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'

Mi dleport CounCil

B- The Oailv Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June 211,)971

Bid ·'230 For

New Conservationist ·

Jones Sweater

Is Appointed Today

By RICK VAN SANT

COLUMBUS ·&lt;UPil - A $230 bid for a sweater
wasn't unusual when they auctioned away Johnny
Jones' things this weekend.
Johnny, who died at age 71last March, had quite a
reputation around Ohio.
During the 20 years he put together newspaper
columns for the Columbus Dispatch he made some
5,000 speeches around the state, meeting a lot of
people, making friends and instilling memories.
Several hundred of his friends Saturday milled
about the beautiful, wooded grounds surrounding the
small, frame house north of here where Johnny
Jiv11t1.
The auction was the type of
thing ol' Johnny hlmseif would
have shown up for, if he could
have. He might have been an
hour or so late, but he would
have been there.
He would have been happy to
know on Saturday he had a
friend like 69-year-old James M.
Smlth of Columbus. Smitty's
sister, Mrs. Kendell Bryan of
Williamsport, bid $230 for a
sweater of Johnny's that she
gave to her brother.

·C.Ontends ·Pomeroy ·
.
Responsible ~or
Water Over Quota
.

David pariy, 23, a native of · has been undergoing watershed
Highland County, was named training since Janlllll")', th1s
today Meigs County District year, In Lawrence CoWlty.
Soil Conservationist to replace Since joining lbe service,
Carl Bilikam, Pomeroy, who Parry has undergone two
reUred on May '1:1.
training courses for new emParry, who graduated from pioyes - one in Feblilary 1971,
Ohio State University with and one of basic leadership .in
honors, has had prior training April.
with the soil conservation Parry will begin his duties
service in three com~ties before here on July 11 but will be
coming to Meigs, Clarence visiUng the COWlty before then
McKnight, area soil con- to locate housing.
servatlonlst of Albens, reports. BWkam, who resigned in
In 1969, Parry underwent a May, had been conservationist
student training program in In Meigs County since 194ll. He
CUnton COWlty. He received his and his wife continue to reside
degree in June, 1970. He lben on Uncoln Heights in Pomeroy.
worked In crawford County and

by payment regulations for the purchase of -:vater
from Pomeroy - as made by Pomeroy Vill_age
Council last week - · was answered Monday mght ·
when Middleport Village Council met in regular
session.
During a discussion on the allegations that
Middleport is not paying the amount that it should be
paying to Pomeroy for water, it :-vas repor~~ that
the Pomeroy Board of Public AffairS was notified by
registered mail in January of Middleport's stand.
-

rze1 s

Mrs. Thomas To Work

With Young Retarded

Miss Wilson
Dies Saturday

5.95 ,.

SIZES

TO
TO
AND SUPER SIZES 46 TO-52

See Our Many
New DreSses

INSURED

Bank Rate
Financing

l~ceJs Furni~ure

Arriving Each Day

......
,
...
.......

n•

a. •

. Elberfelds In Pomny

,

hanks.
Grueser commented on the
events and how well attended
th~y were and how much they
added to Regatta activities. A
detailed report submitted by
Mrs. Franklin Lewis on the Flea
Market activities will be a great
help next year. Grueser said.
Grueserpointed out that when
all expenses are paid and ali
proceeds have been received
the profit to the chamber would
total approximately $700.

tendent and the Meigs Board of
Education for th~ir fine
cooperation and for the use of
the Pomeroy Junior and Senior
High School buildings, to
Pomeroy Mayor Charles Legar
and council members, MiddlepOrt officials, Pomeroy and
Middleport Pollee Departments, the ,Meigs County
Sheriff's Department and the
employes of the Community
Action Program for the excellent job of cleaning the river

The Regatta received State
and National recognition ,
Grueser said. He was contacted
by the Detroit Sun in regard to
Dr. George W. Nace ,head of the
Zoology Department; ai the
University of Michigan, being
here to attend the Frog jump.
He was also contacted by the
New York Times, the Cincinnati
Enquirer and a write-up appeared in the Cleveland Plain
Dealer on all activities of the
Regatta.

A decision from the Ohio
Bureau of Unemployment
Compensation will detennine
whether workers at the lmperial Electric Co. in Middleport, closed since June 3, are
to receive benefits.
Represeptatives of both the
local
of
International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers of the plant and G!flcials attending a hearing
recently before a delegate from

the Bureau of Unemployment
Compensation.
The company charges that
the over 80 employes of the
plant are out on strike. If the
Bureau concurs, then the
employes, according to
unemployment compensation
rules, are not eligible for
benefits. However, workers
charge that they were locked
out of the plant at the expiration
of their contract. If the Bureau

lEN CENTS ·

In other business directors
were named with six to be
elected for the 1971-72 term
beginning July 1.
Named by Grueser were Ada
Nease, Marjorie Hoffner, N. W.
Compton, Jack CarSey, Richard
Chambers, Don Pearch, Earl
Ingels, Ted Reed and Kermit
Walton. Nominated from the
floor were Herbe~t Hoover,
Dale Warner and Bill Grueser.
Carrc,-over directors are Tom
( ontinued on page 10)

rules that to be the situation
then the workers will have the
right to collect benefits.
Union representatives at the
hearing testified that they went
to the door on the morning of
June 3 and were locked out of
the plant, it is reported.
It was reported also that the
company was offered by the
union that the plant could
continue operating on a day-today basis under terms of the old

contract, This offer was
declin'ed, it is reported.
Meantime, nothing was
reported "happening" in lbe
way of a settlement between the
workers and plant management, the first dispute
since the plant located in
Middleport some 25 years ago.
No meetings between the two
have been scheduled, it is
reported .
Employes of the plant have
been able to secure food stamps
and some donations have been
received from businesses
locally for provisions on the
closed their shops in obser- "line" at the plant where
vance of the rally.
representatives of the wllon are
The source said Joe Gallo, stationed daily. The workers of
"Cho was recently released.from, ,.the Wlion _receive no benefits
prison, "was known to consort through their union or·
wij.h ~~gr~ lnl!la~ .and, lb!lre g~~~· ~ Ia ·repor~;
is a rumor ~~ there Is a s6rt On the mofillng lit hill a, 8.
of Negro Mafia and 'that he T.,Smitll, plant tnallllt,r. said:
(Gallo) is using negroes."
"Negotiations between the
One of Colombo's · aona, company and union in meeUnga
Anthony, said today hla father with the Federal mediation and
had begun breathing on his own Conciliatory Service have not
without use of a special oxygen resulted in a settlement. The
tank . "He's gettil)g better," union struck the plant as of
Anthony said. "He moved. his midnight, June 3. I have no
left arm."
'
further comment at this time."

Police Continue Quest

1

time for consideration of the
historic dispute between the
government and The New York
Times and The Washington
Post over the Vietnam papers.
The justices, who heard the
case Saturday, gave no hint of
when they would announce a
decision . But the speed with
which they acted on the case
indicated they would make a
ruling s_oon, possibly today.

N{i:W ·YORK (UPI)-Joseph Gallo and his brother, Albert,
Colombo Sr., reputed I¥ooklyn two of Colombo's chief rivals,
gang leader shot Monday at an . and Carlo Gambino, considered
Italian-American rally he one of the most powerful
helped organize, remained In m~derworld leaders in the
critical condition today . from nation.. ~
. , .
.
three gunshot wounds· fired at A police source who attributclose range.
ed the shooting !0 mob rivalry
Police inunedlately began said the Gallos were unhappy
questioning underw~ld figures with Colombo's handling of the
to see if the shooting was Italian-American rally and
caused by a renewal of a feud wanted part of the money
between Colombo and others collected at the gathering. The
over the South Brooklyn rack- source said 1be brothers
ets he allegedly controlled.
warned Brooklyn merchants of
Colombo's attacker, Jerome possible retaliation if they
A.
25, a N.J.,
Negrowhom
from
NewJohnson,
Brunswick,
police described as "an admirer of Adolf Hiller" was ahot to
death after wounding Colombo.
Police were also Investigating
the possibiUty Johnson may
have been a member of a blac.k
revolutionary group.
Colombo remained unconscious and. In critical cohdition
at 8 a.m. today. He was shot in
the brain, left cheek and neck
while attending the ItalianAmerican unity rally near
Central Park. More than 2,000
persons were present when he
was shot.
Four guns were fom~d at the
scene of the sllooUng and pollee
said ballistics tests would be
needed to detennine who shot
Johilson. A police department
source said he was not shot by
a policeman and speculated the
fatal bullets may have been
d
. ed b c 1 bo bod
[Jr
Y a o om
yguar .
Among those questioned by
police were Joseph "Crazy Joe"

·'' '%'"' ' ' ' "' '"' "' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '' '-' ' ' ' i:•;;:;;:;:'-' ;:::::•:::::::'::
By United "Press International
Ohio Extended Outlook Thunday through Saturday:
ContiDued wann Thursday
and cooler Friday and
Saturday. Chance of showers
Thursday and Friday, ending
Saturday. Highs Thursday ID
the upper 8Gs and the lower
90s, droppiDg by Saturday to
the upper· 70s and the lower
80s. Lows early Thursday
illornlllg near 70, dropping
Saturday to 55 to 60.
,,3,,,,,,,,,,,,,,(,,,,,,,,,,,,"'' "' ' ' ' '"' ' '&gt;' !' ' "' '"' ' '@' '3,,,,,,

Communists Step
Up DMZ Activity

SAIGON (UPI)-'The U.S.
command today reported more
North Vietnamese rocket attacks agalnat · two American
bases near the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ). Communist antlaircraft guns In the same area
shot down a U.S. F4 Phantom
jet.
The barrages of 122mm
rockets against the U.S. outposts were the second such
attacks In 24 hours in the
increasing pressure against
WASHINGTON -THE ROMAN Catholic Church appears to
da11ied bases along the DMZ.
be giving a mixed reaction to the Supreme Court's mixed decision
J
Military spokesmen said the
on state aid for church schoola.
.1. I
o 1U I
(Uf
Th
p
'I Phantom jet fighter-bomber
Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin, general secretary of the U. S.
ree
omeroy counc1
.
, te h
inted
d ti f orne seniors m·
b
t
.th th was supporting B52 bombers on
Six
Catholic Conference, said Monday's ruling against state
ac ers were appo
gra ua on or s
mem ers me WI • · e strikes over the Ho Chi Minh
payments for parochial school teacher salaries in Pennsylvania for the next school year when the academic course only.
faP~meMroy daBo~ ofht toPubhelic .Ala- trail in Laos when it was hit by
II'S
on y rug
ar n .
.
fir "f
th
and Rhode Island "does not mean the end of ~on.publlc schools in the Meigs Local School District George Hargraves, superlnBoard of Education met tendent, reports that in the new
explanation of the payment for a~ 11. alrcra11
e
rom
e
the United States."
Monday night in Middleport.
high school students are In some
•
water to Pomeroy by Mid- v1cmity of ~~ western portion
He did concede the Impact of the decision "cannot be
The group includes Mrs . instances
eligible
for
dleportVillage under terms of a of the DMZ. The pilot and a
overestimated" and that It complicates the financial problems of
Clarice Norris Hopkins, Racine, graduation at the end of the first
contract between the two towns. sen cond c~ewmanledI managedil to
the nation's 12,200 Catholic elementary and secondary schools. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. semester because of the
··
water board members ex- Ythe cr1pp Pane 120m es
·Carroll Norris, French and number of courses they are
plained
that according to the to the Da Nang· area but had to
1
WASHINGTON - THE NIXON administration's effort to English; Mrs. Unda Aikman, taking. If the pian is approved
contract with Middleport parachute_ to safety, the plane
save Lockheed Aircrpft Corp. from bankruptcy faced its first test elementary; Mrs. Carla later , these students coulol
.Village, Pomeroy is to supply crashing mto Da Nang harbor·
In Congress today with Lockheed supporters confident of success. Gilmore Saelens, Middleport graduate at that time and begin
.
2,500,000 gallons of water a The U:S. command said it
. · Theissuewentbefore a Closed meeting of the Senate Banking · Elementary; Mr.' and Mrs. college or technical school
month at a cost of $1,000.
was the fll'st loss?' an F4 over
Conunittee, whose vote either will doom the rescue operation or Charles Corder, drafting and training. They woUld or could
Middleport had requested Soul~ V1etn~ smce Feb. 11
send it out to the Senate floor, where stiff opposition awaited it. elementary respectively, and return to Meigs High In the
'
that the water be turned off and 1,t emphasized the CommuSen. ,TohnSparkman, D-Aia., felt sure he had enough '{Oies to Mrs . Janet Murphy ·Deetz, spring to receive their diplomas By United Press InternaUoual when the 2,500,000 was reached. nlsts ~ovem~~t of heavy gm~s,
save the firm aOdthe l7,000 jobs involved In Lockheed's first elementary. Mrs. Corder is the . with their classmates.
Temperatures In Ohio However, the water had not ~ncludmg antiall'craft weapons,
attempttor~terthecommercialjetiinerfieldslnceitbuiltand former Joanne Montgomery
A proposed student behaVior Monday soared above the 100. been turned off as when the mto t~e area just below the
abandmedthemoneylosingEiectralntheearly1960s.
andformerlytaughtinRutland. plan for the high school was degree mark before severe water is sllut off the extreme DMZ m recent weeks.
Mrs. Deetz is from Indiana as discussed· based on a demerit thunderstorms swept across the pressure caused breaks in ~Hilary sourc~s said meanWASHINGTON _ A ROUl'INE RESOLUTION providing is Mr. Corder.
system. Proposed dress code state for the second time in Pomeroy water lineS and it is wh1le that the Umted State_s has
emergency money for the government to operate until congress
T~e b_oard accepted the revisions bas ed in recom- three days, dropping tern- more costly to Pomeroy to moved more 155mm llow1_tzers
can peas the regular appropriations bllls got caught up today In a . res1gna bon of Mr~ . Grace mendations of the high school peratures more than 10 degrees repair the lines than give and tanks tto the mounta1~ous
,.;.,;t · del
ndin and Cuban refugees. .
.
Hawley, who will retire at the student council and the junior in less than an hour in some Middleport the extra·amount of reg1on be ow the DMZ w ere
'""' ·over ense ape
g
.
· ' end of summer. The board and kenior high schools were areas.
..
water it was reported. · ·
more than lO,OOO North Vletn~,Congress has enacted nbne of the regular appropriations bills approved a resolution · of discussed and bills were ap- The i)ighest official ~eading In other buslnes$ the board of mese troops ha_ve been fighting
for the new fiscal year starting Thursday. Instead, the House commendation for Mrs . proved for payment.
was at ·coshocton where · public affairs accepted the alil~d forces '" the heaviest
adopted a rouUne resoluton perm1tling the government _to con- Hawley's years of service.
Board members present were Monday afternoon tern- resignation of Dick Young, actwn in three years aroWl~
tlnue spending at last year's rate until the new money bills are
Charles , Jones, Fred U!e , Franlt w. Porter, Don Mullen, peraturea reached 101-degrees. superintendent of the water the neutral zone.
,
passed.
Fred Jones and James Cottrill Virgil King, Hiram Slawter, and Toledo reported a high of 99and plant. Young resigned due to U.S: spoke_smen said till'~
were appointed to work on a Joe Sayre. Others attending . all olber major Ohio cities personal reasons it was Amencans. fr~m the ls~il~~
FARMINGTON, W.VA.- A GRISLY TASK began early special student s.jmmer work were Hargraves, Larry reported readings In lbe middle reported.
Cavalry D1vis10n ~ere .
today inside a funeral home near the No. 9 mine - the task of program and ·Mrs. Mildred W.orrison, assistant superin- or' Upper 901. Recorda were aet Attending were E: F. and 19 wo~ded m fightmg
placing names on five dead coal miners, the latest victims Salley was named, a subatitute tendent, James Diehl, high at Y!!UD8Jtown and Manafleld. Robinson, Robert Hysell and Monday 60 m1les east-northeast
unearthed' from a 1988 explosion.
I
for the Title 1 summer · school principal, and Russell The heat, coupled with ex- B.ill Baronick, water board of Sa1gon. Two of the wounJ:
~ry teama, opening the newest phase. of the search program.
~ "!
Moore, junior high school tremel~ high humldll):, caused members, and Jim Mees, Ralph were 5re~men of an Army h :
Monday,cut past lbe ?North eritranc;e and were startled with the
The board discussed the principal. ·
dam~e to several hi~hways in Werry and !£lma Russell, Hiley hehcopter gunship s o
possibility
of
mid-year
the state.
Pomeroy council members.
down .
discovery.

.

Elberfelds Just Received
Women's Wash Dresses

rre1 s

PHONE 992&gt;2155

29, 1971

Outcome Of Imperial Benefits

Supreme Court
con,,n
·h ues
·
Case

a

Clay

'ews .•. rn

FRANKFORT KY. - A GROUP of small coal mine
operators, chargtn'g the Coal Mine Health and Safety Act is
driving them out of business, prepared to file a suit in federal
'
court today to halt enforcement of the law.
Details of the suit were withheld until it was_fU~d in u.s.
District Court In Pikeville, Ky., but sources SSid 11 charged
discrimination by the federal government In enforcement of the
law and sought a temporary Injunction against the stringent
WASHING TON (UP! ) - Supreme Court justices, their
safety standards the law imposes.
summer recess delayed, ponCOLUMBUS - A GRANT OF $10,000 for the legal defense dered today the question o(
fund established for Angela Davis has caused widespread whether two newspapers should
be allowed to continue•publicadisagreement within the United Presbyterian Church.
tion
of secret Pentagon doThe grant was _the source of sharp debate during the
Presbyterian General Assembly in May of :Iris year and further cuments on the origins of the
publicity has Ignited anger and concern among the member Vietnam War.
The court Monday postponed
churches.
the Scheduled adjournment of
It aU began when the Presbyterian Council on Church and
Race a 40-member agency of the denomination, announced it had its current term to allow more
.
'
made lbe donatlm from trust funds to assure that MillS Dav1s
would receive justice in her trial in San Rafael, Calif.

•

A Large Shipment Of

1

TIIESDAY,)~NE

OBUC Decision To Determine

•u

'

Five Injured In Collision

WHY PAY MORE?

members during the noon
luncheon held at Bowers' DriveIn, noted that the three day
event was finest ever staged.
Grueser extended· thanks. to
George Hargraves, Me1gs High
School superintendent, Larry
Morrison, assistant supetin-

OIDO'S lOth District Representative Clarence E. Miller
(left) receiVed an album of commemorative stamps from
I
.
I
Postmaster General Winton M. Blount as a part of a special
ceremony marking the inauguration of the new United States
By United Press lnlernaUonal
Postal Service. July 1, 1971, was specified in the Postal
WASHINGTON - !'RESIDENT NIXON has decided to veto
Reorganization Act as the date for the Postal Service to take
fbe
blllim -accelerated public works bill backed by . the ·· over functions of the old Post"Offlee""Deparbhent. The stll!jlp
Democrats, Treasury Secretary John B. Connally announced
presented by Blount to Miller was specially designed to honor
today.
Postal Service Day and shows the official insignia of the new
Connally said a veto message by Nixon would "111llke abunPostal Service. It comes exactly 124 years after the first
dantly clear" that Nixon '1eels he is not going to engage in further
Federal postage stamps were issued . A complimentary
spending where it cannot be related directly" to the unemsouvenir cachet bearing the new insignia as well as the old
ployment problem.
Post Office Department seal will be distributed one. to a
The President had until midnight to either accept or reject the
customer at all post offices on July 1.
measure.

1

Filed

MEIGS THEATRE.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.
.
-- OHIO
. - --·

(---------------------------,
I
7\.T
B . ,.f. I
I

The Inter-all Of 1Jae Meiga-MG/lOn Area

Regatta Termed Financial Success

BY KATIE CROW
Bill Grueser, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Monday termed the Big
Bend Regatta a huge success
not only in· attendance but
That. registered letter infinancially
as welL
fanned the Pomeroy board that when the two and a bait million
Grueser speaking to Chamber
water from Pomeroy to Mid-· gallons have been used each
dleport should be cut off at a month is Pomeroy's responcutoff valve between the two sibility. If Pomeroy does not
towna each month when Mid- close the valve to stop water'
dleport had used two and one- moving Into flllddleport, then
haU million gallons.
the responsibility for the large
That ·is the amount of water amounts lies with Pomeroy, the
Middleport had contracted to Middleport Council contends.
purchase from P.omeroy when According to the letter sent to
the two villages purchased their the Pomeroy Public Affairs
portions of the Meigs Water Co., Board in January, the only time
which had served both com- when the cutoff valve is to be
munlties,
turned back on after the two and
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate a hail miliion gallons was used
said that Middleport has four during a month is in case of an
wells now which produce emergency.
enough water to supply several It was further reported that
towna and would not actually Pomeroy had twice attempted
need the water from Pomeroy. to shut the water flow off betHowever, the village did agree ween the two towns after the
In wriUng to purchase two and designated amount had been
one-hail million gallons each used, but the pressure had
month and is paying for that caused lines to burst in
amount.
Pomeroy , However, the conPomeroy Village said that tention last night is that this
Middleport is using twice the problem Is Pomeroy's to.solve:
amount and paying only the A permissive automobile taJ:
amount due for the two and a measure which had a first"
bait million gallons. It was reading earlier this month. and
pointed out at the Middleport was unanimously approved by
meeUng last night that shutUng council, did not come before the
off the water from Pomeroy
(Continued on page 10)

Ohio•••

S

NO. 54

A charge that Middleport Village is not abiding

(---------------------------,
B . ,../.

p.--------.

NO. 'XXIV

BY BOB HOEFLICH

19Jti.
"It may seem like a.high price
to pay for a sweather," he said.
"But it's worth more than $230
to me."
Coat Has Memories.
I
7\.T
•
I
Mrs . Sarah Smith of 1
1
1
Columbus, who became the first
I
girl cheerleader at OSU in 1947, I
1971 SEOGA CHAMPIONS - 1be Plckaway Country nament, held m the local links over lbe weekend. Ptckaway
By United .Press International
was on !he front row to bid for
Club of Orclevllle captured the 4&amp;h Annual team cham- shot an 887, flnlshlng 13strokesahead ofrunnerup Lane~.
WASHINGTON - AGRICUL'ruRE Department officials
the long, sleek, raccoon coat
pionship
of the Southeastern Ohio Goif ASsociation Tour- The champs !U'e pictured here with their hard-earned tropby.
Johnny wore to football games. report they are making a special survey In 14 states to find out
She figured her winning $42.50 how much acreage farmers intend to plant to the 1972 winter
wheat crop.
bid was a bargain.
Gilt From OSU
"I would have gone as high as The survey, officials say, will be used to help them determine
"I don't know how high I $75," she said. "I used to walk opera ling details of the government's 1972 winter wheat program.
would have bid to get the back from games with Johnny Most members of a gpvernment advisory committee discussing (ConUnued from page I)
sweater," a smillng Mrs. Bryan when he wore the coat.
the W72 program at a meeting last month suggested an increase this year.
said. "I think J9hnny would "I had to have this coat," she in acreage reUrement to head off surplus production.
Bayh said he had not set up
have wanted my brother to have said. "Maybe I'll wear it back to
The 14-etate survey will cover Ohio, Indiana, Illlnois, any Ohio organization, but has
it."
had help offers from a number
a cheerleading reunion."
'The scarlet ' sweater with a Dozens of boxes stuffed with Missouri, South Oakots, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, of Ohioans. The Hoosier, who
grey, block "0" was presented hats, smoking pipes, antlques Colorado, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon - states said he has a 70-member staff
to Johnny In 1940 by Ohio State and trinkets were auctioned off. which account for about 87 per cent of the crop.
working on his capaign national~
University, in tribute for Cliff Chesbrough of Columbus
ly, revealed he would announce
CLEVELAND - THE TREND toward big wage settlements his decision about running late
Johnny's enthusiastic and bought several boxes full,
sometimes impromptu wanted to buy more, but ran out and the expectation that pay hlkes In !he steel Industry will be this year.
hefty is creaUng fear in the Industry, Industry Week magazine
chee.rleadlng lit footbaU games. of money.
McGovern said newspaper
said today,
'
.
Johnny loved the sweater.
publication
of classified PentaHe went through the crowd
A
labor
el!pert
with
a
diversified
west
coast
company
said
"This sweater won 'I be trying to sell a guitar he had
gon papers revealed "deception
that
unless
President
Nixon
Intervenes
In
the
steel
negotiations
worn," Smitty said, draping It brought with him to get more
on part of government officials"
"all signs point loa hefty wage hike over the next three years, and to Congress and the American
carefully over his arm. "I'm cash for future bidding.
going to·display It where I used
if this happens, we have just walked into another three years of people. He said Attorney GenerFollow The Auctions
to have a drug store when "Hey, you want to buy a new, uncontrollable lnflation affecUng virtually the enUre economy." al John Mitchell's efforts to halt
Johnny came by to see me." $108 guitar for $65?" he asked
the New York Times and other
Smith was a fraternity people who brushed by him.
papers from printing the docubrother of Johnny's at Ohio When he couldn't sell the
ment were "unprecedented."
State and had known .him since guitar, he began selling Items
Bayh proposed a federal revenuesharingplantoautomaticalhe had purchased earlier at the
ly send money to states and to
auction In order to bid for
cities when the unemployment
others.
rate exceeded 4 per cent. He
It was a thing like that which
Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Meigs the two classrooms. The said the slowdown in the economight have caught Johnny's eye
Sun., Mon. &amp; Tues.
had he been covering the event. Local kindergarten teacher for Hemlock Daily Vacation Bible my probably had caused state
June 27-28-29
Johnny also might have been the past several years, has been School contributed $125.20; the and local governments to lose
Double FNture Program
intrigued by the food concession employed by the Meigs Cqunty Riverview Community DVBS, more than $4 billion this year. '
VIncent Price In
· trucks parked in his driveway Board of Mental Retsrdatlon $55; and the Pomeroy
CRY oflhe
BANSHEE
and wandered over to pick up a for the 1971-72 school tenn.
.
Ministerial Association, $50.
Mrs. Thomas will be working Present for the meeUng were
GP
lew quotes.
SEOqA MEDALIST, RUNNERUP - aJff Rhein, -ter, attired In a new green gillf
Essy Persson
with the younger class of Mrs. Grace Weber, Mrs.
"How
did
you
know
to
come
jacket,
Is congratulated by 1971 SEOGA Tournament Olainnan Atty. R. WW!am Jenkins,
Hugh Griffith
retarded
children.
Applications
here?''
a
woman
customer
Barbara Shuler, Mrs. Nora
Plus
right, after the Lancaster golfer captured medalist bonors In tbe 46th annual event here over
are now being accepted for a Rice, the Rev. Stanley PlatTHE VAMPIRE
asked the vendor.
the weekend. On left is Dean McFadden, Pickaway, who finished second In Individual scoring.
LOVERS
"I follow all these auctions, teacher. for the .older group of tenburg, and Edward KeMedy. ARBUCKLE - Miss Isabella
Rhein carded a 141 for the 30-hole session. McFadden was 143. See todsy's sport$ page for
("Color)
children, and a special meeting
Chilton Wilson, 77, of Arbuckle,
ma'am," he replied.
complete
tournament details.
R
fonner head of home economics
't
"I can hardly get the wrapper has been set for July 6 at which .
Ingrid Pitt
department of three univerUme the board plans to hire a
W
. Peter Cushing
off this sandwich," he said.
"Shows they're fresh, teacher.
A suit for the return of sities, educator and in later
Acknowledged during a property which was being sold years manager of the Armma'am/' the vendor said.
recent
meeUng of the board on land contract has been filed strong Family Farm here, died
01' Johnny might ha-ve
wri !ten down stuff like that and were several donations, all in Meigs County Common Pleas Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in the
designated for the purchase of a Court by Bernard and Myrtie Lanham Nursing Home at Five persons were injured, moderate damage to the Neff Darlene Hayes, 23, Rt. 2
Tonlghl &amp; Tu.-.
used It in his column.
June28-29
mimeograph machine for use In Wilson, South Point, against Poca.
none seriously, in a two vehicle auto.
Pomeroy, attempted to Pill
GET CARTER
Paul and Audra Runyon, Funeral services will be collision at 7:50p.m. Sunday on A second mishap occurred at two other vehicles, !oat control
- Technicolor_..
conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. Tycoon Rd., five tenths of a mile 10:25 p.m. Sunday on Rt. 7, five of her car and ran off lbe
Michael Caine
The chief justice of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Vinton, Rt. 1.
and two tenths miles south of roadway. She was cited. for
ian Hendry
The defendants failed to from the Arbuckle Independent north of Rt. 554.
Supreme Court acts as pre- SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Church
located
on
the
property
According
to
the
Gallia-Meigs
Rt. 218 where Gary F. Finley, failure to pass without the
John Osborne
siding officer when the Sen- Charles Klein, Pomeroy ; comply with the contract on
donated
to
the
church
by
Miss
Britt Ekland
Post State Highway Patrol, 30, Rt. 2, Crown City, lost assured clear distance,
ate tries the impeachment of Charles cochran, Point property they were purchasing
"R"
Wilson.
In
tennent
will
follo)V
in
vehicles
driven by Marie B. control of his truck, ran off the A final collision occurred at
PI
t K th C II d
a U.S. president.
in Salem Township.
Armstrong
Family Neff, 41, Dayton, and David H. right side of the highway and 8:40 p.m. Saturday at lhe
~-~-------·
easan ; a y a en er,
In the same court Sherry D. the
-· Grand Rapids, Mich.; Donna
Cemetery
at
Arbuckle
with
the Smith, 27, Rl. 2, Bidwell, slid into a pole. There was junction of Lew Jones Rd.,
Devol, Pomeroy, and Eber Fridley, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, flied Rev. Troy L. Pritt officiating.
collided on curve.
moderate damage to his truck. wh!!re vehicles driven by Earl
suit for divorce against Delbert
Carpenter, Portland.
The body wUI be removed from
Mrs. Neff had a laceration of No citation was issued.
K. Louder, 24, Columbus, and
SATURDAY DISCHARGES W. Fridley, Columbus, charging the Raynes Funeral Home at
- Ralph Werry, Annia Phelps, gross neglect of duty and ex- Buffalo to the church one hour the head ; two passengers, A third Sunday accident was Aifred · P, Wilcox, 56,. Jackson,
Connie Chapman, 21, Rt. 2, lnvestigatedat11:55a.m.onRt, collided·ona curve. There W..
Patty Crossan, Clarence treme cruelty.
before the services.
Bidwell, and ChrisUna Chap- 7, one and eight tenths miles moderate damage to both care.
Hawley, Maude Connolly, Mary
Active
pallbearers
will
be
the
man, 10 months old, Rt. 2, south of Rt. 554. The patrol said No citation was issu.ed.
Forfeit Bonds
Lambert, Jeff Snowden.
Rev. James Blake, Dewey
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Five -defendants forfeited F'ISher, Jr., L. T. Bennett, minor
Bidwell,lacerations.
both suffered from ~------------------•
Otis Cole, Cincinnati; Bernie bonds and a sixth was fined In George Bennett, Milford
Smith had a bruised arm
Edwards, Reedsville: George the court of Pomeroy Mayor Rayburn and Darrell Buck.
while a passenger in his car,
Tope, Gallipolis; Ayward Charles Legar Saturday night. Miss Wilson was born in West Clayton Smith, 41, Rt. 1,
Jones, Racine; Carol Drake,
Forfeiting bonds were Sherry Virginia Sept. 21, 1893, a Langsville, had a head
New Haven; Thryan Wallace, Fridley, 20, Pomeroy, $25 daughter of John Raynar laceration. Smith was charged
Pomeroy:
Linda
Baer, posted on a charge of driving Wilson and laabelle Armstrong with driving while under the
Minersville, and Estella Atltins, left of center; Carleton Wells, Wilson .
influence. There was heavy
Reedsville.
70, Ironton, $25, Improper left She was a granddaughter of damage to the Smith car and
SUNDAY DISCHARGES - turn; Harold Durst, Pomeroy, the late Robert Hall and .John
Monty Woife, Frances Mowery, $25, posted on i~toxication ' Armstrong who ":ere early
Molly Guinther, Thryan charge; Duane S1dders, 24, setUers of Arbuckle,'W. Va. She
Wallace, Robert McCartney. Shade, $50, unsafe operation, .was active in the Mason County (ConUnued from page I)
and FaMie Oiler, Pomeroy, $50, Farm Bureau; a member of the scientious objector.
posted on a petty larceny Daughters of the American
The Supreme Court cited the
• All Mtttl Conttructlont
charge.
Revolution and Daughters of government's own concession
Ltfetlmt Lubricated Motor!
• ITRONQ VINYL DUST BAQ COYER
Fined $5 and costs on a charge 1812.
that "there is no dispute that
Dirt juat wipes away! Prohtcls the dis·
An outstanding value at this price of
running
a
red
light
was
She
was
graduated
from
petitioner's professed beliefs
ponbte dust bag.
WUJ!am Haptonstall, 21, Mid- Marshall University, Hun- were founded on basic tenets of
• HYOENICALLY TREATED
smartly styled dresses for · all size
DISPOSABLE DUST BAQ
dleport.
lington : University of Illinois the Muslim religion, as he
ranges - washable permanent press
Specially treated for laatlng fraahneaa .
Guards against germ and bac teria
,
with honors; received her understood theln, and ' derived
fabric- zipper and button front stylesgrowth, resists mold and mildew. '
Mast-ers and Doctorate Degrees In substantial part from his
• TOE SWITCH
eeves - dark pia ids and stripes.
ON HONOR LIST
at Columbia University; was a devotton to ·Allah as the . s~ort sl_
Ea1y Up-toe control No bending, stoopIng to start or atop.
Miss . Brenda Bradford, member of Phi Beta Kappa and · supreme being/ ' ,
. A top brand name for this type dress.
• ADJUSTABLE 3 POSITION
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Delta Ganuna· Sororities.·
HANDLE
"This concesssion Is clearly
Simple to operate. Designed forClarence Bradford of Racine, Sh~ was a former head of correct," the Supreme Court
14~
24~
comfort and ease.
Your . .
was
named
to
the
honor
list
at
Home
E;conomics
Departments
said.
·
• PROlECTIYE VINYL BUMPER
Graceland
College
In
Lamoni,
at
Marshall
"
University;
Protects furniture and wood The ruling, reversing All's
Insurance
26~
32~
work from nicks and aeratches.
Ia.,
for
lbe
spring
semester.
'
University
of
Akron
and
conviction
and the five-year
AQent
• ROlLI ON 4 EASY-ROLL
A nursing student, Miss University of Arkansas where prison sentence and $10,000 fine
WHULI
·Dale Warner
Oan't mar wood or tile
Bradford was.initiated into fbe she helped design the new Home imposed · by a lower. court,
Gildea over deep pile rugs .
Lambda
Delta Sigma Soccety at Economics Building.
,, ONLY e• HIQH
means he can continue his ring
the college. Sbe also was ; After leaving Arkansas she career with a fight agai~t
. Low, streamline motor hood
goe1 ·under chairs and tablei.
awa~ed a scholarship. , .
came back to West Virginia to Jimmy Ellis scheduled next
MISS Bradford baa returned manage the Armatrong Farm. month.
"DIITURBULATOII"
I
home for the summer after Miss Wilson continued her
CIHnlntl Acllonl 1 1
8pelldlna twoweeb In San Joae, Interest and activities In the
1 ,_tol 8hakool
Calif., aa ~U"t of Mr. and Mn!. field of education and was crdI 8woopol CC..bol
PUBLIC INVITED
George Wellar and 1011, Kelly. dited with wrltinga pertaining to
1 Sucllon Cloanol ...~~.,.,....,_
AUTO? Triller? Boat?
Patrons of the Minersville
her field of interests, some of
Camper? When you go . ,
1
Post Office are invited to the
go Insured I For 1 quotation
which were published.
without obligation.
JURORS SELECTED
F\'ltndl . may, call at the Jnaugliratlon of the new U, S.
Jurors wen beinC aaltcted fllllll'al hOme until one ' hour ,Postal service Thutsday at the
Sleeveless shifts · culotte dresses - new fall
post office. Coffee and cookies
today to 111'\'t 011 the petit jury blfore lhe ll!f'VIce.
dresses In polyester knit. J&amp;nior, Misses and
Colhult lJ~ ~on In Mtip County Cllmmon Pleu ...;.._.,...._ _ __ will be served from ato 11 a.m. half
slze.s.
Caart.
.
'.
and lrom 2 lb ' p.m. A 1lmillld
FlU. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
Tbe IIIII llelna lrled Ia for tpl'lltLiadl"- HID; Racine, .number of lp'Cial lllftlopel
llltllty
In lilt IIDOUI of for tJI I f ""r'pe llld in- comlnemoralinllbe btalllnlnP
Middleport
$11,'/~Ut, lllld by WOllam M. ,..._ nultllllllu ac:cldent ~ lhe new aerv1c:e • will be
c.owt ~' •
Bllllllpl'dner, RIMIN, Rl. 'on
hiJ 12, l.._
aVIII.Ible.

,ews.•. rn

Devoted To

Meigs Board Appoints
• ,.,eacher.•Q 11.1on ""Y
SIX

w·

StOnll Bnngs
'.
Some Relief

ACrOSS
. Ohi0

Council
MeetS With
B
ater oar

'

Six Americans from the 1st
Cavalry Division were wounded
in fighting eight mllea norlbeaat
of Xuan Loc and 45 mllea
northeast of Saigon.
Maj. Gen. Pham Van Phu,
commander of the South
Vietnamese lsi Infantry Division, said today the North
Vietnamese have infiltrated
6,000 men into South VIetnam's
northern quarter since May 1
and 4,000 were believed to have
come across the DMZ.

Hargraves
Is Appointed

To AEL Board
G~orge
Hargraves,
superinteodent of the Meiga
Local School District, has been
appointed as a member of the
board of directors of the Appala~hla
Educational
Laboratories at Charleston, W. ·
Va.
He will represent the Meigs
LoCal and the Buckeye Assn. of
School Administrators m the
board. He succeeds Wallace
Blake, superintendent of
Zanesville, who Is reUrlng.
The Appalachia Educatimal
Laboratory is a non-profit
corporation establll!lled under
the provisions of Title IV ~f the
Elemenl,ary a~d Secondary
Education Act. It is governed by
a board of directora
representing sta~ departmenll
o! education, local school
systems,
colleges
and
universities and the public at
large. It was elitabllshed far the
plJrpose
of
developtna
educational techniqun,
methods .and . materiaII lo
llilpr~ve le8rnln,g. It hal beell in
existence lor apprvxlmaltiJ

nve ytlii'B.

�r
3- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., June 29, 1971

2- the Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June29, 1971

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

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

!Helen Help Us!
I

' ..

i

l

By Helen Bottel

l

·.: ., ' . •...

I

1

LONDON - Golf and Perry Como seem a
redundancy. He's never far away from a good
goH course whether in Florida, where he lives
mostly these days, in Hollywood where he plays
with Bob Hope or any of a dozen friends; no
matter where he travels, he can get up a game
within a few minutes.
He loves goH and occasionally does a charity
tournament lor friends. One for Bob Hope in Ohio
where Bob has his own Boys Town project there.
,rack Nicklaus joins them every year, and helps
raise a lot of money for the kidS.
"CoUple of weeks ago," says Perry, I did one
for Chet Atkins in Kiloxville, Tenn. That's really
a ball with all the Nashville music gang. I'll also
do one for my dear friend Max Hankin in Pennsylvania. He owns the George Washington
motels. This one is a Pr!Mni with all the great
goHers.l know most of them since they were kids
starting out on tile golf circuits.
"I do a lot of fishing, much more now that
I'm a little older.lt's my big fun tllese days.l'm
fascinated with the techniques of fishing casting, the names of the fish, habits and all the
nimrod stuff. I'm a little beyond the pure
amateur, but I'm afraid I'll never be a Ted
Williams.
"Where do you think I rehearse my Las
Vegas club act? On the boat, my boy!" (Perry
didn 'I mention he gets $125,000 a week for six
weeks a year in two three-week standS at the
International Hotel in Las Vegas; he opens next
month and in August at Harrah's in Tahoe.)
"Ray Charles, my old choral director, and
producer and Nick Pertot, my arranger and
conductor, worked on the act with me on my
London trip. Ray sang aU the numbers I'm to do,
recorded them on tape, and me and my litUe tape
recorder go fishing together. I don't know If the
singing soothes or disturbs the fish, but I do know
I'm ready, as that dear wonderful guy Joe E.
Lewis used to say, at post time."
Our topics wandered as conversations will;
we mentio~ed the manner in which TV stars give
screen credit to various manufacturers of men's

Not that I admire tile Nazis. I'm just "drawn" to them. I
dearly want to be a good person and I can't decide whetller this
studying the Nazis ill a sln. I don't tell anyone, not even my
parents, and I feel awfully sneaky and ashamed, kind of like a
aecret drinker feels I guess.
Pleaae, Helen,lhlllsn 't a joke, but a very big problem to this
llttle girl of 13. - A. W.
Dear A.:

Who Isn't fallcinated by tales of cruelty and crunching power
'

. •.

'

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moll;),''.: ; .
: (fii"V;,c)lh
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Today'•
Almanac

attempt to put down terrorism
in Palestine.
In 1964 the sister of Cuban
Communist Premier Fidel CasBy Ul!lted Press International tro defected tD Mexico City.
Today is Tuesday, June 29, In 1970 the last Amencan
the !80th day of 1971.
troops were withdrawn back
The moon lS between its new mto South Vietnam from
phase and first quarter.
Cambodia.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
A thought for today: Lord
The evening stars are Mercu- Byron said, "I speak not of
ry aod Jupiter.
men's creeds. They rest be·
Those born on this day are tween man and hlS maker."
under the slgn of Cancer.
Homing Ability
William Mayo, founder of the
lamed medical center, was
The American' toad has
been known to return to its
horn June 29, 1861.
breedmg s1te after bemg
On th1s day in history:
carried
a mile away. Sc1en·
In 1852 AmeriCan statesmen
lists
beheve
1t is gu1ded by
Henry Clay died in Washington. the dronmg calls
of 1ts felIn 1946 the British arrested lows m the " home " breedmg
more than 27,000 Jews in an pond.

. DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
foods Can ,Aggravate Problem

Jim Thorpe, an Ameri·
can Indian, was one of the
greatest male athletes in
the United States. He won
both the pentathlon and de·
cathlon events at the 1912
Olympic games at Stock·
holm , Sweden, The World
Almanac recalls. In 1913,
the Amateur Athletic Union
requested that he forfeit
h1s awards because he had
p 1aye d semiprofessional
baseball.

I know what you mean gas and may help relieve
about the problem of relax· your distention but 1t won't
ing if you don't feel well cure the underlying cause
from any caus~. You might Dear Dr. Lamb-Could y~u
sl~ep soundly If you could tell me somethmg about hy·
ehmmate your problem. The
.
. ,
best approach is to treat the perhpem~a · How senous Js
cause. Gall bladder surgery ll and ~an lt be controlled
is not always the answer by d~et. What effect does
since the same problems can s.mo~mg have on thJs condl·
and often do persist after lion ·
surgery. Your doctor may D~ar Reader- Lipid means
not want you to risk that (athke. The term is used for
kind of treatment and may mcreased amounts of fat and
nghtly feel the risk out· cholesterol m the blood. The
weighs the likelihood of your c~nd11Ion 1s often associated
getting any significant im- Wlth heart and vascular dis·
provement
~a~e The d1et principles and
Besides your diet you hvmg Patterns recom.
might avoid eating for at mended to ~revent heart and
least four hours before going vascular d1seas~ apply to
to bed and take some char- People Wlth th1s probl~m
coal tablets if you can get The same 1s true of c•ga.
them Charcoal helps absorb rette~ . I have not found any
~ondlllons benefited by obesIty or smoking ~igarettes

WIN AT BRIDGE

Fortunes Saved by Care
NORl'H
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clothing. Perry wouldn't mention names because
be said I might quote hlm (Me? You bet!). Perry
wears beautifully custom tailored clothes, has a
keen sartorial eye and only would say he notes
tllatit might be more honest for llid liars to say
in the credits, "Clothing for the star's relatives
supplied by J;lrand~X."
Despite a comfortably busUing schedule of
TV .recordings and golf tournaments, -Perry's
reluctance to return wthe weekly TV grind has
some of his millions of fans concerned lllat he
'might be about to pack it all In and retire, as did
Morton Downey when he was younger than
Perry is now (58). But Perry does nine weeks of
cafe shows plus recordings, one TV special (at
least) which he will produce late this year with
Doris Day as his guest for Perry's old sponsor
Kraft.
"People ask why I've retired," Perry
shrugs. "Retired! Man, I think I'm really
working!"
"I've been urged to go to Japan, and I'm
toying witll the idea. However, Roselle, like your
Vonnie, still counts beadS when she flies, and it
would be no fun without her."
Perry's no phony when It comes to one major
offo6CI'een activity most stars bemoan: "To be in
London and have a Cockney working stiff walk
up to you and say, 'Hello, Pyree!' or in
being greeted by 'Ciao, Pierino' is great
satisfaction, a real kick. You wonder how they
know you, and then you remember your shows
and records played over there and you're part of
the gathering in their living rooms."
Perry did TV shows from Rome long belore
some of the stars who lately think It's an odyssey
to originate from Hollywood or Florida. He never
put into a press release nor wid an interviewer
that he gave a smart percentage of his fees for
said shows to charity, for instance Boys Town of
Italy, close to his heart and to such concerned
folk as Louis Sobol, ~roadway columnist
emeritus. In fact Perry rarely bas recealed his
family honors; It was two years after he was
made a Papal Knight that the secret got out:
Bishop Fulton J. Sheen mentioned to us that
Perry and Roselle had been knighted - same
day as himself.
(Tomorrow; more about Como).

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Although Cincinnati's "Big
Red Machine" has performed
more llke a little red wagon
this season, Lee May's hitting
has been in high gear.
May hit two homers Monday
night to power the faltering
Reds to a doubleheader sweep
over the Montreal Expos, 4-3
and 5-4.
Cincinnati, 1970 National
League champion, is in fourth
place, 14'h games behind
Western division leading San
Francisco, but May is hitting

Rome

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
ClUCAGO (UPI)-Tbe shock
had worn off when Muhammad
All was ready to talk about the
U.S. Supreme Court decision
!bat he should notf have been
convicted of draft evasion.
Ali first learned of the
decision Monday from a storekeeper on Chicago's South Side
who heard the news on the radio
and rushed onto the street to tell
the former heavyweight
champion.
All's first reaction was to
"thank Allsh," to thank his
religious leader , Elijah
Muhammad, and finally to
thank the Supreme Court.

'"You're free! You're free!/'
All said the storekeeper told
hlm. '"The Supreme Court said

No man 1s an island, en·
tire of 1tself, every man is
a piece of the continent, a

part of the main. - John
God will not look you over
Donne, English clergyman.
for medals, degrees or diplomas but for scars.- Eibert
"'
Hubbard, author.

-. ..

ln the day of prospenty
be joyful, and in the day of
adversity consider; God has
made the one as well as the
other, so that man may not
fmd out anythmg that w1ll
be after him.-Eccl. 7.14.

• • •

"And shall! wait, because
they da not speak, because
they stand there, and answer
no more? I also will give my
answer; 1 also will declare
my opinion."-Job 32:16, 17.

I~

•I
\
I
6Xl;;;g,a,:;:::===J)

will proceed to knock out
either minor-suit ace. Should
East win, East won't be able
to do anything about the
spade suit. However, West
will win and will continue
with the mne of spades.
South is not clairvoyant.
He finesses the jack th1s
time. East takes his queen
but can't lead a spade back
to his partner. South w1l!
have time to knock out the
o!her minor-suit ace.
What h a p pens 1f East
started with three spades?
He takes his queen and leads
the suit back to set up the
13th spade for his partner
but two aces, plus two
spades, aren't enough to
beat three no-trump.
Suppose West had opened
a doubleton and East held
the other ace? Then South
would go down You can't
wm them all.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand would be b1d
one no-trump-! h r ee no·
trump in any standard·type
system. South has 17 good
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
p o i n t s for his no-trump,
North has 11 for h1s raise.
Twenty-eight pomts usu·
ally makes game, but this
The hiddmg has bet!n,
time it won't unless South
West
Nm·lh
East
exercises considerable care
1•
Dble
belore playing from dummy ;~ t
Pass
Pass.
at thck one. If he says to
You, Soulh, hold
himselt , "I have a free fl ·
nesse." and then reaches .A!l3 .Qi62 +4:1
What dn you do now''
for the jack of spades, he
A-Bid thtee he a •· Lli. You
will wind up deep 10 the
soup West Will get In Wllh wnn'l be duubled here and ;'\IOU
hoth hiS aces and will cash lUI.\ push yout· oppnncnt!l t1ne
:~hcht..,,
th1 ~e spade tricks
TOIIA Y'S QUESTION
U' South stops to think .. he
Vnn •lu lud lh~·cll h~u1ts. West
will lqsure his c&lt;mt1 act by
playing dummy's lhree·~put and North pl:\."'.'i. East btds roUI
duunnulis, What do yuu do'1
an~ winning wtth his ace
Alter lhat &lt;]Uiet start. h~

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
lion must deal with the war. No historian and no journallSI yet has had access to this gold mine .
•
Burns views as valid the complaint of some that a good
part of the published documentation in the Pentagon papers represents not presidential decision not settled
policy, but contingency planning.
'
He makes another point heard in many quarters-that
many memos, pos1tion papers and the like can only be
understood in their full context In the study no princl·
pal in the Johnson administration could be i~terv1ewed.
Was a paper ordered by a superior to present one side of
a case? Was the writer giving his true views or playing
dev11's advocate? Is the document the whole story or were
there verbal exchanges (unrecorded) on the issue?
Arthur Schlesinger Jr., once said of his White House
years that much present top-level history runs through
telephone Wlfes but no farther. Later recollections put
down in "oral histories ," are often fuzzy .
'
The consequence of these limitations is distortion. Averell Harriman, foreign affairs aide to many presidents,
says, for example, that the Pentagon study makes former Assistant Defense Secretary John McNaughton look
like_ a "warlike fellow," but that, in fact, he was always
dov1sh. Do the documents support Johnson's judgment
that the then Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and
then CIA head John McCone were the "most docile" of
his advisers?
Burns, immensely happy at having some of the raw
~tuff of the war years on the open record, nevertheless
IS appalled at the reacllon of some public figures which
puts a "web of duplicity" label on that record.
"1 don't envy anyone trying to put these papers in sober
perspective," says Burns. "On top of everything I'm
afraid the overreaction to publication means Vl~tnam
w1l! be lost to reason from any point of view "
The liftmg of the curiam part way must be hailed But
a lull, balanced view of Vietnam may now be more 'than
half a century off.

pie. "

For one thmg, the 7,000-page war study is based wholly
on the Pentagon's hies It does not draw upon former
President Johnson's papers, nor upon the still-Impounded
State Department materials. Any of these found in the
study are there by the accident of bemg in Pentagon
flies That means the study's "mside history" of the V1et·
nam war IS necessanly grossly mcomplete.
For instance, 11 1s estimated that m LBJ's newly christened library m Austm, there' are some 3 1 m1lhon separate classified documents. Inevitably, a s1zable propo1··
Every man has a right to
his opinion, but no man has
a right to be wrong in his
facts.-Bernard Baruch, fin·
anc1er

Hado s They'll Do It Every Time •
1

TI-IEN

...

Major League Leaders
By United Press International
National League
G. All R. H. Pet
:rorre, St. L 17 300 47 112 .373
Davis, LA
75 299 49 107 .358
Bckrt, Chi
72 290 411101 .348
Brock.SI .L 74 303 55 !OJ .340
Gorr, All
78 322 56 106 .329
Ppln, Chi
56 210 28 69 .329
Clmnte, Pll 66 260 41 85 .327
Strgii,Pit
6724.5 50 78.318
Cash, Pit
64 262 48 83 .317
May, Cln
65 240 35 76 .317
American League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min 67 265 51 100 .377
Murcer, NY 74 261 4.1 89 .341
Kallne, Del 63 20• 3'1 68 .333
Rolas, KC
69 260 36 83 .319
Rchrdt. Chi 58 217 2~ 68 .313
Buford, Bal 56 216 54 67 .310
Olts, KC
67 266 42 81 305
FRbsn, Bal 59 211 35 63 .299
Hwrd, Wash 70 267 25 79 .296
White, NY 63 223 35 ~ 296

Viet Study 'Terribly Distorting'
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Not surprisingly, pnze-winnmg historian James Mac·
Gregor Burns sees the New York T1mes' publication of
major Vietnam war documents as providmg important
benefits for the American people and the1r chroniclers.
But he also has some big reservations about the effect of
th1s particular undertaking.
Sa1d Burns in a telephone mterv1ew
" I'd rather have partial disclosure than none at all."
He considers 11 an unforgivable failure of government
that the major materials of history are, by common prac·
lice, generally kept bottled up for a generatwn or more.
The State Department is only now releasmg the full
documentatiOn of events wh1ch transpired m 1945·46
Mountains of pnceless ev1dence contained in presidential
papers from Harry Truman through Lyndon Johnson are
still screened from all but very special viewing.
Burns thmks the State Department's 25-year embargo
on release 1s absurdly long. There have been suggestions
the hm1t ought to be no more than 10 years, just a bit beyond a sitting president's possible two terms. But Sen.
Edmund Musk1e is proposmg that an independent board
survey class1hed matter and turn much of it loose after
two years.
Having made his pomt on the "historia n's right to
know," Burns contends, however, that the T1mes' use of
the so·cal!ed Pentagon papers has an effect which is "ter·
ribly distortmg and may do great injustice to some peo·

I

Home Runs

.

May, who missed the f~rst 14
games of 1971 because of a preseason injury, was sorely
missed by his teammates at the
start of this season's activities.
But now that the Cincinnatl
slugger is back in shape, the
"Big Red Machine" ,maY
regenerate some of its ' lost

•

Meigs Summer League opened the scoring in the first
Basketball continued Mondsy overtime with a pa!r of free
as the league leading Sentinel throws. Adolph's then missed a
nipped upset-minded stars of field goal attempt, and the
Adolph's Dairy Valley in a Sentinel began to stall. A tur·
double overtime, 49 to 44.
' nover by the Sentinel gave the
In the nightcap Ronnie ball to Adolph's. With 15
Ferguson and Jeff T. Morris seconds left, Tony Vaughan
combined for 74 poinlll as the tried a short shot wlrich was off,
Ohio Valley Bakery smashed but he was fouled by Doxie
winless Mark V, 113 to 58.
Walters . Vaughan then made
In the first game Adolph's two pressure free throws to
broke out to a nine point lesd send the game into tile second
early in tile second baH, but overtime.Withtbescoretled44Rich Bailey and Steve Dunfee 44, Dunfee was fouled on a drive
led a Senflnel rally with clutch and again made the two free
h S t' 1
baskets and great defense.
throws . . With t e en me
The score was 42-42 at the end leading 46-14, Dunfee stole the
ofregulatlonplay.SteveDunfee ball from Rick Van Maire and
passed to Walters who made a
three point play witll one second
left.
The game's leading scorer
was Dunfee. , He netted 18.
Bailey added 16 for the winners.
For the losers, Tony Vaughan
and Chuck Hannahs had 16 and
14 apiece.
Dunfee was credited with a
super defensive job as he held
the league's third leading
scorer, Rick Van Maire, to no
field goals and five free throws.
Tony Vaughan and Jon Kloes
also played fine defense for
· Adolph's.
In the second game, former

VISIT BAKER'S

&lt;ll

SCHO~ CLOSES FORTI-IE

6tJMMER VACATION... WE!..L.,AT LEAST
THE JANITOR CAN~ IT- • • •

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Extc. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

Laver, 32, was generous in
defeat, "Gorman can be rated
among the best of numerous
and impro¥ing young players in
world class tennis.
"I never expect to have a
monopoly , at this standard,
but it's a fact that
these young players are
narrowing the gap after
making tremendous improvement. I guess I !DaY
suffer because of this, but the
sport will benefit as it rightly
should," he sa1d.
The girls' semifinal lineup
was completed Monday with
title favorite and defending
champion Margaret Court qualifying to meet Australian
compatriot Judy Dalton in one
match and Billie Jean King of
Long Beach, Calif., taking on
Evonne Goodlagons of Australia
win the world's premier tour~ in the other. They play
nament when honored with the Wednesday.
top seeded place.

"I've met Tom several limes
before and, fortunately, I've
won most times. He did me a
favor by beating Laver at
Queens and then I heat him in
the semis and went on to
victory. It's happened here as
well. I hope that is a good
omen," Smith said.
,Gorman declined to predict
how he'll do against tile 24year-old Smith, but he said
DaviS cup coach Dennis Ralston
of Bakersfield, Calif., helped
him plot Laver's downfal before
a 15,000 center court audience.
"I talked with Denny for a
half hour. We decided I should
keep the ball low and at Rod's
feet. Denny beat him at Forest
Hills that way last year. It also
worked for me."
Laver's defeat means he's
failed m two success1ve years to

the bases, a fan grabbed the
ball after SanguUlen rounded
second but the hit was ruled a
tc!ple despite Cardinal protests.
Ken Boswell's eighth inning
single enabled Gary Gentry to
win his seventh game against
five losses for the Meis.
Tommie Agee backed Gentry's
four-hit pitchmg with his
seventh homer of the season
and three singles off Rick WISe,
makmg his first start since
pitching a no-hitter over
Cincinnati last Thursday Wise
lS now 6-5.
Willie Crawford and Wes

By Un'lted Press International
Nation ~1 1

League

East

w.

Pillsburgh
New York
Chicago
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal

GB
645
597 4
507 10'1'
506 10'12
405 18
403 1B

l. Pet

49 27
43 29
37 36
39 38
30 44
29 43
West

W. L. Pel. GB

San Franctsco 49 28 .636

..

Los Angeles
Holston

43 33 .5M 5'1'
37 38 .493 II

Cincinnati

35

43

449 U l/2

A!lanta
36 45 .444 15
San Diego
27 50 351 22
Monday's Results
Los Angeles 6 Chicago 4
Cinc~nnatl 4 Mont 3, lsi
C.ncinnal&lt; 5 Monl 4, 2nd
New York 3 Phila 1
P1tlsburgh 11 St. Louis 5
Houslon 6 Atlanta 5, sl
Houslon 6 Atlanta 4, 2nd
San D1ego 6 San Fran 2

McLain. Nearing
Nats Loss Mark

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Denny McLain, whose name was
linked with Hall of Famers Cy
Young, Christy Mathewson and
Walter Johnson when he won 31
games three years ago, is now
courting the dusky recordS of
Benhie Daniels, John Townsend
and Bob Groom.
Daniels, Townsend and
Groom?
Benn1e lost a club record 10
straight games for the Washington Senators' expansion
team that succeeded the club
Cal Griffith moved to Minnesota

all SEOAL leaguer Ron
Ferguson from Gallipolis broke
loose for a fantastic 46 points as
he shot fed, and rebounded his
team to victory. He hit on 22
field goals and was 2-2 at the
free throw line. Ronnie hit 19 in
the first haH and '1!1 in the
second as be missed no shots in
the second half.
Ferguson wasn't the only big
gun for the Bakery. Jeff Morris
canned 28 and Tom Cooke added
22. Also in double figures for the
winners was Jim Boggs with 11.
Wihless Mark V was led by
Bill Vaughan and Bill Chaney
with 16 points each. Mike Sayre
added 10.
The 113 ooints scored was the
highest ever, breaking the
previous record by some 50
pomts.
Ferguson's 46 also broke the
league record of 28 points. The
impressive victory put the
Bakery in undisputed second
place.
· The Bakers go for first
Tuesday as they tangle with the
undefeated shockers of The
Daily Sentinel. In an earlier
contest, The Sentinel nipped the
Bakery 50 to 44. The Dairy
Valley take on Mark V at seven
and the big game begins at
eight.

Wednesday's Games
Allanta at Montreal, nlghl
Pills al New York, n1ght
Los Angeles ai ' Chlcago
Cincinnati at Phila, night
....
SF at San Diego, night
in 1961.
IOnly games scheduled)
Townsend and Groom share
American League
the American League record for
East
most losses by a pitcher in a
w. L. Pet. GB
45 26 .634 ..
season, 26. Ironically, their Balli more
Boston
41 31 .569 4'12
marks of futillty came when
41 32 .562 5
Delroit
they toiled in the uniforms of Cleveland
34 39 .466 12
Washington, which has lost New York
34 41 .453 13
nearly 6,000 games, finished Washington 26 46 .366 19'12
West
last 14 times and in the second
W. L. Pet. GB
division 50 times in 70 years.
Oakland
50 24 .676 ...
Despite his 4-14 record and Kansas Clly 37 33 .529 11
Minnesota
36 39 .480 14'1'
nine straight losses for the California
34 44 .436 18
Senators, McLain still main- Milwaukee
30 40 .429 18
Chicago
28 41 .406 19'12
tains a jaunty air.
Monday's
"I've won four more than last Cleve 3 New YorkResults
O, lsi
year at this time," says the 'J!/. Cleve 5 New York 2, 2nd
year..,ld rightllander, who was Milwaukee 7 Chicago 4
on suspension from the Detroit Boston 10 Washington 4
x-Detroit 4 Baltimore 4
Tigers until July 1last season. Oakland 6 Mlnnesola 4
Kansas City 3 California o
Denny was traded to the
x-13 innings, game suspended,
Senators along with Elliott curfew.
Maddox and Don Wert for Joe
Today's Probable Pitchers
Coleman, Aurelio Rodriguez
Cleveland (Foster 5-51 at New
and Ed Brinkman last fall.
York I Kline 6·61 .
McLain refused to knock his Minnesota !Corbin 4-51 at
(Blue 16-2), nlghl.
teammates, who have provided Oakland
Kansas City I Hedlund 6·4) at
hlm with only 38 runs.
California !Murphy ~·91. night.
Detroit (Coin 5·11 at Balli·
McLain says only "this is the
more
(Dobson 6·41, night.
most snake-llit team I've ever Washington
(Broberg O· ll at
seen."
Boston (Lonborg 2·31. night.
At one point there was Chicago (John s.Bl at Mil ·
speculation Vida Blue, Oak· waukee (Slaton 2·1), night.
land's rookie phenom, would
Wednesday's Games
win 20 games before Washing- Mlnn at Oakland. night
ton. While the Senators had won Kan Clly at Calif, night
Chicago at Mllw, twl ·nlght
19, Blue had won 13.
Boston at Delroll, night
Some critics ssy manager Ball at Cleve, twl·night
Ted Williams may he resting New York at Wash, nlghl
McLain too long between starts. ~---------.
The p1tcher likes to work every
four days, but Williams uses
him every five and plans to
continue the pace.
McLain lost wthe Yankees, 40, in New York Saturday and is
slated to face them again
Your regular payday
Wednesday night here.
savings plus. our .high
rate of return wi II
make your savings
This Week's Special
grow quickly ...

EARN

MORE NOW

..

·&amp;7 ·CHEVELEE
.IT CPE.

Published dapy except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publtshlng Company, 111
tour! Sf , Pomeroy, OhtO,
45769 eusmess Office Phone
992 2156, Edttorlal Phone 992

4%%

I

S1795 ,

Budget Shop

sorvl~e

.r

BAKER

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

AJRNITURE .

~----~·--~M

_o_._

'

"You'll Like Our Quality
Way ol Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
1192·l3•12
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:00
Tots P.M. Sat.

eight-hitter and Jack Hiatt's
double sparked a four-&lt;111l rally.
Dave campbell's bases loaded, three-&lt;111l double in the fifth
inning powered the Padres to .
victory over San Francisco.
Clay Kirby went the distance,
scattermg nine hits while
str1king out nine to record his
s1xth win against five losses.
The win was only the second
for the season for San Diego in
10 meetings with the Giants.

Lynch Has No-Hitter

Teams Resume
Summer Play
In Middleport Utile League
actwn Monday, Ke1th Lynch
was the blg news .
The Indians ' righthander
pitched a no-hit game in his first
sl&lt;!rt over the Mets. He retired
the first 10 men to face hlm. A
walk in the fourth spoiled hls
perfect game bid His teammate pounded out seven hilllln
routing the Meta 7.0. Lynch had
three of them In the master·
p1ece he fanned 5 and passed 3.
Losing pitcher was Jeff Miller.
He was relieved in the fourth.by
Kevin Yeauger . They combined
to str1ke out five and pass three.
Bes1des Lynch's three
doubles, Mark and Tony Venoy
each had a triple. Joey Gleason
had a double and Jeff Beaver a
smgle .
In the other contest, Charles
Smith's m1ghty Braves kept on
rolhng as they handed the Mark
V Reds a IH loss. Although tile
Braves had no one brilliant star,
they had a fme team effort as
eight different players contnbuted at least one hit.
The leadmg hitters were
Steve Bachner with three
singles, M1ke Lavender, a
smgle and triple, and Mlck
Davenport a single and double,
D1ck Owen, Tim Thomas, Mike
Wayland, Gene Halley, and
David Sm1th each added
smgles.
For the Reds, Gene Hum·
phrey had a double and single,
Del Call, and Big Buck Tyree

eacQ. a,,~l~\ 'l ·~

Browmng. Browning was effective until the fifth. He then
yielded to Bobby Schneider,
who finished the game. He
fanned six and passed 10.
Randy Phillips led the
Yankees at the plate (he was 44) striking three singles and a
double. Smith had two singles,
Owens had a pair of singles,
Hood and G. Browning had
homers and Van Meter, a
single. Schneider hsd a double.
For the losers, Doug
Browning doubled and had a
pair of singles. Mark Mitch had
a double, and Sisson, Snyder, B.
Qualls, and Triplett each had a
smg!e.
In the other contest, Dale
Browning limited the Dodgers
to four hits and struck out 10. He
walked only three. The Dodgers
used three pitchers, Taylor B.
Seth and Fullrod. They combined to fan seven and pass
three.
Partlow and Scites led the
winners with a double and a
pair of singles. Marshall had a
tr1ple and single, and McClure
and Morris each singled.
For the Dodgers, Jeff Grueser
had two singles.

"! ..

Davenport went a the way
on the mound for the winners.
He struck out 11 and passed
five . The loss was charged to•
Mark Haggerty, who failed to
last an mning. Reliever Steve
Pickens took over ln the first
and pitched the rest of the way.
They combined to fan five and
walk three.
In Pomeroy action Monday, In keeping with In ·
Ron Logan's second place ~~~~~n~::nc:~ Day, we wish to
Yankees kept the pressure on
the 'Independent
the front rll!'ning Tigers as they
agent'. He Is not
pounded three Pirate pitchers
captive employee of one
·
company - he
for 12 hilll in winning, 17-7. In
Insurance from
the meantime, the Tigers
companies. and
scored nine runs in the first two
you In collecting
innings to overwhelm the
The Downing.
Is an ln.
Dodgers, 11-4.
lns!Jran,ce ageht.
In the Yankee-Pirate game,
Mike Owen and Greg Browning
Wft
combined to strike out 10
Dodgers. They walked nine.
Eddie Sisson was charged with
the loss. He lasted one Inning.
200 N. 2nd
He was relieved by Doug
Ml DD
....iii&lt;iiii&lt;iiiiiiiiii&lt;illi«iiii. . . .

1

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Childs
A
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Exterior Alkyd

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on smoothly and easily.

PASSBOOK RATE

IIV\EIGS CO. BRANCH

I

An unusually thick co,at may be
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Retains It's Gloss 2 To 3 Years.

283 V-8 engine, auto ., P S..
rad1o, tinted glass

2151

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio
National ldvertis•ng
represen tatlv 1
Bott in ell i .
Gallagher, Inc , 12 East 42nd
St., New York City, New York
Subscription ret••
De .
livered by carrier where '
av,llable SO centa ptr wuk,
By Motor Route where carrier

Parker each had three hits and
drove in two runs in leading the
Dodgers to their fourth straight
win . Crawford homered in the
first inning and doubled in the
sixth while Parker hit a tworun single in the third .
Cesar Cedeno drove m three
runs with a triple, homer, and
single and scored two runs in
leading the Astros to thelf
dou~leheader sweep. In the
first game Don W1lson had an

Today's Probable Ptlchers
Los Angeles IO'Br&lt;en 2·1l at
Chicago (Hands 8-8)
Cinclnnali (Simpson 1 1 or
Cloninger 2 51 al Montreal
(Brit ton 0 2 or McAnally 1-6).
night.
New York (Seaver 9.3) at
Philadelphia
(Lersch ~ 6 ).
cher w1th 336,770 and Tony m the run for the third outfield night
Ohva of Minnesota has the edge spot With 445,037 votes.
Piltsburgh (Walker J.61 at 51
Louis ICleveland 6 7). nigh I
Atlanta • (JarviS 2-91 al
Houston IBill Ingham 3-71 , night
San Francisco (Cumberland
3-01 at San Diego I Rober Is 6-ll.
night

USED CARS

City Editor

not tvflllble: One
month JU5. By mall In Ohio'
and W. Va .. One yur Uc.OO.
Six montos 11.25 Throe
montha U.SG. Subscrlr,tlon
prlct lnctudts Sundty T mea.
Stntlntt.

a game that was suspended
becallS\! of a curfew after 13
inrungs.
Manny Sanguillen drove in
three runs with a disputed
triple m the first inning as the
Pirates pounded Card starter
Jerry Reuss for 10 runs. The
victory enabled the Pirates to
retam their four-game National
League East lead over the
Meta.
Sanguil!en's one-out drive
highlighted the Pirates' five-run
first inning. After Bill Mazeroski and AI Oliver singled and
Roberto Clemente walked to fill

Gorman Scores Upset

Sentinel, 0 VB Post Wins

Cin 20; Bench, Cln 18 ; Bonds,

U.'

team."

power.
In other National League
action Pittsburgh downed St.
Louis,. 11~. Houston swept a
twinbill from Atlanta, 6-5 and 64, New York tripped Philadelphia, 3-1, and Los Angeles
downed Chicago, 6-4.
In the American League,
Cleveland swept a double,
9; and 5-2, Milwaukee
defeated
Chicago,
7-4,
Boston trounced Washington,
10-4, Kansas City blanked
California, 3-0, Oakland edged
Minnesota, 6-4, and Detroit and
Baltimore played to a 4-4 he in

Yaz Still AL Leader

National League: Stargell,
PiH 28; Aaron, All 22; May,

SF 17.
American League: Oliva,
Mlnn 18; Cash, Del and
Jackson, Oak 16; Smith, 8os
and Met~ou"~.c;!J!d ln
National League: Stargetl,
PiH 79: Aaron All 60: Santo,
~r~
Torre, St.L 54 ' May,
American League: Killebrew,
Mlnn 55; Powell, Ball and
Oliva, Mlnn •91 Petrocelli, Bos
47: F. Robinson, Ball and
Bando, Oak 46.
Pitching
National League : Ellis, Pitt
12-3; Carllon. St.L 11 .4; Jenkins, Chl11·7: Dierker. Hou tO4: Marichal, SF 10·5.
American League: Blue, Oak
16-2: McNally, Ball 12·4:
Cuellar, Ball 11 -1: Siebert, Bos
11 ·4: Lol ich, Del and Perry,
Mlnn 11-6.

ing but not by Red manager
Sparky Anderson.
"May has been our big man,"
the Cincinnati skipper said.
"Now with McCovey out of
action I'd be disappointed if
May doesn't make the All.Star

WIMBLEDON , England
(UPI)--Stan Smith offered to
buy Tom Gorman a beer.
It was the least the Army
nprivate from Pasadena, Calif.,
,
could do for a man who')!
probably help him defend the
so.~~~
Davis Cup in Ocwber.
But at first, other than voicing
Gorman, of Seattle, Wash.,
his tllanks, All said lle would scored the upset of upsets at
talk no more about the court the 85th Wimbledon tennis
rullng that, as a member of the championships Monday by
Black Musllms, he was a bona dumping title favorite Rod
fide conscientious objector.
Laver in straight sets, 9·7, ~.
"I'm not going to say 6-3, (\) go with his opening day
anything to get me in trouble," ouster of eighth seeded South
be said.
African Cliff Drysdale.
Later he realized he really
Smith, the bookies third
was "free"-free to fight with choice before the 12-&lt;tay,
his fists, to leave the country, to $120,128 tournament opened,
quit fighting eventually, and to figures to hsve the Indian sign
behave as he wished as a over Gorman and is quietly
citizen.
'
confident about the outcome of
"I know that lam sincere and their semifinal meetmg on
I know that I do believe in the Thursday. He beat New ZeaIslamic religion and the land's Onny Parun 7~. 6-3 6-4 to
teachings of it," he said. "!just advance.
figured that I ~ould he vindicated.
"I don 'I feel nothing as far as
the people who took the title or
the courts for doing what they
thought was right. For me to be
angry or have any bad feeling
NEW YORK (UP! ) toward them for doing what
they think was right and at the Baltimore had the edge m the
same time expecting them to race for three starting berths
recognize me for what I believe and Boston was ahead in two
positions today as fan balloting
was right would be bad.
"They did what they thought went miD the final week to
was right at the time, and I did select the American League
what I !bought was right, so I team for the July 13 All.Star
can'I be angry because they did Game in Detroit.
what they thought was right."
Brooks Robinson was the
All was in Chicago training most popular Oriole as he drew
for a July 26 fight in Houston 563,966 votes in a b1d for the
against Jimmy Ellis, the first of starting third baseman's berth.
three matches be wants before F~rst baseman Boog Powell
he tries for a rematch with collected 457,169 votes and
heavyweight champion Joe outfielder Frank Robinson was
Frazier next year.
named on 348,860 ballots.
"Immediately after I get my
Outfielder Carl Y3strzemski
tiUe back from Joe Frazier," he of Boston continues to lead the
said, he will quit the ring. His balloting with 596,1ff8 votes and
hope then is to be able to "work teammate Luis Aparicio heads
with the people and do what I all shortstops with 253,975.
can to uplift the youth and
Rod Carew of Minnesota
l:t'ing more dignity and respect maintained his lead among
to the black people and use my second basemen w1th 296,599
fame to help make them feel votes, Ray Fosse of Cleveland
llke they're somebody."
solidified his standmg at cat-

e

THOUGHTS
What IS man that thou art
mindful of h1m, and the son
of man that thou dost care
for h1m? Yet thou has made
him little less than God, and
dost crown h1m with glory
and honor.-Psalms 8 4, 5
• • •
•

like the Reds were · in first
place.
The Cincinnati first baseman
collected six hits in Monday's
twinbill, including his 19th and
Z(!th homers of the season, as
tpe Reds powered their way to
the double victory. May is
currently hitting at a .317 clip
for the season and has added 48
RB!s to the Reds'. anemic
attack.
His super performance,
however, has been largely
ignored by the fans in favor of
Giant first baseman Willie
McCovey in the All.Star ballot-

Ali Shaken
By Deczs lO

Noted Historian's View

Gall Bladder and Excess Gas

,,I
I~
lor:
..
•
•••
'•··~
•'· -----------------------------------------

'

BRUCE BIOSSAT

..

of the gall bladder and someBy Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
times the liver often have
; Dear Dr. Lamb-! would excess gas formation. Fatty
be one of the most grateful foods often aggravate the
borrespondents you have problem. You might try
ever had if you could give avoiding fried foods , fatty
)ne some advice on what is foods, eggs (the yolks are
pest for gas formation. I am the problem), beans, pork,
butter or margarine, milk
111 married lady 70 years old
and
cream.
11nd haven't known what it
Some people without gall
Is to get a good night's sleep
tlue to this fullness that bladder trouble have diffi.
awakens me for hours (and culty digesting the lactose in
Without a sedative, it is an the milk. You might be one
~Ji-nlght vigil).
of these people. If so you will
! I realize so much is sa1d need to discontinue milk of
about relaxation but how any type. If you stop milk
iJoes one relax when they you should take calcium or
teet full to the nth degree? eat nonfat cottage cheese or
l failed to say I have an buttermilk, otherwise your
inactive ~ail bladder. I won· diet may be deficient in
ller if th1s is significant or calcium .
pot?
Occasi9nally a person is
' Dear Reader-Gas forma- an a1r swallower. Belching
tion can be caused by an in· often results in taking in
i)lctive J(all bladder. People more air than is actually ex·
::with gallstones or any other pelled. These problems are
:1cause for abnormal function often related to nervousness.

.

COMO AND HIS LINKS
-SECOND INSTAIJ.MENT

Germany.

and obaeselon -and horror - all those things we'll hopefully
never see In our dull, safe llves?
Don't be ashamed of your interest In history, little A.W.,
learning the faclll doesn't mean you're "converted." More llkely,
juat the opposite! - Right? -H.
Dear Helen:
About 12 mont)IS ago I wrote some additions to "What is a
Serviceman's Girl." ,
Well, now I'd llke to share with you and your many readers
what it's llka to scratch off those final days until my Serviceman
cm~es home!
It's been 11 months, four days, one hour, 45 minutes, since he
gave me !bat last kiss.
It's now II days until he gives me the first one after all that
Umel
It's sttil running to the mailbox, and because our mailman
knows whati'm looking for, I can tell by the expression on his face
If there's a Jetter or not. '
I don't smear the Ink with tears anywhere .... I flood the tape
recorder 'csuse he sends tape letters too.
I U8ed to think 53 letters wli's a lot. What shall I do with aU 299
oflllem?
,
The klda at summer school are beginning to count the days
will! me and IIIey don't even know him.
&amp;it the best thing is knowing that exactly 17 days after he's
home I'll be Mrs. instead of Miss and there'll be no more waiting
for me I - JUDY
P. S. Thaks, Helen, for personally helping so much the several
Urnes I'Ve written during the last year. We'll be leaving for
Oldnawa after the wedding, and it's nice to know you'll stlll be
there to write to. Maybe you '11 soon be bearing bow a happlly
married gal adjusta to life on a tropic Island. -H.
'Dear Judy :
Lots of luck and much, much happiness to you both! Do write!
.-H.

.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

YOUTH ASKED FOR ITI
Thl8 colwnn II ~ young people, their problems and
pleuures, tbelr troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! It wele«nes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a
lrush.off.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
ol Helen Help Us! lhll newspaper.
FASCINATION DOESN'T
MEAN INDOCTRINATION
De.Br Helen:
I'm not crazy or subversive or anything, though maybe
people might think so If they knew ....
For the past year I've had an inexplicable Interest In, and
have loved to learn everything about, the Nazl.s, especially Hitler.
I'm fascinated by books on him and movies that show Hitler's

s In Twinhill

Voice along Broadway ·1

Meigs County Branch ot
Athens County Savings
Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
l '~leh;ber

Member

&amp;

Both in White and Most Colors Available.

Federal Home Loan
~ederal

Savings &amp;

Loan tnsur Bnce Corporat 1pn

1\lt llccounts Insured up 1o

S20.000.00.

Also check our Acrylic House Paint.

.

King Builders Supply 'Co.
992-3748

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�r
3- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0., June 29, 1971

2- the Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., June29, 1971

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

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

!Helen Help Us!
I

' ..

i

l

By Helen Bottel

l

·.: ., ' . •...

I

1

LONDON - Golf and Perry Como seem a
redundancy. He's never far away from a good
goH course whether in Florida, where he lives
mostly these days, in Hollywood where he plays
with Bob Hope or any of a dozen friends; no
matter where he travels, he can get up a game
within a few minutes.
He loves goH and occasionally does a charity
tournament lor friends. One for Bob Hope in Ohio
where Bob has his own Boys Town project there.
,rack Nicklaus joins them every year, and helps
raise a lot of money for the kidS.
"CoUple of weeks ago," says Perry, I did one
for Chet Atkins in Kiloxville, Tenn. That's really
a ball with all the Nashville music gang. I'll also
do one for my dear friend Max Hankin in Pennsylvania. He owns the George Washington
motels. This one is a Pr!Mni with all the great
goHers.l know most of them since they were kids
starting out on tile golf circuits.
"I do a lot of fishing, much more now that
I'm a little older.lt's my big fun tllese days.l'm
fascinated with the techniques of fishing casting, the names of the fish, habits and all the
nimrod stuff. I'm a little beyond the pure
amateur, but I'm afraid I'll never be a Ted
Williams.
"Where do you think I rehearse my Las
Vegas club act? On the boat, my boy!" (Perry
didn 'I mention he gets $125,000 a week for six
weeks a year in two three-week standS at the
International Hotel in Las Vegas; he opens next
month and in August at Harrah's in Tahoe.)
"Ray Charles, my old choral director, and
producer and Nick Pertot, my arranger and
conductor, worked on the act with me on my
London trip. Ray sang aU the numbers I'm to do,
recorded them on tape, and me and my litUe tape
recorder go fishing together. I don't know If the
singing soothes or disturbs the fish, but I do know
I'm ready, as that dear wonderful guy Joe E.
Lewis used to say, at post time."
Our topics wandered as conversations will;
we mentio~ed the manner in which TV stars give
screen credit to various manufacturers of men's

Not that I admire tile Nazis. I'm just "drawn" to them. I
dearly want to be a good person and I can't decide whetller this
studying the Nazis ill a sln. I don't tell anyone, not even my
parents, and I feel awfully sneaky and ashamed, kind of like a
aecret drinker feels I guess.
Pleaae, Helen,lhlllsn 't a joke, but a very big problem to this
llttle girl of 13. - A. W.
Dear A.:

Who Isn't fallcinated by tales of cruelty and crunching power
'

. •.

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moll;),''.: ; .
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Today'•
Almanac

attempt to put down terrorism
in Palestine.
In 1964 the sister of Cuban
Communist Premier Fidel CasBy Ul!lted Press International tro defected tD Mexico City.
Today is Tuesday, June 29, In 1970 the last Amencan
the !80th day of 1971.
troops were withdrawn back
The moon lS between its new mto South Vietnam from
phase and first quarter.
Cambodia.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn.
A thought for today: Lord
The evening stars are Mercu- Byron said, "I speak not of
ry aod Jupiter.
men's creeds. They rest be·
Those born on this day are tween man and hlS maker."
under the slgn of Cancer.
Homing Ability
William Mayo, founder of the
lamed medical center, was
The American' toad has
been known to return to its
horn June 29, 1861.
breedmg s1te after bemg
On th1s day in history:
carried
a mile away. Sc1en·
In 1852 AmeriCan statesmen
lists
beheve
1t is gu1ded by
Henry Clay died in Washington. the dronmg calls
of 1ts felIn 1946 the British arrested lows m the " home " breedmg
more than 27,000 Jews in an pond.

. DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
foods Can ,Aggravate Problem

Jim Thorpe, an Ameri·
can Indian, was one of the
greatest male athletes in
the United States. He won
both the pentathlon and de·
cathlon events at the 1912
Olympic games at Stock·
holm , Sweden, The World
Almanac recalls. In 1913,
the Amateur Athletic Union
requested that he forfeit
h1s awards because he had
p 1aye d semiprofessional
baseball.

I know what you mean gas and may help relieve
about the problem of relax· your distention but 1t won't
ing if you don't feel well cure the underlying cause
from any caus~. You might Dear Dr. Lamb-Could y~u
sl~ep soundly If you could tell me somethmg about hy·
ehmmate your problem. The
.
. ,
best approach is to treat the perhpem~a · How senous Js
cause. Gall bladder surgery ll and ~an lt be controlled
is not always the answer by d~et. What effect does
since the same problems can s.mo~mg have on thJs condl·
and often do persist after lion ·
surgery. Your doctor may D~ar Reader- Lipid means
not want you to risk that (athke. The term is used for
kind of treatment and may mcreased amounts of fat and
nghtly feel the risk out· cholesterol m the blood. The
weighs the likelihood of your c~nd11Ion 1s often associated
getting any significant im- Wlth heart and vascular dis·
provement
~a~e The d1et principles and
Besides your diet you hvmg Patterns recom.
might avoid eating for at mended to ~revent heart and
least four hours before going vascular d1seas~ apply to
to bed and take some char- People Wlth th1s probl~m
coal tablets if you can get The same 1s true of c•ga.
them Charcoal helps absorb rette~ . I have not found any
~ondlllons benefited by obesIty or smoking ~igarettes

WIN AT BRIDGE

Fortunes Saved by Care
NORl'H
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clothing. Perry wouldn't mention names because
be said I might quote hlm (Me? You bet!). Perry
wears beautifully custom tailored clothes, has a
keen sartorial eye and only would say he notes
tllatit might be more honest for llid liars to say
in the credits, "Clothing for the star's relatives
supplied by J;lrand~X."
Despite a comfortably busUing schedule of
TV .recordings and golf tournaments, -Perry's
reluctance to return wthe weekly TV grind has
some of his millions of fans concerned lllat he
'might be about to pack it all In and retire, as did
Morton Downey when he was younger than
Perry is now (58). But Perry does nine weeks of
cafe shows plus recordings, one TV special (at
least) which he will produce late this year with
Doris Day as his guest for Perry's old sponsor
Kraft.
"People ask why I've retired," Perry
shrugs. "Retired! Man, I think I'm really
working!"
"I've been urged to go to Japan, and I'm
toying witll the idea. However, Roselle, like your
Vonnie, still counts beadS when she flies, and it
would be no fun without her."
Perry's no phony when It comes to one major
offo6CI'een activity most stars bemoan: "To be in
London and have a Cockney working stiff walk
up to you and say, 'Hello, Pyree!' or in
being greeted by 'Ciao, Pierino' is great
satisfaction, a real kick. You wonder how they
know you, and then you remember your shows
and records played over there and you're part of
the gathering in their living rooms."
Perry did TV shows from Rome long belore
some of the stars who lately think It's an odyssey
to originate from Hollywood or Florida. He never
put into a press release nor wid an interviewer
that he gave a smart percentage of his fees for
said shows to charity, for instance Boys Town of
Italy, close to his heart and to such concerned
folk as Louis Sobol, ~roadway columnist
emeritus. In fact Perry rarely bas recealed his
family honors; It was two years after he was
made a Papal Knight that the secret got out:
Bishop Fulton J. Sheen mentioned to us that
Perry and Roselle had been knighted - same
day as himself.
(Tomorrow; more about Como).

By NEIL HERSHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Although Cincinnati's "Big
Red Machine" has performed
more llke a little red wagon
this season, Lee May's hitting
has been in high gear.
May hit two homers Monday
night to power the faltering
Reds to a doubleheader sweep
over the Montreal Expos, 4-3
and 5-4.
Cincinnati, 1970 National
League champion, is in fourth
place, 14'h games behind
Western division leading San
Francisco, but May is hitting

Rome

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
ClUCAGO (UPI)-Tbe shock
had worn off when Muhammad
All was ready to talk about the
U.S. Supreme Court decision
!bat he should notf have been
convicted of draft evasion.
Ali first learned of the
decision Monday from a storekeeper on Chicago's South Side
who heard the news on the radio
and rushed onto the street to tell
the former heavyweight
champion.
All's first reaction was to
"thank Allsh," to thank his
religious leader , Elijah
Muhammad, and finally to
thank the Supreme Court.

'"You're free! You're free!/'
All said the storekeeper told
hlm. '"The Supreme Court said

No man 1s an island, en·
tire of 1tself, every man is
a piece of the continent, a

part of the main. - John
God will not look you over
Donne, English clergyman.
for medals, degrees or diplomas but for scars.- Eibert
"'
Hubbard, author.

-. ..

ln the day of prospenty
be joyful, and in the day of
adversity consider; God has
made the one as well as the
other, so that man may not
fmd out anythmg that w1ll
be after him.-Eccl. 7.14.

• • •

"And shall! wait, because
they da not speak, because
they stand there, and answer
no more? I also will give my
answer; 1 also will declare
my opinion."-Job 32:16, 17.

I~

•I
\
I
6Xl;;;g,a,:;:::===J)

will proceed to knock out
either minor-suit ace. Should
East win, East won't be able
to do anything about the
spade suit. However, West
will win and will continue
with the mne of spades.
South is not clairvoyant.
He finesses the jack th1s
time. East takes his queen
but can't lead a spade back
to his partner. South w1l!
have time to knock out the
o!her minor-suit ace.
What h a p pens 1f East
started with three spades?
He takes his queen and leads
the suit back to set up the
13th spade for his partner
but two aces, plus two
spades, aren't enough to
beat three no-trump.
Suppose West had opened
a doubleton and East held
the other ace? Then South
would go down You can't
wm them all.

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Today's hand would be b1d
one no-trump-! h r ee no·
trump in any standard·type
system. South has 17 good
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
p o i n t s for his no-trump,
North has 11 for h1s raise.
Twenty-eight pomts usu·
ally makes game, but this
The hiddmg has bet!n,
time it won't unless South
West
Nm·lh
East
exercises considerable care
1•
Dble
belore playing from dummy ;~ t
Pass
Pass.
at thck one. If he says to
You, Soulh, hold
himselt , "I have a free fl ·
nesse." and then reaches .A!l3 .Qi62 +4:1
What dn you do now''
for the jack of spades, he
A-Bid thtee he a •· Lli. You
will wind up deep 10 the
soup West Will get In Wllh wnn'l be duubled here and ;'\IOU
hoth hiS aces and will cash lUI.\ push yout· oppnncnt!l t1ne
:~hcht..,,
th1 ~e spade tricks
TOIIA Y'S QUESTION
U' South stops to think .. he
Vnn •lu lud lh~·cll h~u1ts. West
will lqsure his c&lt;mt1 act by
playing dummy's lhree·~put and North pl:\."'.'i. East btds roUI
duunnulis, What do yuu do'1
an~ winning wtth his ace
Alter lhat &lt;]Uiet start. h~

By BRUCE BIOSSAT
lion must deal with the war. No historian and no journallSI yet has had access to this gold mine .
•
Burns views as valid the complaint of some that a good
part of the published documentation in the Pentagon papers represents not presidential decision not settled
policy, but contingency planning.
'
He makes another point heard in many quarters-that
many memos, pos1tion papers and the like can only be
understood in their full context In the study no princl·
pal in the Johnson administration could be i~terv1ewed.
Was a paper ordered by a superior to present one side of
a case? Was the writer giving his true views or playing
dev11's advocate? Is the document the whole story or were
there verbal exchanges (unrecorded) on the issue?
Arthur Schlesinger Jr., once said of his White House
years that much present top-level history runs through
telephone Wlfes but no farther. Later recollections put
down in "oral histories ," are often fuzzy .
'
The consequence of these limitations is distortion. Averell Harriman, foreign affairs aide to many presidents,
says, for example, that the Pentagon study makes former Assistant Defense Secretary John McNaughton look
like_ a "warlike fellow," but that, in fact, he was always
dov1sh. Do the documents support Johnson's judgment
that the then Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and
then CIA head John McCone were the "most docile" of
his advisers?
Burns, immensely happy at having some of the raw
~tuff of the war years on the open record, nevertheless
IS appalled at the reacllon of some public figures which
puts a "web of duplicity" label on that record.
"1 don't envy anyone trying to put these papers in sober
perspective," says Burns. "On top of everything I'm
afraid the overreaction to publication means Vl~tnam
w1l! be lost to reason from any point of view "
The liftmg of the curiam part way must be hailed But
a lull, balanced view of Vietnam may now be more 'than
half a century off.

pie. "

For one thmg, the 7,000-page war study is based wholly
on the Pentagon's hies It does not draw upon former
President Johnson's papers, nor upon the still-Impounded
State Department materials. Any of these found in the
study are there by the accident of bemg in Pentagon
flies That means the study's "mside history" of the V1et·
nam war IS necessanly grossly mcomplete.
For instance, 11 1s estimated that m LBJ's newly christened library m Austm, there' are some 3 1 m1lhon separate classified documents. Inevitably, a s1zable propo1··
Every man has a right to
his opinion, but no man has
a right to be wrong in his
facts.-Bernard Baruch, fin·
anc1er

Hado s They'll Do It Every Time •
1

TI-IEN

...

Major League Leaders
By United Press International
National League
G. All R. H. Pet
:rorre, St. L 17 300 47 112 .373
Davis, LA
75 299 49 107 .358
Bckrt, Chi
72 290 411101 .348
Brock.SI .L 74 303 55 !OJ .340
Gorr, All
78 322 56 106 .329
Ppln, Chi
56 210 28 69 .329
Clmnte, Pll 66 260 41 85 .327
Strgii,Pit
6724.5 50 78.318
Cash, Pit
64 262 48 83 .317
May, Cln
65 240 35 76 .317
American League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Oliva, Min 67 265 51 100 .377
Murcer, NY 74 261 4.1 89 .341
Kallne, Del 63 20• 3'1 68 .333
Rolas, KC
69 260 36 83 .319
Rchrdt. Chi 58 217 2~ 68 .313
Buford, Bal 56 216 54 67 .310
Olts, KC
67 266 42 81 305
FRbsn, Bal 59 211 35 63 .299
Hwrd, Wash 70 267 25 79 .296
White, NY 63 223 35 ~ 296

Viet Study 'Terribly Distorting'
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Not surprisingly, pnze-winnmg historian James Mac·
Gregor Burns sees the New York T1mes' publication of
major Vietnam war documents as providmg important
benefits for the American people and the1r chroniclers.
But he also has some big reservations about the effect of
th1s particular undertaking.
Sa1d Burns in a telephone mterv1ew
" I'd rather have partial disclosure than none at all."
He considers 11 an unforgivable failure of government
that the major materials of history are, by common prac·
lice, generally kept bottled up for a generatwn or more.
The State Department is only now releasmg the full
documentatiOn of events wh1ch transpired m 1945·46
Mountains of pnceless ev1dence contained in presidential
papers from Harry Truman through Lyndon Johnson are
still screened from all but very special viewing.
Burns thmks the State Department's 25-year embargo
on release 1s absurdly long. There have been suggestions
the hm1t ought to be no more than 10 years, just a bit beyond a sitting president's possible two terms. But Sen.
Edmund Musk1e is proposmg that an independent board
survey class1hed matter and turn much of it loose after
two years.
Having made his pomt on the "historia n's right to
know," Burns contends, however, that the T1mes' use of
the so·cal!ed Pentagon papers has an effect which is "ter·
ribly distortmg and may do great injustice to some peo·

I

Home Runs

.

May, who missed the f~rst 14
games of 1971 because of a preseason injury, was sorely
missed by his teammates at the
start of this season's activities.
But now that the Cincinnatl
slugger is back in shape, the
"Big Red Machine" ,maY
regenerate some of its ' lost

•

Meigs Summer League opened the scoring in the first
Basketball continued Mondsy overtime with a pa!r of free
as the league leading Sentinel throws. Adolph's then missed a
nipped upset-minded stars of field goal attempt, and the
Adolph's Dairy Valley in a Sentinel began to stall. A tur·
double overtime, 49 to 44.
' nover by the Sentinel gave the
In the nightcap Ronnie ball to Adolph's. With 15
Ferguson and Jeff T. Morris seconds left, Tony Vaughan
combined for 74 poinlll as the tried a short shot wlrich was off,
Ohio Valley Bakery smashed but he was fouled by Doxie
winless Mark V, 113 to 58.
Walters . Vaughan then made
In the first game Adolph's two pressure free throws to
broke out to a nine point lesd send the game into tile second
early in tile second baH, but overtime.Withtbescoretled44Rich Bailey and Steve Dunfee 44, Dunfee was fouled on a drive
led a Senflnel rally with clutch and again made the two free
h S t' 1
baskets and great defense.
throws . . With t e en me
The score was 42-42 at the end leading 46-14, Dunfee stole the
ofregulatlonplay.SteveDunfee ball from Rick Van Maire and
passed to Walters who made a
three point play witll one second
left.
The game's leading scorer
was Dunfee. , He netted 18.
Bailey added 16 for the winners.
For the losers, Tony Vaughan
and Chuck Hannahs had 16 and
14 apiece.
Dunfee was credited with a
super defensive job as he held
the league's third leading
scorer, Rick Van Maire, to no
field goals and five free throws.
Tony Vaughan and Jon Kloes
also played fine defense for
· Adolph's.
In the second game, former

VISIT BAKER'S

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SCHO~ CLOSES FORTI-IE

6tJMMER VACATION... WE!..L.,AT LEAST
THE JANITOR CAN~ IT- • • •

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Extc. Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

Laver, 32, was generous in
defeat, "Gorman can be rated
among the best of numerous
and impro¥ing young players in
world class tennis.
"I never expect to have a
monopoly , at this standard,
but it's a fact that
these young players are
narrowing the gap after
making tremendous improvement. I guess I !DaY
suffer because of this, but the
sport will benefit as it rightly
should," he sa1d.
The girls' semifinal lineup
was completed Monday with
title favorite and defending
champion Margaret Court qualifying to meet Australian
compatriot Judy Dalton in one
match and Billie Jean King of
Long Beach, Calif., taking on
Evonne Goodlagons of Australia
win the world's premier tour~ in the other. They play
nament when honored with the Wednesday.
top seeded place.

"I've met Tom several limes
before and, fortunately, I've
won most times. He did me a
favor by beating Laver at
Queens and then I heat him in
the semis and went on to
victory. It's happened here as
well. I hope that is a good
omen," Smith said.
,Gorman declined to predict
how he'll do against tile 24year-old Smith, but he said
DaviS cup coach Dennis Ralston
of Bakersfield, Calif., helped
him plot Laver's downfal before
a 15,000 center court audience.
"I talked with Denny for a
half hour. We decided I should
keep the ball low and at Rod's
feet. Denny beat him at Forest
Hills that way last year. It also
worked for me."
Laver's defeat means he's
failed m two success1ve years to

the bases, a fan grabbed the
ball after SanguUlen rounded
second but the hit was ruled a
tc!ple despite Cardinal protests.
Ken Boswell's eighth inning
single enabled Gary Gentry to
win his seventh game against
five losses for the Meis.
Tommie Agee backed Gentry's
four-hit pitchmg with his
seventh homer of the season
and three singles off Rick WISe,
makmg his first start since
pitching a no-hitter over
Cincinnati last Thursday Wise
lS now 6-5.
Willie Crawford and Wes

By Un'lted Press International
Nation ~1 1

League

East

w.

Pillsburgh
New York
Chicago
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal

GB
645
597 4
507 10'1'
506 10'12
405 18
403 1B

l. Pet

49 27
43 29
37 36
39 38
30 44
29 43
West

W. L. Pel. GB

San Franctsco 49 28 .636

..

Los Angeles
Holston

43 33 .5M 5'1'
37 38 .493 II

Cincinnati

35

43

449 U l/2

A!lanta
36 45 .444 15
San Diego
27 50 351 22
Monday's Results
Los Angeles 6 Chicago 4
Cinc~nnatl 4 Mont 3, lsi
C.ncinnal&lt; 5 Monl 4, 2nd
New York 3 Phila 1
P1tlsburgh 11 St. Louis 5
Houslon 6 Atlanta 5, sl
Houslon 6 Atlanta 4, 2nd
San D1ego 6 San Fran 2

McLain. Nearing
Nats Loss Mark

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Denny McLain, whose name was
linked with Hall of Famers Cy
Young, Christy Mathewson and
Walter Johnson when he won 31
games three years ago, is now
courting the dusky recordS of
Benhie Daniels, John Townsend
and Bob Groom.
Daniels, Townsend and
Groom?
Benn1e lost a club record 10
straight games for the Washington Senators' expansion
team that succeeded the club
Cal Griffith moved to Minnesota

all SEOAL leaguer Ron
Ferguson from Gallipolis broke
loose for a fantastic 46 points as
he shot fed, and rebounded his
team to victory. He hit on 22
field goals and was 2-2 at the
free throw line. Ronnie hit 19 in
the first haH and '1!1 in the
second as be missed no shots in
the second half.
Ferguson wasn't the only big
gun for the Bakery. Jeff Morris
canned 28 and Tom Cooke added
22. Also in double figures for the
winners was Jim Boggs with 11.
Wihless Mark V was led by
Bill Vaughan and Bill Chaney
with 16 points each. Mike Sayre
added 10.
The 113 ooints scored was the
highest ever, breaking the
previous record by some 50
pomts.
Ferguson's 46 also broke the
league record of 28 points. The
impressive victory put the
Bakery in undisputed second
place.
· The Bakers go for first
Tuesday as they tangle with the
undefeated shockers of The
Daily Sentinel. In an earlier
contest, The Sentinel nipped the
Bakery 50 to 44. The Dairy
Valley take on Mark V at seven
and the big game begins at
eight.

Wednesday's Games
Allanta at Montreal, nlghl
Pills al New York, n1ght
Los Angeles ai ' Chlcago
Cincinnati at Phila, night
....
SF at San Diego, night
in 1961.
IOnly games scheduled)
Townsend and Groom share
American League
the American League record for
East
most losses by a pitcher in a
w. L. Pet. GB
45 26 .634 ..
season, 26. Ironically, their Balli more
Boston
41 31 .569 4'12
marks of futillty came when
41 32 .562 5
Delroit
they toiled in the uniforms of Cleveland
34 39 .466 12
Washington, which has lost New York
34 41 .453 13
nearly 6,000 games, finished Washington 26 46 .366 19'12
West
last 14 times and in the second
W. L. Pet. GB
division 50 times in 70 years.
Oakland
50 24 .676 ...
Despite his 4-14 record and Kansas Clly 37 33 .529 11
Minnesota
36 39 .480 14'1'
nine straight losses for the California
34 44 .436 18
Senators, McLain still main- Milwaukee
30 40 .429 18
Chicago
28 41 .406 19'12
tains a jaunty air.
Monday's
"I've won four more than last Cleve 3 New YorkResults
O, lsi
year at this time," says the 'J!/. Cleve 5 New York 2, 2nd
year..,ld rightllander, who was Milwaukee 7 Chicago 4
on suspension from the Detroit Boston 10 Washington 4
x-Detroit 4 Baltimore 4
Tigers until July 1last season. Oakland 6 Mlnnesola 4
Kansas City 3 California o
Denny was traded to the
x-13 innings, game suspended,
Senators along with Elliott curfew.
Maddox and Don Wert for Joe
Today's Probable Pitchers
Coleman, Aurelio Rodriguez
Cleveland (Foster 5-51 at New
and Ed Brinkman last fall.
York I Kline 6·61 .
McLain refused to knock his Minnesota !Corbin 4-51 at
(Blue 16-2), nlghl.
teammates, who have provided Oakland
Kansas City I Hedlund 6·4) at
hlm with only 38 runs.
California !Murphy ~·91. night.
Detroit (Coin 5·11 at Balli·
McLain says only "this is the
more
(Dobson 6·41, night.
most snake-llit team I've ever Washington
(Broberg O· ll at
seen."
Boston (Lonborg 2·31. night.
At one point there was Chicago (John s.Bl at Mil ·
speculation Vida Blue, Oak· waukee (Slaton 2·1), night.
land's rookie phenom, would
Wednesday's Games
win 20 games before Washing- Mlnn at Oakland. night
ton. While the Senators had won Kan Clly at Calif, night
Chicago at Mllw, twl ·nlght
19, Blue had won 13.
Boston at Delroll, night
Some critics ssy manager Ball at Cleve, twl·night
Ted Williams may he resting New York at Wash, nlghl
McLain too long between starts. ~---------.
The p1tcher likes to work every
four days, but Williams uses
him every five and plans to
continue the pace.
McLain lost wthe Yankees, 40, in New York Saturday and is
slated to face them again
Your regular payday
Wednesday night here.
savings plus. our .high
rate of return wi II
make your savings
This Week's Special
grow quickly ...

EARN

MORE NOW

..

·&amp;7 ·CHEVELEE
.IT CPE.

Published dapy except
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publtshlng Company, 111
tour! Sf , Pomeroy, OhtO,
45769 eusmess Office Phone
992 2156, Edttorlal Phone 992

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BAKER

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"You'll Like Our Quality
Way ol Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
1192·l3•12
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Til 8:00
Tots P.M. Sat.

eight-hitter and Jack Hiatt's
double sparked a four-&lt;111l rally.
Dave campbell's bases loaded, three-&lt;111l double in the fifth
inning powered the Padres to .
victory over San Francisco.
Clay Kirby went the distance,
scattermg nine hits while
str1king out nine to record his
s1xth win against five losses.
The win was only the second
for the season for San Diego in
10 meetings with the Giants.

Lynch Has No-Hitter

Teams Resume
Summer Play
In Middleport Utile League
actwn Monday, Ke1th Lynch
was the blg news .
The Indians ' righthander
pitched a no-hit game in his first
sl&lt;!rt over the Mets. He retired
the first 10 men to face hlm. A
walk in the fourth spoiled hls
perfect game bid His teammate pounded out seven hilllln
routing the Meta 7.0. Lynch had
three of them In the master·
p1ece he fanned 5 and passed 3.
Losing pitcher was Jeff Miller.
He was relieved in the fourth.by
Kevin Yeauger . They combined
to str1ke out five and pass three.
Bes1des Lynch's three
doubles, Mark and Tony Venoy
each had a triple. Joey Gleason
had a double and Jeff Beaver a
smgle .
In the other contest, Charles
Smith's m1ghty Braves kept on
rolhng as they handed the Mark
V Reds a IH loss. Although tile
Braves had no one brilliant star,
they had a fme team effort as
eight different players contnbuted at least one hit.
The leadmg hitters were
Steve Bachner with three
singles, M1ke Lavender, a
smgle and triple, and Mlck
Davenport a single and double,
D1ck Owen, Tim Thomas, Mike
Wayland, Gene Halley, and
David Sm1th each added
smgles.
For the Reds, Gene Hum·
phrey had a double and single,
Del Call, and Big Buck Tyree

eacQ. a,,~l~\ 'l ·~

Browmng. Browning was effective until the fifth. He then
yielded to Bobby Schneider,
who finished the game. He
fanned six and passed 10.
Randy Phillips led the
Yankees at the plate (he was 44) striking three singles and a
double. Smith had two singles,
Owens had a pair of singles,
Hood and G. Browning had
homers and Van Meter, a
single. Schneider hsd a double.
For the losers, Doug
Browning doubled and had a
pair of singles. Mark Mitch had
a double, and Sisson, Snyder, B.
Qualls, and Triplett each had a
smg!e.
In the other contest, Dale
Browning limited the Dodgers
to four hits and struck out 10. He
walked only three. The Dodgers
used three pitchers, Taylor B.
Seth and Fullrod. They combined to fan seven and pass
three.
Partlow and Scites led the
winners with a double and a
pair of singles. Marshall had a
tr1ple and single, and McClure
and Morris each singled.
For the Dodgers, Jeff Grueser
had two singles.

"! ..

Davenport went a the way
on the mound for the winners.
He struck out 11 and passed
five . The loss was charged to•
Mark Haggerty, who failed to
last an mning. Reliever Steve
Pickens took over ln the first
and pitched the rest of the way.
They combined to fan five and
walk three.
In Pomeroy action Monday, In keeping with In ·
Ron Logan's second place ~~~~~n~::nc:~ Day, we wish to
Yankees kept the pressure on
the 'Independent
the front rll!'ning Tigers as they
agent'. He Is not
pounded three Pirate pitchers
captive employee of one
·
company - he
for 12 hilll in winning, 17-7. In
Insurance from
the meantime, the Tigers
companies. and
scored nine runs in the first two
you In collecting
innings to overwhelm the
The Downing.
Is an ln.
Dodgers, 11-4.
lns!Jran,ce ageht.
In the Yankee-Pirate game,
Mike Owen and Greg Browning
Wft
combined to strike out 10
Dodgers. They walked nine.
Eddie Sisson was charged with
the loss. He lasted one Inning.
200 N. 2nd
He was relieved by Doug
Ml DD
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Parker each had three hits and
drove in two runs in leading the
Dodgers to their fourth straight
win . Crawford homered in the
first inning and doubled in the
sixth while Parker hit a tworun single in the third .
Cesar Cedeno drove m three
runs with a triple, homer, and
single and scored two runs in
leading the Astros to thelf
dou~leheader sweep. In the
first game Don W1lson had an

Today's Probable Ptlchers
Los Angeles IO'Br&lt;en 2·1l at
Chicago (Hands 8-8)
Cinclnnali (Simpson 1 1 or
Cloninger 2 51 al Montreal
(Brit ton 0 2 or McAnally 1-6).
night.
New York (Seaver 9.3) at
Philadelphia
(Lersch ~ 6 ).
cher w1th 336,770 and Tony m the run for the third outfield night
Ohva of Minnesota has the edge spot With 445,037 votes.
Piltsburgh (Walker J.61 at 51
Louis ICleveland 6 7). nigh I
Atlanta • (JarviS 2-91 al
Houston IBill Ingham 3-71 , night
San Francisco (Cumberland
3-01 at San Diego I Rober Is 6-ll.
night

USED CARS

City Editor

not tvflllble: One
month JU5. By mall In Ohio'
and W. Va .. One yur Uc.OO.
Six montos 11.25 Throe
montha U.SG. Subscrlr,tlon
prlct lnctudts Sundty T mea.
Stntlntt.

a game that was suspended
becallS\! of a curfew after 13
inrungs.
Manny Sanguillen drove in
three runs with a disputed
triple m the first inning as the
Pirates pounded Card starter
Jerry Reuss for 10 runs. The
victory enabled the Pirates to
retam their four-game National
League East lead over the
Meta.
Sanguil!en's one-out drive
highlighted the Pirates' five-run
first inning. After Bill Mazeroski and AI Oliver singled and
Roberto Clemente walked to fill

Gorman Scores Upset

Sentinel, 0 VB Post Wins

Cin 20; Bench, Cln 18 ; Bonds,

U.'

team."

power.
In other National League
action Pittsburgh downed St.
Louis,. 11~. Houston swept a
twinbill from Atlanta, 6-5 and 64, New York tripped Philadelphia, 3-1, and Los Angeles
downed Chicago, 6-4.
In the American League,
Cleveland swept a double,
9; and 5-2, Milwaukee
defeated
Chicago,
7-4,
Boston trounced Washington,
10-4, Kansas City blanked
California, 3-0, Oakland edged
Minnesota, 6-4, and Detroit and
Baltimore played to a 4-4 he in

Yaz Still AL Leader

National League: Stargell,
PiH 28; Aaron, All 22; May,

SF 17.
American League: Oliva,
Mlnn 18; Cash, Del and
Jackson, Oak 16; Smith, 8os
and Met~ou"~.c;!J!d ln
National League: Stargetl,
PiH 79: Aaron All 60: Santo,
~r~
Torre, St.L 54 ' May,
American League: Killebrew,
Mlnn 55; Powell, Ball and
Oliva, Mlnn •91 Petrocelli, Bos
47: F. Robinson, Ball and
Bando, Oak 46.
Pitching
National League : Ellis, Pitt
12-3; Carllon. St.L 11 .4; Jenkins, Chl11·7: Dierker. Hou tO4: Marichal, SF 10·5.
American League: Blue, Oak
16-2: McNally, Ball 12·4:
Cuellar, Ball 11 -1: Siebert, Bos
11 ·4: Lol ich, Del and Perry,
Mlnn 11-6.

ing but not by Red manager
Sparky Anderson.
"May has been our big man,"
the Cincinnati skipper said.
"Now with McCovey out of
action I'd be disappointed if
May doesn't make the All.Star

WIMBLEDON , England
(UPI)--Stan Smith offered to
buy Tom Gorman a beer.
It was the least the Army
nprivate from Pasadena, Calif.,
,
could do for a man who')!
probably help him defend the
so.~~~
Davis Cup in Ocwber.
But at first, other than voicing
Gorman, of Seattle, Wash.,
his tllanks, All said lle would scored the upset of upsets at
talk no more about the court the 85th Wimbledon tennis
rullng that, as a member of the championships Monday by
Black Musllms, he was a bona dumping title favorite Rod
fide conscientious objector.
Laver in straight sets, 9·7, ~.
"I'm not going to say 6-3, (\) go with his opening day
anything to get me in trouble," ouster of eighth seeded South
be said.
African Cliff Drysdale.
Later he realized he really
Smith, the bookies third
was "free"-free to fight with choice before the 12-&lt;tay,
his fists, to leave the country, to $120,128 tournament opened,
quit fighting eventually, and to figures to hsve the Indian sign
behave as he wished as a over Gorman and is quietly
citizen.
'
confident about the outcome of
"I know that lam sincere and their semifinal meetmg on
I know that I do believe in the Thursday. He beat New ZeaIslamic religion and the land's Onny Parun 7~. 6-3 6-4 to
teachings of it," he said. "!just advance.
figured that I ~ould he vindicated.
"I don 'I feel nothing as far as
the people who took the title or
the courts for doing what they
thought was right. For me to be
angry or have any bad feeling
NEW YORK (UP! ) toward them for doing what
they think was right and at the Baltimore had the edge m the
same time expecting them to race for three starting berths
recognize me for what I believe and Boston was ahead in two
positions today as fan balloting
was right would be bad.
"They did what they thought went miD the final week to
was right at the time, and I did select the American League
what I !bought was right, so I team for the July 13 All.Star
can'I be angry because they did Game in Detroit.
what they thought was right."
Brooks Robinson was the
All was in Chicago training most popular Oriole as he drew
for a July 26 fight in Houston 563,966 votes in a b1d for the
against Jimmy Ellis, the first of starting third baseman's berth.
three matches be wants before F~rst baseman Boog Powell
he tries for a rematch with collected 457,169 votes and
heavyweight champion Joe outfielder Frank Robinson was
Frazier next year.
named on 348,860 ballots.
"Immediately after I get my
Outfielder Carl Y3strzemski
tiUe back from Joe Frazier," he of Boston continues to lead the
said, he will quit the ring. His balloting with 596,1ff8 votes and
hope then is to be able to "work teammate Luis Aparicio heads
with the people and do what I all shortstops with 253,975.
can to uplift the youth and
Rod Carew of Minnesota
l:t'ing more dignity and respect maintained his lead among
to the black people and use my second basemen w1th 296,599
fame to help make them feel votes, Ray Fosse of Cleveland
llke they're somebody."
solidified his standmg at cat-

e

THOUGHTS
What IS man that thou art
mindful of h1m, and the son
of man that thou dost care
for h1m? Yet thou has made
him little less than God, and
dost crown h1m with glory
and honor.-Psalms 8 4, 5
• • •
•

like the Reds were · in first
place.
The Cincinnati first baseman
collected six hits in Monday's
twinbill, including his 19th and
Z(!th homers of the season, as
tpe Reds powered their way to
the double victory. May is
currently hitting at a .317 clip
for the season and has added 48
RB!s to the Reds'. anemic
attack.
His super performance,
however, has been largely
ignored by the fans in favor of
Giant first baseman Willie
McCovey in the All.Star ballot-

Ali Shaken
By Deczs lO

Noted Historian's View

Gall Bladder and Excess Gas

,,I
I~
lor:
..
•
•••
'•··~
•'· -----------------------------------------

'

BRUCE BIOSSAT

..

of the gall bladder and someBy Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
times the liver often have
; Dear Dr. Lamb-! would excess gas formation. Fatty
be one of the most grateful foods often aggravate the
borrespondents you have problem. You might try
ever had if you could give avoiding fried foods , fatty
)ne some advice on what is foods, eggs (the yolks are
pest for gas formation. I am the problem), beans, pork,
butter or margarine, milk
111 married lady 70 years old
and
cream.
11nd haven't known what it
Some people without gall
Is to get a good night's sleep
tlue to this fullness that bladder trouble have diffi.
awakens me for hours (and culty digesting the lactose in
Without a sedative, it is an the milk. You might be one
~Ji-nlght vigil).
of these people. If so you will
! I realize so much is sa1d need to discontinue milk of
about relaxation but how any type. If you stop milk
iJoes one relax when they you should take calcium or
teet full to the nth degree? eat nonfat cottage cheese or
l failed to say I have an buttermilk, otherwise your
inactive ~ail bladder. I won· diet may be deficient in
ller if th1s is significant or calcium .
pot?
Occasi9nally a person is
' Dear Reader-Gas forma- an a1r swallower. Belching
tion can be caused by an in· often results in taking in
i)lctive J(all bladder. People more air than is actually ex·
::with gallstones or any other pelled. These problems are
:1cause for abnormal function often related to nervousness.

.

COMO AND HIS LINKS
-SECOND INSTAIJ.MENT

Germany.

and obaeselon -and horror - all those things we'll hopefully
never see In our dull, safe llves?
Don't be ashamed of your interest In history, little A.W.,
learning the faclll doesn't mean you're "converted." More llkely,
juat the opposite! - Right? -H.
Dear Helen:
About 12 mont)IS ago I wrote some additions to "What is a
Serviceman's Girl." ,
Well, now I'd llke to share with you and your many readers
what it's llka to scratch off those final days until my Serviceman
cm~es home!
It's been 11 months, four days, one hour, 45 minutes, since he
gave me !bat last kiss.
It's now II days until he gives me the first one after all that
Umel
It's sttil running to the mailbox, and because our mailman
knows whati'm looking for, I can tell by the expression on his face
If there's a Jetter or not. '
I don't smear the Ink with tears anywhere .... I flood the tape
recorder 'csuse he sends tape letters too.
I U8ed to think 53 letters wli's a lot. What shall I do with aU 299
oflllem?
,
The klda at summer school are beginning to count the days
will! me and IIIey don't even know him.
&amp;it the best thing is knowing that exactly 17 days after he's
home I'll be Mrs. instead of Miss and there'll be no more waiting
for me I - JUDY
P. S. Thaks, Helen, for personally helping so much the several
Urnes I'Ve written during the last year. We'll be leaving for
Oldnawa after the wedding, and it's nice to know you'll stlll be
there to write to. Maybe you '11 soon be bearing bow a happlly
married gal adjusta to life on a tropic Island. -H.
'Dear Judy :
Lots of luck and much, much happiness to you both! Do write!
.-H.

.
BY JACK O'BRIAN

YOUTH ASKED FOR ITI
Thl8 colwnn II ~ young people, their problems and
pleuures, tbelr troubles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
Us! It wele«nes laughs but won't dodge a serious question with a
lrush.off.
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
ol Helen Help Us! lhll newspaper.
FASCINATION DOESN'T
MEAN INDOCTRINATION
De.Br Helen:
I'm not crazy or subversive or anything, though maybe
people might think so If they knew ....
For the past year I've had an inexplicable Interest In, and
have loved to learn everything about, the Nazl.s, especially Hitler.
I'm fascinated by books on him and movies that show Hitler's

s In Twinhill

Voice along Broadway ·1

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�'.

. S- The Da.Uy Sentlnel,Middl_eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 29, 1971
.PRINCE IN HOSPlTAL
ROME (UP!) - Prince Ullah
Hedayat, 50, son of a onetime
. King of Mghanistan, was
hospitallud Saturday suffering
from serious overdose of an
unspecified medicine, doctors..
said. The piince is the son of
TUESDAY
the Emir .Amanullah Khan who
DIRECTORS " meeting, In 1919 declared Mghanisian's
Pooieroy-Middleport Lions independence and fought a "20Ciub, 7 p.m. Tuesday at Far- day war" agalflllt England. He
mers Bank and Savings Co., was tater deposed and moved
Pomeroy,
Paul
Kloes, with his family to Italy.
·
president-elect announces.
·
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
MCCOY GRADUATES
Eight and Forty, wiener roast, Marine Pvt. Paul W. McCoy,
Virgil Roush and Sons, Letart son of Mrs. Mary I. McCoy of
Falls, 7 p.m . Tuesday. Casual 2307 Jefferson Ave ., Point
attire.
Pleasant, . W. Va., has
HYMN SING Tuesday, 1:30 graduated from Basic Infantry
pm. Freedom Gospel Mission Specialist Training at the
at Bald Knobs with the Dwlcan Marine Corps Base, Can:tp
family of Tampa, Fla. The Lejeune, N. C.
public is invited. .
,---------.
THURSDAY .
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club picnic, 6:30 p.m.
Route 33 Roadside Park, right
side.
REGULAR meeting of
Evangeline Chapter 172 O.E.S., ·
Middleport, Thursd.ay, 7:30
p.m. All members welcome.

Social
Calendar

'

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Feast on Glazed Ham July 4
Cheryl Ann Bumgardner

Cheryl Bumgardner
To .Wed Earl Riley
and Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner of New Haven, W.
Va. are announcing the
engagenient of their daughter,
Cheryl Ann, to Earl L. Riley,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl W.
iwey of Mason, W. Va .
The open church wedding will
take place on July 17 in St. Paul
Luther'l'l Church, New Haven,
W. Va., wjth The Rev. James
Mr.

Middleport

Mr. and Mrs. John Allens-

worth of Mt. Gilead are announcing the birth of a
daughter, ·saturday at the
Gallon Community Hospital.
The aeven pound, 13 ounce
Infant named Kristin Adair is
Mr. and Mrs. Allensworth's
· first child. Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Wildermuth and Mrs. Robert
Allensworth of Middleport are
the grandparents.

Personal Notes

Mr . and Mrs. Roper! Jay and
Mrs . Susan Rawlings of
Columbus were weekend guests
of relatives here. The Jays were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William
T. Grueser, and Mrs. Rawlings
stayed with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rawlings, Pomeroy.
General James Hartinger of
Colorado Springs, Colo. was a
visl tor last week with his
POST OFFICE OPENS
mother,
Mrs. Lawrence Har'Die Inauguration of the new
U. S. 'P01tal Service Will be tinger, and Mrs. Clyda Allenobserved from 8 a.m. to 5 pm. sworth.
Mrs. Ann Zirkle is
Thursday at the Rutland Post
recuperating from surgery. Her
Office.
mother-in-law,
Mrs . Ruth
A Umited number of souvenir
envelopes imprinted with the Zirkle, is assisting in the care of
old lind the new lflllignia of the the family .
Mr. and Mrs. James Mourthe Postal Service will be
available. Cookies and punch ning and children of Columbus
were weekend guests of his
will be served.
mother, Mrs. Golda Mourning .
..........lf.........., Mr. Mourning returned to
Columbus and his wife and
A THOUGHT chil.dren went to Point Pleasant
to visit her mother, Mrs. Tom
FOR
Walters.
Mt. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
If Is betfer to say, "This
of Elyria spent the weekend
·. one thing I do", than to
. say "These forty things 1
here with Mrs. Golda Mourning.
dabble In"
They attended the Lambert
-Wasrungton Gladden
· family picnic at Harrisonville
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hawley
!f. . :JI. •
of Wintersville and Mr. and
lfs ~u icll! Easy
Mrs. James Hawley, Jr. and
twin sons, Scott and Shawn, of
Toledo returned to their homes
Monday after visiting here with
Mrs. Grace •Hawley and Mrs.
·11 ·
Fridays Only
il The Drive-In Window il Flossie Allensworth.
Mary Bradbury is caring for
lsOpen
her niece, Wendy Wolfe, this
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
i&lt; summer while Mrs. Suzanne
I Continuously) i&lt; Wolfe completes her degree
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3f work at Rio Grande College.
Mrs . Robert Reibel of
~ •nd 5 to 7 as usual
ij .Fridays.
i&lt; Morristown spent the past week
at the Harrisonville farm of Mr.
and Mrs. William Kitcl!en and
daughters. She came especially
to be with the children while her
POMEROY, OHIO
il daughter, Mrs. Kitchen, attends
Member FDIC
~ Ohio University . She will
Member Federal
ij graduate this swnmer.
Re$erve System
'I'

t

TODAY~

t
t

t
t
t

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

i

t

i

ont

i

; ·FARMERS BANK ·
and SAVINGS CO. : .

........................

~

HOMEMADE
Ham Salad
Cheese Spread

Troye(s TlaU Bologna
'

Plt.llf.3502

Class Plans July Picnic

Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

I

When the pastor's away, the parishioners will playWith the Rev. W. H. Perrin on vacation and lay speakers
filling the pulpit these days, thought we should let you know that
Sunday there will be special guests at Trinity Church, people you
will probably want to see.
The Rev. R. L. Hegnauer, popular pastor of Trinity two decades ago, and his wife will be here over the Fourth. The
minister occupied the pulpit here.for four years, 1941h10, and for
the past several years has been at the Berne, Ind. church.
Anyways, they will be on vacation and coming through here
and are anxious to renew old acquainiances. The time to do that is
following the Sunday morning service.
INCIDENTALLY, WE'VE HEARD so many good reports on
Mike Struble's sermonette at Trinity Chur,ch Sunday. Talented
and inteUigen!, Mike's ambition is to become an attorney. He's
just back from Ashland College where he attended Buckeye Boys'
State and he used his experiences there as the basis for his talk
Sunday.
Mike will he a senior at Meigs High School this fall .
HAD SOME INFORMATION from Jan Wetherholt on
exhibits and activities of the French Art Colony at River by, sure
to be of interest to Bend area residents.
saturday two new exhibits will open - Leslie Fliegel's
"Fantasy Realism" featuring 18 works, and Bohdan-Osyczka
"Fluid Abstract," 20 works. On Sundsy there will be an art exhibit
in the park in conjunction with the River Recreation Festival.
On both Sundays, July 11 and July 25, child workshops, the
first, shapes in space, and the second, sendcasting, will be -conducted by William Fogus. On July 18, a painter's workshop will be
held at Riverby. A benefit ball, "An Evening in Paris" is
scheduled for 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Riverby, on Saturday, July 17. It
wiU be a semi.formal affair.
Activities at Riverby this summer include a large variety of
things with a summer schedule of 13 classes with a current
enrollment of 85 students, exhibits, workshops, seminars and
poster making and framing and 25 tours conducted so far for 351
children. About 30 new members have been added in recent
weeks. Perhaps you'd like to contribute to the program or participate in it. VisitorsatRiverby are welcome. Weekend hours are
1 to 5 p.m.

A picnic was planned for
Thursday at Forked Run Park
when the One-Won-One Class
met at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
It was planned for that time
so that Mrs. Edith Shain of
Florida, here visitiug relatives,
a former active member of the
class, could atteiJd.
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett read at the
meetlng held Thursday night
three letters from the Hong
Kong child supported by the
class. It was noted that eight
members had attended funeral
services for Mrs. Margaret
Seidenabel.
Mrs. Audrey Young presided
at the meeting which opened
with the class song, "He Keeps
Me Singing." The teacher's
thought was given by Mrs.
Joseph Cook who used
"Sometimes It Helps to Worry"

WEEKEND VISIT
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. KBrl RliSSeU, Racine, were
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Chapman,
Shelley
and
Kimberly,
Colwnbus, Mr. an!l Mrs. Roy
Smith and son Donnie,
Pomer~y, Rt. 3, Dorothy
Dand~, Athens, and Bruno
C1Iscl, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Chapman .and
family returned Saturday
following a tour of the western
states. They visited Mrs.
Chapman's brother Sgt. and
'
Mrs. Karl Russell, Ywna, Ariz.,
and Thomas Burkett and
family, Nogales, Ariz.
Other points of ipterest visited
by the Chapmans were
Carlsbad Caverns New Mexico
Grand Canyon, Disneyland and
toured the ship Queen Mary
anchored at Long Beach, Calif.
and also visited old Mexico.
Mrs. Chapman is . the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell.

MEAT SIZZLERS!
'

USDA.
CHO.ICE

MAJESTIC SET

A!! Carved~
OIAMONO

RING S

We'll do our part.
Just bring your rriendly
bachelor in to see our ArtCarved
diamond riilgs. When he sees
how you light up when you

try one on, he'Jl resolve then

and there that nobody but
him will give you one.
And he'll likely resolve that
the one he'll sive you will
be an ArtCarved even before we
tell h.im about ArtCarved's
Permanent Value Plan.

'

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE .

606 E. Main

and a poem entitled "Goodness" from Apples of Gold. Mrs.
Shain had the closing prayer.
.Mrs. ·Caddie Wickham
provided re~shrnents for the
class meeting although she was
unable to attend due to the
illness of her mother, Mrs. Julia
Davis Qf Gallipolis. Grace was
by Mrs. T. T. Shelton.
Atteilding besides those
named were Mr. and Mrs.
William Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Price, Mrs . Burton
Smith, Mrs. Marla Foster, and
Mrs. Ellen Couch.

992-2094

~=:!. . . .~: . 59
9¢

4

:C:f:

SUPERIORS DART

SLICED

BACON

BEER
. Stop In And See Our Floor Display

16 oz.

A.

g::(
LEMON
SCENTED

I

0

0

=~::=M
FAMILY
ROOM

GARAGE
0 STEEL
II DING

I tm loterntod In 1 new home.

· .- htve my own lot.
I do ...... do not .....

Name ........... :............. ...... .. ...........................
'
'
Add rna ........................................................... .

r",'

25¢

79t;

I

I,..•
I

·

Fine Wlth Burgers!
Extra Fine
For Your Salads!

bots.

••· pkg.

7 9~

10 1.00

-c~"

cans

Biltmore Canned

LUNCH MEAT.
12 oz. can
only
39~

Red Ripe

TOMATOES·

U.S. GRADE A

2 lbs. for

SEALTEST MILK
Vz gal.

53~

,

99~

Canning Supplies

79t;

THURS. ONLY

gal

Now! Big Supply

PEPSI-COLA
•

18

CANNED POP

5 •.1

PAK
16 oz.

BREADED CHUCK
WAGON STEAKS

16 oz. p"'
Whole
Strawberries
~

t;

lvs.
for

1';'

BIRDS EYE

FAVORITE BREAD·
EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

'5 lb.
bag

Shasta (Reg. or Diet)

49~

quart

*gal.

'C'·"''•r' rl-:;u.:•

\

DEBBIE DETERGENT

We can handle your ftMncln1 too. Plnse check . the remodolln&amp; job you
would like more FREE Information about.
•

, .

DURKEE'S OLIVES

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

0

SCOT LAD
3
FRENCH FRIES :,:.·

8 PAK

DRIVE DETERGENT

·0

lb.

DOG FOOD

SCOT LAD

MILK

"MR.
FRIENDLY" ,

'
You tdd nlue •• wiiii 11 convenience when you modernize. Our home ttrYICt
lllPirtl will help you pltn tnd buUd that now 11r1p, kitchen, or addition.
We •110 show you tht bolt values In bulldlna mattrlals to live you the btat
job lor the money.

UPSTAIRS

lC:E

.,

Q

home improvement

0 FINISHED

c

The best you can
buy anywl1ere.
So nice, lean
and tender .

FRISKIES

HWI

Make your
dreams come
true ... call
us for

0 ROOM

CUBE STEAK

HOT lb.
DOGS

ROOT
.

AND FURNITURE .

Refrigerator Jar

tJ KITCHEN

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS FOOT LONG

lb. .

OFFIC~ SUPP~I~S

!

CITY BUILDING

5 $}

•FRIDA 'f ONLY! !

FROZEN
FOOD

7 ounce

I

59~

•THURS. ONLY

DAD'S

~~

I

PURE, LEAN
BEEF. BEST
FOR
COOKOUTS!

.

Pomeroy

It

216 E. 2nd
.
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421
'

LEAN GROUND CHUCK

WIENERS
Ut

..,_•·.'".'' .".Ar.t_·..'C.•.··.•_d_,._.•_,..__.

I

ROBINSON'S ·
CJ;EAN.ERS ·

AT NEW HAVEN

·lb

Pomeroy

Court St.

t}

~ CLEANING .
(Upon Request)

,Superiors All Meat

Low, Low Prices!

bois. .

2~0UR

WIG SHOW &amp; SALE ·

c

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Skinner was ' 1Priorities'' using
scripture from Luke 12, 15-25,

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Charles C. Boykln, Cecil c.
Burdette, Mrs. Harold D. Davis
and daughter, Omar S. Drennen, UriasHaU, Rev. Chester J.
Lemley, Mrs. Donald L. McCarty and son, Mrs. Mollie
Miller, Mrs. Frankie Eugene
Norris and daughter, Hobart T.
Niday, Sr., Richard C. Parker,
Mrs. Edgar K. Payne, Beverly
June Short, William Fred
Smith; Sr., Miss Clara C.
Yauger, Mrs. Emma Icard, and
Robert Burson.

RUMMAGE SALE
Heath United Methodist ~~~;::=~;;::;:::-;::;:;..-­
Church, Middleport, wlll have a
rummage sale Thursday,
. Friday and Saturday in the Fry
building. Residents with items
to contribute are asked to take .
them · to the building before
Wednesday or telephone Mrs.
Norman Wayland or Mrs.
James Jividen for pickup Of
JULY 2nd-9A.M.. T07:l0 P.M.
Items.
IOO Per Cent Ktnokalon Synllletlc Stretch Wig

..

as her theme. She said that

worry sometimes contributes to
resolutions and action. The
devotional topic by Mrs. George

·puRE! .

For Your

SUPERIORS
BONES .

'I

LEAN!

STEAK

SUPERIORS
POLISH · save lOc
SAUSAGE
..per . lb.
- ·-

.

·GROUND BEEF

Superiors USDA.Choice·

ROUND

'.l

Bucky Walters, your trie11dly store manager and Roger Bush, your courteous
meat manager. says come on in. sl1op around. Compare our everyday low prices
with anybody's in town.

OxJkout!

HOSPITAL NEWS

MRS. GRACE STACE and daughter, Mrs. William Radford,
are home after a delightful several days at Camp Perry on Lake
Erie, guests of Mt. Sgt. and Mrs. Harry Glaze.
· Sgt. Glaze is the administrative supervisor of the Officers
Candidate School there and one of the things which Mrs. Stace and
Mrs. Radford did was ·attend the Impressive graduation of the
recruits. They also visited Cedar Point for a day of fun and
relaxation.
Coincidentally, Mrs. Radford's son, Second Lieutenant
William R. Radford, happened to be at Camp Percy. He is
stationed with the National Guard at Marietta but was there on a
lraining mission.

830 E: MAIN

POMERQY

BAKED HAM GLAZE
¥. cup packed brown sugar
1'h teaspoons dry mustard
2 teaspoons water
G 1 a z e ingredients . are
mixed cold and spread on
ham as directed. To prepare
the ham score the fat diagonally and insert a whole clove
at the cente~ of each diamond that IS forn:ted by
scormg. Cook over m~rect
medium heat for 9 mmutes
per pound. After 30 minutes
baste with glaze. Baste again
every 20 minutes if thick
glaze is desired. With all but
peach glaze, garnish with
pineapple rings and cherries
15 minutes before ham is
done.

r--~~---,

Announce Birth
Of First Child

f.

It should read 160-170 depan on top the grill.
Home economists for Web- grees before ham is ready to
er-Stephen Products Co. ad- serve.
vise using 25 briquettes on
CRANBERRY GLAZE
each side of a 23-inch grill
1 cup mashed jeilled
kettle for medium heat. Add
cranberries
eight briquettes to each side
•;.. teaspoon ginger
about every 45 to 50 minutes,
'14 teaspoon cinnamon
they say. An 8-to-10 pound
ham should roast for 9 mm- 'fJ cup packed dark brown
utes per pound and a larger
sugar
ham requires less time per
pound to cook than a smaller HONEY -ORANGE GLAZE
•;, cup· packed dark brown
one. Roasting t i m e' for
sugar
canned hams is to heat them
throughout and allow time tq '14 cup honey
take on the flavor of cloves
'/, cup orange juice
and glaze: Smoked or cured
PEACH GLAZE
ham must be completely
1 cup peach preserves
cooked through in oven or
1 tablespoon lemon juice
covered unit and it is best
'h teaspoon ginger
to·use a meat thermometer.

FREE ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5

a

Help
stamp out
bachelors!

Plan Fourth of July feast oround handsome glozed hom.

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A hefty ham makes an attractive centerpiece for a
Fourth of July table. Wheth- •
er cooked in the oven or in
a covered kettle a ham takes
on added flavor f r o m a
Vee Kin Moy officiating.
glaze. These may be sweet
Miss Bumgardner is a or tangy when made with a
graduate of Wahama High cranberry, honey-orange,
School. Her fiance graduated peach or brown sugar-dry
from Wahama High School and mustard. Cooking a ham in .a
aerved for two years in the U. s. covered kettle outdoors 1s
Army Military Police of which si'!lple. Be certain charcoal
14 months were spent in Korea. bnquettes are stacked at the
He is at present serving an sides to provide space for a
..
.
. dnp pan of heavy duty aluapprenticeship m electromcs. minum foil and for indirect
heat. Some people like to
place the ham directly in a

-

FRIDAY ONLY

5
A

Col69

v SAVE 30~
E
WITH THIS COUPON

•1

s

I

1

ON ANY 3 OF THESE
QUAKER CEREALS

Cap'll Crunctl • King Vitsman • Crunch Be rries
Ule • QlJisp • Quake • Peanut Butter

I MARK

A

v

v

OH"

E

NESTEA

s

INSTANT TEA
3 oz. Jar

A

v

Large

99¢

With
Coupon

AT: MARK VSTORE

E

EXPIRES SATURDAY

SAT. ONLY

City ........................-................-....................... .

ONLY 15.75 ·
· .Shirl~

Temple accumulated a fortune of over fl
million before she was 10
years old, as a child film
......_,star.

Including: FREE STYRO HEAD,
FREE STYLING
.

Never needs setflng, 1ust walll and. -r.
Ladies come lnd

Me

tiC!ads. No Obllptt111.

'bur complete lint of heir

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
"The pepartmer~t Store of Building Since 19l5"

MARKET·· Open · Dai~ 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to
. . We Accept Federal FOOd Stnmtl.~

Comer Mill al\11 Second Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480

'

" We Reserve The Right To Limit auo,~flllie •

-

�'.

. S- The Da.Uy Sentlnel,Middl_eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 29, 1971
.PRINCE IN HOSPlTAL
ROME (UP!) - Prince Ullah
Hedayat, 50, son of a onetime
. King of Mghanistan, was
hospitallud Saturday suffering
from serious overdose of an
unspecified medicine, doctors..
said. The piince is the son of
TUESDAY
the Emir .Amanullah Khan who
DIRECTORS " meeting, In 1919 declared Mghanisian's
Pooieroy-Middleport Lions independence and fought a "20Ciub, 7 p.m. Tuesday at Far- day war" agalflllt England. He
mers Bank and Savings Co., was tater deposed and moved
Pomeroy,
Paul
Kloes, with his family to Italy.
·
president-elect announces.
·
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710,
MCCOY GRADUATES
Eight and Forty, wiener roast, Marine Pvt. Paul W. McCoy,
Virgil Roush and Sons, Letart son of Mrs. Mary I. McCoy of
Falls, 7 p.m . Tuesday. Casual 2307 Jefferson Ave ., Point
attire.
Pleasant, . W. Va., has
HYMN SING Tuesday, 1:30 graduated from Basic Infantry
pm. Freedom Gospel Mission Specialist Training at the
at Bald Knobs with the Dwlcan Marine Corps Base, Can:tp
family of Tampa, Fla. The Lejeune, N. C.
public is invited. .
,---------.
THURSDAY .
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club picnic, 6:30 p.m.
Route 33 Roadside Park, right
side.
REGULAR meeting of
Evangeline Chapter 172 O.E.S., ·
Middleport, Thursd.ay, 7:30
p.m. All members welcome.

Social
Calendar

'

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Feast on Glazed Ham July 4
Cheryl Ann Bumgardner

Cheryl Bumgardner
To .Wed Earl Riley
and Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner of New Haven, W.
Va. are announcing the
engagenient of their daughter,
Cheryl Ann, to Earl L. Riley,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl W.
iwey of Mason, W. Va .
The open church wedding will
take place on July 17 in St. Paul
Luther'l'l Church, New Haven,
W. Va., wjth The Rev. James
Mr.

Middleport

Mr. and Mrs. John Allens-

worth of Mt. Gilead are announcing the birth of a
daughter, ·saturday at the
Gallon Community Hospital.
The aeven pound, 13 ounce
Infant named Kristin Adair is
Mr. and Mrs. Allensworth's
· first child. Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Wildermuth and Mrs. Robert
Allensworth of Middleport are
the grandparents.

Personal Notes

Mr . and Mrs. Roper! Jay and
Mrs . Susan Rawlings of
Columbus were weekend guests
of relatives here. The Jays were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William
T. Grueser, and Mrs. Rawlings
stayed with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rawlings, Pomeroy.
General James Hartinger of
Colorado Springs, Colo. was a
visl tor last week with his
POST OFFICE OPENS
mother,
Mrs. Lawrence Har'Die Inauguration of the new
U. S. 'P01tal Service Will be tinger, and Mrs. Clyda Allenobserved from 8 a.m. to 5 pm. sworth.
Mrs. Ann Zirkle is
Thursday at the Rutland Post
recuperating from surgery. Her
Office.
mother-in-law,
Mrs . Ruth
A Umited number of souvenir
envelopes imprinted with the Zirkle, is assisting in the care of
old lind the new lflllignia of the the family .
Mr. and Mrs. James Mourthe Postal Service will be
available. Cookies and punch ning and children of Columbus
were weekend guests of his
will be served.
mother, Mrs. Golda Mourning .
..........lf.........., Mr. Mourning returned to
Columbus and his wife and
A THOUGHT chil.dren went to Point Pleasant
to visit her mother, Mrs. Tom
FOR
Walters.
Mt. and Mrs. Carl Mourning
If Is betfer to say, "This
of Elyria spent the weekend
·. one thing I do", than to
. say "These forty things 1
here with Mrs. Golda Mourning.
dabble In"
They attended the Lambert
-Wasrungton Gladden
· family picnic at Harrisonville
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hawley
!f. . :JI. •
of Wintersville and Mr. and
lfs ~u icll! Easy
Mrs. James Hawley, Jr. and
twin sons, Scott and Shawn, of
Toledo returned to their homes
Monday after visiting here with
Mrs. Grace •Hawley and Mrs.
·11 ·
Fridays Only
il The Drive-In Window il Flossie Allensworth.
Mary Bradbury is caring for
lsOpen
her niece, Wendy Wolfe, this
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
i&lt; summer while Mrs. Suzanne
I Continuously) i&lt; Wolfe completes her degree
Other Banking Hours 9 to 3f work at Rio Grande College.
Mrs . Robert Reibel of
~ •nd 5 to 7 as usual
ij .Fridays.
i&lt; Morristown spent the past week
at the Harrisonville farm of Mr.
and Mrs. William Kitcl!en and
daughters. She came especially
to be with the children while her
POMEROY, OHIO
il daughter, Mrs. Kitchen, attends
Member FDIC
~ Ohio University . She will
Member Federal
ij graduate this swnmer.
Re$erve System
'I'

t

TODAY~

t
t

t
t
t

DRIVE-IN
BANKING

i

t

i

ont

i

; ·FARMERS BANK ·
and SAVINGS CO. : .

........................

~

HOMEMADE
Ham Salad
Cheese Spread

Troye(s TlaU Bologna
'

Plt.llf.3502

Class Plans July Picnic

Community
Corner By

Charlene Hoeflich

I

When the pastor's away, the parishioners will playWith the Rev. W. H. Perrin on vacation and lay speakers
filling the pulpit these days, thought we should let you know that
Sunday there will be special guests at Trinity Church, people you
will probably want to see.
The Rev. R. L. Hegnauer, popular pastor of Trinity two decades ago, and his wife will be here over the Fourth. The
minister occupied the pulpit here.for four years, 1941h10, and for
the past several years has been at the Berne, Ind. church.
Anyways, they will be on vacation and coming through here
and are anxious to renew old acquainiances. The time to do that is
following the Sunday morning service.
INCIDENTALLY, WE'VE HEARD so many good reports on
Mike Struble's sermonette at Trinity Chur,ch Sunday. Talented
and inteUigen!, Mike's ambition is to become an attorney. He's
just back from Ashland College where he attended Buckeye Boys'
State and he used his experiences there as the basis for his talk
Sunday.
Mike will he a senior at Meigs High School this fall .
HAD SOME INFORMATION from Jan Wetherholt on
exhibits and activities of the French Art Colony at River by, sure
to be of interest to Bend area residents.
saturday two new exhibits will open - Leslie Fliegel's
"Fantasy Realism" featuring 18 works, and Bohdan-Osyczka
"Fluid Abstract," 20 works. On Sundsy there will be an art exhibit
in the park in conjunction with the River Recreation Festival.
On both Sundays, July 11 and July 25, child workshops, the
first, shapes in space, and the second, sendcasting, will be -conducted by William Fogus. On July 18, a painter's workshop will be
held at Riverby. A benefit ball, "An Evening in Paris" is
scheduled for 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Riverby, on Saturday, July 17. It
wiU be a semi.formal affair.
Activities at Riverby this summer include a large variety of
things with a summer schedule of 13 classes with a current
enrollment of 85 students, exhibits, workshops, seminars and
poster making and framing and 25 tours conducted so far for 351
children. About 30 new members have been added in recent
weeks. Perhaps you'd like to contribute to the program or participate in it. VisitorsatRiverby are welcome. Weekend hours are
1 to 5 p.m.

A picnic was planned for
Thursday at Forked Run Park
when the One-Won-One Class
met at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church.
It was planned for that time
so that Mrs. Edith Shain of
Florida, here visitiug relatives,
a former active member of the
class, could atteiJd.
Mrs. L. P. Sterrett read at the
meetlng held Thursday night
three letters from the Hong
Kong child supported by the
class. It was noted that eight
members had attended funeral
services for Mrs. Margaret
Seidenabel.
Mrs. Audrey Young presided
at the meeting which opened
with the class song, "He Keeps
Me Singing." The teacher's
thought was given by Mrs.
Joseph Cook who used
"Sometimes It Helps to Worry"

WEEKEND VISIT
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. KBrl RliSSeU, Racine, were
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Chapman,
Shelley
and
Kimberly,
Colwnbus, Mr. an!l Mrs. Roy
Smith and son Donnie,
Pomer~y, Rt. 3, Dorothy
Dand~, Athens, and Bruno
C1Iscl, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Chapman .and
family returned Saturday
following a tour of the western
states. They visited Mrs.
Chapman's brother Sgt. and
'
Mrs. Karl Russell, Ywna, Ariz.,
and Thomas Burkett and
family, Nogales, Ariz.
Other points of ipterest visited
by the Chapmans were
Carlsbad Caverns New Mexico
Grand Canyon, Disneyland and
toured the ship Queen Mary
anchored at Long Beach, Calif.
and also visited old Mexico.
Mrs. Chapman is . the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Russell.

MEAT SIZZLERS!
'

USDA.
CHO.ICE

MAJESTIC SET

A!! Carved~
OIAMONO

RING S

We'll do our part.
Just bring your rriendly
bachelor in to see our ArtCarved
diamond riilgs. When he sees
how you light up when you

try one on, he'Jl resolve then

and there that nobody but
him will give you one.
And he'll likely resolve that
the one he'll sive you will
be an ArtCarved even before we
tell h.im about ArtCarved's
Permanent Value Plan.

'

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE .

606 E. Main

and a poem entitled "Goodness" from Apples of Gold. Mrs.
Shain had the closing prayer.
.Mrs. ·Caddie Wickham
provided re~shrnents for the
class meeting although she was
unable to attend due to the
illness of her mother, Mrs. Julia
Davis Qf Gallipolis. Grace was
by Mrs. T. T. Shelton.
Atteilding besides those
named were Mr. and Mrs.
William Watson, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Price, Mrs . Burton
Smith, Mrs. Marla Foster, and
Mrs. Ellen Couch.

992-2094

~=:!. . . .~: . 59
9¢

4

:C:f:

SUPERIORS DART

SLICED

BACON

BEER
. Stop In And See Our Floor Display

16 oz.

A.

g::(
LEMON
SCENTED

I

0

0

=~::=M
FAMILY
ROOM

GARAGE
0 STEEL
II DING

I tm loterntod In 1 new home.

· .- htve my own lot.
I do ...... do not .....

Name ........... :............. ...... .. ...........................
'
'
Add rna ........................................................... .

r",'

25¢

79t;

I

I,..•
I

·

Fine Wlth Burgers!
Extra Fine
For Your Salads!

bots.

••· pkg.

7 9~

10 1.00

-c~"

cans

Biltmore Canned

LUNCH MEAT.
12 oz. can
only
39~

Red Ripe

TOMATOES·

U.S. GRADE A

2 lbs. for

SEALTEST MILK
Vz gal.

53~

,

99~

Canning Supplies

79t;

THURS. ONLY

gal

Now! Big Supply

PEPSI-COLA
•

18

CANNED POP

5 •.1

PAK
16 oz.

BREADED CHUCK
WAGON STEAKS

16 oz. p"'
Whole
Strawberries
~

t;

lvs.
for

1';'

BIRDS EYE

FAVORITE BREAD·
EVERYDAY
LOW PRICE

'5 lb.
bag

Shasta (Reg. or Diet)

49~

quart

*gal.

'C'·"''•r' rl-:;u.:•

\

DEBBIE DETERGENT

We can handle your ftMncln1 too. Plnse check . the remodolln&amp; job you
would like more FREE Information about.
•

, .

DURKEE'S OLIVES

FREE ESTIMATES ON YOUR REMODELING NEEDS

0

SCOT LAD
3
FRENCH FRIES :,:.·

8 PAK

DRIVE DETERGENT

·0

lb.

DOG FOOD

SCOT LAD

MILK

"MR.
FRIENDLY" ,

'
You tdd nlue •• wiiii 11 convenience when you modernize. Our home ttrYICt
lllPirtl will help you pltn tnd buUd that now 11r1p, kitchen, or addition.
We •110 show you tht bolt values In bulldlna mattrlals to live you the btat
job lor the money.

UPSTAIRS

lC:E

.,

Q

home improvement

0 FINISHED

c

The best you can
buy anywl1ere.
So nice, lean
and tender .

FRISKIES

HWI

Make your
dreams come
true ... call
us for

0 ROOM

CUBE STEAK

HOT lb.
DOGS

ROOT
.

AND FURNITURE .

Refrigerator Jar

tJ KITCHEN

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS FOOT LONG

lb. .

OFFIC~ SUPP~I~S

!

CITY BUILDING

5 $}

•FRIDA 'f ONLY! !

FROZEN
FOOD

7 ounce

I

59~

•THURS. ONLY

DAD'S

~~

I

PURE, LEAN
BEEF. BEST
FOR
COOKOUTS!

.

Pomeroy

It

216 E. 2nd
.
Pomeroy
Phone 992-5421
'

LEAN GROUND CHUCK

WIENERS
Ut

..,_•·.'".'' .".Ar.t_·..'C.•.··.•_d_,._.•_,..__.

I

ROBINSON'S ·
CJ;EAN.ERS ·

AT NEW HAVEN

·lb

Pomeroy

Court St.

t}

~ CLEANING .
(Upon Request)

,Superiors All Meat

Low, Low Prices!

bois. .

2~0UR

WIG SHOW &amp; SALE ·

c

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Skinner was ' 1Priorities'' using
scripture from Luke 12, 15-25,

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Discharges
Charles C. Boykln, Cecil c.
Burdette, Mrs. Harold D. Davis
and daughter, Omar S. Drennen, UriasHaU, Rev. Chester J.
Lemley, Mrs. Donald L. McCarty and son, Mrs. Mollie
Miller, Mrs. Frankie Eugene
Norris and daughter, Hobart T.
Niday, Sr., Richard C. Parker,
Mrs. Edgar K. Payne, Beverly
June Short, William Fred
Smith; Sr., Miss Clara C.
Yauger, Mrs. Emma Icard, and
Robert Burson.

RUMMAGE SALE
Heath United Methodist ~~~;::=~;;::;:::-;::;:;..-­
Church, Middleport, wlll have a
rummage sale Thursday,
. Friday and Saturday in the Fry
building. Residents with items
to contribute are asked to take .
them · to the building before
Wednesday or telephone Mrs.
Norman Wayland or Mrs.
James Jividen for pickup Of
JULY 2nd-9A.M.. T07:l0 P.M.
Items.
IOO Per Cent Ktnokalon Synllletlc Stretch Wig

..

as her theme. She said that

worry sometimes contributes to
resolutions and action. The
devotional topic by Mrs. George

·puRE! .

For Your

SUPERIORS
BONES .

'I

LEAN!

STEAK

SUPERIORS
POLISH · save lOc
SAUSAGE
..per . lb.
- ·-

.

·GROUND BEEF

Superiors USDA.Choice·

ROUND

'.l

Bucky Walters, your trie11dly store manager and Roger Bush, your courteous
meat manager. says come on in. sl1op around. Compare our everyday low prices
with anybody's in town.

OxJkout!

HOSPITAL NEWS

MRS. GRACE STACE and daughter, Mrs. William Radford,
are home after a delightful several days at Camp Perry on Lake
Erie, guests of Mt. Sgt. and Mrs. Harry Glaze.
· Sgt. Glaze is the administrative supervisor of the Officers
Candidate School there and one of the things which Mrs. Stace and
Mrs. Radford did was ·attend the Impressive graduation of the
recruits. They also visited Cedar Point for a day of fun and
relaxation.
Coincidentally, Mrs. Radford's son, Second Lieutenant
William R. Radford, happened to be at Camp Percy. He is
stationed with the National Guard at Marietta but was there on a
lraining mission.

830 E: MAIN

POMERQY

BAKED HAM GLAZE
¥. cup packed brown sugar
1'h teaspoons dry mustard
2 teaspoons water
G 1 a z e ingredients . are
mixed cold and spread on
ham as directed. To prepare
the ham score the fat diagonally and insert a whole clove
at the cente~ of each diamond that IS forn:ted by
scormg. Cook over m~rect
medium heat for 9 mmutes
per pound. After 30 minutes
baste with glaze. Baste again
every 20 minutes if thick
glaze is desired. With all but
peach glaze, garnish with
pineapple rings and cherries
15 minutes before ham is
done.

r--~~---,

Announce Birth
Of First Child

f.

It should read 160-170 depan on top the grill.
Home economists for Web- grees before ham is ready to
er-Stephen Products Co. ad- serve.
vise using 25 briquettes on
CRANBERRY GLAZE
each side of a 23-inch grill
1 cup mashed jeilled
kettle for medium heat. Add
cranberries
eight briquettes to each side
•;.. teaspoon ginger
about every 45 to 50 minutes,
'14 teaspoon cinnamon
they say. An 8-to-10 pound
ham should roast for 9 mm- 'fJ cup packed dark brown
utes per pound and a larger
sugar
ham requires less time per
pound to cook than a smaller HONEY -ORANGE GLAZE
•;, cup· packed dark brown
one. Roasting t i m e' for
sugar
canned hams is to heat them
throughout and allow time tq '14 cup honey
take on the flavor of cloves
'/, cup orange juice
and glaze: Smoked or cured
PEACH GLAZE
ham must be completely
1 cup peach preserves
cooked through in oven or
1 tablespoon lemon juice
covered unit and it is best
'h teaspoon ginger
to·use a meat thermometer.

FREE ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5

a

Help
stamp out
bachelors!

Plan Fourth of July feast oround handsome glozed hom.

By AILEEN CLAIRE
NEA Food Editor
A hefty ham makes an attractive centerpiece for a
Fourth of July table. Wheth- •
er cooked in the oven or in
a covered kettle a ham takes
on added flavor f r o m a
Vee Kin Moy officiating.
glaze. These may be sweet
Miss Bumgardner is a or tangy when made with a
graduate of Wahama High cranberry, honey-orange,
School. Her fiance graduated peach or brown sugar-dry
from Wahama High School and mustard. Cooking a ham in .a
aerved for two years in the U. s. covered kettle outdoors 1s
Army Military Police of which si'!lple. Be certain charcoal
14 months were spent in Korea. bnquettes are stacked at the
He is at present serving an sides to provide space for a
..
.
. dnp pan of heavy duty aluapprenticeship m electromcs. minum foil and for indirect
heat. Some people like to
place the ham directly in a

-

FRIDAY ONLY

5
A

Col69

v SAVE 30~
E
WITH THIS COUPON

•1

s

I

1

ON ANY 3 OF THESE
QUAKER CEREALS

Cap'll Crunctl • King Vitsman • Crunch Be rries
Ule • QlJisp • Quake • Peanut Butter

I MARK

A

v

v

OH"

E

NESTEA

s

INSTANT TEA
3 oz. Jar

A

v

Large

99¢

With
Coupon

AT: MARK VSTORE

E

EXPIRES SATURDAY

SAT. ONLY

City ........................-................-....................... .

ONLY 15.75 ·
· .Shirl~

Temple accumulated a fortune of over fl
million before she was 10
years old, as a child film
......_,star.

Including: FREE STYRO HEAD,
FREE STYLING
.

Never needs setflng, 1ust walll and. -r.
Ladies come lnd

Me

tiC!ads. No Obllptt111.

'bur complete lint of heir

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
"The pepartmer~t Store of Building Since 19l5"

MARKET·· Open · Dai~ 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to
. . We Accept Federal FOOd Stnmtl.~

Comer Mill al\11 Second Sts.

PHONE: 992·3480

'

" We Reserve The Right To Limit auo,~flllie •

-

�I

6- The Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~ 29, 1971

1971
Carmel
New!!,
tashion Forecast for Fall

·POLLrS POINTERS

.

By the Day

Solution Makes It
Eas\'
.

_Mr. a~ Mrs. Robert -Wa_tson
and family of Kent spent tbe
'weekend with Mr..and Mrs.
. ~ughn· RoBaushbarTh~ gr:dgda ter, r a spen
a few days with the Roushes.
and Mrhs. ~est Cla~kgof
Racme exc ange gree n s
with . Eunle Brinker Sunday
everung.
Spending the weekend at the
home of Mary Circle were Mr ·
and Mrs. Melvin Circle and
family of Columbus, Mr. and
··
.
d
Mrs . George Ctrc1e an
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle of New Haven and Ricky
Circle of St. Albans.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Johnson
and Brenda of Racine caUed at
the home of Arthur Earl and
Margaret Ann Johnson and
family and Betty Van Meter on
Sa1urday evening.
Eunle Brinker called at the
home of William and Cathy
Carleton ot'Racine recently.

.To Clean Wood Paneling
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- Nowadays there is so much wood paneling in our homes but I have an ideal solution for cle~n ­
ing it that is also easy on the hands and leaves a mce
finish on the paneling. Mix four tablespoons -vinegar, two
tablespoons olive oil and one pint of warm water.FRANCES

MI:.

DEAR GIRLS-I found this not only worked well on
wood finished In ~atural wood Wnes but was great used on
white painted wood paneling. Of course, after cleaning a
small area you rub It dry with a elean soft cMh.-POLLY

--a.wr-1

!1M:!:'~&gt;' :; :s,t Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY-After many years of waxing my
blond furniture with both liquid and spray wax of
various kinds it is getting yellow. Can anyone tell
me how to remove the old ·wax? Water cannot be
used on this furniture as it has no special coating.
-MARJORIE

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with magazines that
say turn to page 100 to continue a story or article and
then have to go through A, B and perhaps C series until
you finally stumble on page 100. Thanks for letting me get
this off my chest.~MARTHA
DEAR READERS-Mrs. T. R. also bas a Pet Peeve
wllb magaztnea tbat start a story In the middle of the
book and continue It In the front as she does not like w
go bacllwards.-POLL Y
DEAR POLLY-While having to use hot applications on
a sprained knee I discovered the easiest way was to fold
and wet two bath towels and put them in the top of my
double boiler while .the water In the bottom part was kept
boilln~. All I had to do was 11ft out a hot towel with no
wringmg and folding or burned hands . When one cooled
the other was hot and ready.-MRS. J . B.

From Peter Clements by
Rodriguez for Fall ' 71
comes the long, fl o ra! printed cotton dress with
above-the-waist interest by
way of ruffled collar (left).
The Teal Traini cover-up
city dress {c en I e r) is in
brown tweed with knit oc·
centing the torso above a
wrap-effect flared skirt. By
Marshall Klugman for the
Fifth Addition, division o

DEAR POLLY-The camping season is here again so I
want to pass on a Pointer
we used while camping last
year. ·Take two sleeping
bags the same size and with
identical zippers. Open both
to a large flat size. Keep
the outsides of bags on bottom and top and both insides facing each other.
Hook zippers together and
zip into one large double
bag where three children
can sleep comfortably but
when using them as two singles they would only accommodate two children.-MRS. L. S.

Jack Elam and family.
SUnday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sayre, Don and
Sandy, were Mr. and .Mrs.
William Sayre of Columbus and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre and
family of Chester.
Miss Jo Smith and friend,
Barbara, of Concord College

were weekend visitors of her
parents, Mr. an·d Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,
Jo and a friend, Barbsra, enjoyed a cookout with homemade
ice cream at the home. Ill Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail,
Kevin and Charles, Sundav

GRAMBLING vs MORGAN
NEW YORK (UPI)-Grambling and Morgan State, which
had a total of 19 players from
last year's squad signed by the
pros, will meet at Yankee
Stadium of Sept. 11 in the first
Whitney M. Young Jr. MemorIal Football Classic.

Market Report

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, June 111,1971
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
HOGS -1'15 to 220 lbs. 18.25 to
18 _60 ; 220 to 250 Jbs. ')7.50 to
17 85 . Light 14 to 16.25· ·.Fat
S~ws' 13.50 to 15.7~; sta'gs 13
Down; Boars ll.SOto 13.50; Pigs
3 to 10 so· Shoats 9 to 14.
CATILE-Steers26.50toaz;
Heifers 23.50 to 30; Baby Beef 30
to a:; 75 . Fat cows 17 to 22.25·
Cann~r~ 18 to 24; Buils 24.50 ~
28 · Milk Cows 135 to 305.
VEAL CALVES _ Tops 40 ;
Se ds 36 to 37 40 . Medium 30
· con
· •
.
to 34; Com. &amp; Hvs. 30 to 31,
Culls 30 Down:
ABY CALVES_ 32 50 to 85 .
B
·
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
HOGS: 200-230, 20.t0; No. I,
20.65; 23().240, 20.15; 241).260,
19.40; 26().280, 18.85; 100-200,
15.90; 16().180, 18.40. Sows 300tOO, 15-15.70; 400-550, 15-15.60.
Boars, 14.60. Stock Hogs, 14-Zl.
Pigs B.H. 7.5().21.50.
.
CATTLE - Good to chotce
Steers 31.11).31.90; good Steers
26.75-29; good Hfrs. 28.51).30.90;
good Cows 22.85-24.25; Utility
Cows 20.85-22; Canner .a·nd
Cutter 17.60 down; Stock Cattle
Steers, 24.51).31; Heavy Calves
Steers 32.51).37; Heavy Calves
Hfrs. 25.51).31.
VEAL CALVES - 'Choice
46.50; Good 42.50; Med. 35. Baby
Calves B.H. 1~2.50.
LAM!IS - Choice ' 31; good
27.30.
Jefferson D a vi s, who
served in the office of president of the Confederate
States of America, was
unique in his presidency in
that he had neither predecessor nor successor.

••1

~~~
ps~~rd~:~~ ~~d~~,t:~ ..------------~------------------nr-r-,Y.-..OAiU"i~~A=-:u":":S::T:-:B::E:--•,
(right). The black wool rit
top is teamed with attachec
skirt
and double
matching
of beige
knit jacket
wool. .

(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPRI!! ASSN .)

.

Wolfpen

You will receive a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaldng Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solutloa to a problem. Write Polly In care of this aewspaper.

lnternollonol League Stondlngl JETS SIGN TWO
By United Press International
NEW YORK (UP!)-The New
W
L
Pet.
GB.
Syracuse
42 26 .618 York Jets· have s1gned No · 3
Charleston
38 29 .567 31f&gt; draft choice Chris Farasopoulos
Tidewater
41 33 .554 4 of Brigham Young and Roy
Rochester
37 33 .529 6
f M 1 d stat
Louisville
34 36 .486 9 Kirksey o
aryan
e.
Richmond
34 39 .466 101/l Farasopoulos set NCAA punt
Winnipeg f
27 o40 .-403 14'12 and kickoff return records at
~ Toledo
27 « .380 16'/l · Brigham Young, and Kirksey
J... .. Mondoy's Rosults
1
Tia""(oter 4 Winnipeg 1
pia~ guard and fullback with
Rochester 9 Charleston 5Bridgeport of the Atlantic Coast
(Only g·am,eo ocheduled)
League the past three years.

--,---,-----------~-------------­

TREVINO LEADS LIST
NEW YORK (UPI)- Lee
Trevino continues to lead the
PGA money-won list with
$165,869 while Jack Nicklaus is
second with $161,213.
Others In the top 10 are Gary
Player ($119.165), Arnold Palmer ($111,339), Miller Barber
($102,793), Gene Littler
{$89,485),
Tom
Shaw
{$87,076), Charles Coody
{$82,665), George Archer
($79,625) and Frank Beard
($77,233).

PRESENT TO
WIN.THESE BIG
DOOR PRIZES!

TO THE

GRAND
OPENING
'

News, Notes

'

Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
family were Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves, Linda and
grandson, Bryan Lee Reeves,
Mr. BID McElroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith;-and Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Tuckerma.n of
Spring!ieid also Mr. and Mrs.

•

liN FACT, YOU MUST IE PRESENT
TO ENJOY THE FREE
REFRESHMENTS, TOOl

OF

•

7- 'nle DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pwneoy, 0., June •· 1971

·

.

.

News Notes
' 1ii

I

oocnsm
TV

GRAND PRIZE I

Over 400 Pairs of
Latest Shoe Fashions

•

15" TV SET
''The Townsman''
by RCA
***

WOMEN'S

SECOND PRIZE:
ONE YEAR
OF FREE
CABLE TV
SERVICE

NATURALIZERS
Regular

'

18.00

lin additloa to
the two-11onth
free trial
mrr one getsfl

Regular 13.00 and 14.00
White and beige summer dress
shoes. Latest fashions. Now·-----------·

,.

8 64

. SEE THE .FIRST .
CABLE TV PICTURES

Priced to Clear!

IN·
LADIES' TRAIL MOCCASINS
NOW AT GREAT SAVINGS

-

-

~·

CHAPMAN'S

Main St

SHOES

.

THIRD PRIZE:
SIX MONTHS'
FREE CABL-E
TV SERVICE.

AT WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL

Ladies' Nurse and Waibess

Pomeroy

DISPLAYS

. 2 SillS

~

.....,.,_
.,.,Co.

Mr. aM Mn. Ronnie R111sell ·
Mr. · ud . Mrs. Dta·mond have moved fl'(IJI Plimeroy to
LBWI!II ~ Mt. Morllh vlllted tbetrallerbcme~Mr.and Mrs.
· Wednelday wiUt Mr. and Mn. RDy Annes at Minersville.
Ollrlel unnon and flimuy. • Mn. Edna Roush of Racine · . lt66 BUICK'WILDCAT .CI't:.
11195
Mra. LBWIOil, wbo ball been wai a dinner guest of Mr. and , Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes. •good w-w
bedfutfor some time; )las able Mrs. lferbel't Roush and Roger : fires, rodlo. heater.• whlteflnlsh, clean Interior. Reg. price
to vlllt in a wheel cbalr.
Sunday. Other . callers, In the • $1395.00. E.O.M. Special.
· Mu: Manuel&amp;. spell! Sunday Roush, home were Mrs. G!adys
lt67 FORD LTD
Sl595
wiUrMr. and Mn. Arnold-Hupp Shield&amp; of Racine, Pebble and
4 Ooor Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes.- vlnyllnferlor, blk .
at Letart FaDs.
• Sllnd;y Hagen (# !!.argo, Fla., . vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air tondlflonlng - Special,
Mrs. Bertha R9blnson and Todd .Roberls, Mr. a~ Mrs:
Special.
·
Mrs. Mabel Sllel~ attended a 1\onl)ie ~~~. Pomeroy, and
bridal lhowl!l' for Miss Jan Mr. and Mn. Dana Lewis of
. 1964CHEVELLE2DOOR
.
$399
Plccin, !ride-elect of Richard •c:lifton.
·
6 Cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio, good tires, green finish .
Special E.O.M
Salient at the home of Mrs. Mr.,and Mrs. Charlea Wolfe
Alleyne Reese at Racine and children of Anliqulty caUed.
Saturday evening.
Sunday evening on Mr. and
Mn. Anna Wines; Karen and Mrs. Russellltoush and family.
Jackie, of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Charita Lawson and son,
, •OP.EH EVES. 1:00 I'.M,
~I! ROY, OHIO
BobWinesandsonofColtDnbus, Edward, called on Mrs. Ida
Mrs. Steve Cleland and son Heile Donohue Monday
:spent Sunday afternoon with evening,
WANT AD
Mrs., Kate Rowe and Ada. .
Mrs. Bill Robinson and
Wanted
INFORMATION
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of children of Racine rOute spent
DEADLINES
s·OMEON E to haul brush from
Clifton, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Sunday evening with Mrs . . 5 P:M. Day Before Publication
private yard. Phone 992-2639.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
6-29-3tp
Ronnie Russell of Pomeroy Bertha Robinson.
Can~ 0 Uall0('1 &amp; Corr~lons · -----,.,:---spent Fathl!l''s Day with Mr. Danny Sayre of ColtDnbus Will be accepted untll9a.m. for
and Mrs. Russell Roush and spent a weekend with his
Wanted To Buy
Day of Publication
R!OGULATIONS
family. A cookout was enjoyed grandparenls, Mr. and Mrs.
' . The PubUsher reserves the HOUSE In Pomeroy-Middleport
by an.
. '·
Herbert Sayre. .
area,2or3bedrooms,on land
rlghf to edit or retect '8ny ads
contract. Phone 742·5775.
deemed objectional.. The
6·25-6tc
publisher will not be responsible
ByMn, llaberiROIIIII

, Of

QUALITY

Pomeroy·Motor Co.

Apple Grove News, Events
·

for mor~ than one Incorrect.
Insertion.

Ia
f th
RATES
ANT I QUE S:
dIshes,
re lives or e summer.
For w~nt Ad Service
telephones, clocks, brass
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and Mrs. Junior Wolfe and '5 cents per Word one Insertion . bed~, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
rain and Zane Beegle spen\a' daughter, Wendy, of Cheshire
Minimum Charge7Sc
Phone 992-3-403.
.
301c
7
5
2
·weekend with Mrs. Belly ,spent Friday afternoon with co~2sec~~7~~ ,,r.';rtl~n~d three. _.:__ _ _ ____·_ ._
Stewart at Columbus. They also Mrs. Dallas Hill and family.
18 cents per word sl• con· TELEPHONES, brass beds,
visited the zoo.
William Wickline, Roger secutive insertions.
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
' Mr d u. Cl 1 Re te R sh J Hill Mr Pauline
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
. an ..es. . tares u r au • an
• . s.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
of TUcson, Ariz., visited a week Hill, Mrs. Debbie Roush, Mrs.
CARD OF THANKS
4-27.tfc
&amp; OBITUARY
with Mrs. Mae Pearson at Kathryn HID are attending Rio
St.SOadditional
tor SO word
.
Ra cme
an d vis it ed oth er Grande CoUege for the swnmer Each
wordminimum.
2c.
Notice
; relaUves In this area. Mrs. Mae semester.
BLIND ADS
' Pearson was a dinner guest Mrs. Margie Roush, PortAdditional 25c Charge per
I WILL NOT be responsible for
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Roy -laii'd, Mrs . Doris Hensler Advertisement.
any debts contracted by
t~ Pearson and accompanied her Racine, Mrs: ,Helen King and 8:30a.m.
OFFICE
HOURS
anyone other than myself.
to 5:00
p,m. Dally,
&lt; daughter,theReuterstoTUcson daughter, Paula of Raleigh, 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon Signed Dallas Lightfoot.
. 6·29·3tp
l Monday for an indefinite visit. Kans., visited Monday with Mr. Saturday.
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 4, I
~ Mrs.· Ava Belles of Wellston and Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
· In Memory
p.m . at the Racine Gun Club.
speDt Sunday with Mrs. Feme Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
6-29-4tc
~ Hayman• and father, Wesley Skinner ofC0IurnbUS VIS
· itedMr · INdear
LOVING
our
'·
mother,MEMORY
Addle L. 'of
Hawk,
f Bellea Sr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Nice Sunday. who passed away June 29,
\
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodge and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
1964. What would we give to REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese. tablets and E·Vap
Mary Lou Wickersham of Gloeckner took their daughter, clasp ~er hand. her ~appy
wa,ter pills. Nelson Drugs.
face to see, to hear her voice
6-27-30tp
Columbus spent Sunday wil;h Mrs. LarryBadgely, Danny and and see heir smile, that meant
l Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Margaret, to th~ir home In so much to us. Sadly missed
~ Wickersham and sons.
Fairfax, Va ., Thursday, by children and grand - REVIVAL starting Wednesday
~
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin returning home Friday.
children .
at Rutland Free Will Baptist
,
6·29-ltp
Church, 7:30 each evening.
' Gloeckner and son, David, Mrs. Mrs. Erma Wilson visited Mr.
Rev. Paul Taylor, evangelist.
~ LarrY, Badgely, Mr . .and Mrs. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson and Card of Thanks
Public invited.
Sherman Ford ·attended a children at Charleston Sunday WE , WISH to thank all our .
6-27-6tc
~. dinner at the Hotel Frederick in thru Wednesday. The :Wllsons
friends and neighbors "!ho ANNUAL Flag Tournament all
. Huntin•ton last week. The accompanied her home · and
helped In any way during the
day Sunda~, july ~th at the
ij'•~ li'as In honor of those visited · WednesdAy , 'thru • 'receli't death of Thelma
Chester Hill '' Golf Course.
.
Michael. A special thanks to
Prizes will be given.
having 30 years of service at Sa1urday.
.
our minlsler, Keith Wise,
6·27·3tc
• theLocksandDamsontheOhio Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cady,
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, the
~ IUver. Mr. GlOeCkner and Mr. Lori and Jerry, of West JefMartin Funeral Home and all SMALLEY'S
Gill Shop,
~
··
those who prepared and
1
1
, Furd, both former employees of ferson enjoyed camp ng a
brought food. The family of
Chesler, Ohio. Bottles, Bllnko
glassware, Sequoia ware,
the former Dam 23, were Forked Run Lake over the
Thelma Michael.
jewelry, flowers. small items,
6·29·1tC
presented 30 year service weekend. Visiting them were
and lar9,1! collection of Avon
anrds. Both men are n.W Mr: and Mrs. Marshall Adams ~w~·E:-::W-,I""SH,---,t_o_e-•p_r_e-ss-ou-r apbottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. dally.
preciation and thanks to those
6·18·12tc
: employed at the new Racine Ffiday night. Mr. and Mrs.
who
helped
In
any
way
at
the
Dam.
Raymond Proffit spent the
loss of our husband, father,
Quarter stud
1
Mrs. Larry Badgely and weekendandMr.andMrs. Mike
grandfather and great- REGISTERED
service.
·
Hank's
Rock 209498.
children and Mrs. Erwin O'Brien and children, Mrs.
grandfather, Mr. Pearl E.
Contact
Mike
Jones.
Rf. 3,
Cole. Special thanks to friends
.•. Gloeckner were dinner guesls Larry O'Brien and children
Pomeroy, Ohio, . Phone 992and relatives who came so far
6880.
i:-' Sundayo!Mr.andMrs.Richard visited Saturday.
to show their respect. Also
6·17·12tc
!·· Fishel' at Charleston.
Word was received by Mrs.
special thanks to those who
sent flowers, cards and food.
~
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser Herbert Roush, Mrs. Russell
While Funeral Home and KITTENS to give away. Phone
and children of Mansfield spent Roush and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons the
Rev. Rol' Deeter.
992·5327.
the weekend with Mrs. Alice Sunday that their niece and
Mrs. Pearl E. Cole and
6-22-12tc
Family
, Balser·.
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Sher6·29·11P
Mr. and Mrs. Bus Hupp and man Reeder of Mineral Ridge
SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
~ children of Baltimore were had had an auto accident. Mrs. Lost
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
weekend ' guests of iheir Reeder is hospitalized with a
Pomeroy .
} parenls, Mr. aitd Mrs. Arnold broken ankle, severe cuts and LOST-EXTRA largo tom cal
4-23-tfc
mlssiog In . Reedsville area .
Hupp and sons.
bruises and Mr. Reeder was Whfte
and dark gray, white
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas treated and released with cuts feet, black on hind legs. v.hite
' Johnson 'J r. and daughter, and bruises. Mrs. Reeder Is a ring around neck, with
on him. Reword for Auto Sales
, Brenda of Racine spent Sunday daughter of foriner residents, fleacollor
return. Bill Bailey, Bo• 14, 1%1 PLYMOUTH, $100. Contact
'• evening with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst of Reedsville, Ohio ~772.
Harvey Roseberry,, Bashan6-29-10tc
Robert Wood and Waid John- Nlles.
Keno Road.
son.
. Hobart Click of Mt. Alto, W. BLACK and white pony run off
6·29-3tp
Cheryl Ann and Tressa Lynn Va., is a surgical patient at a with · sled, harness and all.
" Bostick of Dunbsr visited their Cincinnati hospital. Mr. Click Phone 992-6055. Raymond 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop / power steering,
:" grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. frequently visited in this area McCumber.
power brakes, air, 18,000
6-27·6tc
Robert Wood while their with friends and relatives.
miles. E•cellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
~· brother, Mike Bostick, was a
Dorsa Parsons was a pslient
6-3-tfc
!. patient at Thomas Memorial at Veteran Memorial Hospital
• Hospital in ·charleston. Mr. and due to muscle spssms.
Mrs. Ray Johnson and family of 1%7 DODGE ,_. ton, 4 speed,
~ Mrs. Paul Bostic spent Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Columbus and Mrs. Lee 1\oush good condition. 8 ply llres. H.
with Mr. and Mrs. Wood and spent Saturday evening with and family of Logan were D. springs, st.SOO. Phone 992·
2975.
Cheryl and Teressa ac- Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston at Sunday afternoon visitors of
6·27-3tc
companied them home to. Racine.
Mr. ilnd Mn. Larry Johnson - - - - - -- and family and Mrs. Geneva 1950 CHRYSLER, running
Dunbar.
condltloo, $150. Phone 992·
. i Mi; and Mrs. Jess Anderson,
U~
Shumate.
ms.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Everette Ransom
Mrs. John R. Murphy ac6-27-3tc
, of Antiquity visited Mr. and
companied Mr.. and Mrs. - - - -- - - PONTIAC
Catatlna, 4power
door,
. •• Mn. Benny Boggess Sunday, Weekend visitors of. Mr. and Dwight Logan of Pomeroy to 1963
power
brakes.
t Mrs. Boggess visited Mrs. Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Pittsburgh where sbe visited ateerlng, good condition.
: Shirley Ables Saturday evening. Karen Gilkey of Albany and Mr. with Mr. and Mn. Don Murphy Contact Robert Tewksbarr,.
~. and Mrs. Dale Hili of and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of and family:.
·
6-25-3 P
• Moore
· Haven, Fla. are vislling Albany.
Carl and Paul (BID) McElroy
•• Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Everelt Ray of Columbus were weekend For. Sale or Trade
'
J h
d f II
f vis' lora of their par Is Mr WHITE stud pony, 38 In:, tame.
, Dallas HW, Mr. and Mrs. Mike o nson an
am Y o
I
en •
. Will sell reasonable or will
~ · Hill. Mr. HID will return to Columbus were weekend and Mn. Paul McElroy.
trade for 3 pigs. Phone 992 _
:f, MooreHavenintwoweeksand vlsi~ofHelenJohnson. ·. ~-and Mn. Larry Barr, 5946.
. ~ f,l.. J.IIU will remain with Helen Johnson and Mr. and DaVId and Michelle of Rutland,
· 6·27·3tc
~
Mr. and Mn. Howard , Thoma
~
BltC•pocltv
Jr,' and son, Curtis, of Glouster Help Wanted
Aut:~~tYcs
•were recent Sunday vllllors of
lspetdoptratlon. Mr. and Mn. Howard Thoma.
- e.~NT
'
f:~~~~. of :,'~~~~
Mr. and Mn, ~ . Sarver
4ft!
w
o
tor
11 v ol
and
BOlli of Bridgeman, Mich.,
L
control .
Lint' returned hciiDe lalt week after
I,
. Filter or Power
~ln,.Agltat~r.
spendlnll their,:._acalion with
o~maj rou .
ber parents,. mr. and Mn.
Hal::, ~~.t
Howard Thoma and Patricia.
Prron
They also vlllted Ida
•Surround clothes
paren..,
with oontto, even
Mr. • and Mr1. Sarver In
and
heat. No hot spots,
VirGinia. •••-- Patricia
.,
.....,.
-·~Yno ·~:.~ry~~i ac~nled tbem heme for a
Fllttr.
few daya vlllt.
WoMS'l.oycrloAIIOllln
Mr.' ·-llarr ud f•-"" of
Phone 992-•ls6
A
Ro~ Corptt
RuUand were Monday OVI!l'·
Service
nlghtgueallofherparents,Mr. For Rent
...
. l!y Mn , HerbertRousb

f

•1

I'

i

i

You must be
present to win! '

WIN .ONE OF
THREE GREAT
DOOR

ANSWERS TO ALL
YOUR QUESTIONS
ABOUT CABLE TV
11116

Pf. PLWAIT

St., Middleport afte.r 5 p.m.,
William Smith.
6-27-12fp

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court. Rt . l:i~. Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951. ·
4-2-flc .

f.jr'WINSOR
-ilBUDDY

EXTRA large trailer lots, good
location. Velma G. Zuspan,
773-5750, Mason, W. Va .
· 6·15·12fc

FURNISt'iED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-t!c

1.

:t'CHAMPION
1-fr_VAN DYKE

-·z

Arnold Grate

Rutland,O.

Paintina .
NEW&amp;

OLD WORK

All Wtalhor .Rooflnt &amp;
ConstrUc.tlo., Co.
DEXTER, 0. 457.26 '
PHONE 742·3,45 .

,SEE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBUR~ MOBiLE HOMES, INC..
MEMORIAL BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Insured- Experienced
· Work Gu1ranteiCI.

.

.~----------------~~ -~-z=====~

TRAVEL trailer, locally. Phone
992-2367 before 5 p.m . dally .
·
6-2Hfp

-

Radiator
'
. Sertice
- -.. ~- ....a.:
.._... .

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

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

5 RM. house and bath In
Rutland. Phone 992-6329.
6-2Hfc

- - - -----:--

See
1 BEDROOM trailer apart.
Dale Dutton
ment, Ideal for couples .
Contact McCiure'.s Dairy Isle.
992-2534
992·52-48 or 992·3436.
Middleport
6-27-6fc
- - - - - -- - FURNISHED apartment 217112
North Third St., Middleport.
For Sale
Phone 992-2780 or 992·3432.
COAL. limestone . Excelsior
6-27.tfc Salt Works, E. Main St .,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
4·9-tfc
For Sale
- - - - - - ' -----''-':-'""SINGER sewing machine, BUILDING LOTS for sale .
automatic zig zag sewing
Newly approved In restricted
machine, makes buttpnholes,
housing district. Near Rock
darns, monograms, etc. Pay
Springs. Phone 992-6887 after
balance of $46.20. Use our
5 p. m., ·or on weekends .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
6·17-tfc
6-27·6tc
310 CASE dozer, blade and
winch. Good condition. Phone
REGATTA Special, 17·ft.
742-4794. 8 to 4 p.m. After 4
Thompson boat, dock .covers,
phone 698-3257.
e•tras, 75 HP newly rebuilt
6·2Htc
motor, trailer. Good ski boat.
$600. Call 992-2003 . Will
LOGAN FIRE and satety
demonstrate.
6-B·ffC
equipment. Sales and service.
All types and sizes of fire
e•tingulshers. Special prices
350 KAWASAKI motorcycle,
on e•tlngulshers for boats,
1970 model, $675. .175
campers,
homes.
Also
Kawasaki motorcycle, 1966
discount prices on other sizes .
model, $250. Roger Bahr,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
Chesler, Ohio. Phone 985-3958.
992·3821.
Owner Dwight
6·22-7tc
Logan.
6·16·301(.
SPINET- CONSOLE PIANO
WANTED. responsible party to
take over spinel plano. Easy
terms. Can be. seen locally.
Write Credit Manager, P. 0.
. 36" x 2:3"" .nno
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana
46176.
6-22·i2tp

------

-----

.For Sale
Aluminum ·
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES

G. E. Range, $90; cabinet sink,
$40, bathroom basin, $20.
Phone 742-.4171 .
6-27-3tc
i965 CORVAIR Monza hardtgp,
• 25 "•automatic ~pistol, single · '"
shot. .22 rifle, antique player
piano. Phone 742·5042.
6-2Htc

------

BLACK raspberries, Roy
Proffitt. Phone 843·2281.
6·2Hfc

HAVE
MANY USES

; "''"20~ .

.,

Slor $1.00

From the Largest Truck or1
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.
·

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tlc

BLAEII NARS

,
.•Ph. 992-2143
_ ..Pom.roy
."r~:;;;;;:=:=:::=:::::::~

Have Your Seasooal

AWNINGS, storm doors and
windows , carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sa~es rer.resentative. For lr~

Con~itionin&amp;

Air

lnspectjpn and

estima es, phone Charles

Lisle. Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son. Inc.
5·27-flc

Re.Qiarge

6.98 'Piva
Blaettnar's
Special
At

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER·
VICE. Phone 949·~51.
5-30-ffc

Pa~

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
PHONE 992-2143
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478. ~::;::;::==:::::::;::::::~
4-25-tlc to

)OHNSON MASON

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992·2522.
6·10-ffc

Complete
Remodeling

INTERIOR, exterior decorator ' ·
and barn roofs . Phone 742·

5683.

Kltchtnl, Balhs
Room Addltlans
And Potlos

6·20·30tc

Ba~khotAnd

Endlooder Work

O'DELL WHEEL . allgnment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service. ·
Ironically
All
work
Wheels .balanced
elecguaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
6·24-30tc
'H.-

I' 'H

nn· 1 &lt;~'i

rosrfr

5eptlc Tonks
And Loch Btds.

- .&amp;
~=- ~~~~~~~~O~~~d

. EXPERT . .,

1~

Wh8li AiiiRent

Real Estate For Sa'e

15.J5 :·

ROOM house, bath, full
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave.,
jusl walking distance from

Daily Sentinel

I

·--

Tom Crow
992-2580
Pomeroy

S~X

The

.

.EXPERIENCED.

WANT A NEW HOUSE?

dawn town Pomeroy. Contact

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
237·4334, Columbus.
•
s-t'ttc

Cleland Realty

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

- - - --

11

Virgil Ii.
TEAFORD
SR.

-

2

C

ITURE

Roofing

i'ALtiO
DOUBLE - WI DES

INEL

•

&amp;Clrplnlllt
Wen
Spoutint. Roof

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
.~o Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be tho Most P,:olitable
Time You Ever Spent.
.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

•'

~GUARANTEED­

, """ Phone
. 992-2094
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW zlg.zag
Pomii'UJ Home &amp; Auto
111 Court St.
sewing machine left In
Pomeroy,
Ohio
layaway , Beautiful pastel
OponiTII5
color, full size model. All 1-,-------~--------' MIDDLEPORT - Stewart
Monday thru $11t~rday
home. S. 4th St., 2-story brick
buiJt .ln to buttonhole, over- KOSCOT KOSMETICS. wigs
606 E. Me in, Pom..-.y, 0.
and garage, 3 bedroorns,
cas! and fancy stitch. Pay just and accessories. Call us for
sleeping porch, 2'12 bafh5, lull
$48.75 .. cash or terms your needs. We deliver
basement, hol water heal, 2
available. Trade-Ins ac · distributors. Brown's, Phone
lois.
Shown by appointment CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
cepted. Phone 992-56ott.
9'12-5113.
6-29·6tc
only. RODNEY DOWNING. Dick Vaughan, phOne 992·
6-Hfc
REAL ESTATE BROKER. 3374, Dale Little, phone 992·
6346 .
PHONE 992-3731.
VACUUM cleaner brand new
6-27-3tc
6-23·30tC
1971 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage In shipping. Will take
S27 cash or budget plan
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
available. Phone 992-56ott.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
6·29·6tc
662·3035.
2-12-tfc
601 E11t Moln
LOG CABIN on Bowmans Run
Pomeroy
Road, partly remodeled. 22ft . 12' - 14' · 24' • WIDE
NEIGLER Conltructlan. For
WANTED ·- 3 .BEDROOM bulldlrtg or remodtllrtg your
Layton camper, self con:
talned. Dav1d Huddleston.
HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY home. Call Guy Nelgler,
Phone 949-3621.
- FROM $8,900 to $15,000.
Racine, Ohio.
6-29-3tc
7-31-trc
ALSO WANTED - FARMS 15 acres to 150 acres, FROM RALPH'S CAR PET ~ Up46 ACRES, 10 • 60 trailer with
1220 Woshlngton Blvd.
.
ss,ooo to $20,000.
holstery Cleaning Service .
tlpout. Old vacant house, lake
Belpre, Ohio
and excellent camp site. 2 . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Free estimates. Phone
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS
Gallipolis
&lt;141&gt;-029~.
miles from Middleport. Phone EARLY AMERICAN stereo.
IS REAL ESTATE
3-12-flc
992-2362.
AM·FM radio lovely maple
finish, 4 speed changer .
6·25-6tc
HENRY CLELAND
$EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Separate controlo, ~ spea~er
REALTOR
Reasonable rates. Ph; «6-4782, ·
sound
system.
Balance
$78.59.
TWO female Norwegian
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Free gift with every puroiflco 992-2259
elhound pups. Phone 992-2362.
Owner &amp; Operator.
chase. Use our budget ter~.
Residence
"2·2568
6·2s.6fc
.!-13-tfc
Call 992-7085.
6-27-6tc
6-27-6fc
EXPERT lawn mower and
"NEVER · used anything like
tiller repair. Frot pickup and
It, say users of Blue Lustre STEREO-RADIO console. 4
aarpet cleaner . Rent electric speed lnterml•ed changer,
delivery . Warren's Mower
Shop, 2-48 Condor St. P~one
shampooer $1. Baker Fur· dual volume control.
992-7357.
nlture Company.
speaker sound system
6·2J.6tc beautiful walnut finish .
5-18-tfc
- ----Balance $44.89. Free gift with
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
every purchase . Use our
'63 CHEVY II, 6 cyl., standard,
..
service, all makes, 992-2284,
budget terms. Call 992-7085 .
26" riding lawn mower .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
6-27-6tc
Phone 985-3929.
- BrOker
Authorized Singer Sates and
6·27·3tp
110 Mechonlc Strott
Service. We Sharpen Sclsaors.
POII!Ir,Y,
Ohio
.
· ' 3-29-llc
Real
Estate
For
Sale
'61 PONTIAC, Tempest, 4 cyl.,
.
$125, '64 Pontiac Catallne
1640 lincoln Hts .,
CONCRETE
$325, ACetylene welding HOUSE,
POMEROY- 3 bedroom home, .READY-MIX
Pomeroy.
Phone 992·2293.
delivered
rlglit
to your
outfit, hoses. gages and carf,
10-:i5-ttc bath, forced air heat and
pro/ect. Fest end easy. Frot
m . Phone 742·5361. • 1
apartment, Nice lot. Asking
27 3
est motes, Phone 992·3214.
.
. c HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights. $7,500.00.
- -- -- - - ,~- Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
·
1861 COLT Navy replica
Call Danny Thompson, 992· MOTEL LOCATION - 7 acres
revolver, also holster, flask
2i96.
.
6-:JO.tfc
on
route
7.
and bullet mold . Very nice.
5-26·tfc
Phone742-5625.
ROOMb I k~
lthb th POMEROY BUSINESS FREE ESTIMATE on generJII
5
remodeling, roofing and
0
6·2Hic
paneling' ~nd :! 1 ~ to !ali ~~~'!WhG r;str~~s~e ~~
painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
PALAMI~!O, 7 years old, 62" , carpeting. Phone 992·2540 or floor. Second floor hao 2 1.m. to 6 p.m.
rode In Re~atta Parade .
992·3465.
buslne11 rooms rented and •5
6-9·30tc
Phone 992-279 .
6·2Htp
room apartment. ,Only
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
6·24·6tc HOUSEstoryandhalf.6rooms,
$25,000.00.
Complete Sarvt~
1967 TAGALONG, camper,
bath, Rutland. Phone 742- 7 FARMS - 21 acres to 320
Phone9•m1
RIKint, Ohio
excellent condition. Fully
5613.
acres. Starting at $6,000.00.
Crltt
Bradford 5-1-tfc
equipped. Phone 247-255~.
6-25-tfc
.
_..
6-24-6tc
4 BUILPfNG LOCATIONS - ~p;;;;;;;;;iiii;
3. BEDROOM brick home .
11.500.00 up.
Choice location In Middleport.
Seen by appointment only . WOULP YOU LIKE TO BUY
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m.
OR BUILD YOURSELF A
5-7.tfc
NEW HOME. WE HAVE
SEVERAL PLANS.
All Our First Lino
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom.
with or without form POhMERUY1h-2 16 t'oom
lrobam •
W
machinery. House with ' 3
orne WI
o s 1or m 111
1 1 11
bedrooms, dln~ng room, ll.vlng
homes. Asking $3,000.00.
oly
Nat r!ltvflr prlctroom, l'h batha, enclosed
get Znd tlrt ..,
.
back porch, wall to wall DO YOU WANT TO SELL. lEE
t'L
carpeting. Aluminum $ldlng, · ¥ S.YIF u~o SA\-E. NO COST
~
awning. storm windows and
'l'boma
and Mn. Howard
·
NICE b35 trailer with tlpout
storm doors . City water .
Mr. Bill McElroy wu amdly exltnllon, 1 bedroom end air
f'OM.I•OY
Selling due to Ill health. Phone
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
1•« viii'- of Mr and ucondltlanl"". Phone 992-6~52.
J. W. CerMr.Mtr,
614·985·~938.
. ASSOCIATE
····-...
""
·
......
• ...,
6·2s.tlc
.....,,.1Jit .
6·23·3otp' •
"2-3ns 992.2371
------- ----

'11t-•

P.0. IUl

J ROOM furnished apartment, .
utilities paid. 356 North ~th

TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'f2 .mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3·5·tfc

·. '

Business Service.s .

F.or Rent

- ----

wOupell

WEDNES.DAY, JUNE .ao·

•

OXFORDS

'•

.

.

.

f

M.ASON-NIEW H'AV·EN'S.

AT 7:30 P. M.

'

Bargains,. Bargains ·and·More .Bargains In The Sentinel Oassifieds

!

MISS AMERICA SHOES

,

_.. _,.

ARRI ER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

B'lg Tire Sale

HARTPORD

UNI"" 'fiRES

.

•

I.

PRICE

~::::::::::~------~=============-~~:y:le~KM
::~::Md~~
:::·~_::::::::::::::=~~~~~~~!!!!~:::::::::---~ ·

0 0

1

~-

�I

6- The Da~y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~ 29, 1971

1971
Carmel
New!!,
tashion Forecast for Fall

·POLLrS POINTERS

.

By the Day

Solution Makes It
Eas\'
.

_Mr. a~ Mrs. Robert -Wa_tson
and family of Kent spent tbe
'weekend with Mr..and Mrs.
. ~ughn· RoBaushbarTh~ gr:dgda ter, r a spen
a few days with the Roushes.
and Mrhs. ~est Cla~kgof
Racme exc ange gree n s
with . Eunle Brinker Sunday
everung.
Spending the weekend at the
home of Mary Circle were Mr ·
and Mrs. Melvin Circle and
family of Columbus, Mr. and
··
.
d
Mrs . George Ctrc1e an
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle of New Haven and Ricky
Circle of St. Albans.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Johnson
and Brenda of Racine caUed at
the home of Arthur Earl and
Margaret Ann Johnson and
family and Betty Van Meter on
Sa1urday evening.
Eunle Brinker called at the
home of William and Cathy
Carleton ot'Racine recently.

.To Clean Wood Paneling
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY- Nowadays there is so much wood paneling in our homes but I have an ideal solution for cle~n ­
ing it that is also easy on the hands and leaves a mce
finish on the paneling. Mix four tablespoons -vinegar, two
tablespoons olive oil and one pint of warm water.FRANCES

MI:.

DEAR GIRLS-I found this not only worked well on
wood finished In ~atural wood Wnes but was great used on
white painted wood paneling. Of course, after cleaning a
small area you rub It dry with a elean soft cMh.-POLLY

--a.wr-1

!1M:!:'~&gt;' :; :s,t Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY-After many years of waxing my
blond furniture with both liquid and spray wax of
various kinds it is getting yellow. Can anyone tell
me how to remove the old ·wax? Water cannot be
used on this furniture as it has no special coating.
-MARJORIE

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with magazines that
say turn to page 100 to continue a story or article and
then have to go through A, B and perhaps C series until
you finally stumble on page 100. Thanks for letting me get
this off my chest.~MARTHA
DEAR READERS-Mrs. T. R. also bas a Pet Peeve
wllb magaztnea tbat start a story In the middle of the
book and continue It In the front as she does not like w
go bacllwards.-POLL Y
DEAR POLLY-While having to use hot applications on
a sprained knee I discovered the easiest way was to fold
and wet two bath towels and put them in the top of my
double boiler while .the water In the bottom part was kept
boilln~. All I had to do was 11ft out a hot towel with no
wringmg and folding or burned hands . When one cooled
the other was hot and ready.-MRS. J . B.

From Peter Clements by
Rodriguez for Fall ' 71
comes the long, fl o ra! printed cotton dress with
above-the-waist interest by
way of ruffled collar (left).
The Teal Traini cover-up
city dress {c en I e r) is in
brown tweed with knit oc·
centing the torso above a
wrap-effect flared skirt. By
Marshall Klugman for the
Fifth Addition, division o

DEAR POLLY-The camping season is here again so I
want to pass on a Pointer
we used while camping last
year. ·Take two sleeping
bags the same size and with
identical zippers. Open both
to a large flat size. Keep
the outsides of bags on bottom and top and both insides facing each other.
Hook zippers together and
zip into one large double
bag where three children
can sleep comfortably but
when using them as two singles they would only accommodate two children.-MRS. L. S.

Jack Elam and family.
SUnday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sayre, Don and
Sandy, were Mr. and .Mrs.
William Sayre of Columbus and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre and
family of Chester.
Miss Jo Smith and friend,
Barbara, of Concord College

were weekend visitors of her
parents, Mr. an·d Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith,
Jo and a friend, Barbsra, enjoyed a cookout with homemade
ice cream at the home. Ill Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail,
Kevin and Charles, Sundav

GRAMBLING vs MORGAN
NEW YORK (UPI)-Grambling and Morgan State, which
had a total of 19 players from
last year's squad signed by the
pros, will meet at Yankee
Stadium of Sept. 11 in the first
Whitney M. Young Jr. MemorIal Football Classic.

Market Report

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, June 111,1971
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Uveslock Co.
HOGS -1'15 to 220 lbs. 18.25 to
18 _60 ; 220 to 250 Jbs. ')7.50 to
17 85 . Light 14 to 16.25· ·.Fat
S~ws' 13.50 to 15.7~; sta'gs 13
Down; Boars ll.SOto 13.50; Pigs
3 to 10 so· Shoats 9 to 14.
CATILE-Steers26.50toaz;
Heifers 23.50 to 30; Baby Beef 30
to a:; 75 . Fat cows 17 to 22.25·
Cann~r~ 18 to 24; Buils 24.50 ~
28 · Milk Cows 135 to 305.
VEAL CALVES _ Tops 40 ;
Se ds 36 to 37 40 . Medium 30
· con
· •
.
to 34; Com. &amp; Hvs. 30 to 31,
Culls 30 Down:
ABY CALVES_ 32 50 to 85 .
B
·
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
HOGS: 200-230, 20.t0; No. I,
20.65; 23().240, 20.15; 241).260,
19.40; 26().280, 18.85; 100-200,
15.90; 16().180, 18.40. Sows 300tOO, 15-15.70; 400-550, 15-15.60.
Boars, 14.60. Stock Hogs, 14-Zl.
Pigs B.H. 7.5().21.50.
.
CATTLE - Good to chotce
Steers 31.11).31.90; good Steers
26.75-29; good Hfrs. 28.51).30.90;
good Cows 22.85-24.25; Utility
Cows 20.85-22; Canner .a·nd
Cutter 17.60 down; Stock Cattle
Steers, 24.51).31; Heavy Calves
Steers 32.51).37; Heavy Calves
Hfrs. 25.51).31.
VEAL CALVES - 'Choice
46.50; Good 42.50; Med. 35. Baby
Calves B.H. 1~2.50.
LAM!IS - Choice ' 31; good
27.30.
Jefferson D a vi s, who
served in the office of president of the Confederate
States of America, was
unique in his presidency in
that he had neither predecessor nor successor.

••1

~~~
ps~~rd~:~~ ~~d~~,t:~ ..------------~------------------nr-r-,Y.-..OAiU"i~~A=-:u":":S::T:-:B::E:--•,
(right). The black wool rit
top is teamed with attachec
skirt
and double
matching
of beige
knit jacket
wool. .

(NEWSPAPER EHTIRPRI!! ASSN .)

.

Wolfpen

You will receive a doUar If Polly uses your favorite
homemaldng Idea, Pet Peeve, PoUy's Problem or solutloa to a problem. Write Polly In care of this aewspaper.

lnternollonol League Stondlngl JETS SIGN TWO
By United Press International
NEW YORK (UP!)-The New
W
L
Pet.
GB.
Syracuse
42 26 .618 York Jets· have s1gned No · 3
Charleston
38 29 .567 31f&gt; draft choice Chris Farasopoulos
Tidewater
41 33 .554 4 of Brigham Young and Roy
Rochester
37 33 .529 6
f M 1 d stat
Louisville
34 36 .486 9 Kirksey o
aryan
e.
Richmond
34 39 .466 101/l Farasopoulos set NCAA punt
Winnipeg f
27 o40 .-403 14'12 and kickoff return records at
~ Toledo
27 « .380 16'/l · Brigham Young, and Kirksey
J... .. Mondoy's Rosults
1
Tia""(oter 4 Winnipeg 1
pia~ guard and fullback with
Rochester 9 Charleston 5Bridgeport of the Atlantic Coast
(Only g·am,eo ocheduled)
League the past three years.

--,---,-----------~-------------­

TREVINO LEADS LIST
NEW YORK (UPI)- Lee
Trevino continues to lead the
PGA money-won list with
$165,869 while Jack Nicklaus is
second with $161,213.
Others In the top 10 are Gary
Player ($119.165), Arnold Palmer ($111,339), Miller Barber
($102,793), Gene Littler
{$89,485),
Tom
Shaw
{$87,076), Charles Coody
{$82,665), George Archer
($79,625) and Frank Beard
($77,233).

PRESENT TO
WIN.THESE BIG
DOOR PRIZES!

TO THE

GRAND
OPENING
'

News, Notes

'

Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
family were Mr. and Mrs.
James Reeves, Linda and
grandson, Bryan Lee Reeves,
Mr. BID McElroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith;-and Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Tuckerma.n of
Spring!ieid also Mr. and Mrs.

•

liN FACT, YOU MUST IE PRESENT
TO ENJOY THE FREE
REFRESHMENTS, TOOl

OF

•

7- 'nle DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pwneoy, 0., June •· 1971

·

.

.

News Notes
' 1ii

I

oocnsm
TV

GRAND PRIZE I

Over 400 Pairs of
Latest Shoe Fashions

•

15" TV SET
''The Townsman''
by RCA
***

WOMEN'S

SECOND PRIZE:
ONE YEAR
OF FREE
CABLE TV
SERVICE

NATURALIZERS
Regular

'

18.00

lin additloa to
the two-11onth
free trial
mrr one getsfl

Regular 13.00 and 14.00
White and beige summer dress
shoes. Latest fashions. Now·-----------·

,.

8 64

. SEE THE .FIRST .
CABLE TV PICTURES

Priced to Clear!

IN·
LADIES' TRAIL MOCCASINS
NOW AT GREAT SAVINGS

-

-

~·

CHAPMAN'S

Main St

SHOES

.

THIRD PRIZE:
SIX MONTHS'
FREE CABL-E
TV SERVICE.

AT WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL

Ladies' Nurse and Waibess

Pomeroy

DISPLAYS

. 2 SillS

~

.....,.,_
.,.,Co.

Mr. aM Mn. Ronnie R111sell ·
Mr. · ud . Mrs. Dta·mond have moved fl'(IJI Plimeroy to
LBWI!II ~ Mt. Morllh vlllted tbetrallerbcme~Mr.and Mrs.
· Wednelday wiUt Mr. and Mn. RDy Annes at Minersville.
Ollrlel unnon and flimuy. • Mn. Edna Roush of Racine · . lt66 BUICK'WILDCAT .CI't:.
11195
Mra. LBWIOil, wbo ball been wai a dinner guest of Mr. and , Automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes. •good w-w
bedfutfor some time; )las able Mrs. lferbel't Roush and Roger : fires, rodlo. heater.• whlteflnlsh, clean Interior. Reg. price
to vlllt in a wheel cbalr.
Sunday. Other . callers, In the • $1395.00. E.O.M. Special.
· Mu: Manuel&amp;. spell! Sunday Roush, home were Mrs. G!adys
lt67 FORD LTD
Sl595
wiUrMr. and Mn. Arnold-Hupp Shield&amp; of Racine, Pebble and
4 Ooor Sedan, power steering &amp; brakes.- vlnyllnferlor, blk .
at Letart FaDs.
• Sllnd;y Hagen (# !!.argo, Fla., . vinyl roof, maroon finish, radio, new w-w tires, V-8 with
automatic trans. &amp; factory air tondlflonlng - Special,
Mrs. Bertha R9blnson and Todd .Roberls, Mr. a~ Mrs:
Special.
·
Mrs. Mabel Sllel~ attended a 1\onl)ie ~~~. Pomeroy, and
bridal lhowl!l' for Miss Jan Mr. and Mn. Dana Lewis of
. 1964CHEVELLE2DOOR
.
$399
Plccin, !ride-elect of Richard •c:lifton.
·
6 Cyl. engine, stand. trans., radio, good tires, green finish .
Special E.O.M
Salient at the home of Mrs. Mr.,and Mrs. Charlea Wolfe
Alleyne Reese at Racine and children of Anliqulty caUed.
Saturday evening.
Sunday evening on Mr. and
Mn. Anna Wines; Karen and Mrs. Russellltoush and family.
Jackie, of Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Charita Lawson and son,
, •OP.EH EVES. 1:00 I'.M,
~I! ROY, OHIO
BobWinesandsonofColtDnbus, Edward, called on Mrs. Ida
Mrs. Steve Cleland and son Heile Donohue Monday
:spent Sunday afternoon with evening,
WANT AD
Mrs., Kate Rowe and Ada. .
Mrs. Bill Robinson and
Wanted
INFORMATION
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of children of Racine rOute spent
DEADLINES
s·OMEON E to haul brush from
Clifton, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Sunday evening with Mrs . . 5 P:M. Day Before Publication
private yard. Phone 992-2639.
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
6-29-3tp
Ronnie Russell of Pomeroy Bertha Robinson.
Can~ 0 Uall0('1 &amp; Corr~lons · -----,.,:---spent Fathl!l''s Day with Mr. Danny Sayre of ColtDnbus Will be accepted untll9a.m. for
and Mrs. Russell Roush and spent a weekend with his
Wanted To Buy
Day of Publication
R!OGULATIONS
family. A cookout was enjoyed grandparenls, Mr. and Mrs.
' . The PubUsher reserves the HOUSE In Pomeroy-Middleport
by an.
. '·
Herbert Sayre. .
area,2or3bedrooms,on land
rlghf to edit or retect '8ny ads
contract. Phone 742·5775.
deemed objectional.. The
6·25-6tc
publisher will not be responsible
ByMn, llaberiROIIIII

, Of

QUALITY

Pomeroy·Motor Co.

Apple Grove News, Events
·

for mor~ than one Incorrect.
Insertion.

Ia
f th
RATES
ANT I QUE S:
dIshes,
re lives or e summer.
For w~nt Ad Service
telephones, clocks, brass
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Buck and Mrs. Junior Wolfe and '5 cents per Word one Insertion . bed~, lamps, etc. Lee Rudisill,
rain and Zane Beegle spen\a' daughter, Wendy, of Cheshire
Minimum Charge7Sc
Phone 992-3-403.
.
301c
7
5
2
·weekend with Mrs. Belly ,spent Friday afternoon with co~2sec~~7~~ ,,r.';rtl~n~d three. _.:__ _ _ ____·_ ._
Stewart at Columbus. They also Mrs. Dallas Hill and family.
18 cents per word sl• con· TELEPHONES, brass beds,
visited the zoo.
William Wickline, Roger secutive insertions.
clocks, dishes, old furniture,
' Mr d u. Cl 1 Re te R sh J Hill Mr Pauline
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
etc. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
. an ..es. . tares u r au • an
• . s.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·6271.
of TUcson, Ariz., visited a week Hill, Mrs. Debbie Roush, Mrs.
CARD OF THANKS
4-27.tfc
&amp; OBITUARY
with Mrs. Mae Pearson at Kathryn HID are attending Rio
St.SOadditional
tor SO word
.
Ra cme
an d vis it ed oth er Grande CoUege for the swnmer Each
wordminimum.
2c.
Notice
; relaUves In this area. Mrs. Mae semester.
BLIND ADS
' Pearson was a dinner guest Mrs. Margie Roush, PortAdditional 25c Charge per
I WILL NOT be responsible for
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Roy -laii'd, Mrs . Doris Hensler Advertisement.
any debts contracted by
t~ Pearson and accompanied her Racine, Mrs: ,Helen King and 8:30a.m.
OFFICE
HOURS
anyone other than myself.
to 5:00
p,m. Dally,
&lt; daughter,theReuterstoTUcson daughter, Paula of Raleigh, 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon Signed Dallas Lightfoot.
. 6·29·3tp
l Monday for an indefinite visit. Kans., visited Monday with Mr. Saturday.
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, July 4, I
~ Mrs.· Ava Belles of Wellston and Mrs. St. Clair Hill.
· In Memory
p.m . at the Racine Gun Club.
speDt Sunday with Mrs. Feme Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
6-29-4tc
~ Hayman• and father, Wesley Skinner ofC0IurnbUS VIS
· itedMr · INdear
LOVING
our
'·
mother,MEMORY
Addle L. 'of
Hawk,
f Bellea Sr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Nice Sunday. who passed away June 29,
\
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodge and Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
1964. What would we give to REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese. tablets and E·Vap
Mary Lou Wickersham of Gloeckner took their daughter, clasp ~er hand. her ~appy
wa,ter pills. Nelson Drugs.
face to see, to hear her voice
6-27-30tp
Columbus spent Sunday wil;h Mrs. LarryBadgely, Danny and and see heir smile, that meant
l Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Margaret, to th~ir home In so much to us. Sadly missed
~ Wickersham and sons.
Fairfax, Va ., Thursday, by children and grand - REVIVAL starting Wednesday
~
Mr. and Mrs . Erwin returning home Friday.
children .
at Rutland Free Will Baptist
,
6·29-ltp
Church, 7:30 each evening.
' Gloeckner and son, David, Mrs. Mrs. Erma Wilson visited Mr.
Rev. Paul Taylor, evangelist.
~ LarrY, Badgely, Mr . .and Mrs. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson and Card of Thanks
Public invited.
Sherman Ford ·attended a children at Charleston Sunday WE , WISH to thank all our .
6-27-6tc
~. dinner at the Hotel Frederick in thru Wednesday. The :Wllsons
friends and neighbors "!ho ANNUAL Flag Tournament all
. Huntin•ton last week. The accompanied her home · and
helped In any way during the
day Sunda~, july ~th at the
ij'•~ li'as In honor of those visited · WednesdAy , 'thru • 'receli't death of Thelma
Chester Hill '' Golf Course.
.
Michael. A special thanks to
Prizes will be given.
having 30 years of service at Sa1urday.
.
our minlsler, Keith Wise,
6·27·3tc
• theLocksandDamsontheOhio Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cady,
Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, the
~ IUver. Mr. GlOeCkner and Mr. Lori and Jerry, of West JefMartin Funeral Home and all SMALLEY'S
Gill Shop,
~
··
those who prepared and
1
1
, Furd, both former employees of ferson enjoyed camp ng a
brought food. The family of
Chesler, Ohio. Bottles, Bllnko
glassware, Sequoia ware,
the former Dam 23, were Forked Run Lake over the
Thelma Michael.
jewelry, flowers. small items,
6·29·1tC
presented 30 year service weekend. Visiting them were
and lar9,1! collection of Avon
anrds. Both men are n.W Mr: and Mrs. Marshall Adams ~w~·E:-::W-,I""SH,---,t_o_e-•p_r_e-ss-ou-r apbottles. Open 1 to 8 p.m. dally.
preciation and thanks to those
6·18·12tc
: employed at the new Racine Ffiday night. Mr. and Mrs.
who
helped
In
any
way
at
the
Dam.
Raymond Proffit spent the
loss of our husband, father,
Quarter stud
1
Mrs. Larry Badgely and weekendandMr.andMrs. Mike
grandfather and great- REGISTERED
service.
·
Hank's
Rock 209498.
children and Mrs. Erwin O'Brien and children, Mrs.
grandfather, Mr. Pearl E.
Contact
Mike
Jones.
Rf. 3,
Cole. Special thanks to friends
.•. Gloeckner were dinner guesls Larry O'Brien and children
Pomeroy, Ohio, . Phone 992and relatives who came so far
6880.
i:-' Sundayo!Mr.andMrs.Richard visited Saturday.
to show their respect. Also
6·17·12tc
!·· Fishel' at Charleston.
Word was received by Mrs.
special thanks to those who
sent flowers, cards and food.
~
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser Herbert Roush, Mrs. Russell
While Funeral Home and KITTENS to give away. Phone
and children of Mansfield spent Roush and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons the
Rev. Rol' Deeter.
992·5327.
the weekend with Mrs. Alice Sunday that their niece and
Mrs. Pearl E. Cole and
6-22-12tc
Family
, Balser·.
husband, Mr. and Mrs. Sher6·29·11P
Mr. and Mrs. Bus Hupp and man Reeder of Mineral Ridge
SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
~ children of Baltimore were had had an auto accident. Mrs. Lost
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave ..
weekend ' guests of iheir Reeder is hospitalized with a
Pomeroy .
} parenls, Mr. aitd Mrs. Arnold broken ankle, severe cuts and LOST-EXTRA largo tom cal
4-23-tfc
mlssiog In . Reedsville area .
Hupp and sons.
bruises and Mr. Reeder was Whfte
and dark gray, white
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas treated and released with cuts feet, black on hind legs. v.hite
' Johnson 'J r. and daughter, and bruises. Mrs. Reeder Is a ring around neck, with
on him. Reword for Auto Sales
, Brenda of Racine spent Sunday daughter of foriner residents, fleacollor
return. Bill Bailey, Bo• 14, 1%1 PLYMOUTH, $100. Contact
'• evening with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst of Reedsville, Ohio ~772.
Harvey Roseberry,, Bashan6-29-10tc
Robert Wood and Waid John- Nlles.
Keno Road.
son.
. Hobart Click of Mt. Alto, W. BLACK and white pony run off
6·29-3tp
Cheryl Ann and Tressa Lynn Va., is a surgical patient at a with · sled, harness and all.
" Bostick of Dunbsr visited their Cincinnati hospital. Mr. Click Phone 992-6055. Raymond 1969 BUICK LeSabre, 2-dr.
hardtop / power steering,
:" grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. frequently visited in this area McCumber.
power brakes, air, 18,000
6-27·6tc
Robert Wood while their with friends and relatives.
miles. E•cellent condition.
Phone 992-2288.
~· brother, Mike Bostick, was a
Dorsa Parsons was a pslient
6-3-tfc
!. patient at Thomas Memorial at Veteran Memorial Hospital
• Hospital in ·charleston. Mr. and due to muscle spssms.
Mrs. Ray Johnson and family of 1%7 DODGE ,_. ton, 4 speed,
~ Mrs. Paul Bostic spent Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush Columbus and Mrs. Lee 1\oush good condition. 8 ply llres. H.
with Mr. and Mrs. Wood and spent Saturday evening with and family of Logan were D. springs, st.SOO. Phone 992·
2975.
Cheryl and Teressa ac- Mr. and Mrs. Ott Boston at Sunday afternoon visitors of
6·27-3tc
companied them home to. Racine.
Mr. ilnd Mn. Larry Johnson - - - - - -- and family and Mrs. Geneva 1950 CHRYSLER, running
Dunbar.
condltloo, $150. Phone 992·
. i Mi; and Mrs. Jess Anderson,
U~
Shumate.
ms.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Everette Ransom
Mrs. John R. Murphy ac6-27-3tc
, of Antiquity visited Mr. and
companied Mr.. and Mrs. - - - -- - - PONTIAC
Catatlna, 4power
door,
. •• Mn. Benny Boggess Sunday, Weekend visitors of. Mr. and Dwight Logan of Pomeroy to 1963
power
brakes.
t Mrs. Boggess visited Mrs. Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Pittsburgh where sbe visited ateerlng, good condition.
: Shirley Ables Saturday evening. Karen Gilkey of Albany and Mr. with Mr. and Mn. Don Murphy Contact Robert Tewksbarr,.
~. and Mrs. Dale Hili of and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of and family:.
·
6-25-3 P
• Moore
· Haven, Fla. are vislling Albany.
Carl and Paul (BID) McElroy
•• Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Everelt Ray of Columbus were weekend For. Sale or Trade
'
J h
d f II
f vis' lora of their par Is Mr WHITE stud pony, 38 In:, tame.
, Dallas HW, Mr. and Mrs. Mike o nson an
am Y o
I
en •
. Will sell reasonable or will
~ · Hill. Mr. HID will return to Columbus were weekend and Mn. Paul McElroy.
trade for 3 pigs. Phone 992 _
:f, MooreHavenintwoweeksand vlsi~ofHelenJohnson. ·. ~-and Mn. Larry Barr, 5946.
. ~ f,l.. J.IIU will remain with Helen Johnson and Mr. and DaVId and Michelle of Rutland,
· 6·27·3tc
~
Mr. and Mn. Howard , Thoma
~
BltC•pocltv
Jr,' and son, Curtis, of Glouster Help Wanted
Aut:~~tYcs
•were recent Sunday vllllors of
lspetdoptratlon. Mr. and Mn. Howard Thoma.
- e.~NT
'
f:~~~~. of :,'~~~~
Mr. and Mn, ~ . Sarver
4ft!
w
o
tor
11 v ol
and
BOlli of Bridgeman, Mich.,
L
control .
Lint' returned hciiDe lalt week after
I,
. Filter or Power
~ln,.Agltat~r.
spendlnll their,:._acalion with
o~maj rou .
ber parents,. mr. and Mn.
Hal::, ~~.t
Howard Thoma and Patricia.
Prron
They also vlllted Ida
•Surround clothes
paren..,
with oontto, even
Mr. • and Mr1. Sarver In
and
heat. No hot spots,
VirGinia. •••-- Patricia
.,
.....,.
-·~Yno ·~:.~ry~~i ac~nled tbem heme for a
Fllttr.
few daya vlllt.
WoMS'l.oycrloAIIOllln
Mr.' ·-llarr ud f•-"" of
Phone 992-•ls6
A
Ro~ Corptt
RuUand were Monday OVI!l'·
Service
nlghtgueallofherparents,Mr. For Rent
...
. l!y Mn , HerbertRousb

f

•1

I'

i

i

You must be
present to win! '

WIN .ONE OF
THREE GREAT
DOOR

ANSWERS TO ALL
YOUR QUESTIONS
ABOUT CABLE TV
11116

Pf. PLWAIT

St., Middleport afte.r 5 p.m.,
William Smith.
6-27-12fp

TRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Court. Rt . l:i~. Syracuse,
Ohio. 992-2951. ·
4-2-flc .

f.jr'WINSOR
-ilBUDDY

EXTRA large trailer lots, good
location. Velma G. Zuspan,
773-5750, Mason, W. Va .
· 6·15·12fc

FURNISt'iED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-t!c

1.

:t'CHAMPION
1-fr_VAN DYKE

-·z

Arnold Grate

Rutland,O.

Paintina .
NEW&amp;

OLD WORK

All Wtalhor .Rooflnt &amp;
ConstrUc.tlo., Co.
DEXTER, 0. 457.26 '
PHONE 742·3,45 .

,SEE TOM CROW OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBUR~ MOBiLE HOMES, INC..
MEMORIAL BRIDGI! TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Insured- Experienced
· Work Gu1ranteiCI.

.

.~----------------~~ -~-z=====~

TRAVEL trailer, locally. Phone
992-2367 before 5 p.m . dally .
·
6-2Hfp

-

Radiator
'
. Sertice
- -.. ~- ....a.:
.._... .

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

NO DOWN PAYMENT
GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

5 RM. house and bath In
Rutland. Phone 992-6329.
6-2Hfc

- - - -----:--

See
1 BEDROOM trailer apart.
Dale Dutton
ment, Ideal for couples .
Contact McCiure'.s Dairy Isle.
992-2534
992·52-48 or 992·3436.
Middleport
6-27-6fc
- - - - - -- - FURNISHED apartment 217112
North Third St., Middleport.
For Sale
Phone 992-2780 or 992·3432.
COAL. limestone . Excelsior
6-27.tfc Salt Works, E. Main St .,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3891.
4·9-tfc
For Sale
- - - - - - ' -----''-':-'""SINGER sewing machine, BUILDING LOTS for sale .
automatic zig zag sewing
Newly approved In restricted
machine, makes buttpnholes,
housing district. Near Rock
darns, monograms, etc. Pay
Springs. Phone 992-6887 after
balance of $46.20. Use our
5 p. m., ·or on weekends .
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
6·17-tfc
6-27·6tc
310 CASE dozer, blade and
winch. Good condition. Phone
REGATTA Special, 17·ft.
742-4794. 8 to 4 p.m. After 4
Thompson boat, dock .covers,
phone 698-3257.
e•tras, 75 HP newly rebuilt
6·2Htc
motor, trailer. Good ski boat.
$600. Call 992-2003 . Will
LOGAN FIRE and satety
demonstrate.
6-B·ffC
equipment. Sales and service.
All types and sizes of fire
e•tingulshers. Special prices
350 KAWASAKI motorcycle,
on e•tlngulshers for boats,
1970 model, $675. .175
campers,
homes.
Also
Kawasaki motorcycle, 1966
discount prices on other sizes .
model, $250. Roger Bahr,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone
Chesler, Ohio. Phone 985-3958.
992·3821.
Owner Dwight
6·22-7tc
Logan.
6·16·301(.
SPINET- CONSOLE PIANO
WANTED. responsible party to
take over spinel plano. Easy
terms. Can be. seen locally.
Write Credit Manager, P. 0.
. 36" x 2:3"" .nno
Box 276, Shelbyville, Indiana
46176.
6-22·i2tp

------

-----

.For Sale
Aluminum ·
Sheets
USED OFFSET PLATES

G. E. Range, $90; cabinet sink,
$40, bathroom basin, $20.
Phone 742-.4171 .
6-27-3tc
i965 CORVAIR Monza hardtgp,
• 25 "•automatic ~pistol, single · '"
shot. .22 rifle, antique player
piano. Phone 742·5042.
6-2Htc

------

BLACK raspberries, Roy
Proffitt. Phone 843·2281.
6·2Hfc

HAVE
MANY USES

; "''"20~ .

.,

Slor $1.00

From the Largest Truck or1
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.
·

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922966.
6-15-tlc

BLAEII NARS

,
.•Ph. 992-2143
_ ..Pom.roy
."r~:;;;;;:=:=:::=:::::::~

Have Your Seasooal

AWNINGS, storm doors and
windows , carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sa~es rer.resentative. For lr~

Con~itionin&amp;

Air

lnspectjpn and

estima es, phone Charles

Lisle. Syracuse . V. V.
Johnson and Son. Inc.
5·27-flc

Re.Qiarge

6.98 'Piva
Blaettnar's
Special
At

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SER·
VICE. Phone 949·~51.
5-30-ffc

Pa~

BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
Septic tanks Installed. George
PHONE 992-2143
I Bill) Pullins, Phone 992-2478. ~::;::;::==:::::::;::::::~
4-25-tlc to

)OHNSON MASON

HARRISON'S TV AND ANTENNA SERVICE. Phone
992·2522.
6·10-ffc

Complete
Remodeling

INTERIOR, exterior decorator ' ·
and barn roofs . Phone 742·

5683.

Kltchtnl, Balhs
Room Addltlans
And Potlos

6·20·30tc

Ba~khotAnd

Endlooder Work

O'DELL WHEEL . allgnment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12~ .
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service. ·
Ironically
All
work
Wheels .balanced
elecguaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
6·24-30tc
'H.-

I' 'H

nn· 1 &lt;~'i

rosrfr

5eptlc Tonks
And Loch Btds.

- .&amp;
~=- ~~~~~~~~O~~~d

. EXPERT . .,

1~

Wh8li AiiiRent

Real Estate For Sa'e

15.J5 :·

ROOM house, bath, full
basemen I, 133 Butternut Ave.,
jusl walking distance from

Daily Sentinel

I

·--

Tom Crow
992-2580
Pomeroy

S~X

The

.

.EXPERIENCED.

WANT A NEW HOUSE?

dawn town Pomeroy. Contact

Ed Hedrick , 2137 Wadsworth
Drive, Columbus, Ohio, phone
237·4334, Columbus.
•
s-t'ttc

Cleland Realty

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

- - - --

11

Virgil Ii.
TEAFORD
SR.

-

2

C

ITURE

Roofing

i'ALtiO
DOUBLE - WI DES

INEL

•

&amp;Clrplnlllt
Wen
Spoutint. Roof

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
.~o Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be tho Most P,:olitable
Time You Ever Spent.
.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

•'

~GUARANTEED­

, """ Phone
. 992-2094
1971 DIAL &amp; SEW zlg.zag
Pomii'UJ Home &amp; Auto
111 Court St.
sewing machine left In
Pomeroy,
Ohio
layaway , Beautiful pastel
OponiTII5
color, full size model. All 1-,-------~--------' MIDDLEPORT - Stewart
Monday thru $11t~rday
home. S. 4th St., 2-story brick
buiJt .ln to buttonhole, over- KOSCOT KOSMETICS. wigs
606 E. Me in, Pom..-.y, 0.
and garage, 3 bedroorns,
cas! and fancy stitch. Pay just and accessories. Call us for
sleeping porch, 2'12 bafh5, lull
$48.75 .. cash or terms your needs. We deliver
basement, hol water heal, 2
available. Trade-Ins ac · distributors. Brown's, Phone
lois.
Shown by appointment CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING.
cepted. Phone 992-56ott.
9'12-5113.
6-29·6tc
only. RODNEY DOWNING. Dick Vaughan, phOne 992·
6-Hfc
REAL ESTATE BROKER. 3374, Dale Little, phone 992·
6346 .
PHONE 992-3731.
VACUUM cleaner brand new
6-27-3tc
6-23·30tC
1971 model. Complete with all
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage In shipping. Will take
S27 cash or budget plan
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
available. Phone 992-56ott.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
6·29·6tc
662·3035.
2-12-tfc
601 E11t Moln
LOG CABIN on Bowmans Run
Pomeroy
Road, partly remodeled. 22ft . 12' - 14' · 24' • WIDE
NEIGLER Conltructlan. For
WANTED ·- 3 .BEDROOM bulldlrtg or remodtllrtg your
Layton camper, self con:
talned. Dav1d Huddleston.
HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY home. Call Guy Nelgler,
Phone 949-3621.
- FROM $8,900 to $15,000.
Racine, Ohio.
6-29-3tc
7-31-trc
ALSO WANTED - FARMS 15 acres to 150 acres, FROM RALPH'S CAR PET ~ Up46 ACRES, 10 • 60 trailer with
1220 Woshlngton Blvd.
.
ss,ooo to $20,000.
holstery Cleaning Service .
tlpout. Old vacant house, lake
Belpre, Ohio
and excellent camp site. 2 . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Free estimates. Phone
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS
Gallipolis
&lt;141&gt;-029~.
miles from Middleport. Phone EARLY AMERICAN stereo.
IS REAL ESTATE
3-12-flc
992-2362.
AM·FM radio lovely maple
finish, 4 speed changer .
6·25-6tc
HENRY CLELAND
$EPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Separate controlo, ~ spea~er
REALTOR
Reasonable rates. Ph; «6-4782, ·
sound
system.
Balance
$78.59.
TWO female Norwegian
Gallipolis. John Russell,
Free gift with every puroiflco 992-2259
elhound pups. Phone 992-2362.
Owner &amp; Operator.
chase. Use our budget ter~.
Residence
"2·2568
6·2s.6fc
.!-13-tfc
Call 992-7085.
6-27-6tc
6-27-6fc
EXPERT lawn mower and
"NEVER · used anything like
tiller repair. Frot pickup and
It, say users of Blue Lustre STEREO-RADIO console. 4
aarpet cleaner . Rent electric speed lnterml•ed changer,
delivery . Warren's Mower
Shop, 2-48 Condor St. P~one
shampooer $1. Baker Fur· dual volume control.
992-7357.
nlture Company.
speaker sound system
6·2J.6tc beautiful walnut finish .
5-18-tfc
- ----Balance $44.89. Free gift with
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
every purchase . Use our
'63 CHEVY II, 6 cyl., standard,
..
service, all makes, 992-2284,
budget terms. Call 992-7085 .
26" riding lawn mower .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
6-27-6tc
Phone 985-3929.
- BrOker
Authorized Singer Sates and
6·27·3tp
110 Mechonlc Strott
Service. We Sharpen Sclsaors.
POII!Ir,Y,
Ohio
.
· ' 3-29-llc
Real
Estate
For
Sale
'61 PONTIAC, Tempest, 4 cyl.,
.
$125, '64 Pontiac Catallne
1640 lincoln Hts .,
CONCRETE
$325, ACetylene welding HOUSE,
POMEROY- 3 bedroom home, .READY-MIX
Pomeroy.
Phone 992·2293.
delivered
rlglit
to your
outfit, hoses. gages and carf,
10-:i5-ttc bath, forced air heat and
pro/ect. Fest end easy. Frot
m . Phone 742·5361. • 1
apartment, Nice lot. Asking
27 3
est motes, Phone 992·3214.
.
. c HOUSE - 1642 Lincoln Heights. $7,500.00.
- -- -- - - ,~- Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
·
1861 COLT Navy replica
Call Danny Thompson, 992· MOTEL LOCATION - 7 acres
revolver, also holster, flask
2i96.
.
6-:JO.tfc
on
route
7.
and bullet mold . Very nice.
5-26·tfc
Phone742-5625.
ROOMb I k~
lthb th POMEROY BUSINESS FREE ESTIMATE on generJII
5
remodeling, roofing and
0
6·2Hic
paneling' ~nd :! 1 ~ to !ali ~~~'!WhG r;str~~s~e ~~
painting. Phone 992-7729, 9
PALAMI~!O, 7 years old, 62" , carpeting. Phone 992·2540 or floor. Second floor hao 2 1.m. to 6 p.m.
rode In Re~atta Parade .
992·3465.
buslne11 rooms rented and •5
6-9·30tc
Phone 992-279 .
6·2Htp
room apartment. ,Only
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
6·24·6tc HOUSEstoryandhalf.6rooms,
$25,000.00.
Complete Sarvt~
1967 TAGALONG, camper,
bath, Rutland. Phone 742- 7 FARMS - 21 acres to 320
Phone9•m1
RIKint, Ohio
excellent condition. Fully
5613.
acres. Starting at $6,000.00.
Crltt
Bradford 5-1-tfc
equipped. Phone 247-255~.
6-25-tfc
.
_..
6-24-6tc
4 BUILPfNG LOCATIONS - ~p;;;;;;;;;iiii;
3. BEDROOM brick home .
11.500.00 up.
Choice location In Middleport.
Seen by appointment only . WOULP YOU LIKE TO BUY
Phone 992·5523 after 4 p.m.
OR BUILD YOURSELF A
5-7.tfc
NEW HOME. WE HAVE
SEVERAL PLANS.
All Our First Lino
24 ACRE farm Long Bottom.
with or without form POhMERUY1h-2 16 t'oom
lrobam •
W
machinery. House with ' 3
orne WI
o s 1or m 111
1 1 11
bedrooms, dln~ng room, ll.vlng
homes. Asking $3,000.00.
oly
Nat r!ltvflr prlctroom, l'h batha, enclosed
get Znd tlrt ..,
.
back porch, wall to wall DO YOU WANT TO SELL. lEE
t'L
carpeting. Aluminum $ldlng, · ¥ S.YIF u~o SA\-E. NO COST
~
awning. storm windows and
'l'boma
and Mn. Howard
·
NICE b35 trailer with tlpout
storm doors . City water .
Mr. Bill McElroy wu amdly exltnllon, 1 bedroom end air
f'OM.I•OY
Selling due to Ill health. Phone
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
1•« viii'- of Mr and ucondltlanl"". Phone 992-6~52.
J. W. CerMr.Mtr,
614·985·~938.
. ASSOCIATE
····-...
""
·
......
• ...,
6·2s.tlc
.....,,.1Jit .
6·23·3otp' •
"2-3ns 992.2371
------- ----

'11t-•

P.0. IUl

J ROOM furnished apartment, .
utilities paid. 356 North ~th

TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
'f2 .mlle north of new Meigs
High School. Phone 992-2941.
3·5·tfc

·. '

Business Service.s .

F.or Rent

- ----

wOupell

WEDNES.DAY, JUNE .ao·

•

OXFORDS

'•

.

.

.

f

M.ASON-NIEW H'AV·EN'S.

AT 7:30 P. M.

'

Bargains,. Bargains ·and·More .Bargains In The Sentinel Oassifieds

!

MISS AMERICA SHOES

,

_.. _,.

ARRI ER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

B'lg Tire Sale

HARTPORD

UNI"" 'fiRES

.

•

I.

PRICE

~::::::::::~------~=============-~~:y:le~KM
::~::Md~~
:::·~_::::::::::::::=~~~~~~~!!!!~:::::::::---~ ·

0 0

1

~-

�..

•
iT

BARNIY

EEKAND~K

'IE SHORE fiNISHED UP
'&gt;'ORE CHORES MIGHTY
EARLV TODAY,
LOWEE7.Y--

'fEP-- BUT I
NEVER COULD
A-DONE IT
WITHOUT TATER'S
HELP.
ELVINEY

HE
SLEPT
TH'WHOLE

LAND
O'GOSHEN!!
' WHAT ON
AIRTH DID
HE ·Do?

8UT~O~R~e0&amp;~~------------~--------------~

!. HOPE 'IE DON'T

GOT A FULL HOUSE
TONIGHT

MIND EATIN' 01'\J TH'

BLESSET
MORNIN'·

~~~~A~H~e
MY DRE'AIJIS f

FRONT PORCH,

TATER

•

---

D::::::.~'RE:CKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
WHI&gt;.T DOYOU''ll-11!-JI( OF 1M

.

NEW GIRt. FRIEND?

ACTUALLY, I 0111.'1
GL.ASSSS .FO~ ~e
$CI-IOL.ARL'I EFFECT

'rtlU. '
i-1oNEYeEE.

NOr ONLV COOL!&gt;~~~ .
!lEAD ·I!VER't' ,l.iTTiiR-

'IlEA~

•.. UE

~AD,

PltQNOUNCED

--

AND 1RANSLA76C&gt;
EIIC~

LINE i

,..-A
zME

GFEBU
TCIIYNL

MSTKPZE
PIIODNYR
CltM$VovA!jp

.
YO'LL KNOW Wl-fi
WHEN 'K&gt;' READS

Al-l I-lOPE 'rl:l'LL ~

WEGOTTA

MAH PAPP'I'S

HAPPY HERE,
DATELESS, DEAR-

LEAVE!!

WILL!.'

f}.S'I!!

dotter because of
ou w!.l:h my
i
Y
I am trult ng
coking, and
,
i
for puritY' good c
.
your repootat on
omantic chile.

\

\

. she io already a r
.
noss · sense·
d uas straight
.
• 1700 erooke m
.
soon' • you travel
own which is
to the acre 1
,
ahead you' 11 come
h 'll likeWile be
morel!
• vif Gold- Then I e
burst i n
dateless no
and oatalesa will be

•
Fi~

NO TIME

tM AFRAID ~INJM . I

CONVERSATION,

GUfee 'THe S&lt;CITEMfNT
OF YOUR ARRIVAl. WAS

SYLVESTiR '
THIS IS
eusv lli'IY!

MV

100 MUCH FOR /olE: J

ALLEY OOP
GASOLINE ALLEY
I~ti llli kel.lou
better'n an~ bod~

i:; ....

me

Papa have
qo awaLJ 1

1 ever knew'

'',

'•,

.

'·

.

hm-OOP'S

•,,

. . ..:·

NEW FOUR·
AliEND,

'

. ..

There~ a
cloctorin
New York
who can
help him!

fOOIE)

K,4W-TEE, IS
PRO\ITNG 10 BE

.r

~E'Of',O. '

PES!" lHI\N

,a.m

U·lllo,S~ O..D ~-;-:

11M A FroFESSiooAL
Plc.KI'OCK6T!

~~ AA'.'GIJ'T CIWJI,o6D
ABIT, H~'I'Ei 'IOJ1

--- •r-.

Ll:\CCEP'l'ED AS Jl MEMBER OF
I!OOHAH'S "FLYJI!Cll'I:AROOME FOUR·

•

SOME "ANNir PROVES .IIH AP't STUVEI'i'l' "'

,
,

IHS!DJOUS
DR. HO · HO,
WHOSE HEt!CH-

~

J

'

JJ&amp;MOO!Lrn®"~ ~.~.,,_, ....~

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN

AOROIIS
1, O'Shanter

1.Typeo!
school exam

~. - boyl

8. French city
10. Bucket Item
ll. Run _.!...form

(2wds.)

(Swda.)
2."-You
Glad You're

·Y oul"
3.-Floor
cove~

12. Mtutary
meal

13. Verily
u . Gratify

18. Departed
11. Vandals

quoon

9. 1961

Oscar
·wtnner
(2.wdo.)
11. NotUral

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

. gilt
15. Fenc- ·
lng
move

(2 wds.)
B. Hurl

cloister
22. Snakes
30. Ceremonies
31. Have a dra-

kingdom or
Asia Minor

or venial
20. Merkel

TERRY ARRIVES AT
GENERAL JjRASSARO~

HOTEL TO REPORT
PR. ~OOEON sAFELY
IJACK HOME ...

SNAPPER 15·0110EREO
MCJ&lt; TO WASHINGTON.
HE ASKS TERRY TO
CONVEY HIS Af'Ol06Y
ANP A 51JG6E5TION
TO HI91ATE FRIEND!&gt;
WillOW,

MY INSTINCT !10E5 TEll
ME TO HIDE, CCX.ONEL
BUT I MUST NOT.

32. Primates
33. Function
37.on
your

matic part

ll!e!

(2 Wda.)

t

r

I

YE:lfl /,1'

i."OESN'T JUST
l.E A~THER

FATHfR. IT
CONVEMN 5

:olaturd•y'~

An"'w~r:

Whar

WOVEN

b~f' ~~

MAGPIE

LIKELY

nn e.tJJ~rt - A "WALKOVER"

~.

BaUor

21. Before

8. O~gon
...port

Clple

automobile
(2 wcls.)

'(I

33.Expunce

27. Maller
29, Prln·

•r• you telling
the fruth?

LEim

iron

(2 Wdl.)

9. Part of an

22. - tnone
2f.Pieued

Ye.t. .ar•a Auwer

pllng

Chri1Ue'1

torte

Una&lt;ramble thue four Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

many
26. Grap~ ,

7. Agatha

B11hlleato, r...)

JJ1YMW~;::t..:!:! -t..c

17.ll&amp;rvtn
23. Unlted

34. Uooda

1topwatch

or

Taolam
Sl. Board
or cloth

39, ECPtlan
solar

.'if~El'll

deity
fl. Sprout

sepnent
27. Wanderer
1L--..ll.----~..J 28, Undeniable

TERRiY~-:;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;~~;~~~~~~;~;~~
6AlfE'5 PlAY CALLS
EVERY MAH W!lO EVER
ElECTED TO DEFENP
~M HIS SOCIETY A 8l00Pl"

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

t~;-;:;;;;;;-::;:;-;:;;:,:;~ "1.-----.;;.

===
:

JJ.!;;;;t;;""'

..

--,::;---- - - -- ·HE MI&amp;HT BE LYIN&amp;

BAIIFU{

29. "Punch and

30. Judy"
Slgn otdog
Aries
31. Head

...

~RE1'll
~ ' ~· ;; ~

appendage

32. Become

~

solid

1

',

....

I

~

UNCONSCIOU&amp;~Y.

y

"'J

Now arranr• the cireled lettera
to form the ourprlae answer, u
•urr~ted by the above cartoon.

J

f\_ _A

11•••-~

31. Pref!x tor

1

Arr xxxxxJ
(btwen tomorrow)

com
or

.
· Yf'lllf'rd•y'•

color

-

38. Grudfe
~0. Nautical

~Joo.,...._,
•

CHAff

~•r: TltiJJ

SIIGI TIMELY CHISEL
J

i11 li.Jilll In rtlr"·- A FlASHliGHT

direction

U, More painful
411. Edith Cavell,
· forono

explosive

&lt;JRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a · how to work It:

AXl'DLJIAAXB .
It LON .GFELLOW
'
,
One letter •lm~ly o!MM. lor another. In thll l&amp;mple A It
~=::.t:~ L----1.-L-~
u.Od tor the three L's, X for· the .two 0'1, etc, IIIJIIIe !etten,
'"'""",..:.._ __.._..._...,.._,,
apoltrophes, the lenJth and formation of the wordl &amp;n all ....;;;.;,,....=;;_-~T"---,

L...:::::=::::_...::::

htnto. ICach day tho code !Otter.

&amp;n

different.

0~

CO\JRSE

A~ Qaotalloo

BXC

AZQD

A.J'DilXCD

UF Q s W,PJ,

EX OV

DX

VPFGW

r\MOI BltONliON AI.£rirr

DAlLY &lt;JRYP'J.'OqUOTE--'ete'l how t.O wort It:
A X Y D loB A-A X B
LONGI'J:LLOW
Olle leiter limply atanda tor another. In thll aamplo A. II
Ia

1

of the wonla are oil

XWUVKOQWYRXUA ,Q : X YUBW' (KOJ

.;'!~].,./

SA.SKVV2l
PWR
NYUO

WKA

D 'KVJ)

RVJ

QYKUpU

PWUVI

WUA.

NIOQV11 FKO
WUI'AIVG

QR

BROABUIOBI UA.

·

XtiJIJIUON

,(0 lfll Xlq J'eolllrll 87A41eatt, Joe.)

.

·,

DtiiYBI

WU A

~;!~~~~~~~~~~ ;:~~~~~~~:!
1 OON'T KNOIIIIIJIW I LOOK
~T IHE MfNO ... l AI.WA'IS

A ~to- QW 1&amp;1111

F QI"""'-·-

'CQLQXAQ

llnJth and !ormaUon

1111111. J:oclt day the code IItten are 4lftoront.

F

BXCP

Ill Z NNW P

JIZQVJ. - JXCPRW

45. colored

apootropheo, tj!e

JNZJilFQB
DIll W

"'· ODJ&gt;qnent

1lMcl for the throo L'a, X for the two 0 '1, etc. Slnf)o litton,

1 ~'o CI'1Jit.o!Uotel FIIU!'1' FIND THE MAN IN YOtlRIIBLI' Jl' YOU WIJ,.L INSPI!IIIl KANLINEIIS IN OTHJllt8,· - ~jjl!!:~:£..=:si

•

(0 lfll J:lar J'totu,..

eaUnr

aa.Mator

fl . High

'~

tor

35. See15
Acl'OIB

38. Other ·
3t: Clamorous
40. Adjuat.
the alarm

'

5. Sboelace
B. Dr.'a org.

oppoalte
20.W8(er

COlONEL.

be for

and-

YXDil

13. Heaped

•'

NAILS WlTHOU'l' IKAIIHINO YOUB J'.INGIIRII, HOLD '1'1111

• H.l JOaiR IN BOTH HANDII ..-IO'IIJtCJI UNKNOWN

11. Flt

the bleachers 25. "Street"
(8wds.)
ln
4. Early exile
O.r-

TO,......Il2. Entertaln

CARR~:

35. VersltJer
36. Step• In

QZFOJ

WHO ,O.RE

•'

Sonny

FU

K.~N~I~C.~~r~~

19. llyn.'I

IAKllli.XIIIX)

Jumhlr.11 t CRACK

34. Singers,

PINPOINT:$ THeiR Po.;mo&gt;J TO THEi
TH610&lt; PURSU!il&lt;:l' ~

AWAY, YOU
IN SHININCt

r-A:-N~D~N;::O;:;W:;-;:;IT=i;'s~;;~.,

18. June beetle

(Aaawen to•orrow)

dilettante

·oAJLY

SWES A
WWAT?

P"'so_M_V_PR-IS_O_N_E_R_GO_J'"',

16. bland (Fr.)

10

Mlllo-'IISIIISWII ...

32.More

I·

=J=::.;~ -~S-1-1-E!"'s•A-·--~-'il

coconut
meat
2. Btranre
3. Shout from

unit

Now arranre the circled lettera
to form the aurpriM anawer, u
suneoted by the above cartoon.

31. llkln
eondlUon

THE UNIFORM.

DICKTRAC't

1. Incrwot
:1. Truman's
blrthpla.ce
10':":::!:nt.

expre8111on

28. Gcal
29. Therefore

EVERY MAr-l

-

DOWN
1.Drled

J'eotordo.:r'1 Clrn&gt;-....to: II' YOU WANT '1'0 DRIV11 Df

25.0pera

contents

\'IHO EYER WORE

AOROIIS

THI5 15 1.16H1'

•·"

~~~DAILY CROSSWORD

. \---l+-

!

letters
27. Tankard

15 ~ERE A PlACE 10 HIDE
WHERE I WOULDN'T KNOW HER
PRAMA WA5 5lANDERI'I6 SO '
MANY Ol~ DECENT FRIEND!;?

-

,_

lJ I

24.Part ofa
ahoelace
25. Red-eyed
carp
s.AlEE'S PlAY

®!

15. Electrical

26. Arable
THE GENERAL HAS A RJINT, loll'S. GAR.
YOIJR DAUGHTER'S PLAI IS BOIJNP TO
MAKE &gt;OU A TARGET
fOR INTERVIEWERS,
CRAI'KS. A TJ&lt;1PTO
""~'"\1"50MEPlACE WHERE
YoU COUlO~ ' T BE
WACEP WOULD
SPARE lOU
TI&lt;AT.

~TfR --·

UM.,a -

23. Nothing

.. ...___ _ _____. LLL-=:::::::L__u.._...L-J

,.

POLICEwoMAN .

19.Step
21.Convent:

19. Mortal

MAKE OUT lii&lt;E
10U'RE FAlliNGo
11'110 A POOL OF

R!AOY FOR AJJMP?

F41/FC

4. Huck.atero
5. Pirate's
cache
1. Cathedral
part
8. Former

18.l&gt;oat
Spanish

O.K., FACE IN THE

OPI'OSITE DIRECTION

'

M!ll S'l'JLL

5£ARCH 1\?R Til!
MJS9li!G
ANt!lf ·..

®

SCA~ED ENOUGH 10
BE CAUTIOOS, ANNIE HQW... DO YOU FEEL

.I
;

V!CT114 OF THE

TERRY
. ··-· . " .

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

•!

XRBlot:IQ .·-- KlrD'f,JU.X

~ili£SAI#oElllili6

�..

•
iT

BARNIY

EEKAND~K

'IE SHORE fiNISHED UP
'&gt;'ORE CHORES MIGHTY
EARLV TODAY,
LOWEE7.Y--

'fEP-- BUT I
NEVER COULD
A-DONE IT
WITHOUT TATER'S
HELP.
ELVINEY

HE
SLEPT
TH'WHOLE

LAND
O'GOSHEN!!
' WHAT ON
AIRTH DID
HE ·Do?

8UT~O~R~e0&amp;~~------------~--------------~

!. HOPE 'IE DON'T

GOT A FULL HOUSE
TONIGHT

MIND EATIN' 01'\J TH'

BLESSET
MORNIN'·

~~~~A~H~e
MY DRE'AIJIS f

FRONT PORCH,

TATER

•

---

D::::::.~'RE:CKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
WHI&gt;.T DOYOU''ll-11!-JI( OF 1M

.

NEW GIRt. FRIEND?

ACTUALLY, I 0111.'1
GL.ASSSS .FO~ ~e
$CI-IOL.ARL'I EFFECT

'rtlU. '
i-1oNEYeEE.

NOr ONLV COOL!&gt;~~~ .
!lEAD ·I!VER't' ,l.iTTiiR-

'IlEA~

•.. UE

~AD,

PltQNOUNCED

--

AND 1RANSLA76C&gt;
EIIC~

LINE i

,..-A
zME

GFEBU
TCIIYNL

MSTKPZE
PIIODNYR
CltM$VovA!jp

.
YO'LL KNOW Wl-fi
WHEN 'K&gt;' READS

Al-l I-lOPE 'rl:l'LL ~

WEGOTTA

MAH PAPP'I'S

HAPPY HERE,
DATELESS, DEAR-

LEAVE!!

WILL!.'

f}.S'I!!

dotter because of
ou w!.l:h my
i
Y
I am trult ng
coking, and
,
i
for puritY' good c
.
your repootat on
omantic chile.

\

\

. she io already a r
.
noss · sense·
d uas straight
.
• 1700 erooke m
.
soon' • you travel
own which is
to the acre 1
,
ahead you' 11 come
h 'll likeWile be
morel!
• vif Gold- Then I e
burst i n
dateless no
and oatalesa will be

•
Fi~

NO TIME

tM AFRAID ~INJM . I

CONVERSATION,

GUfee 'THe S&lt;CITEMfNT
OF YOUR ARRIVAl. WAS

SYLVESTiR '
THIS IS
eusv lli'IY!

MV

100 MUCH FOR /olE: J

ALLEY OOP
GASOLINE ALLEY
I~ti llli kel.lou
better'n an~ bod~

i:; ....

me

Papa have
qo awaLJ 1

1 ever knew'

'',

'•,

.

'·

.

hm-OOP'S

•,,

. . ..:·

NEW FOUR·
AliEND,

'

. ..

There~ a
cloctorin
New York
who can
help him!

fOOIE)

K,4W-TEE, IS
PRO\ITNG 10 BE

.r

~E'Of',O. '

PES!" lHI\N

,a.m

U·lllo,S~ O..D ~-;-:

11M A FroFESSiooAL
Plc.KI'OCK6T!

~~ AA'.'GIJ'T CIWJI,o6D
ABIT, H~'I'Ei 'IOJ1

--- •r-.

Ll:\CCEP'l'ED AS Jl MEMBER OF
I!OOHAH'S "FLYJI!Cll'I:AROOME FOUR·

•

SOME "ANNir PROVES .IIH AP't STUVEI'i'l' "'

,
,

IHS!DJOUS
DR. HO · HO,
WHOSE HEt!CH-

~

J

'

JJ&amp;MOO!Lrn®"~ ~.~.,,_, ....~

DAILY CROSSWORD
DOWN

AOROIIS
1, O'Shanter

1.Typeo!
school exam

~. - boyl

8. French city
10. Bucket Item
ll. Run _.!...form

(2wds.)

(Swda.)
2."-You
Glad You're

·Y oul"
3.-Floor
cove~

12. Mtutary
meal

13. Verily
u . Gratify

18. Departed
11. Vandals

quoon

9. 1961

Oscar
·wtnner
(2.wdo.)
11. NotUral

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

. gilt
15. Fenc- ·
lng
move

(2 wds.)
B. Hurl

cloister
22. Snakes
30. Ceremonies
31. Have a dra-

kingdom or
Asia Minor

or venial
20. Merkel

TERRY ARRIVES AT
GENERAL JjRASSARO~

HOTEL TO REPORT
PR. ~OOEON sAFELY
IJACK HOME ...

SNAPPER 15·0110EREO
MCJ&lt; TO WASHINGTON.
HE ASKS TERRY TO
CONVEY HIS Af'Ol06Y
ANP A 51JG6E5TION
TO HI91ATE FRIEND!&gt;
WillOW,

MY INSTINCT !10E5 TEll
ME TO HIDE, CCX.ONEL
BUT I MUST NOT.

32. Primates
33. Function
37.on
your

matic part

ll!e!

(2 Wda.)

t

r

I

YE:lfl /,1'

i."OESN'T JUST
l.E A~THER

FATHfR. IT
CONVEMN 5

:olaturd•y'~

An"'w~r:

Whar

WOVEN

b~f' ~~

MAGPIE

LIKELY

nn e.tJJ~rt - A "WALKOVER"

~.

BaUor

21. Before

8. O~gon
...port

Clple

automobile
(2 wcls.)

'(I

33.Expunce

27. Maller
29, Prln·

•r• you telling
the fruth?

LEim

iron

(2 Wdl.)

9. Part of an

22. - tnone
2f.Pieued

Ye.t. .ar•a Auwer

pllng

Chri1Ue'1

torte

Una&lt;ramble thue four Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

many
26. Grap~ ,

7. Agatha

B11hlleato, r...)

JJ1YMW~;::t..:!:! -t..c

17.ll&amp;rvtn
23. Unlted

34. Uooda

1topwatch

or

Taolam
Sl. Board
or cloth

39, ECPtlan
solar

.'if~El'll

deity
fl. Sprout

sepnent
27. Wanderer
1L--..ll.----~..J 28, Undeniable

TERRiY~-:;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;~~;~~~~~~;~;~~
6AlfE'5 PlAY CALLS
EVERY MAH W!lO EVER
ElECTED TO DEFENP
~M HIS SOCIETY A 8l00Pl"

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

t~;-;:;;;;;;-::;:;-;:;;:,:;~ "1.-----.;;.

===
:

JJ.!;;;;t;;""'

..

--,::;---- - - -- ·HE MI&amp;HT BE LYIN&amp;

BAIIFU{

29. "Punch and

30. Judy"
Slgn otdog
Aries
31. Head

...

~RE1'll
~ ' ~· ;; ~

appendage

32. Become

~

solid

1

',

....

I

~

UNCONSCIOU&amp;~Y.

y

"'J

Now arranr• the cireled lettera
to form the ourprlae answer, u
•urr~ted by the above cartoon.

J

f\_ _A

11•••-~

31. Pref!x tor

1

Arr xxxxxJ
(btwen tomorrow)

com
or

.
· Yf'lllf'rd•y'•

color

-

38. Grudfe
~0. Nautical

~Joo.,...._,
•

CHAff

~•r: TltiJJ

SIIGI TIMELY CHISEL
J

i11 li.Jilll In rtlr"·- A FlASHliGHT

direction

U, More painful
411. Edith Cavell,
· forono

explosive

&lt;JRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a · how to work It:

AXl'DLJIAAXB .
It LON .GFELLOW
'
,
One letter •lm~ly o!MM. lor another. In thll l&amp;mple A It
~=::.t:~ L----1.-L-~
u.Od tor the three L's, X for· the .two 0'1, etc, IIIJIIIe !etten,
'"'""",..:.._ __.._..._...,.._,,
apoltrophes, the lenJth and formation of the wordl &amp;n all ....;;;.;,,....=;;_-~T"---,

L...:::::=::::_...::::

htnto. ICach day tho code !Otter.

&amp;n

different.

0~

CO\JRSE

A~ Qaotalloo

BXC

AZQD

A.J'DilXCD

UF Q s W,PJ,

EX OV

DX

VPFGW

r\MOI BltONliON AI.£rirr

DAlLY &lt;JRYP'J.'OqUOTE--'ete'l how t.O wort It:
A X Y D loB A-A X B
LONGI'J:LLOW
Olle leiter limply atanda tor another. In thll aamplo A. II
Ia

1

of the wonla are oil

XWUVKOQWYRXUA ,Q : X YUBW' (KOJ

.;'!~].,./

SA.SKVV2l
PWR
NYUO

WKA

D 'KVJ)

RVJ

QYKUpU

PWUVI

WUA.

NIOQV11 FKO
WUI'AIVG

QR

BROABUIOBI UA.

·

XtiJIJIUON

,(0 lfll Xlq J'eolllrll 87A41eatt, Joe.)

.

·,

DtiiYBI

WU A

~;!~~~~~~~~~~ ;:~~~~~~~:!
1 OON'T KNOIIIIIJIW I LOOK
~T IHE MfNO ... l AI.WA'IS

A ~to- QW 1&amp;1111

F QI"""'-·-

'CQLQXAQ

llnJth and !ormaUon

1111111. J:oclt day the code IItten are 4lftoront.

F

BXCP

Ill Z NNW P

JIZQVJ. - JXCPRW

45. colored

apootropheo, tj!e

JNZJilFQB
DIll W

"'· ODJ&gt;qnent

1lMcl for the throo L'a, X for the two 0 '1, etc. Slnf)o litton,

1 ~'o CI'1Jit.o!Uotel FIIU!'1' FIND THE MAN IN YOtlRIIBLI' Jl' YOU WIJ,.L INSPI!IIIl KANLINEIIS IN OTHJllt8,· - ~jjl!!:~:£..=:si

•

(0 lfll J:lar J'totu,..

eaUnr

aa.Mator

fl . High

'~

tor

35. See15
Acl'OIB

38. Other ·
3t: Clamorous
40. Adjuat.
the alarm

'

5. Sboelace
B. Dr.'a org.

oppoalte
20.W8(er

COlONEL.

be for

and-

YXDil

13. Heaped

•'

NAILS WlTHOU'l' IKAIIHINO YOUB J'.INGIIRII, HOLD '1'1111

• H.l JOaiR IN BOTH HANDII ..-IO'IIJtCJI UNKNOWN

11. Flt

the bleachers 25. "Street"
(8wds.)
ln
4. Early exile
O.r-

TO,......Il2. Entertaln

CARR~:

35. VersltJer
36. Step• In

QZFOJ

WHO ,O.RE

•'

Sonny

FU

K.~N~I~C.~~r~~

19. llyn.'I

IAKllli.XIIIX)

Jumhlr.11 t CRACK

34. Singers,

PINPOINT:$ THeiR Po.;mo&gt;J TO THEi
TH610&lt; PURSU!il&lt;:l' ~

AWAY, YOU
IN SHININCt

r-A:-N~D~N;::O;:;W:;-;:;IT=i;'s~;;~.,

18. June beetle

(Aaawen to•orrow)

dilettante

·oAJLY

SWES A
WWAT?

P"'so_M_V_PR-IS_O_N_E_R_GO_J'"',

16. bland (Fr.)

10

Mlllo-'IISIIISWII ...

32.More

I·

=J=::.;~ -~S-1-1-E!"'s•A-·--~-'il

coconut
meat
2. Btranre
3. Shout from

unit

Now arranre the circled lettera
to form the aurpriM anawer, u
suneoted by the above cartoon.

31. llkln
eondlUon

THE UNIFORM.

DICKTRAC't

1. Incrwot
:1. Truman's
blrthpla.ce
10':":::!:nt.

expre8111on

28. Gcal
29. Therefore

EVERY MAr-l

-

DOWN
1.Drled

J'eotordo.:r'1 Clrn&gt;-....to: II' YOU WANT '1'0 DRIV11 Df

25.0pera

contents

\'IHO EYER WORE

AOROIIS

THI5 15 1.16H1'

•·"

~~~DAILY CROSSWORD

. \---l+-

!

letters
27. Tankard

15 ~ERE A PlACE 10 HIDE
WHERE I WOULDN'T KNOW HER
PRAMA WA5 5lANDERI'I6 SO '
MANY Ol~ DECENT FRIEND!;?

-

,_

lJ I

24.Part ofa
ahoelace
25. Red-eyed
carp
s.AlEE'S PlAY

®!

15. Electrical

26. Arable
THE GENERAL HAS A RJINT, loll'S. GAR.
YOIJR DAUGHTER'S PLAI IS BOIJNP TO
MAKE &gt;OU A TARGET
fOR INTERVIEWERS,
CRAI'KS. A TJ&lt;1PTO
""~'"\1"50MEPlACE WHERE
YoU COUlO~ ' T BE
WACEP WOULD
SPARE lOU
TI&lt;AT.

~TfR --·

UM.,a -

23. Nothing

.. ...___ _ _____. LLL-=:::::::L__u.._...L-J

,.

POLICEwoMAN .

19.Step
21.Convent:

19. Mortal

MAKE OUT lii&lt;E
10U'RE FAlliNGo
11'110 A POOL OF

R!AOY FOR AJJMP?

F41/FC

4. Huck.atero
5. Pirate's
cache
1. Cathedral
part
8. Former

18.l&gt;oat
Spanish

O.K., FACE IN THE

OPI'OSITE DIRECTION

'

M!ll S'l'JLL

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Now You Know

10- T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., June 29, 1971

Ohio Finance Committee Approves JUly Budget
COLUMBUS (UPI)-TheOhio
H~ Finimce Committee ap·
proved a $674.5 million state
budget for the month of July
Monday night, setting up an
expected vo~ on the measure
today in the House that will
·keep the government operating
through the first month of the
new fiscal year.
The measure cleared the commit~ tn the identical form it
left the Senate last week, but
had to survive an attempt by
two Republican members to
shave $ii ~on off the appro·

prlatlon.
Rep. Robert l'ietzley, RLaura, proposed to take a flat
one-twelfth of the state's current budget for one year
through Wednesday, then add 5
per cent for state worker pay
hikes and $1.3 million for local
school support.
Only Netzley and Rep. John
Bechtold, RCincinnati, went
along with the proposal as the

budget prepared .by state Fi·
nance Director Harold Hovey
was passed 16-2,
·
Theinterimbudgetwasmade
necessary by the fact that tbe
General Assembly thus far has
been unable to agree on a
budget to carry the . state
through the next two fiscal
years.
Relief Checks Late
The House passed and sent to

BIJJckhurst Receives
Academy Appointment

the Senate a $7.8 billion bll1, day that relief check~! to Frank·
but hjla not come to grlpa with lin County families with
a tax plan to finance tbe pro- dependent children would be
grams. The Senate · II still held back until tbe budget is
working on the apjlroprlationa. formally passed.
Eveq 'the prospect of pi.Ulng Spokesmen said only Franklin
the ''mini budget" haa caused Count): would be delayed as
some sectors of govetru:nent to · long as the one-mdnth budget ts
slow up.
·
passed before the start of the
The Departnu;nt of Public new fiscal year ai 12:01 a.m.
Welfare and state Auditor Jo- Thursday. Checks to recipients
seph Ferguson announced Mon- 1n the other counties are not

due to be mailed until Thurs- have propQBed their own tax
day.
·
package, issued a statement
The House Republican leader- Monday challenging "editorial
ship is considering several tax writers to fully compare and
plans but one month has passed report to tbe people" the bene·
since the lower chamber sent Jits of their proposed 0.8 per'
the appropriations part of the cent personal income tax col·
budget to the Senate and still,o;.,Jected and distributed at the
there is no decision.
· loeallevel.
Aok for Comparison
Rep. John A. Bechtold, a
A group . of conservative member of the group, claimed
members of the House, who

... ·

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on the grounds and work crews reason th e rnatier did not come members for voting.
are busy cleaning up the before council Monday night; Grueser read a Jetter that had
grounds and making im- Clerk-Treasurer Grate sa1'd that been received by Fred Crow
provements to the track.
f ·1
f th
tte to
It has been decided that no al ure 0 e rna r come up explaining that a phar·
had been an oversight.
maceutical company seeking
repIacement will be. named for c ouncil hast he month of Ju1Y a plant loca.tion. The letter
th e Ia te Ered Le'ifh e1t, who was
th din
'di
president of the"board, because . to pass e or ance provl ng stated that they needed a 50
the replacement would serve for the $ii additional motor acre site, elevation not over
vehicle tax on each vehicle in 1,000 feet, one hour within a
only unUI the fairboard elec·
lions in the fall . Wallace the community. Council has corrunerclal airport and within
indicated that If the measure 100 miles of a glass plant.
Bradford has taken over the
presiding post.
does go through; proceeds will The plant which would hire 80
The board will meet in be used entirely for a street pet. male employes with a total
regular session at its offices on improvement program.
workforce of 100 would possibly
the fairgrounds Monday Allen Lee King, Independent locate here if Meigs County
.
candidate for mayor in the faD, could meet the requirements
evenmg.
was present and raised several with production to start In 1973.
questions. He asked If residents Chamber members agreed to
could drill their own wells and contact the company and seek
PRIZES OFFERED
Three cash prizes will be was told that law - both state the Information they requested.
awarded at the talent show to be and local - prohibits the Jack Carsey suggested that
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday tn drilling of wells within 450 feet the chamber commit themconjunction with the annual of a sewer line and that such selves for 8 Regatta next year
July 4th celebration of the locations are not available in in order to eliminate problems
Middleport. He asked about the that came up this year. No
Rutland Fire Department.
Registr~tion for the contest is status of an auxiliary police action was taken, however.
requested· but is not required. force and ·was told that Mid· Bob Jacoba noted that overall
Those wlahing to take part may dleport does have such a force the Regatta was successful and
contact Vernon Weber or any but it is inactive. He questioned adds to the growth of Pomeroy
fire department member. the timing on two traffic lights and Middleport. c. E. Blakeslee
Prizes will be $25 for first place, in the business section and it offered suggestions that would
$15 for second place and $10 for was explained by Chief of Pollee improve next year's event such
J. J. Cremeans and Mayor C. 0. as more local food stands and
third prize.
An ox roast will be held Fisher that the lights are timed moving the tractor pull to the
throughout the day and there as they are so that traffic will afternoon. Richard Chambers
will' be games and contests not be tied up on side streets off noted that people travel many
· miles to attend the Regatta and
during the celebration lobe held North Second Ave.
It was the contention of the to ·see the Ohio River and a
on the RuUand athletic field .
chief and mayor that changing great number of them would
the timing would make it dlf· like to take a boat ride.
fic~tfor a motorist to get out of Chambers suggested that such
GRAVESIDE SERVICES
Graveside services for the a s1de street where there Ill no a program be arranged for next
Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. lraffi~ signal.
.
year. He also noted that some
Clarence McDonald, Dexter
Mamtenance Supervisor · even enjoy walking scross the
Route 1, who died Monday at Harold Chase turned over to the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens, village a check for $26Z.31 which Tom Cassell suggested that a
were held at 2 p.m. today at the had~ payment made to him non-profit . oraanizatlon •be
Standish Cemetery at Dexter for his role as building inspector forn'led and a 'cilrector hired to
with the Rey. Keith Wise of- since appointed two months handle Regatta activities since
ago. Chase sa1d tha_t he per· it Is becoming more profitable
ficiating .
·
Besides her parents, the in· formed tbe duties pnmarily in each year
fall! is survived by a sister, conj~ction _with his every day
All sugg~tions will be taken
Shirley, a maternal grand- functions With the village and into copslderation it was noted.
'
mother, Mrs. Flossie Hoffman, did not feel entitled to the additlonal
payment.
He
was
and paternal grandparents, Mr .
,. .J_
and Mrs. 1 Rome McDonald, commended by Mayor Flaher Serv· ic
and
council
members
for
his
es
~ ouay
Dexter Route I.
generosity. Payme~t was made For Roush Girl
TO MEET WEDNESDAY
m accordance w1th village
NEW HAVEN
An regulations In regard to a Lisa Kay Roush, Infant
organizational meeting of ·the building inspector.
. daughter of Milton, 0., and
New Haven Emergency Squad Councilman Clifford Stumbo Beverly Fields Roush of New
unit wiD be held Wednesday at 8 said that Chase had been Lexington, died Monday at
p.m. at the City Building in New recommended .for a salary Holzer Medical Center.
Haven, it was announced today. increase last year but had not Other survivors in addition to
Officials said election of a gotten it. He said council should her parents are one brother,
squad leader, assistant squad approve the increase when it Travis, maternal gi-andparents,
leader and unit secretary • comes up' this year before the Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fields,
treasurer will be the main group in view of Chase's turning New Lexington ; paternal
topics of business. All interested back payment for serving as grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
persons are urged to attend.
building Inspector.
Oscar Roush, Mason; greatChase reported motor repairs grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
BODY RECOVERED
needed - at the pool and the David Fields, New Haven; Mr.
DAYTON (UPI) -The body marina and was tnatructed to and Mrs. Charles T. Edwards,
of David Vann, 14, Dayton, was proceed with the repair of the Mason, and Mrs. Ueulo Roush,
·recovered Monday · from pool pump motor and to discuss Letart, W. Va.
Stillwater River northeast of the marina motor repair with Gravepside services will be
here.
the Planning Commission.
held today· at Hoffman
Vann was reported drowned Mr. and Mrs. William Cemetery at 7 p.m., cooducted
Saturday when he fell into the Ohlinger appeared before by Foglesong Funeral Home.
river just north of where the council to discuss a stop sign on The Rev. David Flelda will
body was discovered by a Fourth St. near their home. officiate.
fishennan ..
They believe the sign should be -~:--SLATED SATURDAY
.on Walnut St. rather than on Chief Cremeans, Chase, and
An ice cream social will be Fourth. Council will in· councllmembers,Stumbo,John
held Salurday beginning at 6 vestlgate.
Zerkle, Jean Morgan, Richard
p.m. at the Bashan fire house.
Attending were Mayor Vaughan, David Ohlinger and
.The public Is invited.
Fisher, Clerk-Treasurer Grate, Lawrence Stewart.
1
' 11

MEIGS THEATRE

Point All Set

For Golf

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Regatta •••

New Restroom FacUities JnstJJlled (Continued from page I)
continued from page 1)
Mr. Hawley,
oody last night.
Cassell, Fred Crow, · Fred
.
.
Three new restroom facilities available.
.
Ask.ed If th e threa t of a Morrow, Ralph Graves, D. H.
SUperv180t
are being tnallllled on the Rock The board also is enlarging re feren durn ac t'Jon on th e Diener, Bob Jacobs, and Jack
Springs Fairgrounds by the the ~tile pole bam near tbe measure, If passed by council, Ke
rr.
Oaimed Monday
Meigs County Fairboard in county highway garage building bY vernon Se e had bee n the Forms
will
. be mailed to
··
, preparatiqn for the 1971 county

'"' - Formal
NEW HAVEN
Clarence "Dee" Hawley, 43, · fair. .
announcement by the Office II.
Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, died The fall'board has agreed to
VIncent Price in
the Director of Admissions at
·CRY ofihe
Monday
at Holzer Medical secure water service from tbe
The United States Merchant
BANSHEE
Center following a heart attack. relatively new Chester-Tuppers
Marine Academy of apGP
Friday, Mr. Hawley was Plains water district to make
pointment as Midshipman was
Essy Persson
taken to Veterans Memorial the additional restrooms
Hugh Griffith
received on June Z6 by Gary
Plus
Allen Blackhurst, son of Mrs.
Hospital by the Middleport Misl! Chaney In
THE VAMPIRE
Emergency Squad and was
Maryanne
Blackhurst
GorreU
LOVERS
later
transferred to Holzer
·and the late Robert Gorrell of
(Color)
Medical Cehter.
New York City
R
New Haven, W.Va.
Ingrid Pill
Mr. Hawley II survived by his
A 1971 graduate of Wahama
Kenda Chaney, Darwin,
Peter Cushing
wife,
Dianne (Phillips) Hawley,
High School, Gary Is a member
daughter
of Mr. · and Mrs.
one daughter and one son,
of the New Haven United
Wed., Tllur., Fri.
Ingrid and Tom, both at home, Kenneth Chaney, left Thursday
Methodist Church, Tbe Herbert
June 30 . July 2
his mother, Lola Hawley, viii jet from Columbus for New
H. Jarrett Chapter of the Order
Double Feature Program
Pomeroy; three brothers, John York City where she met and
of DeMolay and ' the National
HOUSE OF
L. in VIetnam; Ralph of Mid· accompanied other counselors
Thespian Society.
DARK SHADOWS
Jonathan Frid
dleport; Bob of Pensacola, Fla., to the twin camps, Ken-Mont
During his high school years,
Grayson Hail
who is serving with the U. S. and Ken-Wood for boys and
he served as co-business
Joan Bennet
.Navy, one sister, Phyllis Stone, girls. ·
manager of the school
- PiusPomeroy, and several other The camps are located at the
newspaper, vice president of
" FLAREUP"
G.A. JILACDtlUr
top of the Berkshire Mountains
I Metrocolor)
the Drallla Club, participated in
relatives.
near
Kent, Connecticut. Miss
Raquei Welch
Mr. &amp;wley was employed by
track
and
wrestling
and
played
James Stacy
a supporting role in tbe, Junior Marine Academy, dedicated by the State of Ohio for the past 18 Chaney will be employed as a
Class Play . In 1970, he President
Franklin
D. years. At the time of his death, general counselor for eight
represented Wahama at the 5th Roosevelt in 1943, takes its he was a project supervisor. He weeks and will also be In a
Arqly Science and Humanities place as one of the world's was a member of the F.O.E. specialty counselor position
Symposium held at west foremost institutions in tbe field 2171 Pomeroy, Institute for doing baton instruction. She is a
Virginia University. During his of maritime education. It Is Certified Engineering former student of Miss Gloria
Tonight, June 29
seni!l' year, be was chosen' as located at· Kings Point, Long Technicians, and the Trinity Buck·. Miss Chaney will be a
junior this fall at Ohio
-l;,ETCARTER
one of four class members for Island, New York, and has a Church, Pomeroy.
- 'teclut!tolo,....The Skllled Skulla Debating student population of 1,000 Funeral services Will be held University where she Is
,Michael Caine
Team. .
students enrolled in a four year Thursday ill 1 p.in. at Ewing majoring in health and physical
'ian Hendry
A five-year member of the course for Midshipmen. Chapel with tbe ltev. Robert education.
John Osborne
award-winning Wahama High Graduates are commissioned as Kuhn Officiating. Buri!ll will be
Britt Ekiand
"R"
School Band, Gary was chosen Ensigns and receive Bachelor in Beech Grove Cemetery. Infant Claimed
to be an AJI.,State Band member of Science degrees. They are Friends will be received at the
Colorcartoons:
Hide and Go, Sidney
in 1969, 1970 and 1971. In 1969, he obligated to serve on active · funeral home at anytime.
MASON- Rachel Lee Dillon,
Misunderstood Giant
toured Florida with the All· duty for a period of five years
infant daughter of Kenneth and
state Band and recently par- following graduation. . .
SHOW START 57 P.M.
Geneva
Evener Dillon of
ticipated in the Youth Day
Candidates for Midshipmen
Mason died Monday at Holzer
concert held on the lawn of the are selected inlitially on tbe
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Medic~! Center. The lllfant was
state's capitol in celebration of ' basis of results of federal civil
June 30-Juiy 1
born June Z3 at Holzer.
west VIrginia Day.
service examinations. Each
NOT OPEN
·SUrvivors in addition to her
The United States Merchant Congressman is allotted len
parents include three sisters,
;;;.~ nominations and those chosen
Teresa
Susie and Diana and
must compete statewide on
college board examinations for PT. PLEASANT - "It's on'e br~ther Johri, all at home.
Gravesid~ riles will be held
four (4) vacancies allotted to going to be a tremendous golf
tournament."
Wednesday at 2p.m. at Graham
West Virginia.
This
was
the
comment
conducted by
Cemetery
Gary was nominated In
December,
1970,
by Monday of Bill Rardin, Jr., as Foglesong Funeral Home.
Congressman Ken ~bier who he announ.ced over 80 enlcies Friends.may call at the funeral
makes his nominations solely on have been receiyed for the July home from 7 to 9 this evening.
5th Golf Tournament at the
The Rev . Mrs. Bernice
merit.
Winkler
will officiate.
Hidden
Valley
Country
Club.
Final appointments are made
on the basis of scholastic Tourney thainnan Rardin
examinations plus an objective reminded golfers of the Meigs, .
NOW YOU KNOW
evaluation by United States Gallls,.Maaon area that July I is
the
deadline
for
entering
by
The
first known use of a
Naval personnel. Candidates
are tanked in order of merit, ~igning up at the HVCC. motion picture camera that did
state or geographical locatloo~ Pairings will be announced on · not remain stationary while it
and nationally. Tbe objective Saturday, July 3, and Sunday, was taking pictures was in 1896
evaluation takes into con- July 4, in local newspapers. A when a cameraman fixed a
sideration scholastic record, total of $300 worth of prizes will camera to a gondola to
extra curricular activities and be awarded to winners in the photograph Venice.
evidence of capacity to assmne tourney.
KEEP YOUR BALANCE!
leadership and responsibility.
On April 22, Garfwas notified OBSEkV~CE ntUIISDAY
NO DAMAGE REPORTED
by
Congressman Hechler be· REEDSVILLE - In ob· No damages from Monday
It's easier to keep track of
had been selected as a principal servance of the new United night's stonn were reported at
expenditures with a checking account
candidate for appointment.
States Postal Service the the Meigs County Sheriff's
On
July
20,
he
will
report
to
and it's reassuring to know that
Reedsville Ptwt Office will hold Department. However, in the
Kings Point to begin a two week an open hOUie Thursday.
village of Syracuse, electric
your cancelled checks are proof
orientation period prior to Punch and cookies will be power was off for apclasses .which will begin tbe served by the Girl Scouts and a proximately 45 minutes. Power
of payment. Open an account today!
first week in August.
few new issue envelopes will be was alao Interrupted in the
available. Michael ·Perry ind Racine area.
Open Your Account Today!
Johnny Smith will ralle the new
CHICKEN BARBECUE
flag at &amp; a.m. D. C. Riebel is
A chicken barbecue will be postmaster.
WHf N YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
held Monday at Eastern High
LAD INJURED
School
sponsored
by
Eastern
Dennis
Winefordner, 15,
PITTS&amp;URCH
Athletic Boosters. Serving will
Columbus, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
begin at 11:30 a.m. In addition
to the chicken, ice cream, cake
the Pomeroy &amp;R squad early
-...II~CI~ICINNATI
Monday afternoon where he
and soft drinks will be sold. Ball
was treated for a laceration of
games are also scheduled
MIDDLEPORT
during the day.
the foot received from 8' power
OHIO
mower. He is visiting in
Harrisonville. Wlnefordner was
diamlased following treatment.

Tonight, June 29
Double Feature Program

Contends...

edltori!ll writers "have not told ·
the people the full story regard•
ing the tax batUe in Columbus."
He said the news media had
ignored cost comparisons show·
ing the county tax to cost only
$9' million to adnllnlster while
the governor's proposed graduated state Income tax would
cost $40 million.

Tournament

l.iibens ~alional

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SEE THE NEW 1972

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STEREOS· COLOR TELEVISION • BLACK AND
WHITE TELEVISION • PORTABLE TV's.
'

CoHons
CoHon Blends
Fall and
Summer
Fabri(:s

.FABRIC SHOP
SINGER S,tt,LI:S &amp; SERVICE
McOUL' S&amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

::.:::::....==

liS W. Sec011d

.

992·2284

Weather
Partly cloudy, continued hot
and humid with chance II.
lhunderllmt:. today' tonight
lnd Wtdnncla7. Hlcha today
llld aca1n Wedn11117 in the
111111 lo upper .... lmla lonlcbt
,Ill tbe lo!! lo mid 'lal.

'

Visit the music department 2nd floor -and take a look at the new fine 1972
.· RCA Line. Many new features this year-such as XL-100 Classic color set
. with the accumatic ~olor monitor - Ill!~ RCA Computer c:i-aftld ster;o •
new "Cushlonaire" sealed speaker system ·· new look• in RCA Portable
TV sets· black and white.consoln. Ask for a demonstration of any models
you'd lille.
I Use Elberfelds sensible credit service if you like.
.

Elberfelds. .In .Pomeroy

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, . . . .. ; - . .

The aardvark, a buri'owing
nocturnal African mammal that
feeds on ants, has a long snout, .
a snakelike tongue and a heavy .
tapering .tail, derives its name
from a coin]linatioh of the ·
words aar~ (earth) and vark
(pig). .

POME~OY- MIDDLEPORT,

B
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1 'ew~ ... rn
rre1 s :

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By Uuited Press Interoational
COLUMBUS - GOV. JOHN J. GILLIGAN said Tuesday
President Nixon's veto Of the public works program could cost
Ohio as much as $161 million in federal funds between now and
1978.
Gilllgan termed the veto "an irresponsible and tragic blow to
the economy of Ohio."
Nixon vetoed the $5.5 billion measure, designed to reduce
unemployment, but said he would support a similar job program.
"It is particularly significant to me that the President has
offered Ohio $212 million in his much-beralded revenue sharing
plan, but thinkS nothing of taking $161 million away by vetoing
this legislation," Gilligan said.
·
COLUMBUS - THE U. S. SUPREME Court ruling
prohibiting some state aid to private schools probably will have
lltUe effect on Ohio schools, an attorney for several non-public
schools in Ohio said 'fuesday.
David Young, attorney for Catholic, Lutheran and Jewish·
operated schools in the Columbus area, said the Ohio legislature
would "not be governed by scare tactics of hasty decisions" but
probably would discover that the court ruling still permits certain
kinds of assistance.
·

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Central Asia.
Tass said the causes of the
crew's death are being invest!·
gated. The men spent Z3 days,
17 hours arid 40 nilnutes in
orbit, and space scientists have
speculated in the. past that
prolonged weightlessness and
the sudden shock of re-entering
earth's gravity could cause
h ~art failure.
It may take weeks and
months before the exact 'cause
of the disaster Is ascertained

osmo:Dauts
and then even more time to
devise methods of overcoming
the danger.s.
The SovietUnion plunged into
national mourning for the three
heroes who were in space six
days and 41 minutes longer
than any other men. Moscow
radio played funeral music and
Muscovites expressed shock
and horror at the latest of tbe
trouble and· tragedy that has
plagued the Soyuz manned
space program.

The cosmonauts' ashes will
be buried in the Kremlin wall
with other heroes of the Soviet
Union following a state funeral
in Red Square.
Messages of condolence
poured in from around the
world- Pope Paul VI. President
Tito of Yugoslavia, western scientists, including the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space
Administration which said the
loss of the cosmonauts · is a
terrible tragedy.

To Americans it recalled the
loss of three American astro-•
nauts wh·o died on Jan. Z7, 1967,
when an electrical spark ignited
the pure oxygen in their cabin
on the ground at Cape Kennedy
- Virgil I. Grissom, Edward H.
White and Roger B. Chaffee .
That tragedy postponed the
American Apollo program for
eight months. The tragedy of
Soyuz II is expected also to
postpone the Soviet space pro-

/

WASKINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON called a meeting of

the NaUonal Security Council today for a top-t&lt;Hlottom policy
review to prepare for the July 8 resumption of Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks (SALT) with the Soviet Union.
The next round of the anns talks is expected to be crucial
because it will test the compromise approach the two nuclear
superpowers annpunced on May 20.

ea

'. .
gram and ·Russian plans to
build cosmograds or orbiting
cities in the sky.
Col. Francois Violette, head
of the French space medical
service, said in Paris today the
death of the three men could
have come from blood circulation problems - that prolonged
weightlessness could make the
heart and circulatory system
lazy and that it could fail with
the shock of re-entry.

July 8 Speaker
R. H. (Bob 1 Anderson, vice an engineer, will speak ~bout

president of Stanley Consultants, Inc., will speak to the
membership of the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council at its annual recreation
meeting and golf tournament it
was announced today by E. E.
Davis, president of the SEORC.
Davis said the meeting will be
held at the Portsmouth Elks
Country Club on Thursday, July

SEOUL -VICE PRESIDENT Spiro T. Agnew paid a 50minute courtesy call today on President Park Chung Hee and said
afterward he expected no "hard negotiations" on a number of
sensitive issues during his six-day visit to South Koreal.
Agnew wore a silk top hat and a cutaway coat as he arrived In
a drizzling rain at the Blue House presidential palace. The visit
had been scheduled for 2o minutes but it stretched into almost an
hour.

MOSCOW - A SOVIET 'COURT in Kishinev, Moldavia,
sentenced nine Jews to from one to five years in prison today for
nnti-SOvlet activities, Jewish sources said.
,
The eight-day trial was cqmected with an abortive ~!tempt to
hijack a Soviet passenger airliner from Lel!ingrad to Sweden a
year ago. Eightofthenlnehad pleaded guilty.

.

AndersonNamed

COLUMBUS ..;. IN A MOVE to protect the consumer from ·
door-to-door salesmen, the Ohio Senate unanimously approved
Tuesday a measure giving the buyer' three days to reconsider his
purchase If !twas made under a high pressure sales pitch.
Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R-Findlay, chief sponsor of the
legislation, said persons subjected to high-pressured salesmen
should be protected from purchasing goods they don't want.

WASHINGTON - THE GOVERNMENT closes its books
tonight on the red ink~tained 1971 fiscal year which produced the
second largest budget deficit since World War II and the fifth
largest in the nation's history,
Although the final figures will not be compiled for about a
month, it already is certain that spending exceeded income by
about $20billion during the 12months that began July I, 1970.

TEN CENTS

•

ovtet
MOSCOW (UPI) - The three
Soviet cosmonauts who set an
endUrance record for space
flights,died mysteriously today
on their return to earth, the
Soviet news agency Tass
reported.
.
Soyuz 11 cosmonauts Georgy
Dobrvoisky, 43, Vladislav Volkov, 35, and Viktor Patsayev, 36,
were , found strapped in their
seats "without any signs of
life" when their spacecraft softlanded as .planned in Soviet

·PHONE 992-2156

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1971

OHIO

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Weather

Partly cloudy and warm .
ton1ght with a chance of
thundershowers and lows from
the upper 60s to'the middle 7115.
Variable cloudiness and not as
warm Thursday with thun·
dershow.ers likely, highs in the
. mid 80s to the lower 9&lt;1!.

Devoted To The I~tereati 0/ Tlae Meigs-Ma10n Area

VOL XXI~ NO. 55

I

•

' .

8.

ANNUALLY the Meigs County Fair Board attempts one .
major improvement to the Rock Springs Fairgrounds

prepara tory to the amual fair. This year, an addition is being
constructed to the pole cattle barn on the grounds for use at
the 1971 fair to be held in August.
·

':.:~;;~:;~~~~~~::~:;; Meigs Couple Set For
today ruled a federal law
prohibUlng natlooal bauks
from making loans to
political candidates or
organizations
is
unconstitutional.
Judge Joseph P. Klnneary,
In making the ruling, ordered
charges dismissed against
the First National
of
Cincinnati and the First Knox
National Bank of MOUI!t
Vernon.

'ank

Need House Stand CIA Chief
On Vote 18 Issue Summoned
To Israel

By KAY CHRISTENSEN by Sens. Harry L. Armstrong,
COLUMBUS (UPI) - With R-Logan, and Paul R. Malia,
only two dissenting votes, the R,Westlake.
By United Press International
Ohio Senate has put its stamp Kurfess,however,saidhewas The director of the Central
of approval on a proposed in no rush to have Ohio be• Jntelllgence Agency (CIA) is in
amendment to the U. S. Con- coineone of the ratifying states. Israel for a round of talks with
. stltution lowering the voting age "I personally am in no mood top government officials, diploIn the nation to 18. Pressure to play games with it," he matic sources in Tel Aviv said
was expected to bEl exerted for said. "But l.f somebody over today.
the House of Representatives to there (the Senate) wants to play
The visit by CIA chief
do likewise.
numbers games and make Ohio Richard C. Helms came at a
On a 30.2 vote, the Senate the 38th state, that's A.()K with crucial juncture tn Middle East
adopted the heavily - sponsored me."
diplomacy, with a possible
resolution Tuesday that its span·
Israeli..Sovlet detente in the
sors hope will result In Ohio
Could Make History
cards, Israel . upset over a
being among the 38 states need- Aronoff consulted with the "phantom" peace plan and
ed to ratify the federal amend- speaker prior ~ the Senate Jerusalem and Washington in
men!.
vote, but he would give no sf- apparent disagreement over the
Over In the House, Speaker finnation that Kurfess had Soviet involvement in the Arab
Charles F. Kurfess, R·Bowling agreed to .place the bill on this world.
Green, said he was "in no week's agenda.
In Washington, admin·
mood to play giunes with it," Speaking on behalf of the istration officials said the
but would fit it into the sched- me~sure, Senate Minority Lead- United· States is prepared to
ule if pressed to do so.
er Anthony 0. · Calabrese, D· present Israel and Egypt some
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R.Cincin- Cleveland, urged the House to specific suggestions on
natl, chairman of the Eelections take ,swift action.
negotia ling an ag(eement to
Committee and the re~olution 's . "Today Ohio will make his· reopen the Suez Canal, closed
chief sponsor, said the lower tory," Calabrese said. "If we since the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
voting age was a sure thing, could move this resOlution with Although the possibility of
whether Ohio acted or not.
dilpatch to llie House and if taking a more positive ap"I think it is obvious that they could change the rules and proach has been under con·
the 16-year-old v.ote - the pro- pass this resolution, then Ohio sideration for some time, the
posed 26th amendment to the could be among tlul 38 states to Officials admitted it had been
Constitution - is an idea that ratify the amendment.
hastened by the furor over the
has become a reality," he said. "This is the voice of the pea- "phantom memorandum.''
Time Running Out
pie of Ohio to give the 16-yearAronoff noted 35 states have oids a chance to express them· Veterans M~morial Hospital
already ratified the amendment selves," he added.
ADMITTED - Miles Cain,
and several other states are Aronoff noted Oklahoma had Albany; · Lizzie Hanning,
prepared to take swift ac\ion on .called' a special session for Middleport ; Anne . Alley,
It.
Thursday to take action, Ala- Racine ; Frances Yeauger,
"As of today, with Illinois bama had technically approved Pomeroy.
taking its action, 35 of our sis· it but was waiting for signing
DISCHARGED - Otis Cole,
ter states have taken affirms· procedures, one chamber in Kathy Callender, John Chaney,
tiveactionforthisamendment," North Carolina has passed the Nickolas rille, Grace Gloeckner
Aronoff said.
:measure, and both utah and and Tamara,HUnnell.
"This a~ust Senate hils an Wyoming were ready to call
opportunity today to give the special sessions.
NO PAPER MONDAY
16-year-olds the right to vote in · Sen.HarryMeshel,O-YoungsThe Sentinel will . not be
all elections, not some distant town, summing up t~e urgency
published
Monday, July 5, . in
time tn ~ future, but now,'' ·of the situation, said " It will be
he wild.
like the bride left at the altar, order to permit employes to
The two negative "votes wooed and won , but not enjoy- · observe the Independence
holiday.
against the resoluliCIII we~ cast ing approval of clergy,:•

July Tour In Europe
The "do, re, mi's" of' two
Meigs County young people will
be heard tn several European
countries in July as they join the
Ohio Youth Choir on a jaunt to
the "old country."
. Making the three week trip
are Ani~ Fultz, daughter of ·Mr.
and Mr. John ' Fultz of Mid·
dieport, and Duane Will, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will of
near Rutland.
As members of the Ohio
Youth Choir, Miss Fultz and
Will have been traveling across
Ohio over the past few months
taking part In concerts by the ·
choir. In 'addition, there have
been record cutting sessions
and rehearsals. In all, they have
taken part in Z4 concerts under
the direction of Glenville
Thomas'.
Thomas, born in Ystra·
dgynlais, Wales ; has had
extensive music training. He
has presented recitals at the
famed Carnegie Hall and hils
been soloist tn many New York
City Churches.
Miss Fultz and Will are to join
the other 122 choir members
Monday evening in Columbus
and wiD leave vja TWA for
London, England.
Arriving Tuesday, July 6, the
choir will go to Swansea
University where members will
have accommodations for a
three-night stay In Wales.
They'll do a concert at Ystar·
dgnlais, the birthplace of the
dir.ector, and on Thursday,
another concert will ' be
presented at Moriah Chapel in
Uaneilli.
Leaving Swansea via train on
July 9, the choir will ,go to
London where they will go
sightseeing to such points as
Dickens' famed Old Curiosity
Shop, St. Paul's Cathedral and
the Tower of London. On July
10, the sightseeing will continue
with visits to Piccadilly Circus,
Buckingham Palace and
Westminster· Abbey belng included. Following lunch on
Sunday, July ll, the choral
group will go to Bournemouth
for dinner and another concert.
After a visit to Dover, the
choir will drive through
.
Belgium and enter Holland
going to Rotterdam and then to
Amster dam for a short sightseeing . ~ . Based at Rot·
terdam tbe chorus will make a
number of trlpa to points of
Interest and will &amp;lve a concerl
(~tinued on Page 20)

The meeting and tournament,
hosted by the Portsmouth
Chamber of Commerce, Is an all
day affair with the golf piay
beginning in the morning and
continuing throughout the day.
Vern Miller, president o! the
National Bank of Portsmouth, Is
. the tournament director.
Bob Anderson, a graduate of
South Dakota State College and

Study Continues
WASHINGTON ( UPI) Government officials as early
as .the Eisenhower adminlstra·
lion failed to tell .the 'American
public and Congress of the risks
faced by the United State• In
its involvement in Vietnam,
according to a top ·. secret
Pentagon ~tudy of the war.
The summary of the 47volume study also outlined the
scope of the huge American
involvement In VietnallJ, pointing out that during the
presidency of Dwight D.
Eisenhower South Vietnam
, became the .fifth-ranking reel·
p\ent of American aid. ·
It said the Southeast Asian
country had the largest economlc aid. mission anywhere in
the world by 1958 and the
world's only military aid
misston commanded by a
lieutenant general.
Copies of portions of the
Pentagon report were furnished
to UPI lo(!ay by Sen. Mike
Gravel, D·Alaska. Charging
P.resldent Nixon was trying to
"manipulate the United States
Senate into silence," he made
several hundred pages of the
study public at a specially
called subcommittee hearing
that lasted into the early
morning hours.
The papers released by
Gravel were a summary of the
same Pentagon papers pub·
lished in part by the New York
'

'DUANE WILL, aon II. Mr. and MrS. N(I'JIWI Will, near
Rutland, and Anita Fultz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Fultz, Middleport, In the official uniform of the Ohio Youth
Choir for Its European tour. Win and Miss FUltz will leave
from Columbus oil M~day for a three week tour with the
vocal chorus.

Portions Of. Roads Are Vacated
The Meigs Coun ty Commissioners adopted a resolution
to vacate portions of three roads.
in Salem Township and one road
in Columbia Township following
a viewing and hearing 'fuesday.
Portions of roads to be
vacated in Salem Township are
County Road 9, Township Roads

21 and 22 and County Road 6 In
Columbia Township.
In other business, a bid for
gasoline· and diesel fuel was
awarded to Texaco, Inc.
Attenoing were Bob Clark and
Warden Ours, commissioners,
and Martha Chambers, clerk.

~::::;:::;::::·::~:::~:::::::::::~~;:::t.::::::;:::~;::;:::::::;::::::::::::~~:::::~:~t::::::::~;,

Obi 0 Extended 0utJook F
rlday lbrough Sunday: ·
seasona blY warm tbtough
th
rlod lth L--e pe
w
e.......,e of
showers 08 SIUlday. Highs In
the low to middle 80s aalllows
f
Ill
,...
·
~~~~r .:. upper - to the
:':""-~"O'Xe&lt;:,•,,.,_,.,._,_,,:;.;:,:'{i,.,,,,,:,,,,~,@H%%);"''

SEEKS D1VOR':'"
A sul' t for d!'vorce ""'
has been
filed in Mei"s County Common
•
Pleas Court by Brenda Sue
Taylor, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, against
Gary Lee Taylor, Ml'ddleport,
Rl. I, charging gr.oss neglect of
duty and extreme cruelly.

future recreation developments
in southern and southeastern
Ohio as a result of the Central
Ohio Water Development plan
which is now being formulated.
This plan covers the drainage of
the Scioto and Hocking Rivera,
Raccoon, Symmes and Ohio
Brush Creek systefn and 224 ·
miles of the Ohio River V.alley.
Anderson is responsible for
the recreational planning in the
development plan. He is a
member of several professional
socltles and the author of
several papers on water
resource development and
pipelines.
He is presently the manager
of the Cleveland Office, Stanley
Consultants, Inc., directing
activities of the company in the
eastern United States.

Times, the . Washington Poet
and ·other newiiJ)lpen, ·
The Justice l)epattment was
granted 1a temporary federal
coiU't order against further
publication of sensitive portions
of the report. The case was
appealed to the Supreme Court.
The report showed that
during the late 1950s, Al!lerlcan
intelligence officials in South
Vietnam. were reporting to the
U.S. government that despite
substantial U.S. assistance,.the
regime of president Ngo Dinh
Diem was under internal attack
and its use of the assistance
was "below that which Is
politicallydeslrable. "
"While classified policy papers through 1959 thus dealt
with risks, public statements of
U.S. officials .did not refer ·to
the jeopardy," the Pentagon
report summary said. "To the
contrary, the picture presented
to the public and Cof\gress by
... administration spokesmen
was of continuing progress,
virtually miraculous improvement, year-in an&lt;l year-out."
1n 1954, soon after the defeat
of the French and the signing
of the Geneva accords, the
r.eport said, an American
intelligence estimate concluded
the chances of establishing a
stron~. anti-Communist regime
in Vietnam were poor an~ that
the situation was likely to
continue lb deteriorate progressively.

·Reds Fighting
South of DMZ
•'

SAIGON (U.PI) - Military
spokesmen today reported renewed heavy fighting just below
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
~orth Vietnamese units inflicte~ heavy losses on a South
Vietnamese militia unit and
carried out both shelling and
ground assaults against a
government mountaintop out·
post near the DMZ.
As the fighting flared again
along the DMZ, President
Nguyen Van Thieu predicted
the "final confrontation" with
North Vietnam would ~orne In
1973 after most U.S. troops had
withdrawn. He said it woUld
come in the area 9outh uf the
neutral buffer strip,
The U.S. command reporttll
. meanwhile that three Americans
killed and eight

were"

wounded today when plastic
explosives blew up in their
truck near Da Nang. Two other
Gls died in the crash of their
helicopter and IZ were woundf!d
when a U.S. helicopter acclder:·
tally fired rockets into their
position.
South Vietnamese marines
atop Ba Ho moun'l!in five miles
south of Fire Ba~ Fuller carne
under attack Several times late
Tuesday and today MilitarY
spokesmen said 11 North
Vietnamese were slain In a
Communillt grOUd attack but
that i111e of the 320 marines at
tbe outpost was wounded. It
was hit by 122mm roc:llell
today following au. aucb
barraaes Tuesday. OR« marine
was ~lied and ~~ woundld In
a rookel attack TllndSJ •daht·

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