. Wyatt returned last
week where she is staying with and Mrs. Chase and Mr. and
her daughters in Columbus, Mr. Mrs. lA!o Smith.

$5.4.88

YOU SAVE 5519 WITH THE COUPONS BELOW!

2nd Game

W0rlfiI pen
·
•
.
N "" N.()•:n
U::S

-

compete in a 72-hole tour·
nsment against other candi·
dates at a site in North
Carolina, Dlinois or California.
U ·he is among the low scorers
in that totirnament, he moves
on to the school at the PGA
National Golf Club at Palm
Beach Gardens, Fla., Oct. 8-16.
At the school, candidates get.
two days of classroom lectures

These, roughly, are the rules
set down by the PGA's
tournament player division
under Conmtissloner J.oe Dey:
A player who hopell to join
the pro tour must apply for
admittance to the qualifying
school for approved tournament
players. The application documents must inClude character references from three golf
professionals, personal liability
insurance for two months in the
fall and assurance thst he has
the financial means to support
him for one year on !he tour.
The application fee is $50. By
signing it, he becomes a golf
professional though he might be
able to regain amateur standing
at a .later date.
The candidate then must

Low scorers in thst six rOI!lld .
tournament will be handed,
approved player cards.
~
But such a card is not an'
automatic qualiflcailon for '
those weekly tour tournaments. '
For a fledgling pro, all a nrd·:
does is to pennit him to'
compete in Monday tests with ·
the other "jackrabbit" for the
few spots in a tournament field '
not already occupied by an.:
established playing pro.

I
.

lh'-n IO l •t ol 'M onG AM , wi th big ·•p.ahr r o wn ~ , ttl full . foolut t~
cloclk-olcmrr ' Y"'"' con .. ft;.~ct. 100~ • S.OIId·r•olt Cll(l/ll dtt i9&lt;1 I
llo~ttd Cloc~ Dlol • .ii· iron t·fir.o' d~no"'l( IPfllk•r I ClocO 1p1hr111
ftotwtt Skr111btr Switch and WuOt•la Mu•u • • MuiiC I. AI"'"' t l uilt.
in AfC far rllrift·lt" FM a !hilt C:a"'~'" "''"'" • Awl ol!llllif Volumt
C•n!&lt;ol,

JEWElRY
DEPT.
HICK'S RIG.

$26.96

88

FM/AM clock radio in Antique
White . Features radium tipped
hands. Automatic music woke·up .
Slide-rule tuning . FM/ AM selector
switch . Built·in FM and AM onten·
nas. Solid-State engineertd.

HICK'SREG •
$29.96

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IOT09

ZEBCO 2490 ROD AND·REEL
"America's most popular combination". In·
eludes: Zebco 600 Reel and 3300 Rod . • All
metal constr~ction . • Smooth wide-range drag.
• Complete with line. e 6 ft. two piece fiber
glass rod.

$ 88

WALKER
· Heavy duty dnd big game fishing! Rein forced spool! Ftee spool action by shift
. lever! Star handle for smOoth and wide
drag control. Anti·backlosh control by
1ens i c:~n adjusting screw on left side
plate center! Easy opera1i ng click but·
'ten!

. SPIN CAST

ROD &amp;REEL COMBINATION

$ 99

HECK'S REG.

ncn

HECK'#~

$11.97

...

( .: .· ·-~
.

HECK'S
REG.
' $10.99 .

SPORTS
DEPT.

RE§_._j_6_.99

SPORTS
DEPT.

SI'DITS

BLAZON

WHIRLY-BIRD

•
ROn

TDIEIT 01

TIE
ILAC:KWOOJIIROTBERS

THE ' BEST OF" THE MUSIC AND ARTISTS YOU LIKE BEST ON

OUARm

$

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RCA, King of Nashville recording studios, bring_Lr_ou this exclusive offer
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. Till! llt;ST Of

TOMMY DOilSE\'

INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING FAMOUS ARTISTS:
*CONNIE SMITH
* FLOYD CRAMER
*PORTER WAGONER
* AL HIRT
*EDDY ARNOLD.
*TOMMY DORSEY
*CHET ATKINS
*HENRY MANCINI
*BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
*CHARLIE PRIDE
*SAM COOKE
*JIM REEVES
*DOLLY PARTON
*GEORGE BEVERLY SHEA
~ ·~'· ... ·~1r-GLEN MILLER
*ELVIS PRESLEY !(,"'
1

!:

'

.

•

~~

Super comfort constru~tion of padded
vinyl with. strong stiiching and stylish de·
sign. Built-in arch supoort and sure grip
tread design.

Thrilling merry-go-round with push-pull
exercise for youngsters of all ages. Can
be.operated by one child. Nylon bearings.

VICTOR

New model 33 lighter in weight and quieter in action. Exclusive Zebco fitted thumb
control. Weight 8 Y:z ounces. Complete with
approKimately 125 yds. of h lb . lest mon -

HECK'S REGULAR
124.88 -

SHELLED HOOKS
6111 PACK

HECK'S
REG.
$11.97

TOY DEPT.

~ ·

-

with

•

ACCESSORY
SAFE

~pin

on lant~ rn bose
to keep spo res saf e
ond always hand y.

s1'9

PACK
;til'h\

HECK'S REG.

FLOYD CRAMER

8'
SPORTS ·
DEPT.

SPECIAL GROUP

HECK'S REG.

15.99 -

~~~~~~~ SPORTS~DEPT.

FISHING
FLOATS

ACCESSORY SAFE

Sn ap~

THE BEST OF' ''''""

ssaa

ofilament line .

Cast Reel with stainless steel spin·
nerheod, positive drag ad justment, con·
tinuous anti·reverse, stainless steel line
guide prevent ~ line fray , complete with
approKimately 75 yd s. of 10 lb . te•t
monofilament line.

HECK'S
REG.
$2.99 .

' $ '1 '99

SPORTS DEPT.

1 TO 21NCH

4FOR25&lt;

WINCHISl'IR •

22 LONG RIFLE

SHELLS
lOBOXES
IN CARTON

$799

HECK'S REG.
14' EACH

si'OiTs··' ·~

HECK'S REG. $3.88

DEPT.

10-ST .
11-ST
.

#k

VICTOR
THE BEST Of

tr•\'"'"'

. PORTER WAGONER ·

The Bes t Df

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"' \'' '"'

GEORGE BEVERLY SHEA

U-2 SNOOPER .
HECK'S REG. 87'

SPORTS DIPT.

I
.

SI'ORTS DEPT.

6

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!:!!)

Colgate

c

HECK'S
REG.
$1.18

MFP

'

3 1/c oz.

AQUA VELVA
AFTER . SHAVE

SPINNING SAVINGS ON HITS FROM CAPITOL!
Full sound stereo from hard rock to country and western or.~ the Capitol
label. The same exclusive low price and only at HECK'S!

9&lt;

HECK'S
REG.
49'

BRECK
SHAMPOO

3oz. ·
. HECK'S
REG.
94'

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPIRTS
DEPT.

10 oz.
NOXZEMA .

WILKINSON

SKIN CREAM

'lo

COSMETIC /JIPT. .

STAINLESS BLADES
S's

6.5 oz.

APRIL SHOWERS
DEODORANT tALC

HECK'S REG. ·

62'
lDSMETil
DIIT.

59&lt;

6 1/c oz.

EDGE

SHAVE CREAM ·

44(
HECK'S REG.
74'

lDSMIT/l
DEPT. ·

· 46~
HECK'S REG.
$1.28

DOUBLE EDGE

HECK'S
REG • .
$1.28

NORMAL, DRY &amp; OILY

59#

COSMRIC IIPT.

HECK'S REG. $1 .62

HECK'S REG. TO $1.78

DEPT.

oz.

JOE'S
FLIES
HECK'SREG.
78'

COSMETIC

. . 15

*

$127

HECK'S REG.
$1.16

COSMETIC DEPT.

INCLUDING THE. FOLLOWING
POPULAR NUMBERS
.
AND ARTISTS

* DAVE MASON'&amp; CASS ELLIOTT ,* BLOODROCK 3
*MERLE HAGGARD "HAG"
*FIGHTING SIDE OF ME-HAGGARD
*BEST OF HAGGARD
i ANNE MURRAY .
* OKIE FROM MUSKOGEE
GRAND FUNK LIVE ALBUM
*GLEN CAMPBELL'S GREATEST HITS

$127

'

66&lt;

COLGATE TOOTHPASTE
UP

oz.

JOHNSONS

SPOON

SIZES: 5-7-9

MEPPS SPINNER

59&lt;

.

R·APALA
LURES
e

COSMETIC

HECK'S REG.
991

DEPT.

lD$MET/C DEPT.

15cc 'h OZ.

VISINE
EYE DROPS

vl

["""'J
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7ft"
:w

. 14 oz.

DIAL
DEODORANT
AITI·"ISPIIAIT

c
HECK'S REG.
$1.24

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

lDSMET/C DEPT.

lDSMITilii9T.

........
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OPEl DAILY
IOTO 9

OPEl DAILY
IOTO 9

PRICES IN EFFECT

OPIIIAiY

OPEl lAlLY

1!»109

1010. 9

.

UGH SUNDAY, JUNE 27, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST~
LADIES'

TODDLERS'

HOT
PANTS

PAJAMAS
WITH BUTTON
OR SNAP·ON
CROTCH

Polyester knit HotPants
with a pull-on waist,,
and cuffed bottoms .
Pastel colors. Sizes 614. .
Unequalled performance in on econo·

HECK'S
REG.

$1.48

HECK'S REG. $5.88

ClOTHI/IC
DEPT.

ClOTHINC DEPT.

ODDLERS'

BABY DOLL PAJAMAS
2 piece baby doll
pajamas for the tiny
tot in assorted print·
ed designs. Permo ·
nent press fabric.

'INFANTS'

2-PIECE PAJAMAS
Boy or girl style with
snap crotch. Sizes 12
to 24 months.

$122 .
HECK'S REG.
$1.68

ClOTHING DEPT.

GIRLS'

HOT PANTS

HECK'S REG. $1.48

i

Cuffed 'style in assorted prints and
solid colors. Sizes 7-14 and 3 to 6X

REG.

HECK'S REG.

The latest in fashion with long point collars.

Permo Press . Several styles to choose from in
solid co lors and prints. Sizes 32 to 38.

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

TUCKER PLASTIC
3 QT.

LETTUCE CRISPER

44(

64

DOWNY

HOUSEWARE

85

oz.

OVEN

LIP PITCHER

Works on either electric or
gas stove.

18.88

BASEMENT
PAINT

ClOTHING
DEPT.•

•

HECK'S
REG.

7(

66(

HECK'S
REG.
~')~-?.:;JJ

$1.09

$1 .44

HOUSEWARE

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

DEPT.

l

PITCHER
'h

1/2

· NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

TWIN

$

.

GRAss·
SEED

•
Pl Pleasant Store

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

On~

Fine quali1y lawnmower
blades . If you ' ve nicked
and dulled yours, thi s is a

.

--~ ···:·~ =~~ -.::.:·:: :~~~-·
0

.great buy.

• •.• ::·':".;.. __

$28.8

r.nu.·)·(§[4) ·

,..111

t~lsiJit

SPEtiAL OFFER

• '

~
- ·· ·.·
1

~ ~ 1 .,_

HECK'S REG.
$ 3•99

~i'

\ ..........

HECk'S
REG,

99 1

•

· IIOUSIWAIEDIPT.

HECK'S
REG.

$2.99

99&lt;
' 1,

_.]

c:

\~-. NA:::,~RE

~
..... ~&gt;4&lt;· · -·•. •&gt;•"• --~-- ..._. ...-

2-GALLON

WESTLEY'S

ROCKET MOTOR OIL

BLECHE
WHITE
• WHITEWAll TIRE CLEANER

· 2 GALLOII
C:AII

WIPER BLADE REFILLS

• Top quality • Tokes ae«:ond1 ro
ctlonge e Self cleaning, will nol
trop ice or dirt e Sixes 15", 16" &amp;
18"

t--:======--11111!1
1'\i!i ~
,•

.

; -;,~~:019'

. . :. '"'~'~'&gt;

.•

) \¥ ~

C·l.OTHES BAR

66#
1
,.

CD-2 OIL TIEATMEIT
Two blends: one for high mileoge cars
that burn oil and one for low milecige
cars th at don't burn oil.

77(
HECK'S REG.
$1.18 '

HECK'S REG.

77•

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

/lAID WARE DEPT.

t ... ll

F;tsf, lla croulheback .. at
and O"oches to the standard
clothes kook, ,

. 48(

$144

HECK'S RIG. $1.24

..... ,....

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

BASKETBALL SET
The lttll rings each time basket is mode. Complete
with hoop, net and 6" basketball .

HECK'S
REG.

. 99 1

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.

CASSEROLE
HECK'S
REG.

$1.19

$2.99
TOYDEPT.

88(

OR VALVOLINE
lOW-40 MOTOR OIL

RUBBER
CAR
MATS
Heavy rubb e r
fl oor mats . Full
auto

4;

AUTOMOTIVE4
.
1/EPT.
I

"

HICK'S RIG. 59c

across front and rear. Assorted colors.

FRONT .. .. .. .. •

QT•

REAR ...........

$3,22
$2.22

POWER SUBMARINE

UM in tub or pooL Power-sub UM5 a potenled
design principle to di..., , turfoce, crLI Ist. Sell ·propelled by soft power fuel pellet~.
·

HECK'S REG.
$1.88

$133

TOY DEPT.

.
MAnEL

ASSORTED BARBIE DOLL CLOTHES

s1_16

HECK'S
REG.
$1.58

TDYDEPT.
RUBBER BAND POWERED

WITH LOCK
HANDLES

$ 66

lj

RING A BELL

11"
BABY

TRAliSOGRAM

FEDERAL GLASS

IN

8"ROUND

HIGH
CHAIR

SET

8·cALGARBAGE
DISH DRAINER
&amp; DRAIN BOARD SET
'

Heovy gouge steel with baked
enamel grey finish • Eoty to
assemble, tosy to toke down
. , . nail tleods posilioned for
easy remo¥ol and storage.
(NECESSARY lUMBER NOT
INClUOEO).

HAIDWARE DEPT.

llll toiOnl

PLASTIC

PLASTIC

SAW HORSE BRACKETS

.

LAWN MOWER REPLACEMENT
BLADES

77(

NOT
EXACTLY AT
PICTURED

HARDWAII DEPT.

$2488

HECK'S REGULAR $36.88

41b. BAG
HECK'S
REGULAR
' $1.58

GALLON

.

25 LBS.

Heck's Reg. $1.55

GALLON
HARDWARE DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

TURN TABLE

$233

KENNER

39 1 '
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG •
$1 .19

MACDOWEll

QUART

HECK'S REG.

$1.18

88(

oz.

Choice of 10 modern colors plus
two white.

3-Piece picnic set. Table and two matching
benche s. Rustic 2 in . thick redwood ...
rounded corners, Weother resistont.

HARDWAIE
DEPT.
12

VINYL PAINT

PICNIC TABLE SET

lllJIDt ....

COVERED
CASSEROLE

GALLON SIZE

~~ REG.

PAINT BRUSH SET

HECK'S

$333
3 PIECE SOLID REDWOOD

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

2 112 QUART COVERED

77

5-PIECE

$219

FEDERAL GLASS ·

TU(:KER PLASTIC

HAIDWARlDEPT.

HDUSEWARE
DEPT.

SPONGE MOP

HECK' S
REG.

HECK'S REG~ $1.99

-- $.6.44

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

DUST MOP

HECK'S

GALLON
NAIDWAIE DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$1.44 -

NYLON

$148

Beautiful and waterpr9ofs. Equally perfect inside, outside,
above and below the sudace.

FIX

OUR VERY BESTJ Equol to or exceeds
any w~ll paint sold by anyone! Fully
guaranteed. ]6 beau tif ul Decorator
Colon plus White. Paint in the morning,
move bock in the afternoon.

T.V. WIRE

SURE DRY WATERPROOFING

FLAT

FEEDING SET

$1188

100FT.

·_ $433
.

HECK'S PREMIUM
VINYL PAINT

HECK'S REG. $17.66

.

16 oz.

FEDERAL GLASS

1

ors.

$]3~

(
HECK'S REG.

ENAMEL

HECK'S REG.
$4.97

The Tiny Tot exerci ser hos o
poten tAd seat !hot holds the
baby safAiy in place . No
sno ps or metal ports to injure
the baby. The (Ombinotion of
safety spring and sturdy cord
mo~es for easy adjustment.

BABY

Point Pleasant Store On~

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

OLD ANCHOR

channels.

A high gloss, durable porch and floor
finish for oil wood and previ ously
painted conceite surfaces. Great for
lawn furniture .. , anwhere you f!eed a
tough, hord Qloss finish . Choice of col-

EXERCISER

PITCH-BACK

$1.59

HECK'S REG. $6.77

TINY TOT ·

NO. 1901

HECK'S REG.

GALLON

HECK'S
REG.
$2.48

ClOTHING DEPT.

$ 33

$433 .

2GALLOI

ClOTHING DEPT.

PLUS FREE 1 7 oz. SIZE

HECK'S
REG.
69'

Smart a nd stylish ... these shorts feature a
pull-on waist and stitch crease. Polyester-cotton blend shorts are availa ble in so lids,
checks a nd ploids.
Sizes 8-18.

$
HECK'S REG . $4 .8 8

oz.

KING SIZE

JAMAICA SHORTS

· H.CK'S
PORCH &amp; FLOOR

-

HECK'S REG. $2.48

$

HOUSEP
WHITE ONLY

LADIES'

$166

$17.88

u.Ja

Sleeve less styles with jewel neckline . Pastel colors.
Sizes S-M-L.

SLEEVELESS SHIRTS

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S

KNIT TOPS

LADIES'

ClOTHING DEPT.

BASS
WITH LINER AND PAD

LADIES' NYLON

i
'

HECK'S
ACRYLlC LATEX ·

my antenna series! The Color Master
difference skows in color and black and
white. Ruggedly built to serve for years
to come, the Color Moster Serifu has
unique features to boost gain where it's
mOst needed for Deok 11eception on all

1 1/z

QUART LOAF OR
FEDERAL GLASS

UTILITY PAN

59&lt;
HECK'S REG. 99'

IIOISIWAI.E DEPT.

;J liz QT, COVERED

CASSEROLE
\

HECK'S RIG.
$1.39

99

1101/SIWMI"'"

CAKE DISH
HECK'S
REG.

88 1

c

$158
HICK'S RIG.
$2.12

TOY
IEPT.

Ready to fly , 3 •tyles from which to choose.

JR. GOLF

DOLL .

FEDERAL GLASS

AERO

RUBBER

ALLIGATOR OR
FANG SNAKE
HECK'S
REG.
84' .

rOY,T.

CHOIC.

68(

·'

77(
HECK'S REG.
$1.08

$118
PLASTIC
\

DUNE BUGGY
HECK'S
REG.

99'

HECK'S
REG.
$1.~6

74~

TOY DEPT.
TOY DEPT.

TOY
,T.

�•
#

.. ,

•
l CAN SELL 'IE

SOME FUST·HAND
GOSSIP FER
FIFTY CENTS,
LOWEEZ.V '

THANI&lt;V JEST TH'
SAME, GRANN'/
CREEPS. BUT I GIT
ALL riN .FUST- HAND
GOSSII' FROM ·
ELVINEV

BEFORE
IT HAPPENS?

We SiiJGl£ GIRl.,.

STOP PAYING RENT ~nd own a house with
your rent moneY.

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

See

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

GUN SHOOT, Sunday. June COLONIAL maple stereo-radio
Insured-Experienced
27th, 1 p.m. Assorted met!•·
combination, AM-FM radio,
Work Guar1nteed
Racine Gun Club.
four speakers. 4-speed In6-22- ~lc
termixed ' changer, separate . L------,....:-~
controls. Balance 578.60. Use
our
budget terms. Call m .
Help Wanted
7085.

------:--

Pomer~y ioter~ Co.

6-20-61c

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMERO". OHIO

MODERN walnut stereo-radio ·
combination, dual .volume
control. ~ speakers. 4-speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $63.70. Use our time
payment plan. Call 992-7085.

.Ra~iator Service

'

C!Jm.plete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endlooder Work

15.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

6-20-6tc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

. . BlAmNAifS
,Ph_. 992-2143
6-22-3tc

.

.I

Pomero~

46116.

6·22·12tp

DEHUMIDIFIER tor
basem.ent . Phone 992-7645.
6-22-31c

-----------PAl NT DAMAGE . 1971 zJg.zag

sewing machines. Still in
original cartors. No at.
tachments needed as our
controls are buill-in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on bullons,
monograms, and blind hem
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
6-22-61c

2 BEDROOM house at Rock - - - - - - - - Springs. Furnished or un- COAL, limestone . Excelsior'
fur~shed . Call992-6887 after 5 Salt Works, E. Main St.,
P· ·
6_17 .tfc Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc

Annual Fish Fry arid
Trap Shoot Thursday,
June 24 at the Pomeroy
Gun Club.
Rain or shine. '

TRAI~ER for rent. 2 bedroom SIX-MONTH-old Hereford bull.

In Pomeroy . Phone 9'12-5623.
6-22-6tc

.

THERE will be 8 hy1nn sing at
the Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church. Sunday, June 27, 2
p.m . Everyone welcome.
6-22-5tc
- - -- -- - - J WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by any
one other than 111Y•elf. Signl!jl
Delbert W. Fridley.
.
6-22-31p

THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY,
Plaintiff,

•••

No. 14,117

LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant to an order of sale
Issued by the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio , 1
will otter for sale ~~ public
auction on the lOth . day of Jul y,
House Steps, In the VIllage of
Pomeroy , County of Me igs,
State of Ohio, the follow ing

described real estate:
Situated in the Villag e of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio : Being LOt No . 502
In , the Village of Pomeroy ,
Counly of Mejgs, ond Stale of
Ohlo,andther,lsalsocon"Yeyed
herewith, el l rights wlth 'respect
to the UH of the sidewalk bet .
ween Lots Noo. 502 and 503 as
was transferred 10 the Grantor

herein .

Reference O.e&lt;ls: Vol. 227,

Pagit917,and VoL l68, Page 371 :
· Detd Records,ottMh elgks County,
Ohio. Being ur er nown IS
206
Butter.nut
Avenue,

Aiumirium·
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

4

8 for $1.00

The
Da~lt_~ntinel
111 Court St.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS 1

COURT OF MEIGS
·
COUNTY, OH I O
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;

'SAVINGS COMPANY,

Plaintiff,
c~l· RLES ROBERT
AL E

L NSWORTH, ET AL .,

Defendants.

LEGAL NOTIC~. I~.tll
. Pursuanl to an order of sale
1ssued by the Court of common
P~ea s of Meigs County , Ohio, 1
W1ll offer for sale at public
t'
~~7'1 ' 0 ~ ~ 0n. the lOth day of July,
• a · 00 ~ .M. at t~e Court
House Steps, 'n lhe VII loge ·of

SAVE UP to one half. ,Bring 1969 BUICK LeSabre. 2-dr.
your sick TV to Chuck • T9 hardtop , power steering,
All Qur First Lint
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.. power brakes. air, 18,000
Pomeroy.
rnlles. Excellent coodlllon.
_ __ _ _ _ __~_-2_J.Ifc Phone 992-2288.
6-3-lfc
REGISTERED Arablon Stud
Buy 1 lira at regular priceService. Klraff No. 050481. 1967 CAMARO, 6 cyt., standard, get 2nd !Ire •'
Rich Raffles bloOd lines. Fee
lllustsell betore July 1. Phone ·
sso. Phoni 992-6880, E. J. 11111, 915·3503
after 5.
,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-13-121C
6-23-3lp
--'-~---~
· ~r~
POMEROY ~
•
•
J, W. ClttfY,Mir~
Eibploymerit Wanted·
1
-lft·Uil
,·· .
. . . I
BABYSifTING, . nurse's aide,
cltanlng, lronlngs done In my '
LOGAN FIRE and safety '
home. Phone 2~} -221~.
equipment. Sales and service.
"
6-22-3tc
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simp:
All typos and sizes of fire
__ ._
.
son apent a ,._In Baltimore
i extinguishers. Spacial prices
on extinguishers for boats,
with Mr. and Mrs. · Brian For Sale
.
campers,
homes . Also
and cblldrtn.
USED LUMBER
II
discount prices on other sizes.
Phone
992-6~18.
' a s izes .
Mr.anctMrs.AlfredCrowand
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
18 St P
daughten, Nancy llld !lecky, ________6;,·_:·
992-3821 . Owner Dwight
Logan .
spenl the weellllld ln Pllnn· AMPLIFIER. 1970 model
aylvanla 1o Villi t.ln. Q-olr'a Ftnder ~~~dm..ter. l!xaWtt, Mrs. Mabel Wllflt•, who
Cllltnt condltlort. 200 watts
'
tlell&lt; 100 walls llMF . Phone
has aulfend a llroke and II a
949-4561.
·
pallenl in' the W11bin1ton
6-23-3tc
Milici' NUI'IIIIIItlale.
"NEV"'A •"""
lhl
1•
Mr. __. ...., o.w. •w,.lE
u.... •nrm•nt · I~•
- -· -• 1
It," NY uter&amp; of llue ~ttl
spenllbewl' 'wllbMr.alld carpet clienor. · Atfll electric
M
...... ••n4 sheml*fr $1. llaktr !'ur·
ra. .,._ -pton •
nlturt Cl)lllpany;
·,

f4c"WINSOR
·ttBUDDY

1

0

101

llll••

..

.

«CHAMPION
,-jr_VAN DYKE

,.. AUO
DOUBLE-WI DES

~EE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

.

"

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Re-Charge

MEMORIAL BRIDGJ' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Plus
Parts

W'IKE UP ~RI614T AND

_...

~

PRICE

Racine

SimPaon

w• - · ........

l=

••lt.

12' • 14' · 24' •' WID£

Blaettnar's

•

__.

I _.:__ ..__-._ _ ,_-17-flc

~EE

YUU IN

TH E MORNI NG !

&amp;TART ~!':EIN&lt;;&gt;

THE TCWN!

ALLEYOOP

THE~RN
:t 'S,I.Ie&gt;,

Virgil B._
TEAFORD

"'"'

IJGA
~

SR.

~

FIFS

,

Me!

44. Finished
ACROSS
1. Proapoctlve 45. Coloring

MOLENE'S?

father

expert

5. - - Pr!ze
10. Sprightly
12. Foolloh
13. ot one's

DOWN
1. Lord's

birth

U. Terrachoice

'

'

,

.

. '··

n H•' Caldwell
'

G
.
erdo

I

to

tale, with

Beer~

'The'"
(2 wds.)

oheba

Un1cromblethese foor Jumblet,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary worda.
33. HOI!ery

tlon

thread
M.Grln

25. DleUn·
gullhed

o! Ill.
2:1. Place In
Ge.....

ln&amp;'IY

Noah

man
(abbr.)

.\ I ,'i'l'f..'l'

24. Word with
bellum or.

WHAT UNDclrrAKING 15&gt;.

U&lt;le
25. Wanderer
27. Wrath
28. Hot place
29. Bedouin

THER COtNICTEP HIMSE(f,
(0NG ~E FORE THo COURT-

MARTIAL PID. WHAT &lt;Il l F D
HIM IN PRISON,M(i~s-

~~'i 1 ·"~:';1.;;·1)+---r,....;:l?"'"('
V
V "V 'J

~"=:=::\=·::L~:=::::h~A~~,;l~o~•;n~o;•t~ed~b~y

SO. Thrice
(mua.)

31. Allar
CO!IIItella.
t!On

1

--.. !'·-

I ltll ... l 0"tl&gt;o&lt;ot.;. lo....

39. ll'omlllln•
ouftlx
U . Annapolla

end for

29. Land .
meaaure
tt~al un·
derotandlng 31. Computed

%1. Neighbor

l 11':-H.O(;

mock-

26. Exceeded
1:1. Journey's

i2W41.)
8.lntema-

20.8eadog

~tg')i'j@ThJ]; lkJ M&gt;•••'IJ -.J , _

2". Literary
collec·

5. :More acute
6. Palestinian
plain
7. Beaeh
a.ttraoUon

(abbr.)

Now arronre the clrclttlletten
to form the aurpriH a~~~wer, ~
the above cartoon.

[ ~~-~llli~ "[ 1 XI I J" (X ll J

32. Mllehle!·
mall:er
35. Garmont
part
'
ae. German

·

IJomohh·-. ALIAS

\ l' •lt'f'•l o" •,.

IU'IIele
31. Be Ill

1·1 \'\t

I An ~ y, o• r:

t '"

lA••""'• tnmorrn.,.·t

ODIUM

NI~IL'(

SAILOA

l1u111l tml1111•d tl•iup:IC - NAILS

I~

38. Interweave
4o. lJ!vert
42. $Inger,

I

'

property
2.Spe11bound
3. Andersen

nota

pilot
18. Chickenhearted one
19. Judaism,
e.g.

In compliance with the prov1s1ons of Section 5721.02
Revised Code of Ohio, there will be ·published in this
ne'wspaper, a list of the delinquent real estate in Meigs
County, Ohio, upon which the taxes, assessments and
penalties or either have not been paid for two consecutive
tax paying periods.

1.

11 . Eclltatlc
17. Ont.,

4. Gulllo'a

16. Cert&amp;ln

~Vo TO~ P GALEE THAT HER FA-

•

9. Hero'•
· beloved

· Que ..
etc.
23. From

l!i. Make a

' - - --1..

If delinquent taxes are paid, in full or arrangements
made with the. County T-reasurer to pay not' later than 48
hours before said publication, the parcel will be removed
from the delinquent list before advertising.
.
,·.
'
The delinquent land list will be . ready tor publication
after July 20, 1971.

Yeotenla1'1 (ley.....uolel TO PUT lT BLUNTLY, YOU
CAN'T GIIIT ANYWHIIIIIIIl UNLilSS YOU KNOW WHJ:IIB
TO BTAJ\T J'ROM: AND WHIIlllll TO GO.- LIONilL BAR•
RYMOlllll
&lt;0 1111 XJor ,_,. IJ041~lt, hlo.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

.TERRY

Metvscou~~;~g~fl ~f:~:::~~:ld~Mr:lbe:·~-~~~P~r-•~nesm~~-:~rh~~~n,~.w'"~· ~·~':"~·~··~·:j~;~;~;;~J!~~~~~~;~;~~=;~~M~~~~~~~p~:~
-~~~~b~J~~~~-~~di~~lG~N'~~L~
1612.9, ta, 23, 30,lt

WE UNDER·
STAND'-DEAR .

EARLY TOMORRCM', PICK
'rOJ UP HERE~ AND

AUTO body repairs and pain· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ling. Free estimates. All work Reasonable rates. Ph. 446- ~782,
guaranteed . Phone 1-667-3807. Gallipolis. John Russell,
. PHONE 992-2143
.
6-22-3lp Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-lfc
INTERIOR and exterior house
Real Estate For Sale
painting . Also general EXPERT lawn mower and
tiller repair. Free pickup and
Phone .1-667-3807 .
repairs.
HOUSE - 16~2 Lincoln Heights.
' 6-22-31p delivery . Warren's Mower
Call Danny Thompson, 992Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
2196.
992-7357.
INTERIOR,
exterior
deco•ator
5-26-tfc
5-18-lfc
and barn' roofs. Phone 7425683.
HOUSE . 1640 Lincoln His .,
6·20-301c
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc
•
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
3 BEDROOM brick home.
license?
Call
992operator's
Choice location. in Middleport.
2966.
Seen by appointment only.
6-15-lfc
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
5-7-lfc
CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING .
delivered right to your
24' ACRE farm Long Bottom,
Dick Vaughan. · phone 9'12·
pro/eel. Fast and easy. .Free
with or without farm
337~. Dale Lillie. phone 992est mates . . Phone 992 - 328~.
· machinery . House with 3 6346.
Goeg leln Ready-Mix Co. ,•
bedrooms, dining room, living
6-23-301c
Mlddl~port, Ohio.
room , l 'h baths,, enclosed - - - - - - - - - - . - ~· ~·
· -! ;,!"f
•' 1 '. ~ 6·"'1fc
~ If.
back porch . .wall to wall
•
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
FREE ESTIMATE on general
awning, storm windows and Real Estate For Sale
remodeling, roofing and
storm doors . City water .
painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
Selling due to Ill health. Phone HOUSE In Syracuse, 2 lots,
a .m. 10 6 p.m.
6-9-JOic
61~ -985- 3938 .
·
51,800.00. Phone 9'12-2806.
6-23-30ip
6·21 -6tc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
-------------~----Complete Service
Phone 9~9- 3821
SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
Racine. Ohio
basement, 133 Butternut Ave. ,
Crill
Bradford
just walking distance from
5·1-tfc
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Drive, Columbus. Ohio. phone
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
237-4334, Columbus.
662-3035
.•
' 5-9-lfc
~ BrOker
2-12-lfc
•
.
I
110 Mechanic Street
Pof'r!tr9Y, Ohio
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
57 ACRES - Nice country
home.
Call Guy Nelgler,
home, modern bath and
Racine,
Ohio.
6GaEost
Main
kitchen, 4 bedrooms with
Pomeroy
7-31-tfc
closets. Gas forced air furnace , Drilled well , small POMEROY
FAMILY RALPH ' S CARPET - Upbarn . Only $10,000.00.
HOME. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
holstery Cleaning Service .
garden space, garage, lot
Free estimates. Phone
RUTLAND - · 2 bel:lroom
fenced, apartment In lower
Gall
ipolis 446-0294.
'
paneled home, bath, utility
part of house. ALL IN GOOD
3-12-lfc
room. large lot, fenced . Low
CONDITION $10,000.
iaxes. Asking $9.599.99. '
AWNINGS, storm ·dOOrs and
TUPPERS PLAINS 1 windows~ carports.
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms.
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story home,
marquees. aluminum siding
bath , large liv ing, dining
7 rooms, bath. 4 bedrooms,
and
rail ing. Call A. Jacob,
room , nice side porch ,
porches, garage, well water,
sales
rer,resentatlve. For free
garage, fenced yard. Asking
city water, A NICE PLACE
estlma
es. phone Charles
$10,500.00. Want to make an
TO LIVE . Just 58.900.
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
offer.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
DRIVE-IN - LOCATED IN
5-27-lfc
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
SMALL COMMUNITY AND
frame home, bath, forced air
ON STATE ROUTE - lh- BACi(HOE AND DOZER work.
furnace, nice front porch,
cludes all equipment and
Septic tanks Installed. George
basement, drilled well and
building.
INTERESTED
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2~78 •
nice lot afLelart . Storm doors
parties call for price and
4-25-lfc
and
windows .
Asking
showing.
$7,000.00.
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
OUR ONLY BUSINESS IS
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
THINK 'BIG.-INVEST IN REAL
REAL ESTATE - CALL
992-2522.
ESTATE.
TODAY
6-10-tfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
HENRY CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTOR
O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER992-2378
Ollice 992-2259
VICE. Phone 949-4.151.
6-20-61c
Residence 992-2568
· S-30-lfc

UNICO TIRES

Pomeroy, OhiO.
Terms of Solo: Cash for not
less than two -thirds of the ap praised value, and sublec.t to
thellen tor reatostate tam for . ~ °a"r:r~r· ~?~." 1 fhe 01 ~~~s,
0
1971 .
described real estate ·
!'roperty approloed at
Situate In the v'·u
t
$180000Pomero Co t 0fMI age - o
' .~.?""'Robert
C· Hartenbach
Y number
elgs, and
··
Sheriff of· State oJ Y'Ohio un
: Lois
two
2
3
I'Migo¢ounty,Ohlo 1 &gt; on · three 1 &gt; 'In Bradflelds
W 2.f, 16.23, 30, 51 ~~~~t~~~Jo :~~e~\1 vt~! ~~'!'1 e~0l.;
lli••ll!!~
olher mlnerola under so ld tol•
and tho right to mine the same
wllhoul lnlerfatenco wllh lhe
'"~':,~~Inca Deed : vol. 2H,
f'age 437, Deed Records Meigs
County, Ohio . Being further
known as 16 Anne Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio .
,
Termo ol Solo : Cash for not
,••.• than two-thirds Of the •P·
Prtlstd valut, ond lubiect to chlldNB Ia lehiiMU.
'
6-2Htc
the lien for real est1te tl)(tl fOii
ui- uc" 1·...a ._....., .m.."l
1971.
•
, . Properly oppratsad al eevtl'll i!QI Ia Alnll. Her BUILDINC L.OTS tor .
11 soo oo
1
NIWiy aJiproyld In rttlrlctld
' · · Roberl C. Haltenboch, .iller, Mrl. ,.._ ,.._,.~eo
hoU.Ing dlltrlct, ,._,

•

. J6n X23" X.009

Big Tire Sale

1971 , at 10 :15 A.M. at the Court

''DATELESS'"-

Cleland Realty

·For Sale

20

FO' ,

~

5 RM. house and bath In
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rufland. Phone 992-6329.
6-22-6tc
- - -- -- - - KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
and accessories. Call us for
EXfRA LARGE trailer lots on
State Route 7, one mile north · yOur needs. We deliver
distributors, Brown's, Phone
af Eastern High School.
9'12-5113.
REDUCE safe and fast with Phone 985-4106.
6-2-lfc
Gobese tablets and E-Vap6-20·61c
Water pills. Nelson Drug!,, - - . , . . - - - - - - 5'26-JO!p Auto Sales

RUSSELL E. LEWIS,
ET AL.,
Defendants.

EXTRA large trailer lots, gOOd
location. Velma G. Zuspan.
173-5750, Mason, W. Va.
6-15-12tc

6-20·51c

----------

TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33,
'12-mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3-5-lfc

SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
Chester, Ohio. Bollin, Bllnko FURNISHED and unfurnished
plassware, Sequoia wor.e,
apartments. Close to school.
jewelry·, flowers, smallltallls.
Phone 99'2-5434.
and larg_e collection of Avon
10-18-lfc
bottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. dally.
6-18·12tc TRAVEL trailer, locally. Phone
992-2367 before 5 p.m. dally.
REGISTERED Quarter stud
6·22-61p
service. Hank's Rock 209~98 . ------~-­
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3, TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Pomeroy, Ohio,. Phone 992Court. Rt . 124, Syracuse,
6880 .
Ohio. 992-2951 .
6-17-121c
~-2-tfc
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Phone 843-2778.

5TANDS

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

lnspectipn and

6.98

742-4902

·TH1 ... D"

.40 Minutesof Your Time Can Well Be the Most PN.titable
Time You Ever Spent.

Have Your seasonal

Special
At

...Ot&gt;OD'V LOOKS
VERi DEE·LISHUS'
DEE ·LIGI-ITFUL OR
EVEN DEE·VINE ·-

OR WHUT&amp;I/ItR
TH"'O"tN MISS
D. BRONN'S
NAME
STANDS FO'-

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Air Conditioning
SPINET - CONSOLE PIANO
WANTED, responsible party to
take over spinet piano. Easy
terms. Can be seen locally .
Write Credit Manager, P. 0 .
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana

Septic Tanks
And LIICh Beds.

Open8TII5
Monday thru Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

From the Largest Truck o~
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.

~.---.__

ItiHNSON MASONRY
.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

EXPERIENCED .

ISN'T TllERE SOME
WAY I CA!ol Gi.T
Rtl&gt; OF VOU .

Tom Crow
992-2580
Pomeroy

Dale Dutton
992,2534
Middleport

DEXTER, 0 . 45716
PHONE 742-1945

Frankie

CAPl'AIN EASY

43.CbamP'
lonahlp

DAILY CRYPIOQUOTE- Here'1 bow
AXYDLI!AAXR
II

to

work It: .

L 0 N 0 F ll L L 0 W

One letter olmpiy oltJidl !or another. In this sample A I•
Uled !or the three L'a, X lor the two 0'•, etc. Stnr1• lotion.

~;::::~~~~~~~~~ ";:~=:;:====~=::
,.

apootropheo. the lenjlh and !ormation o! the word• ·art all
bln\11. Each day tile code letters ore different.

A LA""I.
n:;

A CryplOJI'IIIII Qooladoa

BJ

YUMJ

Y8 J

C1TW

N8JJWQSJT

JYSWG.
TJW

W ,G J

~T

YLZ
QV

Y
AlB

K C V 8 J T T K I L,-

IL · RIZ'T

OKLZ
Y

RBJJL

BISZ

BGIMJ

;NY t

BJJO . ·

I HATE NOT HAWI6

'
1.))

�•
#

.. ,

•
l CAN SELL 'IE

SOME FUST·HAND
GOSSIP FER
FIFTY CENTS,
LOWEEZ.V '

THANI&lt;V JEST TH'
SAME, GRANN'/
CREEPS. BUT I GIT
ALL riN .FUST- HAND
GOSSII' FROM ·
ELVINEV

BEFORE
IT HAPPENS?

We SiiJGl£ GIRl.,.

STOP PAYING RENT ~nd own a house with
your rent moneY.

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

See

All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

GUN SHOOT, Sunday. June COLONIAL maple stereo-radio
Insured-Experienced
27th, 1 p.m. Assorted met!•·
combination, AM-FM radio,
Work Guar1nteed
Racine Gun Club.
four speakers. 4-speed In6-22- ~lc
termixed ' changer, separate . L------,....:-~
controls. Balance 578.60. Use
our
budget terms. Call m .
Help Wanted
7085.

------:--

Pomer~y ioter~ Co.

6-20-61c

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMERO". OHIO

MODERN walnut stereo-radio ·
combination, dual .volume
control. ~ speakers. 4-speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $63.70. Use our time
payment plan. Call 992-7085.

.Ra~iator Service

'

C!Jm.plete
Remodeling
Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
Backhoe And
Endlooder Work

15.55
-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

6-20-6tc

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

. . BlAmNAifS
,Ph_. 992-2143
6-22-3tc

.

.I

Pomero~

46116.

6·22·12tp

DEHUMIDIFIER tor
basem.ent . Phone 992-7645.
6-22-31c

-----------PAl NT DAMAGE . 1971 zJg.zag

sewing machines. Still in
original cartors. No at.
tachments needed as our
controls are buill-in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on bullons,
monograms, and blind hem
stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
6-22-61c

2 BEDROOM house at Rock - - - - - - - - Springs. Furnished or un- COAL, limestone . Excelsior'
fur~shed . Call992-6887 after 5 Salt Works, E. Main St.,
P· ·
6_17 .tfc Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
4-9-tfc

Annual Fish Fry arid
Trap Shoot Thursday,
June 24 at the Pomeroy
Gun Club.
Rain or shine. '

TRAI~ER for rent. 2 bedroom SIX-MONTH-old Hereford bull.

In Pomeroy . Phone 9'12-5623.
6-22-6tc

.

THERE will be 8 hy1nn sing at
the Rutland Free Will Baptist
Church. Sunday, June 27, 2
p.m . Everyone welcome.
6-22-5tc
- - -- -- - - J WILL NOT be responsible for
any debts contracted by any
one other than 111Y•elf. Signl!jl
Delbert W. Fridley.
.
6-22-31p

THE FARMERS BANK
&amp; SAVINGS COMPANY,
Plaintiff,

•••

No. 14,117

LEGAL NOTICE

Pursuant to an order of sale
Issued by the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio , 1
will otter for sale ~~ public
auction on the lOth . day of Jul y,
House Steps, In the VIllage of
Pomeroy , County of Me igs,
State of Ohio, the follow ing

described real estate:
Situated in the Villag e of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio : Being LOt No . 502
In , the Village of Pomeroy ,
Counly of Mejgs, ond Stale of
Ohlo,andther,lsalsocon"Yeyed
herewith, el l rights wlth 'respect
to the UH of the sidewalk bet .
ween Lots Noo. 502 and 503 as
was transferred 10 the Grantor

herein .

Reference O.e&lt;ls: Vol. 227,

Pagit917,and VoL l68, Page 371 :
· Detd Records,ottMh elgks County,
Ohio. Being ur er nown IS
206
Butter.nut
Avenue,

Aiumirium·
Sheets

USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

4

8 for $1.00

The
Da~lt_~ntinel
111 Court St.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS 1

COURT OF MEIGS
·
COUNTY, OH I O
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;

'SAVINGS COMPANY,

Plaintiff,
c~l· RLES ROBERT
AL E

L NSWORTH, ET AL .,

Defendants.

LEGAL NOTIC~. I~.tll
. Pursuanl to an order of sale
1ssued by the Court of common
P~ea s of Meigs County , Ohio, 1
W1ll offer for sale at public
t'
~~7'1 ' 0 ~ ~ 0n. the lOth day of July,
• a · 00 ~ .M. at t~e Court
House Steps, 'n lhe VII loge ·of

SAVE UP to one half. ,Bring 1969 BUICK LeSabre. 2-dr.
your sick TV to Chuck • T9 hardtop , power steering,
All Qur First Lint
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.. power brakes. air, 18,000
Pomeroy.
rnlles. Excellent coodlllon.
_ __ _ _ _ __~_-2_J.Ifc Phone 992-2288.
6-3-lfc
REGISTERED Arablon Stud
Buy 1 lira at regular priceService. Klraff No. 050481. 1967 CAMARO, 6 cyt., standard, get 2nd !Ire •'
Rich Raffles bloOd lines. Fee
lllustsell betore July 1. Phone ·
sso. Phoni 992-6880, E. J. 11111, 915·3503
after 5.
,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6-13-121C
6-23-3lp
--'-~---~
· ~r~
POMEROY ~
•
•
J, W. ClttfY,Mir~
Eibploymerit Wanted·
1
-lft·Uil
,·· .
. . . I
BABYSifTING, . nurse's aide,
cltanlng, lronlngs done In my '
LOGAN FIRE and safety '
home. Phone 2~} -221~.
equipment. Sales and service.
"
6-22-3tc
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simp:
All typos and sizes of fire
__ ._
.
son apent a ,._In Baltimore
i extinguishers. Spacial prices
on extinguishers for boats,
with Mr. and Mrs. · Brian For Sale
.
campers,
homes . Also
and cblldrtn.
USED LUMBER
II
discount prices on other sizes.
Phone
992-6~18.
' a s izes .
Mr.anctMrs.AlfredCrowand
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
18 St P
daughten, Nancy llld !lecky, ________6;,·_:·
992-3821 . Owner Dwight
Logan .
spenl the weellllld ln Pllnn· AMPLIFIER. 1970 model
aylvanla 1o Villi t.ln. Q-olr'a Ftnder ~~~dm..ter. l!xaWtt, Mrs. Mabel Wllflt•, who
Cllltnt condltlort. 200 watts
'
tlell&lt; 100 walls llMF . Phone
has aulfend a llroke and II a
949-4561.
·
pallenl in' the W11bin1ton
6-23-3tc
Milici' NUI'IIIIIItlale.
"NEV"'A •"""
lhl
1•
Mr. __. ...., o.w. •w,.lE
u.... •nrm•nt · I~•
- -· -• 1
It," NY uter&amp; of llue ~ttl
spenllbewl' 'wllbMr.alld carpet clienor. · Atfll electric
M
...... ••n4 sheml*fr $1. llaktr !'ur·
ra. .,._ -pton •
nlturt Cl)lllpany;
·,

f4c"WINSOR
·ttBUDDY

1

0

101

llll••

..

.

«CHAMPION
,-jr_VAN DYKE

,.. AUO
DOUBLE-WI DES

~EE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

.

"

PARKERSBUR.G MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Re-Charge

MEMORIAL BRIDGJ' TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Plus
Parts

W'IKE UP ~RI614T AND

_...

~

PRICE

Racine

SimPaon

w• - · ........

l=

••lt.

12' • 14' · 24' •' WID£

Blaettnar's

•

__.

I _.:__ ..__-._ _ ,_-17-flc

~EE

YUU IN

TH E MORNI NG !

&amp;TART ~!':EIN&lt;;&gt;

THE TCWN!

ALLEYOOP

THE~RN
:t 'S,I.Ie&gt;,

Virgil B._
TEAFORD

"'"'

IJGA
~

SR.

~

FIFS

,

Me!

44. Finished
ACROSS
1. Proapoctlve 45. Coloring

MOLENE'S?

father

expert

5. - - Pr!ze
10. Sprightly
12. Foolloh
13. ot one's

DOWN
1. Lord's

birth

U. Terrachoice

'

'

,

.

. '··

n H•' Caldwell
'

G
.
erdo

I

to

tale, with

Beer~

'The'"
(2 wds.)

oheba

Un1cromblethese foor Jumblet,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary worda.
33. HOI!ery

tlon

thread
M.Grln

25. DleUn·
gullhed

o! Ill.
2:1. Place In
Ge.....

ln&amp;'IY

Noah

man
(abbr.)

.\ I ,'i'l'f..'l'

24. Word with
bellum or.

WHAT UNDclrrAKING 15&gt;.

U&lt;le
25. Wanderer
27. Wrath
28. Hot place
29. Bedouin

THER COtNICTEP HIMSE(f,
(0NG ~E FORE THo COURT-

MARTIAL PID. WHAT &lt;Il l F D
HIM IN PRISON,M(i~s-

~~'i 1 ·"~:';1.;;·1)+---r,....;:l?"'"('
V
V "V 'J

~"=:=::\=·::L~:=::::h~A~~,;l~o~•;n~o;•t~ed~b~y

SO. Thrice
(mua.)

31. Allar
CO!IIItella.
t!On

1

--.. !'·-

I ltll ... l 0"tl&gt;o&lt;ot.;. lo....

39. ll'omlllln•
ouftlx
U . Annapolla

end for

29. Land .
meaaure
tt~al un·
derotandlng 31. Computed

%1. Neighbor

l 11':-H.O(;

mock-

26. Exceeded
1:1. Journey's

i2W41.)
8.lntema-

20.8eadog

~tg')i'j@ThJ]; lkJ M&gt;•••'IJ -.J , _

2". Literary
collec·

5. :More acute
6. Palestinian
plain
7. Beaeh
a.ttraoUon

(abbr.)

Now arronre the clrclttlletten
to form the aurpriH a~~~wer, ~
the above cartoon.

[ ~~-~llli~ "[ 1 XI I J" (X ll J

32. Mllehle!·
mall:er
35. Garmont
part
'
ae. German

·

IJomohh·-. ALIAS

\ l' •lt'f'•l o" •,.

IU'IIele
31. Be Ill

1·1 \'\t

I An ~ y, o• r:

t '"

lA••""'• tnmorrn.,.·t

ODIUM

NI~IL'(

SAILOA

l1u111l tml1111•d tl•iup:IC - NAILS

I~

38. Interweave
4o. lJ!vert
42. $Inger,

I

'

property
2.Spe11bound
3. Andersen

nota

pilot
18. Chickenhearted one
19. Judaism,
e.g.

In compliance with the prov1s1ons of Section 5721.02
Revised Code of Ohio, there will be ·published in this
ne'wspaper, a list of the delinquent real estate in Meigs
County, Ohio, upon which the taxes, assessments and
penalties or either have not been paid for two consecutive
tax paying periods.

1.

11 . Eclltatlc
17. Ont.,

4. Gulllo'a

16. Cert&amp;ln

~Vo TO~ P GALEE THAT HER FA-

•

9. Hero'•
· beloved

· Que ..
etc.
23. From

l!i. Make a

' - - --1..

If delinquent taxes are paid, in full or arrangements
made with the. County T-reasurer to pay not' later than 48
hours before said publication, the parcel will be removed
from the delinquent list before advertising.
.
,·.
'
The delinquent land list will be . ready tor publication
after July 20, 1971.

Yeotenla1'1 (ley.....uolel TO PUT lT BLUNTLY, YOU
CAN'T GIIIT ANYWHIIIIIIIl UNLilSS YOU KNOW WHJ:IIB
TO BTAJ\T J'ROM: AND WHIIlllll TO GO.- LIONilL BAR•
RYMOlllll
&lt;0 1111 XJor ,_,. IJ041~lt, hlo.)

DAILY CROSSWORD

.TERRY

Metvscou~~;~g~fl ~f:~:::~~:ld~Mr:lbe:·~-~~~P~r-•~nesm~~-:~rh~~~n,~.w'"~· ~·~':"~·~··~·:j~;~;~;;~J!~~~~~~;~;~~=;~~M~~~~~~~p~:~
-~~~~b~J~~~~-~~di~~lG~N'~~L~
1612.9, ta, 23, 30,lt

WE UNDER·
STAND'-DEAR .

EARLY TOMORRCM', PICK
'rOJ UP HERE~ AND

AUTO body repairs and pain· SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
ling. Free estimates. All work Reasonable rates. Ph. 446- ~782,
guaranteed . Phone 1-667-3807. Gallipolis. John Russell,
. PHONE 992-2143
.
6-22-3lp Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-lfc
INTERIOR and exterior house
Real Estate For Sale
painting . Also general EXPERT lawn mower and
tiller repair. Free pickup and
Phone .1-667-3807 .
repairs.
HOUSE - 16~2 Lincoln Heights.
' 6-22-31p delivery . Warren's Mower
Call Danny Thompson, 992Shop, 248 Condor St. Phone
2196.
992-7357.
INTERIOR,
exterior
deco•ator
5-26-tfc
5-18-lfc
and barn' roofs. Phone 7425683.
HOUSE . 1640 Lincoln His .,
6·20-301c
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
10-25-tfc
•
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
3 BEDROOM brick home.
license?
Call
992operator's
Choice location. in Middleport.
2966.
Seen by appointment only.
6-15-lfc
Phone 992-5523 after 4 p.m.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
5-7-lfc
CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING .
delivered right to your
24' ACRE farm Long Bottom,
Dick Vaughan. · phone 9'12·
pro/eel. Fast and easy. .Free
with or without farm
337~. Dale Lillie. phone 992est mates . . Phone 992 - 328~.
· machinery . House with 3 6346.
Goeg leln Ready-Mix Co. ,•
bedrooms, dining room, living
6-23-301c
Mlddl~port, Ohio.
room , l 'h baths,, enclosed - - - - - - - - - - . - ~· ~·
· -! ;,!"f
•' 1 '. ~ 6·"'1fc
~ If.
back porch . .wall to wall
•
carpeting. Aluminum siding,
FREE ESTIMATE on general
awning, storm windows and Real Estate For Sale
remodeling, roofing and
storm doors . City water .
painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
Selling due to Ill health. Phone HOUSE In Syracuse, 2 lots,
a .m. 10 6 p.m.
6-9-JOic
61~ -985- 3938 .
·
51,800.00. Phone 9'12-2806.
6-23-30ip
6·21 -6tc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
-------------~----Complete Service
Phone 9~9- 3821
SIX ROOM house, bath, lull
Racine. Ohio
basement, 133 Butternut Ave. ,
Crill
Bradford
just walking distance from
5·1-tfc
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
Ed Hedrick, 2137 Wadsworth SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Drive, Columbus. Ohio. phone
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
237-4334, Columbus.
662-3035
.•
' 5-9-lfc
~ BrOker
2-12-lfc
•
.
I
110 Mechanic Street
Pof'r!tr9Y, Ohio
NEIGLER Construction. For
building or remodeling your
57 ACRES - Nice country
home.
Call Guy Nelgler,
home, modern bath and
Racine,
Ohio.
6GaEost
Main
kitchen, 4 bedrooms with
Pomeroy
7-31-tfc
closets. Gas forced air furnace , Drilled well , small POMEROY
FAMILY RALPH ' S CARPET - Upbarn . Only $10,000.00.
HOME. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
holstery Cleaning Service .
garden space, garage, lot
Free estimates. Phone
RUTLAND - · 2 bel:lroom
fenced, apartment In lower
Gall
ipolis 446-0294.
'
paneled home, bath, utility
part of house. ALL IN GOOD
3-12-lfc
room. large lot, fenced . Low
CONDITION $10,000.
iaxes. Asking $9.599.99. '
AWNINGS, storm ·dOOrs and
TUPPERS PLAINS 1 windows~ carports.
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms.
LEVEL ACRE, 2 story home,
marquees. aluminum siding
bath , large liv ing, dining
7 rooms, bath. 4 bedrooms,
and
rail ing. Call A. Jacob,
room , nice side porch ,
porches, garage, well water,
sales
rer,resentatlve. For free
garage, fenced yard. Asking
city water, A NICE PLACE
estlma
es. phone Charles
$10,500.00. Want to make an
TO LIVE . Just 58.900.
Lisle, Syracuse . V. V.
offer.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
DRIVE-IN - LOCATED IN
5-27-lfc
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom
SMALL COMMUNITY AND
frame home, bath, forced air
ON STATE ROUTE - lh- BACi(HOE AND DOZER work.
furnace, nice front porch,
cludes all equipment and
Septic tanks Installed. George
basement, drilled well and
building.
INTERESTED
(Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2~78 •
nice lot afLelart . Storm doors
parties call for price and
4-25-lfc
and
windows .
Asking
showing.
$7,000.00.
HARRISON'S TV AND AN·
OUR ONLY BUSINESS IS
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
THINK 'BIG.-INVEST IN REAL
REAL ESTATE - CALL
992-2522.
ESTATE.
TODAY
6-10-tfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
HENRY CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTOR
O' BRIEN ELECTRIC SER992-2378
Ollice 992-2259
VICE. Phone 949-4.151.
6-20-61c
Residence 992-2568
· S-30-lfc

UNICO TIRES

Pomeroy, OhiO.
Terms of Solo: Cash for not
less than two -thirds of the ap praised value, and sublec.t to
thellen tor reatostate tam for . ~ °a"r:r~r· ~?~." 1 fhe 01 ~~~s,
0
1971 .
described real estate ·
!'roperty approloed at
Situate In the v'·u
t
$180000Pomero Co t 0fMI age - o
' .~.?""'Robert
C· Hartenbach
Y number
elgs, and
··
Sheriff of· State oJ Y'Ohio un
: Lois
two
2
3
I'Migo¢ounty,Ohlo 1 &gt; on · three 1 &gt; 'In Bradflelds
W 2.f, 16.23, 30, 51 ~~~~t~~~Jo :~~e~\1 vt~! ~~'!'1 e~0l.;
lli••ll!!~
olher mlnerola under so ld tol•
and tho right to mine the same
wllhoul lnlerfatenco wllh lhe
'"~':,~~Inca Deed : vol. 2H,
f'age 437, Deed Records Meigs
County, Ohio . Being further
known as 16 Anne Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio .
,
Termo ol Solo : Cash for not
,••.• than two-thirds Of the •P·
Prtlstd valut, ond lubiect to chlldNB Ia lehiiMU.
'
6-2Htc
the lien for real est1te tl)(tl fOii
ui- uc" 1·...a ._....., .m.."l
1971.
•
, . Properly oppratsad al eevtl'll i!QI Ia Alnll. Her BUILDINC L.OTS tor .
11 soo oo
1
NIWiy aJiproyld In rttlrlctld
' · · Roberl C. Haltenboch, .iller, Mrl. ,.._ ,.._,.~eo
hoU.Ing dlltrlct, ,._,

•

. J6n X23" X.009

Big Tire Sale

1971 , at 10 :15 A.M. at the Court

''DATELESS'"-

Cleland Realty

·For Sale

20

FO' ,

~

5 RM. house and bath In
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rufland. Phone 992-6329.
6-22-6tc
- - -- -- - - KOSCOT KOSMETICS, wigs
and accessories. Call us for
EXfRA LARGE trailer lots on
State Route 7, one mile north · yOur needs. We deliver
distributors, Brown's, Phone
af Eastern High School.
9'12-5113.
REDUCE safe and fast with Phone 985-4106.
6-2-lfc
Gobese tablets and E-Vap6-20·61c
Water pills. Nelson Drug!,, - - . , . . - - - - - - 5'26-JO!p Auto Sales

RUSSELL E. LEWIS,
ET AL.,
Defendants.

EXTRA large trailer lots, gOOd
location. Velma G. Zuspan.
173-5750, Mason, W. Va.
6-15-12tc

6-20·51c

----------

TRAILER SPACE on old Rl. 33,
'12-mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3-5-lfc

SMALLEY'S
Gift
Shop,
Chester, Ohio. Bollin, Bllnko FURNISHED and unfurnished
plassware, Sequoia wor.e,
apartments. Close to school.
jewelry·, flowers, smallltallls.
Phone 99'2-5434.
and larg_e collection of Avon
10-18-lfc
bottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. dally.
6-18·12tc TRAVEL trailer, locally. Phone
992-2367 before 5 p.m. dally.
REGISTERED Quarter stud
6·22-61p
service. Hank's Rock 209~98 . ------~-­
Contact Mike Jones, Rt. 3, TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Pomeroy, Ohio,. Phone 992Court. Rt . 124, Syracuse,
6880 .
Ohio. 992-2951 .
6-17-121c
~-2-tfc
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Phone 843-2778.

5TANDS

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

lnspectipn and

6.98

742-4902

·TH1 ... D"

.40 Minutesof Your Time Can Well Be the Most PN.titable
Time You Ever Spent.

Have Your seasonal

Special
At

...Ot&gt;OD'V LOOKS
VERi DEE·LISHUS'
DEE ·LIGI-ITFUL OR
EVEN DEE·VINE ·-

OR WHUT&amp;I/ItR
TH"'O"tN MISS
D. BRONN'S
NAME
STANDS FO'-

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

Air Conditioning
SPINET - CONSOLE PIANO
WANTED, responsible party to
take over spinet piano. Easy
terms. Can be seen locally .
Write Credit Manager, P. 0 .
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana

Septic Tanks
And LIICh Beds.

Open8TII5
Monday thru Saturdoy
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

From the Largest Truck o~
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.

~.---.__

ItiHNSON MASONRY
.

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment

EXPERIENCED .

ISN'T TllERE SOME
WAY I CA!ol Gi.T
Rtl&gt; OF VOU .

Tom Crow
992-2580
Pomeroy

Dale Dutton
992,2534
Middleport

DEXTER, 0 . 45716
PHONE 742-1945

Frankie

CAPl'AIN EASY

43.CbamP'
lonahlp

DAILY CRYPIOQUOTE- Here'1 bow
AXYDLI!AAXR
II

to

work It: .

L 0 N 0 F ll L L 0 W

One letter olmpiy oltJidl !or another. In this sample A I•
Uled !or the three L'a, X lor the two 0'•, etc. Stnr1• lotion.

~;::::~~~~~~~~~ ";:~=:;:====~=::
,.

apootropheo. the lenjlh and !ormation o! the word• ·art all
bln\11. Each day tile code letters ore different.

A LA""I.
n:;

A CryplOJI'IIIII Qooladoa

BJ

YUMJ

Y8 J

C1TW

N8JJWQSJT

JYSWG.
TJW

W ,G J

~T

YLZ
QV

Y
AlB

K C V 8 J T T K I L,-

IL · RIZ'T

OKLZ
Y

RBJJL

BISZ

BGIMJ

;NY t

BJJO . ·

I HATE NOT HAWI6

'
1.))

�•

',

!

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center, . fir~l
Ave. and Cedar St. Ge,neral
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Birtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Michael
Neeman, New Haven, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Lee McCarty, Rt. 1,
• Apple Grove, W. Va., a son.
Discharges
Mrs. Benjamin Arthur,
James Chevalier, Pamela
Garnes, Bernard Harper,
Richard Hogg, Darrin Malone,
John . Mulholand, E. . Wayne
Ogdin, Mrs. Anna Oiler, Mrs.
David Ondera, Brack Skaggs,
Mrs. Oscar Swaney and son,
and Loren Rowley.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Leonard
Roush, Letart; Mrs. Roy ;Fields,
Jr.,GaWpollsFeriy; Mrs. Nora
Simmons, Precious; Mrs. Ona
' Dyer, New Haven; John Black,
Pt. Pleuan_t; George Wamsley,
Henderson; Jes.se Legg, Leliil;
Patrlc'k Ryinei', Ravenswood;
Robert Hayes, New Haven;
Mrs. Harold Lane, GaWpolis
Ferry.
DISCHARGES: Mrs. N. P.
Sturgeon, Frederick Roseberry,
Mrs. Jesse Harold, Mrs. Clara
Staats, Mrs. Charles Fetty and
son, Robert Errett, Mrs. Myrtle

Receipts Totaled $41,911.32

I

Pomeroy Vilhige receipts for
the · month of May totaled
$41,9ii.J2 compared to expenditures of $38,409.70 during
the monUt, Mrs. Jane Walton,
village clerk, reports.
Receipts and expenditures,
respectively, during May and
the balance in each fund as of
May 31 in~lude :
General, $3,323.84, $5,283,
$3,932.18; sewer, $5,019.01,
$3,020.73, $34,341.31; boat, dock,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$41&gt;7.88; fire department, $150,
$71.02, $3,274 .31; cemetery,
$1,049, $600.42, $455.47; street,
$22,397.04, $16,310.34, $10,815.91;
slate highway, $599.76, no expenditures, $1,520.49; utility, no
receipts, $858.54, $13,998.29;

Bonecutter, Pearl Jones, Mrs.
Hillard Wallace and son, Mrs.
Harold Darst, Mrs. Ray Beegle,
Mrs. George Bail, Mrs. John
McCarty, Jack Wheeler, Mrs.
Sidney Jones, Mrs. Roger
Nibert.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Patty
Crossan, Middleport; Carol
Russell , Middleport; Jacob
Turner, Middleport; Melinda
Morris, Racine ; Nicholas lhle,
Racine; Monte Wolfe, Racine;
Robert Blackwood, Rutland;
Terry Seidenabel, Middleport,
and Mary Lambert, RutiBnd.
DISCHARGED - Ernest
Molden, Anna Zerkle, Norma
Grueser, William Witte, Edith
McCoy, Larry Lee, Ernest
Rickard, Frances Peck, George
Sellers and Uzzie Hanning .

J. W. Drake
Succwnbs

Fourth Paper Involved

....•..........,

j

* Quick!
'* Easy* t

t

.,

off their shoes and walked
upstatrs to the second Ooor.
"I stood at Joseph Yablon·
ski's bedroom door with the
carbine; Paul Gilly was stand·
ing behind me," Ute confess'lon
said .
"Buqdy and I were to 8hoot
simultaneously. Buddy opened
the door to the bedrOom (the

daogbter Cllarlotte'l, across a '.·,
ball from tl)e parent&amp;' bed· ·' ·
room) and fired two llbola Iiiio ·.
Margaret (actually Charlotte) ,
Yablonski who was lylng in bed. :
"I aimed Ute carbine at the :
Yablonskla, who had awakened. ;
Mrs. Yablonski laid in bed and :
was screaming and Mr. Yablon· .
(Continued on page 6)

Now You Know

Mchelaus,
Kmg · of
Macedonia from 413 to 399 B.C.,
obtained the Utrone by mur·
derlng his uncle, his cousin and
his half-broUter, the legitimate
heir. He was assassinated by
one of his followers 14 years

..

Considerable cloudiness and a
chance of showers Friday in the
northern third while mostly
sunny elsewhere. Highs Friday
in the 71l&lt;! north and the IIOs
south.

'

Devoted To Tlu! Interwu Of The Meilts·MfJIOn Area

latpr.

VOL. XXIV

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 51

TEN CENTS .

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1971

Pentagon Report
Issue· Un er ro e

SALE! BOYS AND GIRLS BICYCLES
Popular style with high rise bars . banana seal . Road-

master and . Murray makes.

42.50 Bicycles 49.00 Bicycles · . - - - - · · ·
54.95 Bicycles - - - - - - - ·
On Elberfelds2ndfloor.

Sale 36.00
Sale 42.00
Sale 44.00

By United Press International
The Los Angeles Times and
Knight Newspapers Inc., a
chain of 11 papers across the
coWltry, published portions of a
secret Pentagon report today
dealing with Vietriam policy
during the Kennedy and
Johnson administrations. They
were the fifth and sixth news
outlets to publish the con·
lroversial report.
At Ute same time, it was
learned a federal grand jury in
Los Angeles was investigating
the leaking of Ute report to the
New York Times.
The Supreme Court was

Clearance Salel 1971
1971 Models -RCA Color TV
699.95 Color TV Sets - - - - Sale 585.00
599,95 Color TV Sets - - - - - - Sale 529.00
519.95 Color TV Sets - - • - - - Sale 460.00

Wall To Wall Bathroom_Ca~!!!g
100 per cent Dupont nylon carpetin!l with SoftT-Soft back. Size 5' wide by 8' long. Paper for
pattern (included) m(lkes it easy to insulate.
Decorator colors: green . black . white orange · yellow - rose.

'19~95
Size

BATES BEDSPREADS

WlLI.JAM E. (BILL( WATSON with some of the fur.

Corded Bates spreads - lOU per cent cotton.
Machine washable - machine dry and no
press.
live · Scarlet- Larkspur . SPECIAL
Honey - Lemon.
Sale Price
Another
Shipment

'8 9S
•

COUCH

Foam back For furniture and beds.
Seamless - machine washable - never need
ironing .
~izes 60 by 70 inches, 70 by 90 inches, 70 by 120
Inches, 70 by 140 inches.
Come in the Drapery department and select
yours now.

Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic SL

Sale! Power Lawn Mowers

News ... in Briefs

t:

niture which he and Mrs. Watson have repaired and
refmished at their home on Pomeroy's Lasley St. The antique

chairs were recaned, refinished and even some new parts
were made. They are maple. The table in the center Is
walnut. On Ute left is a piece which the Watsons' have redone
hnt is not in the true antique category,

Jf~tson,s Keepi~g

Busy
In Retirement Years

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Mr. and Mrs. WlWam E.
Watson are finding that
retirement is giving them time
to "do their Uting" at their
residence, 204 Lasley St. in
Pomeroy.
The "thing" of the Watsons is
giving antique furniture, which
has seen better days, a new
'lease on life,
Gone from Pomeroy for 20
years following construction
work, Mr. and Mrs. Watson
have returned to their comfortable home which they
maintained through the years

for weekend visits. The final six
years ~ore Mr. Watson retired
in January, 1970, Mr. and Mrs.
Wa\s&lt;&gt;n spent in the Springfield
area where their son-in-law and
daoghter,Mr. and Mrs. William
(Patricia) Buck and their four
grandchildren reside.
Somewhere along the way,
the Watsons became interested
in antiques, particularly fur·
niture - not the already
rejuvenated type - but aged
pieces which needed many
hours of love and labor to regain
their original beauty. Their
home is marked with beautiful

tables, lamps, cabinets and
other pieces all of which have
undergone the , "Watson
treatment" within the past tw~
years.
The couple is now expanding
the hobby to taking on antique
pieces of others and putting
them Utrough the refinishing
and repairing processes.
Mr. Watson operated a dry
cleaning establishment in
Pomeroy from 1929 to 1950. He
followed the construction
business from then until his
retirement.

Prices At Ft. Meigs Cut In Half

i

fARMERS BANK .;
and ·SAVINGS CO•

.;:;e:;:;••• ~ Mi!Ji%.W1ti ltliii:i:
GOBLE

59 Replacement$. • •

STOP 'N' SAVE
IN A·
GU-ARANTEED
USED CAR

Identity was not known. Boyle after the Yablonskts were shot
hinlself had no comment.
,. to deaUt in their home at
Vealey pleaded guilty to Clarksville, in southwestern
murder charges before Judge I, Pennsylvania.
Charles Sweet, and after the
The confession said the Utree
FBI agent finished reading Ute gunmen made 10 automobile
confession · in court, Vealey trips during Ute UMW election
signed it a second time. He campaign to track down
first signed it, auth~!fities said, Yablonski.
on Jan. 21, 1970, only 22 days
On Dec. 31, Vealey said, he

,.

lind the others consumed a
bottle of whisky and more than
a dozen cans of beer.
Shortly after I a.m. Ute
confession said, th~ Utree men
went to the Yablonski house,
cut the telephone wires, unscrewed the aluminum frame
on a storm door and found Ute
inside door unlocked. They took

Weather

.;

SAVE WITH

.

Wearing apparel for your family and
furniture, furnishings and , floor
coverings for your home.

I
t.

t

and two other Cleveland men, in the confession and the
Paul Gilly, 38, and Aubran " union's president, W. A. "Tony"
"Buddy" Martin, 21, planned Boyle,. who defeated Yablonski
and executed the murders for in a bitter union presidency
$5,200, paid by a man Vealey election two weeks before the
knew only as "Tony."
Dec, 31, 1969, murder.
The United Mine Workers
The union demanded that
union said in Washington "there authorities "as a matter of
is no relationship of any kind" decency and fairness" identify
between the payoff man named the payoff man or admit his

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Kinnard Rites
Held Today

DRIVE-IN
' BANKING

water operation, $8,169.16;
$11,633.24; $7,456.72; guaranty
meter, $75, $131.73, $3,176.74;
water improvement, no
receipts, no disbursements ,
$15.61; parking meter, $1,128.50,
$500, $5,807,49; sanil(lry sewer,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$5,005.58; special street repair
bond retirement, no receipts, no
disbursements, $1,654.23; bond
retirement, no receipts, no
disbursements, $15,438.99.
The total in all funds as of
May 31 totaled $107,361.20.
TO MEET FRIDAY
A meeting of all managers,
coaches and interested parents
of the Pomeroy Boys Baseball
League will be held at 7:30p.m.
Friday at Pomeroy City Hall.

WASHINGTON, Pa. (UPI)An · astonl.sbing tale of how
Utree gunmen slaughtered mine
unlon official J41stph A. "Jock"
Yablonski, his wife and daughter was told Wednesday in
Waahington County court.
An FBI agent read a 15-page
confession in which Claude
Vealey, 26, Cleveland, .said he

.Shop In Comfort On lUI 3 Floors

NEW HAVEN - James W.
TAXIWAY UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Carter and
work at the Gallla-Mei.gs Regional Airport. The firm will
Drake, 55, Dogwood Drive, New Evans Inc., General Contractors, have begun excavation
construct a taxiway, plane parking area and improve both
Haven, was pronounced dead
Ute lighting and communication systems at Ute airstrip.
upon arrival at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy
late Tuesday nighi.
Mr. Drake became ill ·at his
home and was. taken to the
hospital by ambulance. Death
was caused by an apparent
heart attack, it was reported.
The son of Ute late Melvin G.
and Lelie Wyres Drake at By United Press International
Smithville, W.Va., he was born Three newspapers were under
on July 17, 1915. Mr. Drake was orders today not to publish any
a construction mechanic for Ute more of a classified Pentagon
Funeral services were held Johnston Construction Co. at report pending further court
today at Ute 0. R. Woodyard Willow Island Locks and Dam. action, but a fourth paper, the
Funeral Home in Columbus for He was a member of the Chicago Sun-Times, printed
Russell Kinnard, 56, 1783 Vienna United Methodist excerpts from another secret
Berkl~y Road, Columbus, Church, Clifton Masonic Lodge source, a State Department
formerly of Middleport, who 23, V.F.W: Post 1212 at Parkers- report on Vietnam.
died Saturl;lay .at Bethesda burg, and the American Legion The government, in appealing
Post 15, also at Parkersburg, rulings which gave The New
Hospital in ZanesvWe.
A 1934 graduate of Middleport and a veteran of World War II. York Times and Washington
High School, Mr. Kinnard Is Surviving are his wife, Sarah; Post permission to publish the
survived by his wife, Margaret, two sons, James C. of New Pentagon report, offered a
a son; Jeffrey, a daughter, Haven and Larry of Whittier, compromise Tuesday to set up
Debra, a brother, Homer Lee of Calif.; two stepdaughters, Mrs. a task force to study declassifiCalifornia, Utree sisters, Mrs. Ronald (Jean) SpringeIt of cation of documents. The Post
· Anna Riggs of Crooksville, Mrs. Collegedale, Tenn.; and Mrs. rejected the idea . The -Times
. Ethel Yeauger, Columbus, and Morton (Shirley) Warner of did not comment.
· Mrs. Wanda Grandstaff of Boonsboro, Md.; two sisters, The Boston Globe, which
: Zanesvllle, his stepmother, Mrs. Melgram Adams and Mrs. published its first story on the
Mrs. T. R. Rabbitt of New York Rhoda Wade of Pennsboro, W. report in Tuesday 's editions,
..slate. and. M:veral nieces and Va.; a broiher, Melvin G. was ordered temporarily to
Hep!iellla. He was a member of Drake; Jr., Racine, four stop further publication and to
Ute Churchmen BroUterhood of grandsons and two grand- turn over ali documents to the
Ute Hungarian United Church of daughters.
court. The Globe said it would
Christ.
.
Funeral services will be held comply with the first order and
Burial was In Glen Rest at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the would decide today on the
'
Foglesong Funeral Home with second.
Cemetery.
Ute Rev. William DeMoss of. Appeals courts in Washington
ficiating. Burial will be in and New York took the Post
DONNA BOYD, at right, secretary-treasurer of a Bible school held at the First Baptist
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. and Times cases under adviseChurch·~ Middleport the past two weeks, presents $100.65 to two residents of the Meigs County
~ Masonic rites will be conducted ment and said they would rule Children
s Home, Sandra Little, left, and Cheryl Mowery. The money represents the collecat the graveside. Friends may shortly. Any ruling is expected
tions taken dur~ng the Bible_school and at the closing program Sunday evening and at the
call at Ute funeral home from 2 to be appealed immediately to
suggestion of children attendmg the school was turned over to the children's home as spending
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Ute Supreme Court, which is
money for the 20 youngsters now residing at the home.
·
secret of success.
scheduled to end its current
session next Monday. Tempora. -Ralph Waldo Emerson .
ry restraining orders against
[@jffif®:~1i~[i!iN~IiiM~tm::::~1~~i~~IilliJ further
publication remain in
CHAMPIONS SEPARATE
effect
on
the
Times
and
Post.
Nlne residents of Pomeroy
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Ahearing o~ the Globe's case
Marge and Gower Champion,
It'S
lC and Middleport received
.; degrees at the sprcng eom- was scheduled for 10 a.m.
(Continued from page I )
veteran dancing and acting
(EDT)
Friday
in
U.S.
district
f; mencement of Ohio State
team, announced Tuesday they
Community Jan. 1, 1973.
court.
f; University.
were separating after 23 years
The group Included Leland E. The Times published three
of
marriage.
.
Fr. McPHERSON, GA.- THE legal officer who led the inarticles,
the
Post
two
and
the
The Champions, married in
Fridays Only
Brown, bachelor of arts; Diana
ves~gation into charges Capt. Ernest Medina ordered the My Lai
Globe
one,
ali
believed
based
on
:1:: The Drive-In Window~ D. Davis, bachelor of science; the same report-a 7,00t4Jage massacre says it "appears" Utat public opinion made Medina's October, 1947, have two sons,
Greg, 14, and Blake, 9.
•
is Open
.; Se~n E. Muller, bachelor of
Pentagon study of U.S. involve- trial inevitable.
-ll
9 A.M. to 7 P.M. .; science in pharmacy, all of ment in Indochina from the
.~ol. Wilson Freeman, judge advocate of the Third Army,
-ll
(Co I'
-jc Mlddleport; Robert E. Buck,
1
1
-j(
n 1nuous V . t: juris doctor ; Jennifer Blakeslee Truman through Johnson admi· testified Tuesday Utata!Utough public opinion should not have had
CORN STILL GOOD
any effect on wheUter charges would be filed against Medina, "it
~ other Banking Hours 9 to lC Butcher, bachelor of science ln nistrations.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
-ll 3 ~nd 5 lo 7 as usual on
education;
Richard
D. But the Sun-Times story in certainly appears" it did.
government reports that the
-ll Frodays.
Koblent:z bachelor of science in today's editions dealt with a
nation's corn crop still is in good
. '
new document-a State DepartWASHINGTON
A
HISTORIC
WELFARE
system
of
to excellent condition, despite
-ll
agrtculture; Ronald P. Loga~,
-ll
.; bachelor of science m ment report dated Aug. 30, 1963 guaranteed minimum incomes for poor families cleared the continued spreading o! the corn
-and wiUt a new time period,
-jc
~· education; John B.. Meredi~, the years during the Kennedy House Tuesday, pushed along by President Nixon, intense White blight.
bachelor ,of . SCience 10
House lobbying and the leaders of both parties.
The Agriculture Department
administration.
The
other
newsNow it must clear Ute Senate where Finance Committee and the U. S. Weather Service
POMEROY, OHIO
agriculture ; Jay C. Russell,
Member FDIC
bachelor of science in phar- papers covered the Johnson Chairman Russell Long, D-La., Is reported considering post- said development of the blight
years.
Member Federal
~ macy, all of Pomeroy.
poning action until next year, But House Ways and Means appeared to be very slow while
There was no immediate
"the third straight week of hot,
comment from the Justice Committee Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., who managed the humid weather pushed corn
Jf•
Department on whether it measure through the House Tuesday, said Long had promised growth in the Corn Belt."
would take legal action against him he would not block Senate consideration of the measure .
the Sun-Times.
The Sun-Times copyrighted
MARRIAGE LICENSE
story quoted the report as
Ronnie Richard Wilt, 28,
saying Secretary of Slate Dean
Lancaster, and Marilyn Sue
Rusk knew about and was
· Alkire, 18, Pomeroy, Route 4.
encouraged to assist in a 1963
(Continued from page 1)
CHESHIRE - Linda C.
.
coup which toppled South
Winebrenner.
Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh E. Pigott, James Willard
LOCAL TEMPS
WEST COLUMBIA - David
Diem two months before it Pigott, Robert K. Lute, Unda Mattox.
The temperature in downtown
Lute, Richard Barton, Mace!
happened.
Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Wednesday
POINT PLEASANT
Barton.
was 77 degrees under sunny
REEDSVILLE - 'Grant Charlotte Rice, Robert H. Rice, skies .
Smith, Francis Benedum, Jr.
Margie Benedum, Iva Upton.
THREE PERSONS FINED
WILKESVILLE - Kathleen
Three defendants were fined
SQUAD CALLED
Kruskamp.
and two others forfeited bonds The Pomeroy Emergency
Tonight &amp; Thurs.
in the court of Middleport Squad answered a call at 4:58
June 23·24
Mayor
.C. 0. Fisher 'Tuesday a.m. Wednesday to Ute Leonard
NOT OPEN
M,~WN
night. Fined were VIrgil E. Lunsford home on the Athens
-I
I
Jacks, Jr., 18, Rutland, $10 and Road.
Fri.&amp; Sal.
costs,
on an intoxication Lunsford was taken to
Tonight, Thu. &amp; Fri.
June 25-26
charge; Kenneth D. Hayes, 18, Veterans Memorial Hospital
June 23-24-25
Double
Feature
Program
Middleport, $5 and costs, where he was admitted.
Hell On Wheels
THEY SHOOT
Technicolor
assured clear distance, and
HORSES,
Joseph M. Antal, 48, Point
DON'T
THEY?
John Ashley
SIMPSON INDUCTED
Pleasant, $5 and eosts, running
GP
Marti RObbins -"G"
Gary L. Simpson was for.
Gig Young
a red light.
Susannah York
Plu$
Forfeiting boods were warded to. Fort Hayes,
-PlusTRIBES
Charles R. MacKenzie, 31, Columbus, Tuesday by the
TOO ~ATE
Technlcolor
Gallipolis, $25, posted on a Melgs County Selective Service
THE, HERO
(Color)
charge of running a red light, lor induction into the armed
:O.rrtn McGavin
Michael caine
Eorl Hollimon- "0"
-and Roth C. Sowders, no age or forces. Ten other men were
Mi,ddlepart, 0.
Henry Fonda
address listed on court records, forwarded to Fort Hayes
Cliff Rob.erlsot\
s- 5111'11 1 p.m.
Tuesday for pre;indurtio.n
poated on an

t A Thought
t For Today

'

Yahlonskis Murder Confession Is Revealed

IR- The Daily Sentinel, Midd:eport-Pomeroy, 0., June 23,1971

r---------------------------~

.

MEIGS

DRIVE· IN
&gt;' ••

AT••••

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR lDT

'

;

20 inch cut size _ 3 Hp
Briggs and Stratton
engi~e with easy spin
startmg · adjustable
height cut · throttle
control on handle.

$

.

Spec I~/ prices on linoleum. New Armstrong never wa~ in
6', 9', 12' widths. Bring your m·easurements. we'll cut it
to your exact sire.
Be surotosee VInyl room size rugs hn• ·12'xl2'- 12'X15'
Save on Nylon 'Rugs in a special sale of 12' width In length~
from II' lo 15',
su.oo

Used TV Sols In black and while or color model•.
Reconditioned and ready for you to use.
Roo~ size Rugs in sites 6'x9' and 9'x12'. Rubber barrier.

bright colors.

Also at our wore house- Indoor-outdoor carpeting _swing ·
· sots for outdoor use · whMifllrrows . Congowoll· .
linoleum rug border· co~nllr lopping. Cllromotrlm lor
carpets, Pugs • 1/nol..,m - uwn Boy lnd Toro lnGwors
Including Riders ond Rototlllers . Lown Boy oil.
..,..,. ..............
__....
laWII mower bllde• · TV antonnas. Llfd wire. stoncl-otll
- Roof mounts and accnsorlts lor ontonna lnatallatiln.

.... ....... __ .

-- ..... -·--..

Elberfelds In Pom

......

While inOationary trends are
. continuing across Ute nation,
prices at Meigs County's· Fort
Meigs have been cut in half.
Acting as an incentive for the
half price rates which have
gone into effect at Fort Meigs,
located on the New Uma Road
near Rutland Is the desire of the
Leading Creek Conservancy
District to set' a record year for
camping, fishing and park
visitors.
Effective at once, camping
will be $1 a night, excluding
electricity; fishing will be $1 per
day and trailer and cabin rent
wiD be $3 per night. All these
prices are exactly one-half of
what they have been.
Alimit o! two weeks has been
established on camping and
trailer or cabiri rental each
stay.
The park has a lake of approximately three acres which
has been stocked Utis year with
rainbow trout, 1,470 pounds;
Lake Erie Channel catfish 900
pounds; yellow perch 2~0
pounds, plus bass, crappie and
blue gill.
This year there have been
record catches of large mouth
bass, 24\2 inches; a 3l'h inch
TO MEET MONDAY
Gayle Price, driver's
education instructor, announces
that students of Southern High
School who will be 16 years of
age by Sept. 11 1971, and .whd
wish to start drivers educatlon
are to meet in r00m 206 at Ute
high schoo1 · at 8:30 a. m
Monday, June 28.

channel catfish, several rain·
bow trout of 21 to 23 inches and
14 Inch crappies.
Other facilities at the park
include shelter houses, picnic
tables, reproduction of Fort
Meigs, and a museum. There Is
an attendant on duty at all times
to escort visitors Utrough the
musewn. There Is also a concession stand which can be
rented on a commission hasls to

groups wishing to make money
for
their
respective
organizations. Any group
wishing to use the facility must
obtain prior permission from
Ute Watershed Board .
Further information on any
aspect of Fort Meigs can be
obtained by calling Leading
Creek Conservancy District,
Rutland, 742-5922.

r---------------------------,

!

News ..• in Briefs !

I

By United Press International
PARIS-LEDUC THO, SEVENTH·RANKING member of
Ute North Vietnamese politburo, returned to Paris today after a
year-long absence and promptly dashed hopes that he had
brought any concessions from Hanoi to help unfreeze the Vietnam
peace talks.
"I brjng nothing new in ni.ypocketfor the time being," he told
newsmen at Orly airfield. ''Our proposals put before the con·
ference are still valid. It is up to President Nixon and the United
States to act and fix a date for the U. S. military wiUtdrawal."
His statements left the talks right where they were - the
North Vietnamese and VietCong refuse to negotiate or discuss the
freeing of American prisoners of war unlll the United States seta a
date for wiUtdrawal of all U. S. forces, something Washington
refuses to do.

court's ruling, the appeals court
said the entire matter might be
moot since the Pentagon report
has been published in several
other newspapers.
The Times said its lawyers
would go to Washington today to
file appeals to Ute Supreme
Court on the appeals court's
ruling Wednesday sending the
case back to U.S. District Court
Judge Murray I. Gurfein.
Gur!ein, who Issued the
original temporary injunction
against the Times and later
ruled in its favor, was in·
structed to review the 47·
volume Pentagon report to

Draft May Be Extended

WASHINGTON (UP!) A twoyear extension ·of the draft,
carrying a major legislative
limit on President Nixon's
policy In Vietnam, was headed
By UnltedPrets International for Senate approval today after
Ohio Extended Weather seven weeks of d~bate.
Outlook-8alurday through
Passage was eipecteCI in a
Monday:
roll call vote . sometime Utis
A chance of showers In lbe · afternoon.
weslem sections Saturday
The basic draft measure,
and Sunday. Otherwise fair already passed by the House,
Saturday through Monday. extends Ute draft until Jun~ 31f, ,
Lows IJI the 50s norUt and 80s 1973; eliminates student defersouth early Saturday, war- men~; and authorizes a
ming to the 80s and lower 70s massive military pay increase,
by Sunday night. Highs in the
twice as large as · Pre~dent
70s north and' 80s south Nixon asked, to attract an all·
Saturday and rtslDg to the 80s
volunteer Army.
and lower 90s Monday.
The Senate version in addi·
lion establishes a nine-month

timetable for tolal U.S. with- Cloture was imposed on Ute
drawal from Indochina subject first attempt when Southerners
to only one condition : Ute abandoned their long-held prin·
release of prisoners of war held ciple of unlimited debate,
by the Coinmunists.
contending it was superseded in
It also included, for the first this case by Ute national
time. slnce.l941, a.no-Uft ceiling security.
on Ute nwnber of men that can-· TI\e vote snilffed out, even
be drafted-130,000 the first befQre it began, a · plannad
year and 140,000 Ute second. filibuster to force expiration of
And It orders a reduction in Ute the draft next Wednesday
number of U.S. active duty when the old Selective Service
personnel from 3 million to 2.5 law expires.
million over the next two years. But Sen. Mike Gravel, D·
Neither of the8e ceillngs-&lt;Jn Alaska, said he would flllbuster
draftees or total military the measure again when the bUl
personnel-can be exceeded I comes back from a Houseexcept by an act of Congress. Senate negotiating committee.
The Senate voted 65 to Tl Gravel may get support on
Wednesday to shut off flll'ther that attempt H Ute HouSe
debate on the bill.
refuses tQ accept the Senate's
antiwar amendment.

Combat
Base Is
Shelled

docume~~ts."

In 1Jll Angeles, sources said
11n. Jnveatlntion .beaded by
Asslatant Attorney General
Paw Vincent wu attempting to
determine how Ute Times oiltaiDed the pentagon report. The
secret investigation was the
first Indication the government
might be seeking criminal
complaints.
The Los Angeles Times said
its porUon of the repar.t showed
Secretary of State Dean Rusk ln
August,. 1963, rejecled a
recommendation from a State
Department expert to pull out of ,
Vietnam because Ute United ,
'Slates could not win a war .
there.
.
Ruak made the decision at a .
National Security Council :
session which he chaired in the
~gram
abaence of President Kennedy, .
the newapaper said. Ii said .•
Rusk's actiorll were fiiiPPorled ·
by Defense Secretary JWberl s,
Events have beeil scheduled McNamara and John;on, who
for the Independence Day was then vice president.
celebration of the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department,
Pete Simpson said today.
The observance will he held
on Monday, July 5, and will
begin with a flag raising
ceremony at 9:4~ a. m. at the
Racine Junior High School
followed by a parade leaving
the school at 10 a. m. and
moving Utrough the town. A
chicken barbecue will be served Miss Theima F. Michaei, 62, a
from 12 noon to 5 p. m. ·
retired teacher of the Meigs
At I :30 p. m. there wili be a Local School District, was found
donkey baseball game and at dead at her home in Rutland
3:30 races and contests for Thursday morning.
young people on lhe school Coroner Dr. Ray R. Pickens
grounds. In the evening said that Miss Mfchael had
townspeople will join firemen apparenUy suffered a cerebral·.
and firemen's auxiliary thrombosis. She had been in .
members for a variety and style tolich wiUt a doctor ov~r the .
show. A fireworks display will past day or so complaining of a..
conclude the observance at 10 p. severe headache. Dr. Pickell!(·
m.
said that she had been dead '
from four to six hours when oo::
Ox Roast; Talent visited the home at about 9a.m. ·
Thursday.
Show Scheduled
Miss Michael had last taught ·
An ox roast and a l(llent show at Harrisonville. She was
will be among the highlights of member of th~ Rutland Churrh-: : ·
Ute annual Independence Day of Christ.
·.
celebration of Ute Rutland Fire Surviving her are a sister,'
Department to be held Monday Mrs . Pauline Markins of' ,
July 5, on the former Rutland Rutl.and and ~o nephews,.
•,
High School f9Qtball field
Funeral setVlces will be held .
The ox roast wUI be heid all at2p.m. SaturdayattheMilrtin;
day and there will be all types of Funeral Home ~th the Rev, :
games and contests for children Keith WI~ of~c~ating . .illlNI '
and adult1 •
.
will be 10 Miles Cemetery ..
A talent show will be held at Friends may call at the funeral,,
7:30 in the evening wiUt Vernon. home anytime Friday.
Weber in charge. Cash prizes
wiU be awardood the top three
contestants. Contestants should
LOCAL TEMPS
,
register with Weber.
The temperarure in l'umero,:
Afireworks display will close at 11 R·.m. Thursday was 71
the ann•Jal observance.
degrees under !IWiny'skies, .,

Is

Announced

SAIGON (UPI)-A force of
under a barra~e of rocket and
mortar fire overran an important South Vietnamese combat
base just south of the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ),
military sources said today.
The North Vietnamese troops
captured mortar positions on
the north perimeter of Combat
Base Fuller and turned them
against the SouUt Vietnamese
defenders and a handful of U.S.
advisers t -fore overrunning the
base early today, Ute sources
said.
Before the base five miles
south of the DMZ fell, Ute
sources said, the defenders
were calling in artillery and
aerial rocket fire .from U.S. ·
UH1 Huey helicopter gunships
on their own positions in an
effort to beat back the assault.
Precise casualty figures .were
not known, but the sources said
250 South Vietnamese troops
have been killed or ~ere
missing in the bitter fighting
· for the base in the past four
days.
·
Fuller is a strategically
important base since it blocks
Ute approaches to Camp
Carroll, F:irebase Sarge and
other American bases nearby.
One SouUt VIetnamese officer
said Wednesday Fuller "must
be held at all costs."

decide what portions o! the
study could be printed by the
times.
A federal district judge in
Boston ruled Wednesday the
third newspaper enjointd from
publishing the report, the
Boston Globe, dld not have to
relinquish Its copies . of the
documents. A hearing on the
Globe case was scheduled for 10
a.m. EDT Friday.
The Chicago Sun-Times
prinled a story in its editions
today saying President John F.
Kennedy sent Vice President
Lyndon B. Johnson to Saigon in
May, 1961, to persuade South
VIetnam to request U.S. ground
troops.
The Sun-Times said the
copyrighted story was taken in
part from the Pentagon report
and in part from other
documents. The sun-Times
prin~ a story in Wednesday's
editions which It said was from
"top secret state Department

July Fourth

1,500 Conununlsts attacking

· HUNTINGTON, W.VA. -CHEMETRON Corp. was expected
to open a portion of Its fire-damaged pigment plant here today'
with a work force of 2W hourly employes, as hospital officials
attempted to transfer a victim from Sunday's explosion.
· Aspokesman for the firm said the reipalnder of the 425 work·
men would be .off Ute job until the enlife plant Is inspected for
safety flaws.
An unofficial damage estimate of $1.4 million was made by
UNDERGO&amp;'! SURGERY
Ute firm Wednesday, as firemen continued an investigation Into . Nick !hie, son of .Mr. and Mrs.
Ute cause of the biBs!.
John Ihle, Racine Route t,
underwent an appendectomy at
WASHINGTON - PRF.'IIDENT NIXON is convinced the Veterans Memorial Hospital
\
,(Continued on page 6)
today. His room number is 122.
'

expected to become involved
today in the question
surrounding publication of the
report following rulings Wed·
nesday in appeals courts on
cases involving the Washington
Post and the Times.
The U. S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Washlngllln upheld
the Post's right to print news
and docwnents from the secret
study. The ban against the Port
publishing any more of the
report; however, was extended
until 6 p.m. Friday so Ute
Justice Department had time to
appeal the ruling.
Besides supporting a lower

Retired

Teacher

Succumbs

'

a: .

MILK, ANYONE? Miss Rhea Mora, Meigs County's
Dairy Princeu,la in Colwnbus taking part in the Ohio Dairy
Princess contest today and -tomorrow. Miss Mora, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mora, Pomeroy Route 3, was chosen
to represent Meip Co-*tty at Ute annual joint banquet of the
Meigs Dairy Service Unit and the Southeastern Ohio Guern·
sey Breedell Alan. several monUts ago. She has been active
in church, IICboOI and C011111fnity organizations. A.graduate
thia apr~ of ~tern Hign School, Miss Mora' is a junior
member of the American Guernsey Cattle Club, has been in
4-H club work for 10 years and is reigning Meigs. County
Jurilor Fair Queen. Miss Mora and her mother lite staying at
the Foci Hayes llotel where they are guests of the American
Dairy Alln.

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