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I

Nixon Turns
11 uaw rn. Iatcnati41Ul

Pr d Jent Nlzon amounced a new
ec•••mlc coune fw lbe· natlon Sunday
Jqbt ID fQDbat lnftatton. It Included a ·9(1.
daf ~ on. wages and prices, tax
beaellta IJid wbat amounted to lDiofflclal
dnlluaticll of llie dollar, acU01111 that sent
wava of lhock, astonishment and concern
aOtaid the world ·
·
For lbe _.ld tbe mosUmpirtant part of
NIPI'a JII'Oifllll was bls announcement
lbe Uillted S1atm would no looger convert
fllrei&amp;JWield dollaJ:s Into gold, a move tliat
1Aiilatenll7 cbalged 111e z;.year.old ln·
tematlonal monetary system. Nixm alao
•deled a 10 per.cent surcharge on such
Imports aa automobiles, a move that
4lsmayed fcnign

manlifai:turm.

For tile ~can public the h!gbllgh~
of bl.l program were a IIGoday freeze on
wage~, Prices and rents, repeal of a 7 per
cent automobUe excise tax to aid the
automotlve Industry, a $100 ina"eaae in
personal tax exempt101111, an investment
tax credit of 10 per cent now and 5 per cent
later to firma ll(lelldlng that much in
~tim or expansion; a $4.7 billion
cut in federal spending, and slashing the
federal payroll5 per cent whUe postpooing
a $1.3 billion pay increase.
Some measures Nixon can impose
immediately, others require congressional
approval.
"We wUl break the back of inflation,"
Nixon said in a hastily..arranged radio lind
television address in which he abandoned

his frequently-expressed distaste for
controls. He called upon the "greallless of
a great people~· to make h!f program work
volunblrlly with a few hundred federal
overseers but with the threat of injunctions
and a $5,000 fine for violatloos.
The major money markets in Europe
closed Immediately so governments could
assess the situation. But in Tokyo the
dollar took a beating and the Japanese
government bought up $300 million of
dollars to keep the dollar from plunging
~strowdy.
'
The British cabinet went into emergency
session in London. President Georges
Pompidou of France announced he was
Interrupting his vacation WedneSday to
return to Paris for a crisis session. The

Swiss government held ·an emergency
meetlnj(.
Paul A. Volcker, U.S. Treasury undersecretary for moneblry affairs, new to
London today to brief Brltlsh and
European officials on the Ni:J:on moves
that sttvck America's allies like a thun·
derbolt. WeSt Germany sent a high level
delegation to London for talks with
Volcker..
The Nixon economic plan drew mixed
reaction in Washington . Republican
members of Congress, governors and busi·
ness executives expressed approval.
Labor leaders reserved judgment, but an
AFL-CIO spokesman said the controls
outlined by Nixon did not meet its criteria
for support.

senate DemOCrl!tic Leader Mike
Mansfield said, "I'm delighted that his
patlence has Iinally run out. I'm pleued
he is facing up to the realiUes of the
situation." Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, I).
S.D., called the actioo "madness.~' Sen.
William Proxmlre, D-WIS., Nixoo's chief
economic critic in Congress, praised the
plan.
People across the nation expressed
opinions ranging from "I'm glad" to ''He's
fighting for survival." Paul Boen)linger,
28, of Philadelphia, said, "It's not going to
affect us too much personally. My wife
said she wanted to buy a foreign csr and
will now have to pay about $700 more for
it"

Nixon exempted such imports as coffee

and sugar frCIII the 10 per cent Ucharge
on impCI"ta. The 10 per cent ~chiqe m
such ltema u foreign Cll'l brought Joj In
Detroit and dlamayed foreign manilfac1 ·
turers. British manufacturers were ·
gloomy. Australian manufacturers said .
they were "downright 8J11rY."
I ·
-Nixon's-decisim io allow the u.s. dollar
to ''float" to Its natural level waa espected
to bave tittle Immediate effect on normal
buying in the United States, but it waa
alinost certain to phmge foreign mmey
markets into chaos unW th~ international
monetary system can be overha1J[ed.
Its effect on American tourists at.'oad
was immediate. In West Germany, for
example, _tourists were getting fewer
(Continued on Page 8)

Future ClQudy
By JOHN T. KADY
Ulll1ed Press Ialema&amp;lonal
Industry and labor leaders
throughout Ohio today generally
agreed that President Nixon had
taken a step in the right direclioo in instituting wage and
price controls {or 90 days but
said many questions remain to
be answered. General Motors
said it did not know whether its
40,500 Ohio auto workers would
get their acheduled pay increase
Sept. 15.

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'I'.H B

~BORN

by Art Sa:lisoiD

LOSBR

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"The annual improvement
ractor- up in September,''
said a spokmman for GM in
CJeveland. "And right now we
just don't know if they will get
it. We are awaiting further clarification of the President's an·
JIOlDlcemenl.''
ArmcoStee!Co.,headquarter·
eel iJr Middletown and the na·
lion's third largest steel p~uc·
er, said ''it is too early" to leU
how this would effect the steel
industry but praised the 10 per
cent surcharge on imports would
''reduce the steel imports.
"Just to look at it on the
surface, we hope the effect will
be positive," said an Armco
spokmman. "We hope that with·
in tile next few days we will
have a clearer idea of all"this ."
Frank King, president of the
Ohio AFLCIO said he did not
think the !10-day freeze went far
enough in trying to control infla·
tioo.
"Wage and price controls may
not be too bad at a time like
this but it still doesn't go far
eft9Ugh," he said. "UnW you
limit and restrict the income of
people who manipulate for their

money, through the stock market and speculation, you can't
do much .
"But price, wage and rent controls are discriminatory to those
directly involved, those who get
salaries," King said. "They just
hit the little man."
No Objection
AI Shipka, vice president of
United Steel Workers Unioo
Disrict 26 in Youngstown, said
he had "no objection" to tile
imposition of wage and price
controls.
"Labor has always felt that If
prices and wages 'are both
treated equally there would be
no objection," said Shipka. "In
fact it is long overdue."
But, Shipka said, coming at
this time it will present ~ problem to many USW locals.
The. USW signed a contract
two weeks ago with the basic
steel industry but still has contracts to negotiate with
hundreds of fabricating industries.
"Now we haven't had an opportunity to see what all this
means in this respect," he said.
"Are they going to be able to
bargain equally like the basiC
steel industry?"
Thomas F. Patton, board
chairman of Republic Steel
Corp. in Cleveland, said tile
wage and price controls
"should restore confidence in
the American people and give
them the confidence to spend.
"I am delighted the President
has restored the inveslment 1ax
credit, it was a good move to
put ih~ additi~nal 10 per _Eent
(Continued on Page 8)

Petition Signed
By 55 Workers .
'

Fifty-live of the 80 workers of
the Imperial Electric Co. in
Middleport have signed a
petitioo stating that they were
locked outoftheplanton June 3.
A dispute has been going on
between the company and the
workers since that time. The
company has charged that the
workers went on strike. The
workers charge they were
locked out of tile plant. An In·
formal hearing conducted by
tile Federal Mediation Service
coocluded it was '.a labor
dispute," so neither a strike nor
a lock out. The union's appeal to
that fmding is being heard
today:
The petition reads:
"We, undersigned employes
of the Imperial Electric Co.,
Middleport, Ohio, reported for
work and were locked out on
June 3, 1971, by the Imperial
Electric Co."
.
Marie Romine, Lewis !Amg.
W. H. Clatworthy, Charles
Neuman, Harold Sargent,

·.

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CAPTAIN EASY

Norman Van Matre, John Dill,
K. H. Michael, Lonnie 0.
Dailey, RusSell Lyons, Ralph G.
Martin, Joseph C. Wolfe,
Margie Newell, Jeff Rose,
Gertrude Woods, Mildred De
Wees; Vernal Johnson, ltoger
Leifheit, Paul E. Haptonstall,
Faye Fry, W. Hamm, David H.
Zirkle, Mildred Roush, Wanda
Ross, Gene D. Hudson, Ralph D.
Shain, Bonnie Mathews,
Lawrence Wilcoxen, Franklin
A. Wolfe, Eleanor Jean Duerr,
VincentJ. Dabo, Esther Joseph,
Norbert P. Neutzling, John
Vroman, Argyle Deeter,
William F. Harris, Chester
Oliver, Frances Cline, Bonnie
Whittington, Gail Bradford,
Eldon Vining, Bill Stewart,
Keith Kennedy, Mary J . Roush,
Floyd Keefer, Ronald H.
Hanson, Bill Grant, Dave
Hensler, William K. Bailey,
Frank Gilkey, Jr., Jack Young,
Dana Lewis; Kenneth Sinclair,
Paul D. Burris, Clara Jean
France.

Entries Invited
OH-ER·EVE'~VTHI~6

QKAYt

WA~H~~.HEH-HISH, .. .JUSr:

Y«)NDfRED IF YOU WERE

$Til./.. AWAKEH

Entries are invited for participation in Junior Fair Night
on Wednesday according to
Tom Hamm, president of the
Meigs County Junior Fair.
Entries are invited in the do•
show at 6 p.m., the parade at 7
p.m. and the gsrden tractor
pulling conieS! at 8 p.m.
Garden tractors will be
weighed-in on the grounds.
Entry is open to world com·
petitioo. Serving on the committee are Oluck Yost. Edwin
Q-oss, Bill Cornell, Roy Miller
and Dorsey Jordan.
All youths Wider the age of 18
are invited to participate using
anf commercial garden

Weather
Mostly sunny today and
Tuesday. High today in the low .
to mid Ill, except in the mid 70s
close to Lake Erie. Fair tonight,
low in the SC. and low
High
Tuesday in the Sis.

60s:

tractor. Weights, of course, can
be adjusted to. handle different
classes. Prizes totaling $50 will
be award~.
Participation in the games is
open to every young.person. The
project review invites participation by all youth
organizations of the county. The
style review is open to those
carrying clothing projects in 4H clubs, FHA, or Girl Scout
organizations.
·
UNIT CALLED
The Middleport E·R unit
answered a call Saturday at
5:41 p.m. to the Anna: Ohlinger
residence on South Second Ave.
Dr. J. J . Davis was called and
she was taken lo Holzer Medical
Center~ At 10:09 a.m. Sunday,
U1e squad was called to 648'k
Soulh Second for two year old
Shawn Lee Justis who was dead
upon the squad's arrival.
. /)

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Devoted To The lnlere~l3 OJ The Meigt-Mmon Area

NO. XXIV NO. 86

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.
. ----··OfUO
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MONDAY,. AUGUST 16, 1971

PHONE 992·2156
·-

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TEN CENTS

NewHousing
At Addison

STORM FIJPPED HOME - The mobile home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Barnette was extensively damaged early
Sunday evening when it was turned over on its side during a
storm which hit Meigs County. The home waalocated on a lot
owned by H. A. Cole in Tuppers Plains. Trapped in the

..

Plans for a housing
development to cost $2.5 million
on 4QO..acre site Immediately
west of the railroad track at
Addison, were announced this
morning by J . J. Blazer,
Wheelersburg, president of the
Blazer Construction Co., and
Tara Development Cori&gt;.
Blazer, a native of Gallia
County and former resident of
lbe O!eshire area, is the prime
acavation contractor on Ohio
Power Company's James M.
Gavin Plant near O!eshire.
According to Ken Lee, construction supervisor for Angel
Corporation, Wheelersburg and
Addison, Phase I of the project
consists of the coostruction of

five, six unit apariments on a
12-.acre site formerly owned by
Fred R. Carman.
Carman'soldhome on the site
will be renovated into a
clubhouse, office 811!1 laundry
faclllUes for the 30 apartment
complex.
Aswimming pool will alao be
constructed nearby.
The buildings will be two·
story
structures,
each
apartment having a dining
room, kitchen, two bed·
rooms, and bathroom. All
apartments will be fully
carpeted, all electric and fully
air-conditioned.
Each building will have its
at the time was Mrs. Georgia Barnette and her two-year-old
own entrance with ample
granddaughter, Robin, daughter of the owners. They gol out
parking area.
uninjured after a neighbor, Clyde Kuhn, who bad gone out
Also included In the plwJe I
during the storm to close his garage doors, saw their
JrOject are plaus for the coopredicament and broke a glass at the front of the trailer to
structlon of home sites in the
free .them.
lmmedjate area.
•
·
Twenty-live bousq Illes wUl
be located near the apartmeat
buildings. Apartmenta .will be
Servicemen of the tri-county ready for occupancy Nov. 1.
area on overseas dut)' soon will
A 36-acre . lake and
hear a voice from back home . recreational center will cornTwo single car accidents, in WMPO's Jack Kane was a plete Phase II of the project.
which no one was injured or guest on a recent taping of the 'Ihe lake will have bosting and
cited, were investigated over Tom Campbell Show which is fishing facilltles.
the weekend by the Meigs heard weekly on the American · The recreational center will
Forces radio network. The have playground and !icnic
County Sheriff's Dept.
program
is hosted by a west facilities. It will be located over
Saturday night on West Shade
Road Ronald B. Smith, 17, coast disk jockey and features the hill northwest of the
Hemlock Grove, was traveling modern music and interviews apartment complex.
Lee said Tara Development
south when in rounding a curve with recording artists and other
he went off the road to the left disk jockeys from around the will Install underground
into a ditch, striking ·an em- country. The program's utilities, construct Its own
bankment. There was mediwn potential audience is over 300 sewage trealmeut plant, build
million.
Its own roads, and will 111e
damage to his vehicle.
Sunday on Happy Hollow During his portion of the water provided by the Gallla
Road,
Donald · Eugene broadcast, Kane spoke of the County Rural Water System.
Under tile plans, housing sites
Branaham, 35, Logan, W. Va., activities of the Gallia, Mason
was traveling north in heavy fog and Meigs County Fairs as well are now being subdivided for
when he saw a bridge, skidded as listing the area's top hits and Jrospectlve buyers. The bouaes
are expected to be ready by
in gravel as he applied brakes, current fads.
April, 1972.
and hit the bridge railing. There
Tara Development will not
was heavy damage to the front
PRACfiCE SET
build
the bousea, but If
of the car.
Band practice at Southern
LOCAL TEMPS
Local High School will be held requested, will make the
.
, at 7 p.m. Tuesday instead of necessary arrangements for
The temperature m downtown Wednesday as previous! constructioo. Home sites will be
Pomeroy at 11:30 A.M. Monday scheduled. All members ar~ offered in severallocatioos with
w~s 74 degrees under sunny asked 1o attend.
tile buyer ha~ his choice.
skies.

Tri-Countians

Two Accidents

Overseas W'dl
Hear from Home

Over Weekend

Booster Work Assigned
Kermit Walton, president of
the Meigs High School Athletic
OFF TO CAMP~ Ready and waiting for their ride to Camp Sandy Bend at Elizabeth, W.
Boosters, today announced
Va. where they'll be spending this week were left to right, front, Dorothy Frazier, Dexter; workers for the boosters'
Penny Steinmetz, Rutland; Darlene Reeves, Pomeroy, Route 4, and June Justis, Middleport; restaurant to be operated
back, Judy Asbury, Racine ; Frances Ours, Portland; Cheryl Teaford, Portland, and Debbie during the Meigs County Fair.
Morrison, Rutland. Goingwlth the group but not pictured here were Debra Kauff, Debbie King, Workers are :
Pomeroy, Route 2, and Debbie Lawrence, Pomero~ , Route 2.
Tuesday - 10a.m. to5p.m. Mrs. Don Sayre, Mrs. William
Dunfee, Mrs. John Krawsczyn,
Debbie Call, .Tommy Tyree,
Linda Atkins, Phyllis English,
Helen Davis, Ed Bartels,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH and food fee for the week at the served as coordinator for the Melanie Hackett, Mary Midkiff,
The Appalachian Heritage camp. Two of the sponsors were local participation and worked Susie Soulsby, Donna Powell.
Camp, a project of the Four anonymous but the others were with members of the Middleport 5 p.m. to closing - Richard
Rivers Girl Scout Council, Mr.andMrs. Louis Reibel, Mrs. Child Conservation League who Vaughan, Mrs. Betty Folmer,
opened Sunday at Camp Sandy Charles Gibbs, the American made initial contact with the Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, Mrs. Ralph
Bend near Elizabeth, W. .Va. Legion Auxiliary of Feeney- girls and their parents.
Carl, Mrs. Virgil King, Mrs.
with 11 Meigs County girls Bennett Post 128, Middleport Meigs County girl scouts Norman Wood, Ralph Carl,
among the campers. They were and its junior unit, one each, provided camping gear and in Phyllis English, Tom Hennessy,
there through the magnificent and the Pomeroy Ministerial some cases camp clothes for the James Diehl, Ida Diehl, Don
cooperation
of
local Association, five .
girls.
Ji)iener. ·
·
organizations and individuals. Mrs. Kenneth Scites, home Mrs. Bruce Zirkle , Mrs. Alice Wednesday - 10 a.m. to 5
For all of the g~ls, except health nurse or the Gallia-Meigs Globokar and Mr. and Mrs. p.m. _ Mabel Harman, Wanda
one, this is their first experience Cotnmunity Action Program;
(Continued on Page 8)
Williams, Iris Williams, Jesse
·in organized camping where .w•.•,,.,.,-y'""'·'"····:;;,;·~;:;~~_.....,..:.;,.....w.~=····"""""'....·.····················w White, Mrs. Norman Van
outdoor skills and native crafts ,.,.,.,,..,,«.::,:,;,.,,.,~·"·:.:.:. •''· ·' "'''&lt;""'""''•'~··.w.·."""·&gt;,·.··············w····· · Matre, Mrs. James Rickman,
are taught. This is the second
Mrs . Butcher, Mrs. Libby Oiler,
year or the .camp program for
Mrs. Jeane Cook, Mrs. Don
disadvantaged girls from the
Wilson, Mrs. Bill Childs, Mrs.
seven:.county Scout Council
Belly Fultz, Dorothy Chaney,
area. Approximately 110 will
HelenQuivey,AvisBailey,Mrs.
attend .
Joe Stanley, Melanie Hackett,
Each of the girls re!julred a
Mary Midkiff, Susie Soulsby,
sponsor to pay lhe $10.90 health 'A
-~··~.-..w.Y.w
..
w.·.··.···:·.·m,·w;•&gt;&gt;.~&lt;·&gt;..,;•;··
·
&gt;&gt;;•;•&gt;··;•;•;·;•;•;•;•:•;·;·;···O&lt;·m;•O&lt;
Karla Kuhll, Jo Ellen Diehl, Liz
·~wo•;w;•o-..·N~.w.•,.., ,.;-;., ••-. ••.;o:o; ).~:«o:v.·.·~-· -•!-.6. •.•-~ -·- ·-·-•-• . •.• . •.•.•-·~-"'-'·'·'·"''

11 Meigs Girls are Camping

TODAy

Annual Fair Edition:
See 32,Pages of News, Notices

Blaettlt'ar, Shelly Mankin, Tini
Friday -10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nieri, Jeanie Schneider, Donna Betty Lowrey, Mrs. George
Powell, Diana Ridgway, Joyce Hargraves, Mrs. Woodrow Call,
Hutchison, Diane Smith, Cindy Mrs. J . Tyree, Lois Hawley, Liz
Schneider, Maureen Hennesy, Blaettnar, Jo Ellen Diehl,
Sandra Curtis.
Shelly Mankin , Tin! Nierl,
5 p.m. to closing - James Jeanie Schneider.
Diehl, Ginny Burdette, Patty
5 p.m. to closing - James
Young, Tom Grueser, Carolyn Diehl, Patty Young, Jlnny
Grueser, Marjorie Price, Lena Burdette, Helen Davis, Leo
Nesselroad, Grace Abbott, Vaughan, Mrs. Norman Van
Donna Morris, Guy Morris, Maire, Beth Vaughan, Janet
Dick Ash, Bernice Hoffman, Neal, Edna Wilson, Don Wilson,
Phyllis Hackett, George Katie Swanson, Agnes Dixon,
flackett, Jr., Katie Swanson. Grace Abbott, Jean Merry,
ThUrsday- 10 a.m. 1o 5 p.m. Dale and Marlene Harrison,
- Betty Hutchison, Mrs. Lee Leota Smith.
Woods,
Mrs .
George
Hargraves, Mrs. Bea Stewart, Saturday - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Mrs. Bob Craig, Mrs. Phyllis -Mrs. George Hargraves, Lois
English, Mrs. Annie Moon, Mrs. !lawley, Uz Blaettnar, Diana
Wendell Hoover, Patty Well, Ridgway, Karla Kuhn, Lynn
Agnes Dixon, Helen Blackston, Baker.
Sandy Curtis, . Maureen Hen· 5 p.m. to closing - Mrs.
nesy, Cindy Schneider, Joyce Norman Van Matre, Agnea
Hutchison, Diane Smil)t.
Dixon, Grace Abbott, Ralph
5 p.m. to .closing - James ~1, SaMdie Carl,JGuy ~
Diehl , Patty Young , Ginny • .,.,nna oms, ames ....- .
Burdette, Lois Rosenbaum, Pally\'oung.' Jimmy Burdette.
Dick Rosenbaum, Frank
Waltoo satd P~ and cabs
Vaughan, Mrs. Norman Vari are needed. Those I8IIIJie to
Maire, Mrs. George Hargraves, work are asked to provide lbelll.
Mrs. Velma Rue, Leota Smith, They may leave the ltMIIIII
Ramona Hawk, Jean Werry, goods at the stand • IN .
Sue Seelig, Becky Seelig, Shelly fairgrounds m; they ~ 1!111
Clark.
Walton for pic' up lei ¥tee.

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C , the Let 1 .. 0 I •

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tAKlOU
4K73
J

August 7, 1971

Deer Sir:
After reodi'W the Ad, in this newspaper on August 5, 1971
c:anceniDc the work stoppage at the ImPerial Elecll'ic Ctmpany,
I feel tbat there are quite a few questions that neecj to be anawaed. After taltlng to the peciple who are directly affected by
lbe work slqlpage, itappearx that the Ad inserted in this paper on
lbe 8bave date Is fllled with half truths,~ an all 0111 attmnpt to
!Dike the employeeS ci the Ompa'IY aJlpelll' as "villains;" while
the Ctmpany •mnilet 1be role ci "91tning Knlght!"'ffeel very
llrq)y that this attanpt by the Coolpany to discredit his emplo,ees also
a disrespect foc the lntelllgence of the people
If this cammunlty wbo are expected to believe what was printed
In this Ad,
~ere ast1ng the questions that I feel needs answering, I
want all ci you peqlle who may be reading this le,tter to
Ja•wmber that the pec~ple being attacked by the lmperisl
Elecll'ic Coolpany are your friends and neig!Ms and most of
lban have spelit all of their lives ill this C(llllllunily, while Mr.
Knllle and m011t of the other Imperial policy makers live outside
our area.
In the first paragraph !I the Aug.5Ad, the Company says: "A
new conll'act could notbe negotiated since the Union only agreed
to a few mee~s."

time?

QUESTION: Had the C(l!lp8lly's attitude changed to a
wiDI•!I•
to "seriously" negotiate a new cooll'act at the July
11th and 21st meetings set by .the Federal Mediator? If the
Ompaqy were indeed serious abciut negotiations, then why did
they pnwdte .the employees by withholding their vacation pay,
'l1le Ctmpany said in.the Aug, 5 Ad that it would be an imP"'"'IW tuk to scbedule plant operations 011 a day to day basis.
QUESTION: Is it not true thatcooll'acts have been extended
111 a day to day basis at this plant m numerous occasions in the

put?
QtlES'nON: If the Company truly believed Its own
•
' P"'JJ'pnda about a cooll'act settlement In only five days as
all tid In the first paragraph ci the Aug. 5th Ad why would it he an
'ble tuk to extend the contract on a day today basis?
~ON: Is It true that whlle the O:mpany bas been
aboutlrw Its .,tlllngr e to extend the Ctllll'act for a specific period
' ' If lime It would Clllly do so if the Union would agree to allow the
'· . Ompany to dlacharge or discipline employees without recourse
Ill the grievance procedure, knowing all the lime that the Union
could not accept such a provislm?
1

1"'"

1

"

WHAT ABOtrr VACATION PAY?
QUESTION: Did the Coolpaey pr&lt;mise payment of this
vacatioo pay and seta day,lime and Jl"ocedure foc the employees
til follow to receive their mooey? On the set day and tbne for
payment did the C4Jinpany break a premise and refuse to make
payment of money that was earned by the employees the previous
7'11' and payable to them during the previous cmll'act?

· , The C4Jinpany states in its Ad that the Unim wanted a strike
and was wllllng to prolong a slrlke, As a w~ man I find this
stat&amp;Dent hard to awallow. These people have nothing to gain but
bardlhlp and debts, They do not ewn receive strike benefits.
QUESTION: Would ncit the C4Jinpany have moce to gain from
a strike at lhis time? What are the economic impllcatiom here?
QUESTION: IB it not lrue that the Ccmpafiy bas provoked
Incidents lrylng to create a ''Wildcat" strike which would have
been ev&amp;l more baleficial to the C4Jinpany at this lime?
U the answers to the above questions are as the employees
have laid them to me, then I must conclude that it is the Company
who wanted this work stoppage not the Union. I also feel that the
clllzene of this community should rally to the support of our
friendl and neighbors and insist that bnperial Electric pay the
money due and get down to serious negotiations.
Aconcerned citizen,
C. Robert Fisher

,_,..~a

WEST (D)
.AK2
.J86S

EAST

tJ932

.4

t?S

4Q8

4Ail09

.Q110753

.,

.AKQ972
. • Q8

46542

~

None~

West Nortll IMt

!~!~ada

Pass

Pass .

Pus 1 •

Pass

2t

2.

3.: , .

·near aum:

··

3.
Pus Pass

Opening lead_. K

1
I

Voice along Broadway !
.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
. I

HOWARD !.IKES FIJCKSGET 11IE PICI'URE?
NEW YORK - Howard Hughes despite
other rumocs still resides in the Britarmia Beach
Hotel, Paradise. Isllirid, the Babamas .., Has
three feature flicks flown down every week ...
Dr. Benjamin Gilbert, "Doctor Broadway,"
house physician to all theaters, the Melropolitan
Opera and most of Bdwy.'s hotels is
recuperating splendidly after emergency ulcer
SID'gery ., . The seating at the 2,200-capacity JFK
Center foc the Performing Arts in Washington is
a pain in the imagination to diose in charge of
vanity-protocol in the hammiest city in the
wocld: The Kennedy lribe will grab 300 of the
seats foc their favorite bottoms,., Mrs. LBJ's express secretary Liz Carpenter is off on another
book, "Tourist Guide to Washington.''
The Jack Lemmons squeeze into the SherryNetherland shoctly foc a foi'tnlt ,, Carson
maeslro Doc Severinsen (whll!le weird threads
may serve to dislract ~Iewers from how badly
the boss dresses) serendipped a suitable son.mlaw Emocy Castimore Jr., 1 ,who weds Doc's
Juelith this week: Doc breeds quarter horses in
New Jersey and Emocy's studying to be a vet ....
lllapely Frenchy film star has to peddle her N.
Y, pad because she's busted; hasn't found a job
in two years ,, N, Y. Knicks star Dave
DeBusschere's wife will score a bouncing infant
point any edition unless she goes into sudderHife
overtime .,, ''The Pretenders" authoress Gwen
Davis, who hot-panted to London via the QE2,
liked·itso well in London she's moving there.
Mayoc Und9ay's official protocaller Bud
!'abner's repocted ready to announce he's
building a huge Colorado ski resort, whicll would
1'\'IDOVe another of the few enlir,ely saUsfactory
appoinbnents Bojangles Undsay's made; ironic,
Bud.'sfineata paylessjob .., YulBrynner, who's
climbed to acting riches with a minimum of hair
and talent (we've never believed him in any
show except "The King and 1"), bought a $25,0110
Picasso followed by more unexplainable luck: It
turned out to be a p~bslract Picasso, and thus
repoctedly worth more than a quarter of a
million.

I
'·
'
Mario Lama's daughter Colleen was"'""""
,
._....
by MI. AirY Lodge foc an Oct. 6 gig - the l2tb
anniversary of the ll'agic teoor's death .. , ''My
Fair Lady" poppa Stanley Holloway's son
Julian 27
t wed actress Zena Walker ..,
• •• ...
' '
.
~nnecessary ex~g~eratio~: Johnny Carson
mlroduced her with 'I don t know any female
alive who sings better than Vicki Carr,'' and just
for openers let's mention Ella Fitzgerald,
Marilyn Maye Gerry Gronaer Eloise Laws
'
--., '
'
Me!ba M~re, Aretha Franklin, Barbara MeNatr, Doris Day, and tho they may sing deeper
than Carson's tin ear ~t·s add females Leont)'ne
Price, Tebaldi, Sills, Callas, Grace Brumby,
Eileen Farrell dozens more in both pop and
~tic field5'
.
Th
.. '
. ,
,
. e,co~ee commerCI8 1 .eaturing a guy m
drag 11Dllating John Wayne's voice Is clumsily
pointiess in Ctllcept unless it'S ll'ying to ridicule
the Duke for some explainable purpose ... The
Riviera in Las Vegas booked in a '1ow~t"
pairing (Vic Damone plus Jan Murray) and to
note Vegas inflatim - they cost mere than
$35,000 ... Ex~lumnist Frank. Farren lioesD't
fool around with underlings wbal be dates
airlines' gals: His Pen &amp; Pencilsteakerie beauty
was Astrid Seemueller, Pan-Am's flight

ieftma' lllliii!J'111a11be bar* called and lllid there ... an o;adr•._ Bow
could I leD Da..e I lidded wrorc? So I llclrwatci $111111 pat IllBCalllllt, lhinkl!ll I could .-y It back from What I a-* wllb
lllllri al•fiing. !lilt; u yoomow, guxaios an! gellirc mare

EM£ Jwlveallthetlme,andl llavm'tbealable IDIIIIIIrz~ ,
&lt;II my laair, and they're gettiag tongb.
'l1le only ,.ln..... fling I've got is my ...~ ... J .......
rlilg, ·but If I hock It, I'd ba..e to tell Daw I loll it, and lilea be'd
still tblli: I wa anlrustwcalby,
How can I get out of Ibis mess! - DUNNEO AND DtliiB

OW...,

Dear D tmd DB:

'
.. , By not getting in any deeper!
Beller to laae face with your bu•"" !ban kiJe JIU' lldrt (cr
By Oswald &amp; Jame~ Jaeoby
JIU' ring) toblgiHnlen!Btmooey I •left, TelliDD; and wwlt out
Oswald: "When we were in
Sweden last year winning the the payments lllfll!tber. Yoa IIIIQ' even Jllare a gond laQBb over
Wor I d's championship, we this-ODJIU' 10111 weMi'II~·-Breceived a copy of Jeremy Delr Helen:
Flint's book, 'Tiger Bridge.'
My lmolumd ~beltel: care I f - Pets lbanctfme. At :-t
Somehow it was ffied he buys ~ b4lles. He wm't ghe me eno a dallar. SaJB I !DIIIl
away.'"
Jim: "It covers expert earn it myself, I'm 1111 matemity lem! - . l!ld I IIIM!Il to bu)'
play problems, This band lbings for lbe baby. Be IBJI 1 sbould haw saved It fNm rily
from chapter one shows bow aa5ary. He eapeela me to go ~to 111ft right BDJ, so I will not
an expert counts a hand and only be wife, mulle, maid, cleaning 1ICMIIIJII, caci: and llline
plays for his contract"
Jepair espert, bat also pay my euct half of the
~ .n
Oswald: "West is decided- lhedotbelland briieJJtals fer .n ••. Bow does lie spead B£S
ly unenterprising. He stays
out of the bidding when his maney? Wbo ~!
I've left blm twice, partly .......,.., of his mngtr a, bat also
partner can make four
spades. He also aids the de- beca•• If lU indifraenee. lie newr ub bow I reeL He's only
fense by playing the king interested in bow lll!lcb I llllllrz.
and ·ace of spades. U he
Don't Suggest a c••nwlor, • a budgell'Wl awaal bim
shifts to the queen of clubs
at trick two,, he'll beat de- witbaflectlm, done etaytbing for him, mu to 'l""'ringliisbair.
I praise lim and Jl'llql&amp;' liin. And be only gets wone. Sia•Jealy I
clarer two tricks."
dlacover I no Joaeer love lim. Sbould I pack my blp and lem!?
Jim: "There is nothing on- -DESPERATE

JUS,

supervisor.

John Connally serves his top VIP breakfast
conferees in his Treasury Secretary's office an
unusual addition to the customary Cmgress-type
scrambled eggs - !rue grits from Texas .,, Guy
Madison bought a ooe-way ticket to Eurqle in
'61, made a flock cl. focge~ films and just
jetted back to N.Y., where TV's ex-W'dd Blil
Hickock showed up at Teddy's fine pasta palace
in jeans and denim jacket; last we saw him was
m the Via Veneto years ago sporting a fuU
beard,' which didn't help either ,, Nice whispers
drift down toManbatuin from Greenwich, Conn.,
where a first-play "A Piece ci the Moon" was
Jl"oduced. Authocess Karen Brennan cl, Pound
Ridge is being greeted as a new write liope, La
Breman, wbo wrote book and lyrics (oo a tape
recorder; doesn't read or write music); also
directed; she's the mother of four children under
five years of age, also writes short stories,
poell'y, pailits in acrylics and water colors; and
today's kids even can lrust ber -she's under 30!

enterprising about South. Be
ruffs the second spade, plays
his ace and king of hearts,
notes that · East plays the
jack of clubs and checks to
see what he can do about
that bad trum break. He
proceeds to m~e his contr~t by playing the queen
of trumps, the queen of diamoods, fine~g .the diamond 10 and playll!g dummy's last three diamonds
for three club discards.''
Oswald: "Jeremy points
out that South was using an
a!mcus. He could not make
his contract unless West follo~wed to four diamonds. If
so, the odds were West
would bold the jack, so be
finessed."
(HEWSPAPEI ENTIIPliSl ASSH,I

n.e bidding has been:
West

.North ,,. East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
3•
5•
6t

,;z Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South, hold:
.AK87 .AZ +KQI .KU3
You,

What do you do now?
A-Bid sevea •r de

Yoar
is invitiac aevea without either the - or ltiuc of
part:Der

of trwnpo.
'IODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding five clubs
your partner has bid four notrump to ask for aces and continued to five no-trump after
you showed your two. What
do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow

Q-How did the fourth
book of the Bible come to be

called "Numben"?
A-Its name comes from
the census, or counting, of
tbe Israelites in tbe desert
after their escape from
Egypt,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Second Most Common Cause of Death

Many Cancers Are Preventable ·

Deer Des:
First tlinga first.
Have , _ baby. 'lbal have it out with yoar bmhend U be
CODtinues bGji • Jy ~. slingy tmd
JL well, 1

i"'"
still can't lil8ke tbe decisim for you, but it !!hoqldn't be a bard oue

for YOU to make, - B.

.

RAY CROMLEY

No Set Patterns
In 18-to-20 Voting
By RAY CROMLEY

b

SUTTON, Mass. (UP!} -You
can buy one heck ~ a lot If
disposable diapers with P3.•That's the first 1111ng that
en d Dave Stockloo's miad
after he ended a pa :1011a1 yearlong drought &amp;mday in first
place in the M•=-:t 1 lb
nasricGolfTolrlwD&amp;Il
Dave and his wife bad
brought along thdr U.montbold san, Rlmld, and the family
experienced its biggest p8}'llaJ
since Dan woo the Imi'GA

title,
The next thing . Sfritm

thought about was the DDilenti6td lt~-year4d girt wbo ineclvertmlly gave him his 'igge 1
break of the tour..-rt.
"It was a !W good break. I

bad made probaiJly the only
mistake 1 bad IDIM7e during the
day when my shot !oat a big
bounce oo the fringe at the
sevarth. The wind 'bad dw 1
anMPI on me and the bill was
laking off when il hit a lillie

WORLD ALMANAC

c

°

[

girl.

_ -- - -

Tile D1i1r SJ ti II ·

,_,

'

'" 1911 •• ""'·

~~~

"Before Henry shows you the pictures ol our vacation
let me soy, don't expect too much. They're not nearly a;
goo,/ os the ones they got on the mo~n."

....

City E4111W
.
Pubtished dolfy ••cept
Soturdilr tiy Tire OlliO Voller ·
Publishinll Compony. Ill
court .st .•· Pomon~Y. Ol!iG,
· ..S76t. Business Olfiu .._
"2·2156. Edllo&lt;iol m.
2157.
SKond class -tove paiclot
Pomeroy. Ol!iO.
Notional advertising
·

representAtive
BottiftttliGall~her. In&lt; .* 12 East Gncl
SI.• IIow York City, II- York.

"••

•

'

'

DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF
,JiiE1115-MAS011 AREA
CHESTER L. TAIIIIEIIILL.
. E:.ec. Ell.
ROIERT HOEF\,ICII,

'

..

'•1 4
· ~ .;:;:,

*I

e••·

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

BERRf'S WORLD

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Nobudy has to teach an old
sailot like Roger Staubach how
to make waves.
Staubach, the former Naval
Academy star and Reisman
Trophy winner , put on a
splendid Pl!SSII'g performance
Saturday night to lead the
·Dallas . Cowhooys to a 36-21
victory over the New Orleans
Saints and enhance his position
in the hatUe . for the No. I
quarter-back slot
Staubach, who is hatUing
Craig Morton for the starting
job on the National Football
Conference champions, hit 7t{lf17 passes for 182 yards and
three touchdowns. Four passes
also were dropped.
Two of Staubach's touchdown
passes were bombs of 69 yards
to Bob Hayes and 81 yards to
Margene Adkins and he hooked
up with Adkins again for a 10
yards TD pass. Stauhach's
three TD passes and long range
field goals of 46 and !iO yards
by Auslrian soccer star Toni
Fritsch boosted the cowboys to
a 27~ halftime lead.
Morton was able to hit only 4of-10 passes for 66 J&amp;rds as he
fell behind in the race for No.

"If it hadn't hit ber,"
Sfcdtm said. "It would have
goue into the hazard, She
wasn't tgt and I gave her the
ball And s~~e· even walked with
me the rest of the way, I saw

lB.
.
"'That's the good thing about
a big gall&lt;ry," Slocktm added
after a mnment ~ though I, "U
J011 Jell ''fore" soft enough,
they CJR'l get out of the way,
Just dail't tell my insurance
maa I said that" he added."
Dan had six birdies, three on
each side, and finished the
IIUDaiDeDl with 11 birds and
ODiy lift boge)s for a 1).wlder
SCCft and a 4JIIWiroh edge on
IUIIIUql Ray Floyd, whose
final NIDI a just couldn't
malcll Storti"''s strong 66,
Etm, so, FloJd narrowly
m '
an eagle pull on the
ll1b. Itunailrg fer a bird that
the final margin to a
sing!esb:We, Thatnanow miss
allll floyd, wbo hasn't won a
lla'*'Y this s ES"', a cool
$14)11, the diflerence between
l!!....ttGD'S fat purse and
F1oyd's runnerup award of
1

,.,......

Sll,lll.
~TTON. Mass. "iUPII F-1 scares and money winniDg5 in the Massacllusetts

Classic aaH tuurrnament at
'Piori"' Valley 'Coi.oltry Oub:

In the only Sunday pre.&lt;~eason
game, New England marked
the opening of its new Foxboro
Stadium by beating the New
York giants ro-14. In other
Saturday night action, Minnesota downed San Diego 34-7,
Cincinnati beat Delroit 31-24,
Kansas City edged Atlanta 1210, St. Louis shaded H.ouston 1614, Washington edged Denve 1713, Oakland ripped the New
York Jets 41-20 Pittsburgh
squeezed past Green Bay 16-13
and Baltimore defeated Chicago
21-13. Buffalo and Philadelphia
play tonight.
·
Carl Garrett ran 44 yards for
one TD and Gino Cappelletti
kicked field goals of 36 and 14
yards to lead the Patriots past
the Giants. Ji Nance also had a
nine-yard TD run for the Pats
while New -York's Rocky
Thompson raced 90 yards with
a kickoff return for a Giant

,

•
t

Washington took advantage of .
three Denver fwnbles and 82
yards in .penalties to heat the
Broncos. Curt Knight had a 47yard field goal for the
Redskins, Sonny Jurgensen
passed seven yards to Roy
Jefferson for another score and
Bob Burnt plunged a yard for
U1e last Washington TO.
Clarence Davis' 99-yard kickoff return imd a 72-yard punt
return by George Atkinson
provided a pair of fourth
quarter scores that. enabled
Oakland to bet the New York
Jets . The score was tied at 1717 in the third quarter when
rookie Warren Koegel blocked a

punt and Art Thoms recovered
it in the end zone for an
Oakland scor~. Davis and
Atkinson put the game · out of
reach with their long n!turns. ·
Terry Bradshaw passed 33
yards to Dave Smilh for a TO
to climax a 98-yard ,fourth.
quarter drive that carried
Pittsburgh past Green Bay.
Bradshaw also passed 19 yards
to Bob Adams for the first
Steeler score. ·
Norm Bul.aich and · Tom
Nowatzke plunged for scores
and Earl Morrall passed 37
yards to Ray Perkins for
another as the Coils b.'at
Chicago.
;::::.::::::·

··;

....

.

NOW THE GOOD GUYS
HAVE MARKED EVERY CAR
IN STOCK FOR $PECIAL
CLEARANCE.
DART SWINGER AUTOMATIC
$191 OFF*!
There's no other deal quite like our all-time success Swinger! Buy the
specially equipped, Swinger hardtop, we'll give you the automatic transmission
FREE, (Just like having $191
taken off the sticker price!)
Hurry- before they're
·
all sold.

I

*Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for Torqueflite

automatic transmission on

$190.60;

PO LARA/ AIR-CONDITIONING SPECIAL
$219 OFF*!
Sure, anybody can sell you a car with "'air" -but only we can sell you a
specially equipped Polara with over 50% off the sticker price on
factory,installed air conditioning! See
us for a cool, roomy Polara at
model-clearance
prices.

'

GAUON, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
. Uttle League baseball champion South Point was the victim
of a no-hit pitching effort by
Uoyd McClendon here Saturday as Anderson Company of
Gary, Ind., posted a~ regional
tourney win.
·The ~a team now goes to
Harvey, m. for sectional play.
Ronnie Henderson hit a solo
homer for the winners in the
fifth inning. Pitcher McClendon
helped his own cause by scoring
a run in the first inning on a
throwing error by South Point
catcher Maurice Pleasant,
Warren Smith pitched all the
way for South Point, giving up
three hits,

va models-

6-cylinder models- $182.95.

*Air conditioning-Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, $423.35 less $218.70 sales discount,

COMPACT-SIZE. MINI-PRICE!

DART DEMON.
You can shop uptown, downtown, all-'round town-but nobody's in a better
position to give you more car for less money than the Dodge Boys with their
amazing little Dart Demon! Room lor live.
Big trunk. Wide choice of engines and
options. (And, as we say in our
headline: Demon is sized
with the compacts, and
clearance-priced down
with the mini's.)
All colors in stock.

own world record in the quarter
mile during an exhibition run at
the American Hot Rod
Association nations here, He
drove his jet-powered car at
139.10 mph Sunday around the
York U. S. 30 Dragway near
here.

69-283

Dave Eichelberger $2,557 7J.68-7H1 -283
George Knudson $2,557 - 71.
70.7-1-68-283

Dick Lolz $2,557 -

283
Don

284

74-70~-60-

Bies S1.897 - 71 -69-7J.73.

Bert Weaver Sl.897 - 69-74-68·
73-284
Bob .Lewis Jr. $1,897- 75-66·

74~9-284

Kermit
69·75-284

la~ley

$1,897- 7fHO.

GREAT COMEBACK
NORTHFIELD, Ohio (UPI)
- Barron Philip won the $6,0110
Invitational Pace at Northfield
Park Saturday night by a
length, his eighth win in 13
starts this season, only a year
after he had leg ailments and
was sold for $250,

ONE RACE AWAY
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.
(UPI) -Mark Donohue, only a
race away from winning the
Trans-American championship
for Javelin, is looking forward
to new chalienges,
Donohue scored his fifth
consecutive victory in the
Trans-Am series Sunday by 26.6
seconds after charging past
Ge(\rge Folbner's spinning
Mustang on the 33rd lap of the
twiH!,our event on the Watkins
Glen Grand Prix Course.

Your

RIVER CUIMS ONE

1l-6S-11-219
llwuau Blan •SS..tl67 - 73-

a.a.J2-2Il

Jll.-

Uons ..
~an Slenerud kicked four field
goals, the last from !iO yards
away, to lift Kansas City past
Atlanta. Stenerud's final field
goal, with 10:32 left in the
game, wiped out a lll-9 Falco!
lead.
Larry Wilson blocked a punt
and recovered It for a TD as
the Cardinals beat Houston .
Wilson blocked Dan Pastorini 's
punt on the 15-yard line in the
second period; scooped it up
and raced over for the score,
giving St. Louis a 1G-7lead. Jim
Bakken had two field goals and
George Jakowenko one fon St.
Louis.

;:~f!j::{:::t:.}}fi~~]i!Jli!l@fj~~~itW1.~1P!lli@@@~~]§l~if\hi@l@~~if~If\f~~:~t\:i:~~:;:rd:!:!%:!:~::::;::::.{: :::::r:::;~:::w:·:·~:::::::·:mur: ·:.: :.: .._:::;:··=::::::::::::::~:::.::::

South Point Out

SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UPI) - ·
DlveStodtlonS33.IIIXI - 71~9·
Robert Lemley, 15, Neffs, .
6f.46.2lS
.
D- F....., $li,IIO _ 69·70-69· drowned .Sunday night while
••':::,' -.y
swimming in the Ohio River
-~'
RG!I FU..S..Ih $11.115 - 69·12· near Ibis Belmont County'
-.m
8nJa! Crarnp!an$7,755 - n. community.

Subscription r~tes,: Oe.-..~ r~ ss.~ 7 _ 7J-n .
· IWered by c.arr.er where
"-"'~~~ - - •
••• notilt so c... l$ - . -, n~-211
· Br Molo&lt; Route_, urrier l Mike Hill S5.411- 70-69·11-71servK:e not l¥1ilat.le: One * 211
• monll! SI.7S. By mail !PI Ol!iO
Liane1 11 1• t S5.M1 - 71-75. - W. Yo., OM y- II4.W. : 6J.a-21J
Si• moniM SJ.IS. !hree ; MileR
SSMl-71-47-72·
montl!s. S..SO. Sol!scrtplien
71
211
price incluftl Sllllda .. ":':lftft.
;.-.a
$olftllMI.
I&amp; s:J.a- ~69·10c- ---'-,--~ - - - · -

Lou Graham $3,498- 69·70.68·
75-282
Jerry Heard $3,498 - 70·70.72.
70.282
Bob Rosburg $3,498 - nn
71-69-282
J. C. Snead $3,498 - 72.12-M·
70.282
Billy Casper $2,557-74-68.72.

score.
Norman Snead, playing his
first game for Minnesota,
passed for 251 yards and two
touchdowns to lead the Vikings
past the Chargers. Snead
connected on a six-yard TD
pass to John Beasley and a 12yard strike to Bill Brown. John
Hadl's 3G-yard pass to Gary
Garrison accounted for the only
San Diego score.
Rookie Ken Anderson threw
two TD passes and Jess
Phillips plunged for a pair of
scores as Cincinnati beat
Detroit. Greg Landry and Allie
Taylor teamed for 20 and 29yard scoring plays for the

I.

Honeslwe Sold Out

WASHINGTON (NEA)
There are many myths about the lS., 19- and l!D-year.ald
voter.
A not-yet-publisbed book by two young politician• with
no respect for traditional political preconceptions, goes
a long way toward destroying a number of widely held
beliefs about what tbe DI!W~ Will do. · •
Dr. Joel Fisher is a political scientist formerly on the
White House staff. Bill Treadwell ran for Congress wben
he was in his late :Ills and now is assistant U.S. district
attorney in New Jersey.
It has been widely beld that lhe 18-to-20-year.alds will
not vote in large numbers. 'This assumption is based on
experience in five states which previously enfranchised
the under-21s.
But Fisher and Treadwell found in visits to France,
West Germany and Great Britain, in spot checks in a
number of the 29 other countries which allow. 18-year.()]ds
to vote and in studies on recent voting in se1ec1ed spots
in the United States, that youth do indeed vote-at times
with surprisllig strength.
Some analysts have predicted lhe youth vote will be
liberal. Others with equal conviction .have asserted thai
when the votes are tallied, conservative youth voters will
be found to heavily outnumber the liberal voters upected
from college campuses.
Fisher and Treadwell found that in Germany in a recent election, lhe majority of youths apparently threw
their weight toward "left-leaning" candldatl!s, But in
England, voting for the first time in national elections,
lhe effect was quite different. 'The conservative candi· dates, by and large, benefited from the new youth constituency. . ·
•
'The Fisher-Treadwell conclusion: Youths are by nature
neither conservative nor liberal. You have to ask: What
;youth, wTheben and where do they vote and what are the
ISSues~
se authors are convinced youths will vote
for the issues, not the party,
'There have been forecasts that young people will vote
like their parents. 'This concept wes advanced strongly
for a period by certain ~ts at tbe White-Boule.
Fisher and Treadwell have found that when tested on
specific issues, there 1.! a wide difference between wbat
the average youth believes and what oldsters believe
on a range of crucial issues. That difference extends to
how seriously IIley take these issues in voting. 'This
c!oesn't mean all youths will vote tbe same way oo these
topics or on candidates-but that a candidate's view on
pollution, poverty or Vietnam may normally be more ·
unportant to the average young voter than to tbe average

to write some articles on the ing a lung cancer, blood can- makes the disease more oldster.
types, signs and treatments, cer (leukemia) or cancer of painful and draWn out. I am
Another apparent myth is that regardless of how many
Dear Dr. Lamb-Since also the returning signs after the colon. The symptoms of also hopeful that a major
bow few of the youths vote, their number will be so
or
cancer is one of our leading an operation or treatment. I cancer depend on the organ national effort can lick the small
the total electorate that they won•t seriously
killers. I would like for you have heard that although ra- involved and the location of cancer problem soon. Mean- affect incongressional
or national electioos, especi•Dy
dium extends life it causes the cancer. A cancer around while, I'm not for eutbana- since the youth vote may be divided.
a more drawn-out, painful · the bile duct, for example, sia. 1 am not God. 5 haven't
Fisher and Treadwell say that because so many college'
death. Is this true? What is can obstruct bile flow and seen many doctors who were youths are bunched in a handful of towns, frequently in
your opinion of mercy cause yellow jaundice (jaun- canonized. Doctors should do key states and COilgressional districts, IIley can have a
deaths? If I could be quietly dice can also he caused by a the best they can to relieve very important effect indeed in some close congressional
put to sleep when I reach the lot of other things).
human suffering and help and presidential ~lions.
·
FACTS
stage of constant pain and Many cancers can be pre- . people regain or maintain
As Fisher and Treadwell see it, each caildidate is
helplessness, I could .face vented: others ·cured and their health and that is all.
going to have to find out what lhe ~ young voters in
the futur~. The remammg still others controlled. Men
Certain signs are often his own area think. That thinking may vary radically
parent Will have en u g. h have more skin cancers than (but not always) associated among the factory, the college, lhe slum, the farm and
problems raiSing the chi!- --·
dren without the mountains any other type (23 per cent). with cancer and require an the suburbs.
of h.o s pit a 1 bills and the about 90 per cent of these early visit to lhe doctor.
weeks of waiting. 1 read and are on the face-related to These include: unexplained
9'--WIIo ir the pat• ort
enjoy your c o 1u m n every e~cess exp~sure to sun and weight loss, change in bowel
Jam!
of condemllri crim.
day.-A Cancer Patient
wmd. Shavmg removes one or Ill adder habit, unexmo
...
ol nature's protective de- plained bleeding, unhealed
A-5aint Dismes, lhe peniDear Reader - You've vices against cancer. Where sore, discharge, thickening
tent thief,
·
given me quite a task. True, the face is not covered nor- or new lump anywhere,
cancer is · the second most· mally with a heard, seba- change In wart or mole ·inceous glands in the skin se- digestion or trouble sWal·
Q-b '-"h sand uflitona
common cause of death 1re- crete
·
in
col&lt;IT?
oil
for
natural
proteclowing,
unexplained
cough
. The term bootlegging, for sponsible for 16 per cent of
tion.
Only
13
per
cent
of
or
hoarseness.
·
depending on its
A-No,
Illegal sale of liquor, orig. all deaths) , exceeded only
~omposit!011,
sand may vary
inateq on the Indian reser- by heart and vascular dis- cancers in women are from
m
color
from
white, tan, yellhe skin. In men, 18 per cent
l'ations in the West. accord- ease 154 per cenll.
low,
green,
Jllllll)e,
ancJ may
of the cancers are of the
ing to The World Almanac.
To simplify matters let lungs-and most of them·
be virtually blac:lt wbere volMen who tieddled liquor uncanic
1·ock has been pul\erlawfully to the Indians were me explain lhal a cancer is could be prevented by not
Q-Which was tht lorr.gut !=;:;~-;
i•ed.
really
composed
of
cells
of
smoking
c•garettes.
called bootleggers because
of the grtal overland routes
they hid flasks in lhe legs any part of the body that Most skin cancers can be during tf~e westward t:.pallof their boots to conceal have lost their norm a I cured if they' are completely sion of the United States?
them from government of. growth p a Iter n and· start removed early. So can
A-The . Oregon Trail
Q- WIIIII 1lliU bt the ~
growing "Wild." .&amp;.ny pari of
ficials .
for 2.000 miles
stretching
many
other
cancers.
•to
• for Jlf?o!JIIt on an lh
the body can spawn a can·
1'.....~- ··l _l.d !! ,,., 1!1';]
Independence.
Mo:.
:o
.
from
11buvt
%.000 Jlell"' frorrt IUIID?
\"o •ln' I'HtOI · I' J•: lol t • f' Jofi!o;,.-' ,\ ,,. ~ 11.
cer of its own type. produc· . No, I don't think radium tile Pacific Northwest.
o..l.
(·-'
A-Alpha~i.
1M
• "" ...

Old Salt Stauhach on Course

CINCINNATI (UPII - ltnss Gr i11 ' y's last fline.mlung
Giiu le!y dar't- bu1ba to pedui11&gt;ancecameJune 4 when By United Press lniernltiOMI
go Oftl' the bitters wllb ...._, he Nanbd the St. IAuis CardiArneri~a~~gue
Bmdl befGre the poe,
nals 1U.
W. L, Pet, GB
"Wbea il to
1~
'lhat ns his fifth starting Baltimote
71 « .617
said llarcb,
''Ross is ...(ll'diy
·51•1*'11 after his recall BoDestrtonoit
~~
54 .546 81
".
~ .5JJ
9h
close to uuu Galle1t.
from Indianapolis.
New York
60 61 .496 14
''So;" the Rei eatdi!r Slid. Uutil Siilday Grtinsley, mak- Washington 49 70 .412 24
"I bad Grimsley preUJ ·midr ing his 11tb start of the season, Cleveland
48 72 .400 25'h
follow
·
West
.
the samebmat Gallell bad goue as far as the eighth
w. L. Pet. GB
UBI the other night."
imlinc only once.since that shut Oakland
78 42 .650 ...
One can't 11noct tbei"'J!s oirl_.....,_ over the Cards, who Kansas City 63 55 .su 14
- ·--~
Chicago
57 63 .475 21
Gullett losled a -mUer ....,.. a line-game series with California
56 66 .459 23
wben be beat tile
Cabs the Relk tonigbt at Riverfront fl\lnneaota 53 65 .449 24
Friday nigbl
!!! Jiron bae,
Milwaukee ~~ 67 ..m 26
'-'-..1_
,
•
. \
s Result$
And ""'....y, Grimsley s1Dp- Grims£ey s vrctory was his DetroitSunday
7 Minnesota 5
ped the Cubs CMI to. bits as !!left!lth agaimt five losses.
Milwaukee 4 Cleveland 2
Hal McRae and Beach huuti· And, as Rec!s manager Chicago 2 Baltimore 1
ed to lead the ·Cinrinuti Reds. Spai!t(f Allderson remarked, l;;'~!\ornia 4 Washington 3 (10
to a ~I victar)' in tile wind!$ "''bat's not ·bad for a 21-year- Oakland 6 New York 4
of a three game l&amp;ie5..
old !uolie.."
Kansas City 5 Boston 1 .
Today's Probable Pitchers
''Rol!s had a good fast bill The nc:ad loots even better Cleveland (Lamb 5-101 at
·and he UBI it mast ctf the wbm one considers that Grims- Minnesota. ( Kaat9-9), night.
lime," said B o:h "He 111rew le!y piltd up six straight vic- Baltimore I Palmer 14-61 at
just enough sJidas for sbites toriesfor the Indianapolis farm ~~htaukee (Lockwood 8·8),
to let the Cubs lmow that they dub befare he was recalled by California (May 7-8 or Murhy
couldn't look for just' me .lbe ftelk.
6-131 at Boston (Siebert 1&lt;1-7},
'tcb."
night.
Pl
Only games scheduled
Surprisingly eto•cb, GrimsPluare. B!utecJ Out
Tuesday's Games
ley's paftanumce, one If Iris McRae's bcmer, his fifth of Cleveland at Minnesota (night)
"' the
Baltimore at Milwaukee lnlghll
best ..
season, ame .,.... tbe
- . was one of three Detroit at Chicago 2 (lwi·nighll
though be claims lbe Cubs were hils fer the Red outfielder,
Oakland at Washington (night)
~teali11g his pitches tile first
'l1le bemus by McRae and Kansas City at New York 121
five innings,
Beach were two of eight hits California at Boston (nlghtl
"Larry Srepard (Reds pildr- the Relk made off veteran leftSaturday's Results
ing .coach) nolieed," said har.-ler Juan Pizarro who de- Minnesota 9 Detroit 4
'th his
.·
d 1
Oakland 1, New York 0
Grimsley .
JIIU1!!d WI
secon oss Kansas City 6 Boston 1
Griouley Mjwrts
..:ainsl. four victories after lead Milwaukee 5 Cleveland 3
The rootie Red ief1y bad to oil singles by Grimsley and Chicago 2 Baltimore 2
believe tha-e was srme!lring to Pete Rose in the seventh in- Washington 2 California 0
what ..,..,...
a.....rd said.
. --..
...... -'-"""" Billy· Wiilliams led
NatiOnal League
"I did after John CaJ1ism oil with a double, stole third
East
took me for that slng!e in the and came heme when Bench
W. L. Pet. GB
1
1
fifth inning.'' said ~~oss. "A 111rew the hall wildly into ten- ~i't~ft 6~ : .~ 4
leflhanded hitter dosl't fi&amp;m'e fieFd..
Chicago
64 54 .542 S'h
to pull a fasthall tbe way he ''I • 11dn't bave thrown the New York
58 60 .492 ll'h
did."
o...n " said Bench. ''Grimsley Philadelphia 53 67 .«2 17'h
-.
Montreal
48 71 .403 22
Grimsley made an alljusl.- tbrew a cbangeup and with
west
ment after the fifth.
WUliams getting a good jump,
W. L. .Pet. GB
"AD 1 mow," be said, ''is 1 ftiU!dn't have got him even San Francisco 72 51 .585 ...
Los Angeles 65 ~ .537 6
they only got one bit tboR with a good throw."
Atlanta
64 60 .516 8'h
last four innings and they bit 'l1le Cubs beat the Reds Sat- Houston
60 60 .500 IO'h
a Jot of balls on the gJUJDi.." __,,... :J.l.
Cincinnati 57 65 .41;7 14'h
--..
San Diego 46 n .374 26
Sunday's Resuns
St. Louis 6 Pittsburgh 4
Houston 5 Atlanta 4
Cincinnati 5 Chicago 1
Montreal 6 Los Angeles 3
San Franclsco6 New York 1
San Diego 5 Phila 4 (1stl
San Diego 3 Phila 2 (2nd)
Today's Probable Pitchers
COLUJIBlJS (UPII-• .._.._.. .... wa dflplayed
Houston (Billingham 5-11) at
Pittsburgh IE Ills 16-6), night.
alllleC*ellliltellltftnUyfw, 'tloblw' 'mlllday,
Chicago (Jenkins 1&amp;.9) at
. . . . - tellwft pllaalla&amp;ltd
Ill lleleta
Atlanta (~lley 7-3), night.
W.,, ....... Dl utw ... lleiiiMaltflllae aY1111abl.e
St. Loul\ (Carlton 16-6) at
Cincinnati
(Simspon 3-5), night.
far ' - - &amp;
Wiles 11M te faalty, rl 7 Ia ud lbe
New York (Seaver 12.&amp;1 at
..... ,n.ta,.-.. I II J•I 1,1 II' pudJuen Los Angelex (Alexander 4·31.
_..,.,uri~!
- liiL'ftuwly-.IIRies..,fara!U niy~ly games scheduled)
, ... ' p
an!larll.eatO , u•udMIDTuesday's Games
Houston at Pittsburgh (night I
Chicago at Atlanta (night)
St. Louis at Clnclmatl (night)
New York at Los Angeles
Inight I
Montreal al San Diego (night)
MR. llD l'1NS
BOLDS OUT
Plllladelphla at San -Francisco
RUIDOOO DOWNS, N. M.. CLEVELAND (UPI)
(night)
(UPI)-Mr. Kid,owntdbyWUI .Sberylton Red withstood a
Saturday's Results
F. Whildread of De! Rio, TB., sln!ldl threat to win the $16,6:i0 San Francisco
6 New York s
won the $162,113 Rainbow Forrest Cily Handicap race at (10 inns)
Futirity for quarterborses 1bisUedown Saturday, her Chicago 3 Cincinnati 1
Louis 11 Pittsburgh 0
Sunday, with Mr. Jet llocft wwd stakes win here this St.
Atlanta 7 Houston o
secuMI and Mr. V'vl1aM tbinL ret ••.
Montreal 3 Los Angeles 0

bills,,...

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

· o, Aug. 1&amp;; JJ7J

ln Seventh WiD

4•

I goaled up oar dwdb!l actlllld ~~!'tier my 5
I flilally
llid I eaUd llave a Job!! •M ' '
and b!lre Clre of tile
bo&gt;••wng.Bewaso praad If me boa I ame llllWQ 111
lbe b2ack the first two Dllllllil. So we J!nusb' a 1ilce d!lll .,.W.IIIe

BRIDE

Pass

n '. nn: w

Grimsley Tough

1IQMAN AND AlUI'HMimC IXBT lOX

*•

S01l'IB

shan

QUF$I'ION :-IB It not lrue that the Union notified the ComJIIIIYmere than&amp;Odaysprloc to the contract termination that ihey
willies to meet to negotiate a new contract?
QUESTION: IB it not lrue that after the Union gives notice to
negotiate a new agreement that the next move to establish
meetqals up to the ,Company, but that the Qmpany.made no
move to aet 111cb a meeting unlil the Umon, after watching the
deec!llnedraw near, had to contact lbe Cunpany again?
QUESTION: IB it not 1rue that Mr. Kruse would only meet on
one occasion during the week prior to May 24? If Mr. Kruse could
only meet once that week because of other obligatims and the
UiaOD considered the obligatims valid reasons for not meeting,
w11J could not the Ctrnpany extend the same cmsideratioo to the
Union when the Unioo Internati11181 Representative was
obllpted to be present at another plant to hold negotiation
meetqa that week of May 24? Wby 1.!, the Clmpany ll'ying to
mike It appear that only the Union is at fault while trying to hide,
by not printiDg the whole 1rulh, that they are at least equally if not
more at fault foc the lack of meetings?
'l1le Compmy also cootends that a fair and equitable settlement could have been acbleved In five days if the Union were
willing to "seriously negotiate."
'
QUESTION: Was the O:mpany "serious" about n,egoliating
oc were there reasons for the Ccmpany to want a strike at this

!

I
I

Tigers Take Helen Help· Us
Their Chances !·
By Helen Bottel
!
oNO!I'IB

Open Letter by Fisher

--,

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

Hell,, 1971

•

UFE LOST
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Raymon,d Kidd, Z1, Akron,
drowned in the Cuyahoga River
Saturday night while swimming. Kidd was an employe of

Whether you
auto,
life
homeowners
surance. we will de!;lgnll
a policy to fit your
Individual
requirements
Discuss your specific
needs with us.
..

DaLi&amp;Wamer Ins.
-992-1M6

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Dodge
AUTHORIZEO DEALERS

Mill AND SEOOND STREETS, MIDDI.£PORT

!;!::J . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

the city of Akron's Highway · ~~~~14~C.:III't:
·st~,--=
·

~~on.

5

�•
,_-...
·- - ·
· " I. II OF 2II'P
....,
C , the Let 1 .. 0 I •

'·

.,, 0 ~ . . . . ..11'11.
............ _.

i

11

.988 '

.103
tAKlOU
4K73
J

August 7, 1971

Deer Sir:
After reodi'W the Ad, in this newspaper on August 5, 1971
c:anceniDc the work stoppage at the ImPerial Elecll'ic Ctmpany,
I feel tbat there are quite a few questions that neecj to be anawaed. After taltlng to the peciple who are directly affected by
lbe work slqlpage, itappearx that the Ad inserted in this paper on
lbe 8bave date Is fllled with half truths,~ an all 0111 attmnpt to
!Dike the employeeS ci the Ompa'IY aJlpelll' as "villains;" while
the Ctmpany •mnilet 1be role ci "91tning Knlght!"'ffeel very
llrq)y that this attanpt by the Coolpany to discredit his emplo,ees also
a disrespect foc the lntelllgence of the people
If this cammunlty wbo are expected to believe what was printed
In this Ad,
~ere ast1ng the questions that I feel needs answering, I
want all ci you peqlle who may be reading this le,tter to
Ja•wmber that the pec~ple being attacked by the lmperisl
Elecll'ic Coolpany are your friends and neig!Ms and most of
lban have spelit all of their lives ill this C(llllllunily, while Mr.
Knllle and m011t of the other Imperial policy makers live outside
our area.
In the first paragraph !I the Aug.5Ad, the Company says: "A
new conll'act could notbe negotiated since the Union only agreed
to a few mee~s."

time?

QUESTION: Had the C(l!lp8lly's attitude changed to a
wiDI•!I•
to "seriously" negotiate a new cooll'act at the July
11th and 21st meetings set by .the Federal Mediator? If the
Ompaqy were indeed serious abciut negotiations, then why did
they pnwdte .the employees by withholding their vacation pay,
'l1le Ctmpany said in.the Aug, 5 Ad that it would be an imP"'"'IW tuk to scbedule plant operations 011 a day to day basis.
QUESTION: Is it not true thatcooll'acts have been extended
111 a day to day basis at this plant m numerous occasions in the

put?
QtlES'nON: If the Company truly believed Its own
•
' P"'JJ'pnda about a cooll'act settlement In only five days as
all tid In the first paragraph ci the Aug. 5th Ad why would it he an
'ble tuk to extend the contract on a day today basis?
~ON: Is It true that whlle the O:mpany bas been
aboutlrw Its .,tlllngr e to extend the Ctllll'act for a specific period
' ' If lime It would Clllly do so if the Union would agree to allow the
'· . Ompany to dlacharge or discipline employees without recourse
Ill the grievance procedure, knowing all the lime that the Union
could not accept such a provislm?
1

1"'"

1

"

WHAT ABOtrr VACATION PAY?
QUESTION: Did the Coolpaey pr&lt;mise payment of this
vacatioo pay and seta day,lime and Jl"ocedure foc the employees
til follow to receive their mooey? On the set day and tbne for
payment did the C4Jinpany break a premise and refuse to make
payment of money that was earned by the employees the previous
7'11' and payable to them during the previous cmll'act?

· , The C4Jinpany states in its Ad that the Unim wanted a strike
and was wllllng to prolong a slrlke, As a w~ man I find this
stat&amp;Dent hard to awallow. These people have nothing to gain but
bardlhlp and debts, They do not ewn receive strike benefits.
QUESTION: Would ncit the C4Jinpany have moce to gain from
a strike at lhis time? What are the economic impllcatiom here?
QUESTION: IB it not lrue that the Ccmpafiy bas provoked
Incidents lrylng to create a ''Wildcat" strike which would have
been ev&amp;l more baleficial to the C4Jinpany at this lime?
U the answers to the above questions are as the employees
have laid them to me, then I must conclude that it is the Company
who wanted this work stoppage not the Union. I also feel that the
clllzene of this community should rally to the support of our
friendl and neighbors and insist that bnperial Electric pay the
money due and get down to serious negotiations.
Aconcerned citizen,
C. Robert Fisher

,_,..~a

WEST (D)
.AK2
.J86S

EAST

tJ932

.4

t?S

4Q8

4Ail09

.Q110753

.,

.AKQ972
. • Q8

46542

~

None~

West Nortll IMt

!~!~ada

Pass

Pass .

Pus 1 •

Pass

2t

2.

3.: , .

·near aum:

··

3.
Pus Pass

Opening lead_. K

1
I

Voice along Broadway !
.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
. I

HOWARD !.IKES FIJCKSGET 11IE PICI'URE?
NEW YORK - Howard Hughes despite
other rumocs still resides in the Britarmia Beach
Hotel, Paradise. Isllirid, the Babamas .., Has
three feature flicks flown down every week ...
Dr. Benjamin Gilbert, "Doctor Broadway,"
house physician to all theaters, the Melropolitan
Opera and most of Bdwy.'s hotels is
recuperating splendidly after emergency ulcer
SID'gery ., . The seating at the 2,200-capacity JFK
Center foc the Performing Arts in Washington is
a pain in the imagination to diose in charge of
vanity-protocol in the hammiest city in the
wocld: The Kennedy lribe will grab 300 of the
seats foc their favorite bottoms,., Mrs. LBJ's express secretary Liz Carpenter is off on another
book, "Tourist Guide to Washington.''
The Jack Lemmons squeeze into the SherryNetherland shoctly foc a foi'tnlt ,, Carson
maeslro Doc Severinsen (whll!le weird threads
may serve to dislract ~Iewers from how badly
the boss dresses) serendipped a suitable son.mlaw Emocy Castimore Jr., 1 ,who weds Doc's
Juelith this week: Doc breeds quarter horses in
New Jersey and Emocy's studying to be a vet ....
lllapely Frenchy film star has to peddle her N.
Y, pad because she's busted; hasn't found a job
in two years ,, N, Y. Knicks star Dave
DeBusschere's wife will score a bouncing infant
point any edition unless she goes into sudderHife
overtime .,, ''The Pretenders" authoress Gwen
Davis, who hot-panted to London via the QE2,
liked·itso well in London she's moving there.
Mayoc Und9ay's official protocaller Bud
!'abner's repocted ready to announce he's
building a huge Colorado ski resort, whicll would
1'\'IDOVe another of the few enlir,ely saUsfactory
appoinbnents Bojangles Undsay's made; ironic,
Bud.'sfineata paylessjob .., YulBrynner, who's
climbed to acting riches with a minimum of hair
and talent (we've never believed him in any
show except "The King and 1"), bought a $25,0110
Picasso followed by more unexplainable luck: It
turned out to be a p~bslract Picasso, and thus
repoctedly worth more than a quarter of a
million.

I
'·
'
Mario Lama's daughter Colleen was"'""""
,
._....
by MI. AirY Lodge foc an Oct. 6 gig - the l2tb
anniversary of the ll'agic teoor's death .. , ''My
Fair Lady" poppa Stanley Holloway's son
Julian 27
t wed actress Zena Walker ..,
• •• ...
' '
.
~nnecessary ex~g~eratio~: Johnny Carson
mlroduced her with 'I don t know any female
alive who sings better than Vicki Carr,'' and just
for openers let's mention Ella Fitzgerald,
Marilyn Maye Gerry Gronaer Eloise Laws
'
--., '
'
Me!ba M~re, Aretha Franklin, Barbara MeNatr, Doris Day, and tho they may sing deeper
than Carson's tin ear ~t·s add females Leont)'ne
Price, Tebaldi, Sills, Callas, Grace Brumby,
Eileen Farrell dozens more in both pop and
~tic field5'
.
Th
.. '
. ,
,
. e,co~ee commerCI8 1 .eaturing a guy m
drag 11Dllating John Wayne's voice Is clumsily
pointiess in Ctllcept unless it'S ll'ying to ridicule
the Duke for some explainable purpose ... The
Riviera in Las Vegas booked in a '1ow~t"
pairing (Vic Damone plus Jan Murray) and to
note Vegas inflatim - they cost mere than
$35,000 ... Ex~lumnist Frank. Farren lioesD't
fool around with underlings wbal be dates
airlines' gals: His Pen &amp; Pencilsteakerie beauty
was Astrid Seemueller, Pan-Am's flight

ieftma' lllliii!J'111a11be bar* called and lllid there ... an o;adr•._ Bow
could I leD Da..e I lidded wrorc? So I llclrwatci $111111 pat IllBCalllllt, lhinkl!ll I could .-y It back from What I a-* wllb
lllllri al•fiing. !lilt; u yoomow, guxaios an! gellirc mare

EM£ Jwlveallthetlme,andl llavm'tbealable IDIIIIIIrz~ ,
&lt;II my laair, and they're gettiag tongb.
'l1le only ,.ln..... fling I've got is my ...~ ... J .......
rlilg, ·but If I hock It, I'd ba..e to tell Daw I loll it, and lilea be'd
still tblli: I wa anlrustwcalby,
How can I get out of Ibis mess! - DUNNEO AND DtliiB

OW...,

Dear D tmd DB:

'
.. , By not getting in any deeper!
Beller to laae face with your bu•"" !ban kiJe JIU' lldrt (cr
By Oswald &amp; Jame~ Jaeoby
JIU' ring) toblgiHnlen!Btmooey I •left, TelliDD; and wwlt out
Oswald: "When we were in
Sweden last year winning the the payments lllfll!tber. Yoa IIIIQ' even Jllare a gond laQBb over
Wor I d's championship, we this-ODJIU' 10111 weMi'II~·-Breceived a copy of Jeremy Delr Helen:
Flint's book, 'Tiger Bridge.'
My lmolumd ~beltel: care I f - Pets lbanctfme. At :-t
Somehow it was ffied he buys ~ b4lles. He wm't ghe me eno a dallar. SaJB I !DIIIl
away.'"
Jim: "It covers expert earn it myself, I'm 1111 matemity lem! - . l!ld I IIIM!Il to bu)'
play problems, This band lbings for lbe baby. Be IBJI 1 sbould haw saved It fNm rily
from chapter one shows bow aa5ary. He eapeela me to go ~to 111ft right BDJ, so I will not
an expert counts a hand and only be wife, mulle, maid, cleaning 1ICMIIIJII, caci: and llline
plays for his contract"
Jepair espert, bat also pay my euct half of the
~ .n
Oswald: "West is decided- lhedotbelland briieJJtals fer .n ••. Bow does lie spead B£S
ly unenterprising. He stays
out of the bidding when his maney? Wbo ~!
I've left blm twice, partly .......,.., of his mngtr a, bat also
partner can make four
spades. He also aids the de- beca•• If lU indifraenee. lie newr ub bow I reeL He's only
fense by playing the king interested in bow lll!lcb I llllllrz.
and ·ace of spades. U he
Don't Suggest a c••nwlor, • a budgell'Wl awaal bim
shifts to the queen of clubs
at trick two,, he'll beat de- witbaflectlm, done etaytbing for him, mu to 'l""'ringliisbair.
I praise lim and Jl'llql&amp;' liin. And be only gets wone. Sia•Jealy I
clarer two tricks."
dlacover I no Joaeer love lim. Sbould I pack my blp and lem!?
Jim: "There is nothing on- -DESPERATE

JUS,

supervisor.

John Connally serves his top VIP breakfast
conferees in his Treasury Secretary's office an
unusual addition to the customary Cmgress-type
scrambled eggs - !rue grits from Texas .,, Guy
Madison bought a ooe-way ticket to Eurqle in
'61, made a flock cl. focge~ films and just
jetted back to N.Y., where TV's ex-W'dd Blil
Hickock showed up at Teddy's fine pasta palace
in jeans and denim jacket; last we saw him was
m the Via Veneto years ago sporting a fuU
beard,' which didn't help either ,, Nice whispers
drift down toManbatuin from Greenwich, Conn.,
where a first-play "A Piece ci the Moon" was
Jl"oduced. Authocess Karen Brennan cl, Pound
Ridge is being greeted as a new write liope, La
Breman, wbo wrote book and lyrics (oo a tape
recorder; doesn't read or write music); also
directed; she's the mother of four children under
five years of age, also writes short stories,
poell'y, pailits in acrylics and water colors; and
today's kids even can lrust ber -she's under 30!

enterprising about South. Be
ruffs the second spade, plays
his ace and king of hearts,
notes that · East plays the
jack of clubs and checks to
see what he can do about
that bad trum break. He
proceeds to m~e his contr~t by playing the queen
of trumps, the queen of diamoods, fine~g .the diamond 10 and playll!g dummy's last three diamonds
for three club discards.''
Oswald: "Jeremy points
out that South was using an
a!mcus. He could not make
his contract unless West follo~wed to four diamonds. If
so, the odds were West
would bold the jack, so be
finessed."
(HEWSPAPEI ENTIIPliSl ASSH,I

n.e bidding has been:
West

.North ,,. East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
3•
5•
6t

,;z Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South, hold:
.AK87 .AZ +KQI .KU3
You,

What do you do now?
A-Bid sevea •r de

Yoar
is invitiac aevea without either the - or ltiuc of
part:Der

of trwnpo.
'IODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding five clubs
your partner has bid four notrump to ask for aces and continued to five no-trump after
you showed your two. What
do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow

Q-How did the fourth
book of the Bible come to be

called "Numben"?
A-Its name comes from
the census, or counting, of
tbe Israelites in tbe desert
after their escape from
Egypt,

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Second Most Common Cause of Death

Many Cancers Are Preventable ·

Deer Des:
First tlinga first.
Have , _ baby. 'lbal have it out with yoar bmhend U be
CODtinues bGji • Jy ~. slingy tmd
JL well, 1

i"'"
still can't lil8ke tbe decisim for you, but it !!hoqldn't be a bard oue

for YOU to make, - B.

.

RAY CROMLEY

No Set Patterns
In 18-to-20 Voting
By RAY CROMLEY

b

SUTTON, Mass. (UP!} -You
can buy one heck ~ a lot If
disposable diapers with P3.•That's the first 1111ng that
en d Dave Stockloo's miad
after he ended a pa :1011a1 yearlong drought &amp;mday in first
place in the M•=-:t 1 lb
nasricGolfTolrlwD&amp;Il
Dave and his wife bad
brought along thdr U.montbold san, Rlmld, and the family
experienced its biggest p8}'llaJ
since Dan woo the Imi'GA

title,
The next thing . Sfritm

thought about was the DDilenti6td lt~-year4d girt wbo ineclvertmlly gave him his 'igge 1
break of the tour..-rt.
"It was a !W good break. I

bad made probaiJly the only
mistake 1 bad IDIM7e during the
day when my shot !oat a big
bounce oo the fringe at the
sevarth. The wind 'bad dw 1
anMPI on me and the bill was
laking off when il hit a lillie

WORLD ALMANAC

c

°

[

girl.

_ -- - -

Tile D1i1r SJ ti II ·

,_,

'

'" 1911 •• ""'·

~~~

"Before Henry shows you the pictures ol our vacation
let me soy, don't expect too much. They're not nearly a;
goo,/ os the ones they got on the mo~n."

....

City E4111W
.
Pubtished dolfy ••cept
Soturdilr tiy Tire OlliO Voller ·
Publishinll Compony. Ill
court .st .•· Pomon~Y. Ol!iG,
· ..S76t. Business Olfiu .._
"2·2156. Edllo&lt;iol m.
2157.
SKond class -tove paiclot
Pomeroy. Ol!iO.
Notional advertising
·

representAtive
BottiftttliGall~her. In&lt; .* 12 East Gncl
SI.• IIow York City, II- York.

"••

•

'

'

DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF
,JiiE1115-MAS011 AREA
CHESTER L. TAIIIIEIIILL.
. E:.ec. Ell.
ROIERT HOEF\,ICII,

'

..

'•1 4
· ~ .;:;:,

*I

e••·

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

BERRf'S WORLD

By JOE CARNICEW
UPI Sports Writer
Nobudy has to teach an old
sailot like Roger Staubach how
to make waves.
Staubach, the former Naval
Academy star and Reisman
Trophy winner , put on a
splendid Pl!SSII'g performance
Saturday night to lead the
·Dallas . Cowhooys to a 36-21
victory over the New Orleans
Saints and enhance his position
in the hatUe . for the No. I
quarter-back slot
Staubach, who is hatUing
Craig Morton for the starting
job on the National Football
Conference champions, hit 7t{lf17 passes for 182 yards and
three touchdowns. Four passes
also were dropped.
Two of Staubach's touchdown
passes were bombs of 69 yards
to Bob Hayes and 81 yards to
Margene Adkins and he hooked
up with Adkins again for a 10
yards TD pass. Stauhach's
three TD passes and long range
field goals of 46 and !iO yards
by Auslrian soccer star Toni
Fritsch boosted the cowboys to
a 27~ halftime lead.
Morton was able to hit only 4of-10 passes for 66 J&amp;rds as he
fell behind in the race for No.

"If it hadn't hit ber,"
Sfcdtm said. "It would have
goue into the hazard, She
wasn't tgt and I gave her the
ball And s~~e· even walked with
me the rest of the way, I saw

lB.
.
"'That's the good thing about
a big gall&lt;ry," Slocktm added
after a mnment ~ though I, "U
J011 Jell ''fore" soft enough,
they CJR'l get out of the way,
Just dail't tell my insurance
maa I said that" he added."
Dan had six birdies, three on
each side, and finished the
IIUDaiDeDl with 11 birds and
ODiy lift boge)s for a 1).wlder
SCCft and a 4JIIWiroh edge on
IUIIIUql Ray Floyd, whose
final NIDI a just couldn't
malcll Storti"''s strong 66,
Etm, so, FloJd narrowly
m '
an eagle pull on the
ll1b. Itunailrg fer a bird that
the final margin to a
sing!esb:We, Thatnanow miss
allll floyd, wbo hasn't won a
lla'*'Y this s ES"', a cool
$14)11, the diflerence between
l!!....ttGD'S fat purse and
F1oyd's runnerup award of
1

,.,......

Sll,lll.
~TTON. Mass. "iUPII F-1 scares and money winniDg5 in the Massacllusetts

Classic aaH tuurrnament at
'Piori"' Valley 'Coi.oltry Oub:

In the only Sunday pre.&lt;~eason
game, New England marked
the opening of its new Foxboro
Stadium by beating the New
York giants ro-14. In other
Saturday night action, Minnesota downed San Diego 34-7,
Cincinnati beat Delroit 31-24,
Kansas City edged Atlanta 1210, St. Louis shaded H.ouston 1614, Washington edged Denve 1713, Oakland ripped the New
York Jets 41-20 Pittsburgh
squeezed past Green Bay 16-13
and Baltimore defeated Chicago
21-13. Buffalo and Philadelphia
play tonight.
·
Carl Garrett ran 44 yards for
one TD and Gino Cappelletti
kicked field goals of 36 and 14
yards to lead the Patriots past
the Giants. Ji Nance also had a
nine-yard TD run for the Pats
while New -York's Rocky
Thompson raced 90 yards with
a kickoff return for a Giant

,

•
t

Washington took advantage of .
three Denver fwnbles and 82
yards in .penalties to heat the
Broncos. Curt Knight had a 47yard field goal for the
Redskins, Sonny Jurgensen
passed seven yards to Roy
Jefferson for another score and
Bob Burnt plunged a yard for
U1e last Washington TO.
Clarence Davis' 99-yard kickoff return imd a 72-yard punt
return by George Atkinson
provided a pair of fourth
quarter scores that. enabled
Oakland to bet the New York
Jets . The score was tied at 1717 in the third quarter when
rookie Warren Koegel blocked a

punt and Art Thoms recovered
it in the end zone for an
Oakland scor~. Davis and
Atkinson put the game · out of
reach with their long n!turns. ·
Terry Bradshaw passed 33
yards to Dave Smilh for a TO
to climax a 98-yard ,fourth.
quarter drive that carried
Pittsburgh past Green Bay.
Bradshaw also passed 19 yards
to Bob Adams for the first
Steeler score. ·
Norm Bul.aich and · Tom
Nowatzke plunged for scores
and Earl Morrall passed 37
yards to Ray Perkins for
another as the Coils b.'at
Chicago.
;::::.::::::·

··;

....

.

NOW THE GOOD GUYS
HAVE MARKED EVERY CAR
IN STOCK FOR $PECIAL
CLEARANCE.
DART SWINGER AUTOMATIC
$191 OFF*!
There's no other deal quite like our all-time success Swinger! Buy the
specially equipped, Swinger hardtop, we'll give you the automatic transmission
FREE, (Just like having $191
taken off the sticker price!)
Hurry- before they're
·
all sold.

I

*Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for Torqueflite

automatic transmission on

$190.60;

PO LARA/ AIR-CONDITIONING SPECIAL
$219 OFF*!
Sure, anybody can sell you a car with "'air" -but only we can sell you a
specially equipped Polara with over 50% off the sticker price on
factory,installed air conditioning! See
us for a cool, roomy Polara at
model-clearance
prices.

'

GAUON, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
. Uttle League baseball champion South Point was the victim
of a no-hit pitching effort by
Uoyd McClendon here Saturday as Anderson Company of
Gary, Ind., posted a~ regional
tourney win.
·The ~a team now goes to
Harvey, m. for sectional play.
Ronnie Henderson hit a solo
homer for the winners in the
fifth inning. Pitcher McClendon
helped his own cause by scoring
a run in the first inning on a
throwing error by South Point
catcher Maurice Pleasant,
Warren Smith pitched all the
way for South Point, giving up
three hits,

va models-

6-cylinder models- $182.95.

*Air conditioning-Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, $423.35 less $218.70 sales discount,

COMPACT-SIZE. MINI-PRICE!

DART DEMON.
You can shop uptown, downtown, all-'round town-but nobody's in a better
position to give you more car for less money than the Dodge Boys with their
amazing little Dart Demon! Room lor live.
Big trunk. Wide choice of engines and
options. (And, as we say in our
headline: Demon is sized
with the compacts, and
clearance-priced down
with the mini's.)
All colors in stock.

own world record in the quarter
mile during an exhibition run at
the American Hot Rod
Association nations here, He
drove his jet-powered car at
139.10 mph Sunday around the
York U. S. 30 Dragway near
here.

69-283

Dave Eichelberger $2,557 7J.68-7H1 -283
George Knudson $2,557 - 71.
70.7-1-68-283

Dick Lolz $2,557 -

283
Don

284

74-70~-60-

Bies S1.897 - 71 -69-7J.73.

Bert Weaver Sl.897 - 69-74-68·
73-284
Bob .Lewis Jr. $1,897- 75-66·

74~9-284

Kermit
69·75-284

la~ley

$1,897- 7fHO.

GREAT COMEBACK
NORTHFIELD, Ohio (UPI)
- Barron Philip won the $6,0110
Invitational Pace at Northfield
Park Saturday night by a
length, his eighth win in 13
starts this season, only a year
after he had leg ailments and
was sold for $250,

ONE RACE AWAY
WATKINS GLEN, N. Y.
(UPI) -Mark Donohue, only a
race away from winning the
Trans-American championship
for Javelin, is looking forward
to new chalienges,
Donohue scored his fifth
consecutive victory in the
Trans-Am series Sunday by 26.6
seconds after charging past
Ge(\rge Folbner's spinning
Mustang on the 33rd lap of the
twiH!,our event on the Watkins
Glen Grand Prix Course.

Your

RIVER CUIMS ONE

1l-6S-11-219
llwuau Blan •SS..tl67 - 73-

a.a.J2-2Il

Jll.-

Uons ..
~an Slenerud kicked four field
goals, the last from !iO yards
away, to lift Kansas City past
Atlanta. Stenerud's final field
goal, with 10:32 left in the
game, wiped out a lll-9 Falco!
lead.
Larry Wilson blocked a punt
and recovered It for a TD as
the Cardinals beat Houston .
Wilson blocked Dan Pastorini 's
punt on the 15-yard line in the
second period; scooped it up
and raced over for the score,
giving St. Louis a 1G-7lead. Jim
Bakken had two field goals and
George Jakowenko one fon St.
Louis.

;:~f!j::{:::t:.}}fi~~]i!Jli!l@fj~~~itW1.~1P!lli@@@~~]§l~if\hi@l@~~if~If\f~~:~t\:i:~~:;:rd:!:!%:!:~::::;::::.{: :::::r:::;~:::w:·:·~:::::::·:mur: ·:.: :.: .._:::;:··=::::::::::::::~:::.::::

South Point Out

SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UPI) - ·
DlveStodtlonS33.IIIXI - 71~9·
Robert Lemley, 15, Neffs, .
6f.46.2lS
.
D- F....., $li,IIO _ 69·70-69· drowned .Sunday night while
••':::,' -.y
swimming in the Ohio River
-~'
RG!I FU..S..Ih $11.115 - 69·12· near Ibis Belmont County'
-.m
8nJa! Crarnp!an$7,755 - n. community.

Subscription r~tes,: Oe.-..~ r~ ss.~ 7 _ 7J-n .
· IWered by c.arr.er where
"-"'~~~ - - •
••• notilt so c... l$ - . -, n~-211
· Br Molo&lt; Route_, urrier l Mike Hill S5.411- 70-69·11-71servK:e not l¥1ilat.le: One * 211
• monll! SI.7S. By mail !PI Ol!iO
Liane1 11 1• t S5.M1 - 71-75. - W. Yo., OM y- II4.W. : 6J.a-21J
Si• moniM SJ.IS. !hree ; MileR
SSMl-71-47-72·
montl!s. S..SO. Sol!scrtplien
71
211
price incluftl Sllllda .. ":':lftft.
;.-.a
$olftllMI.
I&amp; s:J.a- ~69·10c- ---'-,--~ - - - · -

Lou Graham $3,498- 69·70.68·
75-282
Jerry Heard $3,498 - 70·70.72.
70.282
Bob Rosburg $3,498 - nn
71-69-282
J. C. Snead $3,498 - 72.12-M·
70.282
Billy Casper $2,557-74-68.72.

score.
Norman Snead, playing his
first game for Minnesota,
passed for 251 yards and two
touchdowns to lead the Vikings
past the Chargers. Snead
connected on a six-yard TD
pass to John Beasley and a 12yard strike to Bill Brown. John
Hadl's 3G-yard pass to Gary
Garrison accounted for the only
San Diego score.
Rookie Ken Anderson threw
two TD passes and Jess
Phillips plunged for a pair of
scores as Cincinnati beat
Detroit. Greg Landry and Allie
Taylor teamed for 20 and 29yard scoring plays for the

I.

Honeslwe Sold Out

WASHINGTON (NEA)
There are many myths about the lS., 19- and l!D-year.ald
voter.
A not-yet-publisbed book by two young politician• with
no respect for traditional political preconceptions, goes
a long way toward destroying a number of widely held
beliefs about what tbe DI!W~ Will do. · •
Dr. Joel Fisher is a political scientist formerly on the
White House staff. Bill Treadwell ran for Congress wben
he was in his late :Ills and now is assistant U.S. district
attorney in New Jersey.
It has been widely beld that lhe 18-to-20-year.alds will
not vote in large numbers. 'This assumption is based on
experience in five states which previously enfranchised
the under-21s.
But Fisher and Treadwell found in visits to France,
West Germany and Great Britain, in spot checks in a
number of the 29 other countries which allow. 18-year.()]ds
to vote and in studies on recent voting in se1ec1ed spots
in the United States, that youth do indeed vote-at times
with surprisllig strength.
Some analysts have predicted lhe youth vote will be
liberal. Others with equal conviction .have asserted thai
when the votes are tallied, conservative youth voters will
be found to heavily outnumber the liberal voters upected
from college campuses.
Fisher and Treadwell found that in Germany in a recent election, lhe majority of youths apparently threw
their weight toward "left-leaning" candldatl!s, But in
England, voting for the first time in national elections,
lhe effect was quite different. 'The conservative candi· dates, by and large, benefited from the new youth constituency. . ·
•
'The Fisher-Treadwell conclusion: Youths are by nature
neither conservative nor liberal. You have to ask: What
;youth, wTheben and where do they vote and what are the
ISSues~
se authors are convinced youths will vote
for the issues, not the party,
'There have been forecasts that young people will vote
like their parents. 'This concept wes advanced strongly
for a period by certain ~ts at tbe White-Boule.
Fisher and Treadwell have found that when tested on
specific issues, there 1.! a wide difference between wbat
the average youth believes and what oldsters believe
on a range of crucial issues. That difference extends to
how seriously IIley take these issues in voting. 'This
c!oesn't mean all youths will vote tbe same way oo these
topics or on candidates-but that a candidate's view on
pollution, poverty or Vietnam may normally be more ·
unportant to the average young voter than to tbe average

to write some articles on the ing a lung cancer, blood can- makes the disease more oldster.
types, signs and treatments, cer (leukemia) or cancer of painful and draWn out. I am
Another apparent myth is that regardless of how many
Dear Dr. Lamb-Since also the returning signs after the colon. The symptoms of also hopeful that a major
bow few of the youths vote, their number will be so
or
cancer is one of our leading an operation or treatment. I cancer depend on the organ national effort can lick the small
the total electorate that they won•t seriously
killers. I would like for you have heard that although ra- involved and the location of cancer problem soon. Mean- affect incongressional
or national electioos, especi•Dy
dium extends life it causes the cancer. A cancer around while, I'm not for eutbana- since the youth vote may be divided.
a more drawn-out, painful · the bile duct, for example, sia. 1 am not God. 5 haven't
Fisher and Treadwell say that because so many college'
death. Is this true? What is can obstruct bile flow and seen many doctors who were youths are bunched in a handful of towns, frequently in
your opinion of mercy cause yellow jaundice (jaun- canonized. Doctors should do key states and COilgressional districts, IIley can have a
deaths? If I could be quietly dice can also he caused by a the best they can to relieve very important effect indeed in some close congressional
put to sleep when I reach the lot of other things).
human suffering and help and presidential ~lions.
·
FACTS
stage of constant pain and Many cancers can be pre- . people regain or maintain
As Fisher and Treadwell see it, each caildidate is
helplessness, I could .face vented: others ·cured and their health and that is all.
going to have to find out what lhe ~ young voters in
the futur~. The remammg still others controlled. Men
Certain signs are often his own area think. That thinking may vary radically
parent Will have en u g. h have more skin cancers than (but not always) associated among the factory, the college, lhe slum, the farm and
problems raiSing the chi!- --·
dren without the mountains any other type (23 per cent). with cancer and require an the suburbs.
of h.o s pit a 1 bills and the about 90 per cent of these early visit to lhe doctor.
weeks of waiting. 1 read and are on the face-related to These include: unexplained
9'--WIIo ir the pat• ort
enjoy your c o 1u m n every e~cess exp~sure to sun and weight loss, change in bowel
Jam!
of condemllri crim.
day.-A Cancer Patient
wmd. Shavmg removes one or Ill adder habit, unexmo
...
ol nature's protective de- plained bleeding, unhealed
A-5aint Dismes, lhe peniDear Reader - You've vices against cancer. Where sore, discharge, thickening
tent thief,
·
given me quite a task. True, the face is not covered nor- or new lump anywhere,
cancer is · the second most· mally with a heard, seba- change In wart or mole ·inceous glands in the skin se- digestion or trouble sWal·
Q-b '-"h sand uflitona
common cause of death 1re- crete
·
in
col&lt;IT?
oil
for
natural
proteclowing,
unexplained
cough
. The term bootlegging, for sponsible for 16 per cent of
tion.
Only
13
per
cent
of
or
hoarseness.
·
depending on its
A-No,
Illegal sale of liquor, orig. all deaths) , exceeded only
~omposit!011,
sand may vary
inateq on the Indian reser- by heart and vascular dis- cancers in women are from
m
color
from
white, tan, yellhe skin. In men, 18 per cent
l'ations in the West. accord- ease 154 per cenll.
low,
green,
Jllllll)e,
ancJ may
of the cancers are of the
ing to The World Almanac.
To simplify matters let lungs-and most of them·
be virtually blac:lt wbere volMen who tieddled liquor uncanic
1·ock has been pul\erlawfully to the Indians were me explain lhal a cancer is could be prevented by not
Q-Which was tht lorr.gut !=;:;~-;
i•ed.
really
composed
of
cells
of
smoking
c•garettes.
called bootleggers because
of the grtal overland routes
they hid flasks in lhe legs any part of the body that Most skin cancers can be during tf~e westward t:.pallof their boots to conceal have lost their norm a I cured if they' are completely sion of the United States?
them from government of. growth p a Iter n and· start removed early. So can
A-The . Oregon Trail
Q- WIIIII 1lliU bt the ~
growing "Wild." .&amp;.ny pari of
ficials .
for 2.000 miles
stretching
many
other
cancers.
•to
• for Jlf?o!JIIt on an lh
the body can spawn a can·
1'.....~- ··l _l.d !! ,,., 1!1';]
Independence.
Mo:.
:o
.
from
11buvt
%.000 Jlell"' frorrt IUIID?
\"o •ln' I'HtOI · I' J•: lol t • f' Jofi!o;,.-' ,\ ,,. ~ 11.
cer of its own type. produc· . No, I don't think radium tile Pacific Northwest.
o..l.
(·-'
A-Alpha~i.
1M
• "" ...

Old Salt Stauhach on Course

CINCINNATI (UPII - ltnss Gr i11 ' y's last fline.mlung
Giiu le!y dar't- bu1ba to pedui11&gt;ancecameJune 4 when By United Press lniernltiOMI
go Oftl' the bitters wllb ...._, he Nanbd the St. IAuis CardiArneri~a~~gue
Bmdl befGre the poe,
nals 1U.
W. L, Pet, GB
"Wbea il to
1~
'lhat ns his fifth starting Baltimote
71 « .617
said llarcb,
''Ross is ...(ll'diy
·51•1*'11 after his recall BoDestrtonoit
~~
54 .546 81
".
~ .5JJ
9h
close to uuu Galle1t.
from Indianapolis.
New York
60 61 .496 14
''So;" the Rei eatdi!r Slid. Uutil Siilday Grtinsley, mak- Washington 49 70 .412 24
"I bad Grimsley preUJ ·midr ing his 11tb start of the season, Cleveland
48 72 .400 25'h
follow
·
West
.
the samebmat Gallell bad goue as far as the eighth
w. L. Pet. GB
UBI the other night."
imlinc only once.since that shut Oakland
78 42 .650 ...
One can't 11noct tbei"'J!s oirl_.....,_ over the Cards, who Kansas City 63 55 .su 14
- ·--~
Chicago
57 63 .475 21
Gullett losled a -mUer ....,.. a line-game series with California
56 66 .459 23
wben be beat tile
Cabs the Relk tonigbt at Riverfront fl\lnneaota 53 65 .449 24
Friday nigbl
!!! Jiron bae,
Milwaukee ~~ 67 ..m 26
'-'-..1_
,
•
. \
s Result$
And ""'....y, Grimsley s1Dp- Grims£ey s vrctory was his DetroitSunday
7 Minnesota 5
ped the Cubs CMI to. bits as !!left!lth agaimt five losses.
Milwaukee 4 Cleveland 2
Hal McRae and Beach huuti· And, as Rec!s manager Chicago 2 Baltimore 1
ed to lead the ·Cinrinuti Reds. Spai!t(f Allderson remarked, l;;'~!\ornia 4 Washington 3 (10
to a ~I victar)' in tile wind!$ "''bat's not ·bad for a 21-year- Oakland 6 New York 4
of a three game l&amp;ie5..
old !uolie.."
Kansas City 5 Boston 1 .
Today's Probable Pitchers
''Rol!s had a good fast bill The nc:ad loots even better Cleveland (Lamb 5-101 at
·and he UBI it mast ctf the wbm one considers that Grims- Minnesota. ( Kaat9-9), night.
lime," said B o:h "He 111rew le!y piltd up six straight vic- Baltimore I Palmer 14-61 at
just enough sJidas for sbites toriesfor the Indianapolis farm ~~htaukee (Lockwood 8·8),
to let the Cubs lmow that they dub befare he was recalled by California (May 7-8 or Murhy
couldn't look for just' me .lbe ftelk.
6-131 at Boston (Siebert 1&lt;1-7},
'tcb."
night.
Pl
Only games scheduled
Surprisingly eto•cb, GrimsPluare. B!utecJ Out
Tuesday's Games
ley's paftanumce, one If Iris McRae's bcmer, his fifth of Cleveland at Minnesota (night)
"' the
Baltimore at Milwaukee lnlghll
best ..
season, ame .,.... tbe
- . was one of three Detroit at Chicago 2 (lwi·nighll
though be claims lbe Cubs were hils fer the Red outfielder,
Oakland at Washington (night)
~teali11g his pitches tile first
'l1le bemus by McRae and Kansas City at New York 121
five innings,
Beach were two of eight hits California at Boston (nlghtl
"Larry Srepard (Reds pildr- the Relk made off veteran leftSaturday's Results
ing .coach) nolieed," said har.-ler Juan Pizarro who de- Minnesota 9 Detroit 4
'th his
.·
d 1
Oakland 1, New York 0
Grimsley .
JIIU1!!d WI
secon oss Kansas City 6 Boston 1
Griouley Mjwrts
..:ainsl. four victories after lead Milwaukee 5 Cleveland 3
The rootie Red ief1y bad to oil singles by Grimsley and Chicago 2 Baltimore 2
believe tha-e was srme!lring to Pete Rose in the seventh in- Washington 2 California 0
what ..,..,...
a.....rd said.
. --..
...... -'-"""" Billy· Wiilliams led
NatiOnal League
"I did after John CaJ1ism oil with a double, stole third
East
took me for that slng!e in the and came heme when Bench
W. L. Pet. GB
1
1
fifth inning.'' said ~~oss. "A 111rew the hall wildly into ten- ~i't~ft 6~ : .~ 4
leflhanded hitter dosl't fi&amp;m'e fieFd..
Chicago
64 54 .542 S'h
to pull a fasthall tbe way he ''I • 11dn't bave thrown the New York
58 60 .492 ll'h
did."
o...n " said Bench. ''Grimsley Philadelphia 53 67 .«2 17'h
-.
Montreal
48 71 .403 22
Grimsley made an alljusl.- tbrew a cbangeup and with
west
ment after the fifth.
WUliams getting a good jump,
W. L. .Pet. GB
"AD 1 mow," be said, ''is 1 ftiU!dn't have got him even San Francisco 72 51 .585 ...
Los Angeles 65 ~ .537 6
they only got one bit tboR with a good throw."
Atlanta
64 60 .516 8'h
last four innings and they bit 'l1le Cubs beat the Reds Sat- Houston
60 60 .500 IO'h
a Jot of balls on the gJUJDi.." __,,... :J.l.
Cincinnati 57 65 .41;7 14'h
--..
San Diego 46 n .374 26
Sunday's Resuns
St. Louis 6 Pittsburgh 4
Houston 5 Atlanta 4
Cincinnati 5 Chicago 1
Montreal 6 Los Angeles 3
San Franclsco6 New York 1
San Diego 5 Phila 4 (1stl
San Diego 3 Phila 2 (2nd)
Today's Probable Pitchers
COLUJIBlJS (UPII-• .._.._.. .... wa dflplayed
Houston (Billingham 5-11) at
Pittsburgh IE Ills 16-6), night.
alllleC*ellliltellltftnUyfw, 'tloblw' 'mlllday,
Chicago (Jenkins 1&amp;.9) at
. . . . - tellwft pllaalla&amp;ltd
Ill lleleta
Atlanta (~lley 7-3), night.
W.,, ....... Dl utw ... lleiiiMaltflllae aY1111abl.e
St. Loul\ (Carlton 16-6) at
Cincinnati
(Simspon 3-5), night.
far ' - - &amp;
Wiles 11M te faalty, rl 7 Ia ud lbe
New York (Seaver 12.&amp;1 at
..... ,n.ta,.-.. I II J•I 1,1 II' pudJuen Los Angelex (Alexander 4·31.
_..,.,uri~!
- liiL'ftuwly-.IIRies..,fara!U niy~ly games scheduled)
, ... ' p
an!larll.eatO , u•udMIDTuesday's Games
Houston at Pittsburgh (night I
Chicago at Atlanta (night)
St. Louis at Clnclmatl (night)
New York at Los Angeles
Inight I
Montreal al San Diego (night)
MR. llD l'1NS
BOLDS OUT
Plllladelphla at San -Francisco
RUIDOOO DOWNS, N. M.. CLEVELAND (UPI)
(night)
(UPI)-Mr. Kid,owntdbyWUI .Sberylton Red withstood a
Saturday's Results
F. Whildread of De! Rio, TB., sln!ldl threat to win the $16,6:i0 San Francisco
6 New York s
won the $162,113 Rainbow Forrest Cily Handicap race at (10 inns)
Futirity for quarterborses 1bisUedown Saturday, her Chicago 3 Cincinnati 1
Louis 11 Pittsburgh 0
Sunday, with Mr. Jet llocft wwd stakes win here this St.
Atlanta 7 Houston o
secuMI and Mr. V'vl1aM tbinL ret ••.
Montreal 3 Los Angeles 0

bills,,...

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

· o, Aug. 1&amp;; JJ7J

ln Seventh WiD

4•

I goaled up oar dwdb!l actlllld ~~!'tier my 5
I flilally
llid I eaUd llave a Job!! •M ' '
and b!lre Clre of tile
bo&gt;••wng.Bewaso praad If me boa I ame llllWQ 111
lbe b2ack the first two Dllllllil. So we J!nusb' a 1ilce d!lll .,.W.IIIe

BRIDE

Pass

n '. nn: w

Grimsley Tough

1IQMAN AND AlUI'HMimC IXBT lOX

*•

S01l'IB

shan

QUF$I'ION :-IB It not lrue that the Union notified the ComJIIIIYmere than&amp;Odaysprloc to the contract termination that ihey
willies to meet to negotiate a new contract?
QUESTION: IB it not lrue that after the Union gives notice to
negotiate a new agreement that the next move to establish
meetqals up to the ,Company, but that the Qmpany.made no
move to aet 111cb a meeting unlil the Umon, after watching the
deec!llnedraw near, had to contact lbe Cunpany again?
QUESTION: IB it not 1rue that Mr. Kruse would only meet on
one occasion during the week prior to May 24? If Mr. Kruse could
only meet once that week because of other obligatims and the
UiaOD considered the obligatims valid reasons for not meeting,
w11J could not the Ctrnpany extend the same cmsideratioo to the
Union when the Unioo Internati11181 Representative was
obllpted to be present at another plant to hold negotiation
meetqa that week of May 24? Wby 1.!, the Clmpany ll'ying to
mike It appear that only the Union is at fault while trying to hide,
by not printiDg the whole 1rulh, that they are at least equally if not
more at fault foc the lack of meetings?
'l1le Compmy also cootends that a fair and equitable settlement could have been acbleved In five days if the Union were
willing to "seriously negotiate."
'
QUESTION: Was the O:mpany "serious" about n,egoliating
oc were there reasons for the Ccmpany to want a strike at this

!

I
I

Tigers Take Helen Help· Us
Their Chances !·
By Helen Bottel
!
oNO!I'IB

Open Letter by Fisher

--,

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

Hell,, 1971

•

UFE LOST
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Raymon,d Kidd, Z1, Akron,
drowned in the Cuyahoga River
Saturday night while swimming. Kidd was an employe of

Whether you
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life
homeowners
surance. we will de!;lgnll
a policy to fit your
Individual
requirements
Discuss your specific
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..

DaLi&amp;Wamer Ins.
-992-1M6

R. H. RAWLINGS SONS CO.

Dodge
AUTHORIZEO DEALERS

Mill AND SEOOND STREETS, MIDDI.£PORT

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the city of Akron's Highway · ~~~~14~C.:III't:
·st~,--=
·

~~on.

5

�..

. l

•-111eDally9t;JlW'I,JIIo!oll.-t-P

•

. ·1
•

O),O.,AIIC. lJ, 1m

t

Tensed Blue Wins 22nd . ·:;;;.:.~:;·=~::~ ~=~-~e:.~ ~~~,. .

~llimore 000 010 ooo- 1 .5 0
Blue (22-41 and Duncan; Durell· of CoiUinbus spent a Colwnbus called Sunday oil
Chicago 100 001 oox- 2 7' 0 ·aahnsen, Aker (8). McDaniel week end with Mr. ·and .Mrs. Mrs. Russell Roush .. other
· Dobson, Hall (7) and Etche· (8), Hambright (9) and M~ .n th R
Sun•. lly' JOE FBOBLINGER
straight.
fully assaulted the mighty Babe KanSas aty dealt Bosion its barren; Wood (15-9) and son. LP- Aker 14.31 .
. Herbert Sayre and ,David.
callers on e OiJsl;es
wsy
UPISpertiWrlter ',
The Albletics raked four RuWs home runtotal.
· seventh straight ' loSs, &gt;1, Herrmann. LP-Dobson 05-6). Cleveland 000 002 ooo- 2 9 1 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel were Mr. and Mrs, ·Waiter
The mental .straln is getting Yankee hurlers for 18 hits with / Blue survived . a shaky California outlasted Washington
Milwaukee
,
caUed on Mr. and Mrs. Don McDade. of Troy, Mrs. Edna
to be tQo mucb for Oakland's Bert Campaneris' twci.tun tie- seventh inning Sunday when the oh1 in 10 innings, and Chicago Kansas Cl~ 103 oio- 5 10 1 . McDowel~:,?~~i~J:" ~e~onr Manuel at . Racine Sunday Roush of Racine and Mr. and
eensatioiial Breballer, · Vida breaking single in the eighth Yanks erupted for four rtms. downed Baltimore 2-1 in other Boston
001 000 ooo- 1 6 2 gan 181 and Fosse; ParS!)ns. morning. Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dana Lewis of Cllfton,W.
Blue. Although . be hasn't leadingtheway.Vidaaided the Dick Williams,_manager of the AL games.
Hedlund, Burgmeler IB) ~nd Morris (7), Sanders (B) and Joe Manuel Sunday were Mr. Va.
.
.
181
-'-- ted losing
·
"'~ , ·.hair
' he · e;g
· hth ·mnmg
· · rallY as he •---'
Paepke; · ·Culp,LP~Culp
. Lee (13-11).
and Rodriguez.
wP..:.Parsons, (lO- and Mrs.·. Robert Bailey. and. Mr
. . . and Mrs. Herbert 0nu"ush
....
,.,.
"""""" A's, never had. qualms about Sand
· · y AIomar •""""-'
o...,.~ the Monl!iomery.
141 _ LP--McDowell (Jl.11J .
admlls being ''about ready to ·.the tie-breaking run on a wild _giving Blue the book: "As long decisive run in California's HR-xhaal 17th) . WP-HedBobby of Long Bottom, Mr. and . and Mrs. Iva Orr called on Mr.
brea_kJ. up_." '
pitch by reliever lindy McDa· ~itlookedlikehecOuldfinish, extra iJin_ing thriller ,when lund 00-6) . .
.
Detroit .ooo 015 001 ~ 7 8,0 Mrs. Le_wis _Hudson and Mrs. 311dMrs, Danai,ewisat_Ciifton,
(10 in.ngs)200 ooo 001 1- 4 13 2 ·Minnesota
.010 40os60
· w. va ., Satur daY evenmg and
. W:lth 50,~ fans watclilng his niel.
l wanted to give him a a double . play attempt Calif
Kilken~y. 000
Denehy
Ill, Scher- Katie Young, of Minersville
every move and the New York
B)ue, with a gOOd chance to chance:" Successive pinch-bit misfired . .MicKey Rivers Wa~h
000 003 000 o- 3 8 o man 171 and Freehan; Perry, Route.
'
shopped in Point Pleasant.
6
.......,. scrutinizing blm careful' become the American .League's tw~doobles by JoluUly Ellis slammed his ·first major FISher, Allen 1 1• LaRoche Gebhard (7), Strickland (8),
Misses Cindy and Debby
·
,.._
d
Hansen
th k
.
·
·
(7), Queen 191. Clark 110) and , Haydel (9) and Roof. WP.
ly, the Oakland A's lefthander eighth ,36-game winner and an Ron
were · e ey league homer for .the Angels.
Stephenson; Bosman_, Linblad Kilkenny 12 .41 . LP- Perry 112 . 4wson spent a night with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lawson of
hung on Sunday for his 22nd baseball's 18th, is succumbiQg blows off the 22-year-«d lefty. Knuckleballer Wilbur Wood (10) , Cox (lQ), Grzenda (10) 14) HR- G. Brown 16th I.
Ida Belle Donohue;
Colwnbus visited .Mr. and Mrs.
2
2
· 1.
\ictory,. a -'"'
6-4 triumph · to the pressure that overtoOk Howev
. er, neither Jack Aker ·allowed Baltimor•J"ustfour
hits and
Mr. and
· son and Mr. and
·~,
~
LP- Bi!lings.
LtndbladW~een
,(5-31. HRs- 1R1vNational· League ,,
· Mrs. Harold Lawson Charles ·Law
over. the Yankees, and helped Roger Maris . in 1961. The n&lt;ir McDaniel could bold the and BiU Melton added a run- ers. (1st), RePOz (loth) .
st. Louis 010 ooo oso- 6 15 o and son of Letart, W. va·.• Mr. Mrs. Diamond.Ulwson Sunday
extend the Western Division former Yankee · slugger lost lead lor New York.
scoring triple in the opening
Pittsburgh
,
and ··Mrs. Robert Lawson and and called on other relatives.
leaders winning streak toseveri tufts of hair wben he success- Minnesota edged Detroit, 7~, inning in Chicago's victory,
Cleveli1nd~IOL~~~y~ ~h:: family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Evnoy and
, Paul SChaal knocked. in five
(8)&lt; Drabowsky (9) and Slm- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson. three children of Harrisonville
runs with a homer, triple and
mons; Kison, Miller. (B) and
Misses Wilda and 'Evelyn and Mrs. Ronnie Russeeil of
14·11 LP Lawson spent.Wednesday . with Syracuse v'osited Mr. and Mrs.
single to hel_p Mike Hedlund to
Sangullleri.
WP-Linzy
- Miller (7-4). HR- Stargell (2,
his lOth victory as Kansas City
40th and 41st) Hague (12th) Mr. an&lt;l Mrs. Ray Lawson at Russell Roush. ·
completed its four-game sweep
Alo~ 14th).
Columbus.
.
Gene Early spent Sunday
of Boston.
Mrs. Anna Wines and Sandra n;'gh.t with Roger Roush.
·
Chicago 000 100 ooo- 1 4 3
Bob
!feise's
infield
out
with
Cincinnati
101
101
lOx5
10
2
Wolfe
of Racine spent Sunllay
"
By NEIL BERSHBERG
The Pirates Wel'll bumbled by extend their lead in the West
the
bases
loaded
off
loser
Sam
Pizarro,
Decker
(7),
Regan
afternoon
with
Mrs.
Kate
Rbwe
P.Jl!ll••••lll!!!llf"'!l!l
UPI Spcn Writer
Cards' ace right-bander Bob DiviSion to six g!ffies. Bon¢; bit
McDowell provided the Mil(8) and Cannlzz•ro; Grimsley and Ada. sherd Cline of New
Pittsburgh saw its National Gillson Saturday night wben be his 22nd homer in the first inLeague East lead dwindle even pitched the first no-bitter of his . ning and Mays bit a tbree-nm
an:'"ir
Pi'
·
further after ~ a cru~ ' ~ en route tO an ll-G homer, climaxing a four-run
By United Press international Phlla
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
102 OOo lOG- 4 9 1
faur-t~ame series to the St. Louis triumph G'bsm all ed . only rally in the seventh. The homer Cleveland its straight loss.
Gates
Brown
drove
in
four
·
Leading
Batters
San
Diego
000 020 l02- s 7 2 visited Sunday with Mrs.
--SAME ·DAY
was the G«tb II Mayg' career. runs with a three-run homer
C8rdlnals,bllt Pirate manager faur Pitts~
National League
Fryman, WiiS!ln (7) and Marlene Fisher and children
Danny Murtaugh has called to wild .,_._
tbird 1M to
Gary SUtherland singled in
8
SER,VICE
bis cbarges to regroup rather
PI""' on a
s . e
two runs in the first inning and and a triple to ~park Detroit's Torre,St.LG. 1 ~ 475R:, 1 ~69 ~~ ~~caJ~;{dnK._t~K~I~~I? 1;l whoarecaiijpingatForkedRun
victory
over
Ml!m~ta.
HarBckrt.
Chi
112
450
73
158.
351
LPWIIson
(l-4).
HR-Gastan
Lake.
Thursday
night
Mr.
and
In
At
9-0ut At 5,!
Ire
t
Milt
May,
and
walks
m
the
bi'
sol
bom
·
the
alnhth
to
tban
re
'
A
la
ou.
turned
on
his
third,
fourth
and
seventh
int
a
o
e
m
~·
mon
Killebrew
drove
in
three
Garr,Atl
117
477
79
157
.329
(15th).
Mrs
.
Dean
Sayre
of
Mid.Matty
lead Montreal past Los Angeles.
lor the Twins to increase SngllnPi! 106 413 47 lllo ·329
dletown, Pa ., and Howard
fCll'lll8l' teammates witb a two- nlngs.
·
Steve Renko went the distance runs
.
.
I 85
Clmnt. P;t 103 409 63 132 .323 Phila
100 000 1oo- 2 7 1
f S
d Mr
s.
out, 1bree-fun hcmer, his fourtll
''Na~y, w~en yo_u lose the to even his reclrd at 12-12 and h;gleague-leading tota to . Brock,St.L 111 475 92 153 .322 San Diego 003 000 oox- 3 . 8 2 Sayre o yracuse an
118
AlouSt.
L
113
462
60
148
.320
Lersch,
Hoerner
(7)
and
Herbert
Sayre
were
dinner
bit «i 'the
in the eighth way we~ l~t
gomg to af- hand the Dodgers their tbird
Jones. NY
101385 43 12 .319 Ryan : Roberts (11 . 12) and guests of Mr. and Mrs ..Norman
binlng Sunday to give the feet you, .SBld the veteran Buc loss in four games.
Davisl, LA 118 477 64 151 .317 Kendall . LP--Lersch (4-10) HR
C8rdlnals a 6-i victory over the skippll'· "We haven't scored Hal McRae and Johnny Bench
HOSPITAL NEWS H.Aaron. All
- Stahl 151hL Montanez (25th). Styer at Water(ord. ·
Pirates and give St. Louis a mor~~ four ~ ~"! ~ slammed heme runs and rookie
107 37~
69 118 .316 New York 001 000 ooo- 1 5 0 II- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .
American
League
llll'eep rl. the series.
our
gW~s team ISilthat left-bander Ross Griinsely Holzer Medical Center, First
G. AB. R. H. Pd. San Francisco
'l'be Cardinals, wbo lrailed our game. ere a
yielded only four hits as the Ave. and Cedar St. General Otiva,Min 97 379 59 134 .354
200 000 40x- 6 7 0
Murcr,
NY
117
426
77
142
.333
McAndrew,
Taylor (7) and
Pltlsburgb by 14 games on July usually sccres runs but lately Reds defeated Olicago
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. Olis, KC
111
435
66
135
.310
Grafe
;
Marichal
(12-8) and
20, are llOW within fCjUI' games of we ha~en't been able to do tha~; McRae's home run w~ one of ~aternity visiting hours 2:30 to Rojas, KC 111 ~01 55 122 .304 Dietz ; LP-McAndrew
(0-4) .
the crumbling divisi(lll leaders. We'D JUSt have to re-group, his three hits and came off loser 4:30 p.m. Parents only on Rchrdt. Chi 103 382 43 115 .301 HR - Bonds (22ndJ. Mays
__. on! 21 added Murtaugh.
J
Pizarro 'th
· t ·
Rtlnmnd, Bal
(16th) .
Tbe Pirates ba ve sew'"'
Y
· Willie StargeD continues to uan .
WI none ou m Pediatrics Ward.
101 346 63 104 .301
'
.
Blrlbs
runil while ~ eight of their
the burden of the Pirilte ~ fli'St inning. The , .Reds
Tovar, Min 115 484 72 144 .298 Montreal . 300 110 01o- 6 12 0
last 10 games.
carry
·
p.cked up unearned runs m the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Horton Del 110 420 60 124 .295 Los Angeles .
attack, billing two IKme runs, third and ·fourth innings and Durst, Athens, a soil; Mr. and Smith, Bos
010 010 OlG- 3 9 0
120
468
68
137
.28993
Renko
(12-121
and Bateman;
40th and 41st of the seal!OO. added a fourth run in the Sixth Mrs. Paul E. Workman, Bird, Bal
"llW':OU .. :. "70 bis
97 357 84 103 .289 Singer. Moeller (6). Mikkelsen
to give Pittsburgh an early lead
,
·
f
103 349 55 101 .289 (8) and Haller. LP- Singer (7 .
in Sunday's contest.Tbe Pli'ate on Bench s ~d home run o the Jackson, a daughter; Mr. and May, Mil
· Home Runs
14). HR- Bailey 112thl SutherMrs.
James
C.
MltcheU,
V'mton,
NEW RECORD
slugger is optimistic about the seasonJiw· , tw
t sing) · a son; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D. Na1ional League: Stargel. land (4th).
WEST SALEM, Ohio (UP! I currentskldfacinghisballclub.
Pitt 41; H. Aaron, Atliand May,
~ ~s. 0011 . em
32; JohnS!ln. Phil 27; Houston · 020 000 12G- 5 10 1
- Tom MeEwea set a new
''Good dubs bounce back and the eighth ummg drove m ~o Goad, Pedro, a daughter; Mr. Cin
Montanez,
Phil 25. ·
Atlanta
000 112 ooo- 4 11 1
and
Mrs.
Turley
E.
George,
,
ood
club
.,
runs
and
gave
Houstoo
1ts
world record of 1.49 seconds
1m
American
League : Cash, Del
we
ow
we
re
a
g
,
·
.
•-·
A"-·ta
Relie
Forsch.
Ray
ad ZZ3.9 mpb Sllllday Ia tbe 881'd Stargell
VIc-, over ""'' .
ver Vinton, a son, and Mr. and Mrs: 26 ; Smith, Bos and Melton. Chi (6), Culver (7)(61.andLemaster
Hiatt ;
. Ialeraatloaal Hotrod
Alou,
by Pittsburgh lo Cecil Upshaw struck out two II Thomas E. Huddleston, Pt. 25; Horton, Oet 22 ; Petrocelli, Stone. U~shaw (.8) and WilBos, Netllees, Clev and Murcer. liams. W Culver (5-6) LPAuaclaUoo World Fwmy Car St Louis last winter ca ped a the first three baUers be faced, Pleasant, a son.
NY
21.
Upshaw (9-6) . HR - Rader
• ·
.' P
wt Bob Watson beat out an
Discharges
ClwllploDSblps,
Runs BaHed In
(lOth) Aaron (32nd) Williams
five-run
rally
that
wiped outa ~ infield bit and Denis Menke
Mrs.
Elizabeth
P.
Allman,
National
League:
Stargell.
Desplle tlu~ record,
(?lrd)
.
1 Pirate lead. 11 was only his doubled to set the stage for Mrs.
Robert
Edward Pitt 104; Torre, St. L 95; H.
McEwea, of Fo1111taln Valley,
fourth heme run of the season Wynn,
· · bit Hank Bresenhan, W. Brice ChanneU, Aaron, All 86; Montanez. Phil
Calif., failed' to wlo tbe but his second against Pitts.
s game-WIIllllllg
80; Williams, Chi 76.
American League: Killebrew,
champlooablp. First prize burgh.
~~ b~ered for the ~raves, Mrs. Budd L. Darst, Mrs.
Minn
85; Bando, Oak 75; B.
Douglas
Ray
Dickens
·
and
was laba by Doa
In other National Lea8ue nusmg his career total tD 624.
Robinson,
Bait 74; Petrocelli,
PADS ON
.
Larry Stahl belted a three-run daughter. Mrs. Roy· Eggers, Bos 73 ; Murcer,
Pndbomme, GreDBCla ~.
NY 72.
aclim,
Mmtnal triwed Los homer•in ·the tbhil iming and Mrs. Charles,w . Hargr.~ye and
COJ,.UMBUS tltP'IJ - Ma;;y
Pitching
Calif."( wbo •also drove a
Angeles
6-3,
San
Francisco
.
Dave
ROOerts
pitched
a
sevendaughter, Mrs. Eugene Herd- Na1ional League: Jenkins , Ohio high'schol!f!1officially open
l·'Jilymliatb. In drag rilciog, a
Chi 18-9; Ellis, Pill and
tiliiijldilolr's clocllng does whipped New Yor~ 6-1, Cin- bitter as the San Diego Padres man an,d son, Mrs. David W. Carlton. St. L16-6; Downing LA their foQtball practice sessions
cmnali beat Ch1cago 5-l, dealt the Pbillies a double Hughes, Mrs. Vernon Isaac and
today, in prepping for the
1101 .tart 1111111 be leaves the Houston edged Atlanta 1&gt;-4, and setback
14-8; Pappas, Chi 14-10.
American
League:
Blue,
Oak
season
opener Sept. 10. The first
son, Patricia A. Kanouse,
llarlblllille.
San Diego downed Philadelphia In ~ opener Nate Colbert William F . Marting, Jerry 22-4; Lolich. Del 19-8; Dobson, scrimmage permitted is .Aug .
Pradllomme wu off lite
&gt;4 and 3·2 sweep a singled with
bases. loaded Wayne McClung, George D.- Ball and Drago, KC 15-6; Wood, 28.
lllle flnt aDd fiDished jllll
Chi 15-9; Hunter, Oak 15-10.
doubleheader. ,
and none out in the ninth to
lhead of McEwea wltb a lime
Mrs.
Clayton ·--~..."!"!'-~~~~~~~~-~-Bobby Bonds and WIDle Mays ck'ive in a pair of runs for the Mitchell,
of US secends aDd 221.11 mpb
Morrison and daughter, Mrs.
•
•
Ernest E. Quillen, Mrs. Carl L.
•
.
lbrcMigb the qaarter-mlle. . drove in five runs between•them Padres' winning margin.
0
Phone 992-2171
with homers and Juan Marlcbal
Stahl's fifth bcmer came after Rathburn, Mrs. Wesley E.
· OPTOMETRIST .
125 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
pitched a fi~tter as the Enzo Hernandez and Dave
Reynolds
and
daughter,
Mrs.
.
·OFFICE
HOURS
9:Jo
2
T05
(CLOSt
I®
J~::.~ms; s~·;·wz Giants defeated ·New York to Campbell singled with one out.
EarlL: Riley, Eddie R. Russell,
A NOO O
U S
AS
U
S
Mrs: Guy V. Sargent, Lincoln
. T
N NTH R .) - E T CO . RT T.;
W. Smith, Mrs, RobertS. Stout, ......
Mrs. Ethelbert R. Williams,
Mrs. James E. Willis and son, r---------------------------------------------~------------------------------­
Frank H. l'A!rkle, Henry L.
•Pierce, Mrs. Ada 0. Pierson,
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- SaJ;dra red in, it wasn't good enough. but jwnped over and rolled two Charles E. Knapp, and Mrs.
Miss Haynie, who finished sec- feet past.
Harry Kraus.
Haynie "can't stand sudden
death playoffs," so she calmly ond in the lmmke tournament "I thought she made it (on
knocked in a lll.foot birdie putt last year. losing in a three-way 18)," said Miss Haynie.
Best All Week
on the final hole Sunday for playoff to Mary Mills, played
the $3,750 first prize in the $25,- extremely steady golf in the Miss Haynie, who bit a wedge
into the 18th green to set up her
tQJ Len lmmke Buick Open golf final round.
title-winning putt, said it was
No Bogeys AgalD
tournament.
She recorded five birdies, four the "best wedge I hit all week.
"I wanted to do it right there,"
said the 28-year-old Fort Worth, on the back side of the 6,635- It was a perfect place to hit it." ·
Tex. native. "I don't like sud- yard, par 72 Raymond MemQr- Two shots off the pace, tied
ial Course for a 32, and could for third, were Kathy Whitworth,
den death playoffs."
The birdie on 18, Miss Hay- have had more on the front who had a 70 Sunday, and Judy
nie's third in a row, climaxed side. She didn't bogey a hole Rankin, in with a final round
a stirring comeback which saw for the second day in a row. 69. At 210 was JoAnne Carner,
Miss Hagge, looking for her who rebounded with a 67 in the
her overtake Marlene Hagge;
the tournament leader since the first tournament win since 1969, final round after a 75 on Satfirst nine bole. Miss Hagge, who !lit a putt on the 17th bole which urday. Miss Rankin and Miss
had a record-tying 29 on her looked like it hsd to go in, but Whitworth each earned $1,980
while Mrs. Carner got $1,465.
f;rst nine Friday, shot a one somehow didn't.
"!
don't
know
how
that
putt
over par 73, while Miss Haynie
stayed out," said a dejected
had a 67.
Miss Hagge, who won $2,825, Miss Hagge after the round, and
actually stsrted her own down- her sentiments were echoed by
fall with a boey five on the par Miss Haynie.
IN IJTIIOPOLIS
Also
on.
No.
18,
although
nearfour 14th. That cut her lead
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
over Miss Raynle to two shots ly 60 feet away, Miss Hagge's president of District 8,
and although Miss Hagee par- putt split the center of the cup, American Legion ttuxiliary,
and Mrs. Albert Roush, District
8 junior activities chairman,
and Mrs. Clair Might of FeeneyBemett Post 128 Auxillilry were
ByBetthaParker
Ohio University, spent several . at Lithopolis Thursday for a
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sabbath SChool attendance days with his grandparents, Mr. meeting of tbe unit there. Mrs.
Aug. 8 at the Free Methodist and Mrs. Schaefer.
Kessinger served as installing
Church was 105.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run, officer for the installation of tiM\
Forty-five friends and neigh- was hostess recently to the 1971-72 officers and initiated
bors had a picnic Saturday at Laurel Cliff Health Club. The several new members into the
the roadside park on Route 22 meeting was opened by the unit.' A dinller preceded the ·
Natloow,idc Mu!u;al h"urarn:c ( 'll.
Ht•mt Ollkt: (I)Jumhus. Oh1n
honoring Rev. Eugene Gill and president, Bertha Parker. The meeting.
family.
meeting included. The Lord's
Mrs. Dora Halley attended a Prayer, the salute to the U. S. .---------:----::---:-------:--:---t
church meeting at Buckeye flag and a song,- "Count Your
]Lake last week.
Blessings," Several readings
Mrs. Erma Champion of were given and game prizes
.
Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Bud went to Mildred Bowen,
Ner\Ofl of Cleveland and Mr. Ladonna Gilmore and Jean .
and Mrs. Bruce Norton of Wright. Bertha Parker won the
_
_. SOmething s1range happens lo a lol of people when
Fairne.ss and understan'ding in traffic jiliuations can
they get behind the wheel ol a car.
Stewart"recentlycallon Mr. and door prize. Refreshments of ice
only help make driving conditions safer for all of us. Y~Jur
They forget they're only human .
Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
cream and cake were served. S3S.OO'l)ownnew car dealer" woul.d like to see the Nap'oleons on our
They Iorge! that mislakes on the road can be caused roads start caring aboUt other drivers.
'
Charles Diehl and Mrs.
Rev. GiU will be preaching Balan~e · On
by
them .. . iusl as well as by the olher guy.
t,lapoleon
may
have
mode
a
prellybig
name
Convenient.
Georgia Diehl visited Sunday over WMPO, August 16,17; !Bat
There's a little Napoleon in all of Us. Some ,have a . for him'seif. But please remember, after all
eveningwithMrs.CharlesDiehl '10:15 a.m. Rev. Gill will hold Terms.
little more -some a little less. The ·important thing is that
was said 11nd done. what he met .
who is a patient at Holzer services at the Royal Oak Park
we au recognize this attitude leads 10 accidents. Because
Waterloo.
Hospital.
Aug. 29.
Napoleon sees things only one way - hi~. When someMr:' and Mrs: Bill Perry of Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
thing goes wrong out on the highway. he presUmes it 's
NatioMI Automobile Dealers ASSOCiation
the other guy 's idiotic mistake, Not h.is.
•
Athens spent saturday with Mr. and Fran Cline have returned
and Mrs. Normah SChaefer. home from a week'·s visit with
Mason, W. Va.
'ane fn a series presented by N.A. D. A., The Daily Sentinel, and the Tri.Counly Automobile Dealers AsS!lC.
David Schaefer, a student at rel:llivcs in Florida.

· ··

·

'

·

:~;t ~ers

banU: ou

J !~;~d~~LB:~h~e ~~ht~!~~~ ~;t~~t~~::;·d:t~: !:~t

base:Oers-a

RJ

flftiSHING

12

iame,

WHAT

USUALLY

HAPPENS
·AFTER
'

1.)•

'

ALL BILLS

ll'aded

ARE PAID
WITH

u.;

WCOMPTON 0 0

..

T0-12,

She Hates Playoffs, so • • •

P. J. PAULEY
992·2318

·Laurel Oiff News Notes

Two -· StateAwards
WOn by Garden Club

··

.Pirates Boarded. Again .

ROOMS

NEW
fURNITURE
'349.95

..

MASON
FURNITURE

' .

l
'I

I. •

..

Rtm.AND - The Rutlaild
Friendly Gardeilers received
two Ohio Association of Garden
dub awards - a first f~r
garden ' therapy work with
special educatioo students of
the RuOand Elementary' School, '
and an honorable mention for
the publicity book~ during the
41st llllliilal c!DVentioo of the
OAGC the past week at the Neil
HOU$e in Columbus.
Mrs. James Carpenter, Mrs.
acmer Parker, Mrs. Larry
Edwards and Mrs. William
W'tllf&lt;rd atitnded the three day
conventioo.
The club's garden therapy
wcl'k was cooduc.ted with 13
studen.t s aod consisted of
gardening, craft work with
aatural resources and dried
materials, flower arranging,
garden and nature tours, bird
study and 'feeding. Stale
'Therap"""'"'~·· Mrs. Elbert
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Bob R. Moore, Syracuse,
Tewell,'~·-..._...,
was most com•are 8Jill0Uilcing the engagement of their daughter, Bobbie
plimentary on the project,
Lou, to John Randolph, son ol Mr. and Mrs. George Randollit
rating it as "extra good."
cJ. New Haven, W. Va. Bobbie, a 1969 graduate of Southern
A project book containing
High School, is employed at Shoppers Bonanza. John is a 1969
publicity qn the therapy
graduate of Wahama High School and attended Marshall
program, pictures of the
University. He is now completing basic !raining in the U. S.
students busy .with the acNavy. Wedding plans are incomplete.
tiviUes, sunshine WCI'k, project
costs, and descriptions rl. each
day's activities was prepared
by Mrs. Carpenter, cochairman, who accepted the
first place award. Mrs~ Fred
William•on assisted as cochairman with all the club
Annual reunion of the families Mr. and Mrs. James Neulzling members helping with the
of 'the late Adeline Rice and daughter, Patty, Miss lberapy er donating refresh.
Yeauger ' and Samuel Yeauger Nancy Mayer, Pomeroy; Mr.
was held Sunday at the Mid- and Mrs. William Neulzling,
dleport Roadside Park.
Timmy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Nina
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Robb, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Tyle
Robert Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Potts, Crooksville; Leonard Baird and grandam,
Mrs. Margaret Clatwerthy, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Altizer and
and Mrs. Henry Clatworthy and family, Corning; Mrs. Mildred Thirteen high school students
J'un, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner Powell and Jeff, ~gfield; frORI Meigs Cotmty left Sunday
and Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Miss Jeanette Scott, Mrs. fer the 1971 Teenage Institute on
Long, Ray Redman, Mrs. Marjorie Bradbury and Alcohol and Drugs to be beJel at
James Buchanan, Middleport; daughter, GaUipolis.
the Ohio [)(minican College,
------------.....:.--------,Columbus, lor the next four
dayg.
The institute is strongly
committed to the phi)OilO)Ihy
;th:'a~t~,:;;;'~~~p~~osltlve and
begins with
young people.
through their
insight, the institule believes,
that may avert « at least
reduce the plight that
alcoholism on drug dependency
may bring. The institute will
therefore be very unique as it
focuses directly oo the students
- their ideas, insighls and
recommendations.
Leaders in the fields of
medicine,
psychology,
sociology and law have been
assembled to discuss the
problems openly and frankly.
sm~ck

Bobbie Lnu Moore Engaged

Yeauger Families Reunited Sunday

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL School
Board 7:30 p. m., high i;Chooi.

CANDY STRIPERS of
. Veterans Memorial Hospital, 7
ments. A first place award in Sears
Community
Im- p.m., hospital cafeteria.
Region 11 was also received by provement Project with Mrs
the club,
Howard Birchfield and Mrs:
RUTLAND Firemen 's
The club's publicity book was Bruce May as co-chairmen will Auxiliary, special meeting, 7:30
awarded an honerable mention receive first place In Region 11 p.m. at the firehouse .
with the state publicity with a cash award also, which MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
chairman, Mrs. Sluart Allan, will be given at the fall regional DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
commenting on the quality and meeting. It had a score of 90 and Middleport Masonic Temple.
quantity of reporting as dnne by was considered in the state Mother.s Club meet in
Mrs. Homer Parker. A total judging.
basement.
SC(II'e of 91 ~ was earned on the
It was the "Let's Keep
TIJESDA Y
,
basiS .of educational quality, Rutland A Bloomin' Clean SCHOOL SAFETY patrol
special effort, radio, ~rden Town" project which involved meeting Tuesd~y ~~Meigts
hints, Green Thumb Notes, planting more than 100 lrees, JUnior High Sc oo • th epdeor '
flower shows, participation in free lrash pickups for Rutland, room 110. All seven gra rs
OAGC projects, therapy removal of old building, interested are asked to attend
programs, civic beautification, cleaning, painting picnic tables, accompanied by at least one
junior club work open meetings, installing a grill and main· parent.
and things of v~lue or lri&amp;piring taining tbe park, lrinuning FRIENDLY CIRCLE, Trinity
to the commuruty.
shrubbery at the s~hooi and a Church, a p.m. Miss Mary
The book was complled by complete landscapmg of the Elizabeth Chapman program
Mrs. William Willilrd and Mrs. Rutland Grade School, giving leader· Mrs Roy Mayer and
Joe Bolin. The pu~licity earned 1,000 packets of_ flower seeds lor Mrs. Donald· Hauck, hostesses.
a first ?lace Region 11 award planting to res;dents, _etc.
VETERANS ·- MEMORIAL
also With the1 award to be The yearbook, wtth Mrs .
·
pres,en ted at the October Homer Parker as chainnan will Hospital Women's Auxiliary
meeting in Gallipolis. Mrs. receive third place in Region 11. potluck picnic, ((p.m. park on
new Route 33,'left going north.
Parker accepted the state In addition, The Rutland Regular meeting to follow .
award fer the club.
Friendly Gardeners were active
Both, the garden therapy and participants in the Meigs
the publicity book, were on County Christmas F1ower Show .
U
display at the state OAGC which won an honorable
convention; as was the flower mention in the state. Mrs. Joe Mr.
Eddy
Educator's
show hook, "Fill Your House Bolin, club member, was co- schedule for week of August 16With Flowers;" the 1969-70 chairman for this show. The 20, in Meigs County:
p.-ogram book, and the m0-n Dower show book was also on Tuesday, 12:30, Tuppers
SCIP book.
·
display at state, as was the one Plains; 3:30, Elmwood; 4:15,
The flower show, which Mrs. fortheMeigsCountyFairShow, Alfred; 5, Burlingham; 5:45,
Harold Wolfe and Mrs. William although it wasn't a winner. The Arnolds; 6:30, Rock Springs;
Brown as co-chairmen, will lour members attending par- 7:15, Brown-Town; 7:45, Enreceive third place in Region 11 ticipated in the state workshops terprise.
for shows presented by a single for therapy, flower shows, Wednesday, 9, Harrisonville;
club. It had a score of 89. The . publicity, and program hooks. 11:45, Radcliff; 12:45, Coalton;
3:30, Leo; 4:15, Green's Store ;
5, Limerick.
Thursday, 9:30, Eastern; 12,
Chester; 3, Old Chester Rd. ;
5:15, Skating Rink; 6:05, State
Garage; 6:45, Five Points; 7:30,
were given by Tom Rice High School; Thomas Roy Beacon.
Friday, 9, Syracuse; 11,
Motors, Keith Goble Ford, New · Cassell, Middleport, Tom Allan
Antiquity;
12,Letart; 2:15, East
Yock Clothing House, Pomeroy Crisp, Langsville, John Harold
First National Bank, Sacred Kauff, Middleport, Debra Jo Letart; 5,AppleGrove; 6,Great
Heart Women's Guild, Mid· May, Rullaild, Milisa K. Rizer, Bend; 7:30, Syracuse P. 0.
All stops will be 20 minutes
dleport, Pomeroy Rotary Club, Pomeroy, Christine Robinson,
long. If you have any special
Simon :s Market, Ewing Middleport, Linda Rel!ecca
Funeral Home, Xi Gamma Mu Rupe, Pomeroy, those from book you would like, please call
,992-3745.
Sorority,
Meigs
County Eastern High SChool; Julia Ann
Ministerial Association, Holter, Pomeroy, Karie Robin
RF..TURN FROM TEXAS
Bradbury P :T.A ., Pomeroy Humphrey, Reei:lsville.
Mr
.._
. and Mrs. Charie sE..
Women's Christian Tern- These sluden .. were selected Blakeslee, Pomeroy, and sonperance Union, Drew Webster by the participating high in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Post 39 of Pomeroy, Feeney schools following guidelines set Mrs. James F. Butcher, MidBetmett Post 128 of Middleport, up by the Meigs County Com- dleport, returned Wednesday
and the Rutland American mittee on Alcoholism and Drug from Midland, Texas, where
Legion Post.
Abuse. Anyone wishing in- they visited Mrs. ffiakeslee's
Students from Meigs County formation concerning alcohol brother and family, Mr. and
attending the institute are those and other drugs or seeking help Mrs. Gerald J. Lavender. While
from Southern High SChool; for themselves or others may there · they assisted at the
Anne. Renee Burke, Racine; contact the program direc~r •. wedding of ,Mrs. Blakeslee's
Jobn William Eichinger, Rev. Arthur C. Lund by calling niece, Diane Lavender to Mr.
Syracuse; Candy Carol Hoback, 992-2010 or ~723: Mr. Danny Sam Chaney. On the return trip
Racine; Connie Elaine Warner, Thompson IS president of the they were guests in the home of
Minersville; those from Meigs committee.
Mr. andMrs. RobertGarwellof
Chickasha, Oklahoma. Mrs.

t

F,ddy 's

Sched /e

13 at Columbus Institute

I

If you're touring a foreign
country this summer, get set for
some hard news.
No matter which way you go,
you'll run
into drug laws
~:£::£~:il:Bahr
that are a whole lot tougher
of individuals who have had
than ours.
close contact witb young people
The Bahr Reunion was held Howard, Tammi, Terri, Jim,
You may have heard differently.
and some real unlentanding of Aug. 8 at the Forked Run Park. and Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Richa~d
the problems SUI'I'OIIMing the
Attending were Margaret Fick, Jr., Kevin, Kirk; Kyle
You may have heard possession and abuse
rl. alcoliol and other Russell, Columbus; Ernest W. Bahr, Aannell B. Payne, Bobby
Recommendations Bahr, John Barnes, Louise Bahr, Michael Payne, Kevin
sale of drugs overseas or south of our drugs.
s!emming from these sessioos Barnes,JobnBarnes,Jr.,Dawn Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. B. W.
will be reported back to the Barnes, Gene Russell, Goldie Bahr and Palricia Fee, AUtens.
own border is.okay. Or at least toler- large
group through the election Russell, and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Winters.
of a member to represent each Golden Bahr, Athens; Mr. and Parkersburg; Cheryl Bentz,
ated. That's a lie. Drugs are illegaL
group to the Teenage A!lvisory Mrs. Victor A. Bahr and Jane, Parkersburg; Mrs. Jack
Board.
The same as here. And that's the
DonVanMeter,WaVanMeter, Gillilan, Mark and Vick
But, it will not be all wert. Jobn Bentz, Linda, Keith and Reedsville; George Gillilan,
truth. '
There will also be plenty of Brenda, Ada Van Meter, Mr. Canton; Mildred _and .foyce
opportunity to get better and Mrs. John J. Rose, Julie Lipsey , Dragerton, Ut«h;
Only one thing is different. The
acquainted with the other 450 and Mandie, Mr. and Mrs. Harold and Lavina Brannan,
participants lbnlugh parties, Charles Goeglein, Charles, Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs,
penalties are stiffer. In Lebanon, for sports,
movies, and other Michael and Mark, Mrs. Evelyn Norman Bahr, Long Botiom;
recreatimal activities. The $35 Well, Kenneth, Russell, Brian Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Conley and
instance, possession gets you ·3 to 5
schdarships which WEre raised and Barbara, Chester-Long Lynn Brooks, Gallipolis; Mr.
Meigs CoWJty Ctmmitlee Bottom area; Mr. and Mrs. A. and Mrs. Albert Hansel, Holly
years in: a mental hospital. That's the byon the
Alcoholism and Drug Almle D. Betzing, Chandlersville; Mr. Jo Tipton, Zanesville; Cindy
law. And there's no way around
and Mrs. Henry Bahr, Patti, Hansel and Rick Marshall,
Roseville; Mr. and Mrs. Archie
their law . .
Circle Planning :f¥~-~~~M!.~'!.!~¥ifRose,
Route 1, Long Bottom;
A Thought__ and
Russell Will, Neda ,Clemson,
Drug arrests of Americans overMr. and Mrs. Clarence
On
Improvements
For Today •Neuizling, Chester area.
seas have jumped 7r!fo since last year_
O;urch improvements were
Pessimism Is a waste of
And nobody tan help. Not friends.
discussed and an electi(lll day
force. It is the penally of
those who do nof know
·tUmed by the Emma
Or family. Or the smartest lawyer in dinner
ho.r Ia live.
Kincaid arete of the Rutlaild
-Charles ,wagner
United Methodist Church
town. Not the United States
Thursday at Fcrest Acres Park.
government. ·
A picnic dinner preceded the
meeting. The need fer a new
lfs Quick! Easy
That's why there a,re over 700
church bulleUn board was
along with the
DRIVE-IN
Atnencim citizens doing time on drug discussed
possibility of planting new
shrubbery. It was l'lll*'ted that
BANKING
charges in foreign jails. .
•
. $22.10 had J;een made from the
Fridays Only
,of dish cloths. The
Those are the facts.
T"e Drive-In Wh'ldow
collection at the nleeting-was

Reunion atPark

* * *
,.

"n1eir ·
wt"t:~ area
than ours..

d.ck it out."

plmic

$11.50. Another
at the
same place was set for the
second 1'lllnldlly «i qat month.
1be ·Rev. Robert Buingamer

had prayer.

• Others attending were Mrs.
Bumgarner, Mr. aocl Mrs.
Harvey Erlewlne, Mrs~va
Howell, lin.. Grace
D,
Mrs. Calba lne ColweD, Mrs.,
Ulde . ,..~~.-, Mrs, Marpret
~ !h lllrle . Bilbop,
Mn.llertia I '-er, Mrs. Jmiy

, ....:-- I!ldilh WUJ!a~.
aad

Opll _Al'lllllronll-

. , ...

is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
CContinuously!

and sAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

Notes . .•.
A weeilly feature of Meigs
.' CoWity Garden Club members.

Cut Flowers, CtJttings, and their Care
BY ANNA ELIZABEnl TURNER
RuUand Garden Club
RUTLAND - Cut flowers are a joy to the flower and plant
lover of nature's. distinctive manufacturer.
After cutting flowers, they should be brought into the house
and should not be put near heating areas or direct sunligb:.
Evaporation of water and rotting of stems by bacteria are the two
worst enemies of cut flowers.
The flowers should be placed in warm water about 130
degrees tempera lure in a refrigeration unit or cool room. The
flowers should be cut off under water with a sharp knife to
promote water passing into the tubes of the stems.
The water in flower containers should be changed cJ.ten to
prevent the growth of bacteria. The flowers will stay fresh longer
and colors brighter if small quantities of sugar and lemon juice
are ~dded. This trealment is most useful to red flowers whicb
have a tendency to change color.
There are a number of 'preparations on the iJlBrket recommended as a preservative. However. aspirin is of little or no value
for this purpose. Florists sometimes remove the anthers as sooo
as !he buds open to help prevent the petals from falling.
In late August, cuttings will root with facility fer creditable
specimens before winter sets in in earnest. Wu begooias,
Ageralums, Fuchsias, Coleus, Geraniums, English Ivy, Sultana,
Airplane Plan~ Philodendron, and a number of other perennials
from the flower garden may be rooted. These, carried through the
winter as smaU plants will be useful Rower size and lor more
cuttings next spring and summer.
Rain-water, vermiculite, and other commercial materials
are suitable source supplies for rooting purposes.

Brief Vacation Trip Concluded
Mrs. J . J. Davis and former roommate of Mrs.
daughter, Elaine, and Mrs. D. Randall Fisher(~ Davis),
H. Robeson have returned from who is a cOUDseler of Qlimney
a short vacation to New York Corners Camp fer Girls. Both
and New England. They went camps are in tile Berbbires.
especially to visit Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ha2zard will be
Don Haz-zard (Joyce Davis) at leaving that area !IQ(IIl for
Pittsfield, Mass. Mr. Hazzal)l Durham, N.C. Mr.Huzard will
received a fellowship to the play with the North Carolina
Berkshire Music Center Or- Symphony the ccming
VI
cbeslra and Olamber Music and Jayce will attend the
Groups and Mrs. Hazzard is a University of North Carolina at
participant in the Boston Olapel Hill where She will be a
University Tanglewood In-· junior in the school of mUsic.
stitute and is studying with Mr. Both attended University II
Armando Ghitalla, first chair Michigan last year and moved
trumpet of the Bosion Syrn- to Durham in June.
phony.
T~_ng1ewood
and
the
M,.O'l'lntll vwr~~~-;
Berkshires is the summer home
Hobart Young of Sjdney spent
of the Boston Symphony. Tbe the weekend here visitiog his
group also visited Tom Aten, mother, Mrs. Sylvia YOIIIIB at
nephew of Mrs. RobeS!ln, who is Guysville, and Miss Evelyn
a counselor at Camp Taconic Flck aud Miss Elizabeth Fick,
and with Miss Mary Stuck, a Pomeray.

..

r----------::=

GarwellisMr.Butcller'ssister.
COUPLE CELEBRATES
Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle
recently celebrated their anniversary at the home of ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Maynard, New Raven. Mrs.
Russell Maynard baked the
anniversary cake. Gifts were
p.-esented to the couple. Cake
and punch were served. At..
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Maynard, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Maynard, Point Pleasant,
and the honored couple's
children, Terri and Debbie.
VACATION ENDED
Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz and
children, Anita and Marc, hsve
returned from a vacation trio.
They spent three days in tennessee, attended the "Trumpet
of the Land" near New
Philadelphia, the Swiss
Festival, and spent a day at.
Cedar Point.

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Tensed Blue Wins 22nd . ·:;;;.:.~:;·=~::~ ~=~-~e:.~ ~~~,. .

~llimore 000 010 ooo- 1 .5 0
Blue (22-41 and Duncan; Durell· of CoiUinbus spent a Colwnbus called Sunday oil
Chicago 100 001 oox- 2 7' 0 ·aahnsen, Aker (8). McDaniel week end with Mr. ·and .Mrs. Mrs. Russell Roush .. other
· Dobson, Hall (7) and Etche· (8), Hambright (9) and M~ .n th R
Sun•. lly' JOE FBOBLINGER
straight.
fully assaulted the mighty Babe KanSas aty dealt Bosion its barren; Wood (15-9) and son. LP- Aker 14.31 .
. Herbert Sayre and ,David.
callers on e OiJsl;es
wsy
UPISpertiWrlter ',
The Albletics raked four RuWs home runtotal.
· seventh straight ' loSs, &gt;1, Herrmann. LP-Dobson 05-6). Cleveland 000 002 ooo- 2 9 1 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel were Mr. and Mrs, ·Waiter
The mental .straln is getting Yankee hurlers for 18 hits with / Blue survived . a shaky California outlasted Washington
Milwaukee
,
caUed on Mr. and Mrs. Don McDade. of Troy, Mrs. Edna
to be tQo mucb for Oakland's Bert Campaneris' twci.tun tie- seventh inning Sunday when the oh1 in 10 innings, and Chicago Kansas Cl~ 103 oio- 5 10 1 . McDowel~:,?~~i~J:" ~e~onr Manuel at . Racine Sunday Roush of Racine and Mr. and
eensatioiial Breballer, · Vida breaking single in the eighth Yanks erupted for four rtms. downed Baltimore 2-1 in other Boston
001 000 ooo- 1 6 2 gan 181 and Fosse; ParS!)ns. morning. Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dana Lewis of Cllfton,W.
Blue. Although . be hasn't leadingtheway.Vidaaided the Dick Williams,_manager of the AL games.
Hedlund, Burgmeler IB) ~nd Morris (7), Sanders (B) and Joe Manuel Sunday were Mr. Va.
.
.
181
-'-- ted losing
·
"'~ , ·.hair
' he · e;g
· hth ·mnmg
· · rallY as he •---'
Paepke; · ·Culp,LP~Culp
. Lee (13-11).
and Rodriguez.
wP..:.Parsons, (lO- and Mrs.·. Robert Bailey. and. Mr
. . . and Mrs. Herbert 0nu"ush
....
,.,.
"""""" A's, never had. qualms about Sand
· · y AIomar •""""-'
o...,.~ the Monl!iomery.
141 _ LP--McDowell (Jl.11J .
admlls being ''about ready to ·.the tie-breaking run on a wild _giving Blue the book: "As long decisive run in California's HR-xhaal 17th) . WP-HedBobby of Long Bottom, Mr. and . and Mrs. Iva Orr called on Mr.
brea_kJ. up_." '
pitch by reliever lindy McDa· ~itlookedlikehecOuldfinish, extra iJin_ing thriller ,when lund 00-6) . .
.
Detroit .ooo 015 001 ~ 7 8,0 Mrs. Le_wis _Hudson and Mrs. 311dMrs, Danai,ewisat_Ciifton,
(10 in.ngs)200 ooo 001 1- 4 13 2 ·Minnesota
.010 40os60
· w. va ., Satur daY evenmg and
. W:lth 50,~ fans watclilng his niel.
l wanted to give him a a double . play attempt Calif
Kilken~y. 000
Denehy
Ill, Scher- Katie Young, of Minersville
every move and the New York
B)ue, with a gOOd chance to chance:" Successive pinch-bit misfired . .MicKey Rivers Wa~h
000 003 000 o- 3 8 o man 171 and Freehan; Perry, Route.
'
shopped in Point Pleasant.
6
.......,. scrutinizing blm careful' become the American .League's tw~doobles by JoluUly Ellis slammed his ·first major FISher, Allen 1 1• LaRoche Gebhard (7), Strickland (8),
Misses Cindy and Debby
·
,.._
d
Hansen
th k
.
·
·
(7), Queen 191. Clark 110) and , Haydel (9) and Roof. WP.
ly, the Oakland A's lefthander eighth ,36-game winner and an Ron
were · e ey league homer for .the Angels.
Stephenson; Bosman_, Linblad Kilkenny 12 .41 . LP- Perry 112 . 4wson spent a night with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lawson of
hung on Sunday for his 22nd baseball's 18th, is succumbiQg blows off the 22-year-«d lefty. Knuckleballer Wilbur Wood (10) , Cox (lQ), Grzenda (10) 14) HR- G. Brown 16th I.
Ida Belle Donohue;
Colwnbus visited .Mr. and Mrs.
2
2
· 1.
\ictory,. a -'"'
6-4 triumph · to the pressure that overtoOk Howev
. er, neither Jack Aker ·allowed Baltimor•J"ustfour
hits and
Mr. and
· son and Mr. and
·~,
~
LP- Bi!lings.
LtndbladW~een
,(5-31. HRs- 1R1vNational· League ,,
· Mrs. Harold Lawson Charles ·Law
over. the Yankees, and helped Roger Maris . in 1961. The n&lt;ir McDaniel could bold the and BiU Melton added a run- ers. (1st), RePOz (loth) .
st. Louis 010 ooo oso- 6 15 o and son of Letart, W. va·.• Mr. Mrs. Diamond.Ulwson Sunday
extend the Western Division former Yankee · slugger lost lead lor New York.
scoring triple in the opening
Pittsburgh
,
and ··Mrs. Robert Lawson and and called on other relatives.
leaders winning streak toseveri tufts of hair wben he success- Minnesota edged Detroit, 7~, inning in Chicago's victory,
Cleveli1nd~IOL~~~y~ ~h:: family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Evnoy and
, Paul SChaal knocked. in five
(8)&lt; Drabowsky (9) and Slm- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson. three children of Harrisonville
runs with a homer, triple and
mons; Kison, Miller. (B) and
Misses Wilda and 'Evelyn and Mrs. Ronnie Russeeil of
14·11 LP Lawson spent.Wednesday . with Syracuse v'osited Mr. and Mrs.
single to hel_p Mike Hedlund to
Sangullleri.
WP-Linzy
- Miller (7-4). HR- Stargell (2,
his lOth victory as Kansas City
40th and 41st) Hague (12th) Mr. an&lt;l Mrs. Ray Lawson at Russell Roush. ·
completed its four-game sweep
Alo~ 14th).
Columbus.
.
Gene Early spent Sunday
of Boston.
Mrs. Anna Wines and Sandra n;'gh.t with Roger Roush.
·
Chicago 000 100 ooo- 1 4 3
Bob
!feise's
infield
out
with
Cincinnati
101
101
lOx5
10
2
Wolfe
of Racine spent Sunllay
"
By NEIL BERSHBERG
The Pirates Wel'll bumbled by extend their lead in the West
the
bases
loaded
off
loser
Sam
Pizarro,
Decker
(7),
Regan
afternoon
with
Mrs.
Kate
Rbwe
P.Jl!ll••••lll!!!llf"'!l!l
UPI Spcn Writer
Cards' ace right-bander Bob DiviSion to six g!ffies. Bon¢; bit
McDowell provided the Mil(8) and Cannlzz•ro; Grimsley and Ada. sherd Cline of New
Pittsburgh saw its National Gillson Saturday night wben be his 22nd homer in the first inLeague East lead dwindle even pitched the first no-bitter of his . ning and Mays bit a tbree-nm
an:'"ir
Pi'
·
further after ~ a cru~ ' ~ en route tO an ll-G homer, climaxing a four-run
By United Press international Phlla
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
102 OOo lOG- 4 9 1
faur-t~ame series to the St. Louis triumph G'bsm all ed . only rally in the seventh. The homer Cleveland its straight loss.
Gates
Brown
drove
in
four
·
Leading
Batters
San
Diego
000 020 l02- s 7 2 visited Sunday with Mrs.
--SAME ·DAY
was the G«tb II Mayg' career. runs with a three-run homer
C8rdlnals,bllt Pirate manager faur Pitts~
National League
Fryman, WiiS!ln (7) and Marlene Fisher and children
Danny Murtaugh has called to wild .,_._
tbird 1M to
Gary SUtherland singled in
8
SER,VICE
bis cbarges to regroup rather
PI""' on a
s . e
two runs in the first inning and and a triple to ~park Detroit's Torre,St.LG. 1 ~ 475R:, 1 ~69 ~~ ~~caJ~;{dnK._t~K~I~~I? 1;l whoarecaiijpingatForkedRun
victory
over
Ml!m~ta.
HarBckrt.
Chi
112
450
73
158.
351
LPWIIson
(l-4).
HR-Gastan
Lake.
Thursday
night
Mr.
and
In
At
9-0ut At 5,!
Ire
t
Milt
May,
and
walks
m
the
bi'
sol
bom
·
the
alnhth
to
tban
re
'
A
la
ou.
turned
on
his
third,
fourth
and
seventh
int
a
o
e
m
~·
mon
Killebrew
drove
in
three
Garr,Atl
117
477
79
157
.329
(15th).
Mrs
.
Dean
Sayre
of
Mid.Matty
lead Montreal past Los Angeles.
lor the Twins to increase SngllnPi! 106 413 47 lllo ·329
dletown, Pa ., and Howard
fCll'lll8l' teammates witb a two- nlngs.
·
Steve Renko went the distance runs
.
.
I 85
Clmnt. P;t 103 409 63 132 .323 Phila
100 000 1oo- 2 7 1
f S
d Mr
s.
out, 1bree-fun hcmer, his fourtll
''Na~y, w~en yo_u lose the to even his reclrd at 12-12 and h;gleague-leading tota to . Brock,St.L 111 475 92 153 .322 San Diego 003 000 oox- 3 . 8 2 Sayre o yracuse an
118
AlouSt.
L
113
462
60
148
.320
Lersch,
Hoerner
(7)
and
Herbert
Sayre
were
dinner
bit «i 'the
in the eighth way we~ l~t
gomg to af- hand the Dodgers their tbird
Jones. NY
101385 43 12 .319 Ryan : Roberts (11 . 12) and guests of Mr. and Mrs ..Norman
binlng Sunday to give the feet you, .SBld the veteran Buc loss in four games.
Davisl, LA 118 477 64 151 .317 Kendall . LP--Lersch (4-10) HR
C8rdlnals a 6-i victory over the skippll'· "We haven't scored Hal McRae and Johnny Bench
HOSPITAL NEWS H.Aaron. All
- Stahl 151hL Montanez (25th). Styer at Water(ord. ·
Pirates and give St. Louis a mor~~ four ~ ~"! ~ slammed heme runs and rookie
107 37~
69 118 .316 New York 001 000 ooo- 1 5 0 II- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . .
American
League
llll'eep rl. the series.
our
gW~s team ISilthat left-bander Ross Griinsely Holzer Medical Center, First
G. AB. R. H. Pd. San Francisco
'l'be Cardinals, wbo lrailed our game. ere a
yielded only four hits as the Ave. and Cedar St. General Otiva,Min 97 379 59 134 .354
200 000 40x- 6 7 0
Murcr,
NY
117
426
77
142
.333
McAndrew,
Taylor (7) and
Pltlsburgb by 14 games on July usually sccres runs but lately Reds defeated Olicago
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. Olis, KC
111
435
66
135
.310
Grafe
;
Marichal
(12-8) and
20, are llOW within fCjUI' games of we ha~en't been able to do tha~; McRae's home run w~ one of ~aternity visiting hours 2:30 to Rojas, KC 111 ~01 55 122 .304 Dietz ; LP-McAndrew
(0-4) .
the crumbling divisi(lll leaders. We'D JUSt have to re-group, his three hits and came off loser 4:30 p.m. Parents only on Rchrdt. Chi 103 382 43 115 .301 HR - Bonds (22ndJ. Mays
__. on! 21 added Murtaugh.
J
Pizarro 'th
· t ·
Rtlnmnd, Bal
(16th) .
Tbe Pirates ba ve sew'"'
Y
· Willie StargeD continues to uan .
WI none ou m Pediatrics Ward.
101 346 63 104 .301
'
.
Blrlbs
runil while ~ eight of their
the burden of the Pirilte ~ fli'St inning. The , .Reds
Tovar, Min 115 484 72 144 .298 Montreal . 300 110 01o- 6 12 0
last 10 games.
carry
·
p.cked up unearned runs m the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Horton Del 110 420 60 124 .295 Los Angeles .
attack, billing two IKme runs, third and ·fourth innings and Durst, Athens, a soil; Mr. and Smith, Bos
010 010 OlG- 3 9 0
120
468
68
137
.28993
Renko
(12-121
and Bateman;
40th and 41st of the seal!OO. added a fourth run in the Sixth Mrs. Paul E. Workman, Bird, Bal
"llW':OU .. :. "70 bis
97 357 84 103 .289 Singer. Moeller (6). Mikkelsen
to give Pittsburgh an early lead
,
·
f
103 349 55 101 .289 (8) and Haller. LP- Singer (7 .
in Sunday's contest.Tbe Pli'ate on Bench s ~d home run o the Jackson, a daughter; Mr. and May, Mil
· Home Runs
14). HR- Bailey 112thl SutherMrs.
James
C.
MltcheU,
V'mton,
NEW RECORD
slugger is optimistic about the seasonJiw· , tw
t sing) · a son; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D. Na1ional League: Stargel. land (4th).
WEST SALEM, Ohio (UP! I currentskldfacinghisballclub.
Pitt 41; H. Aaron, Atliand May,
~ ~s. 0011 . em
32; JohnS!ln. Phil 27; Houston · 020 000 12G- 5 10 1
- Tom MeEwea set a new
''Good dubs bounce back and the eighth ummg drove m ~o Goad, Pedro, a daughter; Mr. Cin
Montanez,
Phil 25. ·
Atlanta
000 112 ooo- 4 11 1
and
Mrs.
Turley
E.
George,
,
ood
club
.,
runs
and
gave
Houstoo
1ts
world record of 1.49 seconds
1m
American
League : Cash, Del
we
ow
we
re
a
g
,
·
.
•-·
A"-·ta
Relie
Forsch.
Ray
ad ZZ3.9 mpb Sllllday Ia tbe 881'd Stargell
VIc-, over ""'' .
ver Vinton, a son, and Mr. and Mrs: 26 ; Smith, Bos and Melton. Chi (6), Culver (7)(61.andLemaster
Hiatt ;
. Ialeraatloaal Hotrod
Alou,
by Pittsburgh lo Cecil Upshaw struck out two II Thomas E. Huddleston, Pt. 25; Horton, Oet 22 ; Petrocelli, Stone. U~shaw (.8) and WilBos, Netllees, Clev and Murcer. liams. W Culver (5-6) LPAuaclaUoo World Fwmy Car St Louis last winter ca ped a the first three baUers be faced, Pleasant, a son.
NY
21.
Upshaw (9-6) . HR - Rader
• ·
.' P
wt Bob Watson beat out an
Discharges
ClwllploDSblps,
Runs BaHed In
(lOth) Aaron (32nd) Williams
five-run
rally
that
wiped outa ~ infield bit and Denis Menke
Mrs.
Elizabeth
P.
Allman,
National
League:
Stargell.
Desplle tlu~ record,
(?lrd)
.
1 Pirate lead. 11 was only his doubled to set the stage for Mrs.
Robert
Edward Pitt 104; Torre, St. L 95; H.
McEwea, of Fo1111taln Valley,
fourth heme run of the season Wynn,
· · bit Hank Bresenhan, W. Brice ChanneU, Aaron, All 86; Montanez. Phil
Calif., failed' to wlo tbe but his second against Pitts.
s game-WIIllllllg
80; Williams, Chi 76.
American League: Killebrew,
champlooablp. First prize burgh.
~~ b~ered for the ~raves, Mrs. Budd L. Darst, Mrs.
Minn
85; Bando, Oak 75; B.
Douglas
Ray
Dickens
·
and
was laba by Doa
In other National Lea8ue nusmg his career total tD 624.
Robinson,
Bait 74; Petrocelli,
PADS ON
.
Larry Stahl belted a three-run daughter. Mrs. Roy· Eggers, Bos 73 ; Murcer,
Pndbomme, GreDBCla ~.
NY 72.
aclim,
Mmtnal triwed Los homer•in ·the tbhil iming and Mrs. Charles,w . Hargr.~ye and
COJ,.UMBUS tltP'IJ - Ma;;y
Pitching
Calif."( wbo •also drove a
Angeles
6-3,
San
Francisco
.
Dave
ROOerts
pitched
a
sevendaughter, Mrs. Eugene Herd- Na1ional League: Jenkins , Ohio high'schol!f!1officially open
l·'Jilymliatb. In drag rilciog, a
Chi 18-9; Ellis, Pill and
tiliiijldilolr's clocllng does whipped New Yor~ 6-1, Cin- bitter as the San Diego Padres man an,d son, Mrs. David W. Carlton. St. L16-6; Downing LA their foQtball practice sessions
cmnali beat Ch1cago 5-l, dealt the Pbillies a double Hughes, Mrs. Vernon Isaac and
today, in prepping for the
1101 .tart 1111111 be leaves the Houston edged Atlanta 1&gt;-4, and setback
14-8; Pappas, Chi 14-10.
American
League:
Blue,
Oak
season
opener Sept. 10. The first
son, Patricia A. Kanouse,
llarlblllille.
San Diego downed Philadelphia In ~ opener Nate Colbert William F . Marting, Jerry 22-4; Lolich. Del 19-8; Dobson, scrimmage permitted is .Aug .
Pradllomme wu off lite
&gt;4 and 3·2 sweep a singled with
bases. loaded Wayne McClung, George D.- Ball and Drago, KC 15-6; Wood, 28.
lllle flnt aDd fiDished jllll
Chi 15-9; Hunter, Oak 15-10.
doubleheader. ,
and none out in the ninth to
lhead of McEwea wltb a lime
Mrs.
Clayton ·--~..."!"!'-~~~~~~~~-~-Bobby Bonds and WIDle Mays ck'ive in a pair of runs for the Mitchell,
of US secends aDd 221.11 mpb
Morrison and daughter, Mrs.
•
•
Ernest E. Quillen, Mrs. Carl L.
•
.
lbrcMigb the qaarter-mlle. . drove in five runs between•them Padres' winning margin.
0
Phone 992-2171
with homers and Juan Marlcbal
Stahl's fifth bcmer came after Rathburn, Mrs. Wesley E.
· OPTOMETRIST .
125 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
pitched a fi~tter as the Enzo Hernandez and Dave
Reynolds
and
daughter,
Mrs.
.
·OFFICE
HOURS
9:Jo
2
T05
(CLOSt
I®
J~::.~ms; s~·;·wz Giants defeated ·New York to Campbell singled with one out.
EarlL: Riley, Eddie R. Russell,
A NOO O
U S
AS
U
S
Mrs: Guy V. Sargent, Lincoln
. T
N NTH R .) - E T CO . RT T.;
W. Smith, Mrs, RobertS. Stout, ......
Mrs. Ethelbert R. Williams,
Mrs. James E. Willis and son, r---------------------------------------------~------------------------------­
Frank H. l'A!rkle, Henry L.
•Pierce, Mrs. Ada 0. Pierson,
OOLUMBUS (UP!)- SaJ;dra red in, it wasn't good enough. but jwnped over and rolled two Charles E. Knapp, and Mrs.
Miss Haynie, who finished sec- feet past.
Harry Kraus.
Haynie "can't stand sudden
death playoffs," so she calmly ond in the lmmke tournament "I thought she made it (on
knocked in a lll.foot birdie putt last year. losing in a three-way 18)," said Miss Haynie.
Best All Week
on the final hole Sunday for playoff to Mary Mills, played
the $3,750 first prize in the $25,- extremely steady golf in the Miss Haynie, who bit a wedge
into the 18th green to set up her
tQJ Len lmmke Buick Open golf final round.
title-winning putt, said it was
No Bogeys AgalD
tournament.
She recorded five birdies, four the "best wedge I hit all week.
"I wanted to do it right there,"
said the 28-year-old Fort Worth, on the back side of the 6,635- It was a perfect place to hit it." ·
Tex. native. "I don't like sud- yard, par 72 Raymond MemQr- Two shots off the pace, tied
ial Course for a 32, and could for third, were Kathy Whitworth,
den death playoffs."
The birdie on 18, Miss Hay- have had more on the front who had a 70 Sunday, and Judy
nie's third in a row, climaxed side. She didn't bogey a hole Rankin, in with a final round
a stirring comeback which saw for the second day in a row. 69. At 210 was JoAnne Carner,
Miss Hagge, looking for her who rebounded with a 67 in the
her overtake Marlene Hagge;
the tournament leader since the first tournament win since 1969, final round after a 75 on Satfirst nine bole. Miss Hagge, who !lit a putt on the 17th bole which urday. Miss Rankin and Miss
had a record-tying 29 on her looked like it hsd to go in, but Whitworth each earned $1,980
while Mrs. Carner got $1,465.
f;rst nine Friday, shot a one somehow didn't.
"!
don't
know
how
that
putt
over par 73, while Miss Haynie
stayed out," said a dejected
had a 67.
Miss Hagge, who won $2,825, Miss Hagge after the round, and
actually stsrted her own down- her sentiments were echoed by
fall with a boey five on the par Miss Haynie.
IN IJTIIOPOLIS
Also
on.
No.
18,
although
nearfour 14th. That cut her lead
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
over Miss Raynle to two shots ly 60 feet away, Miss Hagge's president of District 8,
and although Miss Hagee par- putt split the center of the cup, American Legion ttuxiliary,
and Mrs. Albert Roush, District
8 junior activities chairman,
and Mrs. Clair Might of FeeneyBemett Post 128 Auxillilry were
ByBetthaParker
Ohio University, spent several . at Lithopolis Thursday for a
307 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sabbath SChool attendance days with his grandparents, Mr. meeting of tbe unit there. Mrs.
Aug. 8 at the Free Methodist and Mrs. Schaefer.
Kessinger served as installing
Church was 105.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, Ball Run, officer for the installation of tiM\
Forty-five friends and neigh- was hostess recently to the 1971-72 officers and initiated
bors had a picnic Saturday at Laurel Cliff Health Club. The several new members into the
the roadside park on Route 22 meeting was opened by the unit.' A dinller preceded the ·
Natloow,idc Mu!u;al h"urarn:c ( 'll.
Ht•mt Ollkt: (I)Jumhus. Oh1n
honoring Rev. Eugene Gill and president, Bertha Parker. The meeting.
family.
meeting included. The Lord's
Mrs. Dora Halley attended a Prayer, the salute to the U. S. .---------:----::---:-------:--:---t
church meeting at Buckeye flag and a song,- "Count Your
]Lake last week.
Blessings," Several readings
Mrs. Erma Champion of were given and game prizes
.
Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Bud went to Mildred Bowen,
Ner\Ofl of Cleveland and Mr. Ladonna Gilmore and Jean .
and Mrs. Bruce Norton of Wright. Bertha Parker won the
_
_. SOmething s1range happens lo a lol of people when
Fairne.ss and understan'ding in traffic jiliuations can
they get behind the wheel ol a car.
Stewart"recentlycallon Mr. and door prize. Refreshments of ice
only help make driving conditions safer for all of us. Y~Jur
They forget they're only human .
Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
cream and cake were served. S3S.OO'l)ownnew car dealer" woul.d like to see the Nap'oleons on our
They Iorge! that mislakes on the road can be caused roads start caring aboUt other drivers.
'
Charles Diehl and Mrs.
Rev. GiU will be preaching Balan~e · On
by
them .. . iusl as well as by the olher guy.
t,lapoleon
may
have
mode
a
prellybig
name
Convenient.
Georgia Diehl visited Sunday over WMPO, August 16,17; !Bat
There's a little Napoleon in all of Us. Some ,have a . for him'seif. But please remember, after all
eveningwithMrs.CharlesDiehl '10:15 a.m. Rev. Gill will hold Terms.
little more -some a little less. The ·important thing is that
was said 11nd done. what he met .
who is a patient at Holzer services at the Royal Oak Park
we au recognize this attitude leads 10 accidents. Because
Waterloo.
Hospital.
Aug. 29.
Napoleon sees things only one way - hi~. When someMr:' and Mrs: Bill Perry of Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
thing goes wrong out on the highway. he presUmes it 's
NatioMI Automobile Dealers ASSOCiation
the other guy 's idiotic mistake, Not h.is.
•
Athens spent saturday with Mr. and Fran Cline have returned
and Mrs. Normah SChaefer. home from a week'·s visit with
Mason, W. Va.
'ane fn a series presented by N.A. D. A., The Daily Sentinel, and the Tri.Counly Automobile Dealers AsS!lC.
David Schaefer, a student at rel:llivcs in Florida.

· ··

·

'

·

:~;t ~ers

banU: ou

J !~;~d~~LB:~h~e ~~ht~!~~~ ~;t~~t~~::;·d:t~: !:~t

base:Oers-a

RJ

flftiSHING

12

iame,

WHAT

USUALLY

HAPPENS
·AFTER
'

1.)•

'

ALL BILLS

ll'aded

ARE PAID
WITH

u.;

WCOMPTON 0 0

..

T0-12,

She Hates Playoffs, so • • •

P. J. PAULEY
992·2318

·Laurel Oiff News Notes

Two -· StateAwards
WOn by Garden Club

··

.Pirates Boarded. Again .

ROOMS

NEW
fURNITURE
'349.95

..

MASON
FURNITURE

' .

l
'I

I. •

..

Rtm.AND - The Rutlaild
Friendly Gardeilers received
two Ohio Association of Garden
dub awards - a first f~r
garden ' therapy work with
special educatioo students of
the RuOand Elementary' School, '
and an honorable mention for
the publicity book~ during the
41st llllliilal c!DVentioo of the
OAGC the past week at the Neil
HOU$e in Columbus.
Mrs. James Carpenter, Mrs.
acmer Parker, Mrs. Larry
Edwards and Mrs. William
W'tllf&lt;rd atitnded the three day
conventioo.
The club's garden therapy
wcl'k was cooduc.ted with 13
studen.t s aod consisted of
gardening, craft work with
aatural resources and dried
materials, flower arranging,
garden and nature tours, bird
study and 'feeding. Stale
'Therap"""'"'~·· Mrs. Elbert
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Bob R. Moore, Syracuse,
Tewell,'~·-..._...,
was most com•are 8Jill0Uilcing the engagement of their daughter, Bobbie
plimentary on the project,
Lou, to John Randolph, son ol Mr. and Mrs. George Randollit
rating it as "extra good."
cJ. New Haven, W. Va. Bobbie, a 1969 graduate of Southern
A project book containing
High School, is employed at Shoppers Bonanza. John is a 1969
publicity qn the therapy
graduate of Wahama High School and attended Marshall
program, pictures of the
University. He is now completing basic !raining in the U. S.
students busy .with the acNavy. Wedding plans are incomplete.
tiviUes, sunshine WCI'k, project
costs, and descriptions rl. each
day's activities was prepared
by Mrs. Carpenter, cochairman, who accepted the
first place award. Mrs~ Fred
William•on assisted as cochairman with all the club
Annual reunion of the families Mr. and Mrs. James Neulzling members helping with the
of 'the late Adeline Rice and daughter, Patty, Miss lberapy er donating refresh.
Yeauger ' and Samuel Yeauger Nancy Mayer, Pomeroy; Mr.
was held Sunday at the Mid- and Mrs. William Neulzling,
dleport Roadside Park.
Timmy, Gallipolis; Mrs. Nina
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Robb, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Tyle
Robert Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Potts, Crooksville; Leonard Baird and grandam,
Mrs. Margaret Clatwerthy, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Altizer and
and Mrs. Henry Clatworthy and family, Corning; Mrs. Mildred Thirteen high school students
J'un, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner Powell and Jeff, ~gfield; frORI Meigs Cotmty left Sunday
and Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Miss Jeanette Scott, Mrs. fer the 1971 Teenage Institute on
Long, Ray Redman, Mrs. Marjorie Bradbury and Alcohol and Drugs to be beJel at
James Buchanan, Middleport; daughter, GaUipolis.
the Ohio [)(minican College,
------------.....:.--------,Columbus, lor the next four
dayg.
The institute is strongly
committed to the phi)OilO)Ihy
;th:'a~t~,:;;;'~~~p~~osltlve and
begins with
young people.
through their
insight, the institule believes,
that may avert « at least
reduce the plight that
alcoholism on drug dependency
may bring. The institute will
therefore be very unique as it
focuses directly oo the students
- their ideas, insighls and
recommendations.
Leaders in the fields of
medicine,
psychology,
sociology and law have been
assembled to discuss the
problems openly and frankly.
sm~ck

Bobbie Lnu Moore Engaged

Yeauger Families Reunited Sunday

Social
Calendar
MONDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL School
Board 7:30 p. m., high i;Chooi.

CANDY STRIPERS of
. Veterans Memorial Hospital, 7
ments. A first place award in Sears
Community
Im- p.m., hospital cafeteria.
Region 11 was also received by provement Project with Mrs
the club,
Howard Birchfield and Mrs:
RUTLAND Firemen 's
The club's publicity book was Bruce May as co-chairmen will Auxiliary, special meeting, 7:30
awarded an honerable mention receive first place In Region 11 p.m. at the firehouse .
with the state publicity with a cash award also, which MEIGS CHAPTER Order of
chairman, Mrs. Sluart Allan, will be given at the fall regional DeMolay Monday 7:30 p.m.
commenting on the quality and meeting. It had a score of 90 and Middleport Masonic Temple.
quantity of reporting as dnne by was considered in the state Mother.s Club meet in
Mrs. Homer Parker. A total judging.
basement.
SC(II'e of 91 ~ was earned on the
It was the "Let's Keep
TIJESDA Y
,
basiS .of educational quality, Rutland A Bloomin' Clean SCHOOL SAFETY patrol
special effort, radio, ~rden Town" project which involved meeting Tuesd~y ~~Meigts
hints, Green Thumb Notes, planting more than 100 lrees, JUnior High Sc oo • th epdeor '
flower shows, participation in free lrash pickups for Rutland, room 110. All seven gra rs
OAGC projects, therapy removal of old building, interested are asked to attend
programs, civic beautification, cleaning, painting picnic tables, accompanied by at least one
junior club work open meetings, installing a grill and main· parent.
and things of v~lue or lri&amp;piring taining tbe park, lrinuning FRIENDLY CIRCLE, Trinity
to the commuruty.
shrubbery at the s~hooi and a Church, a p.m. Miss Mary
The book was complled by complete landscapmg of the Elizabeth Chapman program
Mrs. William Willilrd and Mrs. Rutland Grade School, giving leader· Mrs Roy Mayer and
Joe Bolin. The pu~licity earned 1,000 packets of_ flower seeds lor Mrs. Donald· Hauck, hostesses.
a first ?lace Region 11 award planting to res;dents, _etc.
VETERANS ·- MEMORIAL
also With the1 award to be The yearbook, wtth Mrs .
·
pres,en ted at the October Homer Parker as chainnan will Hospital Women's Auxiliary
meeting in Gallipolis. Mrs. receive third place in Region 11. potluck picnic, ((p.m. park on
new Route 33,'left going north.
Parker accepted the state In addition, The Rutland Regular meeting to follow .
award fer the club.
Friendly Gardeners were active
Both, the garden therapy and participants in the Meigs
the publicity book, were on County Christmas F1ower Show .
U
display at the state OAGC which won an honorable
convention; as was the flower mention in the state. Mrs. Joe Mr.
Eddy
Educator's
show hook, "Fill Your House Bolin, club member, was co- schedule for week of August 16With Flowers;" the 1969-70 chairman for this show. The 20, in Meigs County:
p.-ogram book, and the m0-n Dower show book was also on Tuesday, 12:30, Tuppers
SCIP book.
·
display at state, as was the one Plains; 3:30, Elmwood; 4:15,
The flower show, which Mrs. fortheMeigsCountyFairShow, Alfred; 5, Burlingham; 5:45,
Harold Wolfe and Mrs. William although it wasn't a winner. The Arnolds; 6:30, Rock Springs;
Brown as co-chairmen, will lour members attending par- 7:15, Brown-Town; 7:45, Enreceive third place in Region 11 ticipated in the state workshops terprise.
for shows presented by a single for therapy, flower shows, Wednesday, 9, Harrisonville;
club. It had a score of 89. The . publicity, and program hooks. 11:45, Radcliff; 12:45, Coalton;
3:30, Leo; 4:15, Green's Store ;
5, Limerick.
Thursday, 9:30, Eastern; 12,
Chester; 3, Old Chester Rd. ;
5:15, Skating Rink; 6:05, State
Garage; 6:45, Five Points; 7:30,
were given by Tom Rice High School; Thomas Roy Beacon.
Friday, 9, Syracuse; 11,
Motors, Keith Goble Ford, New · Cassell, Middleport, Tom Allan
Antiquity;
12,Letart; 2:15, East
Yock Clothing House, Pomeroy Crisp, Langsville, John Harold
First National Bank, Sacred Kauff, Middleport, Debra Jo Letart; 5,AppleGrove; 6,Great
Heart Women's Guild, Mid· May, Rullaild, Milisa K. Rizer, Bend; 7:30, Syracuse P. 0.
All stops will be 20 minutes
dleport, Pomeroy Rotary Club, Pomeroy, Christine Robinson,
long. If you have any special
Simon :s Market, Ewing Middleport, Linda Rel!ecca
Funeral Home, Xi Gamma Mu Rupe, Pomeroy, those from book you would like, please call
,992-3745.
Sorority,
Meigs
County Eastern High SChool; Julia Ann
Ministerial Association, Holter, Pomeroy, Karie Robin
RF..TURN FROM TEXAS
Bradbury P :T.A ., Pomeroy Humphrey, Reei:lsville.
Mr
.._
. and Mrs. Charie sE..
Women's Christian Tern- These sluden .. were selected Blakeslee, Pomeroy, and sonperance Union, Drew Webster by the participating high in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Post 39 of Pomeroy, Feeney schools following guidelines set Mrs. James F. Butcher, MidBetmett Post 128 of Middleport, up by the Meigs County Com- dleport, returned Wednesday
and the Rutland American mittee on Alcoholism and Drug from Midland, Texas, where
Legion Post.
Abuse. Anyone wishing in- they visited Mrs. ffiakeslee's
Students from Meigs County formation concerning alcohol brother and family, Mr. and
attending the institute are those and other drugs or seeking help Mrs. Gerald J. Lavender. While
from Southern High SChool; for themselves or others may there · they assisted at the
Anne. Renee Burke, Racine; contact the program direc~r •. wedding of ,Mrs. Blakeslee's
Jobn William Eichinger, Rev. Arthur C. Lund by calling niece, Diane Lavender to Mr.
Syracuse; Candy Carol Hoback, 992-2010 or ~723: Mr. Danny Sam Chaney. On the return trip
Racine; Connie Elaine Warner, Thompson IS president of the they were guests in the home of
Minersville; those from Meigs committee.
Mr. andMrs. RobertGarwellof
Chickasha, Oklahoma. Mrs.

t

F,ddy 's

Sched /e

13 at Columbus Institute

I

If you're touring a foreign
country this summer, get set for
some hard news.
No matter which way you go,
you'll run
into drug laws
~:£::£~:il:Bahr
that are a whole lot tougher
of individuals who have had
than ours.
close contact witb young people
The Bahr Reunion was held Howard, Tammi, Terri, Jim,
You may have heard differently.
and some real unlentanding of Aug. 8 at the Forked Run Park. and Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Richa~d
the problems SUI'I'OIIMing the
Attending were Margaret Fick, Jr., Kevin, Kirk; Kyle
You may have heard possession and abuse
rl. alcoliol and other Russell, Columbus; Ernest W. Bahr, Aannell B. Payne, Bobby
Recommendations Bahr, John Barnes, Louise Bahr, Michael Payne, Kevin
sale of drugs overseas or south of our drugs.
s!emming from these sessioos Barnes,JobnBarnes,Jr.,Dawn Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. B. W.
will be reported back to the Barnes, Gene Russell, Goldie Bahr and Palricia Fee, AUtens.
own border is.okay. Or at least toler- large
group through the election Russell, and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Winters.
of a member to represent each Golden Bahr, Athens; Mr. and Parkersburg; Cheryl Bentz,
ated. That's a lie. Drugs are illegaL
group to the Teenage A!lvisory Mrs. Victor A. Bahr and Jane, Parkersburg; Mrs. Jack
Board.
The same as here. And that's the
DonVanMeter,WaVanMeter, Gillilan, Mark and Vick
But, it will not be all wert. Jobn Bentz, Linda, Keith and Reedsville; George Gillilan,
truth. '
There will also be plenty of Brenda, Ada Van Meter, Mr. Canton; Mildred _and .foyce
opportunity to get better and Mrs. John J. Rose, Julie Lipsey , Dragerton, Ut«h;
Only one thing is different. The
acquainted with the other 450 and Mandie, Mr. and Mrs. Harold and Lavina Brannan,
participants lbnlugh parties, Charles Goeglein, Charles, Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs,
penalties are stiffer. In Lebanon, for sports,
movies, and other Michael and Mark, Mrs. Evelyn Norman Bahr, Long Botiom;
recreatimal activities. The $35 Well, Kenneth, Russell, Brian Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Conley and
instance, possession gets you ·3 to 5
schdarships which WEre raised and Barbara, Chester-Long Lynn Brooks, Gallipolis; Mr.
Meigs CoWJty Ctmmitlee Bottom area; Mr. and Mrs. A. and Mrs. Albert Hansel, Holly
years in: a mental hospital. That's the byon the
Alcoholism and Drug Almle D. Betzing, Chandlersville; Mr. Jo Tipton, Zanesville; Cindy
law. And there's no way around
and Mrs. Henry Bahr, Patti, Hansel and Rick Marshall,
Roseville; Mr. and Mrs. Archie
their law . .
Circle Planning :f¥~-~~~M!.~'!.!~¥ifRose,
Route 1, Long Bottom;
A Thought__ and
Russell Will, Neda ,Clemson,
Drug arrests of Americans overMr. and Mrs. Clarence
On
Improvements
For Today •Neuizling, Chester area.
seas have jumped 7r!fo since last year_
O;urch improvements were
Pessimism Is a waste of
And nobody tan help. Not friends.
discussed and an electi(lll day
force. It is the penally of
those who do nof know
·tUmed by the Emma
Or family. Or the smartest lawyer in dinner
ho.r Ia live.
Kincaid arete of the Rutlaild
-Charles ,wagner
United Methodist Church
town. Not the United States
Thursday at Fcrest Acres Park.
government. ·
A picnic dinner preceded the
meeting. The need fer a new
lfs Quick! Easy
That's why there a,re over 700
church bulleUn board was
along with the
DRIVE-IN
Atnencim citizens doing time on drug discussed
possibility of planting new
shrubbery. It was l'lll*'ted that
BANKING
charges in foreign jails. .
•
. $22.10 had J;een made from the
Fridays Only
,of dish cloths. The
Those are the facts.
T"e Drive-In Wh'ldow
collection at the nleeting-was

Reunion atPark

* * *
,.

"n1eir ·
wt"t:~ area
than ours..

d.ck it out."

plmic

$11.50. Another
at the
same place was set for the
second 1'lllnldlly «i qat month.
1be ·Rev. Robert Buingamer

had prayer.

• Others attending were Mrs.
Bumgarner, Mr. aocl Mrs.
Harvey Erlewlne, Mrs~va
Howell, lin.. Grace
D,
Mrs. Calba lne ColweD, Mrs.,
Ulde . ,..~~.-, Mrs, Marpret
~ !h lllrle . Bilbop,
Mn.llertia I '-er, Mrs. Jmiy

, ....:-- I!ldilh WUJ!a~.
aad

Opll _Al'lllllronll-

. , ...

is Open
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
CContinuously!

and sAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

Member FDIC
Member Federal
Reserve System

Notes . .•.
A weeilly feature of Meigs
.' CoWity Garden Club members.

Cut Flowers, CtJttings, and their Care
BY ANNA ELIZABEnl TURNER
RuUand Garden Club
RUTLAND - Cut flowers are a joy to the flower and plant
lover of nature's. distinctive manufacturer.
After cutting flowers, they should be brought into the house
and should not be put near heating areas or direct sunligb:.
Evaporation of water and rotting of stems by bacteria are the two
worst enemies of cut flowers.
The flowers should be placed in warm water about 130
degrees tempera lure in a refrigeration unit or cool room. The
flowers should be cut off under water with a sharp knife to
promote water passing into the tubes of the stems.
The water in flower containers should be changed cJ.ten to
prevent the growth of bacteria. The flowers will stay fresh longer
and colors brighter if small quantities of sugar and lemon juice
are ~dded. This trealment is most useful to red flowers whicb
have a tendency to change color.
There are a number of 'preparations on the iJlBrket recommended as a preservative. However. aspirin is of little or no value
for this purpose. Florists sometimes remove the anthers as sooo
as !he buds open to help prevent the petals from falling.
In late August, cuttings will root with facility fer creditable
specimens before winter sets in in earnest. Wu begooias,
Ageralums, Fuchsias, Coleus, Geraniums, English Ivy, Sultana,
Airplane Plan~ Philodendron, and a number of other perennials
from the flower garden may be rooted. These, carried through the
winter as smaU plants will be useful Rower size and lor more
cuttings next spring and summer.
Rain-water, vermiculite, and other commercial materials
are suitable source supplies for rooting purposes.

Brief Vacation Trip Concluded
Mrs. J . J. Davis and former roommate of Mrs.
daughter, Elaine, and Mrs. D. Randall Fisher(~ Davis),
H. Robeson have returned from who is a cOUDseler of Qlimney
a short vacation to New York Corners Camp fer Girls. Both
and New England. They went camps are in tile Berbbires.
especially to visit Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ha2zard will be
Don Haz-zard (Joyce Davis) at leaving that area !IQ(IIl for
Pittsfield, Mass. Mr. Hazzal)l Durham, N.C. Mr.Huzard will
received a fellowship to the play with the North Carolina
Berkshire Music Center Or- Symphony the ccming
VI
cbeslra and Olamber Music and Jayce will attend the
Groups and Mrs. Hazzard is a University of North Carolina at
participant in the Boston Olapel Hill where She will be a
University Tanglewood In-· junior in the school of mUsic.
stitute and is studying with Mr. Both attended University II
Armando Ghitalla, first chair Michigan last year and moved
trumpet of the Bosion Syrn- to Durham in June.
phony.
T~_ng1ewood
and
the
M,.O'l'lntll vwr~~~-;
Berkshires is the summer home
Hobart Young of Sjdney spent
of the Boston Symphony. Tbe the weekend here visitiog his
group also visited Tom Aten, mother, Mrs. Sylvia YOIIIIB at
nephew of Mrs. RobeS!ln, who is Guysville, and Miss Evelyn
a counselor at Camp Taconic Flck aud Miss Elizabeth Fick,
and with Miss Mary Stuck, a Pomeray.

..

r----------::=

GarwellisMr.Butcller'ssister.
COUPLE CELEBRATES
Mr. and Mrs. David Zirkle
recently celebrated their anniversary at the home of ber
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Maynard, New Raven. Mrs.
Russell Maynard baked the
anniversary cake. Gifts were
p.-esented to the couple. Cake
and punch were served. At..
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Maynard, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Maynard, Point Pleasant,
and the honored couple's
children, Terri and Debbie.
VACATION ENDED
Mr. and Mrs. John Fultz and
children, Anita and Marc, hsve
returned from a vacation trio.
They spent three days in tennessee, attended the "Trumpet
of the Land" near New
Philadelphia, the Swiss
Festival, and spent a day at.
Cedar Point.

Need a
real estate agent
knows
a lot?

SOLID·STATE
FM/AM
STEREO FM RADIO
The HAYDEN • B449W
Tr(,Je component stylin g in a

sol1d -state FM/AM/Stereo
FM Tuner/Amp. Fealures
Zenith·s e..cclusNe Cucle of
Sound speaker system that
diS pe rses be 8U l1fully bal- u:._::-:::~-:-:"'"-;~-.,.;;..;,j
anced stereo sound 1n a complete 360° ci rcle. 40 watt peak ·
rnusic power amplif1er : Tuned FM/ RF stage and tuning ·meier.
Aux il1ary Input/ou tput jacks for optiOnal.
record changer (l1sted below} plus stereo
·I ape and headphones. Grained Walnut color.

SIS995

Zenith Duai-Channei40 ·W Solid State Amplifier end
FM/AM/Stureo FM Tuner
.
4

lnstan1 rcSponse hom Zen1lh quilhl'l' sohd;$1iJit!

omphf~. C001tr ~at.tng

·tor greate• d&lt;JI:H!Odi\blhiV and Ionge• . hie, S~pefb FMIAMIStereo
fec eptjon as \\·ell &lt;~s cc..nYen tlonat FM.and AM 'e~~:nton ..

F~~-·

Zenith High Compliance Speakers
seotcd w1thru e.1ch sp eaker Vl111-center cones ... lloot" on &lt;1 ·cusruon
~tir for lhc bcs·t stereo sOU!1{i i.-produr;l ion

· Zenith

Modul~~or

of

Stereo Reco ...d Ch'i"nger

mool~,l AM?2W. 1dc;.ol lor U" ' wrih "Z('ruth tomtxtnent ilCfOO tystf!'!ft.
r l' flhlli'S lol.\· gmm 11&lt;1\.klH(l Jilur; Dnrnond St,•lus lm u· r&amp;scs A~ ~

other Banking Hours 9 to
J and 5 to 7 as usual on
Fridays.

FARMERS BANK

Greert .Thumb

popul,u 5!'€'1ld thsc; s HUIUIIld!l("ilJ\y. f4NIU1!7:&gt; CUi'lll{l ~1. 11!.1/af! /repK'I
tUIIh u l · l~o I J) m ,llJ, o ph.~l P IU!)$ Hilt) ;t(llf)~ 0!)tll)11ill 411 ICillra COS!.

Yellow
Pages

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS
992-2635

Milldlaput .

�•

·-Tile Di11J $tutiu!l,

~

Mjl'

lepolt.Pumeroy, 0., Auc. 16,1971

LEGAL NOTICE
Ill THE MATTE~ O.F SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN TS,
PROlATE COURT, MEIG S
COUNTY, OHIO
.
Accounts and vouchers of the
following named fiduc i ar ies
tliave been filed in the Probate

Court, Meigs County, Ohio, for
dpproval and settlement :

CASE

NO .

19&lt;0•

Fifth

Current Account of Joyce A .
Dav i s~ guardian of the person

.net estat e of Mary E . Russell .
CASE NO. 19567

First Ac -

count of Paul E . Kloes, Guar -

dian of the Person and Est ate of

I

2

'®.

Po•eroJ
•tor Co.

OF

.QUAlnY

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO CPE.
~5
BeautifUl Gobi Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, factory air
conditioni ng. tinted glass, black nylon bucket seats,
console, Posi traction axle. 400 cu. ln. engine, · Turbo
Hydromatic, power steering, power d isc brakes, radio &amp;

r. seat speaker. bumper guards &amp; Rally Wheels, un·
B~lance

derseal. Save, Save .

Annual Ac count of Frank W.
Porter , Jr ., TruStee under Item
V of the LaSt Will and

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3495
Less than 11 .000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model, R~lly
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sant01wood Interior.
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors.
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln. V·8 engine. Really Sharp.

of warranty .

CASE NO . 2012 1 Second

Teatament of Jane Lou ise D .
Smith , Deceased .

CASE NO .

20~0 1

Final AC ·

count of Phyll is A. Mullen .
Adm in istratr ix of the estate of
Charles J . Mullen, Deceased .
·CASE NO . 20473 First and
F i nal Accoun t of Franklin

Triplett, Executor oi the Estate
of Lewis E . Tri plett . Deceased.
Unless exception s are filed
thereto , sa id accounts will be
for hearing befor-e said Court on

'

Pemetor Motor Co. ·
OPIM EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROY IIHIO

®

the 15th day of September, 1971,

at which time said accounts will

be considered and continued
from day to day until finally
disposed of .
Any .person interested may
fille written exceptions to said
accoun ts or to metiers per taining to the trust , not Jess than
five days pr ior to the date set
for hearing .

JOHN C. BACON
PROBATE JUDGE
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
( 8 ) 16

We talk to you
like a peiSOII.

For Sale

Phone 992-5«3.

8-15-lfc

---..,.,.--- For Sale or Trade

11M Your Si 111111
.Af~ ·
lnspedian and

SINGER ZIG ~G. needs no
Auto Sales
cams• .all built-In features.
1961 OLOS, motor completely Makes buttonholes, fJncy
designs, etc. Pay just SQ.39.
overhauled. Phone 992-6417 .
Use our budget terms. Call
8-1J.6tc
992-7085 . .
.8-15-6tc
1965 iNTERNATIONAL truck
1800, good condition. Henry
Bahr. Long .Bol1om. Ohio.
SEWING MACHINE, new
Phone 985-3988.
deluxe,
zig-zag, heavy duty.
8-15-Jip
Special pre-sc hool offer SPECIAL this week at Tom Rue 164.88. Phone 992·7085. Twin
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
City Sewing Machine Company.
8-15-lfc
8-IJ.6fp
1969 CHEVY II, 6-cyl.,
automatic. Phone 992-6547.
8-15-31'

5 cents per Word one insertion .

FR~EZER

or

UNil:O 20FT. UPRIGHT
FREEZER
26U5

With I his one you get 140 free
ice cream bars or 20 halt

gallons

':t.
· •

of

FREE ice cream .

POMEROY

Jack w. C1rser.. Mgr. 1
Phane tt2-Z111

Blaettna~•

Septic Tinks
And LNch._ ,..Beds...

PHONE 992·2143

. 742.14902

-

EXPERT
Wlx:el
15.55

-ment

-GUARANTEED' Phone 992-2094
1

PamenJJ Home &amp;·Auto
Open1Til5
MDM.y lllrv ~lurdlly
606 E. Moin, Pomeroy, o.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERVICE. Phone 949--4551. '
5-30-lfc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

------

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

LEGAL NOTICE

HARTFORD

Carmel News,

By the Day

36" X 23" X .009

~

Aluminum
Sheets·
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

The
Daily Sentinel

Cleland
Realty
601 East Main
POMEROY

RUTLAND
NEW
ALUMINUM
SIDING,
STORM
DOORS
AND
WINDOWS,
nice
lot
on
quiet
111 Court St.
street for kids. l'h story
Pomeroy, Ohio
frame, 3 large bedrooms,
bath, about tto acre, needs
paper and paint inside, A
PORTABLE Si nger Sewing BUY AT JUST S6,900.
Machine will sell for repair bill
- $18.44. Phone 992-7085. Twin ROUTE 124 - JUST OUT OF
City Sewing Machine Company. TOWN. 3.33 acres level
·
•
8.J3.6tc ground, 1 story home, 3
bedrooms. bath , NEW
ALUMINUM SIDING, NEW
REGISTERED quarter horses
GAS FORCED-AIR FURNACE, (low gas bills}, 2olher
- 3 bred mares, 1 bred grade
mare, 1 registered 2-year old
buildings, MEIGS SCHOOL
gelding. 3 registered yearling
DISTRICT. JUST $15,900.
fillies , 1 reglslered yearling
colt, I yearling grade colt. POMEROY- 1· story frame, J
Contact Horace Karr; Royal · bedrooms. ·bath. 9arage.
Oak Farm. Phone 985.3341.
basement, needs pa1nl and
8-15-Jtc
paper for A DO-IT YOURGREAT BUY AT
I----~---.. SELFER.
SS,SOO.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY IN GOOD
HANDS
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
B·11 -61c

12'. - 14' · 24' ·· WIDE
'

.

MILLER .

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wuhinglon Blvd.
Belpre, Ollio

•

j
~
j

•11
•

•,
tl-1&amp;

AND IUS
WELL,THEY'RE
THE lAR6EST
LilltN&lt;S ~LS

NEW &amp; OlD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction • Co. and ' An·.
thony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete . Plumbing,
' · Heating a.nd Air Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

E.VDNWJ.IEN
~EY·Re ·

DEA
. 01.

--~

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
· Work Guaranteed
see us--for~ Free
Estimate on Furrtace
lnstalation.

1/J.IM-Ir: I

KNOW Mil

Kim&gt;, HEW6

WINISHD

.HOME

Fcir

For Sale

~

~ESTIDOY

JtEW &amp;OLQ WORK
.J....:::=.:.=c..;.:.;;__ _ ___,
All Weather Roofing &amp; Construction Co. and 'Anthony ;
Plumblnv &amp; Ht1Hn9.
POMEROY
Complete Plumbing, "Heating
~-nd .~ir. Conditionlnq.
1
&amp; AUTO
240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
Phone 992-2550
992-2094
Insured. Experienced
606 E. Main Pomef.OY
Work Guraranleed

.

DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and
bath. Apartment, 3 rooms and
bath. Private entrances. Ideal
for family with extra rental or
inveslment propertr. Priced
for quick sale . Cal 992-2o431
aller 5 p.m.
8-11 ·12tc

SERMON

•

i
1

INTH'
FALL

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

Roofil!ll&amp; Carpenter
CWork
Spouting, Roof
,
Painting

ROOF painting &amp; minor roof
MAPLE, EARLY American
repair. Phone 992-2239.
Stereo-radio combination, 4- Real Estate For Sale
8-10-61c
speaker sound system. AMFM radio, +speed intermixed 6 ROOM house and bath located .SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
jus I otilside Chester. Phone
changer. Balance $77.31. Use
secutive insertions.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
985·4262.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
our budget terms. Call 992662-3035.
8-12-121c
7085.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
2-12-lfc
CARO QF THANKS
8-15-61c
.,
&amp;OBITUARY
3 BEDROOM brieR home.
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
$1.50 for 50 word minimum. HALF RUNNER beans, S2
Choice location in Middleport. ·
Complete Servi~
liach additional word 2c .
bushel, pick your own .
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Phone 949-3821
BLIND ADS
·Cucumbers and tomatoes.
Phone
992-5523
after
4
p.m.
Racine, Ohio
Additional 25c Charge per
Clarence Proffitt. Portland .
5-7-lfc
CriH
Bradford
Advertisemt!nt.
843-2254.
Phone
5-1-Hc
OFfiCE HOURS
8·l -15tc FOR SALE by owner, a baby
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p:m. Dally.
farm . 3'h miles- from Athens BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
8: 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon·
city limit, 25 miles from
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
Saturday.
Septic tanks Installed. George
Pomeroy, 5 room plus small
machine 1911 model in new
( BIU l Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
room adjoining bathroom,
walnut stand. All features
4-25-lfc
plenty waler . Can give clear
buill-in to make laney
Notice
deed. 2 veins coal, plenty
desiQns. Also buttonholes,
fruit.
Call 592-1153 .or write QUEEN and Shamblin Conblind
hems
etc.,
$43.25
cash
I WILL nol be responsible for
strucl i on . Roofing ,
Lewis Weyand, RD 5, Athens,
price or terms available.
any debts contracted by
remodeling,
aluminum
Ohio
45701.
Price
on
inanyone other than myself.
Phone 992-5641.
siding.
Phone
992-7324
or 742·
8-11-61c
spection.
Jack Vy'ard, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
4979.
8-lS-Jic
8-11 -61p
8-4-1 21c
A GOOD BUY- give it a try.
Blue
Lustre America 's 11 .16 ACRES located T·79 at
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
favor ite carpet shampoo.
Rock Springs, close to Meigs
Sale
closed for vacation Aug. 16th
Baker Furniture Company. · High School. Contact Bill ·Real Estate
thru 22nd. Visit our booth at
8-11-lllc Witte (for L. Fields) after 5 p. HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
the Meigs County Fair.
m. or on weekends, phone 992·
Call Damy Thompson, 9928-10.101c
2196.
·COAL, limestone . Excelsior· 61187.
8·12-IOic
7-18-tfc
~all
Works,
E.
Main
St
.•
WILL DO babysitting in my
Pomeroy.
Phone
992·3891.
home tor pre-school children.
4-9-tfc
experienced. Mrs . Glenn
CONVENIENT but secluded
Smith. Rock Springs Road.
building lots on T79 at Rock
.VITO B FLAT clarinet in good
Call 992-6187.
Springs. Within walking
condition, $75. Phone 985-3573.
8-I0.6fc
distance of Meigs High
8-11 -51c
School, a Slnlnute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte
weekends or after 5
ANTIQUE double bed, dresser
p.m.
Help Wanted
weekdays.
Phone 992and rocker. Phone 992·2580.
6887.
8-15·liC
COMBINATION waitress and
7-11·11c
Broker
barlender, Blue Tartan. day
110 Mechanic Street
or night shift. No experience DEEP WELL pump, complete
TRAILER LOT for sate, $500.
tank
and
pipe,
¥•
h.p.
motor,
Pomeroy, Ohio
necessary . Apply in person .
Rutland St .• Middleport, Ohio.
Long
Bottom
.
Henry
Bahr,
8-15-61c
Phone 985-3988.
NEAR RUTLAND - New 3 Will hold ~12 trailer. Call
8·15-31p
992-5310.
bedrooms , beauf·iful H-'2
8-11-61p
balhs, gas furnace. Nice
kitchen. $19,500.00.
PEACHES - tree ripened
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
Elberta peaches at Midway
basement. 133 Butternut Ave.,
J
HOUSES2
rented.
All
have
Markel - $3.49 a bushe. Phone
jUst walking distance from
free gas. 3 bedroom modern
992-2582.
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
home. $16,000.00.
·
!;d. Hedrick, 2137 Wadswa&lt;th
8·13-31c 30 ACRES - ()] 1o43. Several
Orive. Columbus, Oh io, phone~
building sites. $5,000.00 NEW
LISTING.
.
.
237 - ~, Columbus.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
--------,..-----2:5-z:9-~tfe!:c
Park view Kennels . Ptlone 992- BUILDING LOT Forrest
5443.
Run. Utilities.
and
8·15-lfc
ORDINANCE
30 ROOM BRICK - Successful
NO. tJJ.n
9 PIECE anlique dining room
business now operating . NEW
An
ordinance
to establish a
suite. price $750. Phone 992·
LISTING.
municipal motor V!'h icl~ license
2798.
.
Phone 992-2156
•
8·15-Jic DO YOU HAVE 100 ACRES ON tax.
Be i t ordained by the- Council
HIGHWAY. or RIVER of the Village of Middleport as
EARN AT home addressing CANNING tomatoes, already
follows :
...
FRONTAGE TO SELL.
envelopes . Rush stamped
sec.
1.
That
tor
the purpose of
picked. $1.25 bu.. bring
CALL 992-3325
paying the cq_sts and expenses
self-addressed envelope. The
containers. Geraldine
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of. enforcing and i!ldministerlng
Ambrose Co ., 4325 Lakeborn.
Cleland, East Main. Racine.
ASSOCIATE
ttte - tax provided tor in this
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
7-18-ftr
8·15-6tc
ordinance ; and for planning,
8·1-30tp
constructing, improving,

r-------------4· ·-------------

foi.IUit\S

WORK

· ~

R_emode_ling

Charge
12 Minimum
cents ·per
word7Sc three.
conseC 11tive insertions.
18 cents per word six con-

Notice
By Mn. Francis Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
were in Dayton, guests of Mr.
Shop,
151 Butternut Ave.,
and Mn. Tom Bartley who
Pomeroy.
..
entertained for the 40th wedding ·
4-23-tfc
aimiversary celebration with
dinner at the Country Club, MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
now . Make ·a p·
Sunday, August1 · Mr ·and Mrs · Studio
pointment for your senior
Webb spent Monday and portraits to be taken during
Tueaday in Colwnbus with their week of August 23rd. Save 10
~ and Mrs James Webb
per cent on the crost of your
son, "'·
·
. order. Phone 992-2475.
and family. Mr. Webb and
8-4-lOtc,
grandson, Jeff, attended the - - - - - - Pro-Am Golf Tournament in KOSCOT Kosmetics , JulyAupust special . Kare Konc0 Iumb us Monday · They dit1on
oil $5. Value now only
returned home Tuesday night. S2.50. Distributors. Brown's,
Twin daughters were born to phone 992-5113.
Mr. and Mn. Jeffery Bowers of _ _ __ __ __7_-4-lfc
Colwnbus. They have a son,
Mart, age 2. Grandparents are with her mother, Mrs. Carrie
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Jr., Nease.
Columbus. Great~andparents Mrs. Larry Wolfe and Laren
are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra, spent several days With her
Sr., Racine.
bro~r-in-law and sister, Mr.
Mrs. Audrey (Heiney) and Mrs. Jack Maiden.
Sheppard, formerly of Fair- Mrs. Helen (Hulse) Robertview, Apple Grove area, is son of Lakeland, Fla., spent a
seriously ill at her home, 1176 couple days with Mrs. Hazel
Irvin St., Akron. Hearing from carnahan, recently.
frienclsandrelativesherewould Mrs. Dale Lee and her
make her days brighter. Ray daughters, Mrs . Fred Clark of
Heiney and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Texas and Mrs. George Tassion
Sr., of Racine are brother and and tWo daughters of Cinslster of Mrs. Sheppard.
cinnati, were recent callers of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry CUrtis Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs.
received worll of the death of Ada Bays.
their son, Robert, in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
They left by jet plane to attend of Patriot spent Sunday with his
the funeral. Tom CUrtis; ac- mother, Mrs. Frances Roberts.
companied by his sister, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Marsha Ann Wells, of and daughter, Mrs. Ivan
Washington C. H. and his l'oweU, Ivanna and Lori, of
lrother, Sam Curtis of Lorain, Newburg, England, spent a day
went by car.
in Colwnbus at the zoo and
Hobart Bryson entered other places of interest.
Veterans Hospital in Hun- Dr. Kathryn Philson of
ling ton, W. Va. for heart Blacksburg, Va., is spending a
surgery.
week with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson Thereon Johnson.
were called to Springfield Mr. Melvin Riffle of
Sunday due to the death of Mr. Colwnbus is a guest of Mr. and
Walthoe Allen, a cousin of Mrs. Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Philson and a former Mid- Mr. and Mrs. Lou Spataro and
dlepU't resident.
sons, Lucian and John, of
Mrs. Clyde Cross of Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. McCullough of Belpre were
George Cross of Micl\igan spent weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
the weekeod with their mother, Alfred Crow.
Mrs. A. B. Cross and their Ken Inghram of Stow, Ohio,
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Earl was a weekend guest of Rook For Sale
TREE ripened peaches, lsi
Cross. They also visiled Mrs. Crow.
house south of Point Rock on
Howard Neigler. Ray Cross Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
Rt. 68'1. Flossie Ragan, Rl. •·
returned to Columbus with attended a get-together of
Albany, phone 669-3787 thru
them 'after spending a week Worthy Matrons and Worthy
Wilkesville.
8·12·6tc
with his cousin, David Neigler. Patrons O.E .S. 1971 at the home
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jacobs of Mrs . Wilma Styer in
and children of Colwnbus and Waterford, Ohio, Sunday.
Wanted To Buy
Sidney Kane of Beaver Falls,
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
Pa., were Sunday guests of Mr.
beds , clocks, dishes, old
and Mrs. Henry Roush and Mr.
furniture, etc. Write M. 0 .
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
and Mrs. Jack Fisher of Akron
Call
992·6271.
were guests on Monday.
7-9·1fc
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
- - -- - Marietta spent Sunday with her
GIN SENG $2:11 oz .• $35 lb.;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis
snake root $5lb., Golden Seal ,
Morris.
$1.90 lb.; Wahoo Root bark $2
lb. Bill Bailey. Reedsville,
Mr . and Mrs. Orland Mitchell
Second
Sl.
of Parkersburg were Sunday
Mr . and Mrs . Hayman
8-8·101c
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Crill Barnitz of Pomeroy called on
Bradford and Mrs. Esther Eunie Brinker a recent evening .
For Rent
Piper. Other callers were Crill Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Derbie
Bradford, Jr., of Worthington, and family of Springfield visiled TRAILER LOTS, BOb's Mobile
Cou rt , Rt. 124, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Carson , Mr . and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Ohio. 992-2'151.
Coolville, Mrs. Ruth Frank, Verna and Wavie Circle and
4-2-lfc
Lois and Anna of Racine Rural, also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
and Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould, Harold Ci rcle and family of FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school .
Marietta.
Racine R. D. and Mr. and Mrs.
Phone 992·5434.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Bob Harden and family of
10·18·«&lt;
Lavinia Simpson were Dr. and Nease Settlement over a recent
Mrs. Thomas Laughlin, Jessica weekend.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
and Scott of St. Petersburg, Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of Middleport . Phone 992-6353.
Fla ., and Mrs . Marian New Ha ven and Mrs. Lucy
8·13·31c
Knightstep and Alicia of Taylor of McKenzie Ridge
Colwnbus.
visited with Mary Circle over 5 ROOMS and bath , good
condition . For more in ·
Mrs. Thome Cottrill of Logan the. weekend.
forma lion call 992-7128 before
and Mrs. Elmer Frecker and Mr . and Mrs . Athur E .
2 p.m. and aller 5 p.m .
8.1J.Ifc
SOli, Roger, of Pine Grove were J ohnson and son, Patrick,
recent dinner guests of Mrs. call ed on Mr. and Mrs. William
Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada Hudson and family of Pomeroy 2 BEDROOM mobile home.
M&amp;G Food Markel, 3 miles
Bays.
" recent Sunday.
soulh
of Middleport on Rl . 7.
Mr. and Mrs. John Parsons
8·13·31c
and Julie Ann of Miami, Fla.,
C)Wim
t
type
of
i11sect
spent a couple days with their
lJlfl~ l.l1 e .~o1rab . held socretl
4 ROOMS and bath, unjurnished
aunt, Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
hous e, 1650 Lincoln His .
')" Ot" ,ttt:i(~ 't ' Rmmtimu.;?
Miss Mary Alice Nease or ,\- ,\ h"elle. It belo ngs to
Phone 992-3874.
a.n .tfc
Cleveland. spent several days lh1· family of dung beetles.

I'M

ROOFiNG &amp; CARPENTER

~mplete .

'

Here's the way It works .. .
you get S;even ic:e cream

freezer, refrigerator
combina11on .
·

lb.rrel

1

FREE ICE CREAM OFFER

cubic foot you buy in a Unico

.

' . ,fli.·

I!&gt; PCLileJfSS!

"" ~E-RUN

"'

BODAQOOS
·'

f !&gt;ELtEVE n!E t.'OST
IMPoRTMIT l'HIU&amp; IIJ UFE

I

6,98.
Plus
·
Parts

AI

~

1

.

'

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
llactihoo And
Endtoader Work

' Specql

SAL£ ·

bars, or a half-gallon of ice
cream. FREE for every

'

KJHrtsoN MASONRY .·

Re-Chall.l

EVER' BODY IN TH
HOllER IS TAlKIN'
ABOUT 'lORE

S.ervic~ .

;---B--.·usiness

Fitzpatrick .l .
Orchar!fs, State Route 619,
phone Wilkesville, 66'1-3785. ~
·
8-15-lfc

. .-

.

-

16 FT. TAGALONG travel
'R IDl NG HORSE for sale or
trailer, fully self a111tained.
trade for cattle. Phone 992·
Ready to go, $1500. Phone nJ.
6160.
5651. Mason, W. Va.
8-15-21p
7-23-tfc

WANT AU
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.
For Sale
5 P.M. Oay"Before Publication
GELDING registered quarter
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
horse . Phone 992-·2759.
...C_aOKellatlon &amp; Corrections
8-16·31C
Will be a~ceptecl unlil9·a.in. for '
Day of Publication
•
REGULAJIONS
· WALNUT STEREO radio
' The Publisher reserves the
combination, AM-FM ,
nght to ed1t or ~lecl any ads
radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
changer, dual volume tonfrol.
deemed ObjeCtional~_ ")"he
pubhsher w11i not be responSible
B 1
7 . Use our
for more than one Incorrect.
a ance 569 · 4· ·
insertion.
· budget terms. Call 992-7085.
RATES
8-ls..ltc
For W~nt Ad Service

Racine.
WMP0/1390
Social Events 1- - - - - - - -..~ ·

rr.-~~~--~------~--

- 1-~:!~~:~ 12 x60, couples only. ·APPL.ES-Peaches.

..

Amy Esther Graham , a M inor .

HGUESI INJUN,
PARSONU

Sentfnel Cla.ssifieds

Bargains, Bargains and

CONFIDENTIAL··
I ALREADY
GOT IT
SCHEDULED
FER A

......

IT···

-AND IT HAS

11LL, OE5TRa'f TijE

ENDED UP IN
SOME.

Cl:lAIR.,I3EFOI&gt;.E IT

INNOCENT
M'l IIONAIP.rS
HOMI.- ?.?•

OWNER!!

DESTR0'/51TS

.

OFFICE SUPPliES
And

1Jft@!DI1
'

~:

MOTORCYCLES
~d-S~.mmer Sale
On All Mode Is .
save-Up To $200.00
Over 10 Percent
HAWK'S J.DA Y
CYCLE SALE
2 miles sou.thof Athens, 0 .
Rt. 33
Open Man., Wed., Fri.
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Phone 593-8669

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end ser.vlce,
tune ·up and brake service.
Wheels b~lanced electronically. · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992·3213.
.,
7-27-tfc

----'-----

·,

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
F.loor Display.
· BUGS BUNNY

EXPERIENCED .
Radiator Service

AND WHEN )'OU FIND
OUT, YOU APPROVE

"1"1-lEY "T"AI&lt;:E A L I' L

LET 1HAT llE A LESSON
10 YOU,')t)l.JNG LADY.
WHOI.EHfARTEOLY! HONE5!Y ltl 1HE BEST
FOLICY!

GETIIN' USED "TO!

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

B~ARl
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2t4J

••• I .lJST GOT AN IDEA
I'OH WE CAN USE
lH' CRITTER[ -_,....,

AWNINGS, storm doors and

windows,

carports,

marquees. aluminum siding NEIGLER Construction. For .
and railing. Call A. Jacob, building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Nelgler ,
sales representative. For free
Racine, Ohio.
estimates, phone Ch~l rles
7-31-11c
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5.27-tfc RALPH'S CARPET - Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free estimates. Phone
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Gallipolis 446-0294.
del!vered right to your
3-12-tfc ,
pro1ect. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284. HARRISON'S TV AND ANGoegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
Middleport, Ohio.
992-2522.
·
·6·30-lfc
6-JO.Ifc
·.
ROSEBERRY Furnace ln . SEWING MACHINE Service In
stallation. Free estimates on
new furnaces , oil or gas. your home. Clean, oil and adjust
Service work . Call Cecil - $4.99. Phone m ·7085. Twin
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio. City Sewing Machine Company.
8-13-6tp
Phone 614-843·2274.
7-22·30tc
NOTICE OF
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
APPOINTMENT
ser.vlce, all makes, 992-2284,
cue No. 20521
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Estate of Glenn R. Collins.
Authorized Singer Sales and

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
_ 11
3· &lt;&gt;·
c
~
.
~
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell.
Owner &amp; Oper:ator.
·

,lj()u don't need
that.~ir!

.01Hf?l DID, 'SOllEY DID!
1\J$. ~ lAAT R~

~!

Deceased .,

Nollce is hereby given Ihal
Pauline Collins, of Route 1. Box
158, Racine, Ohio, has been duly
appointed Administratrix of theEstate of Glenn R. Collins,
deceosed , lote ol Meigs County,
o~~edilors are requ ired to. file

'
.....
.
:;;.;:-.,.

....

their claims with said fiduciary
5-13-'tfc · within tour months .
Dated this 26th day of July

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been 1971 .
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922'166.

ACROSS
J.Zoro-

John c. Bacon
Probate Judge
of said county 1

10. Relating
to oil
11. DIBclose
12.Bundae,
New

r----------------------------,.-----------

U . Qu&amp;y
16. Barracka'
Item
18.Nome

mWdng

6. Lend
OIU!ttelf
to
7."Ball

---"
&amp;

JJtJd)Y£;"'-';sr;!' I C
...I

U.111&lt;nmble ~four Jumble~,

Ye!lt~rdaJ'8

tul
33.German
'
river

u. -

George
31.1\0nute

out

!Ger.}

IPUSHTY

a sweet
tooth

I Alit NOT 1111\GjNJNG,

tnoPouKI
)

(2wds.)

27. Kuscat Is
11.1
capl\&amp;1
28.Courage
29. Not fll'OSS
30. Blbllcal
Jdag
31. DifficUlty
32. Scottlab
explon!r
311. Soda.
fountain
Item

I~

I

i~

•

and · the

exemptlon:sprov lded In sections
~503.16, 4503,17 and .c503.171 ot
lhe Revised Code.

prov ided br law.

(Aa

Jo,.w.., IMIIUI
s......... ,' ••
Anewert

.
~

DAIL~ CRYP'l'OQUO'.fE..;..Here'• how
AXYDLBAAXB

t.Rrl.s-

,

'"· ............

Adv~ rh,in.: rou h ill·rl cd tor IIIP Pui!Uc: j~:OOd in t'noprr.lliM wilh
'
Hu: Alh'c•hsm~: Countl l.tM•Ibr lnlru• ,1h~&gt;ll .tl Ncw~cr M~t'd ! ' lllt~ t•~rulirc \

.

. &lt;'

.

I.

011r

•••t

lf'llueal"e-THI '"MIIf41SH

-- -

L 0 N G P .E L L 0 W

A

:~,
,.,,~: KeepAmeric~ ~leautiful f.D.&gt;.
...

to work It:

...,..m..,....,

"'''E".f&gt;

1

II

SWASH ASSUII INAMIL

PANCE Al\!li.ND IT?

ODe Jetter limply dondl for 1110tber. In thiiJ ample A 11
lilted for the lb...., L'o, X tor the t - 0'1, eU. Slqle ~
the 'JeDctb &amp;lld fonni.Uon Of the wordll are all
111111.1. Each ay the code !etten are dltferent.

start pollution. People can stop it.

Slae /HIM

eu

&lt;JJ»t.cram

KACI'Q

Qwomu.

BVI'

IBKCY,

LPY

PBB - SOJPJSP;

NAB · SOJPJSP

JQ

BVLB

WLB:FQ .

sz

IVJDV

ISKDJ'. - }!CLJQI'

AQF

OLQDLC

I

.....

IIIEU., Wll't' CXlN'r WE M Ill'
A FOLE ~0 ATrACH $0\(E
5TR~ TO IT, ANti

39. Potpourri
fO. Church
part
tl. Abound
f2. Bl&amp;clt:
BeM,for
ex&amp;mpl&lt;:_

ZBKDI'

I I

I

1....- -... 1THE "t r r J( xxI I r

..

IHnwabou·t you? Send for free
SECTION II: Bo it further "'oc&gt;kh!t "71 Thl"ngs You Can Do To
orda ined that a copy of this. I""
ordinance be cerlllled fo the ~:&gt;too Pollution.'' Write to Keep
reg istrar of motor veh icles.
1\Jne.r ica
.Beautiful, lnc., Box 1771,
Sec
.
Ill.
This
Ordinance
shali
~~:~~~City
Station, New York,
take effect and· be in farce from
and alter the earliest date
York 10019.

Now......,.thedrdedWII

to f - the uprilt

~====~=~--L--;;-:r.:IU:I:IOI;II::ed br the..........

(2 wda.}

,..__

~

II J

river
21!. Item for

MY CAPrAIN! lHff1E

I K I t)

38. With

thing

:U. Swiss

OVEB.4.

mented)
35. Wlttlclam
36. 'earty'l
oompant011
37. Be located

11t,

clrcle

one letter to euh 111uue. t.
form four ordinary worda.

(aupple-

30.Humor-

B. Apiary
resident
20.Rallro.d
13. Tibetan
locomotive
gazelle

An1wer

32.Beoucceso-

26. Black
or Red

8. Part0f

-tchfUI

addition to the ta xes at the
spKified in seCtions 4503. ~ and

Passed the 26th day of July
NEW. 3·bedroom home in 1971.
Mlddleporl. Built-in kitchen, Attest: Gene. Grate
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
heat, good neighborhood. Can
( cler• Johnw . zerkle
arrange FHA financing .
President of Council
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.
Ill 2, t , 16. 31
7-25-tfc '

(3 wds.)

17.Kanon
the radio

Some people
-tv ... a deep, abiding respect
the natural beauty
.was once this country.
Middleporl. Such tax shall be
rate-s
some people don't.
4503.16 lhe section 4503.13 ol
Code

5.Swnmer
treat.o
-

&lt;C lrll Ktaa- Featurta Sndk:a.te, ~. )

20. Biack

2I. NomID&amp;te
22.1Daect
23. Gaelic
for John
:u. Teach·
able

ocher

(2 wds.)

in the- planning. lm ·

Of
ReVise-d

f. Yellow

Ellgland

FONTENELLE

coating
lB. Distribute

3. Truat

atyle .

provement, and construction of
state highways; paying the
mun icipal corporation's portion
of the compensation, dary"~ages,
costs. and expenses of pllnnlng,
constructing,
reconstructing,
improving, maintaining. and
repairing road and streets;
paying any costs apportioned to
the municipal cor/'oration
under section 4901.4 of the
Rev ised Code ; paying debt
service charges on notes or
bonds of the munic fpal cor.
poration issued for such pur poses ; pUrchasing , erecting,
and maintaining street and
traffic s igns . and markers;
purchas ing , erecting, and
mainta ining traffic lights and
signals ; and to supplement
revenue already evalleble for
such purposes, there is hereby
levied an annual license tax In
addition to the tax le~t led by
sections ..S03.02, .&amp;503 .07, and
4503 _18 of the Re~t ised COde,
upon the operation of motor
vehicles on the public roads or
highways Within the Vlll•ge.
Said taK shall be at the rate ot
five dollars per motor vehicle
on all motor vehicles the district
of registration Of which, as
defined in section .4503.10 of the
R~v i sed
Code , Is in the
municipal corporation . of

the

2. South
African
plant

captain

maintaining , and repairing
pubtic roads . highways, and
streets; ma in taining and
repa ir ing bridges and viaducts ;
pay ing the municipal corporation's portion of the costs
and expenses of cooperat ing
with the department of high -

ways

memento

S.Pequod

(8) 2. 9, 16, 3t

6·15-tfc

1. Smallpox

aatrian

Satanlay'1 Cryploqaote: A WISE KAN WILL LIVJi AS
KUCH WITHIN HIS WIT AS ·Wl'I1UN HIB INOOKE.-

16. Hoaplclt
17. Sentry'&amp;
word
18. Seed

DOWN

IT ~5 JV5TA
:5U66f5TIOII .

�•

·-Tile Di11J $tutiu!l,

~

Mjl'

lepolt.Pumeroy, 0., Auc. 16,1971

LEGAL NOTICE
Ill THE MATTE~ O.F SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUN TS,
PROlATE COURT, MEIG S
COUNTY, OHIO
.
Accounts and vouchers of the
following named fiduc i ar ies
tliave been filed in the Probate

Court, Meigs County, Ohio, for
dpproval and settlement :

CASE

NO .

19&lt;0•

Fifth

Current Account of Joyce A .
Dav i s~ guardian of the person

.net estat e of Mary E . Russell .
CASE NO. 19567

First Ac -

count of Paul E . Kloes, Guar -

dian of the Person and Est ate of

I

2

'®.

Po•eroJ
•tor Co.

OF

.QUAlnY

1970 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO CPE.
~5
BeautifUl Gobi Beige color with blk. vinyl roof, factory air
conditioni ng. tinted glass, black nylon bucket seats,
console, Posi traction axle. 400 cu. ln. engine, · Turbo
Hydromatic, power steering, power d isc brakes, radio &amp;

r. seat speaker. bumper guards &amp; Rally Wheels, un·
B~lance

derseal. Save, Save .

Annual Ac count of Frank W.
Porter , Jr ., TruStee under Item
V of the LaSt Will and

1970 CAMARO CPE.
$3495
Less than 11 .000 miles &amp; appearance of 71 model, R~lly
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sant01wood Interior.
tinted glass, factory air conditioned, sports mirrors.
console, air spoiler, turbo hydromatic, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln. V·8 engine. Really Sharp.

of warranty .

CASE NO . 2012 1 Second

Teatament of Jane Lou ise D .
Smith , Deceased .

CASE NO .

20~0 1

Final AC ·

count of Phyll is A. Mullen .
Adm in istratr ix of the estate of
Charles J . Mullen, Deceased .
·CASE NO . 20473 First and
F i nal Accoun t of Franklin

Triplett, Executor oi the Estate
of Lewis E . Tri plett . Deceased.
Unless exception s are filed
thereto , sa id accounts will be
for hearing befor-e said Court on

'

Pemetor Motor Co. ·
OPIM EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROY IIHIO

®

the 15th day of September, 1971,

at which time said accounts will

be considered and continued
from day to day until finally
disposed of .
Any .person interested may
fille written exceptions to said
accoun ts or to metiers per taining to the trust , not Jess than
five days pr ior to the date set
for hearing .

JOHN C. BACON
PROBATE JUDGE
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
( 8 ) 16

We talk to you
like a peiSOII.

For Sale

Phone 992-5«3.

8-15-lfc

---..,.,.--- For Sale or Trade

11M Your Si 111111
.Af~ ·
lnspedian and

SINGER ZIG ~G. needs no
Auto Sales
cams• .all built-In features.
1961 OLOS, motor completely Makes buttonholes, fJncy
designs, etc. Pay just SQ.39.
overhauled. Phone 992-6417 .
Use our budget terms. Call
8-1J.6tc
992-7085 . .
.8-15-6tc
1965 iNTERNATIONAL truck
1800, good condition. Henry
Bahr. Long .Bol1om. Ohio.
SEWING MACHINE, new
Phone 985-3988.
deluxe,
zig-zag, heavy duty.
8-15-Jip
Special pre-sc hool offer SPECIAL this week at Tom Rue 164.88. Phone 992·7085. Twin
Motors. 1963 Ford Pickup.
City Sewing Machine Company.
8-15-lfc
8-IJ.6fp
1969 CHEVY II, 6-cyl.,
automatic. Phone 992-6547.
8-15-31'

5 cents per Word one insertion .

FR~EZER

or

UNil:O 20FT. UPRIGHT
FREEZER
26U5

With I his one you get 140 free
ice cream bars or 20 halt

gallons

':t.
· •

of

FREE ice cream .

POMEROY

Jack w. C1rser.. Mgr. 1
Phane tt2-Z111

Blaettna~•

Septic Tinks
And LNch._ ,..Beds...

PHONE 992·2143

. 742.14902

-

EXPERT
Wlx:el
15.55

-ment

-GUARANTEED' Phone 992-2094
1

PamenJJ Home &amp;·Auto
Open1Til5
MDM.y lllrv ~lurdlly
606 E. Moin, Pomeroy, o.

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC SERVICE. Phone 949--4551. '
5-30-lfc

Virgil B.
TEAFORD
SR.

------

SENTINEL
CARRIER
WANTED IN
NEW HAVEN

LEGAL NOTICE

HARTFORD

Carmel News,

By the Day

36" X 23" X .009

~

Aluminum
Sheets·
USED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

The
Daily Sentinel

Cleland
Realty
601 East Main
POMEROY

RUTLAND
NEW
ALUMINUM
SIDING,
STORM
DOORS
AND
WINDOWS,
nice
lot
on
quiet
111 Court St.
street for kids. l'h story
Pomeroy, Ohio
frame, 3 large bedrooms,
bath, about tto acre, needs
paper and paint inside, A
PORTABLE Si nger Sewing BUY AT JUST S6,900.
Machine will sell for repair bill
- $18.44. Phone 992-7085. Twin ROUTE 124 - JUST OUT OF
City Sewing Machine Company. TOWN. 3.33 acres level
·
•
8.J3.6tc ground, 1 story home, 3
bedrooms. bath , NEW
ALUMINUM SIDING, NEW
REGISTERED quarter horses
GAS FORCED-AIR FURNACE, (low gas bills}, 2olher
- 3 bred mares, 1 bred grade
mare, 1 registered 2-year old
buildings, MEIGS SCHOOL
gelding. 3 registered yearling
DISTRICT. JUST $15,900.
fillies , 1 reglslered yearling
colt, I yearling grade colt. POMEROY- 1· story frame, J
Contact Horace Karr; Royal · bedrooms. ·bath. 9arage.
Oak Farm. Phone 985.3341.
basement, needs pa1nl and
8-15-Jtc
paper for A DO-IT YOURGREAT BUY AT
I----~---.. SELFER.
SS,SOO.
PLACE THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY IN GOOD
HANDS
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2568
B·11 -61c

12'. - 14' · 24' ·· WIDE
'

.

MILLER .

MOBILE HOMES
1220 Wuhinglon Blvd.
Belpre, Ollio

•

j
~
j

•11
•

•,
tl-1&amp;

AND IUS
WELL,THEY'RE
THE lAR6EST
LilltN&lt;S ~LS

NEW &amp; OlD WORK
All Weather Roofing &amp;
Construction • Co. and ' An·.
thony Plumbing &amp; Heating.
Complete . Plumbing,
' · Heating a.nd Air Conditioning.
240 Lincoln St., Middleport

E.VDNWJ.IEN
~EY·Re ·

DEA
. 01.

--~

Phone 992-2550
Insured- Experienced
· Work Guaranteed
see us--for~ Free
Estimate on Furrtace
lnstalation.

1/J.IM-Ir: I

KNOW Mil

Kim&gt;, HEW6

WINISHD

.HOME

Fcir

For Sale

~

~ESTIDOY

JtEW &amp;OLQ WORK
.J....:::=.:.=c..;.:.;;__ _ ___,
All Weather Roofing &amp; Construction Co. and 'Anthony ;
Plumblnv &amp; Ht1Hn9.
POMEROY
Complete Plumbing, "Heating
~-nd .~ir. Conditionlnq.
1
&amp; AUTO
240 Lincoln St. Middleport, 0.
Phone 992-2550
992-2094
Insured. Experienced
606 E. Main Pomef.OY
Work Guraranleed

.

DUPLEX HOME, 6 rooms and
bath. Apartment, 3 rooms and
bath. Private entrances. Ideal
for family with extra rental or
inveslment propertr. Priced
for quick sale . Cal 992-2o431
aller 5 p.m.
8-11 ·12tc

SERMON

•

i
1

INTH'
FALL

SPOUTING,
ROOF PAINTING

Roofil!ll&amp; Carpenter
CWork
Spouting, Roof
,
Painting

ROOF painting &amp; minor roof
MAPLE, EARLY American
repair. Phone 992-2239.
Stereo-radio combination, 4- Real Estate For Sale
8-10-61c
speaker sound system. AMFM radio, +speed intermixed 6 ROOM house and bath located .SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
jus I otilside Chester. Phone
changer. Balance $77.31. Use
secutive insertions.
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
985·4262.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
our budget terms. Call 992662-3035.
8-12-121c
7085.
ads and ads paid within 10 days.
2-12-lfc
CARO QF THANKS
8-15-61c
.,
&amp;OBITUARY
3 BEDROOM brieR home.
C. BRADFORD. Auctioneer
$1.50 for 50 word minimum. HALF RUNNER beans, S2
Choice location in Middleport. ·
Complete Servi~
liach additional word 2c .
bushel, pick your own .
Seen
by
appointment
only.
Phone 949-3821
BLIND ADS
·Cucumbers and tomatoes.
Phone
992-5523
after
4
p.m.
Racine, Ohio
Additional 25c Charge per
Clarence Proffitt. Portland .
5-7-lfc
CriH
Bradford
Advertisemt!nt.
843-2254.
Phone
5-1-Hc
OFfiCE HOURS
8·l -15tc FOR SALE by owner, a baby
8:30a.m. to 5:00 p:m. Dally.
farm . 3'h miles- from Athens BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
8: 30 a .m. to 12:00 Noon·
city limit, 25 miles from
TWIN
NEEDLE
sewing
Saturday.
Septic tanks Installed. George
Pomeroy, 5 room plus small
machine 1911 model in new
( BIU l Pullins, Phone 992-2478.
room adjoining bathroom,
walnut stand. All features
4-25-lfc
plenty waler . Can give clear
buill-in to make laney
Notice
deed. 2 veins coal, plenty
desiQns. Also buttonholes,
fruit.
Call 592-1153 .or write QUEEN and Shamblin Conblind
hems
etc.,
$43.25
cash
I WILL nol be responsible for
strucl i on . Roofing ,
Lewis Weyand, RD 5, Athens,
price or terms available.
any debts contracted by
remodeling,
aluminum
Ohio
45701.
Price
on
inanyone other than myself.
Phone 992-5641.
siding.
Phone
992-7324
or 742·
8-11-61c
spection.
Jack Vy'ard, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
4979.
8-lS-Jic
8-11 -61p
8-4-1 21c
A GOOD BUY- give it a try.
Blue
Lustre America 's 11 .16 ACRES located T·79 at
GROVER'S STUDIO will be
favor ite carpet shampoo.
Rock Springs, close to Meigs
Sale
closed for vacation Aug. 16th
Baker Furniture Company. · High School. Contact Bill ·Real Estate
thru 22nd. Visit our booth at
8-11-lllc Witte (for L. Fields) after 5 p. HOUSE. 1642 Lincoln Heights.
the Meigs County Fair.
m. or on weekends, phone 992·
Call Damy Thompson, 9928-10.101c
2196.
·COAL, limestone . Excelsior· 61187.
8·12-IOic
7-18-tfc
~all
Works,
E.
Main
St
.•
WILL DO babysitting in my
Pomeroy.
Phone
992·3891.
home tor pre-school children.
4-9-tfc
experienced. Mrs . Glenn
CONVENIENT but secluded
Smith. Rock Springs Road.
building lots on T79 at Rock
.VITO B FLAT clarinet in good
Call 992-6187.
Springs. Within walking
condition, $75. Phone 985-3573.
8-I0.6fc
distance of Meigs High
8-11 -51c
School, a Slnlnute drive from
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
Witte
weekends or after 5
ANTIQUE double bed, dresser
p.m.
Help Wanted
weekdays.
Phone 992and rocker. Phone 992·2580.
6887.
8-15·liC
COMBINATION waitress and
7-11·11c
Broker
barlender, Blue Tartan. day
110 Mechanic Street
or night shift. No experience DEEP WELL pump, complete
TRAILER LOT for sate, $500.
tank
and
pipe,
¥•
h.p.
motor,
Pomeroy, Ohio
necessary . Apply in person .
Rutland St .• Middleport, Ohio.
Long
Bottom
.
Henry
Bahr,
8-15-61c
Phone 985-3988.
NEAR RUTLAND - New 3 Will hold ~12 trailer. Call
8·15-31p
992-5310.
bedrooms , beauf·iful H-'2
8-11-61p
balhs, gas furnace. Nice
kitchen. $19,500.00.
PEACHES - tree ripened
SIX ROOM house, bath, full
Elberta peaches at Midway
basement. 133 Butternut Ave.,
J
HOUSES2
rented.
All
have
Markel - $3.49 a bushe. Phone
jUst walking distance from
free gas. 3 bedroom modern
992-2582.
downtown Pomeroy. Contact
home. $16,000.00.
·
!;d. Hedrick, 2137 Wadswa&lt;th
8·13-31c 30 ACRES - ()] 1o43. Several
Orive. Columbus, Oh io, phone~
building sites. $5,000.00 NEW
LISTING.
.
.
237 - ~, Columbus.
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy,
--------,..-----2:5-z:9-~tfe!:c
Park view Kennels . Ptlone 992- BUILDING LOT Forrest
5443.
Run. Utilities.
and
8·15-lfc
ORDINANCE
30 ROOM BRICK - Successful
NO. tJJ.n
9 PIECE anlique dining room
business now operating . NEW
An
ordinance
to establish a
suite. price $750. Phone 992·
LISTING.
municipal motor V!'h icl~ license
2798.
.
Phone 992-2156
•
8·15-Jic DO YOU HAVE 100 ACRES ON tax.
Be i t ordained by the- Council
HIGHWAY. or RIVER of the Village of Middleport as
EARN AT home addressing CANNING tomatoes, already
follows :
...
FRONTAGE TO SELL.
envelopes . Rush stamped
sec.
1.
That
tor
the purpose of
picked. $1.25 bu.. bring
CALL 992-3325
paying the cq_sts and expenses
self-addressed envelope. The
containers. Geraldine
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
of. enforcing and i!ldministerlng
Ambrose Co ., 4325 Lakeborn.
Cleland, East Main. Racine.
ASSOCIATE
ttte - tax provided tor in this
Davisburg, Mich . 48019.
7-18-ftr
8·15-6tc
ordinance ; and for planning,
8·1-30tp
constructing, improving,

r-------------4· ·-------------

foi.IUit\S

WORK

· ~

R_emode_ling

Charge
12 Minimum
cents ·per
word7Sc three.
conseC 11tive insertions.
18 cents per word six con-

Notice
By Mn. Francis Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb SAVE UP to one half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
were in Dayton, guests of Mr.
Shop,
151 Butternut Ave.,
and Mn. Tom Bartley who
Pomeroy.
..
entertained for the 40th wedding ·
4-23-tfc
aimiversary celebration with
dinner at the Country Club, MEIGS SENIORS call Grover's
now . Make ·a p·
Sunday, August1 · Mr ·and Mrs · Studio
pointment for your senior
Webb spent Monday and portraits to be taken during
Tueaday in Colwnbus with their week of August 23rd. Save 10
~ and Mrs James Webb
per cent on the crost of your
son, "'·
·
. order. Phone 992-2475.
and family. Mr. Webb and
8-4-lOtc,
grandson, Jeff, attended the - - - - - - Pro-Am Golf Tournament in KOSCOT Kosmetics , JulyAupust special . Kare Konc0 Iumb us Monday · They dit1on
oil $5. Value now only
returned home Tuesday night. S2.50. Distributors. Brown's,
Twin daughters were born to phone 992-5113.
Mr. and Mn. Jeffery Bowers of _ _ __ __ __7_-4-lfc
Colwnbus. They have a son,
Mart, age 2. Grandparents are with her mother, Mrs. Carrie
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Jr., Nease.
Columbus. Great~andparents Mrs. Larry Wolfe and Laren
are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Farra, spent several days With her
Sr., Racine.
bro~r-in-law and sister, Mr.
Mrs. Audrey (Heiney) and Mrs. Jack Maiden.
Sheppard, formerly of Fair- Mrs. Helen (Hulse) Robertview, Apple Grove area, is son of Lakeland, Fla., spent a
seriously ill at her home, 1176 couple days with Mrs. Hazel
Irvin St., Akron. Hearing from carnahan, recently.
frienclsandrelativesherewould Mrs. Dale Lee and her
make her days brighter. Ray daughters, Mrs . Fred Clark of
Heiney and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Texas and Mrs. George Tassion
Sr., of Racine are brother and and tWo daughters of Cinslster of Mrs. Sheppard.
cinnati, were recent callers of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry CUrtis Mrs. Ethel Wheeler and Mrs.
received worll of the death of Ada Bays.
their son, Robert, in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts
They left by jet plane to attend of Patriot spent Sunday with his
the funeral. Tom CUrtis; ac- mother, Mrs. Frances Roberts.
companied by his sister, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland
Marsha Ann Wells, of and daughter, Mrs. Ivan
Washington C. H. and his l'oweU, Ivanna and Lori, of
lrother, Sam Curtis of Lorain, Newburg, England, spent a day
went by car.
in Colwnbus at the zoo and
Hobart Bryson entered other places of interest.
Veterans Hospital in Hun- Dr. Kathryn Philson of
ling ton, W. Va. for heart Blacksburg, Va., is spending a
surgery.
week with Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson Thereon Johnson.
were called to Springfield Mr. Melvin Riffle of
Sunday due to the death of Mr. Colwnbus is a guest of Mr. and
Walthoe Allen, a cousin of Mrs. Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Philson and a former Mid- Mr. and Mrs. Lou Spataro and
dlepU't resident.
sons, Lucian and John, of
Mrs. Clyde Cross of Athens and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. McCullough of Belpre were
George Cross of Micl\igan spent weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
the weekeod with their mother, Alfred Crow.
Mrs. A. B. Cross and their Ken Inghram of Stow, Ohio,
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Earl was a weekend guest of Rook For Sale
TREE ripened peaches, lsi
Cross. They also visiled Mrs. Crow.
house south of Point Rock on
Howard Neigler. Ray Cross Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
Rt. 68'1. Flossie Ragan, Rl. •·
returned to Columbus with attended a get-together of
Albany, phone 669-3787 thru
them 'after spending a week Worthy Matrons and Worthy
Wilkesville.
8·12·6tc
with his cousin, David Neigler. Patrons O.E .S. 1971 at the home
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jacobs of Mrs . Wilma Styer in
and children of Colwnbus and Waterford, Ohio, Sunday.
Wanted To Buy
Sidney Kane of Beaver Falls,
ANTIQUES, telephones, brass
Pa., were Sunday guests of Mr.
beds , clocks, dishes, old
and Mrs. Henry Roush and Mr.
furniture, etc. Write M. 0 .
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
and Mrs. Jack Fisher of Akron
Call
992·6271.
were guests on Monday.
7-9·1fc
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould of
- - -- - Marietta spent Sunday with her
GIN SENG $2:11 oz .• $35 lb.;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis
snake root $5lb., Golden Seal ,
Morris.
$1.90 lb.; Wahoo Root bark $2
lb. Bill Bailey. Reedsville,
Mr . and Mrs. Orland Mitchell
Second
Sl.
of Parkersburg were Sunday
Mr . and Mrs . Hayman
8-8·101c
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Crill Barnitz of Pomeroy called on
Bradford and Mrs. Esther Eunie Brinker a recent evening .
For Rent
Piper. Other callers were Crill Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Derbie
Bradford, Jr., of Worthington, and family of Springfield visiled TRAILER LOTS, BOb's Mobile
Cou rt , Rt. 124, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Carson , Mr . and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Ohio. 992-2'151.
Coolville, Mrs. Ruth Frank, Verna and Wavie Circle and
4-2-lfc
Lois and Anna of Racine Rural, also visited with Mr. and Mrs.
and Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould, Harold Ci rcle and family of FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school .
Marietta.
Racine R. D. and Mr. and Mrs.
Phone 992·5434.
Weekend guests of Mrs. Bob Harden and family of
10·18·«&lt;
Lavinia Simpson were Dr. and Nease Settlement over a recent
Mrs. Thomas Laughlin, Jessica weekend.
2 BEDROOM mobile home in
and Scott of St. Petersburg, Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of Middleport . Phone 992-6353.
Fla ., and Mrs . Marian New Ha ven and Mrs. Lucy
8·13·31c
Knightstep and Alicia of Taylor of McKenzie Ridge
Colwnbus.
visited with Mary Circle over 5 ROOMS and bath , good
condition . For more in ·
Mrs. Thome Cottrill of Logan the. weekend.
forma lion call 992-7128 before
and Mrs. Elmer Frecker and Mr . and Mrs . Athur E .
2 p.m. and aller 5 p.m .
8.1J.Ifc
SOli, Roger, of Pine Grove were J ohnson and son, Patrick,
recent dinner guests of Mrs. call ed on Mr. and Mrs. William
Ethel Wheeler and Mrs. Ada Hudson and family of Pomeroy 2 BEDROOM mobile home.
M&amp;G Food Markel, 3 miles
Bays.
" recent Sunday.
soulh
of Middleport on Rl . 7.
Mr. and Mrs. John Parsons
8·13·31c
and Julie Ann of Miami, Fla.,
C)Wim
t
type
of
i11sect
spent a couple days with their
lJlfl~ l.l1 e .~o1rab . held socretl
4 ROOMS and bath, unjurnished
aunt, Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
hous e, 1650 Lincoln His .
')" Ot" ,ttt:i(~ 't ' Rmmtimu.;?
Miss Mary Alice Nease or ,\- ,\ h"elle. It belo ngs to
Phone 992-3874.
a.n .tfc
Cleveland. spent several days lh1· family of dung beetles.

I'M

ROOFiNG &amp; CARPENTER

~mplete .

'

Here's the way It works .. .
you get S;even ic:e cream

freezer, refrigerator
combina11on .
·

lb.rrel

1

FREE ICE CREAM OFFER

cubic foot you buy in a Unico

.

' . ,fli.·

I!&gt; PCLileJfSS!

"" ~E-RUN

"'

BODAQOOS
·'

f !&gt;ELtEVE n!E t.'OST
IMPoRTMIT l'HIU&amp; IIJ UFE

I

6,98.
Plus
·
Parts

AI

~

1

.

'

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios
llactihoo And
Endtoader Work

' Specql

SAL£ ·

bars, or a half-gallon of ice
cream. FREE for every

'

KJHrtsoN MASONRY .·

Re-Chall.l

EVER' BODY IN TH
HOllER IS TAlKIN'
ABOUT 'lORE

S.ervic~ .

;---B--.·usiness

Fitzpatrick .l .
Orchar!fs, State Route 619,
phone Wilkesville, 66'1-3785. ~
·
8-15-lfc

. .-

.

-

16 FT. TAGALONG travel
'R IDl NG HORSE for sale or
trailer, fully self a111tained.
trade for cattle. Phone 992·
Ready to go, $1500. Phone nJ.
6160.
5651. Mason, W. Va.
8-15-21p
7-23-tfc

WANT AU
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
.
For Sale
5 P.M. Oay"Before Publication
GELDING registered quarter
Monday Deadllne9a.m.
horse . Phone 992-·2759.
...C_aOKellatlon &amp; Corrections
8-16·31C
Will be a~ceptecl unlil9·a.in. for '
Day of Publication
•
REGULAJIONS
· WALNUT STEREO radio
' The Publisher reserves the
combination, AM-FM ,
nght to ed1t or ~lecl any ads
radio, 4 speakers, 4 speed
changer, dual volume tonfrol.
deemed ObjeCtional~_ ")"he
pubhsher w11i not be responSible
B 1
7 . Use our
for more than one Incorrect.
a ance 569 · 4· ·
insertion.
· budget terms. Call 992-7085.
RATES
8-ls..ltc
For W~nt Ad Service

Racine.
WMP0/1390
Social Events 1- - - - - - - -..~ ·

rr.-~~~--~------~--

- 1-~:!~~:~ 12 x60, couples only. ·APPL.ES-Peaches.

..

Amy Esther Graham , a M inor .

HGUESI INJUN,
PARSONU

Sentfnel Cla.ssifieds

Bargains, Bargains and

CONFIDENTIAL··
I ALREADY
GOT IT
SCHEDULED
FER A

......

IT···

-AND IT HAS

11LL, OE5TRa'f TijE

ENDED UP IN
SOME.

Cl:lAIR.,I3EFOI&gt;.E IT

INNOCENT
M'l IIONAIP.rS
HOMI.- ?.?•

OWNER!!

DESTR0'/51TS

.

OFFICE SUPPliES
And

1Jft@!DI1
'

~:

MOTORCYCLES
~d-S~.mmer Sale
On All Mode Is .
save-Up To $200.00
Over 10 Percent
HAWK'S J.DA Y
CYCLE SALE
2 miles sou.thof Athens, 0 .
Rt. 33
Open Man., Wed., Fri.
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Phone 593-8669

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rl. 124.
Complete front end ser.vlce,
tune ·up and brake service.
Wheels b~lanced electronically. · All
work
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992·3213.
.,
7-27-tfc

----'-----

·,

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
F.loor Display.
· BUGS BUNNY

EXPERIENCED .
Radiator Service

AND WHEN )'OU FIND
OUT, YOU APPROVE

"1"1-lEY "T"AI&lt;:E A L I' L

LET 1HAT llE A LESSON
10 YOU,')t)l.JNG LADY.
WHOI.EHfARTEOLY! HONE5!Y ltl 1HE BEST
FOLICY!

GETIIN' USED "TO!

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

B~ARl
Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2t4J

••• I .lJST GOT AN IDEA
I'OH WE CAN USE
lH' CRITTER[ -_,....,

AWNINGS, storm doors and

windows,

carports,

marquees. aluminum siding NEIGLER Construction. For .
and railing. Call A. Jacob, building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Nelgler ,
sales representative. For free
Racine, Ohio.
estimates, phone Ch~l rles
7-31-11c
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5.27-tfc RALPH'S CARPET - Upholstery Cleaning Service.
Free estimates. Phone
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
Gallipolis 446-0294.
del!vered right to your
3-12-tfc ,
pro1ect. Fast and easy. Free
estimates. Phone 992-3284. HARRISON'S TV AND ANGoegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
Middleport, Ohio.
992-2522.
·
·6·30-lfc
6-JO.Ifc
·.
ROSEBERRY Furnace ln . SEWING MACHINE Service In
stallation. Free estimates on
new furnaces , oil or gas. your home. Clean, oil and adjust
Service work . Call Cecil - $4.99. Phone m ·7085. Twin
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio. City Sewing Machine Company.
8-13-6tp
Phone 614-843·2274.
7-22·30tc
NOTICE OF
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
APPOINTMENT
ser.vlce, all makes, 992-2284,
cue No. 20521
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Estate of Glenn R. Collins.
Authorized Singer Sales and

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
_ 11
3· &lt;&gt;·
c
~
.
~
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph. 446-4782,
Gallipolis. John Russell.
Owner &amp; Oper:ator.
·

,lj()u don't need
that.~ir!

.01Hf?l DID, 'SOllEY DID!
1\J$. ~ lAAT R~

~!

Deceased .,

Nollce is hereby given Ihal
Pauline Collins, of Route 1. Box
158, Racine, Ohio, has been duly
appointed Administratrix of theEstate of Glenn R. Collins,
deceosed , lote ol Meigs County,
o~~edilors are requ ired to. file

'
.....
.
:;;.;:-.,.

....

their claims with said fiduciary
5-13-'tfc · within tour months .
Dated this 26th day of July

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been 1971 .
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call 9922'166.

ACROSS
J.Zoro-

John c. Bacon
Probate Judge
of said county 1

10. Relating
to oil
11. DIBclose
12.Bundae,
New

r----------------------------,.-----------

U . Qu&amp;y
16. Barracka'
Item
18.Nome

mWdng

6. Lend
OIU!ttelf
to
7."Ball

---"
&amp;

JJtJd)Y£;"'-';sr;!' I C
...I

U.111&lt;nmble ~four Jumble~,

Ye!lt~rdaJ'8

tul
33.German
'
river

u. -

George
31.1\0nute

out

!Ger.}

IPUSHTY

a sweet
tooth

I Alit NOT 1111\GjNJNG,

tnoPouKI
)

(2wds.)

27. Kuscat Is
11.1
capl\&amp;1
28.Courage
29. Not fll'OSS
30. Blbllcal
Jdag
31. DifficUlty
32. Scottlab
explon!r
311. Soda.
fountain
Item

I~

I

i~

•

and · the

exemptlon:sprov lded In sections
~503.16, 4503,17 and .c503.171 ot
lhe Revised Code.

prov ided br law.

(Aa

Jo,.w.., IMIIUI
s......... ,' ••
Anewert

.
~

DAIL~ CRYP'l'OQUO'.fE..;..Here'• how
AXYDLBAAXB

t.Rrl.s-

,

'"· ............

Adv~ rh,in.: rou h ill·rl cd tor IIIP Pui!Uc: j~:OOd in t'noprr.lliM wilh
'
Hu: Alh'c•hsm~: Countl l.tM•Ibr lnlru• ,1h~&gt;ll .tl Ncw~cr M~t'd ! ' lllt~ t•~rulirc \

.

. &lt;'

.

I.

011r

•••t

lf'llueal"e-THI '"MIIf41SH

-- -

L 0 N G P .E L L 0 W

A

:~,
,.,,~: KeepAmeric~ ~leautiful f.D.&gt;.
...

to work It:

...,..m..,....,

"'''E".f&gt;

1

II

SWASH ASSUII INAMIL

PANCE Al\!li.ND IT?

ODe Jetter limply dondl for 1110tber. In thiiJ ample A 11
lilted for the lb...., L'o, X tor the t - 0'1, eU. Slqle ~
the 'JeDctb &amp;lld fonni.Uon Of the wordll are all
111111.1. Each ay the code !etten are dltferent.

start pollution. People can stop it.

Slae /HIM

eu

&lt;JJ»t.cram

KACI'Q

Qwomu.

BVI'

IBKCY,

LPY

PBB - SOJPJSP;

NAB · SOJPJSP

JQ

BVLB

WLB:FQ .

sz

IVJDV

ISKDJ'. - }!CLJQI'

AQF

OLQDLC

I

.....

IIIEU., Wll't' CXlN'r WE M Ill'
A FOLE ~0 ATrACH $0\(E
5TR~ TO IT, ANti

39. Potpourri
fO. Church
part
tl. Abound
f2. Bl&amp;clt:
BeM,for
ex&amp;mpl&lt;:_

ZBKDI'

I I

I

1....- -... 1THE "t r r J( xxI I r

..

IHnwabou·t you? Send for free
SECTION II: Bo it further "'oc&gt;kh!t "71 Thl"ngs You Can Do To
orda ined that a copy of this. I""
ordinance be cerlllled fo the ~:&gt;too Pollution.'' Write to Keep
reg istrar of motor veh icles.
1\Jne.r ica
.Beautiful, lnc., Box 1771,
Sec
.
Ill.
This
Ordinance
shali
~~:~~~City
Station, New York,
take effect and· be in farce from
and alter the earliest date
York 10019.

Now......,.thedrdedWII

to f - the uprilt

~====~=~--L--;;-:r.:IU:I:IOI;II::ed br the..........

(2 wda.}

,..__

~

II J

river
21!. Item for

MY CAPrAIN! lHff1E

I K I t)

38. With

thing

:U. Swiss

OVEB.4.

mented)
35. Wlttlclam
36. 'earty'l
oompant011
37. Be located

11t,

clrcle

one letter to euh 111uue. t.
form four ordinary worda.

(aupple-

30.Humor-

B. Apiary
resident
20.Rallro.d
13. Tibetan
locomotive
gazelle

An1wer

32.Beoucceso-

26. Black
or Red

8. Part0f

-tchfUI

addition to the ta xes at the
spKified in seCtions 4503. ~ and

Passed the 26th day of July
NEW. 3·bedroom home in 1971.
Mlddleporl. Built-in kitchen, Attest: Gene. Grate
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
heat, good neighborhood. Can
( cler• Johnw . zerkle
arrange FHA financing .
President of Council
Telephone 992-3600 or 9922186.
Ill 2, t , 16. 31
7-25-tfc '

(3 wds.)

17.Kanon
the radio

Some people
-tv ... a deep, abiding respect
the natural beauty
.was once this country.
Middleporl. Such tax shall be
rate-s
some people don't.
4503.16 lhe section 4503.13 ol
Code

5.Swnmer
treat.o
-

&lt;C lrll Ktaa- Featurta Sndk:a.te, ~. )

20. Biack

2I. NomID&amp;te
22.1Daect
23. Gaelic
for John
:u. Teach·
able

ocher

(2 wds.)

in the- planning. lm ·

Of
ReVise-d

f. Yellow

Ellgland

FONTENELLE

coating
lB. Distribute

3. Truat

atyle .

provement, and construction of
state highways; paying the
mun icipal corporation's portion
of the compensation, dary"~ages,
costs. and expenses of pllnnlng,
constructing,
reconstructing,
improving, maintaining. and
repairing road and streets;
paying any costs apportioned to
the municipal cor/'oration
under section 4901.4 of the
Rev ised Code ; paying debt
service charges on notes or
bonds of the munic fpal cor.
poration issued for such pur poses ; pUrchasing , erecting,
and maintaining street and
traffic s igns . and markers;
purchas ing , erecting, and
mainta ining traffic lights and
signals ; and to supplement
revenue already evalleble for
such purposes, there is hereby
levied an annual license tax In
addition to the tax le~t led by
sections ..S03.02, .&amp;503 .07, and
4503 _18 of the Re~t ised COde,
upon the operation of motor
vehicles on the public roads or
highways Within the Vlll•ge.
Said taK shall be at the rate ot
five dollars per motor vehicle
on all motor vehicles the district
of registration Of which, as
defined in section .4503.10 of the
R~v i sed
Code , Is in the
municipal corporation . of

the

2. South
African
plant

captain

maintaining , and repairing
pubtic roads . highways, and
streets; ma in taining and
repa ir ing bridges and viaducts ;
pay ing the municipal corporation's portion of the costs
and expenses of cooperat ing
with the department of high -

ways

memento

S.Pequod

(8) 2. 9, 16, 3t

6·15-tfc

1. Smallpox

aatrian

Satanlay'1 Cryploqaote: A WISE KAN WILL LIVJi AS
KUCH WITHIN HIS WIT AS ·Wl'I1UN HIB INOOKE.-

16. Hoaplclt
17. Sentry'&amp;
word
18. Seed

DOWN

IT ~5 JV5TA
:5U66f5TIOII .

�•

. '
&amp;-TbeDIIIJl!e ilw!,IMiepar~,o.• A~~t.li.JJ'Il

,

Foreign Travelers Hit First by !\love
(OIIIIID-' fnm

p~~~e

I)

finandial allles. He alao did not COIIIIIIIt his
In W•sbington, Geotge P. Sllultz,
wb b' lbelr dalllr llllii at any time allies on biB jUllt-as-expected an- direcl« ol the Olllce ol ......anent and
11111ce WCII'Id w. n. '!be American Ex· no~J~Cement be would -visit Peking. 'lbat I!Qdget and one ol Nbon's IAJp eo .. _lc
adViserS, dmied tbet the -llrllfegJ ...
. . - oiJic:e In Frankfurt gave only 3.:1il alao ci!IJied ~ reaenbneot.
Volcker
told
new11111e11
at
a
baalily
.. wbl!r lbe d6r today, retresenllng a
an aGnission the emiOIDJ na In bad
W per cent devah!alion of the dallar. '11*! arranged news ~ In Imdon that abape.
tiDl!ar bought !.66 marb before West "tbe nature of tbe action made II lm·
'"lbe ecciMIJIY 18n't nm down," !llultz
possible to .bave any e:dellllive COIIIUlta- said on NBc'TV's Today show. "It's e&gt;r;·
Gamany floated. lbe ~k Cit May 10.
Ill London, lbere Wl!ll shock and tiOns. He said Nixon acted to sire~ panding and e&gt;r;pendlng well. He .alao
_.Jel!!e!lt at the Nixon action - and 1be position of 1be 1Jnlled. stateS, "but I denied tbet Nlliln, in effect, bad devllued
resentment. A hlp '1\'easury offlclal don'l'lhiilk •that's incCilaistent with cm- the c~Wlar' and said ''tbe bulc fact illhat
llld Nbon fcm~ulated hiB sav~allar tinued friendJ,y cooperative reJatiooehlpe . tbe value ollbe dollar II wbat you Call b1Qr
wlallla ... . . , ... .
--eaea without -.ulllnc Americi'J wi1b the nit of 1111 ......"

Future
(Continued from page 1)
tariff on imports and the removal of tbe excise lu on cars
should stimulate tbe sale of new
cars/' be said.
Reactioa"Uacen.Ja

Terry Pascarella, managing · · '
edllllr of Industry Week Mapzine in Cleveland, is nof so Sun:
how the consumer will react
"Is !he COIISUII)er going to be
relieved tbat action has been
taken or is this action going to

-

.
•

acare him," Pascarella asked.
"Is this going to slnp the escalator cl.8uses ·which is built
in inflation.
''Wbathe's prescribed may be
gilod medicine but I am iiOIJle.
wbat in doubt whether the conIIUIIlel' will act positive to II,"
he said: "It might scare him
and he would tend to keep tbe
.. doUars he's got."
A spokesman for 1be Kroger
•
Co., the largest supennarlret
chain in Ohio, said ''we are
1till trying to lind out wbat aD
this means.
"We are asking all governmental agencies to find out how
It would operate as far as retail prices, on whetber the surcharge is on agricultural commodities and so on," a spokesMRS. KENNETH SCITES, bcme beaiUI 011111e f« lbe Gellla MftgP O•nmunlty Action ·
man said.
Aspokesman for Lazarus, the
Program, eCIIIpleled.flnal detallsol.lbeirweekat lbe Appalachian Heritage Camp with Debbie
largest deparbnent store In cenKing, rigbt, and Debbie Lawrence, bolb of Pwieioy, Rllllte 1
tral Ohio, said it also is "awaiting furtber details" on the announcement.
"We are sort of treading
water but we are also obeying
vandals at 1be Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport over the
HEAVY DAMAGE -A Beach Bmanza owned by Dr.
the apparent thtust of 1be Pres- (Continued fnm page 1)
weekend. Damage was estimated at $7,000 to 1be plane's
tlay C. Pickens, Middleport, and Dr. Harold Brown,
ident's order," a spokesman Charles Gibbs drove tbe girls to
ClllllJiunicalion
equipment.
POmeroy. received extensive damage when struck by
models are effective up to 18,000
said. .
the camp Sunday aljernoonBy IJPI
after they met on the Sacred
WASIIING'l'ON- THE labor feel
Heart Catholic Church Jot for m011anent made Clllltribntinns SAIGON - FIEI:.D reports
final instructions by Mrs. totaling .$995,812 Ill 29 said U. S. airplane and artillery
Scites. ·
Democrats
mnning for gunners supported South
~unday
While at Camp Sandy Bend governor last year, and the VIetnam
troops today as
Damage has been estimated. The port's main terminal Gulf Service Station in closing 1be station.
Shawn Lee Justis, two-month- the girls will live in platform biggest chunk went to Jobn J. they battled below a hilliAJp base
Kanauga.
at $12,000 to tbe radio equip- building was not entered.
Bonnie Denney, Vinton, old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul tents and learn the art of out- GiDipn ol Obio, AmericiDs for near the Demilitarized Zone
Allen said someone pried reported someone took a lawn Barrett Justis, died Sunday at door living. Instruction in Constitutional ActiCIII {ACA) which was seized Sunday by
ment in five airplanes struck by 1n other deparbnent matters,
•andals late Saturday night or deputies investigated a open a pop machirie. Allen bad decoration (a lion) from her his home on South Second Ave. swimming, folk dancing, · said today. Tile ACA said North Vietnzmese infantrymen.
cooking, dramatics, and nature Gilligan,
electe:d over A helicopter- rescued an
early Sunday morning at tbe breaking and entering at Allen's removed the coin bolt prior to yard.
in Middleport.
Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport.
Arrested over the weekend The Middleport E-R squad study are included on the Republidan Roger Cloud, American adviser and 50 South
According to Gallia Coun!y
were Willard D. Mohler, 49, Rt. was called to tbe residence but agenda for 1be girls who will be received $247,112 frGm labor's VIetnamese marilles from the
political nrganlutions. Ooud mountainside and Dew !hem to
Sheriff Denver A. Walker, !he I
7\.T
•
I 1, Middleport, violation of the infant was dead upon the returning home Saturday.
damage was discovered by :
1 ~ews
probation;. Cbarles W. Ker- squad's arrival just after 10 a. One feature of 1be camp will got .-. II said.
nearby Fire Base Sarge. Pilots
be a clothing ''store" wbere the '!be ACA, in its report. said 17 said the allied attacks left
Eddie Atkins, airport manager. I
wood,
41,
Gallipolis,
inm.
Coroner
Dr.
R.
R.
Pickens,
I
This is tbe first sucb incident
toxication; Jerry Monroe also called, said this moriung girls can purcbase good used Democrats and two of the ''hundreds ol bodies" of tbe
~By
UDited
Pftll
Inlerualkmal
.
known to bave occurred at tbe
Williams, 25, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, cause of death had not been articles to bring home for RepubliCPDS who Will ~ enemy strewn along !he slopes
airport since it was opened In Surface Miners ChaUenged
obstructing traffic and James detennined but that an autopsy "nature money" - maple cmtests last fall received a of l,Dloot Nui Ba Ho mounleaves, stones, flowers, insects, total ol$491,011 ol the •"MMIInt, tain, nine miles south of tbe
Dec. 1967.
L. Frailklin, 21, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, would be performed.
The ·most extensive damag~
CJIARLESTON, w. VA. -SURFACE MINERS came under cbarged with resisting arrest, Besides his parents, Shawn is etc. A fun night will be held wli1e $517,254 wu apent by DMZ.
intoxication, disorderly cooduct survived by a sister, Paula where each unit, made up of 10 labCII' Cll loaers, 12 Democrats
Wllll done to a five passenger fire again over the weekend by a group lhat bas vowed to bave the
PHNOM PENH - CamJean, 14-months-(!Jd; · his or 12 girls, will present skits. and two R"¥"'0 08• •
Beach BOnanza cra{t owned by induatry wtlawed in the next legislative session. Speaking for the and AWOL.
bodian mililary authorities
grandP&amp;rents, Mr. and Mrs. · '!be Four Rivers Girl Scout OOLUIIIIUS -IN· JI'LKliiT disclosed today that tbey bad
Dr. Ray R. Picken:s and Dr. SCH:a)]ed "MOIIIItaineers to Save West Virginia," ofllcial Joe Cook
Edgar Barrett, St. Marys, W. Council, of which tbe Big Bend Device! Cmp. here •1•••11•-ed instructed South Vietnam to
MARRIAGE UCENSES
Harold Bro,wn of ~e1gs &lt;?'un!y. charged that helicopters used in reclamation work failed to get
Samuel Lee Bartrug, 19, Va.; a half. sister, Brenda Kay Neighborhood of Meigs Cotm!y lodayitbaddevelopeda simple, shut down its military base .
'!be planes radio eqmpment · tbejobdmeatastripplngsiteinBooneCoun!y.
was damaged to the extent of
Cook cballenged Ben Lusk, an &lt;ificial of tbe West Virginia Burton, W. Va., and Martba Justis, and two half-brothers, is a part, originated 1be Ap- reliable collwoo avoidance liOIII'-L ol l!bnom Penh and
Hei'!Jitge Camp and s,stem for al.n:raft tbetlt plana pull bact ita IMk force fnm tbe
Paul Justis, Jr. and Billy Justis,
$7:;
lanes
tered and Surface Mine Association, to a ''waJk-(111 toto'" oll!le Pmd Fork Jeanne Yost, 19, Racine; Louis
provides 1be camp site and to marbi at U'OUIId per area because of alleged
Bush, 28, Akron, and all of Racine.
damag~ Pwere E~n L. Atkins' area, .wJH:re Cook sai~ ~lion efforts were futile. Cook's Henry
adult
counselors
and
instructors
,
Wlil
1FD
Pr
·
"ent
R11i1ert
W. atrocities against Cambodian
Janet Dee Levacy, 9, Miner- Graveside services will be
1965 Cessna 172, damages, crg~lion, f(I']J)ed m a meeting here Aug. 7, claims a memheld at 3 p. m. Tuesday at tbe through funds raised . In local Butcbe said 1be ''Ufegurd" civilians.
sville.
But
official
system was speclflcally
$3,000; Dennis Sheltz's Cessna bership of 5,000.
Beech Grove Cemetery with tbe drives,
spokesmen in Saigon denied
cJes!gned fll' use In gmenl
150 sustained a broken wind- Wildcat Coal Strike Again?
Rev. Eddie Griffith officiating.
lhat
they bad got any such
aviatim aireraft and ~ be
shield and other damages
'
Wo~ld's I a r g e s t office Friends may call at the Ewing
available in two models: A request from Cambodia.
totaling $1,500, and 1be radios
HUNTINGTON, w_lvA. -ANOTHER 'I1IREATof a wildcat building is said to be the Funeral Home alter 6 this
TRUCK STOPPED
were taken from Larry Wiley's c:oal slrike was made here Sunday In a speech by Robert Payne, Pentagon at Arlington, Va.
The Middleport village truck manual s,stem wmdiJXovides
evening.
1946 Ercouple and Terry head of tbe Disabled Miners of Southern West VIrginia. Payne,
will not be dispatched about a potential collisiCII wumng
Hamilton's Cessna 140.
·crganizer of a mass strike last summer tbat criwled West
town to pick up trash from function, and a c:J.mpletely Ve&amp;erus Memorial Hosplbl
SATURDAY ADMI8SIONSSheriff Walker said the VIrginia's coalfields and closed mines in adjoining states, said his
homes, it was reported today_. automatic system whicb
vandals prie4 the doors open on group wOO!il caD another strike, if "full" hospital and pension
Calls for the pick up service are provides complete colliaion Jennie Bell Holley, Pomeroy;
several of the planes.
benefits are omitted from 1be new United Mine Workers Union's
becoming too nwnerous and are avoidance w:J41Uialions and Ora E. Q-omlish, Middleport;
Robert W. Harris, Sr., 90, grandchildren.
commands, including auto Timothy Imboden, Syracuse;
Hennan Henry of tbe Ohio cmtract.
South Second St., Middleport, Mr. Harris was a member of interfering with other work
p!ots wlputs.
Flora Donahue, Pomeroy.
Bureau of Criminal Invest"And I'm not joking wben I say there is going to be a died early Monday morning at the Heath United Methodist duties.
''It
is verysigniflcantlhatthe
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
galion, London, was called in nationwide coal strike," Payne told about 25 followers gathered Veterans Memorial Hospital. Church, Middleport, Middleport
manual system Is a true . - L. M. Price, Millard SWartz,
to assist with tbe investigation. bere for a brief rally.
Mr. Harris was born March 7, Lodge 363 F &amp;,AM since 1908, ,
collisinn avcWJanre device and Helene Sayre, Michael Samois.
BAND AT EXPOWO
1881, at Ronceverte, W.Va., the also the higher Masonic bodies,
not just a pilot waming inSUNDAY ADMISSIONS son of the !&amp;te Robert and Ida and was a retired engineer for
The Meigs High School Band, dical«,'' Buldle said. ''We feel Kenneth Braun, Pomeroy;
Link Harris. He was also the New York Central Railroad. directed by David Bowen, will
Belen
band this a major breUtlnagb for
Riggs, LangsvlDe; Mary
preceded in death by his wife, Funeral services will be held perform a1 tbe ...._.hi
0
.....,..
Tura
• allavialionsiooeitwouldiiiiR Gilkey, Middleport;
Tonightthru Saturday
Lyda Chambers Harris, in 1962; Wednesday at 2 p. m. at 1be shell at 5 p.m. on Aug.~ at a feuible tbe inlltalllllion ol a Hunter, Nelsonville; Corwin
August16-21
two brothers, and a sister.
Rawlings Coats Funeral Home part of the free mUSic enti
..,_._ -'~-- "-ter o...... M · H
NOT OPEN
.
f the coopera ve c:o......... av-""' """ , n=u•e; arg1e unt,
He is survived by one with the Rev . Robert tertamment
program 0
tem .
ly an ol the Racine.
• .
daughter,
Miss
Marjorie
BWilgamer
officiating.
Burial
I
88th
Ohio
State
Fair.
Seventy
sys
nera1
m.
~
lleel"
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
_
Sun .. Mon .. &amp; Tues.
aVI8 .•
Loveland, and her sons, Artie, Harris, Alexandria, Va.; three will be in Riverview Ceme,tery. high school bands from Ohio ge
CINCINNATI (UP!)
August22-24
will
play
at
the
day
fair.
Butcbe
saad present test None.
12
LITTLE MURDERS
sons,
Robert
Jr.
and
Gordon,
Friends may call at the funeral
Divers cmtinued their sweep of 15, and Randy, 8, were aD
&lt;T echnicolor I
tbe Ohio River early today in missing. A daughter, Terry, 12, both of Colwnbus, and Eugene home Tuesday from 2 to 4 p. m.
Elliott Gould
search of three children and was treated and released. of Middleport; nine grand- and 7 to 9 p. m. and on WedDonald Sutherland
1bree
adults still missing in tbe Lawrence Redmond, 29, children, and three great- nesday until time of services.
R
lorurtoons:
collision of a cabin cruiser and a Sharonville, was killed and his
Royal Royally
tugbnat Saturday night.
body was reco~~- His wife,
Klondike Strikeout
Donna, was llliSSIIIg.
.
Eleven
persons
were
aboard
Riverboilt Mession
the 2Moot cruiser wben it
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
smashed head-(ln Into the tug,
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Carl August Ebersbach, 74, Richard, and 10 grandchildren.
_ which was pushing 15 barges. ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Enuna Middleport RD, died at Holzer Mr. Ebersbach, a retired
One body was inunediately Thomas, leon; Mrs. Audrey Medical Center early Monday storeroom clerk and cook on
recovered and four persons Starrick, Point Pleasant; morning .
camp cars for the N~w York
were rescued.
Charles Herdman, Letart;
Mr. Ehersbach was born May Central Railroad, was a veteran
Authorities said members of Audrey Bowles, Robertsburg; 31, 1897, in Pomeroy, !he son of of World War I having served in
three families were aboard the Mrs. Robert Craig, Pomeroy; Lhe late Jacob and Anna the army; a member of teeney
pleasure boat on an outing. The Lula Robertson, Gallipolis Leifheit Ebersbach. He was Bennett Post 128, American
boat was east of here wben tbe Ferry; Isabelle Slone, Leon; also preceded in death by two Legion, in Atiddleport for 51
collisioo occurred.
Mrs. Conrad Berkley, Point sons, two brothers and two years, a member of Middleport
The missing persons included Pleasant.
sisters.
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, past master
the boat's owner, Russell
DISCHARGES: Mrs. T. R.
Mr . Ebersbach bad been in ill of th~ lodge; member of
Hundley of West Chester, Ohio, Melrose, Point Pleasant; Diane health the past seven weeks. Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
and his son, Terry, 9. Hundley's Turner, Point Pleasant;
Survivors include his' wife, Arch Masons, member of Ohio
See our outstanding
wife, Wilma, 36, was in Howard Johnson , Point Leona Gilmore Ebersbach ; a Valley Commander No. 24,
selection .of sportswear
satistaetory condition at Pleasant; John Robarge, Leon; son, James Willard Ebershach, Knights Templar, and Bosworth
for girls and teens by
Bethesda Hospital.
Mrs. Charles Wheeler, Wesl Chester ; three daughters, Mrs. Council No. 46, Royal and Select
"
Russ Gi r I". Choose
Two otber sons, Gary, 15, and Columbia; Howard Allen, Hilton (Marilyn) WoHe, Jr., Masters, Pomeroy.
from skirts, slacks,
Larry, 10, were treated and Charles D. Getty, Point ·Racine ; Mrs. Thomas (Phyllis) Funeral services will be held
vests, shifts, jumpers,
released for minor injuries.
Pleasant; Mrs. David Childers, Ebersbach, Orchard Lake, Thursday at 2 p.m. at the
sweaters and blouses Mrs . Mary Partin, 44, Ripley ; Mrs. Charles Utchfield, Mich ., and Mrs. Thelma Rawlings Coats Funeral Home
beautiful
solids and
Apple Grove ; Cecil Tucker, Micbael ; ·one sister, Mrs. Ellen with the Rev. Roy W. Carter
plaids in polyester knits
-- - . Grimms Landin!!.
Harl, Ravenna, a brother, officiating. Burial will be in
and all wOQI fabrics .
'-la&lt;niJ ~~!!!:·IN
Riverview Cemetery.
easy styles to wear · all
.
.
f'L __ ,
Friends may call at the
mix, ani:! match coorUUines aarns
UIKUIY
funeral home Tuesday from 2 to
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
dinates. Come in and
.
.
4 and 7 to 9 p.m., Wednesday 10
Augusl16-17 ,
make your selection '
Charles Cleo Adams, 64, of the Mich., and several naeces Bl!d a.m. until noon, and 4 to 9 p.m.,
Double Feature Program
now.
,Racine area, died Sunday nephews. J:le was preceded m and on Thursda~ until time. Q{
NORWOOD
morning al Veterans Memorial dealh by hiS parents, John and ·services.
(Color)
Glen Campbell
Hospital. Mr. Adams was a Anna Adams, and two brothers, Masonic services will be held
Kim Darby . .
member of the Racine Olin and Wallace.
at the funeral home Wednesday
In troducing Joe Namalh
Wesleyan
Methodist
c·hurch
- PlusFuneral services will be held at 7:30p.m.
and
Racine
Grange.
THE MOLLY
NOW YOU KNOW
He is survived by his wife, at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
MAGUIRES
Funeral
Home
with
the
Rev.
(Color)
Benjamin Franklin's
Emma Easterday Adams,
Sean Connery
Racine ; two brothers, Ralph; of Charles Norris officiating. maternal grandmother was an
Richar d Harris
Dearborn , Mich., and Orval of Friends may call at 1be funeral indentured servant who
Samanthd Eggar
Lake Cily, Mich.; a sister, Mrs. h&lt;ime any time. Burial will be in eventually married the man
#
GP
Pd. Pol. Adv.
•
who purchased her.
Fern Dolbee of Dearborn , Oak Grove Cemetery.

...

..

At Camp

Five Aircraft Heavily Damaged

Infant Justis
Died

(---------------------------.
B . l..f.

Devoted To The I~~~ere~11 Of The Meigi-MOMm Area
•

FAIR EDITION

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1971

M'
etg$
County's

1081h
fair
Opens
Tomorrow

..• zn ne1 s :

This ill where the Action will be Aug. 17-21

PaJachian

Robert Harris Sr. Dies

MEIGS lHEATRE

Six Missing

Carl Ebersbach is Dead

A.J-

Died

Come To Elberfelds
Busy
Ready to Wear
Department

s---.1-

Elbeifelds ·1il Pomeroy

•

•

I

,AUGUST 17-21

'

-

5 DAYS •·s NIGHTS

,,

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