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' 10 - ThP Daily Sent i~e l , Middleport·Pomero.v, 0 .. Tuc!:idtty, Sq 1t

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED E vely n
Campbell, Pomeroy; Oma B.
Smith, Pomeroy ; Mary Van
Meter, Pomeroy ; Tammie
Ferguson , Middl eor t ;
Tamara Theiss , Bidwell ;
Nellie Du nn Middlepor t;
Irma Bales, Ches hire; Selim
Yates, Racine ; Ja mes Sut tl e,
Long Bottom ; Hele n J e nki ns,
Rutland .
DISCHARGES - Leonard
Ly ons, Mar ion F ra ncis ,
Wa yne Shrimplin, Wilbur
Halfhill, William Collins ,
Paul Swisher, Be njami n
Moore, Genevieve Guthrie.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Allen
Phillips , Kentuck, W. Va .;
Mary
Hussell,
Point
Pleasa nt ; Mrs . Carl Schwartz, daughte r , Mason ;
J ohn Ray, Poin t Pleasan t ;
Mrs. Russell Cundiff, Mason.
BIRTH, Sept. 23, a son to
Mr . and Mrs . David Chapman , Gallipolis.

Mar ilyn
Midk iff,
Ca rl
Patrick, Ray. Pickens, I.eot.a
Pritt, Mrs. Mi chael Smi th
a nd d augh te r . Dorothea
Thomas, Debora h Wolf , Ru th
Woods .
I Births)
Mr. and Mrs . J ohn W.
Howard , da ughter, Oa k Hill ;
Mr . and
Mrs . Da nny
Robinson, son, Henderson, W.
Va.

:~: t , :~ 1 /J

By CYN'!'HIA MILLS
WASHINGTON i UPI)
The lates t attempt on
President Ford's life brought
congressional calls today for
less presidential travel,
stricter gun control and in·
vestigations of how well the
Secret Service is protecting
LhP chief exec utivp .

But overriding all the calls
for change in the procedure of
protecting the President was
relief that the second
assassination
attempt
against Ford in 17 days failed
again.
. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D-Mass.. who had two

-

umbrella .
Even a member of Ford's
cabinet suggested some
change in the President's
plans. Commerce Secretary
Rogers · Morton said at a
breakfast meeting today
Ford "should slow down 00.
He must he an iron man to
keep going with the other
matters before him ."
But Morton said Ford alone
will make the difficult
decision on whether he will go
immediately . among the
people again . And the
President gave every indication Monday night that he
plans to cOntinue his policy of
getting out among the people.
'lJ Ulink it's important," he
said on his return to Washington, "that we don't capitulate
to the wrong elements, to the
limited number, to the infinitesimal number who want
to destroy everything that is

Two persons were injured
The first of Utree Gallia
in a traffic accident at 8:30 County accidents occurred at
p.m. Monday on Rt. 681 in 7:45 a .m . Monday at the
Meigs County .
junction of Smoky Row Rd.
The Gallia-Meigs Post and Blessing Rd. The patrol
State Highway Patrol said said a Gallia CoWtty Local
Elda Taylor, 24, Rt. l, Langs- School bus operated by
ville, lost control of her c'-' Donna Blake, 34, Rt. 2,
which ran off a curve and Gallipolis, sideswiped a
over an embankment.
bridge railing. There were no
The driver suffered facial passengers on the bus accontusions while a passenger, cording to the patrol.
PatMcia Cleland, 25, Rt. I,
Another single vehicle
Cancer screening
Langsville, was taken to mishap occurred on Kyger
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens Rd. two and three tenths
clinic day set
by the Pomeyoy SEOEMS miles north of Rt. 325 where
A free cancer screening
ambulance !of treatment of a Anna L. Lester, 45, Rio
bank injury. There was Grande, pulled her car from a clinic wiD he held Thursday, 9
moderate damage to the car private driveway too far to a.m. to 4 p.m. at Veterans
and no charges were filed.
the left and struck an em- Memorial Hospital from all
Another Meigs County bankment. There was minor Meigs County women.
Appoinbnents for the clinic
mishap occurred at 10:35 damage to her car.
p .m . Monday on Rt. 143,
A final accident occurred may he made by calling 992where a pony owned by Lee on Hannan Trace Rd. north of 7684 or 992-7531 between 9
Bing of Rt. I, Rutland, ran Little Bullskin Rd. where a.m. and 4 p.m. The clinic is
into the path of a car operated cars driven by Maurice A. staged on the fourth. Thursby James B. Howard, 17, Rt. Hupp, 50, Northup and Anna day of each month through
4, Pomeroy . There was minor Barnes, 42, Crown City, the cooperation of the Meigs
_County
Department of
da'llage.
sideswiped on a curve.
Health, the Ohio Department
of Health an(! the Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer
Society.

300 Meigs women screened

MEIGS THEATRE

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

lJNui~ l
l ~ate~·:

heritage house

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BOOSTERS TO MEET
DINNER PLANNED
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
CHESTER - The Chester
special
meeting of the
Fire Dept. will give a thankyou dinner at 5 p.m. Sunday Tuppers Plains Boosters Club
for all persons and their in regard to an upcoming
families who donated food carnival will be held at 7:30
and time to the Chester p.m. Wednesday at the
Firemen's booth at the Meigs school. All members are
County Fair. All attending asked to be present.
are to bring a covered dish.
PROGRAM PLANNED
Senior citizens will present
a program for the Meigs
County Women's Fellowship
. of the Churches llf Christ
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
The senior citizens alSo will
display arts and crafts.

ASK TOWED
Don Eugene Harrison, 38,
Rutland, and Diane Magers,
30, Colwnbus.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at II a.m. Tuesday
was 59 degrees, with rain
falling:

Quality
Home Furnishings

Believe it or not, a checking account
can save you money. Your statement,
along with your canceled checks

pap
tests,
14
had
"suspicious" results, and 308
were requested to have a
repeat test later.
The National Cancer Institute has emphasized the
importance of screening a
large nwnber of women. Ohio
Department of Health hopes
to screen 15,000 women by the
end of December. To help
accompllsh this , Meigs
County has been given a six
month extension on its first
year's Cervical Cancer

Rosary service
is tonight for
George Angeletti

Miss Diehl is

named editor

WALK•Ufl!TElLER'WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
· FRI. EVEN.INGS 5 To 7 fl!.M.
1

TH$ FRIENDLY BANK"

While
· the

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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News •• in Briefs
(Contlriuiiil from page 1)
price of their bread products.
Named as defendants in the antitrust complaint were
Klostennan's French Baking Co., the Rubel Baking Co. and
the Rainbo Baking Co. The lawsuit charged Ute finns with
conspiring since 1969-to restrain competitive trade and commerce by submitting noncompetitive bid quotations in the sale
of bread products to the Cincinnati Board of Education and
other school districts in the Cincinnati area.
DAYTON, OIDO -AN AFFIDAVIT FILED by police here
said the man accused of the shooting death last Friday of an
Ohio State University desegregation expert admitted killing 25
or 30 area black persons during a four-year period. Police, in
the same affidavit, said Neal Bradley Long, 48, Dayton, accused of murdering Dr. Charles A. Glatt, Dayton's school
desegregation planner, admitted shooting Glatt.
The U. S. attorney 's office said evidence linking Long to
the Glatt murder was to be presented to a federal grand jury
here today. Officials said should an indictment be returned,
they would ask the court to send Long to a Springfield, Mo.,
federal medical facility for a !Hklay psychiatric examination
to detennine if he was sane at the time of the shootings and is
currently competent to stand trial.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.- SOVIET FOREIGN Minister
Andrei Gromyko followed Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
to the General Assembly today, dusting off the Kremlin's
perennial plan for a total ban on nuclear weapons.
Kissinger scheduled a break in his behind-the-&lt;lcenes talks
with visiting diplomats to hear his superpower counterpart
address 1\te assembly's 30th annual debate. Kissinger spoke at
the opening of the debate Monday, calling for an infonnal
Middle East conference to plan·the next major Arab-Israeli
peace effort.

-ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
tie~up

the soft fife
for you.

,~?;';::~!":~!/
lr

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The look is soft. The feeling is soft. The
shirt is the all new scarf tie tee in Soft '
T9uch polyester knit And even the colors are soft.
Sizes 8 to 18.
Sportswear, Second Floor

Main Store. Annex and Warehouse
Open - Weekdays 9:30 to 5, Friday and
Saturday 9:30 to 8.

Mick Childs 1

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fottowing

linebacker . " I know , buf my
· husband IS the c;:oactl ,'' (and I
· don't ' necessiiriiY loQk like an
insu·rance. man, either . . But
I'm an insurance speciallst ,
ready to serve when you need

BAKER FURNITURE
;

was

"Well, Ralph, ye'
the great
classic. and 1
you certainly
.y our average pro

•ARMSTRONG

l _t II•
IJB OllfS INIUBD TQ '4'•,001

(Continued from page I)
injuries as Eloise made its~
landfaD.
By 10 a.m. EDT Ute stonn
had moved across the coast
and was speeding inland in
Alabama at about 20 m.p.h.
At that hour, the National
Hurricane Center in Miami
reported the storm was
centered at 31.0 north, 82.2
west, or about 45 miles southwest of Dothan, Ala.
' Eloise
continued
to
generate 100 m.p.h. sustained
winds as it moved into
Alabama, but forecasters
said it would rapidly lose its
punch as it moved over land.
Flood warnings were
issued for parts of Alabama,
F1orida and Georgia and
forecasters warned that 5 to
10 inches of rain would fall in
some areas.
Several tornadoes were reported in the florida
panhandle in advance of the
storm and another was
r~orted near Hartford, Ala.

Won

•LANE
•SYROCO

MilD EPOitf, OHIO
Flllllll Dip It lnultlce CaltM•m

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superbowl game,

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Eloise

M

•BASSETT
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best about America."
·· · Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Stott, however, said the
nation's chief executive
should "put some limit on
random handshaking oo• Wttil
we can see whether this
madness is temporary."
Sen. Robert c. Q.yrd, DW.Va., the No.2 Democratic leader, said be thought all
potential !976 presidential
candidates should begin
receiving Secret Service
protection .

WHEN YOU SE-E.ME •.
!JON'T THINK OF
INSURANCE .•• BUT
WHEN YOU THINK-OF

•HOOVER
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•ADMIRAL
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eSPEED QUEEN
•PROVINCETOWN MAPLE

and where you might cut down.

Screening Project. It is hoped
that 60 women from this
county will go through the
clinic each month.
Cllnlc services include a
pap test; pelvic and breast
exam; checks for height,
wej.ght, urine, blood pressure,
and health history; and instruction in Breast SelfExamination. Services are
available to any woman over
15 years of age who has not
had a pap test in over one
year.
Clinics are held the fourth
Thursday each month at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
from 9 to 3. For appointment,
call 992-7684 or 992-7531.

George V. Angeletti, 62,
North Royalton, Ohio, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Saturday at Parma CommWiity Hospital, Parma. He
was preceded in death by his
Marietta College Senior Jo
parents, Alfred and Pauline
EDen Diehl of Pomeroy has
Pierotti Angeletti, and an
been named editor of the
infant daughter, Carol
Marcolian, the College's
Elizabeth Angeletti.
student newspaper. The
Mr. Angeletti is survived
Marcolian publishes weekly
by his wife, Kathryn; two
and has received state and
daughters, Mary Regis
national honors.
McCleland, and Patricia
A 1972 graduate of Meigs
,Toman, both of Parma; six High School, Miss Diehl is a ·
grandchildren" and two
member of the Sigma Sigma
sisters, Mrs .. Olga Mathews,
Sigma Sorority. She is the
Fort Lauderdale, F1a., and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr;1. Sisson of Pomeroy.
James Diehl of Mulberry
·R osary services will be
Heights, Pomeroy, and for
held this evening at the ,
the past three summers has
Ewing Funeral Home in
been employed with the
Pomeroy. FWieral services ' editorial staff of The IJllily
will be held Wednesday at II Sentinel.
a.m. at the Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy with the
ASSEMBLY CALLED
Rev. Father Welton ofSome Jehovah's Witnesses
ficiating. Burial will be in in the Middleport area are
Sacred Heart Cemetery. planning to attend a regular
Friends may call at the Circuit Assembly ai the
funeral home any time.
Assembly
Hall,
4230
Lafayette-Plain City Road,
REUNION SET
N .K London, Ohio, Sept. Tl
A reunion of the descen- and 28. The public address for
dants of Carl and Ella Manley Sept. 28 is "How the Kingdom
will be held Sunday, Sept. 28, of God Affects You,"
at the state park on_U.S. Rt. delivered by John W.
33 on the left going north. Stuefloten, District SuperThere will be a potluck dinner visor, from Brooklyn, N,V.
at I p.m.

eFLEXSTEEL

show where your money's going

·

in San Francisco Monday
with trying to kill the
President.
Rep. John Murphy, D-N.Y.,
a long-time gun control advocate, said he would reintroduce a bill to tighten
controls and Sen. Ernest F .
Hollings,
D-S.C.,
said
Congrt!IIS should look into tl)e
Secret Service protection

SEOEMS asks levy be Two hurt in crash
expanded in Gallia

or

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brothers killed by assassins,
said he was relieved tbe
attempt failed and he was
praying there would be no
reoccurence of "such isolated
incidents of violence."
Republicans and
Democrats
alike
both
suggested Ford should curtail
his travel plans after a 41&gt;year-&lt;&gt;ld woman was charged
I

SAVES
YOU
MONEY

Patty's defense: brainwashed

Nation ·r elieved· 2nd shot missed

in
times
of counties, • townships,
Gallia County voters a p- , se rvic e
pa rently will be asked this
em ergency, any township municipal corporations, or
November to approve a .4 may enter into a contract, for private ambulance owners
mill levy that would raise
a period not to exceed Utree are located within or without
money for the Southeastern
years, with one or more the state, in order to obtain
Ohio Emerg ency Me&gt;!i cal
towns hips, municipal cor- ambulance service, or obtain
Service I SEOEMS) a nd the
porations, or private am· additional ambulance servke
Ga llia County Em er gen cy
bulance owners, regardless in times of emergency. Such
Ambulance Service.
of whether such townships, contracts shall not restrict
This ne w twi s t in an
municipal corporations, .
the operation of other amHolzer Medical Center
already cOmpli cated issue
private ambulance owners bulance services in the
(Discharges, Sept. 22)
ca m e Monday when the
are located within or are county . When such a service
Rita Bogges s, Ger trude county corrunission approved
agreed to by them, to furnish is provided by the board, the
Byer, Mrs. Ray Chattin and
or receive ambulance ser- service may be administered
the recommendation of Kay
daughter,
Mrs .
Larry C'ross of SEOEMS that the
vices or the interchange of by the board, by the county
Cremeens and daughter, Lola ballot he amended to cover
ambulance services within sheriff, or by another county
Cunningham ,
Conni e 'both services, the SEOEMS a
the subdivisions , if such officer
or
employee
Drumm ond, Elsie Farley, partially government funded
contract is first authorized by designated by the board. All
Elizabeth Fellure , Vern on service tied into seven
respective boards of township rules and regulations, inHarker , Bret Harrison , counties, the Gallia service a
trustees or other legislative cluding the determining of
Kathyrene Jewell, Joe volunteer unit.
bodies . Such contract may reasonable rates, necessary
Kelley, Edgar Lakin, Ruth
Commi s sioner John
provide for a fixed annual for
the establishment,
Layne, Mrs. James McPeek Belville made the motion
charge to be paid at the times operation, and maintenance
and son, Mrs . .Flem Meade amending the ballot.
ag reed upon and stipulated in of such service shall be
and daughter, Lillian Melvin ,
the contract, or for com- adopted by the board.
Under
the
amended
resolution, if approved , pensation based upon a
Gallia
County
Com- stipulated price for each run,
call, or emergency, or the
missioners could appropriate
elapsed time of service
a portion of the funds to the
volunteer squad, however, required in such run, call or
emergency, or any comaccording to Bill Mitchell,
The first year of Ohio's
Tonite thru Thurs .
of
the
Gallia
bina lion thereof.
chairman
three year Cervical Cancer
Sept , 22 -25
Mitchell also quoted Sec- Screening Project, funded by
County
Volunteer
NOT OPEN
Emergency Squad, the squad
tion 307 .051 of the _ Ohio National Cancer Institute
Fri. fhru TueS.
Revised Code entitled Am- through Ohio Department of
has never agreed to such a
Sept. 26-30
bulance Service -County Health, was completed on
proposal and will be opposed
THE GREAT
Commissioners which states June 27. Meigs County's
to !t on the basis that once the
WALDO PEPPER
county commtsston ap- a board of county com- project directed by the Meigs
propriated funds toward missiOners may provide County Health Dept. began
operation of the squad they
ambulance service or may clinic operations in May_ A
could, if desired, eliminate its enter into a contract .with one
total of 6,319 women were
operations entirely .
or more counties, townships, screened from 20 Ohio
According to Mitchell the municipal corporations or
counties including 300 from
volunteers met with Mrs. private ambulance owners,
Meigs County. Of the 6,319
I
I Cross a week ago to discuss regardless of whether such screened, 8 had "positive"
I
I the situation , but that no
I agreement either way was
reached . Mitchell said the
levy issue on the November
Shotgun blast misses -children
General Election ballot will
of Ironton High football coach
be amended, but that the
volunteers will not receive
· Three young children of Bob Lutz; Ironton High
any of the money.
School football coach, escaped injury last Friday night
Mitchell said directors of
when the window in the bedroom where they were
HOURS:
the volunteer squad Monday
sleeping was shattered by a shotgWI blast.
9 to 5-Mon.-Sat.
night agreed not to -become
Glass and pellets were found in the baby bed under the
9 to 8 Sat.
involved. "We will continue
window, where Lutz's yoWigest child was sleeping at the
to operate on a voluntary
time of tbe incident, and on the floor of the room, accordbasis," Mitchell stated.
·
ing to police reports.
Mitchell said under Section
The incident was reported to police at 10:46 p.m.
505.443 of the Ohio Revised
Friday following the Ironton-Ashland (Ky.) football game
Code, in order to obtain
Middleport, o.
which Ironton lost IW.
ambulance service or to
obtain additional ambulance

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. ByJACKV. FOX
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI ) Patty Hearst says she was so
terrorized by her captors that
she was slipping into insanity
and lrainwashed to the point
that her criminal actions
during the past one and onehalf years were beyond her
control.
An affidavit signed by Miss
Hearst and submitted in
federal court Tuesday said
the brutalization led to a
fantasy that her parents had
abandoned her , the police
would shoot her on sight and
if she tried to run away her
abduc tors wOuld kill her .
Defense lawyers turned the
document over to'
District Judge Oliver J.
Carter to hack their motion
that she be released on bail so
she could be examined by
doctors chosen by the
Hearsts.
Carter refused to let her out
of jail . He continued her bail

u.s_

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ACHIEVEMENT AWARD WINNERS -:-o Niese!
Duvall and Mark Mora were named the Meigs County
Achievement Award winners at a coWity 4-H Awards
Night Tuesday nii!ht at Pomeroy Elementary School.

They are the outstanding girl and boy in
Work fo_r the
year . From the left are Marta Guilkey, county ex1alsion
agent, home economics; Mora, Miss Duvall, and John
Rice, county extension agent, agriculture . Mora and Miss
Duvall are holding their awards.

Meigs boy,
girl named
Niese! Duvall and Mark
Mora were named the outstandin~ girl and boy In 4-H
work in Meigs CoWity for the
1974-75 year during the annual awards night at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
Tuesday night.
Miss Duvall received an
engraved silver plate and
Mora a large trophy. They
are the achievement award
winners of the coWity, an
honor generally bestowed
during the annual county fair.
However, this year the
presentations were postponed
until the awards night.
A senior at Eastern High
School, Miss Duvall has been
in 4-H work eight years. She
is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. fames W. Duvall and
belongs to the Riverview 4-H
Club. At Eastern High School
she is ~ member of the Future
Homemakers of America, IS
football and basketball
statistician, baseball
scorekeeper.
business
manager of the yearbook and
belongs to the Pep and
Language Clubs.
.She has served as a camp
counselor and on the 4-H
Advisory Committee . She
was a delegate to the 4-H
Citizenship short course and
attended the State Junior
Leadership Camp, the Ohio 4- ·.
H Club Congress, he Buckeye
Recreation Workshop and
has served on the Meigs
&lt;;;ounty Junior Fairboard .
From 1971 to 1975 she won

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" Just because a person is
mentally incompetent, you
shouldn't allow them to
wander down the street, " he
said ,
The "insanity" approach
not bnly was the basis of the
defense plea for her release
on bond .
It also may he th e rationale
when she is brought to trial on
22 felony counts including
kidnaping, hank robbery and
assault with a deadly
weapon .
Defense lawyer Vin cent
Hallinan still says she was
" right on the verge of tipping
one way or another " in terms
of sanity.
During the entire time she

was in captivity she was
insane , he told reporters
outside the courtroom.
" Any jury would acquit her
in a minute," he said .
Patty 's affidavit was
couched in the third person. It
was not clear to whom she
had told her detailed story of
torture , death threats, inferred drugging aod fear tbe
world was dissolving into
" fantasti c shapes
and
linages. "
The affidavit was in contra st to a tape recording
made of a conv ersation
between Patty and a friend ,
Patricia Tobin, who visited
Miss Hearst Saturday in tbe
San Mateo jail in Redwood
City.
The tape was produced
Tuesday a t a hearing for
Steve n Soliah , th e hou se
painte r who rented the
apartment in which Patty
and Wendy Yoshimura were
captured last Thursda y.

There was this Interchange :
Tobin - " Who is he
(Soliah )? Is he the guy you
rented the house from?"
Patty (giggling ) - "No, I
lived with him. I finally got to
see him up in the jail. You
know I got to kiss him . And
then I had to leave to see
about my bail . I rea lly
wonder if I can help with his
$75,000 hail. He can 't possibly
come up with it. "
~e

first returned to the
real world, she said, when she
hugged her mother, father
and sisters in jail.
Patty said that a short time
before she was arrested last
Thursday she began to experience lucid intervals or
sanity and decided to return
to San Francisco to try to
" find some method of
establishin g com munications " with her
parents.

•

enttne

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Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs-Mason Area
=V~
O~L~
XX~V~II=-N_O_._ll_4____P_OM_E_R_OY_
- M_ID_D_LE_P~
OR_T.~O=
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IO________~W_E_DN_E_
SD_AY, S_E_
PT_
EM_B_E_R. ~2~4,~1~
97~
5 ____________~P_
RI_
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four "Outstanding of the
Day" awards in bread.
Also a senior at Eastern
High School, Mora is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C.
Mora. He has been in 4-H
work 10 years. At Eastern he
plays in the marching,
concert, contest and pep
bands, belongs to the Future
Farmers of America and the
Pep and Art Clubs. He was a
delegate to the 4-H Citizenship short course and belongs
to the Meigs Dairy Better
Livestock Club. He is a
member of the Junior
Leadership Club, serves on
the Junior Fair Board and the
4-H Advisory Committee and
has served
as a camp
counselor.
A nwnber of medal awards
last night also were presented
to young people for outstanding accompllshnients in
various fields of endeavor .
The medals are provided by
various companies as '· ·ell as
by the Meigs County 4-H
Committee.
Marty Guilkey, county
extension agent, home
economics, presented a
general talk on 4-H and
Rachel Hunter spoke on
aspects of state fair competition. Miss Guilkey and
John Rice, county extension
agent, agriculture, and
Pansy Jordan, 4-H Assistant,
presented the awards with
Patty Kelly, 4-H Program

Pomeroy, Ohio
River, unique

GUESTS WELCOMED- V'trgil Teaford, right, vice president of the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, who presided Tuesday in the absence of Fred Morrow, president, welcomed
Judy Kitchen, center, and Gerald Hilferty, who spoke and showed slides at the luncheon
meeting held at the Meigs Inn. Ms. Kitchen and HilfeMy are both architects, and they
discussed the possibility of Pomeroy being registered with the National Register of Historic
Places.

The Ohio River and
Pomeroy have teamed up to
make them probably unique
in the United States ac cording to a representative of
the Ohio Historical Society .
Architect Judy Kitchen of
the Ohio Historical Society,
and Gerald Hilferty , architect, who Is associated
with the Meigs County
Historical Society spoke and
showed s lides when the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce met Tuesday at
noon at the Meigs Inn .
Kitchen and Hilferty said
Pomeroy is unique in that it
faces the Ohio River, that the
courthouse is the only courthouse in Ohio that faces a
river and according to Mrs.
Kitchen, probably the only

Ferry tied up, schools disrupted
Heavy rains that hit this
region Tuesday night put the
ferry out of business and

Continued on page 13

Boy recovering
from gun shot
• A 13-year-&lt;&gt;ld Condor St.,
Pomeroy, boy was reported
in stable condition today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after being shot at his home
about 6:20p .m. Tuesday.
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster said Timothy Hysell,
victim of the apparent accidental shooting, had taken a
gWI from a bookcase bed at
. the home of his parents,
.Aaron and Grace HyseD, 205
Condor St., where the .38
-eallbre handgun was kept by
his father.
· According to the report,
Tinuny and his · half-brother,
Terry Barrett, age 17,
discussed the gun. Tinuny
pulled the hammer on the
weapon back and was told by
Terry that he should take the
pjn out of the weapon. Tinuny ·
was handing the handgWI to
Terry when it discharged, the
bullet passing through
.Tinuny's abdomen.
Another brother, Tracy,
'ilge 11, in a bathroom nearby
'at the time, ran to the home of .
Police Chief Webster who
llves close to the Hysell
residence. Webster went to
Ute scene, summoned the
emergency squad, and Terry
.Barrett and ' Tracy Hysell
·were taken to the police
chief's office and shorUy
laier statements were taken
·of the incident by Charles
·Knight, assistant prosecutor.
;The Pomeroy squad tOok
!l'immy
to
Vet~rans
' 'Memorial Hospital.
nl!oSter said ad-

hearJ\g until next Tr .&gt;day.
The judge ordered she be
examined " forthwith " by
three court-appointed
psychiatrists. He said she
was still considered her a
" flight risk ."

ditional statements wiU be
taken from Terry and Tracy
soon, but indicated it is
preswned no charges wiU be
filed.
Last night appeals were
made through the radio
system for blood for Timmy
who underwent surgery.
Chief Webster said that
cooperation was wonderful
and there were responses
from Lancaster. Ravenswood, Lo~an. Gallia County
and other points. Six pints of
blood were used in the
youngster.
This morning the hospital
reported that Timmy had
spent a quiet night and his
condition was stable. He is
expected to get along
satisfactorily provided there
are no unforeseen complications .

ROADS CLOSED
High water has closed two
highways in the Gallia-Meigs
area . The State Highway
Patrol said Rt. 55-1 west of
Cheshire and Rt. 681 west of
Rt. 33 are closed.

disrupted several schools.
The ferry was Wtable to run
this morning due to high
water and will not reswne
operations until the water
recedes to a safe level.
Dan Morris, assistant
superintendent of Meigs
Local School District, said
two school buses were not
running in the western end of
the county and some others
were unable to make all

Mini -park dirt
will move soon

Earth
moving
on
Pomeroy's municipal park
project wiD get under way
this week according to Meigs
Jaycee Bill Young:
Pullins Excavation will
begin grading the park area
for the proposed tennis court
and mini-park, located between
Butternut
and
Mechanic Streets.
1Young said procurement

assignments are, Vincent
Knight, rocking horses for
kiddie land; Jeff Howell ,

Auto goes off road
Two persons were injured
in an accident at 7:50 a .m.
Tuesday on Rt. 7, seven
tenths of a mile north of Rt.
35. The Gallia-Meigs Post.
State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Debbi Hill, 22,
o( Racine, slid on wet
pavement and went off the ·
right side of the highway.
She and a passenger ,
.br·ema Hudson, ,24, Racjne ~
suffered minor injuries .
There. was no damage to the
car. ·
A single c;u- mishap occurred at 12 :15 a.m. Tuesday

'

on Rt. 124, three tenths of a
mile east of Rt. 325 where
Edward E. White, 42,
Pomeroy, was forced off the
road by an unknown vehicle.
The White car struck a tree
causing heavy damage.
A final mishap occurred at
4:o:!p .m. on Little Kyger Rd.
two tenths of a mile east of
Roush Rd . where Richard A.
Little, 19, Gallipolis, applied
his brakes, lost control of his '
car which slid off the road
intb a stone bridge. There
Will' minor damage:

regular stops. Schools most
effected were Salem Center,
Harrisonville and Rutland.
Morris reported that school
officials are keeping a close
watch on the situation as they
do not want pupils stranded,
nor do they want buses going
through water.
Ike Neal, at the State Highway Garage, reported that
SR 681 between Darwin and
SR 692 are closed , and there
is water on SR 124 at Rutland ,
but it has not been closed. He
said high water signs have
been placed on 124.
County officials reported

that the only road closed was
county road 10 between
Dexter and Langsville.
Southern and Eastern
School District apparently
were not effected by high
water .
All Meigs Local School
District schools were to he
dismissed an hour and a half
early
today
as
a
precautionary measure to
keep any students from being
unable to reach their homes
later in the day. Also Wednesday
afternoon
kindergarten class es were
canceDed in the district.

one in the U. S.
It was pointed out that
Pomeroy has beauty ; it looks
like old river towns " used to
look. " The beauty is in the
buildings above all the signs
that hang over the streets .
Mrs. Ki !chen admi tied she
was " very much interested"
in Pomeroy, adding thar it
has
" most
cohesive
buildings ."
The first s tep in having
Pomeroy added to the
National Register of Historic
Places is to take an Inventory
of each building and select
the oldest buildings and
highlight them. Recently the
Chester Courthouse and
Academy were listed in the
National Register .
Restoration need not he more
expensive than remodeling
she maintained.
They showed slides of
Pomeroy , which pointed up
the architectural beauty of
the old buildings some dated
in 1677. The buildings built in
the late 1600s showed people
"really cared ," Hilferty said .
Mrs . Kitchen declared she
had spoken to the county
Tuesday
co mmtsstoners
mornin g in regard to
rPr vcling certain buildings
which she said are fine
buildings, not in good condition , but restorable _
Hilferty , on slides of
buildings in Pomeroy that
have historic beauty and
could he restored s howed the
Goess ler building, the Meigs
Inn , The Weed building, the

teeter-totters; Dwight G&lt;tins,
picnic tables; Larry Spencer,
horseshoe pitch area, and
Chuck Mullen, who was installed as a new member
Monday night, is in charge of
refuse receptacles.
A project next month will
he the Halloween patroL The
executive committee will
make final plans for the
patrol.
Young, coordinator of the
park project, also announ'ced
that Ohio University can he ·
contacted for special group
rates for tickets to Ohio
·University football games.
Eight Athens Jaycees - attended the last meeting of the
Meigs Jaycees. Plans for
collections and donations for
the annual Christmas project
by the Jaycees were
discussed.

Weather
Rain tonight, lows tonight
in Uie low 50s. Cloudy, drizzle
Thursday, highs in lower 60s.
Probability of rain 80 per cent
t9(1ay, 60 per cent tonight, 40
per cent Thursday .

Courthouse, the entrance to
the office of the late Dr. T. H.
Crow, the Amy Kingsland
Jones building on Court
Street, and the Pomeroy
National Bank .
He remarked that if a
person who is in Pomeroy
every day is asked what he
thinks of the town he
probably would not realize
&lt;the beauty that is in the
buildings. " It takes outsiders
to point thi s out and show
them what can be done in
restoration," he said. He said
one has to look above the
signs to see the Victorian
designs.
Mrs. Kitchen showed slides
of Medina, Ohio, after
restoration.
In other business, the
chamber voted no to having
the
excursion
boat ,
"Chaperone ," return next
season . Carolyn Thoma s,
secretary ,
su g gested
members should find it
helpful to attend one or all of
.three upcomin g meeting s.
These are in Athens on Oct. 2
at the Athens Country club
on the four-poin t program
that will be on the November
ballot ; a second is in
Chillicothe -on Oct. 1, a
leadership conference , and
the third is the Ohio Festival
Association mee ting on Oct.
18,
The Christmas program
was tabled until the next
m eeting whic h will be held
Oct. 2 when Ma xin e Plummer, exec utive director of the
Meigs-Gallia Mental Health
and Retardation, will he the
gues t speaker _
Attending we r e Vir gil
Teaford, Lou Osb-o rne,
Me lvin VanM e te r, Mrs .
Milla r d VanM et er, Mr s .
Clar a Loc hary , N. W.
Compton , Pomeroy Mayor
Dale Smith , E . E . Robinson ,
Bob Jacobs, Ja ck Carsey and
Ralph Graves .

Whittington
sent away

"WOMEN IN IDSTORV" was the theme of the annua\ rush party of Ohio Eta Phi
atapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday night at Grace Episcopal Parish House in
Pomeroy. Costume prize winners included, I to r , Brenda Haggy as Eve, and Betty J ean
Krawscyzn as Aunt Jemima ; in the most original category, Susan Lanning as Molly Pitcher
in the best historical category ; Sandy Sargent as Lizzie Borden in1 the most notorious
category, and Yvonne Butcher as Shirley Temple in prettiest category. Janet Downie,
'social chairperson, was in charge of the event .

A second person nas been
arrested and sente nced in
connection with the burglary
on Tuesday, Sept. 16, at
Salem Center School when a
large supply of food was
taken .
Monday the Meigs County
Sheriff' s Dept. an d Middleport Police Chief J. J.
Cremeans arrested Charles
William Whittington , 16,
Railroad St., Middleport.
·Whittington appeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon on a bill
of infonnation prepared by·
Charles Knight, assistant .
prosecuting att orney, and
was sentenced to not less than
six months or more than five
yea rs in th e Ma nsfield
Refonnatory .

•
I~\

�.'"
•
I

2- The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

\ \ ·About guns and presidents

'

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Center fo r
a
60-&lt;lay
Sara Moore, 45, will undergo examination
a psychiatric evaluation to
Miss Moore fired a chromedetennine whether she is plated revolver Monday at
competent to stand trial on a Ford as he was leaving the St .
charge of tryi ng to kill 'Francis Hotel. The bullet
missed and she was subdued
President Ford.
U.S. Magistrate Owen Woo- by police. The ricocheting
druff Tuesday ordered that slug wounded a ca b driver.
U.S Attorney James L.
Miss Moore, twice-divorced
mother of a !1-year-&lt;Jid boy, be Browning asked for the psytaken to the San D1ego chiatric eval uation . lt was
Metropolitan
Correctional

He'd tend store more
By H.D. QillGG
UP! Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Former Gov. Jirruny Carter of
Georgia, a Democratic pres!·
denhal
hopeful,
says
assassination attempts are a
fact of political life that have
to be lived with , but if he were
in President Ford's shoes he
would spend more lime
tendmg the store.
" II I were president, I
would spend much mo re t1me
in Washington working on the
problems of the country,"
Carter said. " He 1Ford)
spends an extraord mary
amount of his time travelmg
around the country making
speeches to conventio ns and
involved in political activity .
quite early."
Carter's effor t to step mto
the presidential shoes has led
to campaigning in 43 states
since he left th e governor's
office in January. He announced his candidacy for the
Democratic pres identi al
nomination in December,
1974, and has ave raged s1x
day s a week campaigning .
In a meeting with the UP!
editorial board Tuesday, he
was asked his views on the
two
recent
alleged
assassination attempts on
President Ford.
"This is the kind of threat
that always exists in public
life," he said. " When I was
governor there were constant
abusive threats or letters . I
never did feel intimidated
and still don't.

" I thmk these (Ford inCidents) are Isolated i nCidents of a kind of lunatic
frin ge of society . My
assessment of the general
feelmg toward public figures
IS tha t it has tmproved
considerably m the last five
years."
As fo r gun control : " I never
have favored the prohibition

of citizens to own guns ...
·'I do favor the registration

of handguns and I do favor
the prohibition of the right to
own a gun of people who have
been involved in any sort of
crime using a weapon."
Carter satd his travel has
taught him polihcal issues
va ry by regions but there are
two
issues
current
everywhere .
"First, can our system of
government as we know it
continue to exist' Can
gover nm e nt ,
the
bureaucracy in Washington ,
be
competent,
well
or ga ni ze d,
e ffici e nt,
economical, purposeful ' Is it
possible for the President and
the Congress to cooperate, for
a change?
"Second , can our govern~
ment be decent, truthful,
honest, fair , idealistic' ... I
think our citizens have been
deeply hurt, even in a personal way , by Vietnam,
Cambodia, Chile, Pakistan ,
CIA, Watergate, and they've
lost confidence in their own
government.
" I think th e answer to both

qu e&amp;'t ions is yes."

Trail began close by
I

'

According to the Daily
Mail, two brothers, Olaf II
and Dana, live in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Dana was not available
when the newspaper reached
his home, but his wife was
quoted as saying her husband
had a sister named Sara
Jane. Mrs. Kahn said her
family wasn 'I contacted by
any authorities after th e
attempt on Ford's life
Monday in San Francisco, the
newspaper said.
"Sara Jane has not been
contacted by the family f9r
about 20 years," she was
quoted as saying. "She did
not even come to her father's
funeral. She's been in California . Her mother has not had
any contact with her."
But the woman said her
sister-in-law
was
a
Charleston native who would
have been a Stonewall High
graduate around 1947.
County records showed the

CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UP!) - A long trail that
ended with Sara Jane Kahn 's
alleged attempt on President
Ford's life all began in West
Virginia's ca pita l city, a
newspaper reported
Tuesday .
The Charleston Daily Mail,
pressing its entire stalf into
an exhaustive search of city
and county records , said it
learned that the accused
would-he assassin was ·born
here Feb. 15, 1930, and was a
1947 graduate of Stonewall
Jackson High Scliool.
the
; According
to
qewspaper, the birth of the
Kahn woman, identified at
' time of her arrest as Sara
lhe
Jane Moore, was confirmed
~y
Secret Service
~kesman in Washington.
: The · newspaper
said
JCanawha Co unty birth
records revealed Sara Jane
kahn had four brothers and
lwo sisters.

a

•

DR. LAMB

.
not opposed by Miss Moore's

attorney, Public Defender
James Hewitt, who later said
that her thought processes
appeared to be "cloudy."
Police said Miss Moore
contacted an inspector on
Saturday and sa1d she " just
might start testing the system ." At that time, police
S8ld, she asked to he placed in
custody. Pollee said th e
Secret Service was notified.
On Sunday police confiscated
a .4kaliber pistol from her .
The Secret Serv•ce said
they questiOned her Sunday
night and determined that
she was not a potenti al
presidential assassin.
At the court hearing, Miss
Moore, dressed in a light blue
pants suit, looked like a
suburban matron. She was
silent and sat at the counsel
table with her hands
clasped.
She had been ordered held
under $500,000 ball on the
charge of trying to kill the
President. However, now that
she is under an order for a
psychiatric examination
there is no possibility for her
to be freed on bail.
Federal sources said Miss
Moore could be held up to a

~eatment?

I

i

.I

..

; DEAR READER - There
are several kinds of
~olycythemia . In all in~~es, though, it means an
iilcrease in the amount of red
'lood cells in your ciriulation.
"! People living at high
lltitude have one form of
jlolycythemia caused by the
Jlnv oxygen pressure. The
~y simply forms more red
~Us to comp~nsate for less
exygen in the lungs. The
mount of increase in red
Sells is related to the level
. 1f altitude. People living at
)4,000 feet have quite an
.Jpcrease.
' You can get a polycythemia
~se from· lung disease.
• fbe:. chronic lung disease
a low oxyfen level in
the lungs, and the body
•11 lllds much. like it does to

, •uaes

altitude . This is the basis for
saying a person with lung
disease is already living at
high altitude.
Both high altitude and lung
disease cause "secondary
polycythemia ." I suspect you
have polycythemia vera
which
is
"primary
polycythemia . " No one
knows what causes this. It is
often associated with an
increase in white blood cells,
too. About two-thirds of the
cases have a n e nlarged
spleen.
It has been demonstrated
that you can cause this in
mice by Infecting them with a
particular virus. The mice
develop the picture of in·
cr:eased amoWits of red cells
a nd an enlarged spleen .
Showing that you can df&gt; this,
though, does not prove that a
virus .causes, polycythemia
vera in humans. Just as an
anemia can be caused from
many different things (iron
deficiency, bleeding, vitamin
deficiencies to mention a
few), it i• reasonable that

!!·

year At the end of the period
it must be determined
whether she is competent to
stand trial. If not competent,
she could be committed to a
mental facility.
Hewitt said that one of her
marn worries was over her
son, Frederickt a student m a

program for gifted children
in the city's public school
system. He was placed in a
nondelinquent cot tage at
Youth Gu1dance Center.
She was a paid informer for
the FBI. She worked as a
business manager for the
People in Need program
dev ised by Randolph A.
Hearst, in an attempt to
obtain the release of h1s
daughter , Patricia , kidnaped
by the Symbionese Liberation
Army in February 1974.
Friends said t hat while
working in PIN she became
r adica li zed
membe r s of

derground" whom she tned
to befnend did not trust her
beca use of her

too .
The Secret Service is undergoing reviews by outside
eva luator s, Treasury
Secretary William Simon
said Tuesday. But that's not
new, he said , only " intensified."
One of the most common
reactions on Capitol Hill is
that the President ought to
"cool" his public forays
11
until we can see whether
this madness is temporary,"
as Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa.,
put it.
Some congressmen are

woman was a daughter of
Olaf Kahn, who died in 1964.
The newspaper said Mrs.
Olaf Kahn lives in Cincinnati,
but attempts to reach her by
telephone were to no avail.
A marriage clerk, Ann Eh·
man, was confident that Sara
Jane Moore and Sara Jane
Kahn are one and the same,
the Daily Mail said.
According to the clerk, she
and Sara Jane's sister, Ruth
Ann, attended scbool together
in the mid-1940s.
"Wlien I saw that picture in
the paper this morning, I said
that looks like Sara Jane
Kahn," Mrs. Ehman told the

September 25, 1775:
Elhan Allen and John Brown- both important in the May
10 caplure of Ticonderoga - are sent ahead of General
Richard Montgomery's advancing expeditionary force
1nto Canada . Their assignment is to enlist Canadian voluntee rs ror rh e America n army. So successful are they that
the two resolve to use their recrUJts i n an attack on

Monlreal. With a total force of fewer than 300, Allen is to
adva nce from below the town, and Brown from above. At

mghl , Allen succeeds 1n ferrying hisllO men across the St.
Lawrence by canoe , Brown fails . Unable_ to withdraw
before dawn, Allen attacks without Brown. Encountering
235 troops commanded by Sir Guy Charleton, Allen and
aboul 40 of hi s men are captured ; All en remains a prisoner
unti l May, 1778. The adventure severely damages
Amenc an prestige with the Canadtan s and the Indtans.

- By Ros&lt;; Mac kenz ie &amp;: Jeff

MacNe ll y/ CI I 97~.

experience with the FBI.
Some said the attempted
attack on Ford was her
ul timate goa l to ach1eve
acceptan ce by radicals .

\

Featur~

Syn&lt;hcate

advising Ford to hang back
from th e crowds, curb his
travel, and avoid being "a
clay pigeon, " as Texas Sen.
U oyd Bentsen said.
'
Others have
offered
another approach, including
the encouragement of Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy, D·
Mass., who credited Ford for
"a courageous stand in
saying that he will not
become a hostage to threats
from a few un balanced
people. "

Kennedy, and others at the
Capitol, say the message in
the two recent threats against
the President's life is !bat the
United states "can no longer
ignore the shocking absence
of responsible gun control. "
Rep. Bill Goodling, R-Pa .,
quickly offered a bill to im·
pose the death penalty for
anyone convicted o! an attempt to kill the President .
The Secret Service persua ded Ford to don a
bulletproof vest after the
Sacramento gun threat Sept.
5 but he was not wearing it
Monday .

paper . "! am positive it 's
her. "
The paper also quoted Pat
Horn , chairman of the 25year Stonewall reunion three
years ago, as saying the
reunion committee received
a note from Sara Kahn that
read :
" Dear Patty,
" H we can't attend, will
there be some way we can get
a roster of our classmates'
current addresses' Perhaps
by making a donation of $5
toward the reunion, we could
receive the program and
roster and a short write-up
about the festiviti- It would

Mrs. Dora Carpenter
of Rutland, 89, dies
RUTLAND - Mrs. Dora
Estella Carpenter, 89, Salem
St., Rutland, died Tuesday
afternoon
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Carpenter was born
Dec. 31 , 1885 at Dyesville, the
daughter of the late William
and Jane Molden Nelson . She
was the widow of Elza Carpenter who died in 1944.
Surviving are three sons,
Henry , of Middleport;
Lawrence, of Dyesville, and
Perry, of Long Bottom; four
daughters, Mrs. G. R. (Anna)
Cline, Carpenter ; Mrs. R. A.
(Evelyn ) Rife, Mrs. Nick
(Margie ) Grueser, and Miss
Kathleen Carpenter, all of
Rutland ; 18 grandchildren, 21
great-grandchildren, and two

great~eat

• grandchildren,
and two sisters , Mrs .
Elizabeth Anderson and Mrs.
Belle Trainer, both of
Mechanicsburg. Preceding
her In death besides her
parents and her husband,
were a son, Edgar; a
daughter, Carrie Belle; a
brother, three sisters and a
granddaughter.
Mrs. Carpenter was af.
filiated with the Dyesville
Commtinity Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rutland Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Amos Tillis officiating.
Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time
after 2 p.m. Thursday.

The real Sarah Jane Moore
is laughing it all off at work
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(UP! ) - Sara Jane Moore is
doing her best to laugh it off.
But it's not easy to keep
smili ng at friends who
mistake her for the woman
accused of attempting to kill
Preside nt Ford in San
Francisco Monday . .

really be marvelous to hear
about everyone. Do let me
know.
"Sincerely,
"Sara Jane Kahn."
According to Mrs. Horn,
the paper said, Sara Kahn
listed her return address in
care of Marie L. Davis, 284
South Madison St., Apt. 203,
Pasadena, Calif.
The newspaper quoted Mrs.
Marie Davis as saying she
shared an apartment with
Sara Kahn three years.
"I was the only one in the
world who cared about her,"
she was quoted as saying.
"She was a brilliant girl.
She had a number of good
jobs."
The paper quoted Mrs.
Davis as saying Sara KBhn
was troubled by a hasty
marriage th at ended in
there may be other causes for con tributed to George divorce.
polycythemia in man . No one Washington's death.
'Confusion abounded in
has yet proved that any such
Sometimes bl ee din g Charleston with the discovery
case in man has been caused treatments have to be here of a Sara Jane Mooreby a virus.
stopped, because the person thesamenameusedwhenthe
A lot of people with may get too low on iron and would-be assassin was ap·
polycythemia vera have no have an iron deficiency. In prehended.
'
symptoms at all. Others have these cases it may be
But the Moore woman, who
symptoms including being necessary to give various attended school with Sara
tired and short of breath as chemicals that depress the Kahn, is an employe of the
you do. The systolic blood bone
marrow 's
over state Department of Employ- ·
pressure may he elevated. production of red cells. There ment Security.
The face may be ruddy a r e a number of these
Midland Trail Elementary
School Principal Reba K.
because of the dilated medicines available.
capillaries. There may be
Finally in older patients, it Epliri, also a 1947 graduate of
told
the
from 7 to 10 million red cells is sometimes a good choice to Stonewall ,
in a milliliter when normally use radioactive phosphorus. newspaper she recalled both
there should be only about 5 This substance slows down women.
sara Jane Kahn was "a
million.
the bone marrow conOne of the mainstays of side•a bly and often relieves sensitive person," Mrs. Eplin
treatment of this disorder is the problem for a relatively said.
" I only had a speaking
simply to draw off some of long period of time.
the blood. That usually lets
For information on the acquaintance with her, but 1
the pressure go down if it is anemias write to me in care remember she was in the
elevated. This is about the of this newspaper, P . 0 . Box Thespians and turned out to
only condition in medicine
1551, Radio City Station, New be the star of the play that :
today where it ill still believed York, NY 10019. Send 50 · year," she said.
Mrs. Eplin added that Sara
to be helpful to bleed a per- cents, a long, stamped, selfKahn's
moth er had the
son. Bleeding was wrongly addfessed envelope, and1 ask
thought to be good treatment for The Health Utter number ' maiden name of Moore, ·and
for many illnesses 200 years
4·3, Underst11 nding the that Sara played violin in
school.
ago and is believed to have
Anemias.
'

It'seven tougher since Miss
Moore attended Charleston's
Stonewall Jackson High
Scbool in 1947 with Sara Jane
Moore, identified as the
would-be assassin . The
woman under arrest went to
school Wider the name of
Sara Jane Kahn, her fonner
classmates said .
"My friends are teasing me
about it," said Miss Mo01e,
an employe of the West
Virginia Department of
Employment Security .,
"There is a sirong simil~rity
in names. I figured the best
way to overcome this is to
just be good-natured about it.
"People know it isn't me
and they just want to tease. I
think it will all die down
quicker if I laugh it off."

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Democratic legislative
leaders are apparently on
their way to the Ohio
Supreme Court seeking
validation of six partisan bills
they rushed through the
General Assembly in one
week last January before
Republican Gov .-elect James
A. Rhodes took office.
Senate President Pro Ternpore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
said he plans to proceed
"immediately"
to the
Supreme Court to appeal the
decision handed · down
Tuesday by a three-judge
panel in Franklin County
Court of Appeals.
The panel· upheld a lower
court ru!ini! of last June
which declared the six bills
invalid on grounds they were
never presented to outgoing
Republican Lt. Gov. John w.
B!'own for certification.
The bills, Slgned by Democratic Gov. John' J. Gilligan
before he left office last Jan.
13 but never flied as laws by
Republican Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown, included
a
Democratic-oriented
congressional redistriCting

'
·I

Thd~~

p
m
~
:!:::-:·

Sport Parade I

:::=:~:.

it:• ••

.:::*~

forSatur~y
Football action this Friday
in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference features
two league games and two
non-league battles.
In league action, unbeaten
Kyger , Creek visits Southwestern and North Gallia
goes to Symmes Valley. Nonleague encounters find
Eastern hosting Federal
Hocking
and Wahama
playing at Southern. Hannan
Trace will take on Ironton's
reserves in a 7:30 contest
Saturday. The Wildcats were
originally scheduled to play
Green Friday, but that school
has dropped football for the
1975 campaign.
Coach Jim-- Sprague's
Kyger Creek Bobcats will go
after their fourth victory in a
row against Coach Bob
Ashley's winless Highlan·
ders.
Tbe Bobcats have averaged
38.3 points in their three
games while pennltting just
4.7 points per outing.
Leading rusher and
scorer for the 'Cats has been
senior
tailback
Chris
Preston. The All-SVAC back
has scored 30 poinis in three
games and has rushed for
approximately 350 yards.
The Highlanders must also
contend with the running of
sophomore Marcus Geiger,
junior fullback Ralph Baylor,
junior tailback Todd Taylor
and the passing and placekicking of senior quarterback
Tim Lucas. Lucas has scored
35 points on three touchdowns, 14 extra points and a
field goal.
Southwestern 0-3 lost 18-0
last Friday at North Gallia.
The
Highlanders
are
averaging 6.6 points per
game while their defense has
permitted 20 points per
outing. Previous losses were
to Southeastern of Ross
County and Hannan, W. Va.
Leading the Highlander
attack are Rick Crouse,
senior tailback; Chris Lewis,
junior fullback and junior
quarterback Donnie Bush.
Coach John Blake's North
Gallia Pirates will seek their
third victory in four starts
against Coach Greg Bailie's
improving Symmes Valley
Vikings. Symmes Valley
tasted victory for the first
time in two years last week
14-7 over Conotton Valley.
North Gallia owns victories
over Waterford and Southwestern. The Pirates only
loss was 1~ to Kyger Creek.
The Vikings were beaten
~by Chesapeake and 8-0 by
Eastern. While the offense
has not generated very much
explosive punch, the Viking
defense has been more than
adequate.
North Gallia's offense is
averaging 20.6 points per
game while its defense has
c

plan, proposals to save more
than 100 Democratic jobs,
and
liberalized
voter
registration and unemployment compensation
!X'ovisions.
Tuesday~s appellate court
ruling was contained in a
unanimous 12-page opinion
written by Judge John W.
McConnac and concurred in
by Judges Robert E. Holmes
and Archer E . Reilly. All
three are Republicans.
The appeal had been made
by attorneys for Democratic
legislative leaders froJ.Il the
permanent injunction issued
against the legislation last
June 6 by Judge Frederick T.
Williams, also a Republican,
in Franklin County Conunon
Pleas Cow-t.
Ocasek, after learning of
the
appellate
opinion,
displayed little concern that
the Supreme Court also is
dominated 5 to 2 by
Republicans .
"We will now move on to
' the Supreme Couri, where we
will get final resolution o~ the
· question," he said, a~ the
appeal would be based on the
complaint that the l~r
court ruling gives the
lieutenant governor ·veto

''

l*;~

BY MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

':@
MAN !LA (UP!) - Muhamnuid Ali never touches the stuff.
He's a teetotaler wbose liquid consumption is confined mostly
to water, milk and an occasional soft drink but here he is in an
alien country far ~way from home compleiely and undeniably
intoxicated.
Some people get drunk on liquor. With Ali, all it takes is the
sound of his own voice.
.
Right now he's intoxicated with the idea that at 33 he is in the
finest physical shape of his life and that he is some type of
supreme being. He is absolutely convinced poor bumbling Joe
Frazier has no chance against him at all on the mornin g of Oct.
1 here .
When he finished his workout today, a session almost enlirely of going one-&lt;Jn-&lt;Jne with the heavy bag and delivering
what amounted to a morning sermon to the 350 or so appreciative Filipino patrons, Ali wrapped a white terry cloth
bathrobe around him and kept it on after returning to his
dressing room .
He sat in a heavily upholstered chair which resembled some
kind of throne and slouching down in it, with his hands clasped
across his belly, he looked like a Middle East oil sheik fresh
from a couple of fast sets of tennis.
Before coming into the room, he had told all those outside
what the outcome of the ftght would be.
"!will knock ·o ut Joe Frazuh! " he had proclaimed, as if
suddenly having a vision . "I will not predict the round, but he
will fall."
Now, in his dressing quarters, he talked about how he was
going back to working with the heavy bag after more than
three years when he couldn't handle it because of arthritis in
his hands. Ali is so 1ascinated with the big bag, he bought a
first class ticket for it on the jet which brought him here.
" My hag rode better than you fellas," he neetDed the writers
around him.
Cooling off now, the champ kept talking about the big bag,
how much stronger he has become working with it, and how
Frazier rarely uses it because it requires a great deal of
strength and the challenger doesn't have really have that

Thus far, the Viking offense
has averaged 4.6 points per
game while their defense has
surrendered 14 points per
outing.
AI Eastern, the E38les of
Coach Spike Berkheimer will
seek their third win of the
season against Federal
Hocking's Lancers.
A stingy stubborn defense
held all but one AlelUlllder
Spartan in check last week.
Roger Gilders, speedy half.
back, scored both touch·
downs for Alexander's 1~
victory.
The Lancers are 0-2 after
last Friday's 27-12 loss to
Miller. Again, the Eagle
defense was the big story last
week as Dave Mills had 12
tackles and Joe Kuhn was
credited with nine solo
tackles. On offense, Eastern
got inside the Spartans' 20
yard line three !lines but
failed to score.
Wahama and Southern go
into Friday's game after
winning the past weekend.
Wahama took his first victory
of the year from Duval.
Lea'ding Coach Marcus
Rice's White Falcons were
Tim Sayre and Mike Goldsberry . Sayre threw two
scoring passes to Goldsberry
in the I~ victory.
Southern led by fullback
Greg Dunning defeated
Waterford, 28-14 in a nonleague game. Dunning has
scored 37 points in three
games. The Tornados are 2-1
after an opening loss to
Fairland.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W L P OP
Team
Kyger Creek
3 0 115 14
North Gall Ia
2 1 62 11/(}.
Eas!ern
2 1 38 '"13 ·
Southern
2 1 65 53
Symmes Valley 1 2 14 &lt;13
Southwestern
0 3 20 60
Hannan Trace 0 3 14 125
Team SYfoC O~L
P OP
Kyger Creek
2 0 72 14
Eas!ern
2 0 38 0
Southern
1 0 37 6
North Gallla
1 1 24 14
Symmes Valley 0 1 o 8
Southwes!ern
0 1 0 18
Hannan Trace 0 3 14 125
Totals
6 6 185 115

.

American League Roundup
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
A lot of not-&amp;Hunny things
are happening to the Oakland
A's on their way to a fifth
straighl American League
West pennant.
Like :
.. .losing four of their last
five games ...
...drawing Bert Blyleven in
a twi-light game ...
... having a Kansas City
Royals' rookie pitcher hurl
six innmgs of no-hit ball for
his first major league victory

Hawkeyes prepare
for Penn State

'

·-

Big Ten Football Roundup ..
CHICAGO (UP!) - At least
three Big Ten teams face
their betters this Saturday
and workouts this week are
directed at making a good
show of it, and perhaps
staging an upset or. two.
Iowa coach Bob Commings
said Tuesday his Ha wkeyes
will have to play a "super
game" if they are to beat
12th-ranked Penn State .
"They will be awfully tough
to defend against," he said.
" We'll have to play a super
game to beat them-but this
team is certainly capable of
!hat super game."
The Hawkeyes practiced
for two hours Tuesday, trying
to solve the offensive
problems that plagued them
in their first two games.
Purdue coach Alex Agase
gave his team their game
plan to use against third·
ranked Southern California at
the Los Angeles Coliseum
Saturday .
He said despite the plaudits
the Trojans' explosive of·
fense .is getting, he considers
the USC defense equal in

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonite thru Thurs.
Sept. 22 -25

NOT OPEN
Fn . thru Tues.
Sept. 26-30
THE GREAT

WALDO PEPPER

power.
"Southern California has
always had top athletes with
good speed and quickness,"
he said . "Our players will be
conscious of that overall
team speed, especially on the
defensive unit."
Northwestern, fresh from a
10-3 victory over Northern
Dllnois and an initial 31-25
win over Purdue, faces a
tougher test Saturday against
Notre Dame at South Bend,
as coach John Pont noted.
"Notre Dame did an excellent job against Purdue,"
he said. "They are substantially stronger with the
return of several players
now, and they have a suherb
defense."
In other Big Ten practices
Tuesday , coach Lee Corso
stressed pass defense as
Indiana practiced for its
Saturday game against
Utah.
"We're thinking in terms of
co ntaining rather than
stopping Utah 's offense ,"
Corso said.
Injured players back for
practice Tuesday included
linebackers Craig Brinkman
and Don Thomas and
defensive end Carl Smith.
Minnesota Gophers went
through a lengthy drill stressing the rushing game, offensively and defensively . They
ended with a brief goal line
scrimmage in which junior
fullback Jim Perkins banged
over for two scores and
looked very strong.

ChiCilQO
12 84 .462 21112
Ca lifornia
72 86 .456 22 117
Tu esday's Results
Mlnnesola 4 Oakland 3, twilight
Cleve land 4 Milwaukee 3, ntghl
Kansas City 4 Texas o. n1 ght
Chicago 5 Calif ornia 4, nigh!
Detroit at Bal tim ore. ppd , ra1n
Boston at New York , ppd , rain
Wednesday ' s Games
(All times E OT)
Detroit (Coleman 10· 17 &amp; Bare
8· 12 ) at Baltimore (Alexander
8·8 &amp; Palmer 22· 111. 2. 5 .30

COLUMBUS (UP! )
Bowling Green quarterback
Mark Miller and Kent State
defensive tackle Walt Vrabel
were named today as the
Mid-American
Conference
p .m
Boston (Cleveland 12·9 &amp; Tiant players of the week. Both
17 14) at New York ( H unter 22·
were unanimous selections.
14 &amp; May 14. 11 ). 2, s · JO p m
M1nnesota &lt;Hughes 16.13) at
Miller completed 16 of 23
Kansa s C•tv { Littell 1.1), 8:30
passes
for 173 to lead BG to a
pm
Ch icago (Jefferson 5 10) at come-from-behind 16-14 win
Oakland { Blue 20 · 11 L 11 p m
Milwaukee (Colborn 10.13) at over· Southern Mississippi.
Vrabel was credited with 17
Cleveland (Peterson 14·7L 7 30
p .m .
tackles as Kent State downed
Virginia Tech.
National League S1andings
By United Press tn1erniltlonat
Special mention was given
eas1
to
Bowling Green punter
W.. L. Pet. G.B.
K· Pittsburgh
91 66 580
Greg Kampe wbo averaged
Philadelphia
83 74 529 B
57.5 yards per kick In
New York
80 77 .510 11
Sf. Louis
80 78 506 11 117 Saturday's game as he i set
Chicago
73 85 462 181/2
Montreal
72 86 456 191J2 school and league records.
~ Wes1
The sophomore underwent
W. L.. Pet. G. B.
x .Cinclnnati 104 54 .658
Los Angeles
85 73 .53e 19
San Francisco 77 79 .494 26
San Diego
70 e7 .446 331f2
Atl.,nta
66 91 .420 371/2
Houst on
63 94 .401 40 1.2112
X·CIInched div isi on ti tle
Tuesday's Results
New York a Chicago 6
Mon trea l 7 St. Lou is 0. night
f?ittsburgh 3 Philadelph ia 1,
night
Cincinnati 5 Hctuston 3, night
Sa n Diego 6 • Los Angeles 4,
Might
Sa n Francisco at Atlanta, n 1ght.
postponed , ra•n
Wednesday'5 Games
I All Times E OT)
New York {Seaver 21 ·9) at
Chicago { Moore 0·0), 2 30 pm
S t LOUIS ( Rasmussen 5. 4) at
Mon treal &lt;Carrithers 4 3). 8: 05

pm .

Philadelphia (C hri stenson 10 5)
at Pittsburg h (Demery 7·31.
7 : 35pm .
Cincinnat i
(K ir-by
9·61
at
Houston (Dierker 14 15) , 8:35

COGGIN WINS
CLEARLAKE, Calif. (UP! )
-Jerry Coggin, of Scottsdale, Ariz., won the U.S.
men 's open water ski title
during the weekend, speeding
over the 2.5 mile course on
Clear Lake at speeds up to 100
miles an bour.
Steven
Van
Meter,
Torrance, Calif ., finished
second, and John BelvaU of
South San Francisco was
third.

••

.

.

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At

PLASTIC

$1

ROOF
CEMENt.
•••
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Regular 2.50 Value
CARTRIDGE

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GUN
CAULKING
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1.89

CAULKING
A Fall Special

COMPOUNo55

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Fall $ 1 9 9

WALL
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Regular
3.95

5' HOUSEHOLD AL OMINUM $ 1 4

Fall

STEPLADDER
.....
s.P;;!~~.
Regular 19.95 ·

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COM POUND•••••••• ~~:~~ ••
DAP '33' GLAZING
Reqular 2.22

WARP' S " EASY· ON "

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and 35
s.

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OldSmobile 1976.

POLYESTER CORD-78
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FULL 4 PLY
CUT!Jt.SS SU I' REM[ HROUG HAM The 1\rsi mid ·Sized c ar lohive ll1l rntenor
msptred try thr ramol" liM R r:g~rn:y The ga.~ milc&lt;~ge is pftUY •nsptnng too

WHITEWALL TUBELESS

San Francisco (Caldwell 7 12
and· Barr l J . tJ) at Atlanta
(LaCorte o.J and Morton 17 16) ,
2, 6 .05 p .m
Los Angeles 1Rau 14 9) at
San D 1ego (Folkers 6 10), 10 :00

Plus F.E.T. From

pm

1.79 to 13.33
and Old casing
1

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MEIGS
TIRE CENTER-

CAMDEN PARK
"

and
emergency
a ppendectomy three weeks ago,
and Saturday recorded kicks
of 49, 47, 77 and 57 yards.

rained out.
Padres 6, Dodgers 4
Randy Jones became the
first 2fl1lame winner in San
Diego's seven-year history.
a llowmg eight hits and
striking out eight going the
distance . Tito Fuentes had
four hits for the Padres, including a double that led off
the seventh inning an d led to
the Padres' tiebreaking run.
Pirates 3, Phillies I
Rich Hebner 's two-run
sixth inning s in gle gave
Pittsburgh a 2-1 lead and he
scor ed the third run on a
single by Duffy Dyer . Bob
Moose pitched a threehitter
to even his record at 2-2.
Steve Carlton, the loser, in
now 14-14.
Expos 7, Cardinals 0
Pete Mackanin drove in
three runs and Mike
Jorgensen hit a two-run
homer for Montreal as Steve
Rogers pitched a sevenhitter
for his lith win . John Denny
lost for St. Louis.
Mets 8, Cubs 6
Rookie John Stearns
doubled home the tying run in
the eighth inning and scored
the winning run on a single by
Felix Millan as reliever Bob
Apodaca won his third game
for New York , which overcame an early 6-0 Chicago
lead. Dave Rosello homered
for the Cubs.

~

ONE-SIZE
TIRE SALE

"F AMll..Y OUTING"
I.A.M. &amp; A.W.

• " "' r

in 1907. The league mark of
116 victories was set by the
1906 Cubs.
" We're trying to win and
get ready for the playoffs at
the same time," says
Manager Sparky Anderson .
" It's a little different than
going all out to win but we 're
still trying to win.' '
Pete Rose drove in two runs
with a single and Ken Griffey
had three hits and scored two
nms in Tuesday night 's triumph. Fred Norman went
eight innings for his 12th
victory against four losses
while Mike Cosgrove lost.
San Diego downed Los
Angeles 6-4, Pittsburgh beat
Philadelphia 3-1, Montreal
blanked St. Louis 7~ and New
York topped Chicago 8-.fj in
other NL games . San
Francisco at Atlanta was

. .,;

pm .

7
' I

to second place in the
MISSION, "Kan. (UP!) Grambling and Wltlenberg Division: In ratings.
colleges were unanimous No .
1 picks Tuesday In the
NCAA's weekly ratings of the
Association's Division D and
Division li1 foo\ball learns.
Teams are selected by the
NCAA's two divisional lourman football committees,
with the help of 28 advisory
personnel.
haven t 1ncrea sed tn
at all But oon 1 wat t
DIViSIOn II Grambling is J.&lt;i
reduces your under·
following a 20-6 victory over
•nsu red
to ashes to lind
out See me aM t 11 e~tpta,n
the Umvers1ty of Hawaii,
ho w a State Farm Homeo wn·
while Wittenberg IS 2-0 after a
ers Polle y w1th In flat ion Cov·
eragc can keep your home
14-8 upset of Delaware last
•nsured l or a!It! s worth
week .
STEVE S NOWDEN
Boise State 12-&lt;J) received
1258 Powell Sf , M iddl epor t
56 points to jump from fourth
Phone 9t2 ·71SS
place to secondflin the
STATE fARM
Division II poll.
Fue and Ca!.ul!llty Corooa•o&gt;l
Ithaca ( 2-0 ) also had 56
H O ~"Iti Q fl oce
Btoomto lQIOn llllnOI I
points, but slipped from hrst

GC)()DYEAR

SATURD4 Y-SEPTEMBER 27th
UNTIL 5 PM

•

by watching his club reach
the .:;oo mark for only the
seco nd time since May 10.
George Hendrick belted a
homer leading off the nmth
inning to win the game while
Boog Powell earlier slammed
a three-run shot for the Tribe .
White Sox 5, Angels 4
Ken Henderson llelted a
solo homer with &lt;&gt;ne lfut in the
seventh mning to snap a 4-4
tie and give Chicago the win
after blowing a 4-0 lead It
was Henderson's ninth homer
and dropped the Angels back
mto the AL West cellar. Dan
Osborn I ~) gained credit for
the win in relief.

Miller, Vrabel honored by MAC

PARK RESERfED

I ,

light," said Blyleven, who
struck out seven and walked
jusi one . " A couple of guys
came back saying it was
tough picking up the rotation
of the ball . I said to myself
then that I should try to put as
much rotation on it as
possible ."
Elsewhere in tbe only other
American League games
played Tuesday, Cleveland
edged Milwaukee 4-3 and
Chicago put away California
:&gt;-4. Boston at New York and
Detroit at Baltimore were
rained out.
Indians 4, Brewers 3
Frank Robinson celebrated
his signing on as manager for
another year with Cleveland

.

Wittenberg is ranked No. 1

Reds eye 1953
D 0 d.Ue r win mark
e.

BA,SEBALL

r

power over bills passed by
the legislature.
Democrats had sought last
January to hurriedly enact
the bills during the first week
of the legislative session
before Gilligan left office
Jan. 13 and Rhodes took over
with veto power.
Wllllarns held the bills were
unconstitutionally enacted
because they did not contain
the authenticating signature
of Lt. Gov. Brown, the
presiding officer of the
Senate who was leaving office
with Gilligan.
·
The Democratic legislative
.leaders, fearing Brown would
hold the bills Wltll Rhodes
took over, sent the measurea
to Gilligan for signature Jan.
11 without Brown's certification of procedures.
The three-judge panel
agreed with Wllllams that the
blils .were not "validly
enacted" · because they
lacked Brown's· signature.
· Legal counsel for the ·
Dem9cr a tic leaders had
argued that ' it was "directory" and not "mandatory"
for Brown to eertlfy that
legislative· procedures had
beeJi followed before bUls
tU.nilnued on'Page 8)

A's still waiting
-for 5th est title

with one out in the eighth .
That was enough for
Manager Whitey Herzog who
removed McOure and sent in
two more relievers to
preserve the ~Royals' win. " My first major league
victory m!liiiiS more to me
than sti innings of no-bit
pitching," said McOure. " I
mean I'm thrilled about
nobody getting a hit but it's
the first victory that sets the
adrenalln flowing ."
According to Blyleven, wbo
scattered nine hits in belping
the TwinS frustrate the A's' 43, pitching in the twi-light can
All or part of th'!5e things compensate for throwing
happened Tuesday night and - hard.
as a result, the A's are not yet
"I like pitching in the twidivision champions, their
magic number still being one .
While the A's failed to do
their bit for the "one" by
losing under the Oakland twi·
light to Blyleven, the Minnesota Twins' hard-throwing
curve specialist, a young man
named Bob McOIU'e was
keeping the second place
Kansas City Royals alive by
winning his first major
league game.
McOure, a 22-year old
southpaw, relieved Royals' National League lloundup
By FRED DOWN
starter Doug Bird after 1 1-3
U-PI Sports Writer
much. 1
innings and continued to hold
The Cincinnati Reds, with
Ali said he COI!Id sense Frazier's general frustration trying the Texas Rangers hiUess
one
National League record
to get the title back.
Wltil Roy Smalley singled
to their credit, can round out
" It's a funny feeling once you've had it and you lose it," he
the season with some of the
said. " !know because I felt the same way Frazier feels now.
gaudiest numbers in league
When you 're the champ, you come into town or go on those TV
history .
shows and everybody says, 'wow, look how big and strong he is
They're trying to stay in
... he's a giant!' But after you lose the title, you're nobody, and
shape
for the playoffs and
they don 't say that anymore. What you say to yourself then is
possibly the World Series as
'if I ever get a nother shot things are gonna be different . I ain 't
they
play out their games, of
gonna fool around anymore.' Yeah, I was just playing. I broke
course,
liut with 104 victories
all the laws. No more, though. I'm in bed every night nine
American League Standings
they already have won more
o'clock. You don't~ me in the coffee shop. You don't see me
By United Press lnterna1ional
games
than any other team in
East
down in the lobby shakin' hands with everybody."
W. L. . Pet. G 8
more than 20 years.
"Anything can happen when two men get into the same ring,
93 63 596
Boston
The Reds , who beat the
88
66
.57
1
4
Baltimore
can't it ?" a newsman said to Ali.
80 76 51 3 13
New York
Houston Astros 5-3 Tuesday
"Yeah," he conceded.
77 77 .500 15
Cleveland
night, need one more win to
64
94
405
30
Milwaukee
"That means Frazier could beat you .''
51 98 .368 3S 1h
Detroit
match the total of the 1953
"Yeah," Ali agreed quietly. "He could if he broke my jaw
West
W. L. Pet. G.B . Brooklyn Dodgers and three
like (Ken) Norton did. But that's all you wanna hear me say,
Oa kl and
94 63 59'9
more would ljlake them the
that he could heat me. I never have thoughts like that. "
Ka nsas City
89 68 .567 5
biggest winners since the
Texas
77 82 484 18
Minnesota
74 80 481 18117 Chicago Cubs won 107 ~ames

permitted 7.3 points per
outing.
The Pirates offense is led
by jWiior- Sfgnal ciiller Mark .
Theiss who mixes his nmrilnc
game with a strong armed
passing attack.
Chief receivers are Don
Spencer, 6-3 senior end; Fred
Logan, 6-1 junior tailback and
Brett Tackett, 6-0 junior end.
The running game is handled
by Logan and speedy
sophomore Mike Casey.
Symmes Valley, while
preparing
for
Its
homecoming match with
North Gallla, has John Berry,
a senior, calling the signals.
Other runners are Jim
Branham and Phil Hllgen·
berg.

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~&lt;&gt;.&amp;mi&lt;-:'"'"''~"""-*-*':::Wi!i?.-=-&lt;'"""'Z'*'§~'
W..i7~~;=iftit;~,.";~%&lt;·.·.·.·W..:!..~~~~02.?.
~

Wildcats pick
up Ironton 'B'

Democrats will take issue
of 6 bills to high court .

'

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United

previous

Protection now urgent
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Congress and the administration are reviewing
with a growing sense of
urgency the question of how
to protect a President.
In the aftermath of two
apparent attempts on his life,
President Ford still insists he
does not want to be a
"prisoner in the Oval Office ."
Given a President who likes
to greet the public with his
own outstretched hand, the
difficulty of protecting him
intensifies. But the ideas that
have surfaced are plentiful ,

A Chronicle of America

Howev e r,
the "un-

Too many red blood cells
Jly Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
: DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
that has been diagnosed as
'olycythemia. I\ leaves me
nry tired and s hort of
'reath . Could you explain this
a;sorder and comment on its

We Hold These Truths ...

'

3- The Da.il~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

POMIROY

992-2101

OHIO

I .

•.

'

ON DISPLAY
TOMORROW,
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·
We Invite You ...
Coffee, Donuts and
Cookies Will Be Served

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
. Caddlac -Oidsmobile

992 -5342

GMAC Financtng Available

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til6- Til 5 p.m . Sat.
" You'l l i
'

tKe
Our OUalitY Way of Doing Bus i ness"
' ,,

.

See one of these co urteous salesmen:
Pete Burr is
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keeba ugh
·

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�.'"
•
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2- The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

\ \ ·About guns and presidents

'

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Center fo r
a
60-&lt;lay
Sara Moore, 45, will undergo examination
a psychiatric evaluation to
Miss Moore fired a chromedetennine whether she is plated revolver Monday at
competent to stand trial on a Ford as he was leaving the St .
charge of tryi ng to kill 'Francis Hotel. The bullet
missed and she was subdued
President Ford.
U.S. Magistrate Owen Woo- by police. The ricocheting
druff Tuesday ordered that slug wounded a ca b driver.
U.S Attorney James L.
Miss Moore, twice-divorced
mother of a !1-year-&lt;Jid boy, be Browning asked for the psytaken to the San D1ego chiatric eval uation . lt was
Metropolitan
Correctional

He'd tend store more
By H.D. QillGG
UP! Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Former Gov. Jirruny Carter of
Georgia, a Democratic pres!·
denhal
hopeful,
says
assassination attempts are a
fact of political life that have
to be lived with , but if he were
in President Ford's shoes he
would spend more lime
tendmg the store.
" II I were president, I
would spend much mo re t1me
in Washington working on the
problems of the country,"
Carter said. " He 1Ford)
spends an extraord mary
amount of his time travelmg
around the country making
speeches to conventio ns and
involved in political activity .
quite early."
Carter's effor t to step mto
the presidential shoes has led
to campaigning in 43 states
since he left th e governor's
office in January. He announced his candidacy for the
Democratic pres identi al
nomination in December,
1974, and has ave raged s1x
day s a week campaigning .
In a meeting with the UP!
editorial board Tuesday, he
was asked his views on the
two
recent
alleged
assassination attempts on
President Ford.
"This is the kind of threat
that always exists in public
life," he said. " When I was
governor there were constant
abusive threats or letters . I
never did feel intimidated
and still don't.

" I thmk these (Ford inCidents) are Isolated i nCidents of a kind of lunatic
frin ge of society . My
assessment of the general
feelmg toward public figures
IS tha t it has tmproved
considerably m the last five
years."
As fo r gun control : " I never
have favored the prohibition

of citizens to own guns ...
·'I do favor the registration

of handguns and I do favor
the prohibition of the right to
own a gun of people who have
been involved in any sort of
crime using a weapon."
Carter satd his travel has
taught him polihcal issues
va ry by regions but there are
two
issues
current
everywhere .
"First, can our system of
government as we know it
continue to exist' Can
gover nm e nt ,
the
bureaucracy in Washington ,
be
competent,
well
or ga ni ze d,
e ffici e nt,
economical, purposeful ' Is it
possible for the President and
the Congress to cooperate, for
a change?
"Second , can our govern~
ment be decent, truthful,
honest, fair , idealistic' ... I
think our citizens have been
deeply hurt, even in a personal way , by Vietnam,
Cambodia, Chile, Pakistan ,
CIA, Watergate, and they've
lost confidence in their own
government.
" I think th e answer to both

qu e&amp;'t ions is yes."

Trail began close by
I

'

According to the Daily
Mail, two brothers, Olaf II
and Dana, live in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Dana was not available
when the newspaper reached
his home, but his wife was
quoted as saying her husband
had a sister named Sara
Jane. Mrs. Kahn said her
family wasn 'I contacted by
any authorities after th e
attempt on Ford's life
Monday in San Francisco, the
newspaper said.
"Sara Jane has not been
contacted by the family f9r
about 20 years," she was
quoted as saying. "She did
not even come to her father's
funeral. She's been in California . Her mother has not had
any contact with her."
But the woman said her
sister-in-law
was
a
Charleston native who would
have been a Stonewall High
graduate around 1947.
County records showed the

CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UP!) - A long trail that
ended with Sara Jane Kahn 's
alleged attempt on President
Ford's life all began in West
Virginia's ca pita l city, a
newspaper reported
Tuesday .
The Charleston Daily Mail,
pressing its entire stalf into
an exhaustive search of city
and county records , said it
learned that the accused
would-he assassin was ·born
here Feb. 15, 1930, and was a
1947 graduate of Stonewall
Jackson High Scliool.
the
; According
to
qewspaper, the birth of the
Kahn woman, identified at
' time of her arrest as Sara
lhe
Jane Moore, was confirmed
~y
Secret Service
~kesman in Washington.
: The · newspaper
said
JCanawha Co unty birth
records revealed Sara Jane
kahn had four brothers and
lwo sisters.

a

•

DR. LAMB

.
not opposed by Miss Moore's

attorney, Public Defender
James Hewitt, who later said
that her thought processes
appeared to be "cloudy."
Police said Miss Moore
contacted an inspector on
Saturday and sa1d she " just
might start testing the system ." At that time, police
S8ld, she asked to he placed in
custody. Pollee said th e
Secret Service was notified.
On Sunday police confiscated
a .4kaliber pistol from her .
The Secret Serv•ce said
they questiOned her Sunday
night and determined that
she was not a potenti al
presidential assassin.
At the court hearing, Miss
Moore, dressed in a light blue
pants suit, looked like a
suburban matron. She was
silent and sat at the counsel
table with her hands
clasped.
She had been ordered held
under $500,000 ball on the
charge of trying to kill the
President. However, now that
she is under an order for a
psychiatric examination
there is no possibility for her
to be freed on bail.
Federal sources said Miss
Moore could be held up to a

~eatment?

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..

; DEAR READER - There
are several kinds of
~olycythemia . In all in~~es, though, it means an
iilcrease in the amount of red
'lood cells in your ciriulation.
"! People living at high
lltitude have one form of
jlolycythemia caused by the
Jlnv oxygen pressure. The
~y simply forms more red
~Us to comp~nsate for less
exygen in the lungs. The
mount of increase in red
Sells is related to the level
. 1f altitude. People living at
)4,000 feet have quite an
.Jpcrease.
' You can get a polycythemia
~se from· lung disease.
• fbe:. chronic lung disease
a low oxyfen level in
the lungs, and the body
•11 lllds much. like it does to

, •uaes

altitude . This is the basis for
saying a person with lung
disease is already living at
high altitude.
Both high altitude and lung
disease cause "secondary
polycythemia ." I suspect you
have polycythemia vera
which
is
"primary
polycythemia . " No one
knows what causes this. It is
often associated with an
increase in white blood cells,
too. About two-thirds of the
cases have a n e nlarged
spleen.
It has been demonstrated
that you can cause this in
mice by Infecting them with a
particular virus. The mice
develop the picture of in·
cr:eased amoWits of red cells
a nd an enlarged spleen .
Showing that you can df&gt; this,
though, does not prove that a
virus .causes, polycythemia
vera in humans. Just as an
anemia can be caused from
many different things (iron
deficiency, bleeding, vitamin
deficiencies to mention a
few), it i• reasonable that

!!·

year At the end of the period
it must be determined
whether she is competent to
stand trial. If not competent,
she could be committed to a
mental facility.
Hewitt said that one of her
marn worries was over her
son, Frederickt a student m a

program for gifted children
in the city's public school
system. He was placed in a
nondelinquent cot tage at
Youth Gu1dance Center.
She was a paid informer for
the FBI. She worked as a
business manager for the
People in Need program
dev ised by Randolph A.
Hearst, in an attempt to
obtain the release of h1s
daughter , Patricia , kidnaped
by the Symbionese Liberation
Army in February 1974.
Friends said t hat while
working in PIN she became
r adica li zed
membe r s of

derground" whom she tned
to befnend did not trust her
beca use of her

too .
The Secret Service is undergoing reviews by outside
eva luator s, Treasury
Secretary William Simon
said Tuesday. But that's not
new, he said , only " intensified."
One of the most common
reactions on Capitol Hill is
that the President ought to
"cool" his public forays
11
until we can see whether
this madness is temporary,"
as Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa.,
put it.
Some congressmen are

woman was a daughter of
Olaf Kahn, who died in 1964.
The newspaper said Mrs.
Olaf Kahn lives in Cincinnati,
but attempts to reach her by
telephone were to no avail.
A marriage clerk, Ann Eh·
man, was confident that Sara
Jane Moore and Sara Jane
Kahn are one and the same,
the Daily Mail said.
According to the clerk, she
and Sara Jane's sister, Ruth
Ann, attended scbool together
in the mid-1940s.
"Wlien I saw that picture in
the paper this morning, I said
that looks like Sara Jane
Kahn," Mrs. Ehman told the

September 25, 1775:
Elhan Allen and John Brown- both important in the May
10 caplure of Ticonderoga - are sent ahead of General
Richard Montgomery's advancing expeditionary force
1nto Canada . Their assignment is to enlist Canadian voluntee rs ror rh e America n army. So successful are they that
the two resolve to use their recrUJts i n an attack on

Monlreal. With a total force of fewer than 300, Allen is to
adva nce from below the town, and Brown from above. At

mghl , Allen succeeds 1n ferrying hisllO men across the St.
Lawrence by canoe , Brown fails . Unable_ to withdraw
before dawn, Allen attacks without Brown. Encountering
235 troops commanded by Sir Guy Charleton, Allen and
aboul 40 of hi s men are captured ; All en remains a prisoner
unti l May, 1778. The adventure severely damages
Amenc an prestige with the Canadtan s and the Indtans.

- By Ros&lt;; Mac kenz ie &amp;: Jeff

MacNe ll y/ CI I 97~.

experience with the FBI.
Some said the attempted
attack on Ford was her
ul timate goa l to ach1eve
acceptan ce by radicals .

\

Featur~

Syn&lt;hcate

advising Ford to hang back
from th e crowds, curb his
travel, and avoid being "a
clay pigeon, " as Texas Sen.
U oyd Bentsen said.
'
Others have
offered
another approach, including
the encouragement of Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy, D·
Mass., who credited Ford for
"a courageous stand in
saying that he will not
become a hostage to threats
from a few un balanced
people. "

Kennedy, and others at the
Capitol, say the message in
the two recent threats against
the President's life is !bat the
United states "can no longer
ignore the shocking absence
of responsible gun control. "
Rep. Bill Goodling, R-Pa .,
quickly offered a bill to im·
pose the death penalty for
anyone convicted o! an attempt to kill the President .
The Secret Service persua ded Ford to don a
bulletproof vest after the
Sacramento gun threat Sept.
5 but he was not wearing it
Monday .

paper . "! am positive it 's
her. "
The paper also quoted Pat
Horn , chairman of the 25year Stonewall reunion three
years ago, as saying the
reunion committee received
a note from Sara Kahn that
read :
" Dear Patty,
" H we can't attend, will
there be some way we can get
a roster of our classmates'
current addresses' Perhaps
by making a donation of $5
toward the reunion, we could
receive the program and
roster and a short write-up
about the festiviti- It would

Mrs. Dora Carpenter
of Rutland, 89, dies
RUTLAND - Mrs. Dora
Estella Carpenter, 89, Salem
St., Rutland, died Tuesday
afternoon
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Carpenter was born
Dec. 31 , 1885 at Dyesville, the
daughter of the late William
and Jane Molden Nelson . She
was the widow of Elza Carpenter who died in 1944.
Surviving are three sons,
Henry , of Middleport;
Lawrence, of Dyesville, and
Perry, of Long Bottom; four
daughters, Mrs. G. R. (Anna)
Cline, Carpenter ; Mrs. R. A.
(Evelyn ) Rife, Mrs. Nick
(Margie ) Grueser, and Miss
Kathleen Carpenter, all of
Rutland ; 18 grandchildren, 21
great-grandchildren, and two

great~eat

• grandchildren,
and two sisters , Mrs .
Elizabeth Anderson and Mrs.
Belle Trainer, both of
Mechanicsburg. Preceding
her In death besides her
parents and her husband,
were a son, Edgar; a
daughter, Carrie Belle; a
brother, three sisters and a
granddaughter.
Mrs. Carpenter was af.
filiated with the Dyesville
Commtinity Church.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rutland Chapel of the Walker
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Amos Tillis officiating.
Burial will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time
after 2 p.m. Thursday.

The real Sarah Jane Moore
is laughing it all off at work
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(UP! ) - Sara Jane Moore is
doing her best to laugh it off.
But it's not easy to keep
smili ng at friends who
mistake her for the woman
accused of attempting to kill
Preside nt Ford in San
Francisco Monday . .

really be marvelous to hear
about everyone. Do let me
know.
"Sincerely,
"Sara Jane Kahn."
According to Mrs. Horn,
the paper said, Sara Kahn
listed her return address in
care of Marie L. Davis, 284
South Madison St., Apt. 203,
Pasadena, Calif.
The newspaper quoted Mrs.
Marie Davis as saying she
shared an apartment with
Sara Kahn three years.
"I was the only one in the
world who cared about her,"
she was quoted as saying.
"She was a brilliant girl.
She had a number of good
jobs."
The paper quoted Mrs.
Davis as saying Sara KBhn
was troubled by a hasty
marriage th at ended in
there may be other causes for con tributed to George divorce.
polycythemia in man . No one Washington's death.
'Confusion abounded in
has yet proved that any such
Sometimes bl ee din g Charleston with the discovery
case in man has been caused treatments have to be here of a Sara Jane Mooreby a virus.
stopped, because the person thesamenameusedwhenthe
A lot of people with may get too low on iron and would-be assassin was ap·
polycythemia vera have no have an iron deficiency. In prehended.
'
symptoms at all. Others have these cases it may be
But the Moore woman, who
symptoms including being necessary to give various attended school with Sara
tired and short of breath as chemicals that depress the Kahn, is an employe of the
you do. The systolic blood bone
marrow 's
over state Department of Employ- ·
pressure may he elevated. production of red cells. There ment Security.
The face may be ruddy a r e a number of these
Midland Trail Elementary
School Principal Reba K.
because of the dilated medicines available.
capillaries. There may be
Finally in older patients, it Epliri, also a 1947 graduate of
told
the
from 7 to 10 million red cells is sometimes a good choice to Stonewall ,
in a milliliter when normally use radioactive phosphorus. newspaper she recalled both
there should be only about 5 This substance slows down women.
sara Jane Kahn was "a
million.
the bone marrow conOne of the mainstays of side•a bly and often relieves sensitive person," Mrs. Eplin
treatment of this disorder is the problem for a relatively said.
" I only had a speaking
simply to draw off some of long period of time.
the blood. That usually lets
For information on the acquaintance with her, but 1
the pressure go down if it is anemias write to me in care remember she was in the
elevated. This is about the of this newspaper, P . 0 . Box Thespians and turned out to
only condition in medicine
1551, Radio City Station, New be the star of the play that :
today where it ill still believed York, NY 10019. Send 50 · year," she said.
Mrs. Eplin added that Sara
to be helpful to bleed a per- cents, a long, stamped, selfKahn's
moth er had the
son. Bleeding was wrongly addfessed envelope, and1 ask
thought to be good treatment for The Health Utter number ' maiden name of Moore, ·and
for many illnesses 200 years
4·3, Underst11 nding the that Sara played violin in
school.
ago and is believed to have
Anemias.
'

It'seven tougher since Miss
Moore attended Charleston's
Stonewall Jackson High
Scbool in 1947 with Sara Jane
Moore, identified as the
would-be assassin . The
woman under arrest went to
school Wider the name of
Sara Jane Kahn, her fonner
classmates said .
"My friends are teasing me
about it," said Miss Mo01e,
an employe of the West
Virginia Department of
Employment Security .,
"There is a sirong simil~rity
in names. I figured the best
way to overcome this is to
just be good-natured about it.
"People know it isn't me
and they just want to tease. I
think it will all die down
quicker if I laugh it off."

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Democratic legislative
leaders are apparently on
their way to the Ohio
Supreme Court seeking
validation of six partisan bills
they rushed through the
General Assembly in one
week last January before
Republican Gov .-elect James
A. Rhodes took office.
Senate President Pro Ternpore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
said he plans to proceed
"immediately"
to the
Supreme Court to appeal the
decision handed · down
Tuesday by a three-judge
panel in Franklin County
Court of Appeals.
The panel· upheld a lower
court ru!ini! of last June
which declared the six bills
invalid on grounds they were
never presented to outgoing
Republican Lt. Gov. John w.
B!'own for certification.
The bills, Slgned by Democratic Gov. John' J. Gilligan
before he left office last Jan.
13 but never flied as laws by
Republican Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown, included
a
Democratic-oriented
congressional redistriCting

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p
m
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Sport Parade I

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it:• ••

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forSatur~y
Football action this Friday
in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference features
two league games and two
non-league battles.
In league action, unbeaten
Kyger , Creek visits Southwestern and North Gallia
goes to Symmes Valley. Nonleague encounters find
Eastern hosting Federal
Hocking
and Wahama
playing at Southern. Hannan
Trace will take on Ironton's
reserves in a 7:30 contest
Saturday. The Wildcats were
originally scheduled to play
Green Friday, but that school
has dropped football for the
1975 campaign.
Coach Jim-- Sprague's
Kyger Creek Bobcats will go
after their fourth victory in a
row against Coach Bob
Ashley's winless Highlan·
ders.
Tbe Bobcats have averaged
38.3 points in their three
games while pennltting just
4.7 points per outing.
Leading rusher and
scorer for the 'Cats has been
senior
tailback
Chris
Preston. The All-SVAC back
has scored 30 poinis in three
games and has rushed for
approximately 350 yards.
The Highlanders must also
contend with the running of
sophomore Marcus Geiger,
junior fullback Ralph Baylor,
junior tailback Todd Taylor
and the passing and placekicking of senior quarterback
Tim Lucas. Lucas has scored
35 points on three touchdowns, 14 extra points and a
field goal.
Southwestern 0-3 lost 18-0
last Friday at North Gallia.
The
Highlanders
are
averaging 6.6 points per
game while their defense has
permitted 20 points per
outing. Previous losses were
to Southeastern of Ross
County and Hannan, W. Va.
Leading the Highlander
attack are Rick Crouse,
senior tailback; Chris Lewis,
junior fullback and junior
quarterback Donnie Bush.
Coach John Blake's North
Gallia Pirates will seek their
third victory in four starts
against Coach Greg Bailie's
improving Symmes Valley
Vikings. Symmes Valley
tasted victory for the first
time in two years last week
14-7 over Conotton Valley.
North Gallia owns victories
over Waterford and Southwestern. The Pirates only
loss was 1~ to Kyger Creek.
The Vikings were beaten
~by Chesapeake and 8-0 by
Eastern. While the offense
has not generated very much
explosive punch, the Viking
defense has been more than
adequate.
North Gallia's offense is
averaging 20.6 points per
game while its defense has
c

plan, proposals to save more
than 100 Democratic jobs,
and
liberalized
voter
registration and unemployment compensation
!X'ovisions.
Tuesday~s appellate court
ruling was contained in a
unanimous 12-page opinion
written by Judge John W.
McConnac and concurred in
by Judges Robert E. Holmes
and Archer E . Reilly. All
three are Republicans.
The appeal had been made
by attorneys for Democratic
legislative leaders froJ.Il the
permanent injunction issued
against the legislation last
June 6 by Judge Frederick T.
Williams, also a Republican,
in Franklin County Conunon
Pleas Cow-t.
Ocasek, after learning of
the
appellate
opinion,
displayed little concern that
the Supreme Court also is
dominated 5 to 2 by
Republicans .
"We will now move on to
' the Supreme Couri, where we
will get final resolution o~ the
· question," he said, a~ the
appeal would be based on the
complaint that the l~r
court ruling gives the
lieutenant governor ·veto

''

l*;~

BY MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

':@
MAN !LA (UP!) - Muhamnuid Ali never touches the stuff.
He's a teetotaler wbose liquid consumption is confined mostly
to water, milk and an occasional soft drink but here he is in an
alien country far ~way from home compleiely and undeniably
intoxicated.
Some people get drunk on liquor. With Ali, all it takes is the
sound of his own voice.
.
Right now he's intoxicated with the idea that at 33 he is in the
finest physical shape of his life and that he is some type of
supreme being. He is absolutely convinced poor bumbling Joe
Frazier has no chance against him at all on the mornin g of Oct.
1 here .
When he finished his workout today, a session almost enlirely of going one-&lt;Jn-&lt;Jne with the heavy bag and delivering
what amounted to a morning sermon to the 350 or so appreciative Filipino patrons, Ali wrapped a white terry cloth
bathrobe around him and kept it on after returning to his
dressing room .
He sat in a heavily upholstered chair which resembled some
kind of throne and slouching down in it, with his hands clasped
across his belly, he looked like a Middle East oil sheik fresh
from a couple of fast sets of tennis.
Before coming into the room, he had told all those outside
what the outcome of the ftght would be.
"!will knock ·o ut Joe Frazuh! " he had proclaimed, as if
suddenly having a vision . "I will not predict the round, but he
will fall."
Now, in his dressing quarters, he talked about how he was
going back to working with the heavy bag after more than
three years when he couldn't handle it because of arthritis in
his hands. Ali is so 1ascinated with the big bag, he bought a
first class ticket for it on the jet which brought him here.
" My hag rode better than you fellas," he neetDed the writers
around him.
Cooling off now, the champ kept talking about the big bag,
how much stronger he has become working with it, and how
Frazier rarely uses it because it requires a great deal of
strength and the challenger doesn't have really have that

Thus far, the Viking offense
has averaged 4.6 points per
game while their defense has
surrendered 14 points per
outing.
AI Eastern, the E38les of
Coach Spike Berkheimer will
seek their third win of the
season against Federal
Hocking's Lancers.
A stingy stubborn defense
held all but one AlelUlllder
Spartan in check last week.
Roger Gilders, speedy half.
back, scored both touch·
downs for Alexander's 1~
victory.
The Lancers are 0-2 after
last Friday's 27-12 loss to
Miller. Again, the Eagle
defense was the big story last
week as Dave Mills had 12
tackles and Joe Kuhn was
credited with nine solo
tackles. On offense, Eastern
got inside the Spartans' 20
yard line three !lines but
failed to score.
Wahama and Southern go
into Friday's game after
winning the past weekend.
Wahama took his first victory
of the year from Duval.
Lea'ding Coach Marcus
Rice's White Falcons were
Tim Sayre and Mike Goldsberry . Sayre threw two
scoring passes to Goldsberry
in the I~ victory.
Southern led by fullback
Greg Dunning defeated
Waterford, 28-14 in a nonleague game. Dunning has
scored 37 points in three
games. The Tornados are 2-1
after an opening loss to
Fairland.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W L P OP
Team
Kyger Creek
3 0 115 14
North Gall Ia
2 1 62 11/(}.
Eas!ern
2 1 38 '"13 ·
Southern
2 1 65 53
Symmes Valley 1 2 14 &lt;13
Southwestern
0 3 20 60
Hannan Trace 0 3 14 125
Team SYfoC O~L
P OP
Kyger Creek
2 0 72 14
Eas!ern
2 0 38 0
Southern
1 0 37 6
North Gallla
1 1 24 14
Symmes Valley 0 1 o 8
Southwes!ern
0 1 0 18
Hannan Trace 0 3 14 125
Totals
6 6 185 115

.

American League Roundup
By BILL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
A lot of not-&amp;Hunny things
are happening to the Oakland
A's on their way to a fifth
straighl American League
West pennant.
Like :
.. .losing four of their last
five games ...
...drawing Bert Blyleven in
a twi-light game ...
... having a Kansas City
Royals' rookie pitcher hurl
six innmgs of no-hit ball for
his first major league victory

Hawkeyes prepare
for Penn State

'

·-

Big Ten Football Roundup ..
CHICAGO (UP!) - At least
three Big Ten teams face
their betters this Saturday
and workouts this week are
directed at making a good
show of it, and perhaps
staging an upset or. two.
Iowa coach Bob Commings
said Tuesday his Ha wkeyes
will have to play a "super
game" if they are to beat
12th-ranked Penn State .
"They will be awfully tough
to defend against," he said.
" We'll have to play a super
game to beat them-but this
team is certainly capable of
!hat super game."
The Hawkeyes practiced
for two hours Tuesday, trying
to solve the offensive
problems that plagued them
in their first two games.
Purdue coach Alex Agase
gave his team their game
plan to use against third·
ranked Southern California at
the Los Angeles Coliseum
Saturday .
He said despite the plaudits
the Trojans' explosive of·
fense .is getting, he considers
the USC defense equal in

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonite thru Thurs.
Sept. 22 -25

NOT OPEN
Fn . thru Tues.
Sept. 26-30
THE GREAT

WALDO PEPPER

power.
"Southern California has
always had top athletes with
good speed and quickness,"
he said . "Our players will be
conscious of that overall
team speed, especially on the
defensive unit."
Northwestern, fresh from a
10-3 victory over Northern
Dllnois and an initial 31-25
win over Purdue, faces a
tougher test Saturday against
Notre Dame at South Bend,
as coach John Pont noted.
"Notre Dame did an excellent job against Purdue,"
he said. "They are substantially stronger with the
return of several players
now, and they have a suherb
defense."
In other Big Ten practices
Tuesday , coach Lee Corso
stressed pass defense as
Indiana practiced for its
Saturday game against
Utah.
"We're thinking in terms of
co ntaining rather than
stopping Utah 's offense ,"
Corso said.
Injured players back for
practice Tuesday included
linebackers Craig Brinkman
and Don Thomas and
defensive end Carl Smith.
Minnesota Gophers went
through a lengthy drill stressing the rushing game, offensively and defensively . They
ended with a brief goal line
scrimmage in which junior
fullback Jim Perkins banged
over for two scores and
looked very strong.

ChiCilQO
12 84 .462 21112
Ca lifornia
72 86 .456 22 117
Tu esday's Results
Mlnnesola 4 Oakland 3, twilight
Cleve land 4 Milwaukee 3, ntghl
Kansas City 4 Texas o. n1 ght
Chicago 5 Calif ornia 4, nigh!
Detroit at Bal tim ore. ppd , ra1n
Boston at New York , ppd , rain
Wednesday ' s Games
(All times E OT)
Detroit (Coleman 10· 17 &amp; Bare
8· 12 ) at Baltimore (Alexander
8·8 &amp; Palmer 22· 111. 2. 5 .30

COLUMBUS (UP! )
Bowling Green quarterback
Mark Miller and Kent State
defensive tackle Walt Vrabel
were named today as the
Mid-American
Conference
p .m
Boston (Cleveland 12·9 &amp; Tiant players of the week. Both
17 14) at New York ( H unter 22·
were unanimous selections.
14 &amp; May 14. 11 ). 2, s · JO p m
M1nnesota &lt;Hughes 16.13) at
Miller completed 16 of 23
Kansa s C•tv { Littell 1.1), 8:30
passes
for 173 to lead BG to a
pm
Ch icago (Jefferson 5 10) at come-from-behind 16-14 win
Oakland { Blue 20 · 11 L 11 p m
Milwaukee (Colborn 10.13) at over· Southern Mississippi.
Vrabel was credited with 17
Cleveland (Peterson 14·7L 7 30
p .m .
tackles as Kent State downed
Virginia Tech.
National League S1andings
By United Press tn1erniltlonat
Special mention was given
eas1
to
Bowling Green punter
W.. L. Pet. G.B.
K· Pittsburgh
91 66 580
Greg Kampe wbo averaged
Philadelphia
83 74 529 B
57.5 yards per kick In
New York
80 77 .510 11
Sf. Louis
80 78 506 11 117 Saturday's game as he i set
Chicago
73 85 462 181/2
Montreal
72 86 456 191J2 school and league records.
~ Wes1
The sophomore underwent
W. L.. Pet. G. B.
x .Cinclnnati 104 54 .658
Los Angeles
85 73 .53e 19
San Francisco 77 79 .494 26
San Diego
70 e7 .446 331f2
Atl.,nta
66 91 .420 371/2
Houst on
63 94 .401 40 1.2112
X·CIInched div isi on ti tle
Tuesday's Results
New York a Chicago 6
Mon trea l 7 St. Lou is 0. night
f?ittsburgh 3 Philadelph ia 1,
night
Cincinnati 5 Hctuston 3, night
Sa n Diego 6 • Los Angeles 4,
Might
Sa n Francisco at Atlanta, n 1ght.
postponed , ra•n
Wednesday'5 Games
I All Times E OT)
New York {Seaver 21 ·9) at
Chicago { Moore 0·0), 2 30 pm
S t LOUIS ( Rasmussen 5. 4) at
Mon treal &lt;Carrithers 4 3). 8: 05

pm .

Philadelphia (C hri stenson 10 5)
at Pittsburg h (Demery 7·31.
7 : 35pm .
Cincinnat i
(K ir-by
9·61
at
Houston (Dierker 14 15) , 8:35

COGGIN WINS
CLEARLAKE, Calif. (UP! )
-Jerry Coggin, of Scottsdale, Ariz., won the U.S.
men 's open water ski title
during the weekend, speeding
over the 2.5 mile course on
Clear Lake at speeds up to 100
miles an bour.
Steven
Van
Meter,
Torrance, Calif ., finished
second, and John BelvaU of
South San Francisco was
third.

••

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CARTRIDGE

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A Fall Special

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Regular 19.95 ·

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DAP '33' GLAZING
Reqular 2.22

WARP' S " EASY· ON "

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OldSmobile 1976.

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CUT!Jt.SS SU I' REM[ HROUG HAM The 1\rsi mid ·Sized c ar lohive ll1l rntenor
msptred try thr ramol" liM R r:g~rn:y The ga.~ milc&lt;~ge is pftUY •nsptnng too

WHITEWALL TUBELESS

San Francisco (Caldwell 7 12
and· Barr l J . tJ) at Atlanta
(LaCorte o.J and Morton 17 16) ,
2, 6 .05 p .m
Los Angeles 1Rau 14 9) at
San D 1ego (Folkers 6 10), 10 :00

Plus F.E.T. From

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and Old casing
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MEIGS
TIRE CENTER-

CAMDEN PARK
"

and
emergency
a ppendectomy three weeks ago,
and Saturday recorded kicks
of 49, 47, 77 and 57 yards.

rained out.
Padres 6, Dodgers 4
Randy Jones became the
first 2fl1lame winner in San
Diego's seven-year history.
a llowmg eight hits and
striking out eight going the
distance . Tito Fuentes had
four hits for the Padres, including a double that led off
the seventh inning an d led to
the Padres' tiebreaking run.
Pirates 3, Phillies I
Rich Hebner 's two-run
sixth inning s in gle gave
Pittsburgh a 2-1 lead and he
scor ed the third run on a
single by Duffy Dyer . Bob
Moose pitched a threehitter
to even his record at 2-2.
Steve Carlton, the loser, in
now 14-14.
Expos 7, Cardinals 0
Pete Mackanin drove in
three runs and Mike
Jorgensen hit a two-run
homer for Montreal as Steve
Rogers pitched a sevenhitter
for his lith win . John Denny
lost for St. Louis.
Mets 8, Cubs 6
Rookie John Stearns
doubled home the tying run in
the eighth inning and scored
the winning run on a single by
Felix Millan as reliever Bob
Apodaca won his third game
for New York , which overcame an early 6-0 Chicago
lead. Dave Rosello homered
for the Cubs.

~

ONE-SIZE
TIRE SALE

"F AMll..Y OUTING"
I.A.M. &amp; A.W.

• " "' r

in 1907. The league mark of
116 victories was set by the
1906 Cubs.
" We're trying to win and
get ready for the playoffs at
the same time," says
Manager Sparky Anderson .
" It's a little different than
going all out to win but we 're
still trying to win.' '
Pete Rose drove in two runs
with a single and Ken Griffey
had three hits and scored two
nms in Tuesday night 's triumph. Fred Norman went
eight innings for his 12th
victory against four losses
while Mike Cosgrove lost.
San Diego downed Los
Angeles 6-4, Pittsburgh beat
Philadelphia 3-1, Montreal
blanked St. Louis 7~ and New
York topped Chicago 8-.fj in
other NL games . San
Francisco at Atlanta was

. .,;

pm .

7
' I

to second place in the
MISSION, "Kan. (UP!) Grambling and Wltlenberg Division: In ratings.
colleges were unanimous No .
1 picks Tuesday In the
NCAA's weekly ratings of the
Association's Division D and
Division li1 foo\ball learns.
Teams are selected by the
NCAA's two divisional lourman football committees,
with the help of 28 advisory
personnel.
haven t 1ncrea sed tn
at all But oon 1 wat t
DIViSIOn II Grambling is J.&lt;i
reduces your under·
following a 20-6 victory over
•nsu red
to ashes to lind
out See me aM t 11 e~tpta,n
the Umvers1ty of Hawaii,
ho w a State Farm Homeo wn·
while Wittenberg IS 2-0 after a
ers Polle y w1th In flat ion Cov·
eragc can keep your home
14-8 upset of Delaware last
•nsured l or a!It! s worth
week .
STEVE S NOWDEN
Boise State 12-&lt;J) received
1258 Powell Sf , M iddl epor t
56 points to jump from fourth
Phone 9t2 ·71SS
place to secondflin the
STATE fARM
Division II poll.
Fue and Ca!.ul!llty Corooa•o&gt;l
Ithaca ( 2-0 ) also had 56
H O ~"Iti Q fl oce
Btoomto lQIOn llllnOI I
points, but slipped from hrst

GC)()DYEAR

SATURD4 Y-SEPTEMBER 27th
UNTIL 5 PM

•

by watching his club reach
the .:;oo mark for only the
seco nd time since May 10.
George Hendrick belted a
homer leading off the nmth
inning to win the game while
Boog Powell earlier slammed
a three-run shot for the Tribe .
White Sox 5, Angels 4
Ken Henderson llelted a
solo homer with &lt;&gt;ne lfut in the
seventh mning to snap a 4-4
tie and give Chicago the win
after blowing a 4-0 lead It
was Henderson's ninth homer
and dropped the Angels back
mto the AL West cellar. Dan
Osborn I ~) gained credit for
the win in relief.

Miller, Vrabel honored by MAC

PARK RESERfED

I ,

light," said Blyleven, who
struck out seven and walked
jusi one . " A couple of guys
came back saying it was
tough picking up the rotation
of the ball . I said to myself
then that I should try to put as
much rotation on it as
possible ."
Elsewhere in tbe only other
American League games
played Tuesday, Cleveland
edged Milwaukee 4-3 and
Chicago put away California
:&gt;-4. Boston at New York and
Detroit at Baltimore were
rained out.
Indians 4, Brewers 3
Frank Robinson celebrated
his signing on as manager for
another year with Cleveland

.

Wittenberg is ranked No. 1

Reds eye 1953
D 0 d.Ue r win mark
e.

BA,SEBALL

r

power over bills passed by
the legislature.
Democrats had sought last
January to hurriedly enact
the bills during the first week
of the legislative session
before Gilligan left office
Jan. 13 and Rhodes took over
with veto power.
Wllllarns held the bills were
unconstitutionally enacted
because they did not contain
the authenticating signature
of Lt. Gov. Brown, the
presiding officer of the
Senate who was leaving office
with Gilligan.
·
The Democratic legislative
.leaders, fearing Brown would
hold the bills Wltll Rhodes
took over, sent the measurea
to Gilligan for signature Jan.
11 without Brown's certification of procedures.
The three-judge panel
agreed with Wllllams that the
blils .were not "validly
enacted" · because they
lacked Brown's· signature.
· Legal counsel for the ·
Dem9cr a tic leaders had
argued that ' it was "directory" and not "mandatory"
for Brown to eertlfy that
legislative· procedures had
beeJi followed before bUls
tU.nilnued on'Page 8)

A's still waiting
-for 5th est title

with one out in the eighth .
That was enough for
Manager Whitey Herzog who
removed McOure and sent in
two more relievers to
preserve the ~Royals' win. " My first major league
victory m!liiiiS more to me
than sti innings of no-bit
pitching," said McOure. " I
mean I'm thrilled about
nobody getting a hit but it's
the first victory that sets the
adrenalln flowing ."
According to Blyleven, wbo
scattered nine hits in belping
the TwinS frustrate the A's' 43, pitching in the twi-light can
All or part of th'!5e things compensate for throwing
happened Tuesday night and - hard.
as a result, the A's are not yet
"I like pitching in the twidivision champions, their
magic number still being one .
While the A's failed to do
their bit for the "one" by
losing under the Oakland twi·
light to Blyleven, the Minnesota Twins' hard-throwing
curve specialist, a young man
named Bob McOIU'e was
keeping the second place
Kansas City Royals alive by
winning his first major
league game.
McOure, a 22-year old
southpaw, relieved Royals' National League lloundup
By FRED DOWN
starter Doug Bird after 1 1-3
U-PI Sports Writer
much. 1
innings and continued to hold
The Cincinnati Reds, with
Ali said he COI!Id sense Frazier's general frustration trying the Texas Rangers hiUess
one
National League record
to get the title back.
Wltil Roy Smalley singled
to their credit, can round out
" It's a funny feeling once you've had it and you lose it," he
the season with some of the
said. " !know because I felt the same way Frazier feels now.
gaudiest numbers in league
When you 're the champ, you come into town or go on those TV
history .
shows and everybody says, 'wow, look how big and strong he is
They're trying to stay in
... he's a giant!' But after you lose the title, you're nobody, and
shape
for the playoffs and
they don 't say that anymore. What you say to yourself then is
possibly the World Series as
'if I ever get a nother shot things are gonna be different . I ain 't
they
play out their games, of
gonna fool around anymore.' Yeah, I was just playing. I broke
course,
liut with 104 victories
all the laws. No more, though. I'm in bed every night nine
American League Standings
they already have won more
o'clock. You don't~ me in the coffee shop. You don't see me
By United Press lnterna1ional
games
than any other team in
East
down in the lobby shakin' hands with everybody."
W. L. . Pet. G 8
more than 20 years.
"Anything can happen when two men get into the same ring,
93 63 596
Boston
The Reds , who beat the
88
66
.57
1
4
Baltimore
can't it ?" a newsman said to Ali.
80 76 51 3 13
New York
Houston Astros 5-3 Tuesday
"Yeah," he conceded.
77 77 .500 15
Cleveland
night, need one more win to
64
94
405
30
Milwaukee
"That means Frazier could beat you .''
51 98 .368 3S 1h
Detroit
match the total of the 1953
"Yeah," Ali agreed quietly. "He could if he broke my jaw
West
W. L. Pet. G.B . Brooklyn Dodgers and three
like (Ken) Norton did. But that's all you wanna hear me say,
Oa kl and
94 63 59'9
more would ljlake them the
that he could heat me. I never have thoughts like that. "
Ka nsas City
89 68 .567 5
biggest winners since the
Texas
77 82 484 18
Minnesota
74 80 481 18117 Chicago Cubs won 107 ~ames

permitted 7.3 points per
outing.
The Pirates offense is led
by jWiior- Sfgnal ciiller Mark .
Theiss who mixes his nmrilnc
game with a strong armed
passing attack.
Chief receivers are Don
Spencer, 6-3 senior end; Fred
Logan, 6-1 junior tailback and
Brett Tackett, 6-0 junior end.
The running game is handled
by Logan and speedy
sophomore Mike Casey.
Symmes Valley, while
preparing
for
Its
homecoming match with
North Gallla, has John Berry,
a senior, calling the signals.
Other runners are Jim
Branham and Phil Hllgen·
berg.

'
I'

~&lt;&gt;.&amp;mi&lt;-:'"'"''~"""-*-*':::Wi!i?.-=-&lt;'"""'Z'*'§~'
W..i7~~;=iftit;~,.";~%&lt;·.·.·.·W..:!..~~~~02.?.
~

Wildcats pick
up Ironton 'B'

Democrats will take issue
of 6 bills to high court .

'

'

United

previous

Protection now urgent
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Congress and the administration are reviewing
with a growing sense of
urgency the question of how
to protect a President.
In the aftermath of two
apparent attempts on his life,
President Ford still insists he
does not want to be a
"prisoner in the Oval Office ."
Given a President who likes
to greet the public with his
own outstretched hand, the
difficulty of protecting him
intensifies. But the ideas that
have surfaced are plentiful ,

A Chronicle of America

Howev e r,
the "un-

Too many red blood cells
Jly Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
: DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
that has been diagnosed as
'olycythemia. I\ leaves me
nry tired and s hort of
'reath . Could you explain this
a;sorder and comment on its

We Hold These Truths ...

'

3- The Da.il~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

POMIROY

992-2101

OHIO

I .

•.

'

ON DISPLAY
TOMORROW,
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·
We Invite You ...
Coffee, Donuts and
Cookies Will Be Served

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
. Caddlac -Oidsmobile

992 -5342

GMAC Financtng Available

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Til6- Til 5 p.m . Sat.
" You'l l i
'

tKe
Our OUalitY Way of Doing Bus i ness"
' ,,

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See one of these co urteous salesmen:
Pete Burr is
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keeba ugh
·

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�.
'

'

.I

. I

~ - The uauy :sentmet.• MidaJeport-1-'~meroy., v ., ~eom,saay .. ~~~t.z 4 , 197~
4 - The Daily sentinel, MidclleP?rt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd&lt;ly, Sc pt.l4, 19"1:1

' .

·o

•

8

..

.

z

-

'·

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Hoople p_icks · Sooners
•
.
Mallftll
•-•.
1:~
Hoop1e s

~a

.... z

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.....
I

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A.
A.

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Ill

~

By Major Amos B. Hoople
peerless Prophet
Egad, friends, we h&lt;ove
s · ome
st . erling
prognostications for you this
week in a schedule dominated
by top intersectional clashes.
)he festivities get off to a
big start Friday night as
Oklahoma brings its spectacular offensive show to the
Orange Bowl aga inst home
team Miami. Rolling in
midseason form , the Sooners
will trample Miami 35-14
under the mazdas - heh-heh!
Saturday is loaded with
prime engagements starting
with UCLA 's invasion of
Colorado to meet the Air
Force Falcons. The Bruins
aerial attack triggered by
John Sciarra will shoot down
lhe Falcons, 28-12. The Norlh
Carolina Tar He els have the
unenviable task of hosting the
mighty Ohio State Buckeyes.
The Hoople System gives the
nod to Archie Griffin and
Company by a 33-14 count.
An excellent game is in the
offing at Fauror Field in
Columbia where Missouri of
the Big Eight, . hosts
Wisconsin , of the Big Ten.
It'll be Missouri 's day as they
prevail 35-18. Two other Big
Ten clubs are in for ' long
journeys
as
Purdue's
Boilermakers visit Los
Angeles to meet Southern
California, and Illinois
travels to College Station to
meet the Texas A&amp;M Aggies.
We see another big day for
John . !'!fcKay's Trojans as
they romp over Purdue , 42-21,
and we look for the Dlini to
surpris: the Aggies, 26-13.
Two mtereslmg conference
games find Texas meeting
Texas Tech 10 the Southwestern loop, and Alabama
vs . Vanderbilt in th e
Southeastern . Darrell
Royal 's Texas legions, still
smarting from the 26-3
thrashing handed them by the
Tech lad!t -last year, will
smash the Red Raiders , 32-14.
The Crimson Tide Will launch
t~eir drive for another league
htle wtth a 37-10 conquest of
the Vanderbilt Commodores .
In one of the great all-time
intrastate rivalries , Princ~ton's Tigers an(! Rutgers
Will get together for the 66th
time on lhe Tiger 's field . In
an old-fashioned do-or-die
fray, the Orange and Black
will edge Rutger' s Scarlet

.

Harvard 21, Holy Cross 14
Houston 33, SMU 18
Indiana 27, Utah 6
1
Penn &amp;tate 37, Iowa 18 '
Kansas 34, Oregon St. 15
Kentucky 24, Maryland 20
pennsylvania 28, Le~lgh 7
Rice 17, LSU 14 .
Cincinnati 22, Louisville 20 •
Dartmouth 36, Ma$s. 17
Memphis St. 33, Ark. St. 7
Miami (0) 24, B&lt;oll State 21
Mich. ·St. 34, N. C. State 24
Michigan 21, Baylor 13
Minnesota 28, Oregon 6
Florida 35, Miss. Stale .7
Mississippi 12, So. Miss. 7
Missouri 25, Wisconsin 18
Nebraska 42, TCU 7
New Mexico 15, Cvl. St. 13
Notre Dame 25, Northwestern 20
Ohio State 38, No. Carolina 14
Kent State 22, Ohio U. 10
Okla' St. 41 , No. Tex. St. IJ
Pitt. 47, Wm. &amp; Mary 12
Knights , 1f&gt;-13 - har Princeton 15, Rutgers 13
Georgia
38, So. Carolina 7
umph!
Now go on with my So. CalH. 42, Purdue 21
forecase .
Stanford 30, San Jose St. 20
Auburn 18, Tennessee 14
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26
Long Beach St. 21, Pacific 17 Dllnols 26, Texas A&amp;M 13
Oklahoma 35,· Miami (Fla) 14 Texas 32, Texas Tech 14
SATIJRDAY, SEPT. 27
Central Mich. 25, Toledo 16
Arizona St. 29, Brigham Tnlane 31, Syracuse 28
Young 18
San Diego St. 22. Utah State
Arkansas 17, Tulsa 8
13
Army 36, Villanova 7
Alabama 37, Vanderbilt 10
Cplorado 35, Wichita St. 6
Va. Tech 34, Richmond 1
Cornell 27, Colgate 20 ,
Wake Forest21, Kansas St. 12
Bowling Green 20, Dayton 10 Wash. St. 28, California 14
Duke 40, Virginia 13
Navy 26, Washington 12
Iowa Stale 17, Fla. St. 8
West. Mich. 33, No. Ill. 21
Appalaehiao St. 37, Furman Boston Col. 28, West Va. 20
12
Arlzona 21, Wyoming 0
Ga. Tech 24, Clemson 12
Yale 15, Connecticut 7
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
KEEPS TITLE
Chesapeake 14 Oak Hill 8
MOSCOW (UP!) -_ Vast'ly cere d o- Kenova 28 coa 1 Grove
Alexeev of the Soviet Union 0
r e t a i n e d
h i s · Rock Hill 44 Ironton St. Joe 6
· superheavyweight title South Point 14 Way.ne 8
Tuesday at the World Huntington 8 Pt. Pleasant 7
Weightlifting Championships Southern 14 Wahama 12
with a two4ilt total of 942.5 Vinton County 28 Trimble 6
pounds.
Easternl4 Federal Hocklng6
ASHE HONORED
Parkersburg Cath. 14 Belpre
RICHMOND, Va. (UP! ) - 0
Arthur Ashe the flrst black to Alexander 7 Miller 6
win the Wlmbledon men 's North Gallia 14 Symmes
s ingles tennis title , will Valley 8
receive an honorary Doctor Kyger Creek 20 Southwestern
of Humane Letters degree 0
from
Virginia
Union · Meigs 25 Wavelry o
University.
Jackson 18 Logan 8
STENNEIT HOT
Ironton 16 Wellston o
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )- Gallipolis 12 Athens 7
Pittsburgh'sRennie Stennett ,
who set and tied several
modern major league hitting
records last week , Monday
was named National League
Player of the Week.

Football
Forecast

Sports-Seers right

Banditos put

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late in the third period , won
" What did they have to lose
only by a 24-17 count.
at that point ? So, they started
&amp;ngals quarterback Ken taking chances . They put
Anderson fumbled in his end together a to uchdown drive
zone for one Cleveland touch- with a lot of reckless stuff.
down a nd Lemar Parrish
" Then," recalls Mayes ,
fumbled a way the ensuing " when we got the ball they
kickoff to give the Browns gamb led some more. Double
another chance- but Ma yes blitzes, stuff like that."
P?ints out the Browns already
It was that type of defenhad bee n gambling after sive gambling that put
being down 24-3 in the third pressure on Anderson and
period.
caused•his fumble in the end
" When you ge t them that zone.
far down they've got to do a
Admitted Bengals coach
lot of gambling," said Mayes. Paul Brown, happy to get
" You're losing anyway . You away with a win in the
ca n either lose big or you can ope ner, " We ended up
ca tch up . That's what they fig hting for our lives."
were thinking about.

Norman
is
struggling
'
By GARY TA YLQR
~ o;&gt;h er ball out of his system
before facing th e Pirates.
UPI Sports Writer
"This Houston club is a lot
HOUSTON (UPI ) - All is
like
Pittsburgh . I pitoh them
well with the Cincinnati Reds,
says manager Sparky Ander- about the same. So this was a
son, even though one of his · good tuneup for me," Nor three starting pitchers for the man said .
In his two seasons with the
playoffs - Fred Norman - is
Reds, Norman has 2:i vicstrugg lin g.
" I jus t co uldn ' t get tooies. The stocky lefthander
anything going the first five will have one more start
(Sunday) before the playoff s.
innings," Norman said after
" There's nothing wro ng
the Reds :i-3 win over the
wilh
Fred. Hell, he's won his
Houston Astros Tuesday in
which he served up two home last 10 of II decisions," Anderson said .
run pitches.
" In fa ct, the whole ballclub
"But starting in the eighth
my pitches really got sharp. is in good shape and ready. "
Coach (Larry Shepard ) came
Catcher Johnny Bench ,
up to me a ft erwards and said sidelined the last lour games
he's never seen me throw the
with a groin pull, will be back
ball harder since I've been in the lineup when Cincinnati
here."
opens.its last regular season
Norman said it was nice to
seri es a t home Friday
think he was getting the against Atlanta . The Reds
play one more tonight in
Houston.
First base man Tony Perez
WAHAMA IN
return ed to the line up
The weekly games of t~e Tuesday and rapped a runseventh and eighth grade scoring double in t he third
footba ll teams of Mei gs after Joe Morgan singled.
Junior High School in MidThe Reds had sco red thr ee
dleport will be played Thurs- in the second on singles by
day again st teams fr om Bill Plummer a nd Ken
Wahama. The fir st game will Griffey, a run.,;coring single
start at 4 p.m . Admission is 50 by Cesar Geronimo and Pete
cents for adults and 25 cenl$, Rose's two-run double .
for studen ts. Refreshments
Norman, meanwhile, was
will be ava ilable at a con- havin~ trouble enjoying the
cession stand .
prosperity . Cliff Johnson ,

Houston 's flrst baseman in
place of Bob Watson, lined a
solo homer in the second. And
Larry Milbourne followed
Roger Metzger's single in the
third with his first major
league homer.
Norman settled down after
that to allow the Astros just
one hit the next five innings
before Anderson lifted ·him to
start the ninth in order to give
Rawley Eastwick an appearance.
Norman got his twelfth win
and Eastwick his 20th save.

I&gt;E VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS- MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor

Published daily except
Saturday by The Oh i o Val l ey
Publishing com pany , 111
Cou rt Sf.. Pomerov, Ohio
45769 . Business Office Phone
99 2 7156. Editor ial Phone 99 2-

215 7.

Second class p os ta ge paid
at P ome roy , Ohio .
Nationa l
adve r tisi n g
re pr ese ntative
Ward Gr i ff i th Com pan y , In c .,
Boll in elli &amp; Ga llagher D l v ..
757 Th ird Ave ., N ew York
N .Y . 100 17 .
•
S ub sc r i ption
rates ·
De live re d by ca rrier where
ava i lable 75 cen ts p er week .
By Mo t or St ou te wher·e
carrier
se rvi ce
ndt
a\lai lable , One mon lh , t.3 .25 .
Sy mail i n Ohlo and W . Va ..
On e . Ye-ar,
S22 . 00 ;
Six
mo nt hs ,
$11.50 ;
T hree
mon ths, S7 . 00. Elsewhere
26 .00 year ; Six mo n t h s
13.50 ; th ree month s, $7. 50 .
ub scription pr ice Includes
un da y n., es -Sent inel.

down 17 to 8

PORTLAND - The Portland Banditos led by Terry
(" The Bandit" ) Brewer
rubbed the Ohio Vall ey
Fellowship Potlikkers out of
The Southeastern Ohio League Sportswriters and Radio the Southern Meigs County
Broadcasters Association has been successful 15 times during Softball Championship by
lhe past 26 years predicting the championship football team in timely hilling and expert
the SEOAL.
base stealings Sunday at the
Eleven times its ''pre.,;eason " choice did not make it, Portland ball fi eld .
leaving the scribes and casters with a batting average of .576.
The Potlikkers were never
that performance level is sneered at among the Major in the game after the first
Hoople - Mole - Swami fraternity who read their crystal inning when the Banditos
balls correctly three out offour tries or hang them up.
scored 9 runs . The final score
On the other hand, the scribes pick winners in a different was 17 to 8.
sort of race . A miss can be a teeny-weeny thing , like a team
The Banditos recruited the
picked to finish first comes in second because that derned best ball players in the county
oblong.,;haped bail bounced crazily one too many limes.
for this game while the
Or a miss may be like the one in 1955: that year the scribes Potlikkers could only come
liked Logan for No.I (all those horses, even then) . Guess what . up with 7 boys , I girl and 2
Pomeroy and Jackson tied for the title and Logan finished
sissies. They hope to have
seventh ! That was a clean, near 100 per cent goof.
more Potlikkers to choose
The newsmen were half-right the first year (1949) by
from next year .
picking Athens . Middleport shared the title with the Bulldogs.
Jim Cleland, manager of
The scribes missed in 1950 before picking four straight
the Potlikkers, is calling for
winners. Tben came three straight misses, another half-right
volunteers lor a basketball
in 1958 before they picked three more in a row.
team from the Racine area .
After missing in 1962 and 1963, the new~men were "right "
Boys and girls who would like
in 1964 and 1965, but came up with three miscues in a row in
to play contact him, next to
1966, 1967 and 1968.
.
Paul 's Barber Shop ·in
After hitting the 1969 forecast, the newsmen missed again
Racine.
in 1970 and were half-right in 1971. The scribes and casters
were perfect in 1972, 1973 but missed again in 1974.
Here's how the league newsmen have picked 'em the past
27 years (including the 1975 campaign) with the eventual
a notiona ll y advertised
no n . _ arbonated vitamin C
. winner listed in the right-hand column: ·
en r ic hed fruil drink i s
WINNER
YEAR-FAVORITE
ava il abl e for vending in 12
oz. ca n s . Ind ividuals w ho
Midd-Athns
·1949--Athens
are se r iously co n sidering a
1950--Middleport
Athens
bu s in ess of their own
shou ld
investigate
an
1951-Wellstop
Wellston
extrao rdinary opportunity
Logan
1952--Logan
currently a vaila ble in th is
area . Th is is a sec ure
Jackson
1953--J'ackson
bus i ness for those who can
Jackson
1954--Jackson
spare a few h ou r s eac h
week
( no
selling ),
1955--Logan
Porn-Jack
r estock in g ve nd o r s placed
Jackson
1956--Pomeroy
on
locat ion
by
our
speci al ists. A qua lified
Wellston
1957--Jackson
indi vidua l may start par!
Log-Well
19:i6--Logan
t ime and expan d w i th
company f in anc ing to a f u ll
Jackson
19:i9-Jackson
t i me business .
1960--Cailipolis
GalliP?Iis
CAS H REQU I RED
Plan 1
$3,450
· 1961--Jackson
Jackson
Pla n 2
$6,240
1962--Jackson
GalliP?IiS
Plan 3
SI 0,225
Tra ining provided . No
Logan
1963--J'ackson
expe ri ence required Tax
Logan
1964--Logan
shelte r w ith writeoff. In vestment secu red by new
Athens
196f&gt;-.-.Athens
equi pm en t
!f ive
year
,1966--{lallipolis
Athens
warranty ) and inve n tor-y .
Earnings guarant eed w i th
Meigs
1967- Athens
a
writt e n
bUY
back
. 1966--Wellston
Athens
agreeme nl. Fo r immediate
i nformat ion or inte r view
Jackson
1969--Jackson
call co ll ec t (30\) 345 -7300 or
197~lronton
GalliP?IiS
write
i ncl udi ng
pho n e
1971- lronton
Iron-Athens ' nu m ber to SUNRI PE ,
IN C . , 6? \ 5 Greenbelt Road ,
1972- lronton
Ironton
College P ark! Ma ryland
197:hlronton
Ironton
201 &lt;10
.
(
Not
a
sub sidiary of
1974--Jackson
Ironton
roc~ Col~ Compal'"ly l
1975--Gallipolis '

15 of 26 times

.

.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Bengals planned
an intensive workout today
fo r nex t Sunday's ga me
aga inst the New Orleans
Sa ints - the first regular
season game in th e New
Orleans Superdome .
The Benga ls are favored to
whip the Sa ints and if Cincinnati gets an ea rly lead,
offensive ta ckle Rufus Mayes
figures the Bengals ca n
expect the Saints to do the
same sort of "ga mbling" that
nearly undid Cincinnati last
weekend.
Cleve land ' s ga mbling
almost paid off , as Ci ncinnati , holding a 24-3 edge

1-11

opposition

HI-C

8

Superdome next
stop for Bengals

I·

JOY

(lOc Off Label)

DISHWASHING LIQUID •••••2:.~:-• ••••• 69~
STOKELY'S

17 oz . 2/79~
CoCKT AIL •••••••••••••••••••
REYNOLDS FOIL ••• ~ .••••,~.i~~.:::.~~ ... 29~
INSTANT NESTEA ••.••••••••••••3.~;~ ••• •1 3 '
PRINGLE'S TWIN PAK •••••••••••••••• !.~~ .... 79~

FRUIT

RICH N' READY

ORANGE DRINK·••••••••••••••••••~~~~ •• 97~
TASTER'S CHOICE

DECAFFINATED COFFEE ••••••••••••••••• ~.~: •• •2 59

MACKEREL ..... ~ ••••••••••••..• ~:~;~ 2/79~
BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE •••••••••••••••••••••••• !~~-59~
MEAT

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••• ~~~ •• 99'
POLISH SMOKED SAUSAGE, ;'.u.~;.~'R~ ••••••r.P•••••9r
SUPERIOR BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••'~,.~~-. 51.39
SUPERIOR ALL MEAT
By Piece lb . sug
5
CASING BOLOGNA ................ Sliced lb.
1.29

1'-----.. . . .

~

DAIRY

BROUGHTON 'S

2,. MILK ••••••••••••••••••••••••• gal. •.1.33
VELVEET A CHEESE •••• • • • •• 8
PRODUCE

GRAPEFRUIT •••••••
Bag

794

oz. box 59'

Chef ~ boy - ar - dee

PillA
CHEESE

3'

HEAD
.
.4}00
1
LETTUCE.......
.

or
Pe pperon i

1,
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13 1/ 2

oz.

99~

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~ - The uauy :sentmet.• MidaJeport-1-'~meroy., v ., ~eom,saay .. ~~~t.z 4 , 197~
4 - The Daily sentinel, MidclleP?rt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd&lt;ly, Sc pt.l4, 19"1:1

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•
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By Major Amos B. Hoople
peerless Prophet
Egad, friends, we h&lt;ove
s · ome
st . erling
prognostications for you this
week in a schedule dominated
by top intersectional clashes.
)he festivities get off to a
big start Friday night as
Oklahoma brings its spectacular offensive show to the
Orange Bowl aga inst home
team Miami. Rolling in
midseason form , the Sooners
will trample Miami 35-14
under the mazdas - heh-heh!
Saturday is loaded with
prime engagements starting
with UCLA 's invasion of
Colorado to meet the Air
Force Falcons. The Bruins
aerial attack triggered by
John Sciarra will shoot down
lhe Falcons, 28-12. The Norlh
Carolina Tar He els have the
unenviable task of hosting the
mighty Ohio State Buckeyes.
The Hoople System gives the
nod to Archie Griffin and
Company by a 33-14 count.
An excellent game is in the
offing at Fauror Field in
Columbia where Missouri of
the Big Eight, . hosts
Wisconsin , of the Big Ten.
It'll be Missouri 's day as they
prevail 35-18. Two other Big
Ten clubs are in for ' long
journeys
as
Purdue's
Boilermakers visit Los
Angeles to meet Southern
California, and Illinois
travels to College Station to
meet the Texas A&amp;M Aggies.
We see another big day for
John . !'!fcKay's Trojans as
they romp over Purdue , 42-21,
and we look for the Dlini to
surpris: the Aggies, 26-13.
Two mtereslmg conference
games find Texas meeting
Texas Tech 10 the Southwestern loop, and Alabama
vs . Vanderbilt in th e
Southeastern . Darrell
Royal 's Texas legions, still
smarting from the 26-3
thrashing handed them by the
Tech lad!t -last year, will
smash the Red Raiders , 32-14.
The Crimson Tide Will launch
t~eir drive for another league
htle wtth a 37-10 conquest of
the Vanderbilt Commodores .
In one of the great all-time
intrastate rivalries , Princ~ton's Tigers an(! Rutgers
Will get together for the 66th
time on lhe Tiger 's field . In
an old-fashioned do-or-die
fray, the Orange and Black
will edge Rutger' s Scarlet

.

Harvard 21, Holy Cross 14
Houston 33, SMU 18
Indiana 27, Utah 6
1
Penn &amp;tate 37, Iowa 18 '
Kansas 34, Oregon St. 15
Kentucky 24, Maryland 20
pennsylvania 28, Le~lgh 7
Rice 17, LSU 14 .
Cincinnati 22, Louisville 20 •
Dartmouth 36, Ma$s. 17
Memphis St. 33, Ark. St. 7
Miami (0) 24, B&lt;oll State 21
Mich. ·St. 34, N. C. State 24
Michigan 21, Baylor 13
Minnesota 28, Oregon 6
Florida 35, Miss. Stale .7
Mississippi 12, So. Miss. 7
Missouri 25, Wisconsin 18
Nebraska 42, TCU 7
New Mexico 15, Cvl. St. 13
Notre Dame 25, Northwestern 20
Ohio State 38, No. Carolina 14
Kent State 22, Ohio U. 10
Okla' St. 41 , No. Tex. St. IJ
Pitt. 47, Wm. &amp; Mary 12
Knights , 1f&gt;-13 - har Princeton 15, Rutgers 13
Georgia
38, So. Carolina 7
umph!
Now go on with my So. CalH. 42, Purdue 21
forecase .
Stanford 30, San Jose St. 20
Auburn 18, Tennessee 14
FRIDAY, SEPT. 26
Long Beach St. 21, Pacific 17 Dllnols 26, Texas A&amp;M 13
Oklahoma 35,· Miami (Fla) 14 Texas 32, Texas Tech 14
SATIJRDAY, SEPT. 27
Central Mich. 25, Toledo 16
Arizona St. 29, Brigham Tnlane 31, Syracuse 28
Young 18
San Diego St. 22. Utah State
Arkansas 17, Tulsa 8
13
Army 36, Villanova 7
Alabama 37, Vanderbilt 10
Cplorado 35, Wichita St. 6
Va. Tech 34, Richmond 1
Cornell 27, Colgate 20 ,
Wake Forest21, Kansas St. 12
Bowling Green 20, Dayton 10 Wash. St. 28, California 14
Duke 40, Virginia 13
Navy 26, Washington 12
Iowa Stale 17, Fla. St. 8
West. Mich. 33, No. Ill. 21
Appalaehiao St. 37, Furman Boston Col. 28, West Va. 20
12
Arlzona 21, Wyoming 0
Ga. Tech 24, Clemson 12
Yale 15, Connecticut 7
AREA HIGH SCHOOL
KEEPS TITLE
Chesapeake 14 Oak Hill 8
MOSCOW (UP!) -_ Vast'ly cere d o- Kenova 28 coa 1 Grove
Alexeev of the Soviet Union 0
r e t a i n e d
h i s · Rock Hill 44 Ironton St. Joe 6
· superheavyweight title South Point 14 Way.ne 8
Tuesday at the World Huntington 8 Pt. Pleasant 7
Weightlifting Championships Southern 14 Wahama 12
with a two4ilt total of 942.5 Vinton County 28 Trimble 6
pounds.
Easternl4 Federal Hocklng6
ASHE HONORED
Parkersburg Cath. 14 Belpre
RICHMOND, Va. (UP! ) - 0
Arthur Ashe the flrst black to Alexander 7 Miller 6
win the Wlmbledon men 's North Gallia 14 Symmes
s ingles tennis title , will Valley 8
receive an honorary Doctor Kyger Creek 20 Southwestern
of Humane Letters degree 0
from
Virginia
Union · Meigs 25 Wavelry o
University.
Jackson 18 Logan 8
STENNEIT HOT
Ironton 16 Wellston o
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! )- Gallipolis 12 Athens 7
Pittsburgh'sRennie Stennett ,
who set and tied several
modern major league hitting
records last week , Monday
was named National League
Player of the Week.

Football
Forecast

Sports-Seers right

Banditos put

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late in the third period , won
" What did they have to lose
only by a 24-17 count.
at that point ? So, they started
&amp;ngals quarterback Ken taking chances . They put
Anderson fumbled in his end together a to uchdown drive
zone for one Cleveland touch- with a lot of reckless stuff.
down a nd Lemar Parrish
" Then," recalls Mayes ,
fumbled a way the ensuing " when we got the ball they
kickoff to give the Browns gamb led some more. Double
another chance- but Ma yes blitzes, stuff like that."
P?ints out the Browns already
It was that type of defenhad bee n gambling after sive gambling that put
being down 24-3 in the third pressure on Anderson and
period.
caused•his fumble in the end
" When you ge t them that zone.
far down they've got to do a
Admitted Bengals coach
lot of gambling," said Mayes. Paul Brown, happy to get
" You're losing anyway . You away with a win in the
ca n either lose big or you can ope ner, " We ended up
ca tch up . That's what they fig hting for our lives."
were thinking about.

Norman
is
struggling
'
By GARY TA YLQR
~ o;&gt;h er ball out of his system
before facing th e Pirates.
UPI Sports Writer
"This Houston club is a lot
HOUSTON (UPI ) - All is
like
Pittsburgh . I pitoh them
well with the Cincinnati Reds,
says manager Sparky Ander- about the same. So this was a
son, even though one of his · good tuneup for me," Nor three starting pitchers for the man said .
In his two seasons with the
playoffs - Fred Norman - is
Reds, Norman has 2:i vicstrugg lin g.
" I jus t co uldn ' t get tooies. The stocky lefthander
anything going the first five will have one more start
(Sunday) before the playoff s.
innings," Norman said after
" There's nothing wro ng
the Reds :i-3 win over the
wilh
Fred. Hell, he's won his
Houston Astros Tuesday in
which he served up two home last 10 of II decisions," Anderson said .
run pitches.
" In fa ct, the whole ballclub
"But starting in the eighth
my pitches really got sharp. is in good shape and ready. "
Coach (Larry Shepard ) came
Catcher Johnny Bench ,
up to me a ft erwards and said sidelined the last lour games
he's never seen me throw the
with a groin pull, will be back
ball harder since I've been in the lineup when Cincinnati
here."
opens.its last regular season
Norman said it was nice to
seri es a t home Friday
think he was getting the against Atlanta . The Reds
play one more tonight in
Houston.
First base man Tony Perez
WAHAMA IN
return ed to the line up
The weekly games of t~e Tuesday and rapped a runseventh and eighth grade scoring double in t he third
footba ll teams of Mei gs after Joe Morgan singled.
Junior High School in MidThe Reds had sco red thr ee
dleport will be played Thurs- in the second on singles by
day again st teams fr om Bill Plummer a nd Ken
Wahama. The fir st game will Griffey, a run.,;coring single
start at 4 p.m . Admission is 50 by Cesar Geronimo and Pete
cents for adults and 25 cenl$, Rose's two-run double .
for studen ts. Refreshments
Norman, meanwhile, was
will be ava ilable at a con- havin~ trouble enjoying the
cession stand .
prosperity . Cliff Johnson ,

Houston 's flrst baseman in
place of Bob Watson, lined a
solo homer in the second. And
Larry Milbourne followed
Roger Metzger's single in the
third with his first major
league homer.
Norman settled down after
that to allow the Astros just
one hit the next five innings
before Anderson lifted ·him to
start the ninth in order to give
Rawley Eastwick an appearance.
Norman got his twelfth win
and Eastwick his 20th save.

I&gt;E VOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS- MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH

City Editor

Published daily except
Saturday by The Oh i o Val l ey
Publishing com pany , 111
Cou rt Sf.. Pomerov, Ohio
45769 . Business Office Phone
99 2 7156. Editor ial Phone 99 2-

215 7.

Second class p os ta ge paid
at P ome roy , Ohio .
Nationa l
adve r tisi n g
re pr ese ntative
Ward Gr i ff i th Com pan y , In c .,
Boll in elli &amp; Ga llagher D l v ..
757 Th ird Ave ., N ew York
N .Y . 100 17 .
•
S ub sc r i ption
rates ·
De live re d by ca rrier where
ava i lable 75 cen ts p er week .
By Mo t or St ou te wher·e
carrier
se rvi ce
ndt
a\lai lable , One mon lh , t.3 .25 .
Sy mail i n Ohlo and W . Va ..
On e . Ye-ar,
S22 . 00 ;
Six
mo nt hs ,
$11.50 ;
T hree
mon ths, S7 . 00. Elsewhere
26 .00 year ; Six mo n t h s
13.50 ; th ree month s, $7. 50 .
ub scription pr ice Includes
un da y n., es -Sent inel.

down 17 to 8

PORTLAND - The Portland Banditos led by Terry
(" The Bandit" ) Brewer
rubbed the Ohio Vall ey
Fellowship Potlikkers out of
The Southeastern Ohio League Sportswriters and Radio the Southern Meigs County
Broadcasters Association has been successful 15 times during Softball Championship by
lhe past 26 years predicting the championship football team in timely hilling and expert
the SEOAL.
base stealings Sunday at the
Eleven times its ''pre.,;eason " choice did not make it, Portland ball fi eld .
leaving the scribes and casters with a batting average of .576.
The Potlikkers were never
that performance level is sneered at among the Major in the game after the first
Hoople - Mole - Swami fraternity who read their crystal inning when the Banditos
balls correctly three out offour tries or hang them up.
scored 9 runs . The final score
On the other hand, the scribes pick winners in a different was 17 to 8.
sort of race . A miss can be a teeny-weeny thing , like a team
The Banditos recruited the
picked to finish first comes in second because that derned best ball players in the county
oblong.,;haped bail bounced crazily one too many limes.
for this game while the
Or a miss may be like the one in 1955: that year the scribes Potlikkers could only come
liked Logan for No.I (all those horses, even then) . Guess what . up with 7 boys , I girl and 2
Pomeroy and Jackson tied for the title and Logan finished
sissies. They hope to have
seventh ! That was a clean, near 100 per cent goof.
more Potlikkers to choose
The newsmen were half-right the first year (1949) by
from next year .
picking Athens . Middleport shared the title with the Bulldogs.
Jim Cleland, manager of
The scribes missed in 1950 before picking four straight
the Potlikkers, is calling for
winners. Tben came three straight misses, another half-right
volunteers lor a basketball
in 1958 before they picked three more in a row.
team from the Racine area .
After missing in 1962 and 1963, the new~men were "right "
Boys and girls who would like
in 1964 and 1965, but came up with three miscues in a row in
to play contact him, next to
1966, 1967 and 1968.
.
Paul 's Barber Shop ·in
After hitting the 1969 forecast, the newsmen missed again
Racine.
in 1970 and were half-right in 1971. The scribes and casters
were perfect in 1972, 1973 but missed again in 1974.
Here's how the league newsmen have picked 'em the past
27 years (including the 1975 campaign) with the eventual
a notiona ll y advertised
no n . _ arbonated vitamin C
. winner listed in the right-hand column: ·
en r ic hed fruil drink i s
WINNER
YEAR-FAVORITE
ava il abl e for vending in 12
oz. ca n s . Ind ividuals w ho
Midd-Athns
·1949--Athens
are se r iously co n sidering a
1950--Middleport
Athens
bu s in ess of their own
shou ld
investigate
an
1951-Wellstop
Wellston
extrao rdinary opportunity
Logan
1952--Logan
currently a vaila ble in th is
area . Th is is a sec ure
Jackson
1953--J'ackson
bus i ness for those who can
Jackson
1954--Jackson
spare a few h ou r s eac h
week
( no
selling ),
1955--Logan
Porn-Jack
r estock in g ve nd o r s placed
Jackson
1956--Pomeroy
on
locat ion
by
our
speci al ists. A qua lified
Wellston
1957--Jackson
indi vidua l may start par!
Log-Well
19:i6--Logan
t ime and expan d w i th
company f in anc ing to a f u ll
Jackson
19:i9-Jackson
t i me business .
1960--Cailipolis
GalliP?Iis
CAS H REQU I RED
Plan 1
$3,450
· 1961--Jackson
Jackson
Pla n 2
$6,240
1962--Jackson
GalliP?IiS
Plan 3
SI 0,225
Tra ining provided . No
Logan
1963--J'ackson
expe ri ence required Tax
Logan
1964--Logan
shelte r w ith writeoff. In vestment secu red by new
Athens
196f&gt;-.-.Athens
equi pm en t
!f ive
year
,1966--{lallipolis
Athens
warranty ) and inve n tor-y .
Earnings guarant eed w i th
Meigs
1967- Athens
a
writt e n
bUY
back
. 1966--Wellston
Athens
agreeme nl. Fo r immediate
i nformat ion or inte r view
Jackson
1969--Jackson
call co ll ec t (30\) 345 -7300 or
197~lronton
GalliP?IiS
write
i ncl udi ng
pho n e
1971- lronton
Iron-Athens ' nu m ber to SUNRI PE ,
IN C . , 6? \ 5 Greenbelt Road ,
1972- lronton
Ironton
College P ark! Ma ryland
197:hlronton
Ironton
201 &lt;10
.
(
Not
a
sub sidiary of
1974--Jackson
Ironton
roc~ Col~ Compal'"ly l
1975--Gallipolis '

15 of 26 times

.

.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Bengals planned
an intensive workout today
fo r nex t Sunday's ga me
aga inst the New Orleans
Sa ints - the first regular
season game in th e New
Orleans Superdome .
The Benga ls are favored to
whip the Sa ints and if Cincinnati gets an ea rly lead,
offensive ta ckle Rufus Mayes
figures the Bengals ca n
expect the Saints to do the
same sort of "ga mbling" that
nearly undid Cincinnati last
weekend.
Cleve land ' s ga mbling
almost paid off , as Ci ncinnati , holding a 24-3 edge

1-11

opposition

HI-C

8

Superdome next
stop for Bengals

I·

JOY

(lOc Off Label)

DISHWASHING LIQUID •••••2:.~:-• ••••• 69~
STOKELY'S

17 oz . 2/79~
CoCKT AIL •••••••••••••••••••
REYNOLDS FOIL ••• ~ .••••,~.i~~.:::.~~ ... 29~
INSTANT NESTEA ••.••••••••••••3.~;~ ••• •1 3 '
PRINGLE'S TWIN PAK •••••••••••••••• !.~~ .... 79~

FRUIT

RICH N' READY

ORANGE DRINK·••••••••••••••••••~~~~ •• 97~
TASTER'S CHOICE

DECAFFINATED COFFEE ••••••••••••••••• ~.~: •• •2 59

MACKEREL ..... ~ ••••••••••••..• ~:~;~ 2/79~
BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE •••••••••••••••••••••••• !~~-59~
MEAT

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••• ~~~ •• 99'
POLISH SMOKED SAUSAGE, ;'.u.~;.~'R~ ••••••r.P•••••9r
SUPERIOR BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••'~,.~~-. 51.39
SUPERIOR ALL MEAT
By Piece lb . sug
5
CASING BOLOGNA ................ Sliced lb.
1.29

1'-----.. . . .

~

DAIRY

BROUGHTON 'S

2,. MILK ••••••••••••••••••••••••• gal. •.1.33
VELVEET A CHEESE •••• • • • •• 8
PRODUCE

GRAPEFRUIT •••••••
Bag

794

oz. box 59'

Chef ~ boy - ar - dee

PillA
CHEESE

3'

HEAD
.
.4}00
1
LETTUCE.......
.

or
Pe pperon i

1,
. ~

.,

13 1/ 2

oz.

99~

-

.'

�)

I

1-

I.

I

.
'
."" ....
"
··&lt;

6 - The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

Youth group elects
officers and teachers

PTO installs officers

•

LETART FALLS - New
officers were installed and
projects planned at the
Monday night meeting of the
Letart Falls PTO at the
school.
Jack Bostick, member of
the Southern Local School
Board, was installing officer
for
Vickie
Cummins,
president ; Violetta Arnott,
vice president ; Catherine
Wolfe , secretary ; Phyllis
0 'Brien , treasurer.
Purchase of a new
television set which was
installed last week in the
school auditorium was
reported. The television will
be used primarily for
educational stations.
The unit voted to save
Campbell labels and Royal
Crown bottle caps. It was
noted that this year menus
, are being sent home •. and that
starting the second six weeks
grading period an honor roll
will be issued along with a
school newspaper.
Nov. 8 was set as tentative
date for the annual fall
festival. Room mothers will

be announced at the next Lawrence, first grade ; Mrs .
meeting on .Oct. 8 or will be Jan Norris, second grade;
included in a newslett•r to be Bill Downie, third and special ·
sent to parents.
education teacher; Roger
Membership in the PTO Roush , fifth grade teacher
was urged and parents are and Jim Wi ckline, sixth
asked to contact Mrs . Arnott, grade teacher and principal.
membership chairperson, ai · Parents were invited to visit
247-2196. Room count was ' the rooms and talk with the
won by Mrs . Barbara teachers.
Lawrence's first grade .
Refreshments were served
Teachers introduced were
by the first grade.
Wavie Circle. -Title I : Mrs .

Cornstarch might
be the answer ·

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Un fortunately I spilled nail
polish on a beautiful dress
made of a type of acetate. I .
would like to know how to
remove these stains. - MRS.

F.
DEAR MRS. F. - The
many present day fa brlc
blends complicate slain
removal, as I am sure you
well know, and all old status
are hard to remove. U your
dress Is an acetate then It
should be taken to the dry
cleaner for this spot removal
job. Washable fabrics (other
than rayon, acetate and
nylon) can be sponged with
chemically pure amyl
acetate and then laundered.
U stain persists sponge with
rubbing alcohol to which a
few drops of ammonia have
been added. Do remember
this Is not for your acetate
dress. Always lest anything
before using on any fabric. POLLY.

Celebrates
birthday

DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is with the blouse
manufacturers who do not
make tunic blouses. Almost
all older women and many
younger ones should wear
longer blouses with slacks
and skirts. The extra three or
four inches would certainly
be more fia\tering to our
figures. Please do not print
my name ; I have raised such
a fuss about this in the stores
around here that I will never
live it down .
ANONYMOUS.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
shut-in but still able to do
most of the work In my apart.
men!. Your hints have been a ·
great help to me so I am

sending one I discovered on
my own. Most of us have
those bouffant bonnets to
wear in the wind to save our
hairdos. Even discarded ones
can serve a gOod purpose.
These days everything saved
is a help. Put the bonnet
(nylon net or whatever) over
your dust mop and be surprised at what will cling to it
- dog and cat hairs as well as
dust and dirt. All one has to
do is shake or rinse out the
bonnet and not have the
difficult job or washing the
mop so often. This also works
on cobwebs when put over
your broom or wall brush. H.C.B.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is-to advise everyone
of the importance of having
important phone numbers
and addresses for each
family member to carry In
purse or billfold. I write them.
on a recipe card. When folded
this just fits in a plastic billfold insert. Put on it all
names and numbers that
might be needed in an
emergency such as home,
office, doctors, children who
live away and brothers and
sisters. - MARIAN.
DEAR POLLY - Tape a
small pencil sharpener to the
inside rim of a wastebasket in
the room where the children
play most of the time. This
eliminates searching for a
sharpener and then, too, the
shavings will fall into the
basket. - M. J .
DEAR POLLY -!find that
if I put salt in the water in the
bottom of a double boiler the
heat will be more intense and
anything In the top will cook
more quickly. - I. G.

MRS. CHLORUS GRIMM, left, the Meigs County Association of Garden Clubs _contact
chairwoman, was suprlsed Monday night with a flower arranging demonstration depicting
events of her life. She was presented the dried arrangement pictured here as a gift from the
garden clubs by Mrs. Letha Morris, a member of the Bend 0 ' the River Garden Club, host
club for the meeting .

Flower arrangement depicts
life of Mrs. Chlorus Grimm
" Portrait of a Lady," a
novel flower arranging
demonstration and show
focusing on events and
phases of the life of Mrs.
Chlorus Gr imm, Meigs
County Garden Clubs contact
chairwoman, highlighted the
guest night observance or the
Bend 0 ' the River Garden
Club.
The surprise tribute to Mrs.
Grimm, attended by more
than 50 women representing
all of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs affiliated with
the Ohio Association, was
held at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Monday
night.
Mrs. Betty Dean of the
Chester Garden Club gave an
outstanding demonstration
showing not only excellence
of design, but good in·
terpretation of the classes
which pertained to the life of
Mrs. Grimm . In conclusion
she made a dried arrangement using a tall green
plexiglass background with a
Madonna figurine, greenery
and royal blue and lime green
artlchoke blossoms which
was presented to Mrs.
Grimm as a gift from the
clubs she has worked with
during her two years as
county contact chairwoman.
It was titled "Civic Minded. "
The arrangements made by
Mrs. Dean interpretive
of Mrs. Grimm's life be·
gan
with
"By
the
Bend of the River" and
depicted her years by the
Ohlo In a floral piece using
curved vine representing the
river, and. yellow mums for
her home in Letart Falls.
For "Higher Education,"
the arrangement featured a
small car replica and a tlre
on a rock container with
bright colored zinnias.
Blacklight materials in
orange and brown were used

Jimmie Lee King, Orient,
was honored recently with a
"welcome home" party given
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmie King of Five Points.
Games were played with
prizes going to Justin King,
Terry Hysell and Timothy
La~ence. The door prize
went to Mrs. Nancy Gillispie
of New Hsven, W. Va . Gifts
were presented to the
honored guest and cake,
baked and decorated by Mrs.
King and Mrs. Gillispie, was
served with tee cream, coffee ·
and Kool-Aid.
OlheTs attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Bentz, Candi,
Bryan, Michael and Anita;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King,
Greg, Tim Dick, Carols and
Darola, Carl , Butch and
MaryGougnon ; Mr. and Mrs.
A family gathering was and Mrs. Thomas Roush,
Robert Gillispie , Sheila ho:ld over the weekend at the Riverla Beach, Flka.;
Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie home of Mrs. Erma Roush, . Tommy K. Roush, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ross,
Reynolds, Bubby and Jacian Forest Run.
Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs . Tom
Present were her children, Akron.
Other relatives and friends
King, Becky, Barb, Tommy grandchildren and other
and Justin, Mrs. Norman relatives, including Mr. and calling were Mr. and Mrs.
Hysell, Bruce, Terry, Norma Mrs. Jay Honchell (Barbara Lee Wince, Zanesville; Mr.
Jean and Steven.
Roush), and daughter Linda and Mrs. Donald Yeauger,
Sending gifts were Mr. and Strope and Susie Honchell, Groveport; Gene Simrris,
Mrs. Dores Arnold and Mr.
Gahanna; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Tom Drake .
Weber (Frances Roush), Alfred Yeauger, Minersville;
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. GeQrge ~er,
John Lloyd, Jackson; Charles Forest RUn; Bill Baer, Stella
Roush, Virginia Wells, both of Grueser, Middleport; Gladys
Columbus; Ronnie and Walker, Mrs. Roger Walker,
Patricia Roush, Du~lin ; Mr . Pomeroy, and Lisa Roush,
Sharon Kuhn and Kris Baer,
Minersville.
The primary and juniors
A family dinner was held
classes of the Laurel Cliff
Sunday.
MASON - The Mason
Free Methodist Church had a
Mothers' Club held its Sepwiener roast Saturday night
tember meeting at the home
' at the Route 33 Roadside
fhe Almanac
of L_ucllle Swackhamer
Park.
United Press Internatlolial
with Mary Berry as coAttending were Crystal
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
hostess. New officers were
Lane, Curtis Braley, Anita 24, the 267th day of 1975 with
installed in a traditional
·Smith and Tommy · Lane 'of · 98 !(\ follow.
candlelight ceremony conThe moon is approaching
the primary class taught by
A yard sale was planned for
Oct. 3 and 4 when the l.a!Ues
Mrs . ~rene Kline; Robin its last quarter.
TOGIVEFARF;WELL
The morning stars are Auxiliary of the Middleport
Campbell, Jack and Tim
Braley, Laura and John Venus, Saturn, Mars and Pentecoalal Church met
The Pomeroy First Baptist
Church will hold a farewell
recently at the church.
Smith, Patty Jeffers and Jupiter.
The evening star is MerWork was · continued on dinner Sunday for the Rev. ,
Margo Martin of the junior
homemade quilts ·to be sold and Mrs . Robert Kuhn..
, class with their teacher, Mrs. cury.
Those born on this date are along with stuffed animals. Following the morning
Donna Gilmore, and her
under the slgn of Libra.
The 1976 calendars were worship service there will .be
husband, James Gilmore.
.John Marshall, fourth chief distributed !o the members apoUuckdlnnerin the church ·
justice of tile _United States, . with all proceeds from the Socl.81 rooms . All. members
was born Sept. 24, 175S.
various projects to go !J!to and friends of the chilrch are
SON BORN
0n this day in history:
church expenses. Next ·urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
In 1!ltis, President Dwight meeting was set for Oct. 7.
Stepheil Haggy, Pomeroy, I). Eisenhower suffered a
A covered dish dinner was
annowice the birth of their heart ·
attack
while held at noon. Prayer opened
SPECIAL GUESTS ·
11econd child, a five pound, wcationlng in Colorado.
the me_etlng and officers
Special ·guests at Pomeroy
two ounce 1011, Brad Eldon,
In
1959,
President reports were given,- First Baptist Church Sunday
on Sept. 8 _at Holzei' Medical Eisenhower and Soviet
Attending were Joyce · morning wlll be members of
Cepter. Maternal grand- Premier Nikita Khrusiichev Sauters, Linda Knittel, Edie Middleport Lodge 363, F. and
p.renta are Mr. and Mrs. met at Camp David, Md.
_Zirkle and Pamela, ~ay' 'A .M. :who will ~ observing
Robert Russell, Poll)eroy,
_In 1971, retired u.s. '. Rlcl!ards, Ruth ·GOiin!!f,~! .:~ G~ ~Church Slinday.
and paternal gran~other is . Supreme Court. Justice ijugo Mason, Man\fa_ Eu~;
--.:
Mrs. Madeline McClung I Black died at the age of 85. Chriatine Sauten, ~~'lid
·;( titoilibt lot: the , day:
P 'o IJI•.iu· o Y • G t.n t •
·In tm,"a private jet plane Christy, Vebtui Keller, Mabel ' President Eisenhower (who
gran\in)others are Mrs. , crashed into a Sacramento, Pearman, Jean Kelly' and died in 1969) said, "In the
. Bertha Ru81ell, ·Pomeroy, . Calif :, ice cream parlor, Lori, Betty Wickline and flnat ·choice, a ~ldier's pack
and Mra : Ethel Clar_k , tdiuns:, 22 persons, most of )'oiDIJly, Livinia Neal _and is not so hf!avy a bw:den as a
Allllny.
thein youngster~. . . . ,.
Galenda W(ckltile, ~ g~sl. Prisoner's chains,"

Roush family reunites
for weekend gathering

Group holds
wiener roast

by Mrs. Dean for "Pupils'
Pet" and the arrangement
included a " wise old owl" to
depict Mrs. Grimm's years of
teaching at the Letart Falls
Elementary School.
Married to a former
professional baseball player,
an arrangement in the class
"Batter Up " featured a small
bat, buckeyes for balls and
greenery. For her "Sunny
Personality ," Mrs . Dean
used Mrs. Grimm's favorite
color, yellow, in a traditional
design of yellow gladioli. For
another class , "FashiQn
Wise, " the demonstrator
used yellow gladioli and pink
asters around the replica of a
lady on a pedestal.
The final class was "Home
is Where the Heart Is" and
for this Mrs. Dean used two
containers representing Mr.
and Mrs . Grimrrl's sons,
Robert and Russell, with a
heart design in vine and pink
gladioli.
A corsage was presented to
Mrs. Grimm by Mrs. Robert
Lewis, Winding Trail Garden
Club . Mrs . Letha Morris
presented the Madonna
arrangement to Mrs . Grimm.
Presiding at the program was
Mrs . Wilson Carpenter,
president of the host club.
Several door prizes were
awarded and refreshments Of
punch, coffee and cake were
served from a table centered
with an arrangement of white
mums flanked by lime green
tapers in silver holders.
Presiding at the- table were
Mrs. Andrew Cross and Mrs.
Ernest Wingett. Mrs. Jru;nes
Diehl and Mrs . Wingett
registered the guests, and
other members of the Bend 0'
the River Garden Club were
hostesses.
Among the guests were
Mrs .
James
Jackson,
Wellston, and Mrs. ·Louise
Stewart, Athens. Members

from the Chester, Rutland,
Middleport Amateur, Middleport Garden Club, Winding
Trail,
Wildwood,
Pomeroy, Rutland Friendly
Gardeners and Star Garden
Club attended.

A thought for the day :
American naval hero John
Paul Jones declared during a
battle with British forces in
1779, "I have just begun to
fight."

. ...
...

""'

;

''

...

BOLOGNA
lb.

~~•m ·~:

.",..,.,'

Use Our Christmas
Lay-Away Plan
NOW!

'

..
,,.

...

...

-----·
"

,, • ff

.

9'9~ ~

BEEF LIVER

69~

DAIRY DEPT.

Cottage
240L

Fresh Tomatoes

89~

3 lb. •1.00
STAR-KIST
LITE C_HUNK_

,

~~oz. 49~

TUNA -,.._.. ••••

l6

°

2

•

39~

Apple-'Raspberry
Apple-Blackberry
ApPle-Grape

lb.
Pkg

·

59"'
,.

MARGARINE·····
TERRY
Roll 49~·
TOWE_LS •••••• ••• .

OLP .VIRGINIA

JELLIES

.,

Head Lettuce
each 33~

VALLEY BELL

.

Calendar.
WWNESDAY
' WILDWOOD Garden ClUb
8 p.m. at the hame of
Ada Holter, MOIDbers are to
come In coslumes.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions .Club, noon
at the Meiss Inn. All Uons
urged to attend .
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar, slated conclave, 7;30
p.m . at the Pomeroy Masonic
T~mple. All Sir Knlghta and
officers urged to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION
A1lnuary and Feeney-Bennet
Post 128 both meeting at 6:30
p.m. for dinner followed. by
meetings at 7:30p.m.
•
THURSDAY
''FREE
CANCER
~ENJNG clinic fourth
'I;hursday each month . Call
!m-7684 or 992-7531, 9 a .m. to 4
p.m., Monday through Friday
for appoinlment.
TWIN CITY SHRINE I IES
will entertain the Thea Court
women of Columbus, 6; 30
p.m. at the Meigs Inn. Those
who plan to attend are to
make reservations with Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Racine, by
Wednesday .
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA, 7:45p.m. at home of
Nellie Brown. Ruby Baer cohostess. Maxine Plummer,
guest speaker.
FREE CLOTHING DAY
from 10 a.m . until noon at
Salvation Army, 115 But.
temut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents are welcome
~ho are In need of clothing.

Mrs:

..;WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
2ln!ted Presbyterian Church,
llflddleport, potluck dinner at
l;;tO p.m. Group II to be
~ostesaes. Miss Susan Fleshman to pre!M!nt slides of her
fife as the daughter of
nlissionaries In Rhodesia.
J,Ci-s: Guy Harper will have
IWVotions. Everyone bring a
'i!overed dish.
"!"sENIOR- CITIZENS will
jresent program at the Meigs
County Women's Fello\vship
!if Churches of Christ, 7:30
Q,m. at Pomeroy Church of

~t.

:",' SPECIAL MEETING,
:[uPpers Plains Boosters Club
eoncerning upcom.Ing carlival, 7:30p.m . at the school.
::. PARENT EDUCATION
i.'J-ogram, 8;30 until 8 at
tomeroy
Elementary,
lutland Elementary ,
Harrisonville Elementary
tpd M~igs Junior High to aid
J!!ifents helping their children
10 read; child care center for
iounger children of parents
f;iahing to attend at any
ltnter.
:
FRIDAY
:t PAST
MATRONS,
!vangeline Chapter, Midilleport Masonic Temple, 7; 30
i:m. with Mrs. Roma
iawkins, hostess.
:
SATURDAY
:tSQUARE DANCE spon(pred by Shade River Belles
fld Beaus Western Square
llance Club at Royal Oak
Park from 8 to 11 p .m. A
lmkey party will follow the
limce. Caller will be Denver
intton from Williamstown,
Va. Everyone welcome.

298 Second -St.

i

POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERKD
Fem Tlc~ts
Book of 10
17.20

YOU'RE ALWAYS FIRST!
BABY BEEF
T-BONE STEAKS.•••••••••~: •.

BABY BEEF
CHUCK ROAST••••••• ~·.

M()RTON'S FROZEN

3 LB. OR MORE PKG.

LB.

G'ROUND BEEF············
12 ·oz.

ECKRICH

WIENERS •...• ~ ... ~~G...... .

GROUND CHUCK

lB.

•

YELLOW
ONIONS...•......... :.

.

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.FRIED 2 lb. pkg. $
CHICKEN ·• ·••··· • .

t:IJNNY BUSINESS
By /loge~ Bollett

~

Miracle Whip
PARKAY
MARGARINE.-,...••~~.

J.LB.
CAN

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NOW ·
'

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$309

W/C

Good On~ At Powell's Super Valu
Limit 1 Per Customer Expires

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity ·

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CHICKEN BROTH

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TICKEIS ON SALE

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32oz.

BAMA
GRAPE JELLY•••••••3•2.~~.

ARGO PEAS....•••..
CO UP ON

'

SALAD _DRESSING

4

Effective Sept. 28, Will
Be
Open
On
Sunday From
.
r
.
10.00 A.M. to 5s00 P.M.

L81

MY-T-FINE
PUDDING••••••••••• !~!-.

:JIYMN SING at Hazel
~mmunity Church, 7:30
jp,ll. All singers welcome.

l!i

.

.

t.

;
OPENING20TH
:;Bob Evans Farms will open
~
first
Youngstown
iiistaurant on September 29.
1:be restaurant, located on
~'elmont Avenue at In·
(erstate 80, Ia the 20th in the
which has family-6tyle
~staurants tliroughout Ohio,
Jndiaha and In Kentucky.

29

BABY BEEF
Sl RLOI N STEAKS •••••••~; ••

ftuoln

•

'

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'

.

'

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! UI

TASTEE BRAND

ner, Betty Lish, Phyllis
Knopp , 'Donna Fowler,
Lucille Swackhamer' and
Mary Berry.

'·.;

A perfect Keepsake diamond~
brilliant and beautiful foreve.Ji. ,,

FRANKS .

Carol Proffitt, Mamie Noble,
Gladdie Stewart, Jody Lish,
Lois Test, Bonnie . MeFarland, Earlene Bumgard-

ENJOY GATHERING
RUTLAND - Sunday, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob G. Graham got
together with neighbors and
friends at their Rutland
home. Attending were Anna
Wolfe, Mr . and Mrs. Virgil
King and Helen, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold White, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Sutherland ani\ Karen;
Mr. ard Mrs. Emnlet Me·
Caskey, Betty Oliver, Randy
and Vincent, Gloria H,utton,
Gary and David.

· ~

..,

-lb.

Social

•''.

"'-

Regular youth services will .;
be held at the church, Oct. 3 :~
and 10 at 7:30 p.m. and on
Oct 17 at 7:30p.m. there will
be ·a youth rally with all ,
churches invited to par- ,
ticlpa"". There will also be a .,
special speaker that evening ..
Eighteen attended the .
meeting with eac h respon· " '
ding to roll call with a Bible .·•
verse.

BLUE
SOFT BONNET

ducted
by
out-going
president, LaVera Yeager.
The new officers ihclude
Gladdle Stewart, president;
Phyllis
Knopp,
vice
president ;
Earle
B\IIIIgardner, secretary; and
Carol Proffitt, treasurer .
Plan• and programs for the
coming year were discusSed.
Members attending were
La Vera Yeager, Sally Ross,

,,

LARGE

That
Good

7- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sepl. 24, 1975

~

"' 0

Mrs. SU!ackhamer hosts club

Yard sak
plans made

•

RUTLAND - Election of
officers 'lllld teachers was a
feature of the Friday nlght
youth service at the Rutland
Community' Church.
Elected were Norman E.
Hysell, youth leader; Susie
Tlllls ; assistant leader ;
Beverly Spires and Sharon
Durham, young ' people's
class teacher ; Ruth TUlia,
children's teach'm) with Susie
Tlllis, assistant ; Dorothy
Durham , · secretary·
treasurer ; and Susie Ti111s,
assistant secretary·
treasurer. Patty Hysell was
elected news reporter and
card sender lot the group.
Pastor Is the Rev. Amos
Leonard .
The youth service opened
with singing led by Norman
E. Hysell and a prayer service at the altar. Patty Hysell
gave the blessing on the offering taken by John Ti111s.
Teslimonies were given and
plans were made for the
youth to meet at the church
Friday night to go singing to
residents ln the Rutland
community. There will be no
regular service at the church
that evening.
The group voted to make a
monthly donatlon of $15 to
Kathryn GUkenson for her
work as a missionary to the
Indians in New Mexico.

Polly's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

1 .

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6 - The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

Youth group elects
officers and teachers

PTO installs officers

•

LETART FALLS - New
officers were installed and
projects planned at the
Monday night meeting of the
Letart Falls PTO at the
school.
Jack Bostick, member of
the Southern Local School
Board, was installing officer
for
Vickie
Cummins,
president ; Violetta Arnott,
vice president ; Catherine
Wolfe , secretary ; Phyllis
0 'Brien , treasurer.
Purchase of a new
television set which was
installed last week in the
school auditorium was
reported. The television will
be used primarily for
educational stations.
The unit voted to save
Campbell labels and Royal
Crown bottle caps. It was
noted that this year menus
, are being sent home •. and that
starting the second six weeks
grading period an honor roll
will be issued along with a
school newspaper.
Nov. 8 was set as tentative
date for the annual fall
festival. Room mothers will

be announced at the next Lawrence, first grade ; Mrs .
meeting on .Oct. 8 or will be Jan Norris, second grade;
included in a newslett•r to be Bill Downie, third and special ·
sent to parents.
education teacher; Roger
Membership in the PTO Roush , fifth grade teacher
was urged and parents are and Jim Wi ckline, sixth
asked to contact Mrs . Arnott, grade teacher and principal.
membership chairperson, ai · Parents were invited to visit
247-2196. Room count was ' the rooms and talk with the
won by Mrs . Barbara teachers.
Lawrence's first grade .
Refreshments were served
Teachers introduced were
by the first grade.
Wavie Circle. -Title I : Mrs .

Cornstarch might
be the answer ·

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Un fortunately I spilled nail
polish on a beautiful dress
made of a type of acetate. I .
would like to know how to
remove these stains. - MRS.

F.
DEAR MRS. F. - The
many present day fa brlc
blends complicate slain
removal, as I am sure you
well know, and all old status
are hard to remove. U your
dress Is an acetate then It
should be taken to the dry
cleaner for this spot removal
job. Washable fabrics (other
than rayon, acetate and
nylon) can be sponged with
chemically pure amyl
acetate and then laundered.
U stain persists sponge with
rubbing alcohol to which a
few drops of ammonia have
been added. Do remember
this Is not for your acetate
dress. Always lest anything
before using on any fabric. POLLY.

Celebrates
birthday

DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is with the blouse
manufacturers who do not
make tunic blouses. Almost
all older women and many
younger ones should wear
longer blouses with slacks
and skirts. The extra three or
four inches would certainly
be more fia\tering to our
figures. Please do not print
my name ; I have raised such
a fuss about this in the stores
around here that I will never
live it down .
ANONYMOUS.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
shut-in but still able to do
most of the work In my apart.
men!. Your hints have been a ·
great help to me so I am

sending one I discovered on
my own. Most of us have
those bouffant bonnets to
wear in the wind to save our
hairdos. Even discarded ones
can serve a gOod purpose.
These days everything saved
is a help. Put the bonnet
(nylon net or whatever) over
your dust mop and be surprised at what will cling to it
- dog and cat hairs as well as
dust and dirt. All one has to
do is shake or rinse out the
bonnet and not have the
difficult job or washing the
mop so often. This also works
on cobwebs when put over
your broom or wall brush. H.C.B.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is-to advise everyone
of the importance of having
important phone numbers
and addresses for each
family member to carry In
purse or billfold. I write them.
on a recipe card. When folded
this just fits in a plastic billfold insert. Put on it all
names and numbers that
might be needed in an
emergency such as home,
office, doctors, children who
live away and brothers and
sisters. - MARIAN.
DEAR POLLY - Tape a
small pencil sharpener to the
inside rim of a wastebasket in
the room where the children
play most of the time. This
eliminates searching for a
sharpener and then, too, the
shavings will fall into the
basket. - M. J .
DEAR POLLY -!find that
if I put salt in the water in the
bottom of a double boiler the
heat will be more intense and
anything In the top will cook
more quickly. - I. G.

MRS. CHLORUS GRIMM, left, the Meigs County Association of Garden Clubs _contact
chairwoman, was suprlsed Monday night with a flower arranging demonstration depicting
events of her life. She was presented the dried arrangement pictured here as a gift from the
garden clubs by Mrs. Letha Morris, a member of the Bend 0 ' the River Garden Club, host
club for the meeting .

Flower arrangement depicts
life of Mrs. Chlorus Grimm
" Portrait of a Lady," a
novel flower arranging
demonstration and show
focusing on events and
phases of the life of Mrs.
Chlorus Gr imm, Meigs
County Garden Clubs contact
chairwoman, highlighted the
guest night observance or the
Bend 0 ' the River Garden
Club.
The surprise tribute to Mrs.
Grimm, attended by more
than 50 women representing
all of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs affiliated with
the Ohio Association, was
held at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Monday
night.
Mrs. Betty Dean of the
Chester Garden Club gave an
outstanding demonstration
showing not only excellence
of design, but good in·
terpretation of the classes
which pertained to the life of
Mrs. Grimm . In conclusion
she made a dried arrangement using a tall green
plexiglass background with a
Madonna figurine, greenery
and royal blue and lime green
artlchoke blossoms which
was presented to Mrs.
Grimm as a gift from the
clubs she has worked with
during her two years as
county contact chairwoman.
It was titled "Civic Minded. "
The arrangements made by
Mrs. Dean interpretive
of Mrs. Grimm's life be·
gan
with
"By
the
Bend of the River" and
depicted her years by the
Ohlo In a floral piece using
curved vine representing the
river, and. yellow mums for
her home in Letart Falls.
For "Higher Education,"
the arrangement featured a
small car replica and a tlre
on a rock container with
bright colored zinnias.
Blacklight materials in
orange and brown were used

Jimmie Lee King, Orient,
was honored recently with a
"welcome home" party given
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmie King of Five Points.
Games were played with
prizes going to Justin King,
Terry Hysell and Timothy
La~ence. The door prize
went to Mrs. Nancy Gillispie
of New Hsven, W. Va . Gifts
were presented to the
honored guest and cake,
baked and decorated by Mrs.
King and Mrs. Gillispie, was
served with tee cream, coffee ·
and Kool-Aid.
OlheTs attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Bentz, Candi,
Bryan, Michael and Anita;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack King,
Greg, Tim Dick, Carols and
Darola, Carl , Butch and
MaryGougnon ; Mr. and Mrs.
A family gathering was and Mrs. Thomas Roush,
Robert Gillispie , Sheila ho:ld over the weekend at the Riverla Beach, Flka.;
Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie home of Mrs. Erma Roush, . Tommy K. Roush, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ross,
Reynolds, Bubby and Jacian Forest Run.
Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs . Tom
Present were her children, Akron.
Other relatives and friends
King, Becky, Barb, Tommy grandchildren and other
and Justin, Mrs. Norman relatives, including Mr. and calling were Mr. and Mrs.
Hysell, Bruce, Terry, Norma Mrs. Jay Honchell (Barbara Lee Wince, Zanesville; Mr.
Jean and Steven.
Roush), and daughter Linda and Mrs. Donald Yeauger,
Sending gifts were Mr. and Strope and Susie Honchell, Groveport; Gene Simrris,
Mrs. Dores Arnold and Mr.
Gahanna; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Tom Drake .
Weber (Frances Roush), Alfred Yeauger, Minersville;
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. GeQrge ~er,
John Lloyd, Jackson; Charles Forest RUn; Bill Baer, Stella
Roush, Virginia Wells, both of Grueser, Middleport; Gladys
Columbus; Ronnie and Walker, Mrs. Roger Walker,
Patricia Roush, Du~lin ; Mr . Pomeroy, and Lisa Roush,
Sharon Kuhn and Kris Baer,
Minersville.
The primary and juniors
A family dinner was held
classes of the Laurel Cliff
Sunday.
MASON - The Mason
Free Methodist Church had a
Mothers' Club held its Sepwiener roast Saturday night
tember meeting at the home
' at the Route 33 Roadside
fhe Almanac
of L_ucllle Swackhamer
Park.
United Press Internatlolial
with Mary Berry as coAttending were Crystal
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
hostess. New officers were
Lane, Curtis Braley, Anita 24, the 267th day of 1975 with
installed in a traditional
·Smith and Tommy · Lane 'of · 98 !(\ follow.
candlelight ceremony conThe moon is approaching
the primary class taught by
A yard sale was planned for
Oct. 3 and 4 when the l.a!Ues
Mrs . ~rene Kline; Robin its last quarter.
TOGIVEFARF;WELL
The morning stars are Auxiliary of the Middleport
Campbell, Jack and Tim
Braley, Laura and John Venus, Saturn, Mars and Pentecoalal Church met
The Pomeroy First Baptist
Church will hold a farewell
recently at the church.
Smith, Patty Jeffers and Jupiter.
The evening star is MerWork was · continued on dinner Sunday for the Rev. ,
Margo Martin of the junior
homemade quilts ·to be sold and Mrs . Robert Kuhn..
, class with their teacher, Mrs. cury.
Those born on this date are along with stuffed animals. Following the morning
Donna Gilmore, and her
under the slgn of Libra.
The 1976 calendars were worship service there will .be
husband, James Gilmore.
.John Marshall, fourth chief distributed !o the members apoUuckdlnnerin the church ·
justice of tile _United States, . with all proceeds from the Socl.81 rooms . All. members
was born Sept. 24, 175S.
various projects to go !J!to and friends of the chilrch are
SON BORN
0n this day in history:
church expenses. Next ·urged to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
In 1!ltis, President Dwight meeting was set for Oct. 7.
Stepheil Haggy, Pomeroy, I). Eisenhower suffered a
A covered dish dinner was
annowice the birth of their heart ·
attack
while held at noon. Prayer opened
SPECIAL GUESTS ·
11econd child, a five pound, wcationlng in Colorado.
the me_etlng and officers
Special ·guests at Pomeroy
two ounce 1011, Brad Eldon,
In
1959,
President reports were given,- First Baptist Church Sunday
on Sept. 8 _at Holzei' Medical Eisenhower and Soviet
Attending were Joyce · morning wlll be members of
Cepter. Maternal grand- Premier Nikita Khrusiichev Sauters, Linda Knittel, Edie Middleport Lodge 363, F. and
p.renta are Mr. and Mrs. met at Camp David, Md.
_Zirkle and Pamela, ~ay' 'A .M. :who will ~ observing
Robert Russell, Poll)eroy,
_In 1971, retired u.s. '. Rlcl!ards, Ruth ·GOiin!!f,~! .:~ G~ ~Church Slinday.
and paternal gran~other is . Supreme Court. Justice ijugo Mason, Man\fa_ Eu~;
--.:
Mrs. Madeline McClung I Black died at the age of 85. Chriatine Sauten, ~~'lid
·;( titoilibt lot: the , day:
P 'o IJI•.iu· o Y • G t.n t •
·In tm,"a private jet plane Christy, Vebtui Keller, Mabel ' President Eisenhower (who
gran\in)others are Mrs. , crashed into a Sacramento, Pearman, Jean Kelly' and died in 1969) said, "In the
. Bertha Ru81ell, ·Pomeroy, . Calif :, ice cream parlor, Lori, Betty Wickline and flnat ·choice, a ~ldier's pack
and Mra : Ethel Clar_k , tdiuns:, 22 persons, most of )'oiDIJly, Livinia Neal _and is not so hf!avy a bw:den as a
Allllny.
thein youngster~. . . . ,.
Galenda W(ckltile, ~ g~sl. Prisoner's chains,"

Roush family reunites
for weekend gathering

Group holds
wiener roast

by Mrs. Dean for "Pupils'
Pet" and the arrangement
included a " wise old owl" to
depict Mrs. Grimm's years of
teaching at the Letart Falls
Elementary School.
Married to a former
professional baseball player,
an arrangement in the class
"Batter Up " featured a small
bat, buckeyes for balls and
greenery. For her "Sunny
Personality ," Mrs . Dean
used Mrs. Grimm's favorite
color, yellow, in a traditional
design of yellow gladioli. For
another class , "FashiQn
Wise, " the demonstrator
used yellow gladioli and pink
asters around the replica of a
lady on a pedestal.
The final class was "Home
is Where the Heart Is" and
for this Mrs. Dean used two
containers representing Mr.
and Mrs . Grimrrl's sons,
Robert and Russell, with a
heart design in vine and pink
gladioli.
A corsage was presented to
Mrs. Grimm by Mrs. Robert
Lewis, Winding Trail Garden
Club . Mrs . Letha Morris
presented the Madonna
arrangement to Mrs . Grimm.
Presiding at the program was
Mrs . Wilson Carpenter,
president of the host club.
Several door prizes were
awarded and refreshments Of
punch, coffee and cake were
served from a table centered
with an arrangement of white
mums flanked by lime green
tapers in silver holders.
Presiding at the- table were
Mrs. Andrew Cross and Mrs.
Ernest Wingett. Mrs. Jru;nes
Diehl and Mrs . Wingett
registered the guests, and
other members of the Bend 0'
the River Garden Club were
hostesses.
Among the guests were
Mrs .
James
Jackson,
Wellston, and Mrs. ·Louise
Stewart, Athens. Members

from the Chester, Rutland,
Middleport Amateur, Middleport Garden Club, Winding
Trail,
Wildwood,
Pomeroy, Rutland Friendly
Gardeners and Star Garden
Club attended.

A thought for the day :
American naval hero John
Paul Jones declared during a
battle with British forces in
1779, "I have just begun to
fight."

. ...
...

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BOLOGNA
lb.

~~•m ·~:

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Use Our Christmas
Lay-Away Plan
NOW!

'

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...

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.

9'9~ ~

BEEF LIVER

69~

DAIRY DEPT.

Cottage
240L

Fresh Tomatoes

89~

3 lb. •1.00
STAR-KIST
LITE C_HUNK_

,

~~oz. 49~

TUNA -,.._.. ••••

l6

°

2

•

39~

Apple-'Raspberry
Apple-Blackberry
ApPle-Grape

lb.
Pkg

·

59"'
,.

MARGARINE·····
TERRY
Roll 49~·
TOWE_LS •••••• ••• .

OLP .VIRGINIA

JELLIES

.,

Head Lettuce
each 33~

VALLEY BELL

.

Calendar.
WWNESDAY
' WILDWOOD Garden ClUb
8 p.m. at the hame of
Ada Holter, MOIDbers are to
come In coslumes.
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions .Club, noon
at the Meiss Inn. All Uons
urged to attend .
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar, slated conclave, 7;30
p.m . at the Pomeroy Masonic
T~mple. All Sir Knlghta and
officers urged to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION
A1lnuary and Feeney-Bennet
Post 128 both meeting at 6:30
p.m. for dinner followed. by
meetings at 7:30p.m.
•
THURSDAY
''FREE
CANCER
~ENJNG clinic fourth
'I;hursday each month . Call
!m-7684 or 992-7531, 9 a .m. to 4
p.m., Monday through Friday
for appoinlment.
TWIN CITY SHRINE I IES
will entertain the Thea Court
women of Columbus, 6; 30
p.m. at the Meigs Inn. Those
who plan to attend are to
make reservations with Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Racine, by
Wednesday .
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA, 7:45p.m. at home of
Nellie Brown. Ruby Baer cohostess. Maxine Plummer,
guest speaker.
FREE CLOTHING DAY
from 10 a.m . until noon at
Salvation Army, 115 But.
temut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents are welcome
~ho are In need of clothing.

Mrs:

..;WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
2ln!ted Presbyterian Church,
llflddleport, potluck dinner at
l;;tO p.m. Group II to be
~ostesaes. Miss Susan Fleshman to pre!M!nt slides of her
fife as the daughter of
nlissionaries In Rhodesia.
J,Ci-s: Guy Harper will have
IWVotions. Everyone bring a
'i!overed dish.
"!"sENIOR- CITIZENS will
jresent program at the Meigs
County Women's Fello\vship
!if Churches of Christ, 7:30
Q,m. at Pomeroy Church of

~t.

:",' SPECIAL MEETING,
:[uPpers Plains Boosters Club
eoncerning upcom.Ing carlival, 7:30p.m . at the school.
::. PARENT EDUCATION
i.'J-ogram, 8;30 until 8 at
tomeroy
Elementary,
lutland Elementary ,
Harrisonville Elementary
tpd M~igs Junior High to aid
J!!ifents helping their children
10 read; child care center for
iounger children of parents
f;iahing to attend at any
ltnter.
:
FRIDAY
:t PAST
MATRONS,
!vangeline Chapter, Midilleport Masonic Temple, 7; 30
i:m. with Mrs. Roma
iawkins, hostess.
:
SATURDAY
:tSQUARE DANCE spon(pred by Shade River Belles
fld Beaus Western Square
llance Club at Royal Oak
Park from 8 to 11 p .m. A
lmkey party will follow the
limce. Caller will be Denver
intton from Williamstown,
Va. Everyone welcome.

298 Second -St.

i

POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERKD
Fem Tlc~ts
Book of 10
17.20

YOU'RE ALWAYS FIRST!
BABY BEEF
T-BONE STEAKS.•••••••••~: •.

BABY BEEF
CHUCK ROAST••••••• ~·.

M()RTON'S FROZEN

3 LB. OR MORE PKG.

LB.

G'ROUND BEEF············
12 ·oz.

ECKRICH

WIENERS •...• ~ ... ~~G...... .

GROUND CHUCK

lB.

•

YELLOW
ONIONS...•......... :.

.

..
..

_
.
1 89

.FRIED 2 lb. pkg. $
CHICKEN ·• ·••··· • .

t:IJNNY BUSINESS
By /loge~ Bollett

~

Miracle Whip
PARKAY
MARGARINE.-,...••~~.

J.LB.
CAN

•• '.,,

.
NOW ·
'

.

•

;

...,,

$309

W/C

Good On~ At Powell's Super Valu
Limit 1 Per Customer Expires

We Reserve Right To Limit Quantity ·

.

•

0

0

0

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II

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• ' I,

•

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COLLEGE INN

CHICKEN BROTH

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FOR !

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BAlH SIZE SOAP

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COFFEE lr·

HERE
,.

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.....:.e....eo.. . . ~-e'3"f«• !'t:-f'7

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TICKEIS ON SALE

'

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-'.;-41

--Q..::;:...... .......... -

32oz.

BAMA
GRAPE JELLY•••••••3•2.~~.

ARGO PEAS....•••..
CO UP ON

'

SALAD _DRESSING

4

Effective Sept. 28, Will
Be
Open
On
Sunday From
.
r
.
10.00 A.M. to 5s00 P.M.

L81

MY-T-FINE
PUDDING••••••••••• !~!-.

:JIYMN SING at Hazel
~mmunity Church, 7:30
jp,ll. All singers welcome.

l!i

.

.

t.

;
OPENING20TH
:;Bob Evans Farms will open
~
first
Youngstown
iiistaurant on September 29.
1:be restaurant, located on
~'elmont Avenue at In·
(erstate 80, Ia the 20th in the
which has family-6tyle
~staurants tliroughout Ohio,
Jndiaha and In Kentucky.

29

BABY BEEF
Sl RLOI N STEAKS •••••••~; ••

ftuoln

•

'

&lt;Jii'-·i

'

.

'

'

! UI

TASTEE BRAND

ner, Betty Lish, Phyllis
Knopp , 'Donna Fowler,
Lucille Swackhamer' and
Mary Berry.

'·.;

A perfect Keepsake diamond~
brilliant and beautiful foreve.Ji. ,,

FRANKS .

Carol Proffitt, Mamie Noble,
Gladdie Stewart, Jody Lish,
Lois Test, Bonnie . MeFarland, Earlene Bumgard-

ENJOY GATHERING
RUTLAND - Sunday, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob G. Graham got
together with neighbors and
friends at their Rutland
home. Attending were Anna
Wolfe, Mr . and Mrs. Virgil
King and Helen, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold White, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Sutherland ani\ Karen;
Mr. ard Mrs. Emnlet Me·
Caskey, Betty Oliver, Randy
and Vincent, Gloria H,utton,
Gary and David.

· ~

..,

-lb.

Social

•''.

"'-

Regular youth services will .;
be held at the church, Oct. 3 :~
and 10 at 7:30 p.m. and on
Oct 17 at 7:30p.m. there will
be ·a youth rally with all ,
churches invited to par- ,
ticlpa"". There will also be a .,
special speaker that evening ..
Eighteen attended the .
meeting with eac h respon· " '
ding to roll call with a Bible .·•
verse.

BLUE
SOFT BONNET

ducted
by
out-going
president, LaVera Yeager.
The new officers ihclude
Gladdle Stewart, president;
Phyllis
Knopp,
vice
president ;
Earle
B\IIIIgardner, secretary; and
Carol Proffitt, treasurer .
Plan• and programs for the
coming year were discusSed.
Members attending were
La Vera Yeager, Sally Ross,

,,

LARGE

That
Good

7- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sepl. 24, 1975

~

"' 0

Mrs. SU!ackhamer hosts club

Yard sak
plans made

•

RUTLAND - Election of
officers 'lllld teachers was a
feature of the Friday nlght
youth service at the Rutland
Community' Church.
Elected were Norman E.
Hysell, youth leader; Susie
Tlllls ; assistant leader ;
Beverly Spires and Sharon
Durham, young ' people's
class teacher ; Ruth TUlia,
children's teach'm) with Susie
Tlllis, assistant ; Dorothy
Durham , · secretary·
treasurer ; and Susie Ti111s,
assistant secretary·
treasurer. Patty Hysell was
elected news reporter and
card sender lot the group.
Pastor Is the Rev. Amos
Leonard .
The youth service opened
with singing led by Norman
E. Hysell and a prayer service at the altar. Patty Hysell
gave the blessing on the offering taken by John Ti111s.
Teslimonies were given and
plans were made for the
youth to meet at the church
Friday night to go singing to
residents ln the Rutland
community. There will be no
regular service at the church
that evening.
The group voted to make a
monthly donatlon of $15 to
Kathryn GUkenson for her
work as a missionary to the
Indians in New Mexico.

Polly's Pointers
By Polly Cramer

1 .

)

•

•

•

•

•

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. 9 -:-;.The Daily Sent!Jlel, Mil!dleport-Pom~roy, 0., Wedilesday, sePL 24, 1975
- -

ru11
Letter From a VirUe Man
Dear Helen :
Some time ago, a letter signed '.'Chased by the Unchaste"
appeared in your column and I have been wanting to answer it
· ever since. This man complained that young girls fall all over
themselves trying to make middle-aged men . He made me
chuckle . ,
,
Doesn t he know that no one - man or woman - can get
past a cold shoulder' If you really want the little ladies, no
matter what you TELL yourself, they DO come closer. And
unless the guy is happily married (sometimes even then), I
can't imagine why he'd not want them.lt'snature's plan .
I am 60 years old, have ridden motorcycles for :;o years,
and when I go out on my bike, dressed in boots, tight pants and
shades, I find all the gals - 21 and up - I want. At six feet
away, I can be mistaken for any age .
What do they see in a man my age ' Several have told me
that they like a nonrabbit, who has their needs in mind and
knows how to be a gentleman, something the younger
generation doesn't manage too well .
One sweet thing found me fascinating because I found
youth itself to be beauty, and that made her feel like Raquel.
Tell "C. by the UC. " that if he is single, heterosexual and
able, he may find he is missing something that will keep him
age 48 all the way to 70. Open up his heart and he will find life is
gorgeous, and so are women of all ages. - ONE WHO KNOWS
P ~ - You may remember me as " Pony Boy" who wrote
you 10 years ago telling about my unequaled happy marriage
to a woman who was still my bride after 30 years. She died two
years ago . I went into a slump for a while, but she would have
wanted me to come out of it - and I'm glad I did.
Dear OWK :
Who could forget "Pony Boy." Your zest for life is equaled
only by your appetite for it. Do write me again 10 years from
now, when I'm sure you'll still be chasing the unchaste. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
I couldn't resist answering "Chaste by the Unchaste ."
This 43-year-old man must be a delightful personality, but why
he doesn't welcome the advances of young women he
describes, is beyond me . Age doesn't really matter.
That goes for women as well as men. Often young men
prefer older women because of their experience, brains, and
also the no-pregnancy factor.
Most females don't reach sexual maturity until their late
3Us. Most men have passed their peak at 30. Nature didn't
organize things very well here .
I have been told that if circumstances would have allowed,
I would have been the choice of a young man who dated my
daughter. He was attracted to her because she was so much
like me, and he kept coming back to her, hoping to find enough
of "me" so that she,would be his choice.
Why did he tell me this ? We were talking outdoors one
evening - just a friendly conversation -and my husband kept
flicking the porch light on and off as he glared out the door. I
said, "How ridiculous for him to put on the jealousy act. I'm
old enough to be your mother." He replied, "That's not as
unlikely as you think.'' And then he confessed how he felt a bout
me. Nothing came of it of course, and he and my daughter
drifted apart without hurts.
I'm not writing this to brag, but just to say that crossing
the age line involves the character; the chronological part
doesn't matter. - T.C.J . (50 )

Democrat
(Continued f_l'om page 2)
became law.
To construe the function as
mandatory, they argued,
would give the lieutenant
governor veto power equal to
or greater than that of the

Dear T. (and OWK):
Your letters put the lie to t11e old saying, "Show me an
over~ person with head held high and·ru show you a person
who l)asn't got used to bifocals. - H.

lATEST
. .IN
'

FALL STYLE

.

.SHOES

Hours: ,·
9 to 5 MQn. -Fri.
9 to a

Sat.

GET

heritage house

ARENTION

Your Thom MeAn S1ore
Middleport, Ohio .

By DONALD LAMBRO
WASHiNGTON (UP!) - Ronald Reagan
won't come.out and say it yet, but it is clear
he has prtvately made up his mind to
challenge President Ford for the 1976
Republican presidential nomfuatlon.
Reagan's intention, if not his declaration
emerged in bits and pieces of conversatio~
during a wide-ranging interview in which
the former California governor said he is
convinced Ford can be beaten in the GOP
primaries.
The GOP conservative concedes that his
greatest worry was that his candidacy
would have a divisive influence upon the
party and that he might be seen as a
"spoiler."
Now, he says, he Is at peace with himself
on that score and believes his candidacy
would in fact help the party.
"I do not believe that a candidacy would
be divisive," Reagan said. " As a matter of
. fact, I tbink it would he very healthy for the
party . That 's no longer a consideration." ··
Reagan revealed that the Citizens for
Reagan group, headed by Sen . Paul Laxalt
R-Nev., is conducting national polls t~
measure Reagan's support within the GOP
nationally and to determine in which states
his support is strongest.
Reagan, lean and tanned, appeared
relaxed and enthusiastic about his twomonth national speaking tour after which,
he says, he will announce his decision .
He said Ford's early support among the
party heirarchy does not impress him and
believes the GOP's standardbearer will be
chosen in the fires of the primaries.
"Do you think you can defeat Ford in the
primaries without the support of the party's
leaders?" he is asked.
"Yes, because ... I look back on my own
experience in 1966 (when he won the
governorship) when I was not the choice of a
great deal of the party leadership," he said.
"The endorsement by the party's heirarchy
and leaders doesn't have the importance it
once had.
" Any challenger to an incumbent

Decision is
made already
president would have to expect to take his
case by way of the · j&gt;rimaries to the
grassroots."
"Would that be your strategy?" he is
asked. " Yes," he replied.
Reagan said Affierica is ready for a
cOnservative president - "all the polls
indicate that."
Looking ahead to next year's contest and
his need for enough ffuancing to match
Ford's already brimming campaign . warchest, ·Reagan admits, "It's not going to be
easy. I know that. But when you declare
your candidacy you have to hope that the
support will be there."
A disciple of California's lith Commandmant that, "Thou shall not speak·lll of
another Republican," Reagan is reluctant to
personally criticize Ford on the issues.
But he is blunt on Ford's potential political
weakness as the first nonelected President.
"He is the only president ever appointed,"
Reagan said. "His appointment to a first
term is one that does have an effect on
whether the party should feel constrained to
not consider other candidates. I tbink this is
so.;,etbing our opponents are going to.
use ."
Reagan declined to detail specifically
where he and Ford "agree or disagree. I
think it's just a case of how energetically are
we going to face up to the need to make ;
changes in the bureaucracy and govern-

.

whether the provision (for
lieutenant governor's
signature) is mandatory or
directory, the result should
be the same-that the legislation has not been validly

McCormac -indicated in his
opinion that if Brown had
attempted to pigeonhole the
bills upon receipt from the
Democrats, he could have
governor.
'
been cited for abusing his
"As pointed out before, constitutional obligations.
McCorma~. wrot~ in his
"If wrongful activity by the
opinion,
the heutenant - presiding officer had actually
governor has no veto power taken place the result in this
over the substantive aspects case may 'weD have difof the legislation and he may fered," McCopnac said.
not use a . procedural sub"An entirely different
terfuge. ThiS d_eciSion should situatioo is presented to the
m no w~y be mter_preted as courts when a presiding ofpresenting the lieutenant fleer has abused or avoidgovernor with a veto power ed
his
constitutional
by his refusal to certify the obligations, whether diprocedural correctness of ~ rectory or mandatory. In that
bill passed by the Senate- . event, we are confident that
McCormac wrote that an independent judiciary has
~own had ''no option" .to the capability of preventing
etther certify or not certify these
actions
from
the bills because the origin~ls frustrating the intent as set
were never presented to hun forth iri the Ohio Conby the Senate clerk.
stitution."
"No option was provided to
Judge McCormac held that
the presiding officer of the Seilate Clerk William H O!aSenate in thi~ case," wrote vanne, an employe of the
McCormac. Someone else Democratic Senate leadertook that option away from ship, had no right to require
h1m and consequently, the lieutenant governor to

PRINT

Vice President Nelson.
Rockefeller will be the
featured speaker at a'Central
Ohio Republican fund-raising
dinner to be held in Columbus
on Wednesday, October 15.'
W. · R. Timken , Jr. ,
Chairman of the Ohio

Republican Finance Committee, announced that the
dinner will cost $150 per plate
and will be held at the
Sheraton-Columbus
Motor
Hotel beginning at 7 p.m.
Columbus businessman
John S. Kaufman is serving
as ®mer chairman for this
year's event which is expected to have representation
from nearly 40 Central Ohio
counties.
Tickets for the dinner may

0''"' ~.
32 -36 .

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
chance of showers Friday
and Saturday and mostly
fair Sunday. Cool at Dlght
but slightly higher da;rtlme temperatures Friday
through Sunday. IUghs wru
be In the 80s and lows wfU
be In the 40s.

~- FULL

S]77

22

OZ-

JOY •••••••••••••••••••• • • bot.
300

CAROLINA

No. 2'12
1

.POnED MEAT .......... . 5
3
BRYAN'S

P;rices Effective Sept.·24&amp;t. 1

RANDALL'S

PINTO BEANS ••••••••••

(.

Morula¥ Thru Fridav
9:00 to 7:00
~ Saturday 9 to 9

MRS. FILBERT'S and NU-MAID (4 STICK)

3 oz.

cans

. ib.
jar
lb.

MARGAitiNE •••••••••••••- pkg .

(:LOSED SUNDAYS

FRESH HEAD -

'

LEnUCE

VAU.EY .BELL I

~.. 2% MILK
~. Twin.Padl '1.29

~

FOR

•1·00

SETS

·~

{
.•

.

!

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..

-

.

,; -~

\

BOYS'
CORDUROY

.

re ad y to 90
1,tile le t o p ~ and &gt;lad !
' mo rch Sna p
&gt;}'u r l li In l_n lo nl ~ lle ~

1

Grea t wi nt er time
warmth with this

pi le -lined

-

. N. lND

~ COLOR

SOUl'HERN

b •o• de• ed po ly. Chao~e lrom a Horte d styles

MISS CLAIROL
SHAMPOO-IN
HAIR COLORING

IICE-N-EASY

\

BYCiAIRDi

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.
99'

HECK'S
REG.

$1.S8
CDSMinC
DEPT.

$138
HECK'S REG.

$1.58

COSMETIC
DEPT.

99'

WE
DARE
TO
COMPARE
PRICE
COMPARE
'S PRICES WITH PRICES OF OTHER FAMOUS BRANDS

NKI'S

PIIV ATE LAIEL

SALE

. 8 ·PAK

SUPER II S'S
''

$1.97
COSMEnc DEPT.

09

ANACIN SO'S

$138

lEI'S

(

_....,
-

HICK"s

PRIVATE LABEL

SALE

'

.,I

'

.... . .

hydf'Oit de gel

CllllDllll

. HECK'S

FAMILY PACK, 9-11 CHOPS

99t

PRICE OF
12-0Z.

...

lb.

COMPARE
, PRICE OF .
ONI-A-DAY

'

100'S

MAALOX

sp• ·.

fRENQi CITY

FRENQt CITY

POLISH
..
SAUSAGE

LIVER
P.UDDING

SOOMG.

' s 122
WITH IRON-S 1.44

COMPARE

.. .

CHUNK

99(

VITAMINS

88&lt;

CHEESE

100 TAaLETS

ALLDAY

MAGAJEL

.LONGHORN
.

250MG.

HECK'S 100'5

• • •

HECK'S 12 OZ.

.49'~

ASPIRIN

VITAMIN(

lb.1.39

99~

CHILDREN'S

: HECK'S

$2.66
WllH,IRON-100'5

100TAILETS

s 122

HECK'S CHEW AILE

VITAMINS

'IICI Of

" · I lAVlS VITA- C
25111(;.
IOOTAILm

$1.79

"·I 50011G.

lAVlS VITAM. (

IHTAILm

36's

100'S

s 144

COMPARE

$3.03

COMPARE
PRICE OF

CHOCK'S
100'1
$369

HECK'S

ASPIRIN
tOO'S
OR

HKK'S BUFFERED
ASPIRIN
100'•
CHOICE

COMPARE
PRICE OF
BAYIR
CHILDS
ASPIRIN

36.'1

39&lt;

58(~ACH

COMPARE
PRICE OF

EXCEDRIN 100'1

VIAMIN E
200 I, U.

., .

KLB6

VITAMINS
100'5

TAI100'o

HKK 'S MITE TIMI
COLD MIX

400 I. U.
TA8100's

60Z.

'2"

COMPARE
1'IKI Of

" · DAVI$ VITAM. I

ZOO I.U.
tDOYAILm

'1'"
OR

•4••
" . DAVIS VnAM•I

BUFFERIN 100's

IOOTAilm

'1"

HECK'S

HICK'S

4001.U.

88&lt;
COMPARE

COMPARE

PRICE OF

nJRE'S BOILINTYI

KLB6

t

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.,

'$"'

,,

\

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PRICE OF

6 OZ. VICKS

., ..

NYQUIL

100 TAl LETS

$1.39
I .

J

Beou t olu l O\ mr lml'nl of lcK:I ieli' flo nd bog ,; "'
po l y u H~ t h o n e . g loo:: v•ny !, qu1lte d , a nd em -

ClOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTH/IIC
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

MIDDLEPORT

, £6.·oi. BOITLES

HANDBAGS

HECK'S REG.

C&gt; nd (Oi o n .

SJ38

. '

ss~

TOMATOES
lb. 39•

$16.99

$11.99

FOAM

aiur'rllo-um

.39~

GRAPEFRUIT
' :5 lb. bag 79c

•

'

79~

. .R.ORIDA

heavy

HECK'S REG.

$5.88

CLAIROL
LOVING CARE

PICKUPS,

RC

an d

s 11 99

ClOTHIIIC
DEPT.

992.7161 .

The1e nylon qu o!t ed . p ol ed lone d
10det• o re o wonle r
t im e dr eam In
bo yi \ Il l!: \ 4 -7

Sl yted wit h a

$5.88

AND
BALANCED FREE.
'
.
.

JACKET

corduroy

16 .

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
.
-

QUILTED
NYLON

COA.TS
zipper . Boys siles 8-

WHILE THEY LAST
. MOUNTED
.

BOYS'
PILE LINED

PILE LINED

· ~He' ll be

'

CI.OTNI/IG
DII'T.

'

hoo d

•2595

I

$22.99

ClOTHIIIC
DEPT.

c-oaf.

. I

'

I

ANGEL TOP SETS

.__s- .
HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

ClDTHIIIC
DEPT.

BOYS' SLACK

f

$2.88

$7.88

GIRLS'

4 ' PLY POLYESTER. ••

PEA'CHES ,. • • •e • • • • • • • • • • • • can
viENNA SAUSAGE••• ~.3 ~aonz~ 99~

'

'.

_

FRUIT COCKTAIL •••• ~ •••• can

Riuht Reserved to limit Quantities .
· .W.-Giad~-Actepffed.
Food. Stam~
-

$8.99

She' ll look grea t on
th e i e ~mo&lt;k t op
10e ts w ith ~lodo:.&gt; to
match Comple t e
; el l o l c olton blend
lobr 1c in ~ •z e&gt; S-M·

HECK'S
REG .

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTHIIIC
. DEPT.

Magajel

51!1 and. PEARL STS., RACiftE
"The StorP. With A Heart:.
You, WE Ll KE"

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTH/NC 1
DII'T.
,

E78-14

•

'

HUNT'~

~

$4.88

. . ••WHITE WALLS

-tS

Sma rtly de li•gne d po·
lyu te&lt; knot , a nd deno m
w oth OHO rted lr inH.
J uno o r and M l\\el \l ll! \,

'" ,. ,ze

HECK'S R

FIRESTONE 11500"•••

PANT
SUITS

.-

HECK'S
REG.

FAVORITE COLA. SALEI

DISHWASHING LIQUID

.

and loll co lor ~ . two pockets
or no p o~ k e t\ on \ •u·~ 8 - \ b

''Hence, ·I no refusal or
improper ac\ion on the part of
the presiding officer of the
Senate can lie found by the
facts as they transpired .
Even it devioJi,$ conduct h8d
been intended, ho opportunity
was given for it'. to take place
and it cannot be presumed."
The bills in question would
have:
-Effected a congressional
redistricting plan calculated
to furnish the Democrats with
between two and four additional seats in the 1976
elections.
- Transferred some 100
taxcollectlng jobs from the
Republican - controlled
Department of Taxation to
the state treasurer's office,
run by Democrats.
- Made a similar transfer
of 22 consumer protection
positions in the state
Department of Commerce to
the state attorn~y general's
office.

SLEEP GOWNS

o"'"""

'I

be obtained through any
county Republican Finance
Committee or county Central
and Executive Committee.
The Columb_us dinner is one
of a series of GOP fundraising dinners being held
throughout the state to raise
money for
the
Ohio
Republican Party.

LADIES'

For c r~~p Foil w~ oil'1e o
Qf\e ol th e~ ~weo t e o~
w1ll bco needed Stylt\ h
p vll ·o ver o r ltne g augt!'
cor d tga n \ lyle S ot l'l\ S·
.. ~' . M-1

lodoe l ' de n'"' jeOn \ ,,., nov )'

\ • lo le \ 1 lo ll la,;hton
, •n many \ lyle~ wtth
long 10lee ve 1i a nd
/ po1n ted collar.
1 lec t /rom

OPEN DAILY10T09
SUNDAYl T07·

LADIES'
BRUSHED

SWEATERS

PANTS

RTS

•

LADI~S'

LADIES'
BRUSHED DENIM

LADIES'

GOP will pay$150 a plate to hear Rocky

- Provided for permanent
voter registration and doort&lt;Hioor registration with fees
collected
by
deputy
registrars.
GIA!IIT BLACKOUT
- Limited the powers of the
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
secretary of state to hire and (UP!) - A massive power
fire members of county failure caused by a defective
boards of election.
switch in a Boardman subProvided unem- station darkened nearly all of
ployment compensation Mahoning County and the
benefits to workers idled by northern portion of Columstrikes in related industries. billl!a County Tuesday night

promise his signature in
order to receive the original
bills.
"The requirement that he
promise in advance that he
will perform this obligation
made
a
cannot
be
prerequisite for performance
of a con~itutional duty,"
McCormac wrote.

enacted."

I

SUMMERRECREATION PROGRAM COMPLETED- The Gallia-Melgs ~ -·
Action Agency under a $2,940 grant sponsored by the Department of Economic and COni"
munity Development sponsored a trip to Kings lsland last month for 93 disadvantaged yout!i
·from ages 6-13 in the Gallia-Meigs County area. Some of them, above, anxiously wait to
enter. According to Joe Barsotti, CAP Executive Director, the children were accompanied
by 21 adults on three Greyhound buses. The children were treated to a sack lunch, given
spending money and their admissions were paid by the CAP grant. Buses left Pomeroy and
Gallipolis. Charlotte Wells' co-ordinated the program . CAP officials hope to conduct a
recreational program the entire summer nex.t year.

mental structure."
He queStioned "whether anyone who is
part of the Washington scene has the perspective that we really have reached a
moment of decision in this country.
"! don't think massage and heat pads are
going to do it anymore," he said.
"Somethmg drastic has to be done."

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

�I '

'"

•

. 9 -:-;.The Daily Sent!Jlel, Mil!dleport-Pom~roy, 0., Wedilesday, sePL 24, 1975
- -

ru11
Letter From a VirUe Man
Dear Helen :
Some time ago, a letter signed '.'Chased by the Unchaste"
appeared in your column and I have been wanting to answer it
· ever since. This man complained that young girls fall all over
themselves trying to make middle-aged men . He made me
chuckle . ,
,
Doesn t he know that no one - man or woman - can get
past a cold shoulder' If you really want the little ladies, no
matter what you TELL yourself, they DO come closer. And
unless the guy is happily married (sometimes even then), I
can't imagine why he'd not want them.lt'snature's plan .
I am 60 years old, have ridden motorcycles for :;o years,
and when I go out on my bike, dressed in boots, tight pants and
shades, I find all the gals - 21 and up - I want. At six feet
away, I can be mistaken for any age .
What do they see in a man my age ' Several have told me
that they like a nonrabbit, who has their needs in mind and
knows how to be a gentleman, something the younger
generation doesn't manage too well .
One sweet thing found me fascinating because I found
youth itself to be beauty, and that made her feel like Raquel.
Tell "C. by the UC. " that if he is single, heterosexual and
able, he may find he is missing something that will keep him
age 48 all the way to 70. Open up his heart and he will find life is
gorgeous, and so are women of all ages. - ONE WHO KNOWS
P ~ - You may remember me as " Pony Boy" who wrote
you 10 years ago telling about my unequaled happy marriage
to a woman who was still my bride after 30 years. She died two
years ago . I went into a slump for a while, but she would have
wanted me to come out of it - and I'm glad I did.
Dear OWK :
Who could forget "Pony Boy." Your zest for life is equaled
only by your appetite for it. Do write me again 10 years from
now, when I'm sure you'll still be chasing the unchaste. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
I couldn't resist answering "Chaste by the Unchaste ."
This 43-year-old man must be a delightful personality, but why
he doesn't welcome the advances of young women he
describes, is beyond me . Age doesn't really matter.
That goes for women as well as men. Often young men
prefer older women because of their experience, brains, and
also the no-pregnancy factor.
Most females don't reach sexual maturity until their late
3Us. Most men have passed their peak at 30. Nature didn't
organize things very well here .
I have been told that if circumstances would have allowed,
I would have been the choice of a young man who dated my
daughter. He was attracted to her because she was so much
like me, and he kept coming back to her, hoping to find enough
of "me" so that she,would be his choice.
Why did he tell me this ? We were talking outdoors one
evening - just a friendly conversation -and my husband kept
flicking the porch light on and off as he glared out the door. I
said, "How ridiculous for him to put on the jealousy act. I'm
old enough to be your mother." He replied, "That's not as
unlikely as you think.'' And then he confessed how he felt a bout
me. Nothing came of it of course, and he and my daughter
drifted apart without hurts.
I'm not writing this to brag, but just to say that crossing
the age line involves the character; the chronological part
doesn't matter. - T.C.J . (50 )

Democrat
(Continued f_l'om page 2)
became law.
To construe the function as
mandatory, they argued,
would give the lieutenant
governor veto power equal to
or greater than that of the

Dear T. (and OWK):
Your letters put the lie to t11e old saying, "Show me an
over~ person with head held high and·ru show you a person
who l)asn't got used to bifocals. - H.

lATEST
. .IN
'

FALL STYLE

.

.SHOES

Hours: ,·
9 to 5 MQn. -Fri.
9 to a

Sat.

GET

heritage house

ARENTION

Your Thom MeAn S1ore
Middleport, Ohio .

By DONALD LAMBRO
WASHiNGTON (UP!) - Ronald Reagan
won't come.out and say it yet, but it is clear
he has prtvately made up his mind to
challenge President Ford for the 1976
Republican presidential nomfuatlon.
Reagan's intention, if not his declaration
emerged in bits and pieces of conversatio~
during a wide-ranging interview in which
the former California governor said he is
convinced Ford can be beaten in the GOP
primaries.
The GOP conservative concedes that his
greatest worry was that his candidacy
would have a divisive influence upon the
party and that he might be seen as a
"spoiler."
Now, he says, he Is at peace with himself
on that score and believes his candidacy
would in fact help the party.
"I do not believe that a candidacy would
be divisive," Reagan said. " As a matter of
. fact, I tbink it would he very healthy for the
party . That 's no longer a consideration." ··
Reagan revealed that the Citizens for
Reagan group, headed by Sen . Paul Laxalt
R-Nev., is conducting national polls t~
measure Reagan's support within the GOP
nationally and to determine in which states
his support is strongest.
Reagan, lean and tanned, appeared
relaxed and enthusiastic about his twomonth national speaking tour after which,
he says, he will announce his decision .
He said Ford's early support among the
party heirarchy does not impress him and
believes the GOP's standardbearer will be
chosen in the fires of the primaries.
"Do you think you can defeat Ford in the
primaries without the support of the party's
leaders?" he is asked.
"Yes, because ... I look back on my own
experience in 1966 (when he won the
governorship) when I was not the choice of a
great deal of the party leadership," he said.
"The endorsement by the party's heirarchy
and leaders doesn't have the importance it
once had.
" Any challenger to an incumbent

Decision is
made already
president would have to expect to take his
case by way of the · j&gt;rimaries to the
grassroots."
"Would that be your strategy?" he is
asked. " Yes," he replied.
Reagan said Affierica is ready for a
cOnservative president - "all the polls
indicate that."
Looking ahead to next year's contest and
his need for enough ffuancing to match
Ford's already brimming campaign . warchest, ·Reagan admits, "It's not going to be
easy. I know that. But when you declare
your candidacy you have to hope that the
support will be there."
A disciple of California's lith Commandmant that, "Thou shall not speak·lll of
another Republican," Reagan is reluctant to
personally criticize Ford on the issues.
But he is blunt on Ford's potential political
weakness as the first nonelected President.
"He is the only president ever appointed,"
Reagan said. "His appointment to a first
term is one that does have an effect on
whether the party should feel constrained to
not consider other candidates. I tbink this is
so.;,etbing our opponents are going to.
use ."
Reagan declined to detail specifically
where he and Ford "agree or disagree. I
think it's just a case of how energetically are
we going to face up to the need to make ;
changes in the bureaucracy and govern-

.

whether the provision (for
lieutenant governor's
signature) is mandatory or
directory, the result should
be the same-that the legislation has not been validly

McCormac -indicated in his
opinion that if Brown had
attempted to pigeonhole the
bills upon receipt from the
Democrats, he could have
governor.
'
been cited for abusing his
"As pointed out before, constitutional obligations.
McCorma~. wrot~ in his
"If wrongful activity by the
opinion,
the heutenant - presiding officer had actually
governor has no veto power taken place the result in this
over the substantive aspects case may 'weD have difof the legislation and he may fered," McCopnac said.
not use a . procedural sub"An entirely different
terfuge. ThiS d_eciSion should situatioo is presented to the
m no w~y be mter_preted as courts when a presiding ofpresenting the lieutenant fleer has abused or avoidgovernor with a veto power ed
his
constitutional
by his refusal to certify the obligations, whether diprocedural correctness of ~ rectory or mandatory. In that
bill passed by the Senate- . event, we are confident that
McCormac wrote that an independent judiciary has
~own had ''no option" .to the capability of preventing
etther certify or not certify these
actions
from
the bills because the origin~ls frustrating the intent as set
were never presented to hun forth iri the Ohio Conby the Senate clerk.
stitution."
"No option was provided to
Judge McCormac held that
the presiding officer of the Seilate Clerk William H O!aSenate in thi~ case," wrote vanne, an employe of the
McCormac. Someone else Democratic Senate leadertook that option away from ship, had no right to require
h1m and consequently, the lieutenant governor to

PRINT

Vice President Nelson.
Rockefeller will be the
featured speaker at a'Central
Ohio Republican fund-raising
dinner to be held in Columbus
on Wednesday, October 15.'
W. · R. Timken , Jr. ,
Chairman of the Ohio

Republican Finance Committee, announced that the
dinner will cost $150 per plate
and will be held at the
Sheraton-Columbus
Motor
Hotel beginning at 7 p.m.
Columbus businessman
John S. Kaufman is serving
as ®mer chairman for this
year's event which is expected to have representation
from nearly 40 Central Ohio
counties.
Tickets for the dinner may

0''"' ~.
32 -36 .

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
chance of showers Friday
and Saturday and mostly
fair Sunday. Cool at Dlght
but slightly higher da;rtlme temperatures Friday
through Sunday. IUghs wru
be In the 80s and lows wfU
be In the 40s.

~- FULL

S]77

22

OZ-

JOY •••••••••••••••••••• • • bot.
300

CAROLINA

No. 2'12
1

.POnED MEAT .......... . 5
3
BRYAN'S

P;rices Effective Sept.·24&amp;t. 1

RANDALL'S

PINTO BEANS ••••••••••

(.

Morula¥ Thru Fridav
9:00 to 7:00
~ Saturday 9 to 9

MRS. FILBERT'S and NU-MAID (4 STICK)

3 oz.

cans

. ib.
jar
lb.

MARGAitiNE •••••••••••••- pkg .

(:LOSED SUNDAYS

FRESH HEAD -

'

LEnUCE

VAU.EY .BELL I

~.. 2% MILK
~. Twin.Padl '1.29

~

FOR

•1·00

SETS

·~

{
.•

.

!

'.

..

-

.

,; -~

\

BOYS'
CORDUROY

.

re ad y to 90
1,tile le t o p ~ and &gt;lad !
' mo rch Sna p
&gt;}'u r l li In l_n lo nl ~ lle ~

1

Grea t wi nt er time
warmth with this

pi le -lined

-

. N. lND

~ COLOR

SOUl'HERN

b •o• de• ed po ly. Chao~e lrom a Horte d styles

MISS CLAIROL
SHAMPOO-IN
HAIR COLORING

IICE-N-EASY

\

BYCiAIRDi

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.
99'

HECK'S
REG.

$1.S8
CDSMinC
DEPT.

$138
HECK'S REG.

$1.58

COSMETIC
DEPT.

99'

WE
DARE
TO
COMPARE
PRICE
COMPARE
'S PRICES WITH PRICES OF OTHER FAMOUS BRANDS

NKI'S

PIIV ATE LAIEL

SALE

. 8 ·PAK

SUPER II S'S
''

$1.97
COSMEnc DEPT.

09

ANACIN SO'S

$138

lEI'S

(

_....,
-

HICK"s

PRIVATE LABEL

SALE

'

.,I

'

.... . .

hydf'Oit de gel

CllllDllll

. HECK'S

FAMILY PACK, 9-11 CHOPS

99t

PRICE OF
12-0Z.

...

lb.

COMPARE
, PRICE OF .
ONI-A-DAY

'

100'S

MAALOX

sp• ·.

fRENQi CITY

FRENQt CITY

POLISH
..
SAUSAGE

LIVER
P.UDDING

SOOMG.

' s 122
WITH IRON-S 1.44

COMPARE

.. .

CHUNK

99(

VITAMINS

88&lt;

CHEESE

100 TAaLETS

ALLDAY

MAGAJEL

.LONGHORN
.

250MG.

HECK'S 100'5

• • •

HECK'S 12 OZ.

.49'~

ASPIRIN

VITAMIN(

lb.1.39

99~

CHILDREN'S

: HECK'S

$2.66
WllH,IRON-100'5

100TAILETS

s 122

HECK'S CHEW AILE

VITAMINS

'IICI Of

" · I lAVlS VITA- C
25111(;.
IOOTAILm

$1.79

"·I 50011G.

lAVlS VITAM. (

IHTAILm

36's

100'S

s 144

COMPARE

$3.03

COMPARE
PRICE OF

CHOCK'S
100'1
$369

HECK'S

ASPIRIN
tOO'S
OR

HKK'S BUFFERED
ASPIRIN
100'•
CHOICE

COMPARE
PRICE OF
BAYIR
CHILDS
ASPIRIN

36.'1

39&lt;

58(~ACH

COMPARE
PRICE OF

EXCEDRIN 100'1

VIAMIN E
200 I, U.

., .

KLB6

VITAMINS
100'5

TAI100'o

HKK 'S MITE TIMI
COLD MIX

400 I. U.
TA8100's

60Z.

'2"

COMPARE
1'IKI Of

" · DAVI$ VITAM. I

ZOO I.U.
tDOYAILm

'1'"
OR

•4••
" . DAVIS VnAM•I

BUFFERIN 100's

IOOTAilm

'1"

HECK'S

HICK'S

4001.U.

88&lt;
COMPARE

COMPARE

PRICE OF

nJRE'S BOILINTYI

KLB6

t

,.

•

I

••

.,

'$"'

,,

\

'
I

.I

•

PRICE OF

6 OZ. VICKS

., ..

NYQUIL

100 TAl LETS

$1.39
I .

J

Beou t olu l O\ mr lml'nl of lcK:I ieli' flo nd bog ,; "'
po l y u H~ t h o n e . g loo:: v•ny !, qu1lte d , a nd em -

ClOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTH/IIC
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

MIDDLEPORT

, £6.·oi. BOITLES

HANDBAGS

HECK'S REG.

C&gt; nd (Oi o n .

SJ38

. '

ss~

TOMATOES
lb. 39•

$16.99

$11.99

FOAM

aiur'rllo-um

.39~

GRAPEFRUIT
' :5 lb. bag 79c

•

'

79~

. .R.ORIDA

heavy

HECK'S REG.

$5.88

CLAIROL
LOVING CARE

PICKUPS,

RC

an d

s 11 99

ClOTHIIIC
DEPT.

992.7161 .

The1e nylon qu o!t ed . p ol ed lone d
10det• o re o wonle r
t im e dr eam In
bo yi \ Il l!: \ 4 -7

Sl yted wit h a

$5.88

AND
BALANCED FREE.
'
.
.

JACKET

corduroy

16 .

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
.
-

QUILTED
NYLON

COA.TS
zipper . Boys siles 8-

WHILE THEY LAST
. MOUNTED
.

BOYS'
PILE LINED

PILE LINED

· ~He' ll be

'

CI.OTNI/IG
DII'T.

'

hoo d

•2595

I

$22.99

ClOTHIIIC
DEPT.

c-oaf.

. I

'

I

ANGEL TOP SETS

.__s- .
HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

ClDTHIIIC
DEPT.

BOYS' SLACK

f

$2.88

$7.88

GIRLS'

4 ' PLY POLYESTER. ••

PEA'CHES ,. • • •e • • • • • • • • • • • • can
viENNA SAUSAGE••• ~.3 ~aonz~ 99~

'

'.

_

FRUIT COCKTAIL •••• ~ •••• can

Riuht Reserved to limit Quantities .
· .W.-Giad~-Actepffed.
Food. Stam~
-

$8.99

She' ll look grea t on
th e i e ~mo&lt;k t op
10e ts w ith ~lodo:.&gt; to
match Comple t e
; el l o l c olton blend
lobr 1c in ~ •z e&gt; S-M·

HECK'S
REG .

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTHIIIC
. DEPT.

Magajel

51!1 and. PEARL STS., RACiftE
"The StorP. With A Heart:.
You, WE Ll KE"

HECK'S
REG.

ClOTH/NC 1
DII'T.
,

E78-14

•

'

HUNT'~

~

$4.88

. . ••WHITE WALLS

-tS

Sma rtly de li•gne d po·
lyu te&lt; knot , a nd deno m
w oth OHO rted lr inH.
J uno o r and M l\\el \l ll! \,

'" ,. ,ze

HECK'S R

FIRESTONE 11500"•••

PANT
SUITS

.-

HECK'S
REG.

FAVORITE COLA. SALEI

DISHWASHING LIQUID

.

and loll co lor ~ . two pockets
or no p o~ k e t\ on \ •u·~ 8 - \ b

''Hence, ·I no refusal or
improper ac\ion on the part of
the presiding officer of the
Senate can lie found by the
facts as they transpired .
Even it devioJi,$ conduct h8d
been intended, ho opportunity
was given for it'. to take place
and it cannot be presumed."
The bills in question would
have:
-Effected a congressional
redistricting plan calculated
to furnish the Democrats with
between two and four additional seats in the 1976
elections.
- Transferred some 100
taxcollectlng jobs from the
Republican - controlled
Department of Taxation to
the state treasurer's office,
run by Democrats.
- Made a similar transfer
of 22 consumer protection
positions in the state
Department of Commerce to
the state attorn~y general's
office.

SLEEP GOWNS

o"'"""

'I

be obtained through any
county Republican Finance
Committee or county Central
and Executive Committee.
The Columb_us dinner is one
of a series of GOP fundraising dinners being held
throughout the state to raise
money for
the
Ohio
Republican Party.

LADIES'

For c r~~p Foil w~ oil'1e o
Qf\e ol th e~ ~weo t e o~
w1ll bco needed Stylt\ h
p vll ·o ver o r ltne g augt!'
cor d tga n \ lyle S ot l'l\ S·
.. ~' . M-1

lodoe l ' de n'"' jeOn \ ,,., nov )'

\ • lo le \ 1 lo ll la,;hton
, •n many \ lyle~ wtth
long 10lee ve 1i a nd
/ po1n ted collar.
1 lec t /rom

OPEN DAILY10T09
SUNDAYl T07·

LADIES'
BRUSHED

SWEATERS

PANTS

RTS

•

LADI~S'

LADIES'
BRUSHED DENIM

LADIES'

GOP will pay$150 a plate to hear Rocky

- Provided for permanent
voter registration and doort&lt;Hioor registration with fees
collected
by
deputy
registrars.
GIA!IIT BLACKOUT
- Limited the powers of the
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
secretary of state to hire and (UP!) - A massive power
fire members of county failure caused by a defective
boards of election.
switch in a Boardman subProvided unem- station darkened nearly all of
ployment compensation Mahoning County and the
benefits to workers idled by northern portion of Columstrikes in related industries. billl!a County Tuesday night

promise his signature in
order to receive the original
bills.
"The requirement that he
promise in advance that he
will perform this obligation
made
a
cannot
be
prerequisite for performance
of a con~itutional duty,"
McCormac wrote.

enacted."

I

SUMMERRECREATION PROGRAM COMPLETED- The Gallia-Melgs ~ -·
Action Agency under a $2,940 grant sponsored by the Department of Economic and COni"
munity Development sponsored a trip to Kings lsland last month for 93 disadvantaged yout!i
·from ages 6-13 in the Gallia-Meigs County area. Some of them, above, anxiously wait to
enter. According to Joe Barsotti, CAP Executive Director, the children were accompanied
by 21 adults on three Greyhound buses. The children were treated to a sack lunch, given
spending money and their admissions were paid by the CAP grant. Buses left Pomeroy and
Gallipolis. Charlotte Wells' co-ordinated the program . CAP officials hope to conduct a
recreational program the entire summer nex.t year.

mental structure."
He queStioned "whether anyone who is
part of the Washington scene has the perspective that we really have reached a
moment of decision in this country.
"! don't think massage and heat pads are
going to do it anymore," he said.
"Somethmg drastic has to be done."

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

�- -- ~--~:---r------~~~--~--~--------~~----------~--------~--~------------------~------~~~~r----~-------

{. '

I.

•
'·

11-

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24. 1975

'

.

.

...

The D8 Uy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, i975 ·

OPEl DAILY

. PLENTY

10 TO 9

Of FREE

FREE
PARKING

PLAID SHIRT
"' -''""' ~'" • · · ~· •· " ~~
«-- ~
~.

Similar
T

I '"'I ''"•

""'"'" ··•' · ~ ·· yl" ""''
riM"' I -~ .... . ~- .... ,,_,. ,,.,

,.
;::

'

0

I

.

HUNTING
ARROWS

lnde~ogn . 1n quul• t) . '" p o•tlootw " •&lt; o:, rl t • ~ new

ed '\ port ~ l er
&lt;HI!

SPORTS
DEPT.

rl"'"'' ''~"

. polo sht:c.l

bl o( ~

t&lt;•l

hlnc ~

)

Caliber

Tf.e eccflomy ao d portability make~ thi~
popvlar l or the light- trcr.- elin9 com per_ '1 1 1pini luel capacity.
~lo11e

·-r
"'

SPOIITS DIP T.

H&amp;R
~(-• .,

aim ing spols .

88(

66C

FUEL
16.4 oz.

SINGLE SHOT
'

SHOTGUN
Choose from 12, 16, 20,
· or 410 gauge.

SPOIITS DEPT.

S]8~~

HECK'S
REG.
$1.79

HECK'S REG .
$49.99

HECK's SJ99
REG.

Arm~'

$999

78~

Sports Dept.

.)

SET OF 3

Heck's Reg .
$1 .39

HECK'S REG. $6 .99

SI'OIITS DEPT.

SI'OIITSDEPT.

$288

Housewares Dept.

HECK'S
RIG.
$13.99 PAIR

SPOIITS

onte~d

"Kontleok" b lod der. Shrink 1eo led
pa&lt;koge that ind1.1de~ lree ~ickin g lee.

S]33

DEPT.

,.

•
•

:~·--- !

-84 SHEET

I~"

•h•

GOBBLER
CALLER

O&gt;lho mo&gt;t e.,otlng t ull onlrodu &lt;P&lt;l '""" th~ b"&lt;h of
bo, rnll Sro~n fOiocn l l r e"'l'" ""'~n nOO ""en .,.,,h

$

modorn \OR09•oplo '"''"'1-'",..n' lh&lt; coli •ev•odv&lt;e &gt; o
' f'H f ECT G CliBll " on tho &gt;om~ '""""''"'!"'""' moM
~•l d lv•key . J"' &gt;onopt., lc v&gt;&lt; o, oh cOo ong ho•-.d• Come&gt;
wtlh tcmo&lt;o~e• o"d''"'Y'"'O &gt;l&lt;op No o "'~' to ll con &gt;O
" "" '""''~ p &lt;ot1LOC~ tho• 11obh l•· fo &lt;ld l•&gt;l&lt;d lo &lt;hlure

f''"'"'''""

•

s599

5'6

SPORTS
DEI'T.

HECK 'S RE G.
$8.94

,fUI Al E::MA..~S

- ----

cookware MI. Lovely design o n
the 1ide for a touch,of elega nce.

$599

&lt;

H..:lc'• Reg . $9.88
HOUSEWARE DE!'f.

-~
I

•

SHOES

,..,1

$

477

0

HECk'S REG. $6.48

9-PAIR

SHOE RACK

s 119

HECK'S REG.
$1.88 .

HOIJSIWAREDIPT.

scon
9" ROUND •• , ,

12" ROUND • • • • • • • •
16 " ROUND •..•••• ,
10" x14" .' ..••• • •••

12" x18" ...•••••..

19'
27'
19' ·
.27c ·

44' ~J!.~.

PLACE MATS

2 FOI U

Heck's

Reg. 53'

.

·'

HECK'S REG. TO 49'

Housewares
Dept.
.
.

. 1101/SIWARIIJIIIT.

.

$4.99

..,.

99 $

HECK'S REG.

NARDWA/11
DEI'T.

44

Made o f ga l11onized steel.

s

$2 .88

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

NAIDWARI
DIJIT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HAIDWARI
DEI'T.
•

s

DRESSING

99~m

$4
$644
99

The five shelf wa ll un it size is 24"x60 "JC 10'' or
18"x61J"JC1 0 "

· HECK'S .
REG .
$17.99

I.

L•IUO'IS.

QT.
HECK'S REG.
79' QT.

AUTO DEPT.

CREAM WAX

BRAKE FLUID

WITH APPLICATOR

f OIDIK .,. DIIJM11Ml5.

HECK'S R.EG.
$1 .99

AUTODEI'T.

AI'ID . .T.
DELUXE
OIL FILTER

RALLY
VINYL TOP

WRENCH

CLEANER

$100

CAR MAT
SET

99(

Choose from assor ted colors. For
a ll d omestic and foreign , com·
poet a nd sport cors. Heovy duty
rub ber.

OIL DRAIN

TRANSMISSION
(ONDinONER
&amp; SEALER

PAN

HECK'S REG. $1.69

DELUXE
TRANSMISSION

HECK'S REG .
$5.48

AUTO
DEI'T.

AUTO DEPT.

SPARK PLUGS

CLEANER

DELUXE

FILLER

SET OF 8

!Jl 66(
77( 1-J

66(

HECK'S REG.
$1.58

tJ

HEC'SREG.
'$1.29

•V

..

'·

I

\

I

..

HECK'S REG. ·
$1.48

HECK ' S REG.
$1.66 SET

h .-

. {i),-4)\

AUTO DEPT.

.

RECONDITIONED

OIL CAN SPOUT .

AUTO DEPT.

AUTfiDIPT.

:r

RALLY
CAR WASH

66(

HECK'S
REG.
$1.48

AUTO DEPT.

AUTODEI'T.

AUTO DEPT.

CON(ENTRATE

sac

HECK'S REG. $6.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.77

CAR MAT SET

A•ro•r.

rr -&gt; m a ssorted colors. Two
piece '"t. Hea vy duty rubber.

DUPONT

LlnLE SWINGER
2 PIKE RUBBER

HECK ' S REG.$1 .99

C ~ oo&gt;e

AUTO DEPT.

..

M()TOROIL

18 OZ. RALLY

DUPONT

WALL UNIT

UCI .

MULD-G

..,....

5-SHELF

$1244

ENGINE TREATMENT

AUTO DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

HECK'S REG .
$1 . 38 PINT

4-SHELF • • •• •••• ••
HECK'S REG . TO $9.99

CHOICE

GULF IOW40

SPRAY CLEANER

BOOKCASES

3-SH_ELF .... ..... .

RISLONE

HECK'S REG.
$1.38 Qt.

99

CHOKE
704

28

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

12 FL. OZ.

CARBAND

The three shelf booktcse is ~O"x30''xl 0''. The
fou r she lf booktose i~ 30"JC36" x I 0"

HOUSIWARI

''

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

s

O uol1ty hea"y metalware .

GARBAGE
CAN

FIT SOLID OR SPLIT SEATSASSORTED COLORS .

llUPONT

HECK'S REG.
$17.99

•

..

hea"y me tolwore

SEAT COVERS

TIRE

HECK'S REG.
•1.49
AUTO DEPT.

. . ._ _SI'O-ITS_DIP_T.•. - - --·H•OU•SIW-'AR•'I•DEP_T._ _

SHOWER
CURTAIN

Ou~l i ty

TERRY

BLACK

HUTCH
FOOTIALL
1~ w le- tooq.., Poly ""'\)"! ond ~~k&gt;riO. ipt«~on moldtc:'-. lob "''"d to -.otk1tond 60 lbt. p.o oq . in. p~lt ,.., _
h1o1to temp.&lt;alvre or 30 NIDw rtra_ ,;,,...n~an Sloodo•diO"otWppo&lt;1ed !honk. Vppe&lt;· l9p lii'&lt;Oin wlul·
ed l ro '01. l.olht o, ltclt..r 1oun•r inlicle ond "'-"'•de
teethe, lined counl'lr.

no

20 GALLON

88!T.

DUPONT

AUTODEI'T.

Comes complete with
shower hooks.

7·PC. ALUMINUM

AUTOD~T.

$1299
SPORTS
DEI'T•..

AUTO
DEI'T.

HECK'S REG. $1.89

HE~~~5~EG •

SCOTT

Everything you need in a ·

WHITE POLISHING COMPOUND

TWIN TEXTURA RUIIER

Sized to
fit most rifles.

SPORTS DEP!!!T.!!!!!!!!I- - - - - - - - · ·-

COOKWARE SET

RUBBING COMPOUND

2 PIECE

GUN
CASE

"'&gt; PE.:~ V(OOD

Housewares Dept.

DUPONT

99(

Thi s· Colemon ~ l eepin g bog is
reo d)' for yov to sleep comfortably a nywhere. It i~ tilled Wi th
acrylic fiber. and !he lin ing is
IOOo/e cotton fl a nnel.

SI'OITS DIPT.

Heck's Reg. 80'

DUPONT

EIGIIE SPRAY
CLEAIER

SLEEPING BAG

for ct~d tl"l g i... e e~tro wea r quali ties. Guar ·

u~e.

88

$

Hardw.are Dept.

GUNK

COLEMAN

FOOTBALL

Simple to

sprtng~ .

Reg. •10.99 ·

II ASK ETIALL

HECK'S REG. $14.88

Pebb le gra ined leotkerteJC· strong ly rein-

DRILL

HECK ' S
REG.
99'

$488

Assl. Colors ond Sizes

DIVIDER BOOK 39~

. 67'

SCRUB
TUB

Improved sturdy cons true·
t ion.

10 QT.
HANDY
PAIL

SPOIITS
DEPT.

sass

COLORED
ATHLETIC SHOES

Y4"

Heck's

HECK'S REG.

HARDWARE DEPT.

GOAL &amp; NET SET

CONVERSE

4 SUBJECT

ENTRY LOCK .... . ........ . .. $ ]99

11322

HECK'S REG. $4.66

SPIRAL
NOTEBOOKS

HECK'S REG.
$9 .99"

BASKETBALL

SPORTS DEPT.

HUNTING HAT
SPORTS DEPT.

WILSON

HECK'S REG .
$14 .99

COMMANDER
FLASHLIGHT'
'.! 9

e

HECK'S REG.
T0$6 .99

"''&gt;( .... .!!!.'.~-~ ......,

Duck and t rea ted water re ·

pe llent. Rubberized gom e pocke t . .

" D" SIZE

HECK'SREG . $ 1.

BEDROOM LOCK

Belt lao~ . """o f.ont olooll

U)~

of rnedium weight mustard co lor

B.B.'S

SPORTS DEP

,,....d.

BATHROOM LOC K .... . . .... .

Designed for rough going. Made

CROSSMAN
"MILK CARTON"

HECK'S
REG.
$1 .36

t.v.y-ight ....... ~ D..oclo
in Muobod . T,_.y"rt tully

MOP
PAIL

$788

$266.
... . .. •. ... $2 66

e
e

$699

HUNTING
COAT
2 PLACE
AUTO-TRUCK
GUN RACK

Tt..,. (.,fortob•. unuol
o&lt;&gt;d "'uwh t•ovw i l ore of

-""· ·~lmt

Airtight sell ·adhesive vinyl
foom . Hundreds of house hold ond au tomotive use~ .

e PASSAGE LOCK . . ........ . . _$ 222

,.,., .,"-. ' - •to• poc~all ,
ond rtpper 1!~ .

SPORTS DEP 1.

HECK'S REG . $1 . 19

HUNTING
PANTS

J.e :

Black &amp;
Decker

VINYL
FOAM
TAPE

·t.~

SI'OITS DIPT.

HECK'S REG. $24 .99

'¢

f

-

HECK 'SREG.
$20 .99

$2299

COLEMAN
PROPANE

stock . . . with sCo ring circles and

Sports Dept.

DELUXE STOVE
HECK'S REG.
$59 .99

-·~
"1""- ....
..

$1899

COLEMAN

SPORTS
DEPT.

DEER TARGET
Nat ural , l ifelike, pri nted on heo"y
Heck's
Reg. '1.04

.

. ..

I

SUPER PELLETS

sovoo;::e and m:cur·
nud t lor IJWNI ond
ru1 "&lt;onorny cla11
IM lo · t tl.h th(' !od{l

'

SPORTS DEPT.

177

' ""'',011 Mu rbl.•w ood
fob crc,l o~' lomb \. II\ dro w ''eve n

•'If '""

HECK 'S REG .
$9.99

•

This Co leman lonlern burnt up Ia 8 hours
on htgh burn. It hos on eJCira Iorge ventilo·
tor that 'hi eld ~ og.,inst up glort

$4411

, , ~,., .

nr•d

Pcanooole

$699
l'

Yl" lam•no t

' lrt•okl U'"""Y lr tJ m tht&gt; puc k . lh mo1k11&gt; g~

and no n ~ rodung , oh thr ul l 1moot hly
ok l ou9h lo·t~~• ond l, (j l' twt!&lt;gh r ,,· I
"'" ""L"'"'ubdot :r l o r ,.,,,o • ••luo· ,.,
h"'' l" ''i !Jc.,.,, t lw p,., ,;-:nn ,v., ,,, 1, C•" ' '

6 PER BOX

HECK'S
REG.
$1&gt;.99

COLEMAN
LANTERN

MACH 1 52 INCH BOW

CEDA~

.

lho)U' ''""•

BEN PEARSON

liEN PEAR SON

1

•

HECK'S .REG.
99 '

AUTO'iJEPT.

RALLY
CAR
~~ UPHOLSTERY
CLEANER

99(

· HECK'S REG.
$1.59

AUTO. DEI'T.

'f•. l

..-

..

\

'

�- -- ~--~:---r------~~~--~--~--------~~----------~--------~--~------------------~------~~~~r----~-------

{. '

I.

•
'·

11-

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24. 1975

'

.

.

...

The D8 Uy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 24, i975 ·

OPEl DAILY

. PLENTY

10 TO 9

Of FREE

FREE
PARKING

PLAID SHIRT
"' -''""' ~'" • · · ~· •· " ~~
«-- ~
~.

Similar
T

I '"'I ''"•

""'"'" ··•' · ~ ·· yl" ""''
riM"' I -~ .... . ~- .... ,,_,. ,,.,

,.
;::

'

0

I

.

HUNTING
ARROWS

lnde~ogn . 1n quul• t) . '" p o•tlootw " •&lt; o:, rl t • ~ new

ed '\ port ~ l er
&lt;HI!

SPORTS
DEPT.

rl"'"'' ''~"

. polo sht:c.l

bl o( ~

t&lt;•l

hlnc ~

)

Caliber

Tf.e eccflomy ao d portability make~ thi~
popvlar l or the light- trcr.- elin9 com per_ '1 1 1pini luel capacity.
~lo11e

·-r
"'

SPOIITS DIP T.

H&amp;R
~(-• .,

aim ing spols .

88(

66C

FUEL
16.4 oz.

SINGLE SHOT
'

SHOTGUN
Choose from 12, 16, 20,
· or 410 gauge.

SPOIITS DEPT.

S]8~~

HECK'S
REG.
$1.79

HECK'S REG .
$49.99

HECK's SJ99
REG.

Arm~'

$999

78~

Sports Dept.

.)

SET OF 3

Heck's Reg .
$1 .39

HECK'S REG. $6 .99

SI'OIITS DEPT.

SI'OIITSDEPT.

$288

Housewares Dept.

HECK'S
RIG.
$13.99 PAIR

SPOIITS

onte~d

"Kontleok" b lod der. Shrink 1eo led
pa&lt;koge that ind1.1de~ lree ~ickin g lee.

S]33

DEPT.

,.

•
•

:~·--- !

-84 SHEET

I~"

•h•

GOBBLER
CALLER

O&gt;lho mo&gt;t e.,otlng t ull onlrodu &lt;P&lt;l '""" th~ b"&lt;h of
bo, rnll Sro~n fOiocn l l r e"'l'" ""'~n nOO ""en .,.,,h

$

modorn \OR09•oplo '"''"'1-'",..n' lh&lt; coli •ev•odv&lt;e &gt; o
' f'H f ECT G CliBll " on tho &gt;om~ '""""''"'!"'""' moM
~•l d lv•key . J"' &gt;onopt., lc v&gt;&lt; o, oh cOo ong ho•-.d• Come&gt;
wtlh tcmo&lt;o~e• o"d''"'Y'"'O &gt;l&lt;op No o "'~' to ll con &gt;O
" "" '""''~ p &lt;ot1LOC~ tho• 11obh l•· fo &lt;ld l•&gt;l&lt;d lo &lt;hlure

f''"'"'''""

•

s599

5'6

SPORTS
DEI'T.

HECK 'S RE G.
$8.94

,fUI Al E::MA..~S

- ----

cookware MI. Lovely design o n
the 1ide for a touch,of elega nce.

$599

&lt;

H..:lc'• Reg . $9.88
HOUSEWARE DE!'f.

-~
I

•

SHOES

,..,1

$

477

0

HECk'S REG. $6.48

9-PAIR

SHOE RACK

s 119

HECK'S REG.
$1.88 .

HOIJSIWAREDIPT.

scon
9" ROUND •• , ,

12" ROUND • • • • • • • •
16 " ROUND •..•••• ,
10" x14" .' ..••• • •••

12" x18" ...•••••..

19'
27'
19' ·
.27c ·

44' ~J!.~.

PLACE MATS

2 FOI U

Heck's

Reg. 53'

.

·'

HECK'S REG. TO 49'

Housewares
Dept.
.
.

. 1101/SIWARIIJIIIT.

.

$4.99

..,.

99 $

HECK'S REG.

NARDWA/11
DEI'T.

44

Made o f ga l11onized steel.

s

$2 .88

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

NAIDWARI
DIJIT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HAIDWARI
DEI'T.
•

s

DRESSING

99~m

$4
$644
99

The five shelf wa ll un it size is 24"x60 "JC 10'' or
18"x61J"JC1 0 "

· HECK'S .
REG .
$17.99

I.

L•IUO'IS.

QT.
HECK'S REG.
79' QT.

AUTO DEPT.

CREAM WAX

BRAKE FLUID

WITH APPLICATOR

f OIDIK .,. DIIJM11Ml5.

HECK'S R.EG.
$1 .99

AUTODEI'T.

AI'ID . .T.
DELUXE
OIL FILTER

RALLY
VINYL TOP

WRENCH

CLEANER

$100

CAR MAT
SET

99(

Choose from assor ted colors. For
a ll d omestic and foreign , com·
poet a nd sport cors. Heovy duty
rub ber.

OIL DRAIN

TRANSMISSION
(ONDinONER
&amp; SEALER

PAN

HECK'S REG. $1.69

DELUXE
TRANSMISSION

HECK'S REG .
$5.48

AUTO
DEI'T.

AUTO DEPT.

SPARK PLUGS

CLEANER

DELUXE

FILLER

SET OF 8

!Jl 66(
77( 1-J

66(

HECK'S REG.
$1.58

tJ

HEC'SREG.
'$1.29

•V

..

'·

I

\

I

..

HECK'S REG. ·
$1.48

HECK ' S REG.
$1.66 SET

h .-

. {i),-4)\

AUTO DEPT.

.

RECONDITIONED

OIL CAN SPOUT .

AUTO DEPT.

AUTfiDIPT.

:r

RALLY
CAR WASH

66(

HECK'S
REG.
$1.48

AUTO DEPT.

AUTODEI'T.

AUTO DEPT.

CON(ENTRATE

sac

HECK'S REG. $6.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.77

CAR MAT SET

A•ro•r.

rr -&gt; m a ssorted colors. Two
piece '"t. Hea vy duty rubber.

DUPONT

LlnLE SWINGER
2 PIKE RUBBER

HECK ' S REG.$1 .99

C ~ oo&gt;e

AUTO DEPT.

..

M()TOROIL

18 OZ. RALLY

DUPONT

WALL UNIT

UCI .

MULD-G

..,....

5-SHELF

$1244

ENGINE TREATMENT

AUTO DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

HECK'S REG .
$1 . 38 PINT

4-SHELF • • •• •••• ••
HECK'S REG . TO $9.99

CHOICE

GULF IOW40

SPRAY CLEANER

BOOKCASES

3-SH_ELF .... ..... .

RISLONE

HECK'S REG.
$1.38 Qt.

99

CHOKE
704

28

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

12 FL. OZ.

CARBAND

The three shelf booktcse is ~O"x30''xl 0''. The
fou r she lf booktose i~ 30"JC36" x I 0"

HOUSIWARI

''

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

s

O uol1ty hea"y metalware .

GARBAGE
CAN

FIT SOLID OR SPLIT SEATSASSORTED COLORS .

llUPONT

HECK'S REG.
$17.99

•

..

hea"y me tolwore

SEAT COVERS

TIRE

HECK'S REG.
•1.49
AUTO DEPT.

. . ._ _SI'O-ITS_DIP_T.•. - - --·H•OU•SIW-'AR•'I•DEP_T._ _

SHOWER
CURTAIN

Ou~l i ty

TERRY

BLACK

HUTCH
FOOTIALL
1~ w le- tooq.., Poly ""'\)"! ond ~~k&gt;riO. ipt«~on moldtc:'-. lob "''"d to -.otk1tond 60 lbt. p.o oq . in. p~lt ,.., _
h1o1to temp.&lt;alvre or 30 NIDw rtra_ ,;,,...n~an Sloodo•diO"otWppo&lt;1ed !honk. Vppe&lt;· l9p lii'&lt;Oin wlul·
ed l ro '01. l.olht o, ltclt..r 1oun•r inlicle ond "'-"'•de
teethe, lined counl'lr.

no

20 GALLON

88!T.

DUPONT

AUTODEI'T.

Comes complete with
shower hooks.

7·PC. ALUMINUM

AUTOD~T.

$1299
SPORTS
DEI'T•..

AUTO
DEI'T.

HECK'S REG. $1.89

HE~~~5~EG •

SCOTT

Everything you need in a ·

WHITE POLISHING COMPOUND

TWIN TEXTURA RUIIER

Sized to
fit most rifles.

SPORTS DEP!!!T.!!!!!!!!I- - - - - - - - · ·-

COOKWARE SET

RUBBING COMPOUND

2 PIECE

GUN
CASE

"'&gt; PE.:~ V(OOD

Housewares Dept.

DUPONT

99(

Thi s· Colemon ~ l eepin g bog is
reo d)' for yov to sleep comfortably a nywhere. It i~ tilled Wi th
acrylic fiber. and !he lin ing is
IOOo/e cotton fl a nnel.

SI'OITS DIPT.

Heck's Reg. 80'

DUPONT

EIGIIE SPRAY
CLEAIER

SLEEPING BAG

for ct~d tl"l g i... e e~tro wea r quali ties. Guar ·

u~e.

88

$

Hardw.are Dept.

GUNK

COLEMAN

FOOTBALL

Simple to

sprtng~ .

Reg. •10.99 ·

II ASK ETIALL

HECK'S REG. $14.88

Pebb le gra ined leotkerteJC· strong ly rein-

DRILL

HECK ' S
REG.
99'

$488

Assl. Colors ond Sizes

DIVIDER BOOK 39~

. 67'

SCRUB
TUB

Improved sturdy cons true·
t ion.

10 QT.
HANDY
PAIL

SPOIITS
DEPT.

sass

COLORED
ATHLETIC SHOES

Y4"

Heck's

HECK'S REG.

HARDWARE DEPT.

GOAL &amp; NET SET

CONVERSE

4 SUBJECT

ENTRY LOCK .... . ........ . .. $ ]99

11322

HECK'S REG. $4.66

SPIRAL
NOTEBOOKS

HECK'S REG.
$9 .99"

BASKETBALL

SPORTS DEPT.

HUNTING HAT
SPORTS DEPT.

WILSON

HECK'S REG .
$14 .99

COMMANDER
FLASHLIGHT'
'.! 9

e

HECK'S REG.
T0$6 .99

"''&gt;( .... .!!!.'.~-~ ......,

Duck and t rea ted water re ·

pe llent. Rubberized gom e pocke t . .

" D" SIZE

HECK'SREG . $ 1.

BEDROOM LOCK

Belt lao~ . """o f.ont olooll

U)~

of rnedium weight mustard co lor

B.B.'S

SPORTS DEP

,,....d.

BATHROOM LOC K .... . . .... .

Designed for rough going. Made

CROSSMAN
"MILK CARTON"

HECK'S
REG.
$1 .36

t.v.y-ight ....... ~ D..oclo
in Muobod . T,_.y"rt tully

MOP
PAIL

$788

$266.
... . .. •. ... $2 66

e
e

$699

HUNTING
COAT
2 PLACE
AUTO-TRUCK
GUN RACK

Tt..,. (.,fortob•. unuol
o&lt;&gt;d "'uwh t•ovw i l ore of

-""· ·~lmt

Airtight sell ·adhesive vinyl
foom . Hundreds of house hold ond au tomotive use~ .

e PASSAGE LOCK . . ........ . . _$ 222

,.,., .,"-. ' - •to• poc~all ,
ond rtpper 1!~ .

SPORTS DEP 1.

HECK'S REG . $1 . 19

HUNTING
PANTS

J.e :

Black &amp;
Decker

VINYL
FOAM
TAPE

·t.~

SI'OITS DIPT.

HECK'S REG. $24 .99

'¢

f

-

HECK 'SREG.
$20 .99

$2299

COLEMAN
PROPANE

stock . . . with sCo ring circles and

Sports Dept.

DELUXE STOVE
HECK'S REG.
$59 .99

-·~
"1""- ....
..

$1899

COLEMAN

SPORTS
DEPT.

DEER TARGET
Nat ural , l ifelike, pri nted on heo"y
Heck's
Reg. '1.04

.

. ..

I

SUPER PELLETS

sovoo;::e and m:cur·
nud t lor IJWNI ond
ru1 "&lt;onorny cla11
IM lo · t tl.h th(' !od{l

'

SPORTS DEPT.

177

' ""'',011 Mu rbl.•w ood
fob crc,l o~' lomb \. II\ dro w ''eve n

•'If '""

HECK 'S REG .
$9.99

•

This Co leman lonlern burnt up Ia 8 hours
on htgh burn. It hos on eJCira Iorge ventilo·
tor that 'hi eld ~ og.,inst up glort

$4411

, , ~,., .

nr•d

Pcanooole

$699
l'

Yl" lam•no t

' lrt•okl U'"""Y lr tJ m tht&gt; puc k . lh mo1k11&gt; g~

and no n ~ rodung , oh thr ul l 1moot hly
ok l ou9h lo·t~~• ond l, (j l' twt!&lt;gh r ,,· I
"'" ""L"'"'ubdot :r l o r ,.,,,o • ••luo· ,.,
h"'' l" ''i !Jc.,.,, t lw p,., ,;-:nn ,v., ,,, 1, C•" ' '

6 PER BOX

HECK'S
REG.
$1&gt;.99

COLEMAN
LANTERN

MACH 1 52 INCH BOW

CEDA~

.

lho)U' ''""•

BEN PEARSON

liEN PEAR SON

1

•

HECK'S .REG.
99 '

AUTO'iJEPT.

RALLY
CAR
~~ UPHOLSTERY
CLEANER

99(

· HECK'S REG.
$1.59

AUTO. DEI'T.

'f•. l

..-

..

\

'

�..
I .
I

·tJ - .l'he Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24. 19~5

•

~~-l

•

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

I

OPEII DAIL

.

10 TO 9

FREE

,.

,,

AIREQUIPT

EC32

PREMIER
UPRIGHT
VACUUM
CLEANER

•

•

V•b&lt;ming B.fltor 8or ond 81 u1~ . Vtn~ l O...!or 8&lt;!9 w•lh
lrpl)l't . -4 Poorh&lt;&gt;n Corptt S.lo.ctoo. Su&lt;1•on Co ntrol v,n,f
lklmpe&lt; . J Powtic " Handle. Eoty coMer &gt;ron tor UH W r!ll
-":•UI&lt;)rl~l

SCHICK
TIME MACHINE

G.E.

HAIR
DRYER

CAN
OPENER

1400 watts o f wpe r drying power .
Exclu!&gt;ive com f ort control panel to
cu ~ t c

inch ?a nne! for even th e
larg e~ ! roller !&gt;. Co mp lete ly col ·

88

$

$4799
HECK'S REG. $54.?6

HECK'S REG.
$32.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

.,. ,

..•

.' \

1102

•'

·.

LIT IONIX

CALCULATOR
_WITf:l STAND
.

'.
..••.
.·.

•

l

1

99JEWElRY

'

9

dry•n ~ .,.,.j

,...,.1,.. 0

••
,•

...·
••

$238

69&lt;

HECK'S REG.
$1.14

P~lo !~ ~ O&gt;Y IO

M"'" ''"'"

IEWB.IIY DB&gt;T.

• Kwik-Sew
• McCalls
• Simplicity

ELECTRIC

SLICING KNIFE

Wn"~ ,...,, ~

....__ ___

NORELCO

&amp; Service

12 CUP DRIP-OLATOR
D10p foltt" CoHH Mo~tr o~ro
mgloUJlly ••aulo!u t.ompe •o ·
lure a"d b&lt;ew1 ng lime. lo n ·

f&gt;nndl• o"-&lt;&gt; P"

·~~ "'" " d~~~·~ b l•
• l~m&lt;O n!l ol llo•o• o~ d o•omo
(.,H.,. M•~r b&lt;&gt;JI• &lt;O 11'1 ..e•er
b•ller Hold• co lfu a t~h~ per ·

"'" '

f,on. "'""~.n~ wMo l • ~ ·tl '"" "

HECK'S REG. 15.96

d•&lt;O'"'"" Jt-

''9"

fe&lt;l •~r ..,ng le mFJe r o !ur• . Sol•
ty 'il lou &lt;01"0"\et fOI~ IO

$2999

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

992 -22 84

Pomeroy, Ohio

100 TABLETS

eFLEXSTEEL

e4-oz . Jar
e4 -oz, Tube

eHOOVER
•ADMIRAL
eSPEED QUEEN
ePROVINCETOWN MAPLE

CHOICE

1~A!

HECK'S
REG.

$1.69

HECK'S REG.
$1.59

COSMEnC
DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSME"(
DEPT.

eBASSETT
eLANE
eSYROCO

200 COUNT

TYPING
PAPER

•·
7386

G.E. ELECTRIC

MUNSEY

. "SNOOZ" ALARM CLOCK

BROILETTE-TOMTER

El«fr ic alarm dock with white face.

."'"e-diym &gt;'le loa-ret bro rlt r od.., ~· hombyr'il~" · 01 lour

Easy Ia read numera ls and hands.

•

HECK 'S
REG.
$6 :79

'

'.' •
'

~

'

ssss
.

JEWRRYDB&gt;T.

I:
••

..

'~' "' oltoo1r Tt.e d""l' lrO'f a&lt;ld rod&lt; "'• m""r&gt;b le for
eo•ydeanin9 Oelad&gt;abto &lt;ord r!Kiudtd .

JR~-

..,.,

Rag.

VINYL
TABLECLOTHS
Durable vi nyl- ea sy to dean

Assorted sizes - 52•.52, 52x70, or

$233

HECK'S REG. $5.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

TABLE CLOTHS
60" round.

7'!

$499

.. I ..

eARMSTRONG
•FRIGIDAIRE

typing

pa:per
Hack's

...

trpi~a: paperQ

'~~=··

to

S]19

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JEANNETTE CLASS

OIL LAMPS

spending. Spending billions of
dollars to reserve one city
will only mean that a never·
ending line will quickly form
consisting of every hardpressed city, all expecting
another
handout
from
Washington .
What lessons can the
federal government learn
from the dilemma of New
York City? Very simply put,
we must put an end to deficit
spending. When it comes to
inflationary and excessive
federal spe nding , those of us
who have been yelling "stop "
have not been listened to.
Rather, the federal government has continued down the
road of attempting to provide
everything for everyone. As
appealing as this may be, a
dollar still only goes so far .
When you try to get a $1.50 out
of that dollar , the juggling
can go on only so long before
financial disaster hits. I intend to continue to speak out
and vote against such
irresponsible deficit spending
on the federal level. The
lesson of New York City
should serve as a warning of
the consequences if the
spending trend is .not
reversed ,

$233

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HECK'S REG. TO $5.39

HECK'S REG. $3.99

HOUSEWAIIE DB&gt;T.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

HOUSEWARE DB&gt;T.

fllD
.,,.,,
..

•

••

..

'

. '......
·I '

;~

':
••
,•r ,.•

.

,
"·
••

:·".

.~

FEDERAL GLASS
SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

$1''

;:

i:
J:
,,t:

~;
,..

HECK'SREG. $2.19

IIOilSEWAIE DEPT.

,i·

- PLASTIC

DRESSER
SCARVES
Your choice 16''x 33" or 16"x 43".

H~CK'S

FEDERAL CLASS

FEDERAL CLASS

SERVING PLATE

SERVING BOWL

$1''

. HECK'S REG. $2.19

REG. TO 99'

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

SJ88

FEDERAL GLASS

FEDERAL GLASS

SALAD SET
$455

9 .. PIECE

$

·,

·.•

SERVE ALL SET

...

.·.

$429

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG. $2.66

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

$7.44
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $6.99

· NOUSEWARI DEPt.

•I

·I' i

~

••
••
•'••
••
••••
••

A SHEET
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
I

.;.
••..;

.
I

I

I

MATERIALS
CO.
..

'•
••
'•,

-

\
•

'.
.•

•
'

'

.

I

..
'

..
••

'

lb. $

Debbie

Windon. Opal Dyer , Lester
Jeffers, Ronnie Wood .

Photography Kau1z . Sarah Goebel.

Pam

39

W. ~A.

-

Free Into Roasts, Steaks
Ground Sirloin

:

Bathroom

4

Roll
Pkg.
With Coupon

limit One Coupon With $10 or More Purchase

0 1111111111111

Sub ject to A.ppli ( able State ancl Loca l T.o xes
Void Alter Sot., Sept. 27, 1975

S•••ked
Picnics

Chunk Light

Flame Red

Star~~~.Kist

Tokay Grapes

Tuna

Public Speaking - Melan ie
Dillard, Rachel Hunter, Sonia

Carr. Sarah Goebel.

Swine Rick
Shirley M cDona ld .

6¥2-01.

Jordan ,

Veterinary Science -

Jim

Tomato Rich

10' Off Label-4-aundry

Cheer
Detergent

3-lb. 1-oz.
Pkg.

CONTEST OCT. 14
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
The American League wiU be
represented
here
by
Milwaukee Brewers infielder
Kurt Bevacqua during the
major league bubble gum
blowing championship on
Oct. 14 .
Bevacqua, whose 17'h inch
bubble edged out Bri9 Raich
of the Cleveland Indians, and
will meet JohMy Oates of the '
Philadelphia Phils. Oates'
National League bubble
winner measured 18 inches.

luY&gt;-oL

Tollhito Soupeans

Joy Liquid
$1
3
Detergent ••.
10' Off Lobel-Oishwashing

Enrichod Kroger

Bread

$119 Kroger

• • • • • •

White
MUSIC COMING
LETART, W. Va. - An
outdoor music festival will be
held Saturday, Sept. 27, 7:30
p.m. featuring The Eagle
Mountain Boys and The
Uberty Mountaineers doing
Bluegrass and Country
Music , at Letart School,
Letart, W. Va . In case of rain
it will be held inside in the
school cafeteria, sponsored
by the Letart PTO. Ad·
m ission is adults , $1.50,
s tudenls, 75 cents.

Can

lbs

Osborn.
State Fair Participants
(Premium Checks) - Carl
Gheen , Sonia Carr , Sarah
Goebe l , Marcia Dillard ,
Mandie
Rose ,
Barbara
Douglas. Debbie Birchfield ,
Julia Gheen , Niesel Duvall.
Betsy
Amsbary,
Robin
Ritchie , Bon i ta Johnston ,
Camil le Sw i ndell. Mary
Mora , Lester Jeffers, Teresa
Carr, Julie Johnson , Mary
Colwell. Tammie Starcher,
Melan ie Dil lard. Sharon
Karr , Ra che l Hunter.

--c ---

Charmin Tissue

Whole 4- to 8 -lb. Avg.

Mora.
Dog Care and Training -

Rhonda Riebel.
Leadership -

---------

irloin Dp

l-Ib.
4-oz.

• • • •

•

l1111ves

Delicious

Kroger Fresh

Kroger

Grade A
Large Eggs

Applesauce
1-lb.
Cans

$

BAND WINS TROPHY
RACINE - The Southern
Local marching band par·
ticipated in the Band-ARama Saturday at Point
Pleasant, competing in the
marching and receiving a
trophy . The band also attended the Apple Festival on
Sept. 17. It will conduct tag
day Saturday, Sept. 27 in the
villages of Racine, Pomeroy
and Middleport. Joy Bigler is
band instructor.

••
•

••

Govt Goaded Ch.olco
People's Choice, Boneless ·
Whole, 8· to 1 O.lb. Avg.

Outstanding

Quality
Home Furnishings

TYLENOL

~

Now the shakey financial
situation has collapsed and
the city has turned to the
state and federal governmenls for help .
The facts and fi gure s
surrounding the collapse are
well worth noting since they
point out trends which have
alarming parallels at the
federal level today. The debt
of New York City totals about
12 billion dollars. There are
approximately 270,000 people
on the city payroll with an \
average salary of $13,000.
Over 1 million people are on
- : vR WNNIE - LoMie LeMaster, who
the welfare rolls. To handle
underwent brain surgery July 28 at St. Joseph Hospital,
this huge am ount of nonParkersburg,
will be honored Saturday with a birthday
taxpayers, attracted by high
party at the Grange Hall at Rock Springs, located at .the
welfare payrnenls , the city
Meigs County Fairgrounds from 1 to 3 p.m . Lonnie had a
has had to increase ils emtumor on the !rain that was removed. He still has unployees by 100,000 in the last
stable equilibrium, but is slowly improving . His seventh
fifteen years, even though the
birthday was Tuesday. Sept. 23. A fund drive was con·
overall city population has
dueled for him to help the family with the hospital ex·
not increased.
penses. He is a second grader at Salisbury Elementary.
It is difficult, if not imPupils at Salisbury grades one through four have been
possible, to point a finger at
invited,
but everyone is welcome. Lonnie is the son of Mr .
any one individual or group
and
Mrs.
Edward LeMaster , Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
and say that they are the ones
responsible for New York's
financial crisis. What is
evident is that no one took the
responsibility for leadership
'
in the city to the point where
Mar ci a
I Continued from page l) Mary ColwelL
overall spending levels were
Holcomb
.
Assistant
presiding
over
the
carefully examined. Nol one
Food Preservation - Jut ia
was willing to step forward evening's activities.
Johnson. Mona lee Peck. Rilla
Following are those who Rhoades .
and say "stop". Instead, it
Home Environment became much easier to received awards last night, Tammy
Fitch , Denise Dean,
knuckle under to the all getting medals with the Mandie Rose. Phyllis Davis.
Home Management demands of every group and exception of the state fair
interest : higher salaries , participants who r eceive d Pa1ty Dyer .
Horse - Marcia Di lla rd.
more welfare, more services, premium checks.
Robin Ritchie.
greater benefits , higher
Achievement Mark
Sheep - Todd Tripp, Bi ll
Mora,
Pam
Holcomb.
Kau1z.
pensions. Now that the money
Agricultural - 1 Brian
Rabbits - Nick Leonard .
has run out , these same free· Windon , Blai r Windon , Mark Rhonda Han ing.
spenders want the state and Mora .
Dress Revue - Jan Wilson ,
Alumni Recognition - Ed
BeHy Mould . Be1h Ri1chie,
federal government to bail
Cross, Nancy Cross , Donna
Brenda Boyles, Apri l Parker .
them out - without any Weber .
Beth Riebel, Jackie King,
Beef - Debbie Boa1rlgh1, Bonita Johnson , Lisa Collins,
substantial reforms to end
their extravagant spending. Grant Johnson , Tammy Dixie Eblin. Darlene Thorn .
, Paula Hysell.
ton. Virginia Jordan . Donna
While it appears that New Pitzer
Bread - Debb ie Birchfield , Thornton, Opal Oyer, Patty
York City has managed to Mary Mora, Kim Bickers, Dyer .
Clothing
Cami ll e
temporar ily repair the short- BeHy Jordan . ·
Electric - M ike McGuire, Swinde l l, Paula
Hysell .
run situation with only state Randy
Kennedy.
·
Teresa Carr, Sandy Garnes.
and not federal aid, it also
Food - Nu1rition - Tammie
Conservation of Natura I
seems inevitable , given th e Star cher, · Denise White , Resources - Rodney Keller ,
Donald Karr , Sharon Karr ,
continuing problems, that
Kim Krautter .
New York will eventually the Congress , I will not
Consumer
Education Mandie Ro se, Tamm ie
turn to the federal govern- support it. New York has not
Starcher, Paula Hysell.
mentfor financial aid. Should begun to address the proper
Dairy - Jan Holter, Derilse
such legislation come before solution - reduction of Dean , Tony Carnahan , Mark

JEWEliiY
DEPT.

- e7-o.z , Lotion

5

By ~~::nee

HECK'S REG.
$35.99

d • on . •a•r fa hold, .., , , to
Hold• I ~

HECK'S
REG. $1.19

COSMEnC
DEPT.

Singer Sales

Cu ts with ou t effo rt- oil you do i ~
o uide it .

\~U'"'!I "e&lt;HJ
~o\&lt;1 !M• "'&lt;dt11

73(

h -..~''"9'!

QuWtTaudi
....__,

With patterns from

REG. '19.96

LADIES SHAVER

MAGIC NET

HECK'S REG.
$3.18

COSME"( DEPT.

'

Cl.or"" ,...._,,.

Show you the largesl
seleclion of labrics in
our area .

G.E.

j .. .

NESTLE
8 oz.

CLAIROL

Let The®
Fabric Shop

p..,~h "::u tt o n ere r tm tempe rOILire w ntro l

HECK'S

JEWELRY DEPT.

QUIET
TOUCH
BY

more pull ong "" '' h GE ' ~ ea~y 1o remove

Automat•&lt;
Re tr o&lt;I O'&gt;Ie handle

$16g;

LS-4

SUNBEAM

co rd ; open

HECK'S REG. $11.96

INTENSIVE CARE

BABY LOTION

e

e

Ell9

,n..

I

"''''' yc fdton&lt;"

oz.

VASELINE
.•
.·..

•

HAMILTON
BEACH
5-SPEED

S999

HECK'S REG.
$25.96

Level (o ntr oll AI C)

e

e

JEWElRY
DEPT.

•

'"&gt;cater~; posit i ... e b!'lolf:r e 1e&lt;1or buM on

S2J99

fleoll• •e f, &lt;&gt;nd 7 "" 'P'"~ &lt;I• l or

lo•l

e

Hogh doi'T'e lod pro ... , de ~ lor ~reale r
cook"19 co po&lt;o ty
No mo re tuggtng: no

· HECK'S REG.
$33.96

, / .~ i

108

de l o~hol:&gt;le

Conver lef

The news media have
devoted a great deal of attention in the past month to
theplightof New York City as
it: -struggles to prevent a
(!eclaration of bankruptcy .
While the majority of the
American public have no
inunediate stake in the fate of
the country's largest city.
there is a definite lesson to be
learned from New York's
troubles.
As any household budgeter
in Southeastern Ohio knows,
it is impossible to consistently. spend more than is
taken in without running into
financial disaster , This lesson
never seems to have sunk in
on the officials in New York
City. For · years New York
City has spent money without
regard to the fact that one
day the bills would be coming
due. Until this year, the city
had managed to stay one step
ahead of the bill collectors.

4 ONLY

hand le ~ryltng lo r '::&gt;olonn• . ch ro me olo tPd

BLOW STYLE DRYER
1000 Wo"• o l " " ..,.•' hQM
we1;h1 a nd eo\&gt; 10 ~o ~ dle 3

Fl'olure ~

lengl'

mo t1 C end -of l ope \hutcH

JEWElRY
DEPT.

5·Speed H o nd M 01H! I will meer on y chol

GILLETTE

{ no T on cl . ~ or A(

e

(n1duded )
Sw• t che ~ from 1-,a tlene l to
A( whe n A( Con..-e rter ·~ uo;e d
Avro ·

HECK'S REG.
$59.96

MIXER

8-DIGIT

PAN

l or

e

\Ue ~o n eroes

co ntrol l e d
lo r word /rever~e and locus . Elevation
and levelin g co ntrol. Handsome
woodg rain tnm

4 ONLY

I

•

co nd e n~~· mocropilone

FRY

"" h...,nd\ fr ee " record.ng p lu\ rem o te micrO-

Remo t e

Jewelry Dept.

•

• s . u l t · ln

e

REG. ~10.96

•

CASSETTE
RECORDER

p hone' lm 'nle • u•e-ws / drcto t rng
Co~~e he
ew( t
AC /DC Power. ope rate \ on 4 "'("

•a••
HECK'S

~ t oroge

1-5090

G •E•

SLIDE
PROJECTOR

G E Del~ • • ran"~""' ~· • " hand\ lrH oper0110~ I! 1
eo •~ to &lt;le-a ~ •"'" ·~mo..,blo &lt;u Uo • ond P"""~ ...,_ ••
.,....,mbf ~· Durnble I~ ' "" l•on ! '' ll' ~'-"" I&lt;'O+&lt; &gt;. und
odor r ~\&lt; 11&lt;1 ~ 1

to ke th e hea t o ff th e fa ce _ 1000

lopsi?le for trave l a nd

G.E.
ELECTRIC

135/635

2001

•

Report

All Kroger Stores

·Now Open
24 Hours a Day
(Except Saturday Midnight 'til 9 a.m. Sunday)
IE1&lt;&lt;e1n

Ashland (WincheSter Ave.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S.
Pikeville, Rainelle, Summersville and White Sulphur)

.

'

.

'

�..
I .
I

·tJ - .l'he Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24. 19~5

•

~~-l

•

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975

I

OPEII DAIL

.

10 TO 9

FREE

,.

,,

AIREQUIPT

EC32

PREMIER
UPRIGHT
VACUUM
CLEANER

•

•

V•b&lt;ming B.fltor 8or ond 81 u1~ . Vtn~ l O...!or 8&lt;!9 w•lh
lrpl)l't . -4 Poorh&lt;&gt;n Corptt S.lo.ctoo. Su&lt;1•on Co ntrol v,n,f
lklmpe&lt; . J Powtic " Handle. Eoty coMer &gt;ron tor UH W r!ll
-":•UI&lt;)rl~l

SCHICK
TIME MACHINE

G.E.

HAIR
DRYER

CAN
OPENER

1400 watts o f wpe r drying power .
Exclu!&gt;ive com f ort control panel to
cu ~ t c

inch ?a nne! for even th e
larg e~ ! roller !&gt;. Co mp lete ly col ·

88

$

$4799
HECK'S REG. $54.?6

HECK'S REG.
$32.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

.,. ,

..•

.' \

1102

•'

·.

LIT IONIX

CALCULATOR
_WITf:l STAND
.

'.
..••.
.·.

•

l

1

99JEWElRY

'

9

dry•n ~ .,.,.j

,...,.1,.. 0

••
,•

...·
••

$238

69&lt;

HECK'S REG.
$1.14

P~lo !~ ~ O&gt;Y IO

M"'" ''"'"

IEWB.IIY DB&gt;T.

• Kwik-Sew
• McCalls
• Simplicity

ELECTRIC

SLICING KNIFE

Wn"~ ,...,, ~

....__ ___

NORELCO

&amp; Service

12 CUP DRIP-OLATOR
D10p foltt" CoHH Mo~tr o~ro
mgloUJlly ••aulo!u t.ompe •o ·
lure a"d b&lt;ew1 ng lime. lo n ·

f&gt;nndl• o"-&lt;&gt; P"

·~~ "'" " d~~~·~ b l•
• l~m&lt;O n!l ol llo•o• o~ d o•omo
(.,H.,. M•~r b&lt;&gt;JI• &lt;O 11'1 ..e•er
b•ller Hold• co lfu a t~h~ per ·

"'" '

f,on. "'""~.n~ wMo l • ~ ·tl '"" "

HECK'S REG. 15.96

d•&lt;O'"'"" Jt-

''9"

fe&lt;l •~r ..,ng le mFJe r o !ur• . Sol•
ty 'il lou &lt;01"0"\et fOI~ IO

$2999

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO

992 -22 84

Pomeroy, Ohio

100 TABLETS

eFLEXSTEEL

e4-oz . Jar
e4 -oz, Tube

eHOOVER
•ADMIRAL
eSPEED QUEEN
ePROVINCETOWN MAPLE

CHOICE

1~A!

HECK'S
REG.

$1.69

HECK'S REG.
$1.59

COSMEnC
DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSME"(
DEPT.

eBASSETT
eLANE
eSYROCO

200 COUNT

TYPING
PAPER

•·
7386

G.E. ELECTRIC

MUNSEY

. "SNOOZ" ALARM CLOCK

BROILETTE-TOMTER

El«fr ic alarm dock with white face.

."'"e-diym &gt;'le loa-ret bro rlt r od.., ~· hombyr'il~" · 01 lour

Easy Ia read numera ls and hands.

•

HECK 'S
REG.
$6 :79

'

'.' •
'

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.

JEWRRYDB&gt;T.

I:
••

..

'~' "' oltoo1r Tt.e d""l' lrO'f a&lt;ld rod&lt; "'• m""r&gt;b le for
eo•ydeanin9 Oelad&gt;abto &lt;ord r!Kiudtd .

JR~-

..,.,

Rag.

VINYL
TABLECLOTHS
Durable vi nyl- ea sy to dean

Assorted sizes - 52•.52, 52x70, or

$233

HECK'S REG. $5.99

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

TABLE CLOTHS
60" round.

7'!

$499

.. I ..

eARMSTRONG
•FRIGIDAIRE

typing

pa:per
Hack's

...

trpi~a: paperQ

'~~=··

to

S]19

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JEANNETTE CLASS

OIL LAMPS

spending. Spending billions of
dollars to reserve one city
will only mean that a never·
ending line will quickly form
consisting of every hardpressed city, all expecting
another
handout
from
Washington .
What lessons can the
federal government learn
from the dilemma of New
York City? Very simply put,
we must put an end to deficit
spending. When it comes to
inflationary and excessive
federal spe nding , those of us
who have been yelling "stop "
have not been listened to.
Rather, the federal government has continued down the
road of attempting to provide
everything for everyone. As
appealing as this may be, a
dollar still only goes so far .
When you try to get a $1.50 out
of that dollar , the juggling
can go on only so long before
financial disaster hits. I intend to continue to speak out
and vote against such
irresponsible deficit spending
on the federal level. The
lesson of New York City
should serve as a warning of
the consequences if the
spending trend is .not
reversed ,

$233

HECK'S REG. $1.88

HECK'S REG. TO $5.39

HECK'S REG. $3.99

HOUSEWAIIE DB&gt;T.

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

HOUSEWARE DB&gt;T.

fllD
.,,.,,
..

•

••

..

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;~

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••
,•r ,.•

.

,
"·
••

:·".

.~

FEDERAL GLASS
SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

$1''

;:

i:
J:
,,t:

~;
,..

HECK'SREG. $2.19

IIOilSEWAIE DEPT.

,i·

- PLASTIC

DRESSER
SCARVES
Your choice 16''x 33" or 16"x 43".

H~CK'S

FEDERAL CLASS

FEDERAL CLASS

SERVING PLATE

SERVING BOWL

$1''

. HECK'S REG. $2.19

REG. TO 99'

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HOUSEWAIE DEPT.

SJ88

FEDERAL GLASS

FEDERAL GLASS

SALAD SET
$455

9 .. PIECE

$

·,

·.•

SERVE ALL SET

...

.·.

$429

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG. $2.66

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

$7.44
HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $6.99

· NOUSEWARI DEPt.

•I

·I' i

~

••
••
•'••
••
••••
••

A SHEET
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
I

.;.
••..;

.
I

I

I

MATERIALS
CO.
..

'•
••
'•,

-

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.•

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lb. $

Debbie

Windon. Opal Dyer , Lester
Jeffers, Ronnie Wood .

Photography Kau1z . Sarah Goebel.

Pam

39

W. ~A.

-

Free Into Roasts, Steaks
Ground Sirloin

:

Bathroom

4

Roll
Pkg.
With Coupon

limit One Coupon With $10 or More Purchase

0 1111111111111

Sub ject to A.ppli ( able State ancl Loca l T.o xes
Void Alter Sot., Sept. 27, 1975

S•••ked
Picnics

Chunk Light

Flame Red

Star~~~.Kist

Tokay Grapes

Tuna

Public Speaking - Melan ie
Dillard, Rachel Hunter, Sonia

Carr. Sarah Goebel.

Swine Rick
Shirley M cDona ld .

6¥2-01.

Jordan ,

Veterinary Science -

Jim

Tomato Rich

10' Off Label-4-aundry

Cheer
Detergent

3-lb. 1-oz.
Pkg.

CONTEST OCT. 14
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
The American League wiU be
represented
here
by
Milwaukee Brewers infielder
Kurt Bevacqua during the
major league bubble gum
blowing championship on
Oct. 14 .
Bevacqua, whose 17'h inch
bubble edged out Bri9 Raich
of the Cleveland Indians, and
will meet JohMy Oates of the '
Philadelphia Phils. Oates'
National League bubble
winner measured 18 inches.

luY&gt;-oL

Tollhito Soupeans

Joy Liquid
$1
3
Detergent ••.
10' Off Lobel-Oishwashing

Enrichod Kroger

Bread

$119 Kroger

• • • • • •

White
MUSIC COMING
LETART, W. Va. - An
outdoor music festival will be
held Saturday, Sept. 27, 7:30
p.m. featuring The Eagle
Mountain Boys and The
Uberty Mountaineers doing
Bluegrass and Country
Music , at Letart School,
Letart, W. Va . In case of rain
it will be held inside in the
school cafeteria, sponsored
by the Letart PTO. Ad·
m ission is adults , $1.50,
s tudenls, 75 cents.

Can

lbs

Osborn.
State Fair Participants
(Premium Checks) - Carl
Gheen , Sonia Carr , Sarah
Goebe l , Marcia Dillard ,
Mandie
Rose ,
Barbara
Douglas. Debbie Birchfield ,
Julia Gheen , Niesel Duvall.
Betsy
Amsbary,
Robin
Ritchie , Bon i ta Johnston ,
Camil le Sw i ndell. Mary
Mora , Lester Jeffers, Teresa
Carr, Julie Johnson , Mary
Colwell. Tammie Starcher,
Melan ie Dil lard. Sharon
Karr , Ra che l Hunter.

--c ---

Charmin Tissue

Whole 4- to 8 -lb. Avg.

Mora.
Dog Care and Training -

Rhonda Riebel.
Leadership -

---------

irloin Dp

l-Ib.
4-oz.

• • • •

•

l1111ves

Delicious

Kroger Fresh

Kroger

Grade A
Large Eggs

Applesauce
1-lb.
Cans

$

BAND WINS TROPHY
RACINE - The Southern
Local marching band par·
ticipated in the Band-ARama Saturday at Point
Pleasant, competing in the
marching and receiving a
trophy . The band also attended the Apple Festival on
Sept. 17. It will conduct tag
day Saturday, Sept. 27 in the
villages of Racine, Pomeroy
and Middleport. Joy Bigler is
band instructor.

••
•

••

Govt Goaded Ch.olco
People's Choice, Boneless ·
Whole, 8· to 1 O.lb. Avg.

Outstanding

Quality
Home Furnishings

TYLENOL

~

Now the shakey financial
situation has collapsed and
the city has turned to the
state and federal governmenls for help .
The facts and fi gure s
surrounding the collapse are
well worth noting since they
point out trends which have
alarming parallels at the
federal level today. The debt
of New York City totals about
12 billion dollars. There are
approximately 270,000 people
on the city payroll with an \
average salary of $13,000.
Over 1 million people are on
- : vR WNNIE - LoMie LeMaster, who
the welfare rolls. To handle
underwent brain surgery July 28 at St. Joseph Hospital,
this huge am ount of nonParkersburg,
will be honored Saturday with a birthday
taxpayers, attracted by high
party at the Grange Hall at Rock Springs, located at .the
welfare payrnenls , the city
Meigs County Fairgrounds from 1 to 3 p.m . Lonnie had a
has had to increase ils emtumor on the !rain that was removed. He still has unployees by 100,000 in the last
stable equilibrium, but is slowly improving . His seventh
fifteen years, even though the
birthday was Tuesday. Sept. 23. A fund drive was con·
overall city population has
dueled for him to help the family with the hospital ex·
not increased.
penses. He is a second grader at Salisbury Elementary.
It is difficult, if not imPupils at Salisbury grades one through four have been
possible, to point a finger at
invited,
but everyone is welcome. Lonnie is the son of Mr .
any one individual or group
and
Mrs.
Edward LeMaster , Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
and say that they are the ones
responsible for New York's
financial crisis. What is
evident is that no one took the
responsibility for leadership
'
in the city to the point where
Mar ci a
I Continued from page l) Mary ColwelL
overall spending levels were
Holcomb
.
Assistant
presiding
over
the
carefully examined. Nol one
Food Preservation - Jut ia
was willing to step forward evening's activities.
Johnson. Mona lee Peck. Rilla
Following are those who Rhoades .
and say "stop". Instead, it
Home Environment became much easier to received awards last night, Tammy
Fitch , Denise Dean,
knuckle under to the all getting medals with the Mandie Rose. Phyllis Davis.
Home Management demands of every group and exception of the state fair
interest : higher salaries , participants who r eceive d Pa1ty Dyer .
Horse - Marcia Di lla rd.
more welfare, more services, premium checks.
Robin Ritchie.
greater benefits , higher
Achievement Mark
Sheep - Todd Tripp, Bi ll
Mora,
Pam
Holcomb.
Kau1z.
pensions. Now that the money
Agricultural - 1 Brian
Rabbits - Nick Leonard .
has run out , these same free· Windon , Blai r Windon , Mark Rhonda Han ing.
spenders want the state and Mora .
Dress Revue - Jan Wilson ,
Alumni Recognition - Ed
BeHy Mould . Be1h Ri1chie,
federal government to bail
Cross, Nancy Cross , Donna
Brenda Boyles, Apri l Parker .
them out - without any Weber .
Beth Riebel, Jackie King,
Beef - Debbie Boa1rlgh1, Bonita Johnson , Lisa Collins,
substantial reforms to end
their extravagant spending. Grant Johnson , Tammy Dixie Eblin. Darlene Thorn .
, Paula Hysell.
ton. Virginia Jordan . Donna
While it appears that New Pitzer
Bread - Debb ie Birchfield , Thornton, Opal Oyer, Patty
York City has managed to Mary Mora, Kim Bickers, Dyer .
Clothing
Cami ll e
temporar ily repair the short- BeHy Jordan . ·
Electric - M ike McGuire, Swinde l l, Paula
Hysell .
run situation with only state Randy
Kennedy.
·
Teresa Carr, Sandy Garnes.
and not federal aid, it also
Food - Nu1rition - Tammie
Conservation of Natura I
seems inevitable , given th e Star cher, · Denise White , Resources - Rodney Keller ,
Donald Karr , Sharon Karr ,
continuing problems, that
Kim Krautter .
New York will eventually the Congress , I will not
Consumer
Education Mandie Ro se, Tamm ie
turn to the federal govern- support it. New York has not
Starcher, Paula Hysell.
mentfor financial aid. Should begun to address the proper
Dairy - Jan Holter, Derilse
such legislation come before solution - reduction of Dean , Tony Carnahan , Mark

JEWEliiY
DEPT.

- e7-o.z , Lotion

5

By ~~::nee

HECK'S REG.
$35.99

d • on . •a•r fa hold, .., , , to
Hold• I ~

HECK'S
REG. $1.19

COSMEnC
DEPT.

Singer Sales

Cu ts with ou t effo rt- oil you do i ~
o uide it .

\~U'"'!I "e&lt;HJ
~o\&lt;1 !M• "'&lt;dt11

73(

h -..~''"9'!

QuWtTaudi
....__,

With patterns from

REG. '19.96

LADIES SHAVER

MAGIC NET

HECK'S REG.
$3.18

COSME"( DEPT.

'

Cl.or"" ,...._,,.

Show you the largesl
seleclion of labrics in
our area .

G.E.

j .. .

NESTLE
8 oz.

CLAIROL

Let The®
Fabric Shop

p..,~h "::u tt o n ere r tm tempe rOILire w ntro l

HECK'S

JEWELRY DEPT.

QUIET
TOUCH
BY

more pull ong "" '' h GE ' ~ ea~y 1o remove

Automat•&lt;
Re tr o&lt;I O'&gt;Ie handle

$16g;

LS-4

SUNBEAM

co rd ; open

HECK'S REG. $11.96

INTENSIVE CARE

BABY LOTION

e

e

Ell9

,n..

I

"''''' yc fdton&lt;"

oz.

VASELINE
.•
.·..

•

HAMILTON
BEACH
5-SPEED

S999

HECK'S REG.
$25.96

Level (o ntr oll AI C)

e

e

JEWElRY
DEPT.

•

'"&gt;cater~; posit i ... e b!'lolf:r e 1e&lt;1or buM on

S2J99

fleoll• •e f, &lt;&gt;nd 7 "" 'P'"~ &lt;I• l or

lo•l

e

Hogh doi'T'e lod pro ... , de ~ lor ~reale r
cook"19 co po&lt;o ty
No mo re tuggtng: no

· HECK'S REG.
$33.96

, / .~ i

108

de l o~hol:&gt;le

Conver lef

The news media have
devoted a great deal of attention in the past month to
theplightof New York City as
it: -struggles to prevent a
(!eclaration of bankruptcy .
While the majority of the
American public have no
inunediate stake in the fate of
the country's largest city.
there is a definite lesson to be
learned from New York's
troubles.
As any household budgeter
in Southeastern Ohio knows,
it is impossible to consistently. spend more than is
taken in without running into
financial disaster , This lesson
never seems to have sunk in
on the officials in New York
City. For · years New York
City has spent money without
regard to the fact that one
day the bills would be coming
due. Until this year, the city
had managed to stay one step
ahead of the bill collectors.

4 ONLY

hand le ~ryltng lo r '::&gt;olonn• . ch ro me olo tPd

BLOW STYLE DRYER
1000 Wo"• o l " " ..,.•' hQM
we1;h1 a nd eo\&gt; 10 ~o ~ dle 3

Fl'olure ~

lengl'

mo t1 C end -of l ope \hutcH

JEWElRY
DEPT.

5·Speed H o nd M 01H! I will meer on y chol

GILLETTE

{ no T on cl . ~ or A(

e

(n1duded )
Sw• t che ~ from 1-,a tlene l to
A( whe n A( Con..-e rter ·~ uo;e d
Avro ·

HECK'S REG.
$59.96

MIXER

8-DIGIT

PAN

l or

e

\Ue ~o n eroes

co ntrol l e d
lo r word /rever~e and locus . Elevation
and levelin g co ntrol. Handsome
woodg rain tnm

4 ONLY

I

•

co nd e n~~· mocropilone

FRY

"" h...,nd\ fr ee " record.ng p lu\ rem o te micrO-

Remo t e

Jewelry Dept.

•

• s . u l t · ln

e

REG. ~10.96

•

CASSETTE
RECORDER

p hone' lm 'nle • u•e-ws / drcto t rng
Co~~e he
ew( t
AC /DC Power. ope rate \ on 4 "'("

•a••
HECK'S

~ t oroge

1-5090

G •E•

SLIDE
PROJECTOR

G E Del~ • • ran"~""' ~· • " hand\ lrH oper0110~ I! 1
eo •~ to &lt;le-a ~ •"'" ·~mo..,blo &lt;u Uo • ond P"""~ ...,_ ••
.,....,mbf ~· Durnble I~ ' "" l•on ! '' ll' ~'-"" I&lt;'O+&lt; &gt;. und
odor r ~\&lt; 11&lt;1 ~ 1

to ke th e hea t o ff th e fa ce _ 1000

lopsi?le for trave l a nd

G.E.
ELECTRIC

135/635

2001

•

Report

All Kroger Stores

·Now Open
24 Hours a Day
(Except Saturday Midnight 'til 9 a.m. Sunday)
IE1&lt;&lt;e1n

Ashland (WincheSter Ave.), Gassaway, Hinton, Ironton (514 S.
Pikeville, Rainelle, Summersville and White Sulphur)

.

'

.

'

�)

I'
I .

_, .

..

Fast Results Use 'T he Sentinel Classi
an~
homes

O'f

mobi l e

P'1one area

code

9531

614 473
-1 13

UMP/0

I I tD
INOOBBAI
r5

®

lfc

..

Auto Sales
1965 MUSTANG , phone 992

'"

--- -----------1967

Phone 992

2892 Can be seen at 957
Broadway . M iddleport
9 23 Jtc

A HEARIN6 .

1

RAMBLER

I
V~

Now arrangt tht circled lttttro
to form the aurpnae lli\IWer, u

I'-::=:·I=;~t,~..J~;;;~~~L~~_j~-':u~g~g;es.ttd
Lr_..:::l'riii=-*=SII::.:•IISE=ANSWIR==-.:..___JI ( x x xxxJ
V~

by the above cartoon.

(An•wen tomorroto)
Jumbl~• - BORAX

Ynterd.y ' •
An.wll'r:

ADAGE

CALICO

JETSAM

/,11oA ~ /tJ.. t' aJI f.'ng/11ch JOt I - "GAOL"

WANT ADS

$2395
"S " Cpe, grey l1ni sh, b lk inter ior . bucket seats &amp;
con sole, r adto, tape. automat•c. power stee ring &amp;
brakes, loca l 1 owner ca r

1968 DODGE , good cond1tion,
air cond1t10nm ~:~ . See at 131
Laurel St, , Pomeroy, Ohio .
9 23 6tc

6 cy l std trans, rad10, li ke new w -w tires , blue fm1~h,
n ~ep car w 1th good economy

1972 CO MET 2 DR.

10 7 74
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

pets
2

AKC APRICOT Poodles
puppies , I male, 1 female, 8
weeks old. Phone 949 5992
9-2l -31p

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale
1954 FE RGU SON tr ac tor w1th
accessor~es Phon e 843 2'i61
9 24 6tc
1971 KAWASAKI 500 Cal l 247

2813

9 24 61p

AKC Reg lrtSh Sette r , male 1
year 5 months old, 565
1973 FX350 Harley Dav idson,
Cont~ct Dean Sc hrl!llck , Box
less than 1,000 m 11es. SBOO.
92 R ul land , Ohio
Phone 992 2967 after 5 p m
9 24 Alp
9 24 4tc
AWAY-...=-] pupp-;s,
part
Beegle and
part COMPLETE Oisp 20 head ot
Blue tick Phone 949 5172
horses , Reg1stered and
9 24 -6tc
grade , show and pleasure
- - ---- - - - ----Phone (6 14 ) 388 ·0991 or 367
7481 .
9-24 6tc
~

To- GivE

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

Emplo,vment Wanted

h!EMODEL!NG
Plumbrng,
hearing and all lypes of
ge n e ral
r e pa rr
Work
q uarant eed . 20 years . ex '
per~ence
Ph one 992 2409

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

LIVING room sulle , end and
coffee table, lamps , bedrm .
suite, re c liner . upr .g ht
freezer . Phone 992 7369
9 24 3tc

5 1 tf r.

RADI A TOR S, doors
and
windows.
and
other
use
d
CAR PEN TRY.
paneling ,
building mater ial Call 992
flooring and ce iling Phone
2720.
992 2759
9 24 lie
9 17 26tc
\975 F IREBIRD Formula 400
A C , 1111 wheel , fa c tory
tape , mags and gauges . Low
IN ··M~MORY of Clyde
mileage Phone 7tl2 -5943 .
BARNYARD Yard Sa le , Sept NATIONAL Company now
Johnson who passed away 1
9-24 4tc
26 and 27, 9 a m. t ill S p m
year ago today , Sept . 24
hiring help for Christmas .
Foot
of
Massar
H11t,
State
Sadly missed by w i fe ,
Starting Oat~: ~l!pt 27 . Send 5 FT . 3 PT . HITCH , bush hog ,
Rt
7
AntiQUeS. Aladdin
Nancy, daughter , Connie,
S225 00 Phon e 985 3594
Information to B&lt;J :&lt; 729 -C, c -o
lamp , telephone, lots of
Dad and Mother, Brother
The
Dally
!:Jentinel,
9 19-8fp
diShes . Clofh1ng
and Sisters
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-23 -Jtc
9 -24 ltc
3 PT HITCH mower to f1l
9-21 4tC
Ford or Fe rg uso n tra c tor
PORCH Sa le, Laurel Cliff,
IN MEMORY 0 of JUlie Ann
Sl2 5 00 Phone 985 3594
Se pl.
22
through
26
Fisher, Sept 24, 1975
9 19 Sip
Clothing , old battles , toys.
Phone 992 -707 5
Our Little Angel,
CASTLER
12~65
2 LOSE we1ght with New Shap e
9 2l ·31c 1974
One year's gone by
Tablets and Hydrex Water
bedroom, 2 full b~ths, total
A little girl came to h is world
Pill s at
Dutto n
Drug ,
e
lectric
,
furn
1tu
re
Phone
of ours ,
BASEMENT Sale Monday on
M i ddleport and
Nelson
949
3655
or
992
7671
Her hair as golden as the
til? , 10 am til 5 p.m Rock
Drug
9 19 -6tc
summer flowers
St
off
Spring
Ave,
9 23 Jf p
Suddenly one autumn day,
Pomeroy Watch for Signs .
WHEN CHECKING the ads
9 FT . OVERHEAD garage
God reached down for this -----------~~~tc
for mobile home sales, you
door complete, large vise.
child,
will
note
many
dealers
are
Our little Angel was laken
modern bathtub, large roll
offering discounts . Most of
about , tool box , 308 Page St ,
away,
4 ROOM house, double car
these deals are on homes
M iddleport , phon e 992 -3509 .
To sleep and slumber mrld ,
garage In Pomeroy
F or
th"at have been on the lot
Memories are left to keep,
lnformBiiOn ca ll 992 2502
9 -23 5tc
several months or perhaps a
She suffers not and lies m
9 :24 -3tc
year . At Kingsbury Home
ALLIS Chalmers tractor with
peace.
,
Sales. 1100 E
Main St. ,
Baby Jesus , watch o'er Ner TRAILER lo t. good location.
Plow and cultivators, S475
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
we
can
offer
sleep.
Also, Bundy B fiat clarinet ,
close to school bus. gas ,
you a better deal on a Fom ·
S50. Phone 742-5825 .
May the prec ious memor.es
water. elec
Available tn
Cor wrapped 1976 model
never cease.
9-il lie
Middleport Phone 992 -2864
home . Call 99:2 -7034
Mommy ,
Daddy- and
IJ
-21
-Stc
9 24-6tc
4 WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
eeegle
9-24 ltp
flat dump truck , Harold
4 RM and ba th furn iShed
1971 M'BILE Home , close to
Brewer , Long Bottom, Ohto,
upstairs
apt
P
hone
992
-5908
.
Meig
Mines . Phone 742 '
614 -985 -3554
6582
9-24 ttc
9-21 -lfc
-----------9 23 6tp
NO HUNTING on George 4 RM FUR NI SHED apt tor
CATERPILLAR 0 -6 bulldozer
Freeland's premises or
rent Phone 992 -3656
ONE 1969 Communtty Homes ,
hydraulic angle b l ade,
nearby woods .
9 3 l fc
(3 bedrm l ~II e l ectric
heavy cab . Good condition.
9-23 ltc
mobile home end 1 acre lot
Harold
Brewer,
Long
111 ND-;tRO 'OM fu-;:-nished -;nd
Ready to lfve in
Price
Bottom, 614 985 3554 .
unfurn1shed
apartments
TAKING orders for firewood
$9,500
2
miles
from
' 921tfc
Phone 997 5&lt;13&lt;1
Dave Bass, Syracuse. Oh io .
Rutland Can be seen by
\
Phone 992 5006.
appt
by
ca·lling
992
-3537
4 1'} " '
GUNS and Ammo . Our fall
9-2l -ltc
after 5 p .m.
stock
is
now
here
3 RMS . furnished and bath
9-23 -lfc
Complete l i ne of Rem
apt on ground floor . Adults
PIANO Tuning , Lane Daniels,
1ngton,
W r nchester ,
Phone 992-2082 .
only, reference
Call 992 - 10 X 50 MOBILE home , $2,700
2050 after 1 p m.
lthica , Savage . Sl ug 6arre l s
8-28· 261p
or will rent for $100 per
m stoc k tor most brand shot
9 23 Stc
month Phone 74:2-5825.
gun s, but in short supply
9-23 Jtc
Get them wh•le lhey last
;C c t Nl ~ v Mobile Home
Money short , lay a way
Park , r.tt 11 ten miles north
your f.all hunting needs New
of Pom eroy Large tot s w l!h
Fall s tore hours starting
c oncret e pat ,os. Sid ewa lk s,
Se pt 5, 10 a.m to 9 p.m.,
runner s ilnd off stree t
IN DA SH 23 Channel Citizen 's
Monday Sat urday . Vil lage
f;arkmq Pho ne 99'2 7:79
•
eand transceiver , am fm
Gun Shoppe, 266 Mill St ,
rt,px radio , 8 track stereo.
12 31 tic
Phone 992 5177 , financing
Call 992·3965
avarlable
4 BEDRM . upstairs and ba th ,
9 4-lfc
9 3 26tc
6 rm s downsta1rs. new
kilchen on R t. l3, Mason, W
2 BEDROOM trailer and
Va , natural gas, elec , c1ty
ground, for rent, 4 room USED CHAIN saws, 498
water Phone 1 304 773 5147,
apartment, couple on l y
Locust St , Middleport.
available 17th of Sept
Phone 992 -3975.
Phone 992 3092
9
1&lt;1
10tc
Junction 7-33
9-18-26tc
9 17 -tfc
rR A ILER space for rent All
Pomeroy
utilities Phone 992 5535
STEREO -RADIO , AM -FM, B
12 GA high power sheets,
tr.ack tape combination .
9 16 ff c
$3 83 box ; Remington or
Balance 5101 29 or terms.
NEW
"OIL OF
MINK " i= u- RNISHe- o- -apartmenf,
Super X .22 mag . S2 60 box ,
Call
992 l965
products, new catalogs . Get
22 L R 73 c box Save also on
adults only in Mrddleport
9-21 -tfc
on our growing customer
new and used guns many
Phone 992 -3874 .
list Or maybe you would
used ~ - B - D .B ' s, auto ' s,
3 25 ttc
like to take orders? Phone ,
pumps , discount on all new ALL NEW T urner M -2 plus 2
power m•ke , 120 , and mobile
guns and extra barrels
Helen J
Brown , 992 -5113, LASA LLE -H-Oi t:L..., MID
100 W Lienar $100. Phone
F ife 's, Back of Speed Queen
KOSCOT
Independen t
DLE POR T, OH IO ROOM S
992 -5784 aft er 6 p. m . 992Laundry Mat , 3rd S.l,
Distri butor .
$5 UP . .S PE C I AL RATES
2590
Mrddleport.
9-21 -lfc
BY WEEK OR MONTH
_·
91212tc
9-18-6tc
T 'I AIR CONOITI0~ J, NG
a 2 . 2111r
19 72 FORD tractor 2000.
Phone 992 ·2990
Siegler&amp; Monogram
9·22-6tc

In Memory

Help Wanted

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

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

Mobile Homes for Sale

3

BEDRM
home ,
lust
finished, remodeling, Salem
St . Rutland Pho ne 742 3615
after A p m or see Mdo B
Hut chison
9 23 lfc

992 7523

9-21 6tp
HOU SE , S1/1 acres In Portland
Call 16 14) 864 1876, after 5

pm

9-24 -12tc

------------NEW 3 bedrm home, br•ck

front, 1 ca r garage. modern
all elec
1 mile out of
Chester Call 949 -4692 or 843 -

2667

9 24 12tp

For Rent

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

'·'

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

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

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

Notice

Opening Oct. 1

For Sale

D&amp;M APPLIANCE
Sales and SeiYice
Located At

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

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

NEW LISTING - 1'/:l acres ion
the Oh1o River on State · Rt.
338. Old concrete block
building , 2 dr illed we lls. A
good place for a home . A ski ng

$6 ,000

6

Starting October 1 we
are buying
Black
Walnuts at market
price . Bring your
Black Walnuts to:

NEW

LISTING

Excelsior Salt
Wolb, Inc.

.'

. ,

Box 267

Pomeroy, Ohio

PICK ·y

R own · gr~en beans
at
bu. Bnng own
containers . Arnold Hupp,
Letar'r Falls, 2.47 -2623.
9-21 -6tc

$4~

swEEPER-- a--;;;1- sew;ng
Machine Repair, Parts. and
Supplies . o•vis VaCUUJ)1
Cle•ner, 'h mile up Georges
Creek Road off State Route
7. Phone 4.46 -029-4 .
9 25 . ltc

Yard Sale

BUILDING
POMEROY, OHIO
CONTACT:
DALE E. SMITH at 9925329
or
THOMAS C. EDWARDS at
992-2052
or
'.
TED REED JR . at 992-2052

4551

9-23 -3tc

-1010- -----------JOHN DEERE dozer ,

diesel engine, $45 ,000 .00 . 985 -

3594 .

.

9

19-Btp

--------------1010 JOHN DEE R'E dozer;611.
1

.

blade,
cenepy, ~ wtnch , ..,
revers·er bar, gasoline .-,.

engine s•s.ooo oo. 985 -359•.
9· 19-Btp

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

$35,000.
NEW LISTING -

HUNTING LAND -

IF YOU DON'T KNOW REAL
ESTATE, KNOW YOUR
REALTOR, at 992-3325.

Good Through

Oct.

CLIP THIS AD and bring it
tn for SIS .OO discount.

•

(

-- --

992 -5858 .

9-18 -tfc
--7:"----_--:;----- - EPT r C 1 A NK S c l eaned
f\' oder n ' an ita t 1on 992 395&lt;1
or 99 / 7].19
9 18 ttc
I F YOU ar e Interested •n
building a n ew home or
hav1ng your present hom e
rem odeled , con ta ct Roush
Cons1rucllon , 992 7583, Greg
Roush
9 17 12tc

BACKHO"E fOr rent , hour or
contract
Reg , or
ex
cavating type Se pt1c tanks
installed B ill P ul lins Phone
992 2478
8-27 lfc

-------------Real Estate for Sale

608 E.
MAIN
- po~ROY,o
POMEROY - TOO MANY
CHILDREN TO LIVE IN A
SHOE - but not tor this
home -

~~,~~~~

STRENUOUS

OR PLAY A
HA!VD OF
CARDS .. QR
WHAH

( YAW"-!!)

FOR MEo
THANK?! ...

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

• Q 84

¥J
• Q J 10 4
. (/J876

Middleport,

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoes

EXCAVATING ,
oackhoe,
dozer and d1t c her
Gas.
electrtc and water line
burial, basements, tooters ,
se pllc systems and brush
c leanmg Will haul fill dirt.
fop soil. sand and gravel,
lim estone for driveways and
roads. Phone Charles R .
Hatfield , Backhoe Service,
Rt. 1, Rutland, Ohio, 742 609 2.
· 7-11 -90tc

Recreation
R ..
g~rage. JUST $30,000.00.
POMEROY - CLOSE TO
SCHOOL - 2 story frame
in

excellent

condition,

3

water heat. Full basement.

$17.000.

Henry Lew1s -

MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful lot,

frame and

• Q 7 63
t A973
o1o A K 4

:9~p:;~:· s{~~'': · ~i:c~~~g~ .r

Pomeroy A utho~rzed 5 inger ~
\ ales a n d Serv1ce
W e~
sha rp en Scissors
:·
3 29 tfc,
-.............=~ -__o_. t
P0 R T A BL E
T 0 I L E Tr
RENTAL,
Co n s tru c t ion'
Outdoor
even t s .
Ph one;
Gallipolis ,
&lt;146 471! ?,1
R u sse ll 's Plu m b ing alh?
Heatrng
B 19 t (c'

•

!

MY HOUSE AHD

eRUTE?

carpeting .
501 NYLON • ''

''

"

Square

y etrd

RIJBBER BACK·

YES ... KEEPING
THI S MUCH
CASH AROUND
IS ASKING
FOR TROUBLE!

We have huf'\,dreds' .o~
carpet values Your job C:a"
be co mpl e ted in 1 to ~
weeks
No long wa •lin g
per•od Ovr install er has 261
years experience .. Expert
installal •on. You'll l 1ke
What YOU get
CALt. 742·4211 •

TALK TO WENDELL
GR.ATE ,

CARPETCONSU~TANT

RUTLAIIID '
FURNITURE
7C2-42:11
Ruttan

FREE

T'WARNT
NOTHIN'

...

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY; SEPT. 27, 1975 11:00 A.M.

FWf.BALLS

ME'ANT
TOBE

IS

BUTA

'

FOOTBALL
LIKE: yO'·
IS-

•
'

DEXTER, OHIO
JUST BE CAREFUL

, OF 111E &amp;WINGING
S INGLES!

TI1E CAMBRIDGE HOfEL
15 OOPPO&amp;ED 1D BE

I

QI.JfTE A GRoovY .-oo~
tslACE1 WINNIE ...

'

a:

that tf the diamond fmesse is on m~n;r correspo nde nt should
every thmg wtll be fme If ot hav e assed It is always
loses and East holds the ace ol danger~us to ~eb;d a five -card
spades, he IS likely to be dow n suit opposite a partner who ha s
two tncks
bd
th 'na
One declarer in an Important no 1 1 any 1 0

by THOMAS_JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Nuisance
l Palace
5 Chas tise
attendant
2
Black
a
3 Slipped
tyke
4 Hamilton
10 Gifted
bill
11 Atelier
5 Big
12 Throw a
mdustry
light
6 Place
14wds. )
i .. _ Bede"
14 F'm1sh
8 Pug1hst
Benvenuti
another on this 15 Small
deer
9 " The Mika·
side! Appear to be
16 Cow
do" charrope burns!
talk
acter
11 Cheat
'---;=~f.::::_ 17 Ringlets
13
Bind
~....-- 19 ~' mally
li
Examples
12 wds I
18 Accelerate
22 Turf
19 Lava
26 Sa ndw1ch
20 Nwnber fo r
12 wds )
28 Rhode
Island 's
motto
lloo..;A 29 Ward 30 Tolerate
Ma who
DEARLY
goes

YOU WiLL PAY
FOR THAT, YOU r-...-~==="
MONSTER!!

Pomeroy, O.

i
:

'

'

I'

'i

41

MBC

..------~w-·---

easy Viewing

7:DO-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars , Pop Goes the Country B; News 10; 1
Country Music Jubilee 13; Family Affair U ; Book
Beat 20: Romagnolls ' Table 33.
7.3o-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Wild Kingdom 15; Match
Game PM 8; E;,venlnq Edition wit~ Marlin
Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell lht .Truth 13;
Episode Acllon 33.
.
8.DO-Li ttle House on the Prairie 3,4,15; When Things
Were Rollen 6.13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10;
Feeling Good 20.33.
8:3o-That's M~ Mama 6.13; Man Builds, Man
Des1roys 33, John Ba ..ette : Th is Time Around 20.
9:DO-Doctors Hospllal 3••• 15; Beretta 6,13; Cannon
8, 10; We lfare Special 20.33.
10:DO-Petrocelll 3,4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13.
11:DO- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 . 3o-Johnny Ca rson 3,4, 15; Movie "T he Sex Symbol"
13 . FBI 6: Madigan 8; Movie " Babes on Broadway " 10.
11 .So-FIIm 8,20, 33
12 DO-ABC News 33 .
12: 3o-Movle "The Sex Sy mbol" 6; Janak I 33.
l ·OQ--Tomorrow 3,-4 ; News 13

THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 25,1975
6.00--Coiumbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10.
6. 2s-Farm Report 13.
6:3o-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
Urban League 10, Pallerns tor Living 13.
6:4s-Mornlng Repor1 3.
6:55-&lt;:huck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13; CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 · 3&lt;1-Schoolles 10.
8:DO-Lucy Show 6; Catptaln Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33
8: 3Q-Big Valley 6.
9 oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show 81 Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J. 13.
9·3o-NOI For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
9:4&gt;-Li vlng Word 4.
10 .00--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3.4, 15;; Dinah 6; Give-nTake 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10·3o-Wheei of Fortune 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3, IS; I Dream ol Jeannie A;
Gambit 8, 10; Elec. Co. 20.
11 .3o-Hoilywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday A; Love of Life B. 10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :5&gt;-Take Kerr 8; Don Imel's World 10.
12 :&lt;»-Magnlllcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 C lub A; News 6,8,10.
-12 :3o-Jackpol 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search lor
tomorrow 8.10
12:5$--NBC News 3.
1 :oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3o-Barbara Walters visits lht Royal Lovers :1,4,15;
Let's Make a Deal 6,13; As the WoriH Turns 8,10.
2:r:h-S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2. 3o-Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,1~; Edge of Night 8,10.
3· oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Rono Borrell 8,10; Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3()-0ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Feeling Good

4 .~r.

Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"The Grealest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13.
4 3Q-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family B;
Gel Smart 15.
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15 .
5:3&lt;1-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Book Beat 33.
h
6 3()-N BC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Grltlll
6; CBS News B. 10; Your Future Is Now 33.
71 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Tnllh 4; Bowling
tor Dollars 6. Space · 8; Black Perspective on tho
News 20; Let's Make a Deal 13; Family Affair 15;
Family at War 33 .
7 3o-Hoilywood Squares 3.~; Evening Edition wiU
Martin Agronsky 20;; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; J lmmy Dean 15.
8 · 00- Monteluscos 3 . ~.15 ;; Barney Miller 6,13;
Wailons 8.10; Roman11c Rebellion 33; Philosophers
&amp; Kings 20
8:3o-Fay 3,4,15. On The Rocks 6,13; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.
9 oo-Eiiery Queen 3.4.15; Streets of San Francisco
6,13 : Movoe "Conrack" 8; Classic Theatre 33;;
Movie "The President's Analyst" 10; Firing Line
20.

10 ·oo-Medlcal Story 3,4,1 5; Harry 0 6,13; News 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8. 10,10, 13, 15.
·n .3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; W ide World ~rstery 13;
FBI 6. Movie "Satan's School for Girls 8; Movie
" Honky Tonk" 10; Janak! 33 .
12 ·3o-Wode World Mystery 6.

AstroGrapM

LWCMV

NBKN

SWC HOB

EV

• Bernice Bede Osol
For Thurodoy, Sopt. 2S, 1875
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)

.

."

MEPP

KPMKQV

:_c__I_Ll...'.L::UW!Jllillill S W C H 0 B . - A B E W S V S

..

AN, I

DOWN ON HI S

KNEECAPS AN '
PLEADED WI~ RUFE

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nav 22)
Pers onal gam will come your
way today through several unusual channels The sources
are not likely to be related .

SAGITTARIUS (Now H-Dec
21) You 're exceptionally sharp
at negotiation today, If you put
yo ur mtnd to It It's a good time
for some horse trading.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II

CAPRICORN (Dec 22...1.. 11)

you put on your old th1nkmg
cap yo u'll r1nd a way to buy
somethmg without putting your
b udget 1n Jeopardy.

Be wllltng to be of service to
others where you can . Your
good deeds will be the seeds
tor a future harvest

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) A

AQUARIUS (Jon 20·Feb 19)

problem l acmg you today will
not t ake as long as you think to
so lve Keep you r sched ule flex~
1ble You m1ght get a surpnse
mv!lal•on later 1n the day .

Your personality doesn't come
tnto tuft bloom till later in the
day That's when you'll collect
your admtrers

CANCER (Juno 21·July 221

You sttll have a lot of things gomg for you that aren't apparent
to those you'll be dealing with
today Thai's why you'll come
up a winner.

You 'll fa re m uch better in
bus1ness matters than you d 1d
yesterday, especlal!y 11 you go
H'1 w1th a posil tve attitude

LEO (July 23·Aug 22) You can
eas1 ly get others to go along
w1th your way of domg things
today 11 you guide. rath er than
push th em
next few days can be benefiCial
careerwise tf you keep your
nose to the wheel A job well
done co uld mcrease your earmngs

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : SCENERY IS fiNE - BUT HUMAN:
NATIJRE IS FINER.- KEATS
LIBRA (Sopt 23·0c1 23) You
((~ 1975 Ki.nJ. Futures Sy ndu:•tt, Inc .)

NOPE·- PAW GOT

S'POSE
RUFE HAWKINS CAUGHT
RUFE
M'l MAN SNUFFV IN
HAD HIM
Ht5 HENHOUSE lAST .
THROWED
NIGFIT1 ELVINE'f
IN JAIL

ME VGCJ

BKDS

tend to look at the darker side
at f•rst today, but fortunately
you'll realize every situation
has many bnghl facets.

You' ll have some doubts about
the way you handle a senous
Situation today Later, you ll
see the decls1on you made wa s
a wtse one

VIRGO (Aug 23.Sopt 22) The
SWC HOB

.

.

1 :oo- 1omorrow 3,4; News 13 .

fiancee, -

BS

sausage stutter .

o,,

33

· CRYPTOQUOTES

iron kett les, 2 pie safes, rocking chairs, horse-drawn

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

21 Back talk
34 - out
23 Lamprey
( augment24 Peer
ed )
36 King 's
Gynt's
mother
address
25 Threefold
:l i P1zzena
( comb.
fiXture
form )
38 Top dra·
2i Hair dye
malic role
40 Neighbor
31 Zestful
32 State 1F'r l
of

maa
Lmcoln's

dresser, round top trunk, powder horn, picture frames,

•
•'

Noah

Yesterday's Answer

used for the three L's, X for the tw_o O's, etc Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatu_m of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lett er s are dtfferent.

oak tab le, stone jugs, stone jars, 6 oak straight _c hairs,

MISC. ITEMS
Lbg · chains, steel traps.
hand tools, Sabre roto-tiller, many other
misc. Items,
'
OWNER- FI:.ORA. McCLURE
: Fo9d '.serve~ .. by · ~ut_ll!nd .' Fire ' Dept.
Auxiliary: • · ·
·
,.· I· ·
·
Not responsible for ;Accidents.
Auctioneer:._ Lloyd Dillinger
Rt. 1, Shade,
Phone 696-1269

1 NT
Pass

Rutledge
...---'---..;:;,::.-.....&gt;-&lt;:::11.,. Costa
Del Throwmg
a h ght
(3 wds I
42 Punish
43 F'1eld
'rZ-4
44 " Bull
~..!:_G~""~c~·~~f'~F= _":~::::=~_::::r.:,'j Moose"
s talwart
-:::;r-------'""--11-m;;~ 45 Incline
~~~~~Yf!:.:c;/ TI1AT
JUST lOOK AT
HUSBAND OF
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work it:
MINE J AW ACROSt;
AXYDLBAAXR
THE FENCE WITH IHE
Is LONGFELLOW
NBV NEXT OOOR
NEIGHf:\QR f
One l etter simply stands for another. ln t hts sample A is

OLD ITEMS- J .
Mitchell muzzle loading rifle (full
stock), W. Richards doub le barrel 12 gauge shotgun.
dinner bell, oil burning tall light for Model T, Model T
Ford coils, oil lamp, olt lantern, partial marble lop

mowing machine, rake, single trees, double trees. 4
round back chairs. sideboard.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 36" Tappan Range,
Frigidaire refrigerator. dinette set, kitchen cupboard
w-glass doors, utility cabinet, Admiral chest type deep
freeze , porch glld&lt;&gt;r, 2 iron beds, sweepers ~ilh attachments, floor ldmp, fan. 2 portable televisions, 2
studio cOt.Jches. platform rocker, stands, quilts,

~m~~~

__

Having sold my home, I will sell the personal property of Flora and the late Marion
McClure.
Located 112 mile east of Dexter on Meigs
(:ounty Rd. No.4. The following items will
be sold:

Coupon No. 27

JJu Bu:s·i~ess With A L~ader
Phone 992-2174

SHECKS~!

'

south

A sad letter from Vermont
reads m part " S;ttmg South , I
opened one spade with :
• AK732 ¥ K98. 2 ... Al043
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ West bid two hearts North and
East passed and l went to two
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
spades Thos came around to
There is no absolute ru~ e East _.;ho doubled . We were '"
about the correct pla y at ma y the soup then, but even more so
3 NT Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - lO •

ch m ce

· Not Respons;ble lor Accidents

rear . ASKING , ONLY
$7,000.
CLELAND REALTY llhe
sign of know how) ACT! ON
&amp; RESULTS ON THE
SALE
OF
YOUR
PROPERTY.
PHONE 992-2259

declarer two lrtcks
The other South dedded to
start with th e d1amond finesse
West was m and l ed his seven of
spades. The lour was played
from dummy . East thought a
whol e an d played the jack .
whereupon South m ad e hi S contract w1th an overlnck
West blamed East lor the
debacle , but we rathe r blame
West 11 he had led the 10 of
spades . East would have had no
excuse, butthatseven-spo tl ead
could have been third best from
king- to-seven

team match dectded to run the
(Do yo u ha ve a questiOn for
fiv e c lub tncks right away on the ,Ja co/Jys? Wflte "Ask th e
thetheorythatEastandWest Ja c o b y s · c are o f th_os
might di sca rd badly Th ey new s p a pe r The most m·
didn't' East signalled m spades te r estong questoons wolf be
and West never let a heart go us ed 1n fhs s column . and
Then when West got m with the wn ter s w1ll recesve cop1es o f
k;ng ·of d;amonds he led a JA C OB Y MODERN.)

•

Auctioneer

forced
air
furnace ,
paneling &amp; file, alley in

11\AKE

YDU CAH'TGEl RID OF
HIM, I SURE CAN, ANO l'IILl 1

11 TO THAl RULI&lt;JHG

East

a heart and set

when my partner r~scued me·~
hold s the l!rst trick, South sees three ,d~amonds W;ll you com

A SAP 001 DF ME -

\0/MY SHOULD WE FEED

East took h;s ace a nd

nog~c~~~~':!,'f~t~ack ol hearts

NO BRAT CAN ORA£;
&lt;\ MAHGY ftJOCH IMTO

JUST A FEW SCRAPS!
WHY, THAl 'S MO~ THA~
WE HAD FOR DiriHER-

LET US DO IT! !

4

No rth

West

------- --- ---- ·

99

East-West vul nerable

e

M A CH I N E

Signed, James A. Kmg, Aammtstrator

stone bulldong. bath, N.G.

t 85
... 10 5 3
• K3

bedroom su1tes, one Whirlpool gas cook stove,
Whirlpool refrigerator, 15 cu . ft . Westinghouse chest
freezer, auto. washer &amp; dryer, 2 ironing boards,
vacuum sweeper, lawn furniture and garden tools, 1
lawn mower. one porch swing, several antiques , one lot
of miscellaneous items, very large sale

.BR. bath, nice k;tchen W.
range, disposal, N.G. hot

t K62

SOUTil JD I

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS: One llvinq room suite, one
Zenith color T V., 2 rocking chairs, gossip bench, 3

heat.

EAST

• AJ965
• 8 52

... 9 2

Mason. W. Va .

enclosed), N . G . hot water

WEST

9 2-1 mo

SE W I N G

0

• 10 7 2
¥ A K 10 9 4

Dan's Shoe Repair

spade

~.Ar.~~ r et u r n ed

NORTil

Located 1 block above Pomeroy-Mason Bridge at

baths. Large liv;ng, Utility
R., large porch (gloss

WIN AT BRIDGE

NI6HT" !

Correct N. T. play evasive

SAT., SEPT. 27 AT 10:00 A.M.

4 bedrooms . 2

•
.

THERE LOOK!&gt;
· LII&lt;E- A PERFECT
CAMPSITE!

SHOULD WE
RU!.J UP OUR
TV ANTENIJA ...

THI&gt;JK l'LL ~UST TURIJ li'J ArJD
ENJOY THE PERFECT PEACE AND
QUIH OF THIS WICDeRN£;5£.

PU&amp;LIC SALE

Count On Us for Service That Counts
Stop by or phone for an appointment today

E. Matn St.

&lt;' l!oA!.J K DOW!.J

THAT

GASOLINE ALLEY

HAVE YOUR EXHAUST SYSTEM CHECKED
BEFORE IrS TOO LATE!

5~0

EXCAVAT IN G , do ze r , loa .... ~ r
and backhoe work. , se pt1 c
1a nk s
tnstalled .
dump .
trucks and lo boys for h~re ,
will h aul fill dirt. top soi l,
l rmestone and gravel_., Call
rob or Roger Je ff er s , d ay
phone 992 7089 , n•ght ph on e
9'-1 / 31)25 or 992 52 32
, 2 11 tfc

Sweepers. toas ter s. irons ,
a ll small lllppl,ances Lawn
mower , next to Stale High
way Garage on Route 7·. .
Phone 985 l825
4 16 lfc

Our technicians will safety check your
car's exhaust system .. , FREE.
5 PCT. Dl SCOUNT on any exhaust parts
and labor needed.

,,

WOULD Y- OU - BELIEVE?
Build an ali steel building at
Pole Barn prices ? Golden
G1ant All Stee l Buildings .
Rt 4, Bo x 148 , Waverly ,
Ohio Ph on e 947 2296
1 24 t fc

'E LWOC.D BOWERS-:'REPAI~

PROTECT YOUR FAMilY

home In Rutland, furnished
or unfurn ished . Phone 9927336 after 5 dur ing week .
days .

~-

WE SPECIALIZE Jn mobile
home furn ace r epair Phone

NUTHl/IJ 1

'lOW, POD!.JE'IH

,.-;:HAT RIVER·

MIX CO N CRE TE
deiPJered r~ gh t to your
proj ect r ast and easy Free
estimates Phone 9"'92 3284 . WILL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery . Phone 949 -3221 .
Goe-gle.n Ready M •x Co ,
or 742 -4441
· ......
M1ddle p ort Oh1a .
6 30 If( '
9 7-24!&gt;

Eihaust System Safety Qleck

POMEROY LANDMARK
·,P.Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
. ; , Phone 992-2181

9-21 6tp

~-..-- - -

4, 1975

older

~E ~OY

With winter coming on and windows are roUed
up, you don't want your exhaust system .leaking .

All sizes on hand, pr1ces
start at $324.69.
-1 Wood Burni"g Stove

and

WE DO aluminum siding,
gutt er
work .
roofing ,
paneling , pa int ing , plum bing , We fi x the whole
house . AI Tromm , 7.42 5081.
9-2 4-lfc

IT MAY BE LEAKING

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

-------

Around

100 acres with 1youhg timber
and 12 acres of bottom All
minerals . $235 per acre.

-----""T"--------J BEDROOM total electric

1

3 acre

trailer or buildtng lot in
Lebanon
township
Also
building lot at Dorcas

NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Apartments In Middleport, 1
bedroom apts from $104 plus
elec. Call 992 -327l or see~
Mrs
Keatley, Apt, 101 ,
Rivers ide Apartments.
l-28-2:6tp

YARD · SALE ,
antiques , TRAILE'"R space for rent in
depression glass , kitchen - Midd leport . Phone 992 5434.
cabinets, babv items , and
8-29-261(:
Children'S
and
adult
clothing , all sizes , old PRI V!\1 E mJ!elinQ room •--""'
radl61, used furniture, long
any organi~aJion , ph9ne 99 ?-~
dresses, office typewriter·.
3915
.~
Qfetswlre, pOrch gliQer with
J ·1Jtf~
cuahlona, ,a.m. lUI? F"ridily
1nd Saturday, Sept . 26 and
1:\E DROOM
fu r niShed
27 . Fourth 1nd Crooks St . 2
mobile home No pels Call
P~ono 992-3717 oc 992 -5866.
992 7479
~aln or Shine.
• 822tfc
·, • I . 9 2•-3tc

Near

older

Rutland- Roger Wamsley

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete a ir conditiOning
sales and ser'lnce, heeling ,
plumb1ng , r oo fing and
general sheet met a! work
Free Estimates
9 14 1 mo

Plus basement

Coolville . 4 bedroom insulated
home, 2112 baths , hot water
heat. large modern kit ., with
range , dishwasher , disposal ,
and birch cabmets, 5 acres .

and Older
and

WE:LL, WHAT

THE Mci&lt;E&amp; AIRMOBILE .. .

Jobber In

SSS .DO CALL 742-3651

Your He•l Deater
Thtrd 51 .
Racine , Ohio
Ph . 949-5961

and '2 porches on 2 lots next to
store . Above all floods with
rtver view. City water, Nat.

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

OFFICE SPACE - ------ - - ----1974 SUZUKI TF 185. Lots of
FOR
RENT
extras, extra low mileage.
MASONIC TEMPLE
Pr.ced to sell . Phone 949-

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

l;, acre
business lot on Rt . 7 East .

home, modern k1f ., bath, 2
porches , basement and all
utilities. $1 ~ . 000

and older

u .oo Bills - $3.25 each.
$5.00 Gold CO IRS X F cond .

S16,500
NEW LISTING -

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

Walnuts Are Cash!

9-21 301c

NEW LISTING - 9 rooms , 3

gas, and bath. Asking S8500.
MIDDLE PORT - 2 bedroom

318 N. 2nd

- - - - FOR SALE---WHEAT BACK PENNIES
.15 A ROLL
BUFFALO NfCKELS$7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
$1.25 EACH

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

bedrooms with closets, hot
water heat, large lfvmg and
nice front porch in Middleport,

11 ROOMS -

TO BUY

20 . Teaching

6 3o-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griff ith 6,
CBS News 8, 10 .. Book Beal J3 .

A? D,ll!&gt;k: DE!&gt;C&amp;IJDS·· SO DOES

.Dan's Shoe

U.S. COINS
WANTED
WILL PAY
f6 for- ll64
d imes
65 for 196"
Quarters
51.30 for 1964
halves .
SJ 40 for 1935
dollars

6 Qo--News 3.4,8, 10, 13 , 15; Sesame St
Children 33 .

Pomeroy

4 10 l mo

Cartoon J ; Merv Griffin 4 ; Somerset 15 .

Mickey Mouse Club 6.8; Mlsler Rogers 20,33, Movie
" ll's Only Money" 10, o;nah 13 .
4 3Q-Bewi1ched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Fam1ly 8,
Sesa me 51 20,33 ; Get Smart 15
5 DO-Bonanza J ; Family Affair 8; Star T rek 15
5 30-A d am -12 4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; E lee Co. 20,33;
Adam -12 13.

SMITH
NELSON .•.
·MOTORS, INC•._
.,

Ph. 992:3993

DOZER WORK , E:xcavat1ng,
land clear1ng , ponds and
basements. ,
and
land
sca p1 ng
P ull1ns
Ex
cava lin g , phone qn 2478
8 26 30tc

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

4 ·0Q-Mr

Nathan Biggs
Rad1ator Specuthst _

Syracuse. Ohio

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 24,1975
3·3(),-()ne Lite to Love 13. Bewitched 6; Taltletales
8.10.

From the largest Truck or
Bu lldoz er Radiator to the
s?'allesl H eater Core

LARRY lAVE8DER

lARRY WHOBREY,

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

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

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

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

BOOI(KEEPINb,
Tax Advmy Service,
Collection systems,
office supply seiYice.

3 BEDRM hom e and bath ,
basement. double ga rage ,
c arport , worksho p over
garage, l outbuildi ng s,
Salem St , Rutland Phone
742 4111
9 23 -6tc

UPPER SEC TION Rustle
Hilts ,
Syrac u se ,
Oh1o ,
Modern 3 bedroom , all
electric , 52,000 BTU a.r
cond1t 1on er . Just built
Recreat ion room A ll car
peted 27x 14, $24.000 Phone

I '

Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

Ph. 742-5081

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

M I DDLEPOR T,
new
decora t ed, c arpeted , gas
fo rced a.r , 3 bedroom , 11,
story c orner lo t. si n gle
ga r age , near schoo l and
shopp rng · cen t er . $17 . 500
992 7624. 586 linco ln .S t ,
Middleport
9 16 1fc

I.

Blown ·
Insulation Services

9-17 I mo,

OPEN EVES.8:00 P . M .
POMEROY, OHIO

0 t urnttur e, 1ce bo~~:es,
brass bed s, or com pl ete
hOUSE'hOlds
Write M
0.
M1t1er. Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760 .

IMJD\J IE CAM!:I&lt;A. MEfT US AT
MAUDE 'S PAR&gt;&lt;ING

FREE ESTIMATES

Paint Houses
Paint !Jams
Paint Roofs
Paint Anything

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

S1850

POMEROY MOTOR CO

)L

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM
Day Befor e Pub
locat•on
3 FAM IL Y Yard Sale , Thurs
Monday Deadl1ne 9 a m
day
through
Sa turday
Cancellation - Correc t •on s
beg1nn1ng at 10 am Wilma
Will be accepted until 9 am
Casto. Portland. Ohio
for Day of Publ•cat•on
9 23 Jtc
REGULATIONS
Th e Publisher reserves the ------ - -- - - - - - right lo ed1t or re te ct any ads MISC SALE, H emlo ck Grove
Gra nt;~ e,
Thursday and
deemed ob1ect•ona1
The
Fr iday 9 a m to 4 p m
publisher
will
not
be
9 23 3t p
respons•bte for more than on e
-- - ---- --- ---1ncorrect 1nsertro n
SEVERAL fa mrl1es , n i ce
RATES
selectio n of men's and
For Want Ad Serv1ce
women's cl othing , SIZes 24• ~
5 cents per Wo rd one m serl ron
to in fant s, household fur
Mm1mum Charge Sl.OO
nilure , ba by fu rni ture , drop
14 cents per wo rd three
consecut•ve inse rt ,ons
If'! el ec . range ~';l rt and hood ,
b~cycles , (26
boys and
26 cents per word si)( con
gr rl s. 24" g 1rl sl, toys,
secut111e 1nsertions
houseplants. tropical f1Sh,
25 Per Cent D1scount on paid
ducks,
and rabb itS. Earl
ads and ads paid wrth 1n 10
Hunl 's reSidence, 2•., moles
days
east of Chester iu s! off 248
CARD OF THANK S
Watch for signs From 9
&amp; Ob1tuary
am . t111 4 p m Wednesday ,
S2 00 for 50 word m1n1mum
Thursday, and F riday
Each addiltonal word 3c
9-23 3tp
_ BLIND ADS
A dd ll ional 25c Charge per
YARD Sale Rt
124 across
Advertisement .
from Syrac use Park Old
OFFICE HOURS
Avo n bot t les , so me fur
8 : 30am to 5 oo p m Dally ,
nilure , baby mattress , lots
8 30 a . m
to 12 00 Noon
of g~rl's clothes, sized 1-6,
Sa •urday
and other m isc Thursday
and Friday, Sept 25t h and
26th, 9 30 a m to 4 p m
9-23-3tc

$5298

1966 FALCON, 80,000 m•les,
good dependable c ar for
$260, or best o ffer Phone
992 5190.
9-23 -Sip

Wanted To Buy

6 FAMILY Yard Sa l e, Thurs
day . Fr•day and Sa turda y
beh •nd Dave's Grocery t')n
old Rt 33
· 9 23 Ate

·

We
We
We
We

1971 OLDS CUTLA~S '' S" CPE .

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

UNJMME

DUALITY

Cpe, less than 7,000 miles . deluxe belts, tint glass , air
con ditioned , de lu xe bumpers and guards, remote LH &amp;
RH m1rror , 400-48 81 en g me, AM radio and tape, aux
l1ghting , comfort !It w h eel Like new and a real sharpie

9 -21 -tfc

YOU WON'T !SET

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1975 CHE V kULI;T CAPR ILE

3181

IF YOU DO THIS

2 SIGNS
OF

"SI:ND 2 M 0 RI: MEN AND A

ONCE, FIRST.

Business Services

cASH pcud tor ·arr mbkes
mod(•ls

·-~--------

CIRCL.E THE BLOCK

''

··wanted

r-·------.._.._.._._.._.._,_.. ___.____
t Television log for

0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975
-Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
'
. - ..

PISCES (Feb 20·Motch 20)

A.vour

~Birthday
Sept. 25, 2t7S
Conditions having an Influence
on your well ~ belng wtll be far

more s1able this year than they
were last year. Several things
you've been hoping for will
become realilies.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

HE IIIANT51tl KNOW HOW

HE CAN TELL IF

TO GIVE HIM A

'iOU'l.l.

DO A 600D J08 ...

BREAK

•
•'

"

"

(

.'

I

'
' .

·.

'

�)

I'
I .

_, .

..

Fast Results Use 'T he Sentinel Classi
an~
homes

O'f

mobi l e

P'1one area

code

9531

614 473
-1 13

UMP/0

I I tD
INOOBBAI
r5

®

lfc

..

Auto Sales
1965 MUSTANG , phone 992

'"

--- -----------1967

Phone 992

2892 Can be seen at 957
Broadway . M iddleport
9 23 Jtc

A HEARIN6 .

1

RAMBLER

I
V~

Now arrangt tht circled lttttro
to form the aurpnae lli\IWer, u

I'-::=:·I=;~t,~..J~;;;~~~L~~_j~-':u~g~g;es.ttd
Lr_..:::l'riii=-*=SII::.:•IISE=ANSWIR==-.:..___JI ( x x xxxJ
V~

by the above cartoon.

(An•wen tomorroto)
Jumbl~• - BORAX

Ynterd.y ' •
An.wll'r:

ADAGE

CALICO

JETSAM

/,11oA ~ /tJ.. t' aJI f.'ng/11ch JOt I - "GAOL"

WANT ADS

$2395
"S " Cpe, grey l1ni sh, b lk inter ior . bucket seats &amp;
con sole, r adto, tape. automat•c. power stee ring &amp;
brakes, loca l 1 owner ca r

1968 DODGE , good cond1tion,
air cond1t10nm ~:~ . See at 131
Laurel St, , Pomeroy, Ohio .
9 23 6tc

6 cy l std trans, rad10, li ke new w -w tires , blue fm1~h,
n ~ep car w 1th good economy

1972 CO MET 2 DR.

10 7 74
- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

pets
2

AKC APRICOT Poodles
puppies , I male, 1 female, 8
weeks old. Phone 949 5992
9-2l -31p

Real Estate For Sale

For Sale
1954 FE RGU SON tr ac tor w1th
accessor~es Phon e 843 2'i61
9 24 6tc
1971 KAWASAKI 500 Cal l 247

2813

9 24 61p

AKC Reg lrtSh Sette r , male 1
year 5 months old, 565
1973 FX350 Harley Dav idson,
Cont~ct Dean Sc hrl!llck , Box
less than 1,000 m 11es. SBOO.
92 R ul land , Ohio
Phone 992 2967 after 5 p m
9 24 Alp
9 24 4tc
AWAY-...=-] pupp-;s,
part
Beegle and
part COMPLETE Oisp 20 head ot
Blue tick Phone 949 5172
horses , Reg1stered and
9 24 -6tc
grade , show and pleasure
- - ---- - - - ----Phone (6 14 ) 388 ·0991 or 367
7481 .
9-24 6tc
~

To- GivE

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

Emplo,vment Wanted

h!EMODEL!NG
Plumbrng,
hearing and all lypes of
ge n e ral
r e pa rr
Work
q uarant eed . 20 years . ex '
per~ence
Ph one 992 2409

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

LIVING room sulle , end and
coffee table, lamps , bedrm .
suite, re c liner . upr .g ht
freezer . Phone 992 7369
9 24 3tc

5 1 tf r.

RADI A TOR S, doors
and
windows.
and
other
use
d
CAR PEN TRY.
paneling ,
building mater ial Call 992
flooring and ce iling Phone
2720.
992 2759
9 24 lie
9 17 26tc
\975 F IREBIRD Formula 400
A C , 1111 wheel , fa c tory
tape , mags and gauges . Low
IN ··M~MORY of Clyde
mileage Phone 7tl2 -5943 .
BARNYARD Yard Sa le , Sept NATIONAL Company now
Johnson who passed away 1
9-24 4tc
26 and 27, 9 a m. t ill S p m
year ago today , Sept . 24
hiring help for Christmas .
Foot
of
Massar
H11t,
State
Sadly missed by w i fe ,
Starting Oat~: ~l!pt 27 . Send 5 FT . 3 PT . HITCH , bush hog ,
Rt
7
AntiQUeS. Aladdin
Nancy, daughter , Connie,
S225 00 Phon e 985 3594
Information to B&lt;J :&lt; 729 -C, c -o
lamp , telephone, lots of
Dad and Mother, Brother
The
Dally
!:Jentinel,
9 19-8fp
diShes . Clofh1ng
and Sisters
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-23 -Jtc
9 -24 ltc
3 PT HITCH mower to f1l
9-21 4tC
Ford or Fe rg uso n tra c tor
PORCH Sa le, Laurel Cliff,
IN MEMORY 0 of JUlie Ann
Sl2 5 00 Phone 985 3594
Se pl.
22
through
26
Fisher, Sept 24, 1975
9 19 Sip
Clothing , old battles , toys.
Phone 992 -707 5
Our Little Angel,
CASTLER
12~65
2 LOSE we1ght with New Shap e
9 2l ·31c 1974
One year's gone by
Tablets and Hydrex Water
bedroom, 2 full b~ths, total
A little girl came to h is world
Pill s at
Dutto n
Drug ,
e
lectric
,
furn
1tu
re
Phone
of ours ,
BASEMENT Sale Monday on
M i ddleport and
Nelson
949
3655
or
992
7671
Her hair as golden as the
til? , 10 am til 5 p.m Rock
Drug
9 19 -6tc
summer flowers
St
off
Spring
Ave,
9 23 Jf p
Suddenly one autumn day,
Pomeroy Watch for Signs .
WHEN CHECKING the ads
9 FT . OVERHEAD garage
God reached down for this -----------~~~tc
for mobile home sales, you
door complete, large vise.
child,
will
note
many
dealers
are
Our little Angel was laken
modern bathtub, large roll
offering discounts . Most of
about , tool box , 308 Page St ,
away,
4 ROOM house, double car
these deals are on homes
M iddleport , phon e 992 -3509 .
To sleep and slumber mrld ,
garage In Pomeroy
F or
th"at have been on the lot
Memories are left to keep,
lnformBiiOn ca ll 992 2502
9 -23 5tc
several months or perhaps a
She suffers not and lies m
9 :24 -3tc
year . At Kingsbury Home
ALLIS Chalmers tractor with
peace.
,
Sales. 1100 E
Main St. ,
Baby Jesus , watch o'er Ner TRAILER lo t. good location.
Plow and cultivators, S475
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
we
can
offer
sleep.
Also, Bundy B fiat clarinet ,
close to school bus. gas ,
you a better deal on a Fom ·
S50. Phone 742-5825 .
May the prec ious memor.es
water. elec
Available tn
Cor wrapped 1976 model
never cease.
9-il lie
Middleport Phone 992 -2864
home . Call 99:2 -7034
Mommy ,
Daddy- and
IJ
-21
-Stc
9 24-6tc
4 WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
eeegle
9-24 ltp
flat dump truck , Harold
4 RM and ba th furn iShed
1971 M'BILE Home , close to
Brewer , Long Bottom, Ohto,
upstairs
apt
P
hone
992
-5908
.
Meig
Mines . Phone 742 '
614 -985 -3554
6582
9-24 ttc
9-21 -lfc
-----------9 23 6tp
NO HUNTING on George 4 RM FUR NI SHED apt tor
CATERPILLAR 0 -6 bulldozer
Freeland's premises or
rent Phone 992 -3656
ONE 1969 Communtty Homes ,
hydraulic angle b l ade,
nearby woods .
9 3 l fc
(3 bedrm l ~II e l ectric
heavy cab . Good condition.
9-23 ltc
mobile home end 1 acre lot
Harold
Brewer,
Long
111 ND-;tRO 'OM fu-;:-nished -;nd
Ready to lfve in
Price
Bottom, 614 985 3554 .
unfurn1shed
apartments
TAKING orders for firewood
$9,500
2
miles
from
' 921tfc
Phone 997 5&lt;13&lt;1
Dave Bass, Syracuse. Oh io .
Rutland Can be seen by
\
Phone 992 5006.
appt
by
ca·lling
992
-3537
4 1'} " '
GUNS and Ammo . Our fall
9-2l -ltc
after 5 p .m.
stock
is
now
here
3 RMS . furnished and bath
9-23 -lfc
Complete l i ne of Rem
apt on ground floor . Adults
PIANO Tuning , Lane Daniels,
1ngton,
W r nchester ,
Phone 992-2082 .
only, reference
Call 992 - 10 X 50 MOBILE home , $2,700
2050 after 1 p m.
lthica , Savage . Sl ug 6arre l s
8-28· 261p
or will rent for $100 per
m stoc k tor most brand shot
9 23 Stc
month Phone 74:2-5825.
gun s, but in short supply
9-23 Jtc
Get them wh•le lhey last
;C c t Nl ~ v Mobile Home
Money short , lay a way
Park , r.tt 11 ten miles north
your f.all hunting needs New
of Pom eroy Large tot s w l!h
Fall s tore hours starting
c oncret e pat ,os. Sid ewa lk s,
Se pt 5, 10 a.m to 9 p.m.,
runner s ilnd off stree t
IN DA SH 23 Channel Citizen 's
Monday Sat urday . Vil lage
f;arkmq Pho ne 99'2 7:79
•
eand transceiver , am fm
Gun Shoppe, 266 Mill St ,
rt,px radio , 8 track stereo.
12 31 tic
Phone 992 5177 , financing
Call 992·3965
avarlable
4 BEDRM . upstairs and ba th ,
9 4-lfc
9 3 26tc
6 rm s downsta1rs. new
kilchen on R t. l3, Mason, W
2 BEDROOM trailer and
Va , natural gas, elec , c1ty
ground, for rent, 4 room USED CHAIN saws, 498
water Phone 1 304 773 5147,
apartment, couple on l y
Locust St , Middleport.
available 17th of Sept
Phone 992 -3975.
Phone 992 3092
9
1&lt;1
10tc
Junction 7-33
9-18-26tc
9 17 -tfc
rR A ILER space for rent All
Pomeroy
utilities Phone 992 5535
STEREO -RADIO , AM -FM, B
12 GA high power sheets,
tr.ack tape combination .
9 16 ff c
$3 83 box ; Remington or
Balance 5101 29 or terms.
NEW
"OIL OF
MINK " i= u- RNISHe- o- -apartmenf,
Super X .22 mag . S2 60 box ,
Call
992 l965
products, new catalogs . Get
22 L R 73 c box Save also on
adults only in Mrddleport
9-21 -tfc
on our growing customer
new and used guns many
Phone 992 -3874 .
list Or maybe you would
used ~ - B - D .B ' s, auto ' s,
3 25 ttc
like to take orders? Phone ,
pumps , discount on all new ALL NEW T urner M -2 plus 2
power m•ke , 120 , and mobile
guns and extra barrels
Helen J
Brown , 992 -5113, LASA LLE -H-Oi t:L..., MID
100 W Lienar $100. Phone
F ife 's, Back of Speed Queen
KOSCOT
Independen t
DLE POR T, OH IO ROOM S
992 -5784 aft er 6 p. m . 992Laundry Mat , 3rd S.l,
Distri butor .
$5 UP . .S PE C I AL RATES
2590
Mrddleport.
9-21 -lfc
BY WEEK OR MONTH
_·
91212tc
9-18-6tc
T 'I AIR CONOITI0~ J, NG
a 2 . 2111r
19 72 FORD tractor 2000.
Phone 992 ·2990
Siegler&amp; Monogram
9·22-6tc

In Memory

Help Wanted

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

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

Mobile Homes for Sale

3

BEDRM
home ,
lust
finished, remodeling, Salem
St . Rutland Pho ne 742 3615
after A p m or see Mdo B
Hut chison
9 23 lfc

992 7523

9-21 6tp
HOU SE , S1/1 acres In Portland
Call 16 14) 864 1876, after 5

pm

9-24 -12tc

------------NEW 3 bedrm home, br•ck

front, 1 ca r garage. modern
all elec
1 mile out of
Chester Call 949 -4692 or 843 -

2667

9 24 12tp

For Rent

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

'·'

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

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

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

Notice

Opening Oct. 1

For Sale

D&amp;M APPLIANCE
Sales and SeiYice
Located At

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

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

NEW LISTING - 1'/:l acres ion
the Oh1o River on State · Rt.
338. Old concrete block
building , 2 dr illed we lls. A
good place for a home . A ski ng

$6 ,000

6

Starting October 1 we
are buying
Black
Walnuts at market
price . Bring your
Black Walnuts to:

NEW

LISTING

Excelsior Salt
Wolb, Inc.

.'

. ,

Box 267

Pomeroy, Ohio

PICK ·y

R own · gr~en beans
at
bu. Bnng own
containers . Arnold Hupp,
Letar'r Falls, 2.47 -2623.
9-21 -6tc

$4~

swEEPER-- a--;;;1- sew;ng
Machine Repair, Parts. and
Supplies . o•vis VaCUUJ)1
Cle•ner, 'h mile up Georges
Creek Road off State Route
7. Phone 4.46 -029-4 .
9 25 . ltc

Yard Sale

BUILDING
POMEROY, OHIO
CONTACT:
DALE E. SMITH at 9925329
or
THOMAS C. EDWARDS at
992-2052
or
'.
TED REED JR . at 992-2052

4551

9-23 -3tc

-1010- -----------JOHN DEERE dozer ,

diesel engine, $45 ,000 .00 . 985 -

3594 .

.

9

19-Btp

--------------1010 JOHN DEE R'E dozer;611.
1

.

blade,
cenepy, ~ wtnch , ..,
revers·er bar, gasoline .-,.

engine s•s.ooo oo. 985 -359•.
9· 19-Btp

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

$35,000.
NEW LISTING -

HUNTING LAND -

IF YOU DON'T KNOW REAL
ESTATE, KNOW YOUR
REALTOR, at 992-3325.

Good Through

Oct.

CLIP THIS AD and bring it
tn for SIS .OO discount.

•

(

-- --

992 -5858 .

9-18 -tfc
--7:"----_--:;----- - EPT r C 1 A NK S c l eaned
f\' oder n ' an ita t 1on 992 395&lt;1
or 99 / 7].19
9 18 ttc
I F YOU ar e Interested •n
building a n ew home or
hav1ng your present hom e
rem odeled , con ta ct Roush
Cons1rucllon , 992 7583, Greg
Roush
9 17 12tc

BACKHO"E fOr rent , hour or
contract
Reg , or
ex
cavating type Se pt1c tanks
installed B ill P ul lins Phone
992 2478
8-27 lfc

-------------Real Estate for Sale

608 E.
MAIN
- po~ROY,o
POMEROY - TOO MANY
CHILDREN TO LIVE IN A
SHOE - but not tor this
home -

~~,~~~~

STRENUOUS

OR PLAY A
HA!VD OF
CARDS .. QR
WHAH

( YAW"-!!)

FOR MEo
THANK?! ...

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

• Q 84

¥J
• Q J 10 4
. (/J876

Middleport,

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoes

EXCAVATING ,
oackhoe,
dozer and d1t c her
Gas.
electrtc and water line
burial, basements, tooters ,
se pllc systems and brush
c leanmg Will haul fill dirt.
fop soil. sand and gravel,
lim estone for driveways and
roads. Phone Charles R .
Hatfield , Backhoe Service,
Rt. 1, Rutland, Ohio, 742 609 2.
· 7-11 -90tc

Recreation
R ..
g~rage. JUST $30,000.00.
POMEROY - CLOSE TO
SCHOOL - 2 story frame
in

excellent

condition,

3

water heat. Full basement.

$17.000.

Henry Lew1s -

MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful lot,

frame and

• Q 7 63
t A973
o1o A K 4

:9~p:;~:· s{~~'': · ~i:c~~~g~ .r

Pomeroy A utho~rzed 5 inger ~
\ ales a n d Serv1ce
W e~
sha rp en Scissors
:·
3 29 tfc,
-.............=~ -__o_. t
P0 R T A BL E
T 0 I L E Tr
RENTAL,
Co n s tru c t ion'
Outdoor
even t s .
Ph one;
Gallipolis ,
&lt;146 471! ?,1
R u sse ll 's Plu m b ing alh?
Heatrng
B 19 t (c'

•

!

MY HOUSE AHD

eRUTE?

carpeting .
501 NYLON • ''

''

"

Square

y etrd

RIJBBER BACK·

YES ... KEEPING
THI S MUCH
CASH AROUND
IS ASKING
FOR TROUBLE!

We have huf'\,dreds' .o~
carpet values Your job C:a"
be co mpl e ted in 1 to ~
weeks
No long wa •lin g
per•od Ovr install er has 261
years experience .. Expert
installal •on. You'll l 1ke
What YOU get
CALt. 742·4211 •

TALK TO WENDELL
GR.ATE ,

CARPETCONSU~TANT

RUTLAIIID '
FURNITURE
7C2-42:11
Ruttan

FREE

T'WARNT
NOTHIN'

...

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY; SEPT. 27, 1975 11:00 A.M.

FWf.BALLS

ME'ANT
TOBE

IS

BUTA

'

FOOTBALL
LIKE: yO'·
IS-

•
'

DEXTER, OHIO
JUST BE CAREFUL

, OF 111E &amp;WINGING
S INGLES!

TI1E CAMBRIDGE HOfEL
15 OOPPO&amp;ED 1D BE

I

QI.JfTE A GRoovY .-oo~
tslACE1 WINNIE ...

'

a:

that tf the diamond fmesse is on m~n;r correspo nde nt should
every thmg wtll be fme If ot hav e assed It is always
loses and East holds the ace ol danger~us to ~eb;d a five -card
spades, he IS likely to be dow n suit opposite a partner who ha s
two tncks
bd
th 'na
One declarer in an Important no 1 1 any 1 0

by THOMAS_JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Nuisance
l Palace
5 Chas tise
attendant
2
Black
a
3 Slipped
tyke
4 Hamilton
10 Gifted
bill
11 Atelier
5 Big
12 Throw a
mdustry
light
6 Place
14wds. )
i .. _ Bede"
14 F'm1sh
8 Pug1hst
Benvenuti
another on this 15 Small
deer
9 " The Mika·
side! Appear to be
16 Cow
do" charrope burns!
talk
acter
11 Cheat
'---;=~f.::::_ 17 Ringlets
13
Bind
~....-- 19 ~' mally
li
Examples
12 wds I
18 Accelerate
22 Turf
19 Lava
26 Sa ndw1ch
20 Nwnber fo r
12 wds )
28 Rhode
Island 's
motto
lloo..;A 29 Ward 30 Tolerate
Ma who
DEARLY
goes

YOU WiLL PAY
FOR THAT, YOU r-...-~==="
MONSTER!!

Pomeroy, O.

i
:

'

'

I'

'i

41

MBC

..------~w-·---

easy Viewing

7:DO-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars , Pop Goes the Country B; News 10; 1
Country Music Jubilee 13; Family Affair U ; Book
Beat 20: Romagnolls ' Table 33.
7.3o-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Wild Wild
World of Animals 6; Wild Kingdom 15; Match
Game PM 8; E;,venlnq Edition wit~ Marlin
Agronsky 20; The Judge 10; To Tell lht .Truth 13;
Episode Acllon 33.
.
8.DO-Li ttle House on the Prairie 3,4,15; When Things
Were Rollen 6.13. Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8, 10;
Feeling Good 20.33.
8:3o-That's M~ Mama 6.13; Man Builds, Man
Des1roys 33, John Ba ..ette : Th is Time Around 20.
9:DO-Doctors Hospllal 3••• 15; Beretta 6,13; Cannon
8, 10; We lfare Special 20.33.
10:DO-Petrocelll 3,4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13.
11:DO- News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15.
11 . 3o-Johnny Ca rson 3,4, 15; Movie "T he Sex Symbol"
13 . FBI 6: Madigan 8; Movie " Babes on Broadway " 10.
11 .So-FIIm 8,20, 33
12 DO-ABC News 33 .
12: 3o-Movle "The Sex Sy mbol" 6; Janak I 33.
l ·OQ--Tomorrow 3,-4 ; News 13

THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 25,1975
6.00--Coiumbus Today 4, Sunrise Semester 10.
6. 2s-Farm Report 13.
6:3o-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
Urban League 10, Pallerns tor Living 13.
6:4s-Mornlng Repor1 3.
6:55-&lt;:huck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; A.M. America 6,13; CBS News 8;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 · 3&lt;1-Schoolles 10.
8:DO-Lucy Show 6; Catptaln Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33
8: 3Q-Big Valley 6.
9 oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy Show 81 Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J. 13.
9·3o-NOI For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
9:4&gt;-Li vlng Word 4.
10 .00--Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3.4, 15;; Dinah 6; Give-nTake 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10·3o-Wheei of Fortune 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3, IS; I Dream ol Jeannie A;
Gambit 8, 10; Elec. Co. 20.
11 .3o-Hoilywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday A; Love of Life B. 10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :5&gt;-Take Kerr 8; Don Imel's World 10.
12 :&lt;»-Magnlllcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 C lub A; News 6,8,10.
-12 :3o-Jackpol 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search lor
tomorrow 8.10
12:5$--NBC News 3.
1 :oo-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3o-Barbara Walters visits lht Royal Lovers :1,4,15;
Let's Make a Deal 6,13; As the WoriH Turns 8,10.
2:r:h-S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2. 3o-Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,1~; Edge of Night 8,10.
3· oo-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Rono Borrell 8,10; Llllos Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3()-0ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Feeling Good

4 .~r.

Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
"The Grealest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13.
4 3Q-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family B;
Gel Smart 15.
5:oo-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15 .
5:3&lt;1-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co . 20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Book Beat 33.
h
6 3()-N BC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Grltlll
6; CBS News B. 10; Your Future Is Now 33.
71 :oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Tnllh 4; Bowling
tor Dollars 6. Space · 8; Black Perspective on tho
News 20; Let's Make a Deal 13; Family Affair 15;
Family at War 33 .
7 3o-Hoilywood Squares 3.~; Evening Edition wiU
Martin Agronsky 20;; Wild Kingdom 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; J lmmy Dean 15.
8 · 00- Monteluscos 3 . ~.15 ;; Barney Miller 6,13;
Wailons 8.10; Roman11c Rebellion 33; Philosophers
&amp; Kings 20
8:3o-Fay 3,4,15. On The Rocks 6,13; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.
9 oo-Eiiery Queen 3.4.15; Streets of San Francisco
6,13 : Movoe "Conrack" 8; Classic Theatre 33;;
Movie "The President's Analyst" 10; Firing Line
20.

10 ·oo-Medlcal Story 3,4,1 5; Harry 0 6,13; News 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8. 10,10, 13, 15.
·n .3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; W ide World ~rstery 13;
FBI 6. Movie "Satan's School for Girls 8; Movie
" Honky Tonk" 10; Janak! 33 .
12 ·3o-Wode World Mystery 6.

AstroGrapM

LWCMV

NBKN

SWC HOB

EV

• Bernice Bede Osol
For Thurodoy, Sopt. 2S, 1875
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19)

.

."

MEPP

KPMKQV

:_c__I_Ll...'.L::UW!Jllillill S W C H 0 B . - A B E W S V S

..

AN, I

DOWN ON HI S

KNEECAPS AN '
PLEADED WI~ RUFE

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nav 22)
Pers onal gam will come your
way today through several unusual channels The sources
are not likely to be related .

SAGITTARIUS (Now H-Dec
21) You 're exceptionally sharp
at negotiation today, If you put
yo ur mtnd to It It's a good time
for some horse trading.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II

CAPRICORN (Dec 22...1.. 11)

you put on your old th1nkmg
cap yo u'll r1nd a way to buy
somethmg without putting your
b udget 1n Jeopardy.

Be wllltng to be of service to
others where you can . Your
good deeds will be the seeds
tor a future harvest

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) A

AQUARIUS (Jon 20·Feb 19)

problem l acmg you today will
not t ake as long as you think to
so lve Keep you r sched ule flex~
1ble You m1ght get a surpnse
mv!lal•on later 1n the day .

Your personality doesn't come
tnto tuft bloom till later in the
day That's when you'll collect
your admtrers

CANCER (Juno 21·July 221

You sttll have a lot of things gomg for you that aren't apparent
to those you'll be dealing with
today Thai's why you'll come
up a winner.

You 'll fa re m uch better in
bus1ness matters than you d 1d
yesterday, especlal!y 11 you go
H'1 w1th a posil tve attitude

LEO (July 23·Aug 22) You can
eas1 ly get others to go along
w1th your way of domg things
today 11 you guide. rath er than
push th em
next few days can be benefiCial
careerwise tf you keep your
nose to the wheel A job well
done co uld mcrease your earmngs

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : SCENERY IS fiNE - BUT HUMAN:
NATIJRE IS FINER.- KEATS
LIBRA (Sopt 23·0c1 23) You
((~ 1975 Ki.nJ. Futures Sy ndu:•tt, Inc .)

NOPE·- PAW GOT

S'POSE
RUFE HAWKINS CAUGHT
RUFE
M'l MAN SNUFFV IN
HAD HIM
Ht5 HENHOUSE lAST .
THROWED
NIGFIT1 ELVINE'f
IN JAIL

ME VGCJ

BKDS

tend to look at the darker side
at f•rst today, but fortunately
you'll realize every situation
has many bnghl facets.

You' ll have some doubts about
the way you handle a senous
Situation today Later, you ll
see the decls1on you made wa s
a wtse one

VIRGO (Aug 23.Sopt 22) The
SWC HOB

.

.

1 :oo- 1omorrow 3,4; News 13 .

fiancee, -

BS

sausage stutter .

o,,

33

· CRYPTOQUOTES

iron kett les, 2 pie safes, rocking chairs, horse-drawn

Smith Nelson Motors Inc.

21 Back talk
34 - out
23 Lamprey
( augment24 Peer
ed )
36 King 's
Gynt's
mother
address
25 Threefold
:l i P1zzena
( comb.
fiXture
form )
38 Top dra·
2i Hair dye
malic role
40 Neighbor
31 Zestful
32 State 1F'r l
of

maa
Lmcoln's

dresser, round top trunk, powder horn, picture frames,

•
•'

Noah

Yesterday's Answer

used for the three L's, X for the tw_o O's, etc Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatu_m of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lett er s are dtfferent.

oak tab le, stone jugs, stone jars, 6 oak straight _c hairs,

MISC. ITEMS
Lbg · chains, steel traps.
hand tools, Sabre roto-tiller, many other
misc. Items,
'
OWNER- FI:.ORA. McCLURE
: Fo9d '.serve~ .. by · ~ut_ll!nd .' Fire ' Dept.
Auxiliary: • · ·
·
,.· I· ·
·
Not responsible for ;Accidents.
Auctioneer:._ Lloyd Dillinger
Rt. 1, Shade,
Phone 696-1269

1 NT
Pass

Rutledge
...---'---..;:;,::.-.....&gt;-&lt;:::11.,. Costa
Del Throwmg
a h ght
(3 wds I
42 Punish
43 F'1eld
'rZ-4
44 " Bull
~..!:_G~""~c~·~~f'~F= _":~::::=~_::::r.:,'j Moose"
s talwart
-:::;r-------'""--11-m;;~ 45 Incline
~~~~~Yf!:.:c;/ TI1AT
JUST lOOK AT
HUSBAND OF
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work it:
MINE J AW ACROSt;
AXYDLBAAXR
THE FENCE WITH IHE
Is LONGFELLOW
NBV NEXT OOOR
NEIGHf:\QR f
One l etter simply stands for another. ln t hts sample A is

OLD ITEMS- J .
Mitchell muzzle loading rifle (full
stock), W. Richards doub le barrel 12 gauge shotgun.
dinner bell, oil burning tall light for Model T, Model T
Ford coils, oil lamp, olt lantern, partial marble lop

mowing machine, rake, single trees, double trees. 4
round back chairs. sideboard.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 36" Tappan Range,
Frigidaire refrigerator. dinette set, kitchen cupboard
w-glass doors, utility cabinet, Admiral chest type deep
freeze , porch glld&lt;&gt;r, 2 iron beds, sweepers ~ilh attachments, floor ldmp, fan. 2 portable televisions, 2
studio cOt.Jches. platform rocker, stands, quilts,

~m~~~

__

Having sold my home, I will sell the personal property of Flora and the late Marion
McClure.
Located 112 mile east of Dexter on Meigs
(:ounty Rd. No.4. The following items will
be sold:

Coupon No. 27

JJu Bu:s·i~ess With A L~ader
Phone 992-2174

SHECKS~!

'

south

A sad letter from Vermont
reads m part " S;ttmg South , I
opened one spade with :
• AK732 ¥ K98. 2 ... Al043
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ West bid two hearts North and
East passed and l went to two
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
spades Thos came around to
There is no absolute ru~ e East _.;ho doubled . We were '"
about the correct pla y at ma y the soup then, but even more so
3 NT Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead - lO •

ch m ce

· Not Respons;ble lor Accidents

rear . ASKING , ONLY
$7,000.
CLELAND REALTY llhe
sign of know how) ACT! ON
&amp; RESULTS ON THE
SALE
OF
YOUR
PROPERTY.
PHONE 992-2259

declarer two lrtcks
The other South dedded to
start with th e d1amond finesse
West was m and l ed his seven of
spades. The lour was played
from dummy . East thought a
whol e an d played the jack .
whereupon South m ad e hi S contract w1th an overlnck
West blamed East lor the
debacle , but we rathe r blame
West 11 he had led the 10 of
spades . East would have had no
excuse, butthatseven-spo tl ead
could have been third best from
king- to-seven

team match dectded to run the
(Do yo u ha ve a questiOn for
fiv e c lub tncks right away on the ,Ja co/Jys? Wflte "Ask th e
thetheorythatEastandWest Ja c o b y s · c are o f th_os
might di sca rd badly Th ey new s p a pe r The most m·
didn't' East signalled m spades te r estong questoons wolf be
and West never let a heart go us ed 1n fhs s column . and
Then when West got m with the wn ter s w1ll recesve cop1es o f
k;ng ·of d;amonds he led a JA C OB Y MODERN.)

•

Auctioneer

forced
air
furnace ,
paneling &amp; file, alley in

11\AKE

YDU CAH'TGEl RID OF
HIM, I SURE CAN, ANO l'IILl 1

11 TO THAl RULI&lt;JHG

East

a heart and set

when my partner r~scued me·~
hold s the l!rst trick, South sees three ,d~amonds W;ll you com

A SAP 001 DF ME -

\0/MY SHOULD WE FEED

East took h;s ace a nd

nog~c~~~~':!,'f~t~ack ol hearts

NO BRAT CAN ORA£;
&lt;\ MAHGY ftJOCH IMTO

JUST A FEW SCRAPS!
WHY, THAl 'S MO~ THA~
WE HAD FOR DiriHER-

LET US DO IT! !

4

No rth

West

------- --- ---- ·

99

East-West vul nerable

e

M A CH I N E

Signed, James A. Kmg, Aammtstrator

stone bulldong. bath, N.G.

t 85
... 10 5 3
• K3

bedroom su1tes, one Whirlpool gas cook stove,
Whirlpool refrigerator, 15 cu . ft . Westinghouse chest
freezer, auto. washer &amp; dryer, 2 ironing boards,
vacuum sweeper, lawn furniture and garden tools, 1
lawn mower. one porch swing, several antiques , one lot
of miscellaneous items, very large sale

.BR. bath, nice k;tchen W.
range, disposal, N.G. hot

t K62

SOUTil JD I

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS: One llvinq room suite, one
Zenith color T V., 2 rocking chairs, gossip bench, 3

heat.

EAST

• AJ965
• 8 52

... 9 2

Mason. W. Va .

enclosed), N . G . hot water

WEST

9 2-1 mo

SE W I N G

0

• 10 7 2
¥ A K 10 9 4

Dan's Shoe Repair

spade

~.Ar.~~ r et u r n ed

NORTil

Located 1 block above Pomeroy-Mason Bridge at

baths. Large liv;ng, Utility
R., large porch (gloss

WIN AT BRIDGE

NI6HT" !

Correct N. T. play evasive

SAT., SEPT. 27 AT 10:00 A.M.

4 bedrooms . 2

•
.

THERE LOOK!&gt;
· LII&lt;E- A PERFECT
CAMPSITE!

SHOULD WE
RU!.J UP OUR
TV ANTENIJA ...

THI&gt;JK l'LL ~UST TURIJ li'J ArJD
ENJOY THE PERFECT PEACE AND
QUIH OF THIS WICDeRN£;5£.

PU&amp;LIC SALE

Count On Us for Service That Counts
Stop by or phone for an appointment today

E. Matn St.

&lt;' l!oA!.J K DOW!.J

THAT

GASOLINE ALLEY

HAVE YOUR EXHAUST SYSTEM CHECKED
BEFORE IrS TOO LATE!

5~0

EXCAVAT IN G , do ze r , loa .... ~ r
and backhoe work. , se pt1 c
1a nk s
tnstalled .
dump .
trucks and lo boys for h~re ,
will h aul fill dirt. top soi l,
l rmestone and gravel_., Call
rob or Roger Je ff er s , d ay
phone 992 7089 , n•ght ph on e
9'-1 / 31)25 or 992 52 32
, 2 11 tfc

Sweepers. toas ter s. irons ,
a ll small lllppl,ances Lawn
mower , next to Stale High
way Garage on Route 7·. .
Phone 985 l825
4 16 lfc

Our technicians will safety check your
car's exhaust system .. , FREE.
5 PCT. Dl SCOUNT on any exhaust parts
and labor needed.

,,

WOULD Y- OU - BELIEVE?
Build an ali steel building at
Pole Barn prices ? Golden
G1ant All Stee l Buildings .
Rt 4, Bo x 148 , Waverly ,
Ohio Ph on e 947 2296
1 24 t fc

'E LWOC.D BOWERS-:'REPAI~

PROTECT YOUR FAMilY

home In Rutland, furnished
or unfurn ished . Phone 9927336 after 5 dur ing week .
days .

~-

WE SPECIALIZE Jn mobile
home furn ace r epair Phone

NUTHl/IJ 1

'lOW, POD!.JE'IH

,.-;:HAT RIVER·

MIX CO N CRE TE
deiPJered r~ gh t to your
proj ect r ast and easy Free
estimates Phone 9"'92 3284 . WILL TRIM or cut trees and
shrubbery . Phone 949 -3221 .
Goe-gle.n Ready M •x Co ,
or 742 -4441
· ......
M1ddle p ort Oh1a .
6 30 If( '
9 7-24!&gt;

Eihaust System Safety Qleck

POMEROY LANDMARK
·,P.Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
. ; , Phone 992-2181

9-21 6tp

~-..-- - -

4, 1975

older

~E ~OY

With winter coming on and windows are roUed
up, you don't want your exhaust system .leaking .

All sizes on hand, pr1ces
start at $324.69.
-1 Wood Burni"g Stove

and

WE DO aluminum siding,
gutt er
work .
roofing ,
paneling , pa int ing , plum bing , We fi x the whole
house . AI Tromm , 7.42 5081.
9-2 4-lfc

IT MAY BE LEAKING

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

-------

Around

100 acres with 1youhg timber
and 12 acres of bottom All
minerals . $235 per acre.

-----""T"--------J BEDROOM total electric

1

3 acre

trailer or buildtng lot in
Lebanon
township
Also
building lot at Dorcas

NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
Apartments In Middleport, 1
bedroom apts from $104 plus
elec. Call 992 -327l or see~
Mrs
Keatley, Apt, 101 ,
Rivers ide Apartments.
l-28-2:6tp

YARD · SALE ,
antiques , TRAILE'"R space for rent in
depression glass , kitchen - Midd leport . Phone 992 5434.
cabinets, babv items , and
8-29-261(:
Children'S
and
adult
clothing , all sizes , old PRI V!\1 E mJ!elinQ room •--""'
radl61, used furniture, long
any organi~aJion , ph9ne 99 ?-~
dresses, office typewriter·.
3915
.~
Qfetswlre, pOrch gliQer with
J ·1Jtf~
cuahlona, ,a.m. lUI? F"ridily
1nd Saturday, Sept . 26 and
1:\E DROOM
fu r niShed
27 . Fourth 1nd Crooks St . 2
mobile home No pels Call
P~ono 992-3717 oc 992 -5866.
992 7479
~aln or Shine.
• 822tfc
·, • I . 9 2•-3tc

Near

older

Rutland- Roger Wamsley

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete a ir conditiOning
sales and ser'lnce, heeling ,
plumb1ng , r oo fing and
general sheet met a! work
Free Estimates
9 14 1 mo

Plus basement

Coolville . 4 bedroom insulated
home, 2112 baths , hot water
heat. large modern kit ., with
range , dishwasher , disposal ,
and birch cabmets, 5 acres .

and Older
and

WE:LL, WHAT

THE Mci&lt;E&amp; AIRMOBILE .. .

Jobber In

SSS .DO CALL 742-3651

Your He•l Deater
Thtrd 51 .
Racine , Ohio
Ph . 949-5961

and '2 porches on 2 lots next to
store . Above all floods with
rtver view. City water, Nat.

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

OFFICE SPACE - ------ - - ----1974 SUZUKI TF 185. Lots of
FOR
RENT
extras, extra low mileage.
MASONIC TEMPLE
Pr.ced to sell . Phone 949-

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

l;, acre
business lot on Rt . 7 East .

home, modern k1f ., bath, 2
porches , basement and all
utilities. $1 ~ . 000

and older

u .oo Bills - $3.25 each.
$5.00 Gold CO IRS X F cond .

S16,500
NEW LISTING -

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

Walnuts Are Cash!

9-21 301c

NEW LISTING - 9 rooms , 3

gas, and bath. Asking S8500.
MIDDLE PORT - 2 bedroom

318 N. 2nd

- - - - FOR SALE---WHEAT BACK PENNIES
.15 A ROLL
BUFFALO NfCKELS$7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
$1.25 EACH

Accountant
Phone 992 -6173

bedrooms with closets, hot
water heat, large lfvmg and
nice front porch in Middleport,

11 ROOMS -

TO BUY

20 . Teaching

6 3o-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griff ith 6,
CBS News 8, 10 .. Book Beal J3 .

A? D,ll!&gt;k: DE!&gt;C&amp;IJDS·· SO DOES

.Dan's Shoe

U.S. COINS
WANTED
WILL PAY
f6 for- ll64
d imes
65 for 196"
Quarters
51.30 for 1964
halves .
SJ 40 for 1935
dollars

6 Qo--News 3.4,8, 10, 13 , 15; Sesame St
Children 33 .

Pomeroy

4 10 l mo

Cartoon J ; Merv Griffin 4 ; Somerset 15 .

Mickey Mouse Club 6.8; Mlsler Rogers 20,33, Movie
" ll's Only Money" 10, o;nah 13 .
4 3Q-Bewi1ched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Fam1ly 8,
Sesa me 51 20,33 ; Get Smart 15
5 DO-Bonanza J ; Family Affair 8; Star T rek 15
5 30-A d am -12 4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; E lee Co. 20,33;
Adam -12 13.

SMITH
NELSON .•.
·MOTORS, INC•._
.,

Ph. 992:3993

DOZER WORK , E:xcavat1ng,
land clear1ng , ponds and
basements. ,
and
land
sca p1 ng
P ull1ns
Ex
cava lin g , phone qn 2478
8 26 30tc

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

4 ·0Q-Mr

Nathan Biggs
Rad1ator Specuthst _

Syracuse. Ohio

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 24,1975
3·3(),-()ne Lite to Love 13. Bewitched 6; Taltletales
8.10.

From the largest Truck or
Bu lldoz er Radiator to the
s?'allesl H eater Core

LARRY lAVE8DER

lARRY WHOBREY,

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

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

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

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

BOOI(KEEPINb,
Tax Advmy Service,
Collection systems,
office supply seiYice.

3 BEDRM hom e and bath ,
basement. double ga rage ,
c arport , worksho p over
garage, l outbuildi ng s,
Salem St , Rutland Phone
742 4111
9 23 -6tc

UPPER SEC TION Rustle
Hilts ,
Syrac u se ,
Oh1o ,
Modern 3 bedroom , all
electric , 52,000 BTU a.r
cond1t 1on er . Just built
Recreat ion room A ll car
peted 27x 14, $24.000 Phone

I '

Blown into Walls &amp; Attics

Ph. 742-5081

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

M I DDLEPOR T,
new
decora t ed, c arpeted , gas
fo rced a.r , 3 bedroom , 11,
story c orner lo t. si n gle
ga r age , near schoo l and
shopp rng · cen t er . $17 . 500
992 7624. 586 linco ln .S t ,
Middleport
9 16 1fc

I.

Blown ·
Insulation Services

9-17 I mo,

OPEN EVES.8:00 P . M .
POMEROY, OHIO

0 t urnttur e, 1ce bo~~:es,
brass bed s, or com pl ete
hOUSE'hOlds
Write M
0.
M1t1er. Rt 4, Pomeroy ,
Oh 10 Ca ll 992 7760 .

IMJD\J IE CAM!:I&lt;A. MEfT US AT
MAUDE 'S PAR&gt;&lt;ING

FREE ESTIMATES

Paint Houses
Paint !Jams
Paint Roofs
Paint Anything

Free Estimates
AI Tromm

S1850

POMEROY MOTOR CO

)L

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 PM
Day Befor e Pub
locat•on
3 FAM IL Y Yard Sale , Thurs
Monday Deadl1ne 9 a m
day
through
Sa turday
Cancellation - Correc t •on s
beg1nn1ng at 10 am Wilma
Will be accepted until 9 am
Casto. Portland. Ohio
for Day of Publ•cat•on
9 23 Jtc
REGULATIONS
Th e Publisher reserves the ------ - -- - - - - - right lo ed1t or re te ct any ads MISC SALE, H emlo ck Grove
Gra nt;~ e,
Thursday and
deemed ob1ect•ona1
The
Fr iday 9 a m to 4 p m
publisher
will
not
be
9 23 3t p
respons•bte for more than on e
-- - ---- --- ---1ncorrect 1nsertro n
SEVERAL fa mrl1es , n i ce
RATES
selectio n of men's and
For Want Ad Serv1ce
women's cl othing , SIZes 24• ~
5 cents per Wo rd one m serl ron
to in fant s, household fur
Mm1mum Charge Sl.OO
nilure , ba by fu rni ture , drop
14 cents per wo rd three
consecut•ve inse rt ,ons
If'! el ec . range ~';l rt and hood ,
b~cycles , (26
boys and
26 cents per word si)( con
gr rl s. 24" g 1rl sl, toys,
secut111e 1nsertions
houseplants. tropical f1Sh,
25 Per Cent D1scount on paid
ducks,
and rabb itS. Earl
ads and ads paid wrth 1n 10
Hunl 's reSidence, 2•., moles
days
east of Chester iu s! off 248
CARD OF THANK S
Watch for signs From 9
&amp; Ob1tuary
am . t111 4 p m Wednesday ,
S2 00 for 50 word m1n1mum
Thursday, and F riday
Each addiltonal word 3c
9-23 3tp
_ BLIND ADS
A dd ll ional 25c Charge per
YARD Sale Rt
124 across
Advertisement .
from Syrac use Park Old
OFFICE HOURS
Avo n bot t les , so me fur
8 : 30am to 5 oo p m Dally ,
nilure , baby mattress , lots
8 30 a . m
to 12 00 Noon
of g~rl's clothes, sized 1-6,
Sa •urday
and other m isc Thursday
and Friday, Sept 25t h and
26th, 9 30 a m to 4 p m
9-23-3tc

$5298

1966 FALCON, 80,000 m•les,
good dependable c ar for
$260, or best o ffer Phone
992 5190.
9-23 -Sip

Wanted To Buy

6 FAMILY Yard Sa l e, Thurs
day . Fr•day and Sa turda y
beh •nd Dave's Grocery t')n
old Rt 33
· 9 23 Ate

·

We
We
We
We

1971 OLDS CUTLA~S '' S" CPE .

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

UNJMME

DUALITY

Cpe, less than 7,000 miles . deluxe belts, tint glass , air
con ditioned , de lu xe bumpers and guards, remote LH &amp;
RH m1rror , 400-48 81 en g me, AM radio and tape, aux
l1ghting , comfort !It w h eel Like new and a real sharpie

9 -21 -tfc

YOU WON'T !SET

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

1975 CHE V kULI;T CAPR ILE

3181

IF YOU DO THIS

2 SIGNS
OF

"SI:ND 2 M 0 RI: MEN AND A

ONCE, FIRST.

Business Services

cASH pcud tor ·arr mbkes
mod(•ls

·-~--------

CIRCL.E THE BLOCK

''

··wanted

r-·------.._.._.._._.._.._,_.. ___.____
t Television log for

0., Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975
-Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
'
. - ..

PISCES (Feb 20·Motch 20)

A.vour

~Birthday
Sept. 25, 2t7S
Conditions having an Influence
on your well ~ belng wtll be far

more s1able this year than they
were last year. Several things
you've been hoping for will
become realilies.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

HE IIIANT51tl KNOW HOW

HE CAN TELL IF

TO GIVE HIM A

'iOU'l.l.

DO A 600D J08 ...

BREAK

•
•'

"

"

(

.'

I

'
' .

·.

'

�"l

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

,

'·

- ... ----

Notices, local news in brief

CHICAGO
( UP!)
National football League 1
RACINE The Racine
Fire Dept. was called
players wlll vote on a con- ' ·Tuesday at 9: 25 p m . to the
tract proposal s tarting Grace Holsmger res1dence,
Thursday and management Rt 2, Racine . A ruq ove; a
. .
furnace had caugh1 on f1re
offiCials have subtly tssued Damages were estimated at
them a challenge: accept it or $200 The property was In strike for a second sll"a1ght

sured . Eight men answered

year.

the

The
NFL
Pl ayers
Association dec1ded to s ubmit
the proposal for a membership vote Tuesday as
negotiations broke down after
two days of con ctliation ef·
forts by top federal mediator
W. J . Usery .

The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to the
William Anderson home on
Mulberry Ave , at 8: 58 p .m
Tuesday
for
Frances
Elberfeld Rovere who had

went to the Pomeroy Jun1or
High School where Wheeler
Thompson, a min1ng student.
had received an ankle Injury
whi le playing basketball
during a break period .
Three defendants were
fined Tuesday night by

Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Fined were Darrell

call

fallen

She

was

A Payne. 20. Columbus, wa$
fined SISOand costs and given
a three day jail sentence for

dri ving while intoxcfcated
and $100 and costs and given
a two day tall sentence for
driving
while
under
sus pens ion ; SlO and cos ts
each were Mehl'ln Durst, 45,
Middleport. charged with

to

taken

Holzer Med1cal Center wtth a
possible fra ctu red ankle At
1· 28 p m ., Tuesday , the squad

GROUND
BEEF

disorderly manner, and
George P
Lemley , 20,
Cheshire , failure to yield the
right of way
Ronnie Willlams,
22,
Middleport, was given a 15
day ta i I sentence for
possession of stolen goods

5LBS.

The

Reuter · Brogan ln .
surance Serv1ces , which has
moved to new quarters at 214
East Matn St .. Pomeroy , was
located for a number of years
on Sycamore St . Pomeroy ,

FIRST CUT

not Syracuse St. as reported

PORK
CHOPS

erroneous ly Tuesday.

LB.

LOCAL TEMPS
The
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a .m. Wednesday was 59
degrees under vel':\' cloudy
skies.

EXTRA LEAN

GROUND 99~
CHUCK LB.

\

'

8-16 0~
BOTTLES

R.C. &amp;
DIET RITE

BEER &amp; WINE CARRY OUT

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Joe
Bradley , New Haven ; Harold
Whittington , Point Pleasant;
Marilyn Crump, Buffalo; '

•
Enjoy the brilliance
of Chromacolor in a
fine-furniture console
all

new

II
1

elections
asks money
The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday heard a
request from the Meigs
County ll&lt;Iard of Elections for
an additional $18,169 to
operate through 1975. The
request was tabled .
Judge Manmng Webster
told the commissioners that
• two more apthere are
plicatwns for the school for
the mentally retarded, which
is over the total that the
Guiding Hand School in
Gallia County agreed to take .
' Each student will cost the
county $100 per month. Also
meeting with the commissioners were Judy Kitchen and Jerry Hilferty in
regard to preservation of old
buildings.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours and
Bernard
Gilkey,
commissioners ; Wesley Buehl,
county engineer, and Martha
Chambers, clerk .

Eunice Rollms , Leon; Mrs.
Blain Vance, Bidwell; Gerald
Woyan, Ashton; Mrs. Eunice
Hunt, McArthur; Mrs. Gene
Moore, son, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Clifford Egnor, Point
Pleasant; John Taylor ,
Mason; Mrs. Leo Sorrell,
Wellston ; Mrs. Gary Green,
Elyria; Iva Buxton, Leon;
Dewey Fisher , Grimms
Landing; Bertha Roush, New
Haven; Mrs. John Buck,
Mason .
Birth, Sept. 24, a son to Mr.
and Mrs . Gerald Barrett,
Vinton .
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. 23)
Joseph F . Adams,Sr., John
Adrian, Joe Angel, Charles
Beard, Hattie Blanton, Mane
Bradley, Eugene Carter,
Pauline Delaney, Tamale Sue
Donley, M1chael Evans,
Charles Faulk, Mrs. Charles
Frecker and daughter,
Steven
Frye;
Donald
Galloway, Linda Guthrie,
Juamta Hatfield , Glenna
Jayjohn, Ellen Matney,
Robert McCormick, Gladys
Miller, Flora Mitchell,
Patricia Stearns, Patricia
Wasmer, Frank Wetherholt,
James Wisman, Judy Ann
Young .
(Births)
Mr . and Mrs. Jackie
Parsons,
daughter ,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Clarence Sheward, daughter,
Jackson .

Three take oart

Solid-State

100%

• BRILLIANT
GIANT-SCREEN
CHROMACOLOR
PICTURE

SOLIDSTATE
CHASSIS

I

PATENTED
POWER SENTRY
VOLTAGE
.REGULATOR

\..

ENJOY IT ALL THIS FALL WITH ZENITH

NFL FOOTBALL
WORLD SERIES
NEW FALL SHOWS
The MANET -

in conference
ATHENS - Three members of Pomeroy area social
service agencies participated
in a day-long Communication
Skills Conference last week at
Ohio University.
They were Joan Culp,
Meigs
County
Health
Department;
Leafy
Chasteen, Meigs County
Senior Citizen Center and
Eleanor Thomas, Meigs
County Council on Aging,
heard federal, state and local
speakers discuss communication problems. They
participated
in
group
discussions.

ByUnited Press Intern a tiona I
FORT WALTON BEACH, FLA. - TROPICAL storm
Eloise, a weakening mass of strong windS and heavy rain,
pushed far inland today, leaving a trail of wreckage and
shattered buildings along the Florida Panhandle .
Eloise, downgraded from a hurricane as it rolled mto
Tennessee, West Virginia and Pennsylvarua early today,
brought heavy rain and flash flood alerts to much of the Northeast. Along the Florida coast, many of the 100,000 residents
who ned the 141knile-.an-bour"storm Tuesday came back to
pick up their lives.

£-S:C s=s

TifE BOSTON TEACHERS UNION TODAY BEGAN
drawmg $5,000 a day in fines for continuing a strike in violation
of a court order. Fort Lauderdale, Fla. teachers bowed to
similar legal edicts and reluctan\ly returned to work .
Delaware faced an AFL-CIO strike by 20,000 workers who
want to force settlement of a Wilmington teachers ' walkout.
Continuing teachers' strikes across the country affected
3~,400students, including 84,000 in ll&lt;Iston , the nation's oldest
school system . The ll&lt;Iston walkout entered its third day today
as teachers refused to knuckle under to a contempt citation .

VOL. XXVII

Lone
GownS-M-L
Matching Miniwith Bikini Pants
P·S-M-L

from
KATZ

Elberfelds
In Pomeroy
:;;: -;; ±
. . . .:.: ; -- - a
l

.

I

~- -

-~

&amp;7

Oldsmobile 1976.
AnOlds foreve~body.
And good mileage in every size.
From sporty Starf1re supercoupes to full s1ze, front -wheel dnve Toronados, there's
good gas m1leage m every s1ze Olds
That's quite a feat cons1dermg the array
of s1zes and models that Olds is offering this
year With th1s kmd o f sclect1on, there 's
bound to be an Olds to ftt your lifestyle and
pocketbook And eve I)' Olds, whether small,
rmd-s1ze or full~stze IS built to be nght for
the t1mes.
Th1s year Oldsmobile is offering an avaJ Iab le f1ve·speed overdrive 1runsm1ssion on
Starfire. Omega and Cut lass models (You
may be use d to thinking of five -speed as
stnctly a performance feature, but the f1fth
gear g1ves you O\lerdnve efficiency I

We mvlle you to make a tolal comparison.
Good gas mileage. trad1t1onal Oldsmobile
engineermg, construction, dependability and
sohd comfo rt You'll fmd each Olds packed
w1th value because il's bUilt w1th the care
and attent io n to detail thal's a tradition at
Oldsmobile. Can we build one for you?

EPA MILEAGE GUIDE
TEST DATA
STAAFIAE
231

18

30

17
18

23

OMEGA
THE 98 REGENCY Proof thai the .,.or1d
ha~ e

for gas economy

tn 1g110re ~

~\11\CC:m

·

250 l6JManual TransmtssiOO
250 l6/Alito:naiiC Transmtss10f1 '

260
260

Trans1111SSIOI1

2S

25
23

'

(Coupes &amp; Sedans)

250 l6/ Manual Tr&lt;JilsmtSSIOO
250 L6/ Au!omai!C Transrn1ss101'1'

17
17

25
22

withdrawn

maturity date.

$499

.

WIT

~ The quality goes m before the name gdes on~
'

,

Mei~

260 V8'1Manua1Transmssl0fl
260 V8'/ Automat 1c Transm.ssoo"

16
16

22

15

21

26

13

11

12

17

DELTA 88 ROYALE. All !he solid
dependab1h1y of a lam• l)-!.lurl Okk.
Yet the !18 g~u good gu mt!eage

for a car of 111 s.lze

STARFIRE \Vho says you can'1set sood J!LS

mtleagc m a ~{XIrty car? Check out·Sialfuto:.
Starti re SX and the: available Starfire GT op1100 ~

Oldsmobile·s su pertoupcs

before

..@ .

I·NGELS FURNITURE

296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ollio

surpnsmg ga~ economy, too

..
'll.

i~
'ifir.l •

L

I ~ ·"\'
I,
I

ClJTI.ASS S ~lctcl front end and Sides
The new look IS boktr:t. sponier Ali ttus and

~.

Ctrrl.ASS SUPREME BROUGHAM The ftnt mid-s1ud car to hive an 1htenor
lnsp1red by lht famous 98 Reg~ncy The g8s m1leagc is pretl)' mspiring too

OMEGA BROUGHAM t\lite poss1bly the most
haunous compac:1 e~ bo.Jil1 But its !ll'lpl'es.Sw~:: au
m1lrage remmds you tt's an eoonorny i,;llr. 100

.~ See and drive the new1976 Oldsmobiles at your Olds dealet

IJ
•

,..
'

'

..

'

By United Press International
VIENNA, AUSTRIA - THE WORW 'S LEADING oil
exporters have decided to raise prices at the end of the month,
but they're divided over the size of the increase. The oil
ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries neared the end today of a two-&lt;lay meeting on how much
the world will have to pay for fuel, sharply divided over the
amount to charge for petroleum when the current oil pnce
freeze ends next Tuesday.
A rise of just one per cent in the $10.46-.a-barrel price for
crude oil would increase the wotld 's fuel bill by $1 billion-.ayear. Iranian Minister Jamshid Amouzegar, who arrived at
OPEC headquarters in Vienna seeking a price hike, predicted
a decision would be made by this afternoon.

!Continuea on page 10)

)

. . I

'

--

I .,

I~'~'''

-----'---"
TH..._UR~S""'DA~Y, SEPTEMB~R _25. __
197_5_ _ _ _ _ _ PRICE 15'

Patty suspect in
murder, robbery
By RICK DU BROW
SAN FRANCISCO ( UP! ) Authorities consider Patricia
Hearst a prime suspect in an
armed robbery and murder
at a bank in Carmichael,
Calif, according to news
reports. The reports said
money taken in the robbery
was found in the house where
the newspaper he1ress was
arrested last week .
CBS
News
reported
Wednesday that Miss Hearst
"closely (esembles the
composite drawing of one of
the robbers sketched from
witnesses ' descriptions .''
The network also sa id

By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK Denlocratlc ca~ ida.te fm t!JL
WASHINGTON (UP! ) party 's 1976 pres idenllal
Pledging to give Americans nomination.
the leadership of Franklin D.
At least two more party
Roosevelt and John F. Ken- hopefuls are expected to
nedy, Pennsylvania Gov. enter the crowded battle for
M1lton J
Shapp today the nomination before the end
became
the
eighth of this year.
Shapp , 63, said the worst
problem facmg the nallon lS
"economic stagnat10n" and
promised to fight it with
increased employment based
on 25 years as a business
executive and two terms m
the governor's chair.
" It is mcredible that we
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. tolerate a conditiOn where
Marshall University's annual
millions are unemployed and
Tri-State Marching Band
underemployed when there
Festival will be held Saturare so many unrnet needs
day 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at
across the land ," he said.
Fairfield Stadium.
"It is sheer folly not to use
Planning to take part in the the efforts and talents of all
festival are the bands from people- young and old- to
Eastern and Meigs H1gh turn both urban a nd rural
Schools.
areas mto better, healthier
For youngsters m 29 h1gh places in which to live.
school bands from Kentucky,
"New
hou si ng,
s lum
OhiO and West Virgin1a, it clearance, land reclamation,
will be a chance to compete water and sewage systems,
on the stadium's Astroturf for railroad m o dernization ~
trophies, plaques and honors
these, and many more
For
Tri-State
Area essential programs demand
residents, it will be an op- attention and action. "
portunity for a day of enShapp smd the last thing
tertainment for the family .
The stadium's concession
stands will be open.
"It's really a lot of fun,"
Kenneth Large, MU director
of bands, said. "The kids in
the bands have a great time
going through their routines
and visiting with other bands,
but the spectators seem to
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
have just as much fun. They new study at the Umversity of
eat, move around, talk, visit Florida mdicates that daily
and try to guess which bands drinks of orange juice may
the adjudicators will consider ward off the smrnes, coughs
to be the best."
and sore throat of common
Admission to the festival is colds.
$1 for adulls and 50 cenls for
Orange juice seemed to be
students. Proceeds go to the most effective when volunTri-State Marching Band teers started dnnking 11 a
Scholarship Fund at Mar- week before they were exshall. The event is sponsored posed to a cold virus . None
by the MU Department of developed cold symptoms.
Music.
While far from conclusive,
Participating bands are the research adds new fuel to
d1 vided in to classes ac- the controversy over the
cording to school enrollment. possible benefits of large
Ten of the bands will be in doses of vitamin C in
Class C (small ), 12 will be in preventing or lessening the
Class B (medium ), and seven severity of upper respiratory
in Class A (large ).
tract infections.
" Each of the bands lS to
present a half-t,i me program
FERRY IDLE
running no longer than seven
minutes," Large said. " They
Due to high wal&lt;!r the ferry
are expected to perform_ a - between Pomeroy and Mason
comple"te program w1!h ' was not operatmg IIJ!Ia y for
(Continued on page 10 )
the se ~ond consecutive day

· :•::

SAN FRANCISCO - THE MIDDLE-AGE MOTHER who
fired a shot at President Ford will spend two months in a cozy
room without bars while psychiatrists try to figure out why she
did it.
Sara Jane Moore, 45, whipped from her purse a .38-caliber
revolver bought only four hours earlier from a private
collector and fll'ed a single shot at the President 40 feet away
as he emerged from a Union Square hotel Monday. Charged
with attempting to asSassinate the President, she has been
ordered to the new San Diego Metropolitan Correctiollal
Center for a 60-day psychiatric examination, although public
defender James Hewitt said Wednesday &lt;said he was considering an appeal oft he tenns of the order.

Co. Branch

The Athens County
S..vlng• &amp; Lo•n Co.

•

of The Meigs-Mu.wm

f!News. . .in Briefsli!

WASHINGTON- A DISCOURAGED MAYOR Abraham
Beame has failed to convince Washington that New York
City's default would be disastrous in Boise as well as the
Bronx . Visibly depressed, Beam left an 80-min4te meeting
with President Ford Wednesday with no encouragement that
the federal government will come to the rescue if his city 1s
unable to meet its debts after November, as now appears
possible.
Fourteen other mayors joined in pleading for some sort of
federal aid - a direct loan or a loan guarantee which would
encourage investors to buy municipal bonds. They said their
own cities may suffer prohibitive interest rates - or an
inability to sell their securities at all - if New York defaults.
On Capitol Hill the mayors were warned Congress has
little appetite for coming to New York 's rescue. "Let's not kid
ourselves," said Sen, Abraham Ribicoff, ~nn. "There's a
prejudice against New York City in the country and in
Congress," And in the White House, according to L, William
Seidman, the President's assistant for economic affairs, Ford
told the mayors that New York City stlll had not done enough to
cut its expenses, balance ils budget and thus eflcourage investors to buy its bunds.

Ninety day Interest pe1111ty
if

Anderson said presidential security was not discussed in the
biparllsan meeting which dealt almost ent1rely w1th Ford
pushing for action on his energy pr og ram plus " pleading "
w1th the Democratic leaders for support in getting
congressiona l a pprova l of the interim Smm agreement and the
bill to repeal the Turkish anns embargo.
" The President made it quite clear that the oniy commitment ma de to Is rael is to study a long hst of weapons
.'
requests Includmg the Pershmg miss ile," Anderson said.
Aides Indi ca te the President will keep traveling, will meet
th e pu bli c 1n gro up mee hng s where security can be controlled,
will avoid b1g crowds, but might engage in public handshaking
when the securtty agents say tt is safe.

enttne

~::~:y:::::::::::::--:::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::q:::::::::::::::~:::~::;:::::~::::~

BEIRUT, LEBANON - MOSLEM AND CHRISTIAN
gunmen ignored a new peace plan today and battled in
downtown Beirut at the start of a second week of religious
warfare in the Lebanese capital. Rocket and mortar rolfllds
exploded during the morning despite an agreement by both
sides to abandon barricades and negotiate an end to six months
of inrermittent religious warfare,
Premier Rashid Karami announced the formation Wednesday of a 26-rnan " national dialogue committee" composed
of the leaders of the counlry's warring religious and political
parties. The group planned to meet for the first time this
morning. Although the formation of the committee meant only
that the various factions agreed to talk to one another something they have refused to do since April - it was greeted
as the first hopeful sign that peace talks would begin.

30 Mo. Term

Tuning AFC

NO. 115

0.

n f lu 11.ury ~n· t

conference between Ford and Democrahc and GOP congres-

stonal leaders.

" .pa rt of the stolen money
marked for idenllfication was
found dunng the search of the
house where M1ss Hearst had
been hvmg when she was
arrested."
Th e
bank,
near
Sacramento, Calif., was
robbed of $15,000 Apnl 21 by
four persons, rnc luding a
yoWlg woman Dunng the
holdup , a bystander, Myrna
Lee Opsahl, was killed .
CBS r epo r te r Richard
Thr el keld sa id authorities
'· later found the getaway car
and on Its license plates
reported ly discov e red the
fm ge rpnn ts of Steve Sohah."

Shapp invokes FDR, JFK ghosts

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse
Open Thursday9:30to5p.m .
~
~

Devoted To The ltrtere.~t.~
POMEROY MIDDLEPORl OH 10

WASffiNGTON ( UP!) - In an unprecedented decision, U.S. District Judge
Lewis Smith Wednesday ordered former President Richard M. Nixon to answer
questions under oath in a damage s uit over FBI wiretaps ordered by Nixon.
Smith, in the first such ruling on the issue, said a former president cannot claim
executive privilege and confidentiality to avoid testimony in connection with the
civil suit of Morton H. Halperin, a former official with the National Security
Agency .
Smith ordered that a deposition be taken at the former President's Califorrua
borne or nearby. It is sure to include questions about " news leak" wiretaps on the
telephones of Halperin and others during the Nixon administration.
The judge said an incumbent president can invoke executive privilege on behalf
of a former president but pointed out that President Ford has not done so in this
case.
"Mr. Nixon makes the claim (of exeuctive privilege ) on h1s own behall as a
private citizen," Smith ruled.
The tap on Halperin's telephone was one of 17 ordered by Nixon against reporters and other persons in what the former President called an attempt to stop news
leaks.
Halperin filed the suit against Nixon, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissmger and
a number of former White House aides for damages he clauns from a wiretap on
his home telephone from 1969 to 1971.

•

Take a look at the beautiful new 1976
Oldsmoh11es in your dealer showroom.
They're 1mpressi\le .
Then take a look at the t 976 EPA Mile.tge
Gu1de tesr figu res for Oldsmobile. They're
impress1ve, too .
They show that good gas m1leage runs 1n
our family. Remember these m1leage figures
are efttmates Naturally the actua l m1leage
you get will vary dependmg o n the type of
dnvmg you do, your dnving ha bits. your
car's cond11ion. and available equ1pment

ce. He said new and more "sophiSticated" methods mu st be
adopted to protect Ford.
Anderson said the President should contmue his public
travel and appearances and not capitulate to terror.
" ! feel he should travel but this does not mean he shou ld
plunge into crowds , as his wife said, " Anderson said.
A woman auned a gun at Ford m Sacramento, calif. Sept. 5,
but did ~t get a shot off because of Secret Service intervention. On Monday, another woman fired a bullet in Ford 's
direction as he was leaving a San Francisco hotel.
" I think that there is a general consensus that the two recent
incidents are not isolated," Anderson sa id. " I believe new and
more sophisticated procedures must be adopted for the
protection of the President."
Anderson made his comments after a one hour While House

y

So warm and bright, soft
and dreamy ... you're
su re to sleep in cozy
comfortl You 'll adore the
charming little boy / little
girl floral print.
Fealures a delicate
lace-trimmed
placket front and
smart mandarin
collar. Of lush
brushed acetate/
nylon tricot
that's machine

C

$1,000 Minimum

Range Tuni ng Sysfem .
Chromat1c One- Button

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UP!) - Betty Ford has advised the
President he should continue his traveling, but be more
cautious and "stay away from the people ."
"Of course I want him to travel," Mrs. Ford told reporters
Wednesday, adding that her husband should be "more
cautious and perhaps not do as much handshaking ."
" Well, of course I've talked to him about it," she said . " I'm
his wife.''
•
Asked exactly what advice she gave him, Betty Ford
replied: " Just stay away from the people-keep going. "
Mrs. Ford's viewpoint was supported today by Rep. John
Anderson, R-lli., chairman of the House Republican Conferen-

of fiO'Ners.

SACRAMENTO, CAUF. - CHIEF U. S. District Court
Judge Thomas J. MacBride has allowed Lynette "Squeaky"
Fromme to defend herself against a charge she attempted to
murder President Ford, but only with tight restrictions.
At a court hearing Tuesday , MacBride said the 26-year-&lt;Jid
Manson cult member was mentally competent to defend
herself. But he appointed federal defender E . Richard Walker
as cocounsel. He also warned Miss Frorrune about her
statements in court.
"As I said before, Miss Fromme, I will :JOt permit you to
make political statements," he said. MacBride handed down
his decision after reviewing a psychiatric study of Miss
Fromme. The judge said the report showed she could
"knowingly and intelligenily make a waiver of her constitutional rights to counsel."

On Certificates
Of DePCiit

Regulator

.,...

Betty to erry •• 'he carefttl'

in a child's garden

WASHINGTON - THE CRACK OF GUNFIRE guns
aimed at Presidents has once again igruted congressional
debate over tougher gun control laws. The administration is
sticking fast to its proposal to outlaw only the small, cheap
handguns commonly known as "Saturday night specials."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy , D-Mass., wants to require
licensing and registration of handguns and their owners.
Others call for a total ban on the ownership of handguns by
anyone except the police.
The National Rifle Association , which has strongly opposed any laws limiting gun ownership, ca lled it a "tidal wave
of hysterical outcries for additional gun controls." Kennedy,
whose brother Robert's assassination in 1968led to enaclment
of a gun control law, asked, ''Must we suffer a serious national
tragedy again, before we redeem our pledge of leadership'"

CLEVELAND - UNITED AIRLINES, in what is believed
to be the first program of its kind in United States commercial
aviation history, will recruit Red Cross blood donors from

w

I

-

.

here

Sleeptite

JAKARTA, INDONESIA - AN INDONESIAN jetliner
crashed in flames today during a landing on the island of
Sumatra, killing 20 of the 61 persons aboard. Airline officials
said the Garuda Indonesian Airways plane ran into "adverse
conditions" on landing at the city of Palembang in southern
Sumatra.
The twin..,ngme, Dutch-made Fokker 28 jet overshot the
Palembang runway and burst into flames after a flight across
the Java Sea from Jakarta . Officials said 20 persons were
killed and Jl mjured . The plane carried 52 passengers and a
crew of nine.

INTEREST

Sol1d·State Super Video

~rrivlng

Thursday.
elati
marui
ons
ger
Thomas A. Gerinuska, regional publlc r
for the airline, said booklets detailing the ]X'ogram ~ be
distributed to passengers departing from other cities fot"
Cleveland on United and other airlines as well as to trave]e,..
leaving this city Thursday, Germuska said more than 6,001
persons will be contacted and inflight amtendants will be
briefed with answers usually asked by prospect1ve first-time
blood donors .

F4543W

- Modern s lyled lowboy
console 23" diagonal
Solid-State
Chromacolor II
Ad .
Vanced
Chromacolor
Picture Tube. 100 pet.
Solid · State Chassis
Patented Power Senlry
Voltage

passengers aboard its 38 flights from 19 cities

Board of

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Alfred
Stitt, Racine; George Logan,
Hemlock Grove; Sandra
Carl, Albany; Sharon Ann
Covert, Pomeroy; Carl
Manley, Middleport ; Kenneth See, Pomeroy ; Kenneth
Mullins, Cheshire; Timothy
Hysell, Pomeroy .
DISCHARGES - Charles
Neece, Melvin Cunningham.

•

\

16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Sept 24, lil75

Players to vote

t

'.

29 area bands
to take part

in festival

More evidence
favors juice
of the orange

• P r :::-~r ·•ns nr ..:d tc...' .... ) IS
another sm1hng politic1an or
spellbinding orator. But he
prom1sed to ca rry the leadership of two of the party's most
charismatic leaders ever to
the Oval Office.
"We need a new sptrit in
1976 to match that ,of two
centurtes ago, and a new zeal
to match tha t of FDR two
score a nd two years ago when
hopelessness last engulfed
thi s !and,'' he satd.
" ! seek the pres idency of
this great country to supply
that kmd of leadership, to
build a new spirit among our
peop le, a nd to give new
Impetus to the forwa rd
motion given by F'rankhn
Roosevelt in the 30s and by
John F . Kennedy a fter the
doldrums of the 50's

Liquor said
too cheap
COLUMBUS (UP!i - The
Governor 's Council on Cost
Control today recommended
an tncrease of 10 cents a
bottle m the retail pnce of
liquor sold m Ohio wh ich the
council said would mcrease
state revenues by $6.7 milli on
a year .
The council, in the last of 1ts
six mini reports on cos t
'control in state government,
said the increase IS needed to
stem dwindling sta te liquor
profils.
The counci l also recommended the development of a
computenzed system of th e
profit margin by the
Department of Liquor control
because increased costs
during the past fiv e years
have steadily eroded the
state's proflt from liquor
sales.
Other
recommendatiOns
for the Department of Liq uor
Control included:
- A concentrated effort to
encourage local authorit1es to
assume more responsibility
m enforcmg state liquor laws
-Ap poi ntment of th e
d~rector of Liquor Control for
10-year periods to 1mprove
the department's efficiency
8l]d e ffectiveness .
~Consider the elimination
of about 25 p~r ce nt of the
hquor brands now stocked
which would free about $2
m1lhon mventory funds .

Soliah , 27, a hous_ painter
with whom Miss Hearst said
she l1 ved, was indicted
Wednesday
on
federal
charges of harboring a
fugitive and being an accessory after the fact. Bail
was set at $75,000.
Miss Hearst, 21, and fellow
SLA members Wendy Yoshimura , William Harris and
his wife Emily were captured
last Thursday at two houses
in the M1ssion District . Miss
Hearst had been kidnaped by
the SLA on Feb. 4, 1974, but
later announced through tape
recordings that she wa s
joimng her captors .
Inves ti g ators said We dne sday James Kilgore, 27,
was wanted in connection
with the bank robbery in
Carmichael and that a raid on
h" D•ly City apartment
turned up bombs, shotguns, a
revolv er and revolutionary
literature.
The Harrises Wednesday
were transferred from the
San Mateo County Ja1! in
nearby Redwood City to Los
Angeles where they face 18
state charges. The move
came after a judge dismissed
for
fe deral J charges
automatiCweapons vi,olations
against them

ONE OF 60 CRAFTSMEN - Broornmaker James
Sha ffer of Charleston, W Va , Is among perhaps 60 c raftsmen who will partiCipate In the fifth annual Bob Evans
Farm Fest iva l Oct 10, II and 12 a! th e Bob Evans Farm in
Rio Grande More than 100,000 people are expected at this
ole country ~at hermg whi ch will feature crafts, field
demonstration s, conti nuous cnte rtauune nt and country
food favorites Admisswn , park ing a nd entertainment are
all free.

Gunwoman
glad Ford alive
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Sara J a ne Moore says she
took a shot at Presid ent Ford
because it was easy to do and
she felt iso lated, desperately
needmg somebody to take her
serious ly But she is glad she
did not hit him
" I'm glad he didn 't die ,''
Mrs. Moore said In her only
intervi ew smce her arrest
Monday on char ges of a ttempting to •ssassinate the
Pres ident. She hoped a ll
along that s he would be
stopped , she sa1d.
Mrs. Moore talked in the
San Franc isco County Jail
w1th Ellen Hume, a Los
Angeles Times reporter who
had talked with her many
times during the past s ix
months tn connection wt th a
senes on re~dicals .
She ta lked m "confused
fragments,' ' aecordmg to the

Lions supporting

renewal of levy
The Pomeroy-Middleport ... wn~ d in to tile combtned
Lions Club e ndorsed a 2 mill prog ram three years ago ..... tth
tax levy up for renewal for a vanety of mental health
the thr ee-county mental serv tces res ul ting
Some 5,000 people recetved
health program at Its _noon
lun cheon Wednesday at he lp through the program In
Me1gs Inn .
1974 and in Md~s County
Mrs. Maxtne Plumm er, about 500 perso ns are
executive dire ctor of the recctvtng services from the
Meigs, Jacks on and Galha progre1rn each month The ta x
Count1es mental health and renewal Will be voted upon m
retard a tton pr og ram, etd- \lfeigs County on Nov 4
The Rev / Wi lliam Middlesdressed the club after which
ttme the e ndorsemen t was war th , presiden t, reported on
made . The three counties a zone meetwg he!d m Athens
a nd
an nounced
World
Liomsm Day for Oct. 8 A
guest of Clar ence Struble for

wmiams works
on mine field

the meeting was Rev Rober t
Hayde n.

Commtttee appomtments
- Navy
Hull Maintenance Technician for the year as an'nounced by
Th1rd Class James F. the prestdent in clude the se
Wilhams, son of Mr. and Mrs. ehairm en
Agrt c ulture , Wend e l l
Freeman W1lhams of Roure
I, Minersv ill e, is par- Hoo ver; Boy s and Gir ls
Work , Bob Hill , CIIIzensh1p
ticipatin g m " Operation
Nimbus Stream ," which and Patn otis m, Dwtght
mvolves the clearing of ex- Zav1tz , Civi c Improvement,
plosives from Damietta Fred Morrow; EducatiOn,
Paul Stodola, Co mmumty
Mmefield off the Egyptian
Betterme
nt, Robert Jacobs;
Coast.
The mine field, laid durmg ' Health and Welfare, Rev
Dw1ght Zavitz , Sa fet y, Larry
hostililles in the Middle East,
Broga n ; Sight Conservation
covers 35 miles of coastline
and
Bhnd , N. W. Compton:
near the Suez Cana l ,
1\ations,
Jack
presenllng a hazard to United
Greeter, Rev.
navigation and local fishing . Walker ;
Williams is a crewmember Dwight Zav1tz .
Al so. Attendanc e , Karl
aboard the amphibious
landing ship USS Inchon , Kraut ter; Cons I! tutwn and
By-Laws, Wendell Hoover ,
which 1s s upporting Egyptian
Convenhon
, C J . Struble;
minesweepers during the
Finance, Gordon Teaford,
operatwn. Helicopters from
Infor m ahon, Ralph
Lions
tl:e Inchon are helpm g clear
the area by towing electromc Graves; Membership. Lou1s
sleds through the area. The Osburne •"' Pr ogram a nd
Enterta i nment,
Larry
sleds generate a magne llc
Brogan. and Pu bli City,
field which neutralizes a ny
James Danner
nearby mines .
MINERSVll~ LE

story m the Times today. The
Int e rview is laced with
contradictwno;, factual errors
a nd non sequiturs . Mrs .
Moore Said her motives were
''comphcaled.''
" ! feel perfectly fine, but
I'm obviously distraught,"
she said.
Mrs. Moore had infiltrated
radical groups for the FBI,
and t hen publicly denounced
herself as an informant,
saying she had been converted to their beliefs.
She told the Tunes she felt
" Isolated"' because radicals
refused to accept her after
she revealed she had been a
spy. Reporters treated her as
"fla ky," she said. She contin ued to feed informa tion to
the F'BJ. however , even as
she pubhcly decned her pas t
role.
1The FBJ has co nceded she
was supp lymg " unsolicited
:n ror mation " for expe nse
money right up to the time
she was arrested.)

Forest fire
season here
The fall forest fi re season 1s
a t han d sai d Joe
Hardesty. d1 stn ct forester,
today .
Beginn ing Oct.
an d
contmwng throug h Nov 30,
the seasonal burnmg pe rm1t
law will be m effe ct In Ohio's
a~a1n

f()re s t

ftre

pr otectiO n

d1stncL' The law states that
anyone kind lmg a ftre m the
open, w1thm 200 feet of gra ss
or woodlands, outs ide city
l:m 1ts. must first obtatn a f1re
permit
Burning perm tts are tssued
without charge and ma y be
obtamed from local Forest
F'1re Wardens or D1v1son of
Fores try offices Suc h perm ltsare issued tn accordance
wtth regulatwns printed on
the back of the permit.
Certam of these regulations
are burning only when wmd
and other weat h'er co ndttwns are safe; burning
only a fter 4 p. m . (unless
spectal permission is first
obtained 1; keeping tools on
hand to control the fire,
should II esca pe ; co nstr ucting a safety fire hne
around the material to be
bur ned ; remaining w1th the
fire until it is out or safely
covered
Careless debris burning
contmues to be the number
one cause of woods and grass
fi res in Ohio. These fires are
man-caused, so it is up to
each of us to do his part to
ass1st m the prevention of
forest [Ires an d the conservatiOn of Ohio's natural
resources.

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