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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 .

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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

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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

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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
•

,..
'

'

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'

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)

)

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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

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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.

�·.;

3 - The Dally Sentmef MIOQleport Pomeroy, 1,1 lhursaa y, Sept ~. un~

Lt. Gov. Celeste challenges
his boss to debate, but Gov.
Rhodes won't be having any

the FOUR-PART plan by
Rhodes for p:~:osperity
By LEE I EONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporte r
COLUMBUS ( UP! )~ Gov
James A Rhodes Is at
- tempting to liTlpress upon
news media executives the
Importance to Ohio s future
of his four economic recovery
proposals on the Nov 4 ballot
Rhodes met se pa rat ely
Wednesday with newspaper
and broadcast editors About
18 editor s attended eac h
meetmg m the governor s
ca bmet room
In the afternoon meetmg
with the newspaper editors

Rhodes tried to bolster
arguments m favor of hiS
housmg tax abatement and
red e velopment
c 1ty
programs
He assured the editors Ohio
"Ill not repeat the rrustake of
a Ne\\ York City urban
dev elopme nt corporatiOn
whe n It defaulted on a multi
mllhon dollar housmg bond
last February
We cann ot do what they
did m New York said the
governor pomting out Ohio
has a $750 000 debt hrrut and
any further debt must be

approved by the voters He
said bond attorneys haqe
assured him Ohio s housmg
bonds will sell
On tax abatement, Rhodes
srud the tax loss would be
more than made up by ex
panding mdustry payrolls m
mner c1ty areas
He said the Chrysler Corp
received $775 000 m annual
property tax exemptions for a
stampmg plant m the core
area of Detrmt but Its em
ployes are contnbutmg $2
m1lhon a year to the city m

On public liTlprovements
for cities and villages the
gove rnor
said
local
legislative bodies still have
veto powers over any
prOJects

There are no chams or
barbed wrre on thiS he said
Rhodes was asked why a
n ch commumty hke Shake r

Anywhere but to debate

mWllCipal mcome taxes

Celeste would debate with Rhodes
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) ~ It
Gov Richard F Celeste
hkemng Gov James A
Rhodes
four economic
recovery proposals to using a
meat axe for bram surgery,
has challenged the governor
to a senes of debates on the
ISsues m October
Celeste, a Democrat and an
opponent of the Republican
governor's four pomt plan
appearmg on the Nov 4
.ballot, Issued the debate
IJIVItatwn Wednesday
A few hours later Rhodes
declined the challenge
callmg 1t strictly pohllcal
I don t have trrne to
debate ' the governor told
newsmen r m busy sellmg
!he bond Issues
Celeste ISSued his challenge
m this letter to Rhodes
Because of the compleXIty
Qf the Issues and because
!l'ey commit billions of tax

dollars over a long period of
tliTle I believe Ohioans are
entitled to as much In
formatiOn as possible from
both v1ewpomts so that they
may arnve at a n mtelligent
well mformed decisiOn on
Nov 4
Therefore I would like to
propose that you and I engage
m a series of debates on the
subject of the four con
slltullonal amendments to be
held dunng the month before
the electiOn m the maJor
populatiOn centers of the
state
Celeste told a news confer
ence he 1s growmg tired of
Rhodes' one-sided outbursts
which mclude character
assassmatlon
adding that
he believes the ments of the
proposals should be arred
pro and con
The lieutenant governor
said his mvitallon to debate
mcludes any member of
Rhodes cabmet staff or

Gripe-a-Card system is
begun by PO services
A nationwide consumer
"Service program designed to
'Improve the quality of mail
serv1ce has been announced
by the Umted States Postal
SerVIce
Begmnmg Oct 1 the postal
service across the nation will

encourage mall users to

•

make known probleiTIS they
may have with the mall
servtce
At the core of the program
Is a consumer service card on
which
problems
are
described Postal managers
will attempt to resolve them
;,(orthw1th
The consumer service
Jli"Ogram reflects Postmaster
General
BenJamm
F
Bailar's deterrrunatlon that
mail serviCes will be friendly
courteous and efficient as
well as speedy and reliable
Good service IS a far
broader concept than JUSt
;; fast mail handling as un• portant as that Is, Ba1lar
•• S8ld
:
It IS also built on em
: ployee
courtesy
our
' responSiveness to customer
• needs, the sympathy and
understanding we brmg to
• your own expectations of
what good postal serv1ce IS all

5
t

:about'
:

•

Customers are urged to

brmg their mqumes and
complamts to the attention of
postal managers To make 1t
easier for a customer to make
a suggestiOn or complamt
about postal serVIce the new
consumer service card will
be available from letter
carriers and at post offices
The card Is two postal cards
with carbon paper between
them One copy goes to the
postmaster so work can be
begun on the problem and the
other goes to postal service
headquarters m Washmgton
for catalogmg and analysis
The
cards
will
help
management spot problems
and trends and take
correcllve
action
If
necessary

The program was tested
earlier this year m other
areas and customers found
the test cards easy to complete and most complamts
were resolved to customers'
sallsfacllon
The card should take no
more than two mmutes to fill
out The postmaster and hiS
staff are w1llmg to discuss
any problems The whole
pomt of the program IS to
bnng your problems to the
attention of the post office
where an attempt can be
made to resolve them

promollonal committee for
the bond ISSUes
The governor's economic
recovery package mcludes
constitullonal amendments to
permit state houSing fmance
assistance and tax incentives
for mdustry to relocate m

urban areas
It also mcludes a parr of
bond Issues totalmg $4 5
million and fmanced by a
penny mcrease m the
gasolme tax and a boost m the
sales tax from 4 to 4 7 cents
on the dollar Those Issues
would furmsh money for
development of
trans
portatwn and c1ty and
VIllage un~rovements
We bave a pallent who
needs delicate surgery, and
the governor IS handmg us a
meat axe
said Celeste
ThiS IS not the prescriptiOn
for the diSease
Celeste said he IS par
llcularly disturbed that
Rhodes has been classifying
opponents of his ISSues as
obstructwmsts agitating for
more crliTle welfare and
unemployment
Thts

LS

nonsense

declared the lieutenant
governor We all want Jobs
for Ohwans and prograiTIS to
put people back to work "
Celeste said Rhodes
proposals
would
not
guarantee any JObs but
would guarantee tax m
creases and the highest
bonded debt of any state m
the nation
Although he offered no
alternative plan to the bond
ISSues, Celeste said 1t was
unfarr of Rhodes to use
that as a criiiCISm of opponents
It will be up to us as
leaders to hammer out an
alternallve if as and when
these (bond ISsues) fail, said
Celeste
The lieutenant governor
sa1d
the
Democrahccontrolled General Assembly
early this year enacted
legislallon to perrrut the state
to help fmance home con
strucllon proJects, putting
bUildmg tradesmen back to
work
He blamed Rhodes for not
testmg the legiSlation m the
Oh10 Supreme Court so 11
could be liTlplemented In
stead, Celeste said, Rhodes
wanted to go through the
ballot, causmg months of
delay
ObJections cited by Celeste
to !he other three Issues
Tax Abatement~ Would

COLUMBUS (UP! )~ Gov
James A Rhodes says he ll
go anywhere to promote
passage of his four economic
recovery proposals on the
Nov 4 ballot~ anywhere but
mto a debate with Lt Gov
Richard F Celeste
Rhodes a Republican was
challenged Wednesday by
Celeste a Democrat to a
series of debates on the ballot
tssues m ma)or urban areas
of Ohio next month
The governor turned down
the
mv1tahon
saymg
Celeste s offer was stnctly
political
Were not gomg to get mto
any political controversy to
help somebody to ascend to
someplace where I am al
ready
said
Rhodes
referrmg to speculatiOn
Celeste rrught be mterested m
runmng for governor
Rhodes was asked about
the proposed debate shortly
after he told a meetmg of
OhiO editors
I'll go
anyplace anybody InVItes me
to talk about the Issues I II
even go to a Democratic
meellng
There ll be no debates on
my behalf
the governor
said In response to the
questiOn He (Celeste) can
debate (Cleveland City
Council President) George
Forbes and the BUildmg
Trades Council We have no
objecllon to that
Rhodes said Forbes and the
labor orgamzation support
his bond Issues
Celeste said the debates
would provide our fellow
ciiizens with the mformation
they need to make the right
decision for the future of our
state on Nov 4 "
My mmd 1s made up
S8ld Rhodes I don t need to
debate anybody I m for the

encourage Industry to
replace
people
with
machines and would hurt
mner city tax bases on which
schools depend
TransportatiOn- The $1 75
b1ll10n bqnd ISSUe IS too large
for starting an economical
and balanced transportahon
plan, and 1t cannot be
fmanced by a penny boost m
the gasoline tax
City and VIllage Im
provements~ The
most
mcredible pork barrel ever
offered the people of thiS
state No money IS provided
to operate the facilities bwlt
with the bond funds Need IS
not taken mto account ~
Shaker Heights a highmcome area and East
Cleveland a nearby low
mcome area, each would
receive $10 million worth of
prOJ!!C!s

~

..•£
•

DR. LAMB

••
:•
••

How to help hiatal hernia

I= By Lawrence E Lamb, M D

t• wondenng
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
how hiatal hermas
: are detected By X ray? I am
: :&gt;4 and five feet five, weigh 126
:,pounds For the last year I
bave had once or tWice a day
a nauseous feeling and jwce
§ oming up In my throat
E:"en I had my annual check

;~::C~rm:~on:: :~ to, ~~
:probably have a hiatal
:hernia Don t drink coffee '
;:And, that Is all he said or did
j:OtherwiSe I am In good
;health except for my blood
:::cQUIIt gomg down easily Do

=~u:en:rr;;;:::~y follow up

1:'

DEAR READER - Yes
rush of fluid mto your
!!tlJroat Is probably from your
ach, and It usually
•
s that the mechanism
• that close. off the stomach at
ethe leveJ of the dJjiphragm IS
""ot worldng properly We call
!Ibis esoplu!geal reflux lt
often IS associated w1lh a

:the

E

if

hernia of a porhon of the
stomach
through
the
diaphragm effectmg the
closmg mechamsm But 1t
can also occur WIthout a
hiatal herma This Is one
reason why surgical repair of
hiatal hernia doesn't always
work The herma may be
corrected, but hte faulty
closure mechamsm may not
Anyone with the symptoiTIS
should have X ray studies of
the esophagus and stomach to
see If there IS a hiatal herma
or reflux
Although all hiatal hernias
do not need special treatment, anyone who bas reflux
symptoms should be treated
to prevent future scarrmg of
the lower portiOn of the
esophagus which may lead to
constriction and difficulty In
swallowing The treatment
may be luruted to modifying
daily livmg bab1ts and cer
tainly one of these Is to stop
drmklng roffee Antacids
~

Heights would receive the
same amount as a poor
commumty of the same s1ze
such as East Cleveland
It JUSt falls that way, he
srud I don t think you can
discrliTlmate agalllSt a com
mumty JUSt because Its
personal mcome 1s a little
above normal

may also be needed to
prevent the bwldup of acid
d1geshve JUICe that can
regurgitate
mto
your
esophagus
For a complete discussiOn
of hiatal hernia and the steps
you can take m your llvmg
patterns to prevent symptoiTIS and future problems
Wfl te to me m care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551,
RadiO C1ty Stallon, New
York, NY 10019 Send 50
cents and a long stamped,
self-addressed envelope and
ask for The Health Letter
number 4-8, H1atal Hernia
Esophageal Reflux
DEAR DR LAMB ~ Why
IS an mgwnal hernia or
rupture called so? It 1s really
a protrusion and not a rupture I speak with authority
as I have had a bowel
protrusion near my groin for
15 years
DEAR READER ~ You
rrught want to consult your
Webster s dictionary which

bond Issues I m for JObs
The governor said Celeste
was leadmg the oppos11Ion to
the bond Issues He s an
obstructiOnist who's agalllSt
JObs and for unemployment
&lt;.TliTle and welfare, Rhodes
said He ought to be commg
up with an alternative

In 1789 the frrst Congress
adopted 12 amendments to
the ongmal Constitution
10
of which were ratified and
became known as The Bill of
Rights

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
The Senate IQielllgence
committee wants to quesllon
former President Richard
Nixon about a CIA program
of opemng and copymg
foreign mail to U S citiZens,
even mcluding one letter to
Nixon

CINCINNATI (UP! ) ~ m the system
Courts should never order
The only way this can be
children bused from nelgh accomplished IS by forced
borhood schools without llusmg This 1s done by
parental consent says a JUdicial power and w1tbout
federal a ppeals court judge the consent of the parents or
The federal courts m the children The method
school desegregatiOn cases used IS by a head count and
are performmg a social task determination IS made solely
usmg law as a lever U S by the color of therr skin
SIXth Circuit Court of Appeals
These children are en
Court Judge Paul C Weick htled to the equal protechon
It of the law the same as the
complamed Wednesday
IS not the function of the
plamllffs
added Weick
courts to perform social tasks
The constitutional nghts of
to attam social goals
other children ough' not to be
In my opmwn
said VIolated m order to accord
Weick
no court order rehef to the plamtiffs '
should ever force a black or
He said an
equal but
white child away from therr racially balanced doctrme
residential school without the was not reqUII"ed by the
consent of hiS parents
ConstitutiOn
Black and white children
doctnne IS
Such a
have equal conshtullonal
repugnant to the Con
rights (but) the plamtiffs m slltullon ( and)
would
these school cases are violate the constitullonal
cla1mmg
special
con- rights of most of our popula
stitutwnal nghts the JUdge lion the judge sa1d
said They are clarrnmg a
In my opmwn if such a
right to racial balance or doctrme ever became the
quotas m each pubhc school law 11 would subject the

Othe r Amencans apd
groups whose mall was
reported opened by m
telllgence agencies are highly
upset about 11
The deciSion to ask NIXon to
testify on th1s and other
matters was announced
Wednesday by Chairman

Frank Church, D-Idaho
James Angleton, former CIA
chief of counterintelligence,
told the committee m
telhgence agencies illegally
opened private mail over a
period of 20 years
The Vlctrrns, accordmg to
Angleton s testimony and

OSU Band to show triple script
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Fans
of the OhiO State Umvers1ty
marching band will not want
to leave their seats at haH
time of the OhiO State North
Ca rolina football gam e
Saturday
They will be treated to a
special Triple Scnpt Ohio
performance pul on by the
current marching band and
two alurnm bands
The performance IS part of
the alumni bands seventh
reuruon More than 300 for
mer marching band mem

bers are expected on campus
Also featured at balftrrne
will be a piano rend1hon of
OhiO State s fight song
Across the Field per
formed at midfield by
composer William Daugherty
who wrote the song while a
student at OSU m 1915
The current and alumm
bands Will !hen premiere a
Richard
Helm
new
arrangement of that song
Two alunuu bands will
perform the scripts on the
east and west sidelines while

•
HPER znstructor

named at college
RIO GRANDE ~ Dr
George Wolfe D1rcector of
Health PhysiCal EducatiOn
and RecreatiOn at R10
Grande College RIO Grande
Community College today
announced ,the appomlment
of Carmen Penmck as health
physical education and
recreatiOn mstruction at the
college
A native of Wichita, Kan ,
the new mstructor received
her B S Degree m Education
and her M S Degree m
Physical EducatiOn from
Kansas State Teachers
College m Empona Kan For
the past siX years she has
been employed as a phySical
educahon teacher m the
Shawnee MissiOn Elemen
tary Schools
Durmg this period she
played basketball for l!!e
AAU and was an all star for
that regwn She also coached
a basketball team at Kansas
C1ty She played volleyball
for the U S Volleyball
Assoc13tion m Kansas City
and assisted on a federal
grant for headstart teachers

un d ay T1Q1eS Sentmel

I

supported in appeal
people on a nationWide basis
to taxatiOn to pay for forced
busmg costing blllions of
dollars, which could be used
more appropr18tely to rrnprove the quality of education
It would polarize the races
and ll"feparably harm all of
the good which has been
accomplished m recent years
In CIVil rights
declared
We1ck
Weick took his stand as the
lone diSsenter m a threejudge panel s decision that
gave the local NAACP the
right to present diSputed
testimony
m
their
desegregatiOn suit against
Cincmnati pubhc schools
The maJority JUdges, who
did not comment on busmg m
therr rulmg , dec1ded to allow
certam relevant ' testrrnony
dating back to before July 26,
1965 although the appeals
court here has already
cleared the school board of
charges of discriminatiOn
before that time

Committee wants to talk with Nixon

states a herma IS
a m-servtce program where
protrusion or an organ or part she bad drrect responsibility
Perceptual
Motor
through connective tissue or for
through a wall of the cavity 1n EducatiOn
Penmck was also the
which 1t Is normally enclosed
~ called also rupture '
-Al
liti
The mgumal herma means
I IICI
a loop of bowel slides through
I:&gt;EVOTEO TO THE
INTEREST OF
the
normally
closed
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
passageway called the
Exec Ed
mgwnal canal In the male
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1tv Ed1tor
this passageway IS where the
Publ i shed dally except
cord to !he testicle passes mto
Saturday by The Oh10 Vallev.
Publ•sh-tng company
111
the abdommal cavity The
Court St
Pomeroy
Oh10
opemng to the canal IS 45769 Bus mess Offtce Phon,
991 2156 Ed1fonal Rhone 992
guarded by a senes of 2157
•
class postage pa d
complex muscles, tendons at Second
Pomeroy Ohio
Nat onal
advert s1ng
and membranes
rep-resentat1ve
Ward
When the muscles tendons
Grlfftfh Company
Inc
and membranes are stret- Bottmelll &amp; Gallagher D1v
757 Th1rd Ave
New York
ched, or m some cases torn, N Y 10017
rates
an abnormally large opemng DelSubscr1pf1on
vered by carrier where
occurs and allows the loop of available 75 cents per week
By Motor R.oute whe~
Intestine to excape from the c4rrler
sennce
nc7t
ava1lable One month SJ 25
abdominal
cavity
By mall n Oh10 and w va
protrude, rupture or her- One Year
$22 00
Sl&gt;t
months
$11 50
Three
mat~ So 1t IS a hernia, a
months $.7 00 Elsewher e
26 00 year
S x months
rupture, and if you want to
13 50 three months $7 50
ca,JJ 1t that a protrusion
ubscr pt1on pnce me tudes

'

Anti-busing stand is

CliniCian for the Perceptual
Motor Clinic there She has
been a guest speaker on her
research proJect m physical
for coachmg
educatiOn
chmcs and workshops
In addition to her work at
Kansas City she was a
graduate teachmg assistant
at Kansas State Teachers
College m health phySical
educabon and recreation for
one year was treasurer of !he
Kansas
Assoc1abon
of
Health Physical EducatiOn
and Recrea bon ( KAHPER),
and was president of the
Students Section o( the KAH
PER While at Kansas State
Teachers College she was
assistant women s basketball swliiUlUng and volleyball coach
In additwn to her college
work, Penmck Is a cerlif1ed
!ramer for cardiO-pulmonary
resuscitatiOn
by
the

the current Marchmg Band
will write 11 out facmg the
north end zone
This weekend s reunion will
mclude a member of the 1907
band, several men m the first
Scnpt Ohio m 1937 and the
first woman to graduate from
the now coed OSU band mto
the alumni ranks
Conductmg the alumm
band durmg the reumon will
be former OhiO State band
marching drrector Jack 0
Evans who led the band from
1951 through 1963

statements by Church In
eluded Nobel Peace priZe
wmners Unus Pauling and
Martin Luther Kmg Jr,
Church and other senators,
NIXon hunself, the Ford and
Rockefeller Foundations and
Harvard Umvers1ty
Church said the Intelligence operabon, codenamed HT Lingual, In
tercepted a letter to NIXon m
June 1968 ~ when he was
campa1gnmg for president ~
from hiS speechwr1ter, Ray
Price, who was traveling m
the SoVIet Umon
Church said a letter he
himself wrote to his motherIn-law while on a tr1p to !he
SoVIet Umon was opened and
photographed
Sen Edward M Kennedy,
D Mass one of the Identified
Vlctrrns, called It extremely
unfortunate Another, Sen
Hubert H Humphrey DMlnn called 11 an outrage

SEOEMS runs
increased in '75
The Southeastern Ohw
Emergency Medical Services
(SEOEMS) system logged
6,200 runs through August,
1975 up 747 runs over the
similar period of 1974 ac
cordmg to a report ISSUed by
Field Operabons Director
William Taylor today
Of that total 214 persons
were treated at the scene by
EMTs referred to their
phySicians for further care
and not transported to
hospitals Taylor srud
Lawrence County placed
the greatest demand for
service, 1,643 calls smce the
first of the year Second was
Jackson w1th 1,344, then
Athens Will! 1,276 Hocking
County followed with 612
Vmton Willi 499 Galha w1th
353 and Meigs wtth 271
Taylor observed that Since
volunteer units also serve

Galba and Meigs counties
that the total demands for
serv1ce m these two counties
could
reasonably
be
estunated as great or greater
than the demand for
SEOEMS Th1s would peg
total emergency calls in
Gallia county at about 100 per
month and about 67 per
month m Meigs
Busiest stalion of the
system s 16 durmg August
was Ironton with a new
montiily system high of 143
runs The Logan stalion,
covenng almost all Hocking
County Jogged 113 for the
month
On a countywide basiS the
Lawrence demand was
greatest durmg August will!
240 requests w1th Athens and
Jackon counlies stahons
servmg 160 senously ll1 or
InJured victims each

'

•

A's cop 5th title in row
American League Roundup
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Wnter
Wedn esday nig ht the
Orioles refused to be stayed
by the ram m their rruss1on of
overtakmg the Boston Red
Sox Ih the Amencan League
East pennant chase
Amid scatte r ed hea vy
rams a delay of o'lr three
hours and a soaked f1eld the
Orwles~ behmd ace n ght
hander
Jim
Palm er ~
walloped the Detroit Tigers s,
1 for their lOth wm m the last
11 games and moved to w1thm
3 ~ games of the ra med-out
Red Sox
The Oakland As after

three s traight games of
flirtm g with a magic number
of one clinched their fifth
straight AL West title
The A s pounded out 13 hits
mcludmg Reggie Jackson s
33rd and 34th homers to drub
the Chicago White Sox IJ.-2
VIda Blue who pitched the
first s1x mnmgs gamed
cri&lt;ht for hiS 21st wm
Palmer now 22-11 spaced
s 1x h1ts m equalm g hi s
preVIous season-high victory
total
The A s celebrated for a
change after lockmg up the
title The past two years they
acted as If nothmg happened
after clmchin g Wednesday

Devils 8th
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wnter
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Warren Western Reserve no
sooner takes over the No 1
spot m the Umted Press
InternatiOnal Ohw High
School Board of Coaches
Class AAA football ratmgs
and nght away somebody IS
1tchmg to take 11 away
The Raiders of Coach
Harry Beer slipped mto the
top spot today by two points
over defendmg poll champiOn
Cincinnati Moeller 244-242
but they may be hard pressed
to keep their lofty pos11Ion
On Saturday mght, Western
Reserve collides headon with
No 4 Lakewood St Edward
the game bemg played on the
artificial turf at Baldwm
Wallace College
A Win by either team would
go a long way toward wmmng
the mythical poll cham
pwnsh1p and also the top spot
m the Region 1 computer
ratmgs of the Ohio High
School Athlelic Assoc1allon
While Western Reserve the
1973 poll champiOn was
laymg clarrn to No 1 among
the b1g schools defending
champiOns Akron St Vmcent
m AA and Middletown
Fenwick m A wasted httle
trrne m movmg to the top m
their respective classes
St Vmcent off to a ~
mark while playmg Its usual
rugged schedule had things
pretty much 1\s way with a
133--96 spread over runnerup
Norwalk ( 2 1) the 1974 AA
playoff cbampwn
Fenwick which also won
the playoff crown m Class A
last year was a runaway
leader m the operung week of
the votmg holding a 137 106
margm
ove r
Newark
Catholic Both are ~
Warren Harding unbeaten
m three games, fuushed No 3
m the first AAA ballotmg
while Upper Arlington (2-1),
an 8--7 winner over Massillon
last Friday mght fm1shed
fifth
~
Roundmg out the AAA top
ten ar~ Niles McKinley ( ~)
Elyna ( ~) Prmceton ( 2-1)
a 14-12 loser to Moeller the
frrst game of the season, East
Liverpool (~ ) and Fmdiay
( ~)

Akron St Vmcent with
WU1S over AAA Akron teams
Garfield East and Central
Hower, meets AAA Loram
Southview this weekend
In thrrd place In AA behind
St Vmcent and Norwalk 1s
unbeaten Toronto ( ~ ) with
Bellrure (~) andMmerva (J..
0) m fourth and fifth
Roundmg the top ten are
LoUisville
St
Thomas
Aqumas
(2-0 I)
New
Lexmgton (~ ) Gallipolis ( 30) CircleVIlle ( ~) and tied
for
tenth
Cleveland

•

1n

mght though, they acted like
first time winners
We lost Catfish and everyone said we couldn t do 11
agam ' said Sal Bando So
that added to the pressure
Personally I m more excited
about wmmng thiS year than
ever before '

Elsewhere m the Amencan
League Kansas City put
away Mmnesota 4 2 and
Milwaukee
drubbed
Cleveland ID-3 Boston at New
York was postponed because
of ram
Brewers 10, lnd18ns 3
George Scott drove home
four runs with a three-&lt;'Un
homer and a double as the

UPI poll

Benedicllne ( 2-1 ) and London
( ~)

Fenwick paced by all-Ohio
ta ilback Mike Harkrader
faces AAA Franklin thi s
weekend The Falcons who
also play a rugged schedule
already have wms over two
AA opponents
Rockford Parkway (2-().1 )

fm1shed thrrd m Class A in the
hrst week of balloting,
followed m fourlh by Canal
Winchester
(3-0 )
and
MonroeVIlle ( ~) m fifth
The rest of the A top ten
mcluded Carey ( ~) m SIXth
followed by Le1ps1c ( ~)
Arlington(~) McDonald (21) and Ridgemont ( 2-().1 )

UPI prep ratings
COLUMBU S ( UP I J - The
l1r st w ee k l y U n t ed Pre ss
I n terna l o nal
O h o H gh
Sc hool Board ot Co aches
footba l l ra t mgs ( wt l h f rs t
pl ace v otes and won lo st
record s n parentheses)
CLASS AAA
Team
Pts
1 w a r Wes Re s ( 7 J 01 244
2 C nc Moeller ( 1 3 OJ
242
J War Hard ( 2 3 OJ
15 4
4 L a k ed St Ed (4 30) 148
5 Up A rlton (l 21 )
100
6Nies McK (l 3 0l
92
7 Etyr1a (2 3 OJ
78
8 Prm ce ton ( 2 1)
72
9Ea s!L v t230 )
55
10 F ndt ay (J OJ
53
Second Ten
11
L o ram
Sen or (l l 5 2
12
(I e l
Y o ung s t o w n
C ard nat
M o on ey and Can to n Gt enOa k
43 e ach
14
Co um bus
E as tm oor J 1 15 Bar ber to n
39
16
Zanesv He 36
17
M1dd eto wn 34
18 Loram
A dm r a1Kn g (1 )3 1 19 ( te l
Cen t erv1tle
( 1J
Cm c mna t 1
La Sal te a nd L a nca ste r
28
each
Others With ten or more
points
Newark
Nor t h
Can ton Ho ov e r
C mc nnat1
Eld er
Ne w Ph tadelph a
C ncmna t
St
Xav er
Ma sS illon G ahanna L n c o l n
( 1)
Nordon a Oregon C l ay
{Il
Yo u n g s t own Chaney
Co l umbus Walnut R1dg e
Par m a Padua
A l l 1an c e
S teubenvil l e
Cant o n
M e K nley
Toledo
St
F ranc s
Sprmgf e d So uth
and w es t erv lt e t 1J
CLASS AA
Team
Pts
1 A k St V nc ( 7 3 0
13 3
2 Norwa tk ( l 2 11
98
3 Toronto ( 1 3 OJ
93
&lt;l Be lla re (2 3 0)
5 M nerva (J OJ
78
6 LO UVIIIeAq ( 1 2 01 )
77
7 NewLex (30 )
64
8 Galhpohs(2 JOJ
57

'"

9 C r c lev tie
54
10 (T e { Cl Bene (2 I }
38
10 (t 1e ) Lo ndon { I J OJ
28
Second
Nine
12
Wheelersburg
R ldgewood
( l) and G1rard .42 each 15
Warr e n Kennedy JO 16 01e l
L ma Central Cathol c and
Cleveland Holy Name
27
each 18 Verm lion 26 19
Wa sh ngton Court House ( 1 J
and Spr ngf l eld Shawnee 22
ea ch
Others w1th ten or more
po.nts Columbus Watterson
8 g Walnut ( 1 l Columbus
Ready
Northwest Stark
O ten!Mgy Medma Highland
(ll
Oberl1n
Ironton
Steubenv He
Cathol c
Y o ungs town L berty
West
Branch a nd Youngstown
Rayen
CLASS A
Team
Pts
1MdFenw(530l
137
2 New Cath (3 OJ
106
3 Rock Park ( 3 2 0 1)
72
4CanWnch {2 30 J
57
5 Monroev1ll ( 1 3 OJ
53
6 Carey (2 3 OJ
45
7Lepsic(130l
41
8 Arl ngton ( 3 0 )
40
9 McDonald (1 2 1)
32
10 R dgemont ( 2 0 1 J
31
Second Ten 11 At len East
{ 1) 29 12 Covmgton 28
13
Tuscarawas Catholic ( 1 J 27
14 Port smouth Notre Dame
23
15
(t1el M nster and
Montpet1er
22 each
17
Bluffton Fa1rport Harbor ( l)
and Lowetl sv l i e 19 each 20
Fremont St J oseph 18
Others w1fh ten or more
po1nh
S dney
Lehman
Garaway ( 1l Cedarv He ( 1)
M ddlef1eld Card nal Un1ted
Loca l Stanton Local L1sbon
Anderson ( 1J New Boston
Glenwood Ottawa H!lls (1)
Mar on Catholic
Mar on
Pleasant Caldwell M nerat
R dge and Loudonv tte

Players may
reject offer
NEW YORK ( UP! ) ~
From the early mdicatwns
the proposed contract offer
made Tuesday by NatiOnal
Football League owners will
be reJected by the players
The first returns on player
~llotmg came m Wednesday
and both the Buffalo Bills and
the Houston Oilers voted to
reJect the contract The Bills
voted 42-1 agamst acceptance
while no totals were released
after the Houston ballottmg
All votes are expected to be
m by next Tuesday
There was no turndown of
our offer by unwn leadership
m ChiCago, ' sa1d Terry
Bledsoe of the Management
Council
Ed
Garvey
(NFLPA execullve director)
told us five mmutes before we

Brewers halted lt-.:han south
paw Fritz Peterson's winning
streak at 11 Scott's homer
his 34th, kept hlm even with
Reggie Jackson for the AL
lead and hiS three RBI moved
him mto a tie with Fred Lynn
for second In that department
with 104 - one behind John
Mayberry
Royals 4, Twl!IS 2
George Brett drove home
three runs Inl!ludmg the
game-Winner llf the eighth
Inning for the Royals, lifting
his RBI total to 89 Brett had
a twO.f'Un triple In the third
and then laced a run-scormg
single to snap a 2-2 lie m the
' eighth

Leaders

C n 106 Staub NY 102 Cey
LA and Parker P t1 101
American League Mayberry
KC 105 Lynn Bos and Scott
M I
104
Rice
Bos
102
Jac kson Oak 101
Stolen Bases
Nat1onal League Lopes LA
76 Morgan c n 65 Bro ck St L
56 Cedeno Hou 49 Cardenal
Ch 34
American League
R vers
Cal 68 Washmgton Oak 40
01 s KC 39 Carew M nn 35
Remy Cat 34
Pitchmg
(Based on most v1ctones)
Nat onat League Seaver NY
21 9 Jones SO 20 11 Messers
m th LA 18 14 Hooton LA 7
9 Reuss P1tl 17 11 Morton
All 17 16
Amer can League
Palmer
Bai t 22 11 Hunter NY 22 14
Blue Oak 21 11 Torrez Batt
20 e Kaat Ch 20 13

How they ran
BEULAH
GROVE CITY Ohio (UP!)
~ Smooth Speed surged
forward m the final 100 yards
and held off a closmg rush by
Jewell s Note Boy to wm the
featured $1,200-&lt;!dded mnth
race by onehaH length at
Beulah Park here Wed
nesday
Pal s
Fantava
Deck
showed
The wmner ridden by
Danny Lang covered the 400
yards m 21 and returned
$14 60 $4 20 and $3 60
The 10-1 dally double
oombmatlon of Super Star
Too and Raealda was worth
$ll5 20

broke that no deciSion had
been taken by umon
leadership on recommending
acceptance or reJectiOn of the
offer Garvey said he was
sending the proposal to the
players Without comment '
New England Patnots'
player rep Randy Vataha
said there would be no
problem about Sunday's
games gomg on but that the
players will have to make up
therr owns mmds on ac
ceptmg or reJectmg the offer
Vataha said the ISSUes still at
large were the Rozelle rule
squad Size and arbitrallon
There was a report ,
THISTLE DOWN
however that the Pats
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
secretly voted to reject the (UP!) ~ Dob1 s Knight won
owners offer
the featured race at Thistle
Down Race Track Wednesday, covenng the SIX
furlongs m 1 12 4 returnmg
$8 60 $4 20 and $3
Rory Glen was second and
Last Mmute Max was third
A daily double combmatlon
of Mean Mama and R1 vers1de
Queen, 11-6 pa1d $69
Attendance was 3 845 and
the dliy's handle was $399 580

FORGET ME NOT PLANTED -Actually It was a ground break111g ceremony Tuesd&amp;y
m New Haven for the soon to be constructed flower ship -Forget Me Not The business Is
owned by DaVId and Joy Russell The building will be 25 by 60 feet made of block and brick
Tentative openmg date will be near the beginning of November Pictured here from let to
r1ght are, Joy Russell, DaVId Russell and usmg the shovel, Shelby Duncan, town recorder
for New Haven

FRIDAY'S GAME'!
Gallipolis at Athens
Ironton at Wellston
Jackson at Logan
Waverly at Meigs
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
North Galha at Symmes
Valley
Miller at Ale,xander
Parkersburg Catholic at
Belpre
Federal Hocking at Eastern
Trimble at VInton County
Wahama at Southern
Pt Pleasant at Huntington
(Thurs )
South Pomt at Wayne
Rock Hill at Ironton St Joe
ceredo Kenova at Coal Grove
Oak Hill at Chesapeake

BY MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

MAN!~ (UPI ) ~ Muhammad All likes to tu rn It on and off
show you Lhat hard dark side of his as well as the soft hght
on&amp; and that s why he ll do so methmg graceless or even "ue l
for no appare nt reason sometimes
Tlus was one of those llme:s 1n his dressmg room c~fter a
workout
He was gethng himself all worked up de h, enng one of those
liTlpasswned sermons he enjoys so much to the members of the
media when with that sharp hear mg of his he happened to
pick up something his kid brother Rahaman was say mg
quietly to the press
Rahaman became so ea rned awm hstemng to hts btg
brothers pearls of wisdom that he beg an urgmg ne\\smen
around hliTI to take notes
Write It wnte It he tn ed persuadmg them
Hearmg that the champion suddenly cut short his O\\n
monologue
Shut up he ordered his brother Don t tell them to " nte
It Don t beg them It doesn t ma tter whether the1 1mte It or
not the fight IS gom on an) way and e1 er) body 111 the 11 orld 1s
M•lor Lugue Leaders
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1ona1
gonna
hear about It
Leading Batters
who aren t aware of the relatiOns hip might thmk there
Those
( based on 425 at bats)
National League
IS some resenlment between Ra haman Ail and his 18-month
g ab r h pet
Madlck Ch 127 500 76 180 360 older brother who defends his hea1 ywe1ght title &lt;~gam.&lt; I Joe
S1mmons St L
Frazier here Oct I (Sept 30m t~e U S 1
154 569 80 189 332
There IS no Ill feelmg between the m \\hatsoe1ei
Sanguttn Pt 131 474 60 156 329
Watson Ho 132 485 67 157 324
Rahaman All who fought With undistmgUished success
Morgan C n 143 489 103 158 323
Garvey LA 157 649 83 207 319 works for his brother and If you ask dmng "hal the ans\\er IS
Joshua SF 126 496 73 158 319 domg anythmg his brother asks !urn to do
Carden! Ch 151 561 83 178 31 7
For this Muahammad Ah ta kes pretl) good ca re of his
Rose Cm
159 651 107 205 31 5
Parker Plf 145 548 75 170 310 brother brmg1ng hrrn alon g on a ll his trips scemg to 1t nobod1
Broc k St L 134 523 77 16 2 310
hassles him and paymg him a ruce r ound $50 OOOa year
Amencan Leavue
g ab r h pet
Rahaman s adm1rallon for hiS big brot her 1s genwne
Carew M n 141 529 89 190 359
Ilove hliTI he tells you right out Hoi\ much' As muc h as
142 517 102 172 333
L ynn Bos
Munson NY 153 582 82 188 323 any man can love his brother You can not possibly put 1t mto
Washmgton Oak
146 581 83 181 31 2 words My love for my brother IS endless
Brett KC
156 621 8.&amp;1 193 311
What about the mc1dent m the dressmg room the othe1 day'
Rice 8os
144 564 92 174 309
What he said to me wa s JUStified says Rahaman He was
McRae KC 126 480 58 147 306
Orl:a Ch1
139 541 64 165 305 correct I know my brother and I know he mea ns form} good
Hargrov Tx 142 507 79 154 304
When the champ worked out today Hahama n was never
Chambliss NY
146 548 65 166 303 more than a few feet away generally w1th an expressiOn of
Braun M n 132 449 69 136 303
complete rapture on his fa ce Wh en Muhammad d1d h1s s1tups
Home Runs
Nahonal League
Sch m dt
on a trainer stable Rahaman rea ched for h1s brother s shoes
Ph l 38
Kingman
NY 35
Luzmsk1 Phd 34 Benc h Cm and held on to them as if they were the cro\\n je\\els
27 Cey LA and Parker P11t
The two brothers are the only children born to Cassius Mar
25
Amer can League Scott Mil cellus Clay II and his wife Odessa Lee Bemg the older
and Jackson Oak 34 Mayber
Muhammad always has been his mothe r s pet but she has no
ry
KC 33
Bonds
NY 30
less affectiOn for her youn gest son Rahaman
Burroughs Tex 29
Runs Baited In
She has always told us to love one ano th er and sta}
Nat1ona1 League
Luz nsk
tog
ether
he says
Ph I 120 Bench C.n 107 Perez

Tar Heels are ACC's
'underdog of the week'"
RALEIGH, N C (UP!) ~ Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes
There s no question who the has Reisman Trophy wmner
Atlantic Coast Conference Archie Gr1ffm, who, 10
underdog of the week IS as c1dentally, played hiS first
North Carolina, trounced 34-7 collegiate game agalllSt the
by Maryland last week, takes Tar Heels back m 1972on second ... anked Ohio State fllShmg for a school record
Saturday on the Buckeyes 239yards m a 29-14 Ohio State
victory that was North
home ground
Carolma
s only loss of the
Tar Heel Coach Bill Dooley
calls 1t a challenge and an season
GrHfin was a freshman
opportunity ' to face ' the
then
Now he has rushed for
Buckeyes adding 'I don't
think our players will be 100 yards or more m 23
regular season consecutive
awed
Still, Dooley hrrnself sounds game&amp; Ohio State also has
a bit awed m talking about Pete Johnson, a 246-pounder
Ohio State, which has one of who averages 5 3 yards per
the more outstandmg back- carry, and who Dooley calls
the biggest back I've ever
fields I've seen m 20 years of
seen-and I hope I never see
coachUig
First
and
for emost , another one hke hrrn '

Sport Parade

Miami players
'deeply hurt'
By RICK VAN SANT
OXFORD, Ohio (UP! I
M1dAmencan Confere nce
noVIce Ball State may have
picked a bad time to
challenge the Miami Red
skins
Miami 1s mad and out lo
show the football world 1t still
has a team that can wreck
opponents
Redskins coach DICk Crum
Is speakmg m terms of h1s
players bemg deeply hurt
by the 14-13loss last weekend
at M1ch1gsn State that ended
a 24-game unbeaten streak
And so M1am1 IS heavll}
favored to soothe that hurt

b) puttmg the Ball State
Cm d mals to ' li ght here
Sa turda}
E:ve n Ball State coach Dave
McClam a former M1arn1
assiStant says we can t beat
M1am1 unless they beat them
selves
The) Will have to fumble
ha ve passes mt ercepted and
ha ve defensive la pses for us
to beat M1am1 he reasons
They are probabl) the best
tea m that Ball State has e&gt;er
met on the football fie ld
After wa tch mg films of t he
Miami Mich1gan State tLL'isle
McCla m said that wit h a
hreak M1 am1 co uld have ver)
easii) beate n the Spartans

A m erjca n t. eague Stant11ng s
Bv Un t ~d Press ln1ernaho nal
East
W L Pel G 8
8os.1on
93 63 596
Ball m ~re
89 66 57 4 3 ~
N ew York
80 76 513 13
77 78 &lt;197 151 ~
Clevelan d
M wil ukee
65 94 409 29 1
De tro t
57 99 365 36
W es t
W L
Pet G 8
x Oak l and
95 63 601
Kam.as C ty
90 68 570
5
T exas

77
74

82

484

18

Mnnesota
81 47719 2
Ch cago
72 ss 459 22 1
Cat fornia
77 80 456 23
x cl n ched d v ~on f e
Wedn es da y s Res ult s
Bait more a Detro t 1
tst
tw1llght
Det r o t aT
Sa more
2nd
postponed
M Iwaukee 10 Cle~o"e and 3 n ght
Kansas C ty 4 Mtnn esota 1
n gh t
Boston
at
N ew
York
1
pos poned ra n
Oakland 13 Ch cago 2 n g h t
Thu rs days Ga m es
( All T1m u E DT J
Ch cago (Wood 15 70J a 1 Oak
ta n a (Bosman 10 6 J -4 JO p m
Detro 1 BMe 8 12 and Lot ch
12' 18) a Ba ll more ( Aie)( an der
B 8 and Torrez 10 8
2 5 30
pm

Nafib,nat League Standln!ils
Press 1n1ernat10n11

East
W L Pet
)( P tts b ur gh
91 67 516
Ph la d elph a
84 74 532
80 78 510
New Y ork
80 79 503
St Lou s
74 85 465
Chicago
73 86 459
Mon trea l

G B
7

11
111

~

17 h
18 ~

West
W L Pet G B
.: C ncmnat 1 105 54 660
Los An gel es
86 73 541 19
San F r anc sea 77 80 490 21
San Di eg o
70 88 443 34 ~
Atlanta
67 9 l 424 37 2
Houston
63 95 399 o11 12
.: cl n c hed d v s on t ti e
Wednesd.11y 1 Results
Ch cago 1 New Y ork 0
ll
1nn n gs
Montreal 6 St l o u s 2 n i ght
Phlledel p h a 8 P ittsburgh 1
n g ht
C nc nnat 6 Houston 4 night
At lant a 7 San FrM CISCO 6 1St
11 n n lngs twl l g ht
San F ranc sco a t Atlanta 2nd
n igh t cance ll ed re n
Los Ange les 14 San D ego 0
n ght
Thursday s Games
(AU T fme1 EDTl
'"
Sa n F ran c sc o ( Falcone 12 11 l
at San D ego (Sp liner S ll l
10 00 p m

Cl eveland (Hood 6 9 ) a t Boston
( Lee 17 9 ) 7 JO p m
M nneso a ( Goltz 14 41 at
Ka1 sas C tv (Spl llorft 9 9 1
8 30 p m

Area youths can enroll
in gymnastics at Rio
RIO GRANDE - J erry and
Danet te Spencer a husband
and w1fe tea m will be of
fermg gymn asb cs to Rw
Grande
a rea
youths
throughout th1s fall at RIO
Grande College
Classes \\Ill start at Lyne
Ce nters gy mnas ium on
Saturday Oct 4 a t lO 30
a m and will run seven
Sa turday sessiOns
Each session will be 75
mmutes m length Students
age s1x and up are welcome
mt o th e prog ram at a
packa ge pnce of $25 each
Deadline date for regJstrahon
IS Thursday Oct 2 and lhe
reg istratiOn fee must be sent
to the Spencers
Jerry and Danelle ha ve a
long and experienced history
m gymnashcs and educallon
Je rr) gamed a B S Degree
fr om the Uruvers1t y of West
VIr ginia while a member of
th e College s Intercollegiate
gymn astics tea m He was
tw ice nam ed
Mot1cola
Athlete of the Year a South
ern All Around ChampiOn
and m 1965 wa s seventh m
the natiOn on the parallel
bars
Dunng h1s gymnastics
career at the university he
scored over half of his team s
pomts Later he earned an
M S Degree at the Umvers1ty
of West V1r gm1a He IS
curren tly teac hm g a nd
coac hm g 1n Parke r s burg
H1gh School sys tem
Dannett e m 1962 won the

Blubaugh Award, best AllAround Athlete and gained a
ll S Degree from the
University of West Vlrglnla m
1956 Smce that time she has
done
graduate
work,
specializing In dance and has
taught and coached gym
nasllcs for five yeani in the
public schools and pnvatel~
with her husband The couple
now own and operate a
gymnasllcs
studio
In
Parkersburg
Lessons
will Include
begmnlng apparatus work
and tumbling Students will
be grouped by l!IStructors at.
to skill levels
Apphcallons for
the
gymnastics classes are no"
available at RIO Grande
College
Lyne Center
Gymnasium or by writing
Glendale Gymnastics Club,
Rt 1 Box 55 Parkersburg,
West V1rg1ma Checks are to
be made payable to Jerry
Spencer and the application,
plus fee amount sent drrectly
to the Spencers before October 4

ST LOUIS (UP!) ~ The
Spirits of St LoUIS said
Wednesday they have sold &amp;foot-&lt;! forward Gene Goo '
Kennedy to the Utah Stars
Kennedy 26 entermg his
fourth year m pro basketball
averaged 9 4 pomts m 74
games last year

r

Morgan ends long ball slump
By GARY TAYLOR
UP! Sports Wnter
HOUSTON (UP!) - As far
as the Cincmnah Reds are
concerned, Joe Mo rgan s
prophecies can contmue
The sparkplug second
baseman entered his team s
series with the Hou ston
Astros th1s week pred1ctmg
he would crack a homer to
break out of his l on g~Jall
slump
'I needed one more to g1ve
me 16, and I needed one more
RBI to hit 90, he sa1d I
wanted to reach both th ose
before the end of the season
Morgan got bo th Wed
nesday mght--and more He
rapped two hits m two official
\rips drew two walks stole
two bases and scored twice m
leading the Reds to a 6-4 wm
In the locker room after
wards, he made a pia) off
prediction
The best team 1s gonna
wm the playoff and the world

grabbed a ~2 lead on Greg
Gross walk a nd Jerry DaVa
non s double Morga n lmed a
La rry Dierker pitch mto the
left field sea ts to tie the score
agam
K1rb} who wa s lifted for a
pmch hitter m the siXth
r ecorded his te nth wm
because the Reds erupted for
the wmmng runs m that 1n
mng
Ken Griffey r eached on a
fie lder s choice and with two
out Plwnmer doubled a nd
Merv Rette nmund wa lked to
load the bases
Pete Rose then smgled fo r
tv. o runs and Da\ e Con
cepcwn smgled for a third
Reds reliever Pat Darcy
allowed the Ast ros one run
and three hits over three
mmngs and Ra wley East
wick mopped up m the mnth
for h1s 2lsl save

1s the time

to call me lor the best
car msurance value anywhere

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St
Middleport 0
PH 992 7155
Ike a g ood
ne ghbo
State Farm
1s th ere
IU I Ull II U Ul
CO IIHM
~ 0111 0

1TATI '.1olM

A

N$UlANCI

•

IU 01101 £ lllUIUCf
Cl I 0 ~11
O•

•c

p 71 108

PARK RESERVED

FOR All

SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 27th
UNTIL 5 PM

YOUR BUILDING

"FAMILY OUTING"

NEEDS

I.A.M. &amp; A.W.
LOCAL LODGE NO 598
SO CHARLESTON

STOP IN TODAY

VALLEY

TA ,VIP

w It be the la s\- open day of the 1
fo r RIDE S REDU CED FOR TH

S300 PE R PER SO N

LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

sen es JUSI hke the best team
\\On thts dh tswn he sa 1d
You can take 1t fr om there
The Reds take the da) off
today before begmmng a
reg ula r season e ndm g three
ga me sen es \Hth Atla nta
F nda y The n Its f11 e days
off a nd on to the best-of three
Na t w na l Lea gue pla1off
ser 1es agam st Pt tt ~b 1 gh
next weekend
[ m read) nov.
the 322
hittmg Mm g;w stud
Jhere was li ttle doubt of
that Wednesda)
With the Reds trailing 2-0
because of two Cia) Kirb)
w1ld pitches Morgan led off
the fourth v. 1th a smgle He
stole second mo1e d to third
on a Dan Dnesscn smgle and
scored on a nother hit by
Cesar Geronuno Dnessen
scored v.hen Bill Plwruner
hit a sacnfl ce fl)
In the hfth after Hou.ston

Saturday evening

CAMDEN PARK
•

US 60 WEST - HUNTINGTON

�·.;

3 - The Dally Sentmef MIOQleport Pomeroy, 1,1 lhursaa y, Sept ~. un~

Lt. Gov. Celeste challenges
his boss to debate, but Gov.
Rhodes won't be having any

the FOUR-PART plan by
Rhodes for p:~:osperity
By LEE I EONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporte r
COLUMBUS ( UP! )~ Gov
James A Rhodes Is at
- tempting to liTlpress upon
news media executives the
Importance to Ohio s future
of his four economic recovery
proposals on the Nov 4 ballot
Rhodes met se pa rat ely
Wednesday with newspaper
and broadcast editors About
18 editor s attended eac h
meetmg m the governor s
ca bmet room
In the afternoon meetmg
with the newspaper editors

Rhodes tried to bolster
arguments m favor of hiS
housmg tax abatement and
red e velopment
c 1ty
programs
He assured the editors Ohio
"Ill not repeat the rrustake of
a Ne\\ York City urban
dev elopme nt corporatiOn
whe n It defaulted on a multi
mllhon dollar housmg bond
last February
We cann ot do what they
did m New York said the
governor pomting out Ohio
has a $750 000 debt hrrut and
any further debt must be

approved by the voters He
said bond attorneys haqe
assured him Ohio s housmg
bonds will sell
On tax abatement, Rhodes
srud the tax loss would be
more than made up by ex
panding mdustry payrolls m
mner c1ty areas
He said the Chrysler Corp
received $775 000 m annual
property tax exemptions for a
stampmg plant m the core
area of Detrmt but Its em
ployes are contnbutmg $2
m1lhon a year to the city m

On public liTlprovements
for cities and villages the
gove rnor
said
local
legislative bodies still have
veto powers over any
prOJects

There are no chams or
barbed wrre on thiS he said
Rhodes was asked why a
n ch commumty hke Shake r

Anywhere but to debate

mWllCipal mcome taxes

Celeste would debate with Rhodes
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) ~ It
Gov Richard F Celeste
hkemng Gov James A
Rhodes
four economic
recovery proposals to using a
meat axe for bram surgery,
has challenged the governor
to a senes of debates on the
ISsues m October
Celeste, a Democrat and an
opponent of the Republican
governor's four pomt plan
appearmg on the Nov 4
.ballot, Issued the debate
IJIVItatwn Wednesday
A few hours later Rhodes
declined the challenge
callmg 1t strictly pohllcal
I don t have trrne to
debate ' the governor told
newsmen r m busy sellmg
!he bond Issues
Celeste ISSued his challenge
m this letter to Rhodes
Because of the compleXIty
Qf the Issues and because
!l'ey commit billions of tax

dollars over a long period of
tliTle I believe Ohioans are
entitled to as much In
formatiOn as possible from
both v1ewpomts so that they
may arnve at a n mtelligent
well mformed decisiOn on
Nov 4
Therefore I would like to
propose that you and I engage
m a series of debates on the
subject of the four con
slltullonal amendments to be
held dunng the month before
the electiOn m the maJor
populatiOn centers of the
state
Celeste told a news confer
ence he 1s growmg tired of
Rhodes' one-sided outbursts
which mclude character
assassmatlon
adding that
he believes the ments of the
proposals should be arred
pro and con
The lieutenant governor
said his mvitallon to debate
mcludes any member of
Rhodes cabmet staff or

Gripe-a-Card system is
begun by PO services
A nationwide consumer
"Service program designed to
'Improve the quality of mail
serv1ce has been announced
by the Umted States Postal
SerVIce
Begmnmg Oct 1 the postal
service across the nation will

encourage mall users to

•

make known probleiTIS they
may have with the mall
servtce
At the core of the program
Is a consumer service card on
which
problems
are
described Postal managers
will attempt to resolve them
;,(orthw1th
The consumer service
Jli"Ogram reflects Postmaster
General
BenJamm
F
Bailar's deterrrunatlon that
mail serviCes will be friendly
courteous and efficient as
well as speedy and reliable
Good service IS a far
broader concept than JUSt
;; fast mail handling as un• portant as that Is, Ba1lar
•• S8ld
:
It IS also built on em
: ployee
courtesy
our
' responSiveness to customer
• needs, the sympathy and
understanding we brmg to
• your own expectations of
what good postal serv1ce IS all

5
t

:about'
:

•

Customers are urged to

brmg their mqumes and
complamts to the attention of
postal managers To make 1t
easier for a customer to make
a suggestiOn or complamt
about postal serVIce the new
consumer service card will
be available from letter
carriers and at post offices
The card Is two postal cards
with carbon paper between
them One copy goes to the
postmaster so work can be
begun on the problem and the
other goes to postal service
headquarters m Washmgton
for catalogmg and analysis
The
cards
will
help
management spot problems
and trends and take
correcllve
action
If
necessary

The program was tested
earlier this year m other
areas and customers found
the test cards easy to complete and most complamts
were resolved to customers'
sallsfacllon
The card should take no
more than two mmutes to fill
out The postmaster and hiS
staff are w1llmg to discuss
any problems The whole
pomt of the program IS to
bnng your problems to the
attention of the post office
where an attempt can be
made to resolve them

promollonal committee for
the bond ISSUes
The governor's economic
recovery package mcludes
constitullonal amendments to
permit state houSing fmance
assistance and tax incentives
for mdustry to relocate m

urban areas
It also mcludes a parr of
bond Issues totalmg $4 5
million and fmanced by a
penny mcrease m the
gasolme tax and a boost m the
sales tax from 4 to 4 7 cents
on the dollar Those Issues
would furmsh money for
development of
trans
portatwn and c1ty and
VIllage un~rovements
We bave a pallent who
needs delicate surgery, and
the governor IS handmg us a
meat axe
said Celeste
ThiS IS not the prescriptiOn
for the diSease
Celeste said he IS par
llcularly disturbed that
Rhodes has been classifying
opponents of his ISSues as
obstructwmsts agitating for
more crliTle welfare and
unemployment
Thts

LS

nonsense

declared the lieutenant
governor We all want Jobs
for Ohwans and prograiTIS to
put people back to work "
Celeste said Rhodes
proposals
would
not
guarantee any JObs but
would guarantee tax m
creases and the highest
bonded debt of any state m
the nation
Although he offered no
alternative plan to the bond
ISSues, Celeste said 1t was
unfarr of Rhodes to use
that as a criiiCISm of opponents
It will be up to us as
leaders to hammer out an
alternallve if as and when
these (bond ISsues) fail, said
Celeste
The lieutenant governor
sa1d
the
Democrahccontrolled General Assembly
early this year enacted
legislallon to perrrut the state
to help fmance home con
strucllon proJects, putting
bUildmg tradesmen back to
work
He blamed Rhodes for not
testmg the legiSlation m the
Oh10 Supreme Court so 11
could be liTlplemented In
stead, Celeste said, Rhodes
wanted to go through the
ballot, causmg months of
delay
ObJections cited by Celeste
to !he other three Issues
Tax Abatement~ Would

COLUMBUS (UP! )~ Gov
James A Rhodes says he ll
go anywhere to promote
passage of his four economic
recovery proposals on the
Nov 4 ballot~ anywhere but
mto a debate with Lt Gov
Richard F Celeste
Rhodes a Republican was
challenged Wednesday by
Celeste a Democrat to a
series of debates on the ballot
tssues m ma)or urban areas
of Ohio next month
The governor turned down
the
mv1tahon
saymg
Celeste s offer was stnctly
political
Were not gomg to get mto
any political controversy to
help somebody to ascend to
someplace where I am al
ready
said
Rhodes
referrmg to speculatiOn
Celeste rrught be mterested m
runmng for governor
Rhodes was asked about
the proposed debate shortly
after he told a meetmg of
OhiO editors
I'll go
anyplace anybody InVItes me
to talk about the Issues I II
even go to a Democratic
meellng
There ll be no debates on
my behalf
the governor
said In response to the
questiOn He (Celeste) can
debate (Cleveland City
Council President) George
Forbes and the BUildmg
Trades Council We have no
objecllon to that
Rhodes said Forbes and the
labor orgamzation support
his bond Issues
Celeste said the debates
would provide our fellow
ciiizens with the mformation
they need to make the right
decision for the future of our
state on Nov 4 "
My mmd 1s made up
S8ld Rhodes I don t need to
debate anybody I m for the

encourage Industry to
replace
people
with
machines and would hurt
mner city tax bases on which
schools depend
TransportatiOn- The $1 75
b1ll10n bqnd ISSUe IS too large
for starting an economical
and balanced transportahon
plan, and 1t cannot be
fmanced by a penny boost m
the gasoline tax
City and VIllage Im
provements~ The
most
mcredible pork barrel ever
offered the people of thiS
state No money IS provided
to operate the facilities bwlt
with the bond funds Need IS
not taken mto account ~
Shaker Heights a highmcome area and East
Cleveland a nearby low
mcome area, each would
receive $10 million worth of
prOJ!!C!s

~

..•£
•

DR. LAMB

••
:•
••

How to help hiatal hernia

I= By Lawrence E Lamb, M D

t• wondenng
DEAR DR LAMB - I am
how hiatal hermas
: are detected By X ray? I am
: :&gt;4 and five feet five, weigh 126
:,pounds For the last year I
bave had once or tWice a day
a nauseous feeling and jwce
§ oming up In my throat
E:"en I had my annual check

;~::C~rm:~on:: :~ to, ~~
:probably have a hiatal
:hernia Don t drink coffee '
;:And, that Is all he said or did
j:OtherwiSe I am In good
;health except for my blood
:::cQUIIt gomg down easily Do

=~u:en:rr;;;:::~y follow up

1:'

DEAR READER - Yes
rush of fluid mto your
!!tlJroat Is probably from your
ach, and It usually
•
s that the mechanism
• that close. off the stomach at
ethe leveJ of the dJjiphragm IS
""ot worldng properly We call
!Ibis esoplu!geal reflux lt
often IS associated w1lh a

:the

E

if

hernia of a porhon of the
stomach
through
the
diaphragm effectmg the
closmg mechamsm But 1t
can also occur WIthout a
hiatal herma This Is one
reason why surgical repair of
hiatal hernia doesn't always
work The herma may be
corrected, but hte faulty
closure mechamsm may not
Anyone with the symptoiTIS
should have X ray studies of
the esophagus and stomach to
see If there IS a hiatal herma
or reflux
Although all hiatal hernias
do not need special treatment, anyone who bas reflux
symptoms should be treated
to prevent future scarrmg of
the lower portiOn of the
esophagus which may lead to
constriction and difficulty In
swallowing The treatment
may be luruted to modifying
daily livmg bab1ts and cer
tainly one of these Is to stop
drmklng roffee Antacids
~

Heights would receive the
same amount as a poor
commumty of the same s1ze
such as East Cleveland
It JUSt falls that way, he
srud I don t think you can
discrliTlmate agalllSt a com
mumty JUSt because Its
personal mcome 1s a little
above normal

may also be needed to
prevent the bwldup of acid
d1geshve JUICe that can
regurgitate
mto
your
esophagus
For a complete discussiOn
of hiatal hernia and the steps
you can take m your llvmg
patterns to prevent symptoiTIS and future problems
Wfl te to me m care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551,
RadiO C1ty Stallon, New
York, NY 10019 Send 50
cents and a long stamped,
self-addressed envelope and
ask for The Health Letter
number 4-8, H1atal Hernia
Esophageal Reflux
DEAR DR LAMB ~ Why
IS an mgwnal hernia or
rupture called so? It 1s really
a protrusion and not a rupture I speak with authority
as I have had a bowel
protrusion near my groin for
15 years
DEAR READER ~ You
rrught want to consult your
Webster s dictionary which

bond Issues I m for JObs
The governor said Celeste
was leadmg the oppos11Ion to
the bond Issues He s an
obstructiOnist who's agalllSt
JObs and for unemployment
&lt;.TliTle and welfare, Rhodes
said He ought to be commg
up with an alternative

In 1789 the frrst Congress
adopted 12 amendments to
the ongmal Constitution
10
of which were ratified and
became known as The Bill of
Rights

WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
The Senate IQielllgence
committee wants to quesllon
former President Richard
Nixon about a CIA program
of opemng and copymg
foreign mail to U S citiZens,
even mcluding one letter to
Nixon

CINCINNATI (UP! ) ~ m the system
Courts should never order
The only way this can be
children bused from nelgh accomplished IS by forced
borhood schools without llusmg This 1s done by
parental consent says a JUdicial power and w1tbout
federal a ppeals court judge the consent of the parents or
The federal courts m the children The method
school desegregatiOn cases used IS by a head count and
are performmg a social task determination IS made solely
usmg law as a lever U S by the color of therr skin
SIXth Circuit Court of Appeals
These children are en
Court Judge Paul C Weick htled to the equal protechon
It of the law the same as the
complamed Wednesday
IS not the function of the
plamllffs
added Weick
courts to perform social tasks
The constitutional nghts of
to attam social goals
other children ough' not to be
In my opmwn
said VIolated m order to accord
Weick
no court order rehef to the plamtiffs '
should ever force a black or
He said an
equal but
white child away from therr racially balanced doctrme
residential school without the was not reqUII"ed by the
consent of hiS parents
ConstitutiOn
Black and white children
doctnne IS
Such a
have equal conshtullonal
repugnant to the Con
rights (but) the plamtiffs m slltullon ( and)
would
these school cases are violate the constitullonal
cla1mmg
special
con- rights of most of our popula
stitutwnal nghts the JUdge lion the judge sa1d
said They are clarrnmg a
In my opmwn if such a
right to racial balance or doctrme ever became the
quotas m each pubhc school law 11 would subject the

Othe r Amencans apd
groups whose mall was
reported opened by m
telllgence agencies are highly
upset about 11
The deciSion to ask NIXon to
testify on th1s and other
matters was announced
Wednesday by Chairman

Frank Church, D-Idaho
James Angleton, former CIA
chief of counterintelligence,
told the committee m
telhgence agencies illegally
opened private mail over a
period of 20 years
The Vlctrrns, accordmg to
Angleton s testimony and

OSU Band to show triple script
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Fans
of the OhiO State Umvers1ty
marching band will not want
to leave their seats at haH
time of the OhiO State North
Ca rolina football gam e
Saturday
They will be treated to a
special Triple Scnpt Ohio
performance pul on by the
current marching band and
two alurnm bands
The performance IS part of
the alumni bands seventh
reuruon More than 300 for
mer marching band mem

bers are expected on campus
Also featured at balftrrne
will be a piano rend1hon of
OhiO State s fight song
Across the Field per
formed at midfield by
composer William Daugherty
who wrote the song while a
student at OSU m 1915
The current and alumm
bands Will !hen premiere a
Richard
Helm
new
arrangement of that song
Two alunuu bands will
perform the scripts on the
east and west sidelines while

•
HPER znstructor

named at college
RIO GRANDE ~ Dr
George Wolfe D1rcector of
Health PhysiCal EducatiOn
and RecreatiOn at R10
Grande College RIO Grande
Community College today
announced ,the appomlment
of Carmen Penmck as health
physical education and
recreatiOn mstruction at the
college
A native of Wichita, Kan ,
the new mstructor received
her B S Degree m Education
and her M S Degree m
Physical EducatiOn from
Kansas State Teachers
College m Empona Kan For
the past siX years she has
been employed as a phySical
educahon teacher m the
Shawnee MissiOn Elemen
tary Schools
Durmg this period she
played basketball for l!!e
AAU and was an all star for
that regwn She also coached
a basketball team at Kansas
C1ty She played volleyball
for the U S Volleyball
Assoc13tion m Kansas City
and assisted on a federal
grant for headstart teachers

un d ay T1Q1eS Sentmel

I

supported in appeal
people on a nationWide basis
to taxatiOn to pay for forced
busmg costing blllions of
dollars, which could be used
more appropr18tely to rrnprove the quality of education
It would polarize the races
and ll"feparably harm all of
the good which has been
accomplished m recent years
In CIVil rights
declared
We1ck
Weick took his stand as the
lone diSsenter m a threejudge panel s decision that
gave the local NAACP the
right to present diSputed
testimony
m
their
desegregatiOn suit against
Cincmnati pubhc schools
The maJority JUdges, who
did not comment on busmg m
therr rulmg , dec1ded to allow
certam relevant ' testrrnony
dating back to before July 26,
1965 although the appeals
court here has already
cleared the school board of
charges of discriminatiOn
before that time

Committee wants to talk with Nixon

states a herma IS
a m-servtce program where
protrusion or an organ or part she bad drrect responsibility
Perceptual
Motor
through connective tissue or for
through a wall of the cavity 1n EducatiOn
Penmck was also the
which 1t Is normally enclosed
~ called also rupture '
-Al
liti
The mgumal herma means
I IICI
a loop of bowel slides through
I:&gt;EVOTEO TO THE
INTEREST OF
the
normally
closed
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
passageway called the
Exec Ed
mgwnal canal In the male
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1tv Ed1tor
this passageway IS where the
Publ i shed dally except
cord to !he testicle passes mto
Saturday by The Oh10 Vallev.
Publ•sh-tng company
111
the abdommal cavity The
Court St
Pomeroy
Oh10
opemng to the canal IS 45769 Bus mess Offtce Phon,
991 2156 Ed1fonal Rhone 992
guarded by a senes of 2157
•
class postage pa d
complex muscles, tendons at Second
Pomeroy Ohio
Nat onal
advert s1ng
and membranes
rep-resentat1ve
Ward
When the muscles tendons
Grlfftfh Company
Inc
and membranes are stret- Bottmelll &amp; Gallagher D1v
757 Th1rd Ave
New York
ched, or m some cases torn, N Y 10017
rates
an abnormally large opemng DelSubscr1pf1on
vered by carrier where
occurs and allows the loop of available 75 cents per week
By Motor R.oute whe~
Intestine to excape from the c4rrler
sennce
nc7t
ava1lable One month SJ 25
abdominal
cavity
By mall n Oh10 and w va
protrude, rupture or her- One Year
$22 00
Sl&gt;t
months
$11 50
Three
mat~ So 1t IS a hernia, a
months $.7 00 Elsewher e
26 00 year
S x months
rupture, and if you want to
13 50 three months $7 50
ca,JJ 1t that a protrusion
ubscr pt1on pnce me tudes

'

Anti-busing stand is

CliniCian for the Perceptual
Motor Clinic there She has
been a guest speaker on her
research proJect m physical
for coachmg
educatiOn
chmcs and workshops
In addition to her work at
Kansas City she was a
graduate teachmg assistant
at Kansas State Teachers
College m health phySical
educabon and recreation for
one year was treasurer of !he
Kansas
Assoc1abon
of
Health Physical EducatiOn
and Recrea bon ( KAHPER),
and was president of the
Students Section o( the KAH
PER While at Kansas State
Teachers College she was
assistant women s basketball swliiUlUng and volleyball coach
In additwn to her college
work, Penmck Is a cerlif1ed
!ramer for cardiO-pulmonary
resuscitatiOn
by
the

the current Marchmg Band
will write 11 out facmg the
north end zone
This weekend s reunion will
mclude a member of the 1907
band, several men m the first
Scnpt Ohio m 1937 and the
first woman to graduate from
the now coed OSU band mto
the alumni ranks
Conductmg the alumm
band durmg the reumon will
be former OhiO State band
marching drrector Jack 0
Evans who led the band from
1951 through 1963

statements by Church In
eluded Nobel Peace priZe
wmners Unus Pauling and
Martin Luther Kmg Jr,
Church and other senators,
NIXon hunself, the Ford and
Rockefeller Foundations and
Harvard Umvers1ty
Church said the Intelligence operabon, codenamed HT Lingual, In
tercepted a letter to NIXon m
June 1968 ~ when he was
campa1gnmg for president ~
from hiS speechwr1ter, Ray
Price, who was traveling m
the SoVIet Umon
Church said a letter he
himself wrote to his motherIn-law while on a tr1p to !he
SoVIet Umon was opened and
photographed
Sen Edward M Kennedy,
D Mass one of the Identified
Vlctrrns, called It extremely
unfortunate Another, Sen
Hubert H Humphrey DMlnn called 11 an outrage

SEOEMS runs
increased in '75
The Southeastern Ohw
Emergency Medical Services
(SEOEMS) system logged
6,200 runs through August,
1975 up 747 runs over the
similar period of 1974 ac
cordmg to a report ISSUed by
Field Operabons Director
William Taylor today
Of that total 214 persons
were treated at the scene by
EMTs referred to their
phySicians for further care
and not transported to
hospitals Taylor srud
Lawrence County placed
the greatest demand for
service, 1,643 calls smce the
first of the year Second was
Jackson w1th 1,344, then
Athens Will! 1,276 Hocking
County followed with 612
Vmton Willi 499 Galha w1th
353 and Meigs wtth 271
Taylor observed that Since
volunteer units also serve

Galba and Meigs counties
that the total demands for
serv1ce m these two counties
could
reasonably
be
estunated as great or greater
than the demand for
SEOEMS Th1s would peg
total emergency calls in
Gallia county at about 100 per
month and about 67 per
month m Meigs
Busiest stalion of the
system s 16 durmg August
was Ironton with a new
montiily system high of 143
runs The Logan stalion,
covenng almost all Hocking
County Jogged 113 for the
month
On a countywide basiS the
Lawrence demand was
greatest durmg August will!
240 requests w1th Athens and
Jackon counlies stahons
servmg 160 senously ll1 or
InJured victims each

'

•

A's cop 5th title in row
American League Roundup
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Wnter
Wedn esday nig ht the
Orioles refused to be stayed
by the ram m their rruss1on of
overtakmg the Boston Red
Sox Ih the Amencan League
East pennant chase
Amid scatte r ed hea vy
rams a delay of o'lr three
hours and a soaked f1eld the
Orwles~ behmd ace n ght
hander
Jim
Palm er ~
walloped the Detroit Tigers s,
1 for their lOth wm m the last
11 games and moved to w1thm
3 ~ games of the ra med-out
Red Sox
The Oakland As after

three s traight games of
flirtm g with a magic number
of one clinched their fifth
straight AL West title
The A s pounded out 13 hits
mcludmg Reggie Jackson s
33rd and 34th homers to drub
the Chicago White Sox IJ.-2
VIda Blue who pitched the
first s1x mnmgs gamed
cri&lt;ht for hiS 21st wm
Palmer now 22-11 spaced
s 1x h1ts m equalm g hi s
preVIous season-high victory
total
The A s celebrated for a
change after lockmg up the
title The past two years they
acted as If nothmg happened
after clmchin g Wednesday

Devils 8th
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wnter
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Warren Western Reserve no
sooner takes over the No 1
spot m the Umted Press
InternatiOnal Ohw High
School Board of Coaches
Class AAA football ratmgs
and nght away somebody IS
1tchmg to take 11 away
The Raiders of Coach
Harry Beer slipped mto the
top spot today by two points
over defendmg poll champiOn
Cincinnati Moeller 244-242
but they may be hard pressed
to keep their lofty pos11Ion
On Saturday mght, Western
Reserve collides headon with
No 4 Lakewood St Edward
the game bemg played on the
artificial turf at Baldwm
Wallace College
A Win by either team would
go a long way toward wmmng
the mythical poll cham
pwnsh1p and also the top spot
m the Region 1 computer
ratmgs of the Ohio High
School Athlelic Assoc1allon
While Western Reserve the
1973 poll champiOn was
laymg clarrn to No 1 among
the b1g schools defending
champiOns Akron St Vmcent
m AA and Middletown
Fenwick m A wasted httle
trrne m movmg to the top m
their respective classes
St Vmcent off to a ~
mark while playmg Its usual
rugged schedule had things
pretty much 1\s way with a
133--96 spread over runnerup
Norwalk ( 2 1) the 1974 AA
playoff cbampwn
Fenwick which also won
the playoff crown m Class A
last year was a runaway
leader m the operung week of
the votmg holding a 137 106
margm
ove r
Newark
Catholic Both are ~
Warren Harding unbeaten
m three games, fuushed No 3
m the first AAA ballotmg
while Upper Arlington (2-1),
an 8--7 winner over Massillon
last Friday mght fm1shed
fifth
~
Roundmg out the AAA top
ten ar~ Niles McKinley ( ~)
Elyna ( ~) Prmceton ( 2-1)
a 14-12 loser to Moeller the
frrst game of the season, East
Liverpool (~ ) and Fmdiay
( ~)

Akron St Vmcent with
WU1S over AAA Akron teams
Garfield East and Central
Hower, meets AAA Loram
Southview this weekend
In thrrd place In AA behind
St Vmcent and Norwalk 1s
unbeaten Toronto ( ~ ) with
Bellrure (~) andMmerva (J..
0) m fourth and fifth
Roundmg the top ten are
LoUisville
St
Thomas
Aqumas
(2-0 I)
New
Lexmgton (~ ) Gallipolis ( 30) CircleVIlle ( ~) and tied
for
tenth
Cleveland

•

1n

mght though, they acted like
first time winners
We lost Catfish and everyone said we couldn t do 11
agam ' said Sal Bando So
that added to the pressure
Personally I m more excited
about wmmng thiS year than
ever before '

Elsewhere m the Amencan
League Kansas City put
away Mmnesota 4 2 and
Milwaukee
drubbed
Cleveland ID-3 Boston at New
York was postponed because
of ram
Brewers 10, lnd18ns 3
George Scott drove home
four runs with a three-&lt;'Un
homer and a double as the

UPI poll

Benedicllne ( 2-1 ) and London
( ~)

Fenwick paced by all-Ohio
ta ilback Mike Harkrader
faces AAA Franklin thi s
weekend The Falcons who
also play a rugged schedule
already have wms over two
AA opponents
Rockford Parkway (2-().1 )

fm1shed thrrd m Class A in the
hrst week of balloting,
followed m fourlh by Canal
Winchester
(3-0 )
and
MonroeVIlle ( ~) m fifth
The rest of the A top ten
mcluded Carey ( ~) m SIXth
followed by Le1ps1c ( ~)
Arlington(~) McDonald (21) and Ridgemont ( 2-().1 )

UPI prep ratings
COLUMBU S ( UP I J - The
l1r st w ee k l y U n t ed Pre ss
I n terna l o nal
O h o H gh
Sc hool Board ot Co aches
footba l l ra t mgs ( wt l h f rs t
pl ace v otes and won lo st
record s n parentheses)
CLASS AAA
Team
Pts
1 w a r Wes Re s ( 7 J 01 244
2 C nc Moeller ( 1 3 OJ
242
J War Hard ( 2 3 OJ
15 4
4 L a k ed St Ed (4 30) 148
5 Up A rlton (l 21 )
100
6Nies McK (l 3 0l
92
7 Etyr1a (2 3 OJ
78
8 Prm ce ton ( 2 1)
72
9Ea s!L v t230 )
55
10 F ndt ay (J OJ
53
Second Ten
11
L o ram
Sen or (l l 5 2
12
(I e l
Y o ung s t o w n
C ard nat
M o on ey and Can to n Gt enOa k
43 e ach
14
Co um bus
E as tm oor J 1 15 Bar ber to n
39
16
Zanesv He 36
17
M1dd eto wn 34
18 Loram
A dm r a1Kn g (1 )3 1 19 ( te l
Cen t erv1tle
( 1J
Cm c mna t 1
La Sal te a nd L a nca ste r
28
each
Others With ten or more
points
Newark
Nor t h
Can ton Ho ov e r
C mc nnat1
Eld er
Ne w Ph tadelph a
C ncmna t
St
Xav er
Ma sS illon G ahanna L n c o l n
( 1)
Nordon a Oregon C l ay
{Il
Yo u n g s t own Chaney
Co l umbus Walnut R1dg e
Par m a Padua
A l l 1an c e
S teubenvil l e
Cant o n
M e K nley
Toledo
St
F ranc s
Sprmgf e d So uth
and w es t erv lt e t 1J
CLASS AA
Team
Pts
1 A k St V nc ( 7 3 0
13 3
2 Norwa tk ( l 2 11
98
3 Toronto ( 1 3 OJ
93
&lt;l Be lla re (2 3 0)
5 M nerva (J OJ
78
6 LO UVIIIeAq ( 1 2 01 )
77
7 NewLex (30 )
64
8 Galhpohs(2 JOJ
57

'"

9 C r c lev tie
54
10 (T e { Cl Bene (2 I }
38
10 (t 1e ) Lo ndon { I J OJ
28
Second
Nine
12
Wheelersburg
R ldgewood
( l) and G1rard .42 each 15
Warr e n Kennedy JO 16 01e l
L ma Central Cathol c and
Cleveland Holy Name
27
each 18 Verm lion 26 19
Wa sh ngton Court House ( 1 J
and Spr ngf l eld Shawnee 22
ea ch
Others w1th ten or more
po.nts Columbus Watterson
8 g Walnut ( 1 l Columbus
Ready
Northwest Stark
O ten!Mgy Medma Highland
(ll
Oberl1n
Ironton
Steubenv He
Cathol c
Y o ungs town L berty
West
Branch a nd Youngstown
Rayen
CLASS A
Team
Pts
1MdFenw(530l
137
2 New Cath (3 OJ
106
3 Rock Park ( 3 2 0 1)
72
4CanWnch {2 30 J
57
5 Monroev1ll ( 1 3 OJ
53
6 Carey (2 3 OJ
45
7Lepsic(130l
41
8 Arl ngton ( 3 0 )
40
9 McDonald (1 2 1)
32
10 R dgemont ( 2 0 1 J
31
Second Ten 11 At len East
{ 1) 29 12 Covmgton 28
13
Tuscarawas Catholic ( 1 J 27
14 Port smouth Notre Dame
23
15
(t1el M nster and
Montpet1er
22 each
17
Bluffton Fa1rport Harbor ( l)
and Lowetl sv l i e 19 each 20
Fremont St J oseph 18
Others w1fh ten or more
po1nh
S dney
Lehman
Garaway ( 1l Cedarv He ( 1)
M ddlef1eld Card nal Un1ted
Loca l Stanton Local L1sbon
Anderson ( 1J New Boston
Glenwood Ottawa H!lls (1)
Mar on Catholic
Mar on
Pleasant Caldwell M nerat
R dge and Loudonv tte

Players may
reject offer
NEW YORK ( UP! ) ~
From the early mdicatwns
the proposed contract offer
made Tuesday by NatiOnal
Football League owners will
be reJected by the players
The first returns on player
~llotmg came m Wednesday
and both the Buffalo Bills and
the Houston Oilers voted to
reJect the contract The Bills
voted 42-1 agamst acceptance
while no totals were released
after the Houston ballottmg
All votes are expected to be
m by next Tuesday
There was no turndown of
our offer by unwn leadership
m ChiCago, ' sa1d Terry
Bledsoe of the Management
Council
Ed
Garvey
(NFLPA execullve director)
told us five mmutes before we

Brewers halted lt-.:han south
paw Fritz Peterson's winning
streak at 11 Scott's homer
his 34th, kept hlm even with
Reggie Jackson for the AL
lead and hiS three RBI moved
him mto a tie with Fred Lynn
for second In that department
with 104 - one behind John
Mayberry
Royals 4, Twl!IS 2
George Brett drove home
three runs Inl!ludmg the
game-Winner llf the eighth
Inning for the Royals, lifting
his RBI total to 89 Brett had
a twO.f'Un triple In the third
and then laced a run-scormg
single to snap a 2-2 lie m the
' eighth

Leaders

C n 106 Staub NY 102 Cey
LA and Parker P t1 101
American League Mayberry
KC 105 Lynn Bos and Scott
M I
104
Rice
Bos
102
Jac kson Oak 101
Stolen Bases
Nat1onal League Lopes LA
76 Morgan c n 65 Bro ck St L
56 Cedeno Hou 49 Cardenal
Ch 34
American League
R vers
Cal 68 Washmgton Oak 40
01 s KC 39 Carew M nn 35
Remy Cat 34
Pitchmg
(Based on most v1ctones)
Nat onat League Seaver NY
21 9 Jones SO 20 11 Messers
m th LA 18 14 Hooton LA 7
9 Reuss P1tl 17 11 Morton
All 17 16
Amer can League
Palmer
Bai t 22 11 Hunter NY 22 14
Blue Oak 21 11 Torrez Batt
20 e Kaat Ch 20 13

How they ran
BEULAH
GROVE CITY Ohio (UP!)
~ Smooth Speed surged
forward m the final 100 yards
and held off a closmg rush by
Jewell s Note Boy to wm the
featured $1,200-&lt;!dded mnth
race by onehaH length at
Beulah Park here Wed
nesday
Pal s
Fantava
Deck
showed
The wmner ridden by
Danny Lang covered the 400
yards m 21 and returned
$14 60 $4 20 and $3 60
The 10-1 dally double
oombmatlon of Super Star
Too and Raealda was worth
$ll5 20

broke that no deciSion had
been taken by umon
leadership on recommending
acceptance or reJectiOn of the
offer Garvey said he was
sending the proposal to the
players Without comment '
New England Patnots'
player rep Randy Vataha
said there would be no
problem about Sunday's
games gomg on but that the
players will have to make up
therr owns mmds on ac
ceptmg or reJectmg the offer
Vataha said the ISSUes still at
large were the Rozelle rule
squad Size and arbitrallon
There was a report ,
THISTLE DOWN
however that the Pats
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
secretly voted to reject the (UP!) ~ Dob1 s Knight won
owners offer
the featured race at Thistle
Down Race Track Wednesday, covenng the SIX
furlongs m 1 12 4 returnmg
$8 60 $4 20 and $3
Rory Glen was second and
Last Mmute Max was third
A daily double combmatlon
of Mean Mama and R1 vers1de
Queen, 11-6 pa1d $69
Attendance was 3 845 and
the dliy's handle was $399 580

FORGET ME NOT PLANTED -Actually It was a ground break111g ceremony Tuesd&amp;y
m New Haven for the soon to be constructed flower ship -Forget Me Not The business Is
owned by DaVId and Joy Russell The building will be 25 by 60 feet made of block and brick
Tentative openmg date will be near the beginning of November Pictured here from let to
r1ght are, Joy Russell, DaVId Russell and usmg the shovel, Shelby Duncan, town recorder
for New Haven

FRIDAY'S GAME'!
Gallipolis at Athens
Ironton at Wellston
Jackson at Logan
Waverly at Meigs
Kyger Creek at Southwestern
North Galha at Symmes
Valley
Miller at Ale,xander
Parkersburg Catholic at
Belpre
Federal Hocking at Eastern
Trimble at VInton County
Wahama at Southern
Pt Pleasant at Huntington
(Thurs )
South Pomt at Wayne
Rock Hill at Ironton St Joe
ceredo Kenova at Coal Grove
Oak Hill at Chesapeake

BY MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

MAN!~ (UPI ) ~ Muhammad All likes to tu rn It on and off
show you Lhat hard dark side of his as well as the soft hght
on&amp; and that s why he ll do so methmg graceless or even "ue l
for no appare nt reason sometimes
Tlus was one of those llme:s 1n his dressmg room c~fter a
workout
He was gethng himself all worked up de h, enng one of those
liTlpasswned sermons he enjoys so much to the members of the
media when with that sharp hear mg of his he happened to
pick up something his kid brother Rahaman was say mg
quietly to the press
Rahaman became so ea rned awm hstemng to hts btg
brothers pearls of wisdom that he beg an urgmg ne\\smen
around hliTI to take notes
Write It wnte It he tn ed persuadmg them
Hearmg that the champion suddenly cut short his O\\n
monologue
Shut up he ordered his brother Don t tell them to " nte
It Don t beg them It doesn t ma tter whether the1 1mte It or
not the fight IS gom on an) way and e1 er) body 111 the 11 orld 1s
M•lor Lugue Leaders
By Un1ted Press 1nternat1ona1
gonna
hear about It
Leading Batters
who aren t aware of the relatiOns hip might thmk there
Those
( based on 425 at bats)
National League
IS some resenlment between Ra haman Ail and his 18-month
g ab r h pet
Madlck Ch 127 500 76 180 360 older brother who defends his hea1 ywe1ght title &lt;~gam.&lt; I Joe
S1mmons St L
Frazier here Oct I (Sept 30m t~e U S 1
154 569 80 189 332
There IS no Ill feelmg between the m \\hatsoe1ei
Sanguttn Pt 131 474 60 156 329
Watson Ho 132 485 67 157 324
Rahaman All who fought With undistmgUished success
Morgan C n 143 489 103 158 323
Garvey LA 157 649 83 207 319 works for his brother and If you ask dmng "hal the ans\\er IS
Joshua SF 126 496 73 158 319 domg anythmg his brother asks !urn to do
Carden! Ch 151 561 83 178 31 7
For this Muahammad Ah ta kes pretl) good ca re of his
Rose Cm
159 651 107 205 31 5
Parker Plf 145 548 75 170 310 brother brmg1ng hrrn alon g on a ll his trips scemg to 1t nobod1
Broc k St L 134 523 77 16 2 310
hassles him and paymg him a ruce r ound $50 OOOa year
Amencan Leavue
g ab r h pet
Rahaman s adm1rallon for hiS big brot her 1s genwne
Carew M n 141 529 89 190 359
Ilove hliTI he tells you right out Hoi\ much' As muc h as
142 517 102 172 333
L ynn Bos
Munson NY 153 582 82 188 323 any man can love his brother You can not possibly put 1t mto
Washmgton Oak
146 581 83 181 31 2 words My love for my brother IS endless
Brett KC
156 621 8.&amp;1 193 311
What about the mc1dent m the dressmg room the othe1 day'
Rice 8os
144 564 92 174 309
What he said to me wa s JUStified says Rahaman He was
McRae KC 126 480 58 147 306
Orl:a Ch1
139 541 64 165 305 correct I know my brother and I know he mea ns form} good
Hargrov Tx 142 507 79 154 304
When the champ worked out today Hahama n was never
Chambliss NY
146 548 65 166 303 more than a few feet away generally w1th an expressiOn of
Braun M n 132 449 69 136 303
complete rapture on his fa ce Wh en Muhammad d1d h1s s1tups
Home Runs
Nahonal League
Sch m dt
on a trainer stable Rahaman rea ched for h1s brother s shoes
Ph l 38
Kingman
NY 35
Luzmsk1 Phd 34 Benc h Cm and held on to them as if they were the cro\\n je\\els
27 Cey LA and Parker P11t
The two brothers are the only children born to Cassius Mar
25
Amer can League Scott Mil cellus Clay II and his wife Odessa Lee Bemg the older
and Jackson Oak 34 Mayber
Muhammad always has been his mothe r s pet but she has no
ry
KC 33
Bonds
NY 30
less affectiOn for her youn gest son Rahaman
Burroughs Tex 29
Runs Baited In
She has always told us to love one ano th er and sta}
Nat1ona1 League
Luz nsk
tog
ether
he says
Ph I 120 Bench C.n 107 Perez

Tar Heels are ACC's
'underdog of the week'"
RALEIGH, N C (UP!) ~ Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes
There s no question who the has Reisman Trophy wmner
Atlantic Coast Conference Archie Gr1ffm, who, 10
underdog of the week IS as c1dentally, played hiS first
North Carolina, trounced 34-7 collegiate game agalllSt the
by Maryland last week, takes Tar Heels back m 1972on second ... anked Ohio State fllShmg for a school record
Saturday on the Buckeyes 239yards m a 29-14 Ohio State
victory that was North
home ground
Carolma
s only loss of the
Tar Heel Coach Bill Dooley
calls 1t a challenge and an season
GrHfin was a freshman
opportunity ' to face ' the
then
Now he has rushed for
Buckeyes adding 'I don't
think our players will be 100 yards or more m 23
regular season consecutive
awed
Still, Dooley hrrnself sounds game&amp; Ohio State also has
a bit awed m talking about Pete Johnson, a 246-pounder
Ohio State, which has one of who averages 5 3 yards per
the more outstandmg back- carry, and who Dooley calls
the biggest back I've ever
fields I've seen m 20 years of
seen-and I hope I never see
coachUig
First
and
for emost , another one hke hrrn '

Sport Parade

Miami players
'deeply hurt'
By RICK VAN SANT
OXFORD, Ohio (UP! I
M1dAmencan Confere nce
noVIce Ball State may have
picked a bad time to
challenge the Miami Red
skins
Miami 1s mad and out lo
show the football world 1t still
has a team that can wreck
opponents
Redskins coach DICk Crum
Is speakmg m terms of h1s
players bemg deeply hurt
by the 14-13loss last weekend
at M1ch1gsn State that ended
a 24-game unbeaten streak
And so M1am1 IS heavll}
favored to soothe that hurt

b) puttmg the Ball State
Cm d mals to ' li ght here
Sa turda}
E:ve n Ball State coach Dave
McClam a former M1arn1
assiStant says we can t beat
M1am1 unless they beat them
selves
The) Will have to fumble
ha ve passes mt ercepted and
ha ve defensive la pses for us
to beat M1am1 he reasons
They are probabl) the best
tea m that Ball State has e&gt;er
met on the football fie ld
After wa tch mg films of t he
Miami Mich1gan State tLL'isle
McCla m said that wit h a
hreak M1 am1 co uld have ver)
easii) beate n the Spartans

A m erjca n t. eague Stant11ng s
Bv Un t ~d Press ln1ernaho nal
East
W L Pel G 8
8os.1on
93 63 596
Ball m ~re
89 66 57 4 3 ~
N ew York
80 76 513 13
77 78 &lt;197 151 ~
Clevelan d
M wil ukee
65 94 409 29 1
De tro t
57 99 365 36
W es t
W L
Pet G 8
x Oak l and
95 63 601
Kam.as C ty
90 68 570
5
T exas

77
74

82

484

18

Mnnesota
81 47719 2
Ch cago
72 ss 459 22 1
Cat fornia
77 80 456 23
x cl n ched d v ~on f e
Wedn es da y s Res ult s
Bait more a Detro t 1
tst
tw1llght
Det r o t aT
Sa more
2nd
postponed
M Iwaukee 10 Cle~o"e and 3 n ght
Kansas C ty 4 Mtnn esota 1
n gh t
Boston
at
N ew
York
1
pos poned ra n
Oakland 13 Ch cago 2 n g h t
Thu rs days Ga m es
( All T1m u E DT J
Ch cago (Wood 15 70J a 1 Oak
ta n a (Bosman 10 6 J -4 JO p m
Detro 1 BMe 8 12 and Lot ch
12' 18) a Ba ll more ( Aie)( an der
B 8 and Torrez 10 8
2 5 30
pm

Nafib,nat League Standln!ils
Press 1n1ernat10n11

East
W L Pet
)( P tts b ur gh
91 67 516
Ph la d elph a
84 74 532
80 78 510
New Y ork
80 79 503
St Lou s
74 85 465
Chicago
73 86 459
Mon trea l

G B
7

11
111

~

17 h
18 ~

West
W L Pet G B
.: C ncmnat 1 105 54 660
Los An gel es
86 73 541 19
San F r anc sea 77 80 490 21
San Di eg o
70 88 443 34 ~
Atlanta
67 9 l 424 37 2
Houston
63 95 399 o11 12
.: cl n c hed d v s on t ti e
Wednesd.11y 1 Results
Ch cago 1 New Y ork 0
ll
1nn n gs
Montreal 6 St l o u s 2 n i ght
Phlledel p h a 8 P ittsburgh 1
n g ht
C nc nnat 6 Houston 4 night
At lant a 7 San FrM CISCO 6 1St
11 n n lngs twl l g ht
San F ranc sco a t Atlanta 2nd
n igh t cance ll ed re n
Los Ange les 14 San D ego 0
n ght
Thursday s Games
(AU T fme1 EDTl
'"
Sa n F ran c sc o ( Falcone 12 11 l
at San D ego (Sp liner S ll l
10 00 p m

Cl eveland (Hood 6 9 ) a t Boston
( Lee 17 9 ) 7 JO p m
M nneso a ( Goltz 14 41 at
Ka1 sas C tv (Spl llorft 9 9 1
8 30 p m

Area youths can enroll
in gymnastics at Rio
RIO GRANDE - J erry and
Danet te Spencer a husband
and w1fe tea m will be of
fermg gymn asb cs to Rw
Grande
a rea
youths
throughout th1s fall at RIO
Grande College
Classes \\Ill start at Lyne
Ce nters gy mnas ium on
Saturday Oct 4 a t lO 30
a m and will run seven
Sa turday sessiOns
Each session will be 75
mmutes m length Students
age s1x and up are welcome
mt o th e prog ram at a
packa ge pnce of $25 each
Deadline date for regJstrahon
IS Thursday Oct 2 and lhe
reg istratiOn fee must be sent
to the Spencers
Jerry and Danelle ha ve a
long and experienced history
m gymnashcs and educallon
Je rr) gamed a B S Degree
fr om the Uruvers1t y of West
VIr ginia while a member of
th e College s Intercollegiate
gymn astics tea m He was
tw ice nam ed
Mot1cola
Athlete of the Year a South
ern All Around ChampiOn
and m 1965 wa s seventh m
the natiOn on the parallel
bars
Dunng h1s gymnastics
career at the university he
scored over half of his team s
pomts Later he earned an
M S Degree at the Umvers1ty
of West V1r gm1a He IS
curren tly teac hm g a nd
coac hm g 1n Parke r s burg
H1gh School sys tem
Dannett e m 1962 won the

Blubaugh Award, best AllAround Athlete and gained a
ll S Degree from the
University of West Vlrglnla m
1956 Smce that time she has
done
graduate
work,
specializing In dance and has
taught and coached gym
nasllcs for five yeani in the
public schools and pnvatel~
with her husband The couple
now own and operate a
gymnasllcs
studio
In
Parkersburg
Lessons
will Include
begmnlng apparatus work
and tumbling Students will
be grouped by l!IStructors at.
to skill levels
Apphcallons for
the
gymnastics classes are no"
available at RIO Grande
College
Lyne Center
Gymnasium or by writing
Glendale Gymnastics Club,
Rt 1 Box 55 Parkersburg,
West V1rg1ma Checks are to
be made payable to Jerry
Spencer and the application,
plus fee amount sent drrectly
to the Spencers before October 4

ST LOUIS (UP!) ~ The
Spirits of St LoUIS said
Wednesday they have sold &amp;foot-&lt;! forward Gene Goo '
Kennedy to the Utah Stars
Kennedy 26 entermg his
fourth year m pro basketball
averaged 9 4 pomts m 74
games last year

r

Morgan ends long ball slump
By GARY TAYLOR
UP! Sports Wnter
HOUSTON (UP!) - As far
as the Cincmnah Reds are
concerned, Joe Mo rgan s
prophecies can contmue
The sparkplug second
baseman entered his team s
series with the Hou ston
Astros th1s week pred1ctmg
he would crack a homer to
break out of his l on g~Jall
slump
'I needed one more to g1ve
me 16, and I needed one more
RBI to hit 90, he sa1d I
wanted to reach both th ose
before the end of the season
Morgan got bo th Wed
nesday mght--and more He
rapped two hits m two official
\rips drew two walks stole
two bases and scored twice m
leading the Reds to a 6-4 wm
In the locker room after
wards, he made a pia) off
prediction
The best team 1s gonna
wm the playoff and the world

grabbed a ~2 lead on Greg
Gross walk a nd Jerry DaVa
non s double Morga n lmed a
La rry Dierker pitch mto the
left field sea ts to tie the score
agam
K1rb} who wa s lifted for a
pmch hitter m the siXth
r ecorded his te nth wm
because the Reds erupted for
the wmmng runs m that 1n
mng
Ken Griffey r eached on a
fie lder s choice and with two
out Plwnmer doubled a nd
Merv Rette nmund wa lked to
load the bases
Pete Rose then smgled fo r
tv. o runs and Da\ e Con
cepcwn smgled for a third
Reds reliever Pat Darcy
allowed the Ast ros one run
and three hits over three
mmngs and Ra wley East
wick mopped up m the mnth
for h1s 2lsl save

1s the time

to call me lor the best
car msurance value anywhere

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell St
Middleport 0
PH 992 7155
Ike a g ood
ne ghbo
State Farm
1s th ere
IU I Ull II U Ul
CO IIHM
~ 0111 0

1TATI '.1olM

A

N$UlANCI

•

IU 01101 £ lllUIUCf
Cl I 0 ~11
O•

•c

p 71 108

PARK RESERVED

FOR All

SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 27th
UNTIL 5 PM

YOUR BUILDING

"FAMILY OUTING"

NEEDS

I.A.M. &amp; A.W.
LOCAL LODGE NO 598
SO CHARLESTON

STOP IN TODAY

VALLEY

TA ,VIP

w It be the la s\- open day of the 1
fo r RIDE S REDU CED FOR TH

S300 PE R PER SO N

LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

sen es JUSI hke the best team
\\On thts dh tswn he sa 1d
You can take 1t fr om there
The Reds take the da) off
today before begmmng a
reg ula r season e ndm g three
ga me sen es \Hth Atla nta
F nda y The n Its f11 e days
off a nd on to the best-of three
Na t w na l Lea gue pla1off
ser 1es agam st Pt tt ~b 1 gh
next weekend
[ m read) nov.
the 322
hittmg Mm g;w stud
Jhere was li ttle doubt of
that Wednesda)
With the Reds trailing 2-0
because of two Cia) Kirb)
w1ld pitches Morgan led off
the fourth v. 1th a smgle He
stole second mo1e d to third
on a Dan Dnesscn smgle and
scored on a nother hit by
Cesar Geronuno Dnessen
scored v.hen Bill Plwruner
hit a sacnfl ce fl)
In the hfth after Hou.ston

Saturday evening

CAMDEN PARK
•

US 60 WEST - HUNTINGTON

�•

I

..
•

4-.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1975
Wednesdily~ s Baseball Results .
By United Press tnternatiurulll
,...,
Nitional League
( 11 Innings)
New York 000 ooo 000 oo- o so
Chicago
000 000 000 Ol - 1 4 1
Seever, Lockwood ( 111 and
Hodges ; R . Reuschel . Crosby
( l1 l and Mitterwatd, Hosley
(10) . WP -Crosby
(1 -0l.
LP
Lockwood (1 .3) .

?Fm&gt;a""~ ':"· -r' ·
-- .~ ·
·-

•

.

-·-

.

+

I

_,
_,:.

KANSAS CITY , Mo. I UP!)
- Major league baseball
owners met for nearly seven
hours Wednesday and solved
exactly nothing .
The owners and their repre sentatives · heard
a
proposal from the franchise

·- .... l

San Frncst: 003 100 100 &lt;ll-6 IS 1
112 010 ooo 02- 1 12 1

by the day ~ong meeting in
Kansas City Royals owner
Ewing Kauffman's Sheraton
Royal Hotel.

(6th) , Lum (Bth )

San Franc isco at Atlanta. 2nd .
cancelled , rain

- The financial problems of
some teams.
" In all franchise delibera·
lions, expanoion has been
given serious copsideration,"
Kuhn said.
National League President
Chub Feeney said the San
Francisco Giants were expecting to escape their
financial problems with a
real estate deal in Minneapolis in the next week, but
if it fell through the league
was ready to offer financial
assistance to the Giants.
Kuhn recessed the meeting
and said he had no idea when
or where it would be
resumed.

Franchise Committee into
four areas;
- The lack of baseball in
Washington, D. C.
- The overexposure of
baseball in the San Francisco-Oakland area.
- The pending lawsuit
against the American League
in Seattle.

''No, we haven't made a

decision on matters put
before us, " said Kuhn. ''l
wish we had, but I'm not
committee but took no action . surprised that we didn't."
Kuhn broke down the
Commissione r Bowie Kuhn
discussions
concerning the
said he was "not gratified "

Barr ,
Lavelle
(ll)
and.
Rader ; Morton. Beard (6l. Dal
Canton (9). Sosa ( 11 J and
Williams . WP -Sosa (2 -5). LP Barr ( 13 - 14l . HRS Thomas

Philadelphia 200 010 41D-8 14 o

Human resources surveyed

Pittsburgh
lOOOOOOOD-1 61
Christenson ( 11 -Sl and Bates ;
Demery , Brett (61, Ell is (7),
Jones
(9)
and
Oyer . LP Demery {7 -51

51 . HR -Parr i sh (lOth) .

000 213 OOD-6 10 2

Houston
101 101 OOD-4 6 0
Ki rby , Darcy (6), Eastw i ck

(91 and Plummer. Werner (61 ;
Dlerk.er, Konieczny (6 ), York
(8) , Siebert (9) and May . WP .
Kirby (10 ·6) . LP ·Dierker ( 14 16). HR .Morg-.an (16th).

Los Angeles 201 640 lOQ---14 18 o
San Diego
ooo ooo ooo- o 6 J
Rau
115 -9) ~ and
Yeager ,
Folkers, Johnson (4), Metzger
(4), Tomlin (6L Mcintosh (9)
and Kendall ; LP Fo lkers (6 . 11 ) .
HRS -Garvey 2 (16th. 17th), Cey
(25th) .

EIGHTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - Eighth grade cheerleaders of the Meigs Junior
High School this fall are fron\ 1tor, Terri Yeauger, captain, and Cindy Thompson ; ba ck
row, Linda Rosenbaum, Kellie Rought , Vicki Sheets, Dee Sinuns Hnrl Maria I.egar, cocaptain. Advisor for the group is Becky Chisholm, an intern with the Meigs l~cal.()hi o
University Teacher Corps.

Coun c il
Bureau
Serv ices,

on
of

County

citizens center, was elected

Aging, Ohio
Employment

temporary chairperson. The

American

Red

Cross blood program, Meigs

I Seaver just misses no-hitter

Accuquartz
I
Digital
I

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Tom Seaver, the perfectionist, isn't happy about his
latest nirtation with no-hit
fame.
"My job is to win ball
games," said the New York

1
1

I
!
!
I

Ught Years
Ahead In

I

Pr ogram , Meigs

I

Bulova

~

Performance

Mets '

I

21-game

Seaver was relieved arter

Wednesday after pitching six
perfect innings and a nohitter for 8 2-3 innings before
the Mets lost to the Chicago
Cubs 1-0 in II innings. "!want
to pitch a no-hitter but if it
happens, it happens. If it
doesn 't, it doesn't."
Seaver is well-known as his
own worst critiC so to most
observers Wednesday 's
brilliant performance was a
fitting, if unrewardin g,
windup to the 1975 season.

yielding two more hits in the
lOth and the Cubs went on to
win in the lith when Skip
Lockwood walked Bill
Madlock with the bases filled .
Ken Crosby pitched the last
two innings to win his first

I

!
!
1

Seaver had two strikes on
rookie Joe Wallis before
Wallis looped a single to right
field with tw o ,out in the ninth.
It was the third time Seaver
had a no-hitter in the . ninth
without achieving one. He has
four one-hitters to his credit.

winner

I1

game for the Cubs.

Cinc inn at i defeated
Houston 6-4, Philadelphia
beat Pittsburgh 8-1 , Atlanta
topped San Francisco 7~,
Montreal downed St. Louis 6-2

and Los Angeles routed San runs and eight hits in five
Diego 14·0 in other NL games . innings and lost -his fifth
Reds 6, Astros 4
decision for Pittsburgh.
Pete Rose's two,run sin gle
Braves 7. Giants 6
was the big blow of a threeDave May drew a walk off
run six th inning rally whicii Gary Lavelle with two out
lifted Cinci nnati to its 105th and the bases filled in the lith
victory - the most by an NL inning giv ing Atlunta Jts vic team since the 1953 Brooklyn tory . Elias Sosa pitched one
Dodgers. Clay Kirby went inning to receive credit for
five inn ings to score his lOUl th e win while Jim Barr was
victory against six losses the loser for San Francisco.
while Larry Dierker wa s
Dodgers 14, Padres 0
charged with his 16th loss
Steve Garvey knocked in
aguinsl 14 win s.
six runs with a single, double
Phillies B, Pirates I
and two homers and Lee Lacy
Dick Allen knocked in three had four hits in an 18-hil Los
runs with two singles and Angeles attack. Doug Rau
Larry Christenson pitched a won his 15th game and scored
six-hitter for his lith tr iumph his second shutout with a sixfor Philadelphia . Larry hitter while Rich Folkers lost
Demery was tagged for three his lith game for San Diego.

Kirby sixth to win 10
games for Reds
Satin goldlone
fini5h . $295.

THE

I

BULOVA

AC · !

CUQUARTZ DIGITAL is a
most remarkabte ·watch . It
computerizes time with
awesome accuracy . I ts
heart Is a t iny quartz
crystal that vibrates at the
astounding frectuency of
786, 432 cycl es per second.
lt employes a unique one ·
button command display
system. Touch the crown
and the hour and m in utes
light up against the dark~
red screen . P ush it and the
seconds change before
your eyes. Pull it and thE
date fleshes on.
Come in today tor a per .
sonal demonstration .

I

CINCINNATI (UP! ) That much-criticized Cincinnati Red pitching staff
may have more depth than
most experts realize.
When Clay Kirby won his
lOth game Wednesday night
at Houston he became the
sixth Cincinnati pitcher with
victories in double figures
this season. The others are

I

I
l
I

•

Lay Away For
Christmas Now!

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - J J's Nino scored an
easy two~ength victory over
Amnesia Wednesday night to
win the third leg of the
Painesville Series for twoyear.&lt;Jlds at Northfield park.
The winner, driven by Bill
Zendt, paced the mile in 2:04
4-5 and paid $2.80, $2.40 and
$2.40. OLark Freddie was
third.
The final leg of the $12,500
series will be held next week.
The big triple combination
in the tenth race paid $846.80
on the 9-:Hi combination.

Designed
For Cool Weather
Hooded

.

I

interested persons are asked

Nmeteen persons attended Community School, Ohio
a recent meeting of the University Medi cal Linkage
Human Resources Council at Project and the Leading
the Me1gs Inn.
Creek Conservancy District.
Repr ese nte&lt;)';~b,J' .'&gt;'!'he 19
Eleanor Thomas, executive
per:; ons were the BurJau of director of the Meigs County
Voca tional
Rehabilitation Co uncil on Aging, sum~
Co unty
Health marized services available to
Mei gs
Oeparlment. Meigs Com~ older
Meigs
Countians
mun ity Mental
Health through the various senior
Ce n ter, Meig s Planned citizens programs .
Parenthood, Pomeroy
Mrs. Leafy Chasteen, inChamb er of Commerce
formation and referral
Personal
Advoca c ; c oordinator for the se nior

St. Louis
010 000 001-2 9 2
Montreal
00210J00,.;- 6102
Rasmussen , Curtis (61 , Rey
notds (7J and Simmons ; Car
r ithers
( 5 3)
and
Car ter ,
Rudolph (!IJ LP -Rasmussen 15
Cincinnati

SWEAT
SHIRT
Zip Front

Pouch pockets ...
. lined or unlined .
Wash 'n' dry ,

Sizes
Small
thru Size 50
Colors

Kerm 's Korner
•

·~ew York Cothin_g House
POMEROY OHIO

Utility's rate fonnula is
, changed in new eriergy bill

Marathon meet solves nothing

..

11 st, 11 innings)
Atlanta

'·

Fred
Norman ,
Jack
Billingham, Don Gullett,
Gary Nolan and Pat Darcy.
The 1965 Baltimore Orioles
were the last American
League team to have six
pitchers in double figures and
the 1949 St. Louis Cardinals
were the last Nat ional
League team. The six Oriole
double-figure winners in 1965
were Milt Pappas, Steve
Barber, Dave McNally,
Wally Bunker, Stu Miller and
Dick Hall. The Cardinals'
was comprised of Howie
Pollet, Harry Brecheen,
Alpha
Brazle,
George
Munger, Jerry Staley and
Ted Wilks.

tllarlnO/ornlnil
&lt;

to attend . Anyone wishing
more information may call
Mrs. Chasteen at 992-7886.

with sufficient interest and

STORM DOOR KIT

representation of agencies

and organizations within the
county, a formal organization
will be possible. Meigs
County could benefit in that

3611 x 84" plaatlc sheet
with moulding and nalla

better
better
human
of the

RfPLACf WrrH

The next meeting will be
held at 12 noon on Tuesda y,
Oct. 21 at the Meigs Inn . All

1

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start losing weight today or
money back . MONADE X is a
tiny tablet and easy to tak e.
MONADEX will help curb
your desire tor excess food .
Eat le ss - weigh less. Contains no dangerous drugs and
will not make you nervous. No
stre nuou s exercise. Change
your life ... start loday .
MONA DEX cost S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy
size
is ss . oo.
Also
try
AQUA TABS : they work Aenlly
to help you lo se water· bloat.
AQUATABS- a "wa ter pill"
that works n.oo. Both
gu-aranteed and sold by:
Swisher &amp; Loh se Pharmacy •
112 E. Main. Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store · Mid·
dleport . Mail Orders Filled .

Be sure this
marlr of
Safely

~

M%t-©-r§W~

approval ,~I

.
ICICC•111
lM.
ACII't'UC LV1TY OLAZtflll .

141 .
Chicago
001 100 000-- 2 13 4
Oakland
211 430 20x-13 13 1
Jefferson, Hinton (4), VUck ·
ovich (5) and Downing ; Blue,
Todd (7), Lindblad (8), Fingers
{9) and Tenace, Fosse (9) . WP .
Blue (21 · 11 1. LP ·Jefferson (5 ·
11) . HRs .Jackson 2 (33rd, 34th) .
.

..

WNII' . . 01.
CHICAGO IDIIf

8-8:00

sllttt

A contribution to the fund
for shipping clothing and
other items to the Grundy,
Va. children's home was
made by the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport

Fri. &amp; Sat.

'

MOoEL701

Film depicts
smoking effects

FOR ONLY

WOOD BURNING

'18.50

THEY Will RECEIVE 9 MONlltS OF
lltEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL

SUDE·DUT ASH DRAWER •
CAST·IRON GRATES • POR·
CElAIN ENAMH FlNISH •
AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT •
FORCED AIR BlOWER (Op-

• FIREBitlCIHINED FIREBOX
• LARGE SIDHOA.DIMG DOOR

OFFER GOOD AT
ANY

&amp;O~GE

7&lt;

EXPIRES
SEPT. 30, 1975

/Darm 0/ornlng
COAL HEATERS
CLIP

MAIL

------------------------------------.
-The
Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, ,Ohio 45769
Dai~

more and beller heat
for your home.

Also Available
MODEL 523
100 lb. capacity

~ND

Model 617, America 's most
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Ebersbach Hardware
"Everything In Hardware''
110 W. Main , 992·2811 Pomeroy

-------------------------------CnY---------------------------------·
STATL--~-----------ZIP CODL-----------·
NAME
ADDRESS-------------------·- -----------·

lJ

CHECK

1J

POINT PLEASANT - The
film "I'm Sorry Baby" will
be shown at 7 p. m . Tuesday
at the Appalachian Power
Building in Point Pleasant.
The fihn is one of the
services' being offered by the
Stop Smoking Clinic and iS
made available to the general
public in the hopes of helping
mothers understand the
relationship smoking has on
an unborn child. It shows the
drama of a mother and child
and depicts the role smoking
plays in their relationship.
The movie will precede the
regular clinic session. The
public is invited to attend the
movie free of charge.

IN lltE UNITED STATES.

The Be sf There Is I

Regardless which of the 11
models you c:hoose, o WARM '.
MORNING coal heater gives

:
'

·
.
·

OFFER

you

BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
(UP!) - Fullback Bill
Brown, 37, who was released
by the Minnesota Vikings
before the start of training
camp, has officially announced his retirement from
. professional football.
Bro\Vn, a Viking for 13
years, Is the club's all-tin)e
leading rusher and pass
receiver. He , gained 5,757
yards on the ground, and
caught 282 passes for another
3,177 yards.

Class contributes to fund

Nitti DJ.t-ttn .oeou

ttpptllfS
011 tvtry

THE DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

Plent iful, lo'l¥ cost waod becomes the most modern of f~.Jels when bu r r~ed in this
sreat new ci rculator ol WARM MORNING'S .. the Mod ~ I 701!
You'll enjoy t he w~rm floor com'fcrt and ease of heating )Our home with this ultramodern, automatic wood ·burning circ ulator t hat pro~ ides ample heat for up to five
rooms. A buiU -in thermostat automatically controls drall to maintain the d£1Sirl.!d
rate of burning and a three-speed blower !an optional feature) spreads a carpet of
warmth 0\'er the floor'
The be!lutilully. styled cab inet hu a !eng lil stmg parctlain tnamtl fini sh. The 11'111!1
11de door mak~ loading easy !you can put in lirew«&gt;d up to 26" lcnQ!l and ash removal' s 1 cmch w1th the handy a!la.&lt;&gt;ut 11h draw11r. No liner wood heater has ever
been built!

Minnesota
000 000 200-2 8 0
Kansas Citv
002 000 02x- 4 8 o
Hughes , Burgme ier (8) and
Borgmann ; L i ttell , Sadecki (7) ,
McDaniel (7), Mingori
(7),
Pat t in {7J and Sti nson. WP ·
Pat tin ( 10 -10). LP .Hughes ( 16·

Mon.-Thurs.'

SEND ALONG ·THE

(34th) .

2nd

Dear Modern :
This is a copout, but it seems to me you careerists would be
naturals as owners of a smaU town newspaper, with Jack the
editor, you the advertising manager. And then you'd never
worry about transfers.
Of course, there would be other worries, such as red ink
mixed with the printer's ink; irate readers; IS-hour days; and
how to stump for school bonda without losing your biggest
advertiser (who hates kids and taxes).
But you'd never be bored. Take it from a former smalltown editor, who knows! - HELEN
P. S. As for Jack's assumption that the woman follows the
man wherever his jobs leads : most of the time it works out
better that way, even in these liberated times. But com·
promise can uusually bring abo! a solution.

SHATTER·PROOF SAFETY PLASTIC

COLLEGE BOUID

tlonJI) • HOLDS zs ·· WOOD

Detroit at
Baltimore
game. postponed, rain.

••

J.

(8 )
and
Porter ;
Peterson .
Brown (2 ), LaRoche (9) and
Ashby . WP -Colborn (ll -13). LP .
Peterson
( 14 · 8) .
HR - Scott

. (1st game)
D etroit
OlOOOOOOG-1 61
Baltimore
010 052 Oh:-8 10 0
Coleman , L aG r ow {5) and
Freehan; Pa l mer ( 22 · 11) and
Hendricks. LP .Colema n (10 · 18 ).

59

FLEX·D·GLAZ.E

council report.

Fearur es:

at New York , 2,
postponed, .rain
Milwa"Ukee 230 000 005-10 12 1
Cleveland
000 001 20o- J 8 3
Colborn , Austin (7) , Murphy

area !bat offers many opportunities in the other's field. So
instead of fighting over a problem that hasn't arrived why
don't you each put out feelers in places where there mirlbt be
possible transfers? Then, if the promotion comes the mate
who must quit and start over will have a pretty good cbance of
making it in the new location.
Which mate follows, and which leads? That shouid depend
on the joll offer, not sex! A woman has as much right as a man
to be involved In a career.
As for loving your job more than your partner, how can
you compare? You have the best life only when you're happy
with both, and ooe complements the other.- SUE

WHEN GLASS BREAKS IN
SCREEN-STORM DOORS

community services and

IU11111IIhmlfll

Boston

Look~ you're both in " big city" work, which means that
whoever IS transferred, he or she will land in a metropolitan

36 11 x 72" plastic sheet
with moulding and nails

W1/h These Greal

American L eague

M.C.:

STORM WINDOW KIT

munication
and
more
coordination of services in
Meigs County. It is felt that

CIRCULATOR

Linescores

Turns out he expects me to be the "Whither thou goes! 1
will go" type. He said the man ALWAYS takes advanceme~ts
and his wUe follows. It never occurred to him that 1 wouldn't
quit tomorrow, if he got a bigger editorship somewhere else .
Then I asked, "Would YOU quit your job, if my company
gave me a great opportunity in New York? He answered "Are
you kidding? "
'
Well, I'm not kidding, and that's when the battle started If
a woman is expected to leave work she loves because her
husband gets _a promotion to another town, then why shouldn't
a man be willing to qu1t HIS JOb, if the wife has the chance of a
great future elsewhere?
Of course, this led to the inevitable question, which do you
love better, your job or your future husband? And I threw it
right back in his face.
Comments please? - MODERN COUPLE

to Install
Inside or Outside

better com-

projects can be
coordi nated with
utilization of existin g
resources, members

here?"

...

EaS

council consists of agencies
and organizations which are

interested in

A Hypothetical Problem?
Rap:
. My fiance , Jack, and·I bad a terrible argument the other
rught, and unless we settle it, we may break up. What would
you two say to this?
Bo~ Ja~k and I have great jobs that will lead to big oppo~tunil!~ m. our comparues. I'm in advertising and he 's
ed.Jtor of a reg1~al magazme here in the west . It's owned by a
rrudwestern chwn.
. We earn approximately equal salaries. If either of us left
his or her job, we'd have a hard time climbing back up the
ladder .I love my work as much as he loves his.
Talking about ou~ futur,e, Jack mentioned, "When 1 get
transferred to the mam office, we'D live in my hometown near
Chicago ... " And I said, "Whoa, there, what about MY 1·ob out

AMT.___ _

MONEY ORDER
.

SORRY NO REFUND

•

ANGELA W·ILEY

Democrats

recommendation

Rows of bright colored
balloons decorated the lawn
with pink
and white
streamers being featured in
the decorations . Games were

played with prizes going to all
of the children .
A Sesame Street puppet
show with Bert, Ernie and the
Cookie Monster highlighted
the activities . Following the
puppet show, 63 guests were
served a pi cnic supper.
Seated at three tables
decorated with pink and
white paper dolls the guests
were served hotdogs, various
salads and vegetable dishes.
The centerpiece, a twolayered birthday cake, held a
large " Rebecca Sue" doll.
Numerous gifts were
presented to Angela by
relatives, neighbors and
friends.

Family meets
for reunion

After

four

months

of

testimony from consumers,

SAUNDRA KOBY demonstrates Oragami, the oriental
art of paper foldmg. Through this skill, animals can be
made which can then be used to const ruct mobiles . Mrs.
Koby will teach Oragami in the first of the monthly
Parent-Child workshops which begin Sunday at River by .

FA C workshops begin
The fall sessions of the
monthly Parent-Child
Worksho\&gt;s, sponsored by the
French Art Colony will
resume Sunday . This week's
two-hou r
workshop ,
sc heduled from 2 p.m . until 4
p.m . on Sunday will meet at
Riverby .
Featured as the instructor
for this first workshop of the
season will be Mrs. Saundra

Speaker set
HARRISONVILLE
Charles Dowler , superin-

tendent, and Danny Morris,
assistant superintendent,
were speakers at the recent
meeting of the Harrisonville
P.T.O.
Also present for the
meeting and. speaking on the
PEP I Parent Education
Program ) was Mrs. Bonnie
Fisher of the Meigs Teacher
Corps. Classes are being' held
at several locations in the
district on Thursday ~ights
for parents interested in
learning how to assist their
children with reading.

Koby, who will teach the art
of Oragami, which is the
oriental art of paper folding.
Using this special skill , the
class will be able to make
animals that can then be
made into mobiles.
If possible, those attending
should bring a fine tipped
black felt pen and a pair of
manicure scissors. All other

materials will be provided .
There is no charge for
materials or the class

in~

struction.
Small children who come to
t he class should be accompanied by a responsible
teenager or adult.
The
Parent-Child
Workshops at Riverby are
open to all who are interested . It is not necessary
to be a member of the French
Art Colony to attend these

assets is established as
"original" and thereafter not
r e-&lt;!stablished
or
reestimated in succeeding rate
valuations, as in RCN .
" It is the committee's
co nc lus ion

that

electric utilities, fuel suppliers and federal and state
officials, the committee
fou'1_d that RCN is a "complicated, antiquated and
outdated method of fixing
utility rates .
" It is not in the best interest
of Ohio's utility customers,
nor in the long-range interest
of Ohio's utilities, to retain
RCN as the base for utility
ratemaking in Ohio," said a
committee report.
RCN produces revenue requirements by considering
investments not actually
made by utility invest&lt; s and
supported by inves ment
costs not actuaUy paid to
investors by utilities, the
COmmittee noted .
More than 30 other states
and the Federal Power
Commission and Federal

origina l cost, rates in Ohio
will most assuredly not be
any higher than they would
be if RCN were continued ,
would most likely be lower
and definitely lower than they ··
would be if utilities took full
advantage of the RCN law as
it now exists," the report
stated.
Release of the report was

convey the appearance that
they concurred.
•:Tiiat certainly wa s not the
case," said Rep. Paul
Wingard, R-Akron. " We have
anticipated
issuing
a

Support (;enter

•

Elastic

this important subject, and
we expect to have that
statement ready by the weekend."
The proposed formula
would give the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
complete discr e tion in
determinin g the rate of

•

•

Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store "

return utilities are going to

get, taking some of that
determination from the
hands of elected public officials, Republicans said.

992-3106
Middleport, U.

VICKS
VAPORUB

Under the recommended
plan, the cost for utility

'

.

, ''

SALE

REG . $1.09
In 1926, the Ford Motor Co.
put its workers on an eight.
hour day , five-day week
schedule for the first time .

12-2 ROMEX W /GROUND

250 ft. '24.95

89'

3 oz. Jar

TYLENOL

Forthe millions
who should not
~e aspirin;::_
D'~!1:.~--

~-

l~.......

~ ,.,

SAFE, FAST
PAIN RELIEF
SALE

'
Ol.

o~ "' " .

::~~~r

Box 100
REG.

I . . ·"

1/ ~

$1.98

99~
SALE

MYLANTA ANTACID

•169
'

12 oz . Bottle Reg . $2.17

SWITCH BOX

'

DON NAGEL
For diarrhea
SALE
and its
discomforts.
Pleasant
REG.
mint taste.
'1.49
4 oz. bottle

98l

For use with
wire. ( 102)

STAR SUPPLY

RIOPAN ANTACID
TABLETS BOX 100

REG .
$2.39

SALE

'1.89

GERITOL

RACINE, OHIO

IRON AND VITAMIN
TONIC SALE
. .. and so will you when
you wear the Nature
Soie(r)! It's the natural
. way to walk . ... a super
sole full of fool plantin'
pleasure . Take your stand
in blue-denim suede .

REG.
1.19

89~

CONTACT COLD CAPSULES SALE
REG.
20's
•2.29
$2.95
CREST
MINT FlAVOR
3 oz . Tube

PREPARATION-H
OINTMENT 2 oz• .

REL&gt;.
69c

SALE

49'

.

•

-

•

• •

•

•

••

ALL

~

•

BRECK

WALLY (sa m\

·. Nature Sole®

SH

%

OFF

POO

•

Sale Groups For Men, Women , Chi ldren

Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

heritage house
MlDDLEPORT, OHIO,

VILLAGE PHARMACY
PHONE 992-5759
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
t

1sull~~~;:sirJa

DUTTON

See The New
Fall Selection.

Shop Our B~rgain Buys! !

•

a· JO to B: 30 Daily
11 · 00 to 4: 00 Sunday

minority report all along on

recommended process.

•'
HERE OVERNIGHT
' SYRACUSE- Rev. M. C.
; Larimore ami'Mrs. Larimore
: were
overnight g~ests
J recently of Alice and George
• Freeland and other relatives
: and friends in Syracuse. He
; has been a former pastor of
. Syracuse Nazarene Church
· for nine years and their many
friends . extended them a
cordial welcome.

AND SURGICAL

Wh eel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Ba ck Braces
Bedside
Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Traction Equipment

members of the committee
said it was issued so as to

cost" method . All major
electric utilities in Ohio and
the interstate business of
Ohio's telephone companies
are already regulated to
some degree under the

250 ft. '16.50

takes astand

PRESCRIPTION

"a ridiculous turn of events, "

12-2 ROMEX (NMP)

nATURE SOLE®

It would lead utility
customers to believe they will
realize lower utility rates,
they said.
" We don't want to be party
to giving false hope to eon.
sumers," said Rep. Scribner
Fauber, R-Elyria .

Comm uni ca lions
Commission now use the "original

SEE US FOR YOUR
WIRING NEEDS.

OUTLET BOX

under

said Kurfess. Republi can

the committee ,.

RACINE- Descendants of
James C. and Ethelinda
Stone Moore held a family
reunion at the Sutton United
monthly sessions.
Methodist Church Sept. 14
with 50 relatives and friends
attending.
A basket dinner was held at
noon and the afternoon was
spent singing. Music was by
Douglas Circle , Brent Patterson and Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Hager.
The group sang "Happy
Birthday" to Laura Moore
Eiselstein who celebrated her
HAYRIDE ENJOYED
9jstbirthday on Sept. 8. A gift
A hayride and wiener roast
was presented to her by the · of the Hillbillies 4-H Club was
group.
held recently at Forest Acres
Attending were Mr . and Park. Attending were Mr.
Mrs. George Genheimer, Mr. and Mrs. Buster Barrett and
and Mrs. Lawrence Rose, Crystal Roush, Lelia RumMrs. Dana Van Meter, David field, Maxie Dyer, Opal, ·
and Lori Van Meter, Mr. and Patty and Billy, Mary and
Mrs. Roger Grueser, Lisa, Dean Colwell, Mike and Mark
Susie and Jennifer, Harriett McGuire. Games were
Barnett, Paul Moore, Mr. and played .
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Hager, Kim
Follrod, Amy Wagner, Mr .
$1600 PLEDGED
and Mrs. Garrett Circle, Mr .
A pledge 9f $1600 to the
and Mrs. Roger Keller,
building fund was made by
Randy, Rodney and Russell,
the Meigs County Junior Fair
·Mr. and Mrs. Norman Rose,
Board during a meeting held
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr.
Monday night at Meigs High
and Mrs. Robert Lee, Bob
School. Vice President
and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Wood presided when
Dana Fell, Mr. and Mrs .
the board also voted that in
Clarence Grueser , Cecil the future any project
Eiselstein and Mrs. Laura
'.
receiving a grade lower than
Eiselstein, Roy Bookman,
an "A" in the judging will not
Dorothy Bookman Call , Mr.
be eligible for either a grand
and Mrs. Fred Smith, Todd
or reserve champion ribbon.
Tripp, Edna Wolfe, Terry
Patterson, Brent Patterson
and Florence Circle.

..,...,.14,.+..,H14•+..,H14•+..,H14•._

Wed~

nesday, charged House
Minority Leader Charles F .
Kurfess , R.Bowling Green ,
and House GOP members of

The first birthday of Angela
Wiley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Wiley , 8 Bethel
Place. Parkersburg, W. Va.,
and granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Wilbur Bailey,
Pomeroy, was observed with
a party recenUy at the Wiley
residence.

circumvented

Republican viewpoints ,
however, in releasing the

Birthday
honored .

Church of Christ during a
meeting Tuesday night at the
church.
Collecting the articles for
the home is an annual project
of the Men's Fellowship of the
Meigs County Churches of
Christ. The class also will
provide some cookies and
candy for the country store at
the Athens Mental Health
Center on Oct. 2. Contributions are to be at the
church not later than 10 a. m.
that morning.
The annual Christmas
party was set for Dec. 2.
There will be no meeting in
November and the men of the
class will be hosts for the
October meeting.
Mrs. Cathryn Ervin had the
·opening prayer with Mrs.
Grace Hawley reading "We
Do Not Walk Alone"; Mrs.
Eula Rice, "Prayer Changes
Things"; Mrs. Regina Swift,
"Do We Have Enough"; Mrs.
Martha Childs, "Religion In
You". Each member gave
thoughts on something for
which they are thankful.
Mrs . Louise McElhinny
thanked the class for flowers
during her illness. Reported
ill were Tom Bowen, Thelma
Collins, Mrs. Donna RusseU
and Mrs. Mary Meinhart.
Members sang "Happy
BAKE SALE SET
Birthday" to Mrs . Rice .
A bake sale will be held by
Donuts and coffee were the Syracuse Brownie Troop
served by Mrs. McElhinny, 01254 'Saturday at the
Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Ruth Syracuse Post Office, 9 a. m.
Karr.
to 12 noon.

ARTICLES NEEDED
Articles are still needed for
. an auction sale to be staged
· Saturday beginning at noon'
· at the Meigs County Senior
Citizeno Center in Pomeroy.
Persons having contributions , . . .
are asked to call 992-7884, 9927886 or they may take their
· donations to the center.
· Lunch will be available. Jim
:. Carnahan and Dan Smith,
; auctioneers, have donated
' their services for the auction.

COLUMBUS IUPI )
Enactment of legislation to
replace the cu~rent Reconstruction Cost New (RCN 1
utility rate-making formula
with one consisting only of the
original cost of a utility's
tangible assets has been
recommended by the HouseSenate Select Committee on
Energy .

\

r

�•

I

..
•

4-.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1975
Wednesdily~ s Baseball Results .
By United Press tnternatiurulll
,...,
Nitional League
( 11 Innings)
New York 000 ooo 000 oo- o so
Chicago
000 000 000 Ol - 1 4 1
Seever, Lockwood ( 111 and
Hodges ; R . Reuschel . Crosby
( l1 l and Mitterwatd, Hosley
(10) . WP -Crosby
(1 -0l.
LP
Lockwood (1 .3) .

?Fm&gt;a""~ ':"· -r' ·
-- .~ ·
·-

•

.

-·-

.

+

I

_,
_,:.

KANSAS CITY , Mo. I UP!)
- Major league baseball
owners met for nearly seven
hours Wednesday and solved
exactly nothing .
The owners and their repre sentatives · heard
a
proposal from the franchise

·- .... l

San Frncst: 003 100 100 &lt;ll-6 IS 1
112 010 ooo 02- 1 12 1

by the day ~ong meeting in
Kansas City Royals owner
Ewing Kauffman's Sheraton
Royal Hotel.

(6th) , Lum (Bth )

San Franc isco at Atlanta. 2nd .
cancelled , rain

- The financial problems of
some teams.
" In all franchise delibera·
lions, expanoion has been
given serious copsideration,"
Kuhn said.
National League President
Chub Feeney said the San
Francisco Giants were expecting to escape their
financial problems with a
real estate deal in Minneapolis in the next week, but
if it fell through the league
was ready to offer financial
assistance to the Giants.
Kuhn recessed the meeting
and said he had no idea when
or where it would be
resumed.

Franchise Committee into
four areas;
- The lack of baseball in
Washington, D. C.
- The overexposure of
baseball in the San Francisco-Oakland area.
- The pending lawsuit
against the American League
in Seattle.

''No, we haven't made a

decision on matters put
before us, " said Kuhn. ''l
wish we had, but I'm not
committee but took no action . surprised that we didn't."
Kuhn broke down the
Commissione r Bowie Kuhn
discussions
concerning the
said he was "not gratified "

Barr ,
Lavelle
(ll)
and.
Rader ; Morton. Beard (6l. Dal
Canton (9). Sosa ( 11 J and
Williams . WP -Sosa (2 -5). LP Barr ( 13 - 14l . HRS Thomas

Philadelphia 200 010 41D-8 14 o

Human resources surveyed

Pittsburgh
lOOOOOOOD-1 61
Christenson ( 11 -Sl and Bates ;
Demery , Brett (61, Ell is (7),
Jones
(9)
and
Oyer . LP Demery {7 -51

51 . HR -Parr i sh (lOth) .

000 213 OOD-6 10 2

Houston
101 101 OOD-4 6 0
Ki rby , Darcy (6), Eastw i ck

(91 and Plummer. Werner (61 ;
Dlerk.er, Konieczny (6 ), York
(8) , Siebert (9) and May . WP .
Kirby (10 ·6) . LP ·Dierker ( 14 16). HR .Morg-.an (16th).

Los Angeles 201 640 lOQ---14 18 o
San Diego
ooo ooo ooo- o 6 J
Rau
115 -9) ~ and
Yeager ,
Folkers, Johnson (4), Metzger
(4), Tomlin (6L Mcintosh (9)
and Kendall ; LP Fo lkers (6 . 11 ) .
HRS -Garvey 2 (16th. 17th), Cey
(25th) .

EIGHTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS - Eighth grade cheerleaders of the Meigs Junior
High School this fall are fron\ 1tor, Terri Yeauger, captain, and Cindy Thompson ; ba ck
row, Linda Rosenbaum, Kellie Rought , Vicki Sheets, Dee Sinuns Hnrl Maria I.egar, cocaptain. Advisor for the group is Becky Chisholm, an intern with the Meigs l~cal.()hi o
University Teacher Corps.

Coun c il
Bureau
Serv ices,

on
of

County

citizens center, was elected

Aging, Ohio
Employment

temporary chairperson. The

American

Red

Cross blood program, Meigs

I Seaver just misses no-hitter

Accuquartz
I
Digital
I

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Tom Seaver, the perfectionist, isn't happy about his
latest nirtation with no-hit
fame.
"My job is to win ball
games," said the New York

1
1

I
!
!
I

Ught Years
Ahead In

I

Pr ogram , Meigs

I

Bulova

~

Performance

Mets '

I

21-game

Seaver was relieved arter

Wednesday after pitching six
perfect innings and a nohitter for 8 2-3 innings before
the Mets lost to the Chicago
Cubs 1-0 in II innings. "!want
to pitch a no-hitter but if it
happens, it happens. If it
doesn 't, it doesn't."
Seaver is well-known as his
own worst critiC so to most
observers Wednesday 's
brilliant performance was a
fitting, if unrewardin g,
windup to the 1975 season.

yielding two more hits in the
lOth and the Cubs went on to
win in the lith when Skip
Lockwood walked Bill
Madlock with the bases filled .
Ken Crosby pitched the last
two innings to win his first

I

!
!
1

Seaver had two strikes on
rookie Joe Wallis before
Wallis looped a single to right
field with tw o ,out in the ninth.
It was the third time Seaver
had a no-hitter in the . ninth
without achieving one. He has
four one-hitters to his credit.

winner

I1

game for the Cubs.

Cinc inn at i defeated
Houston 6-4, Philadelphia
beat Pittsburgh 8-1 , Atlanta
topped San Francisco 7~,
Montreal downed St. Louis 6-2

and Los Angeles routed San runs and eight hits in five
Diego 14·0 in other NL games . innings and lost -his fifth
Reds 6, Astros 4
decision for Pittsburgh.
Pete Rose's two,run sin gle
Braves 7. Giants 6
was the big blow of a threeDave May drew a walk off
run six th inning rally whicii Gary Lavelle with two out
lifted Cinci nnati to its 105th and the bases filled in the lith
victory - the most by an NL inning giv ing Atlunta Jts vic team since the 1953 Brooklyn tory . Elias Sosa pitched one
Dodgers. Clay Kirby went inning to receive credit for
five inn ings to score his lOUl th e win while Jim Barr was
victory against six losses the loser for San Francisco.
while Larry Dierker wa s
Dodgers 14, Padres 0
charged with his 16th loss
Steve Garvey knocked in
aguinsl 14 win s.
six runs with a single, double
Phillies B, Pirates I
and two homers and Lee Lacy
Dick Allen knocked in three had four hits in an 18-hil Los
runs with two singles and Angeles attack. Doug Rau
Larry Christenson pitched a won his 15th game and scored
six-hitter for his lith tr iumph his second shutout with a sixfor Philadelphia . Larry hitter while Rich Folkers lost
Demery was tagged for three his lith game for San Diego.

Kirby sixth to win 10
games for Reds
Satin goldlone
fini5h . $295.

THE

I

BULOVA

AC · !

CUQUARTZ DIGITAL is a
most remarkabte ·watch . It
computerizes time with
awesome accuracy . I ts
heart Is a t iny quartz
crystal that vibrates at the
astounding frectuency of
786, 432 cycl es per second.
lt employes a unique one ·
button command display
system. Touch the crown
and the hour and m in utes
light up against the dark~
red screen . P ush it and the
seconds change before
your eyes. Pull it and thE
date fleshes on.
Come in today tor a per .
sonal demonstration .

I

CINCINNATI (UP! ) That much-criticized Cincinnati Red pitching staff
may have more depth than
most experts realize.
When Clay Kirby won his
lOth game Wednesday night
at Houston he became the
sixth Cincinnati pitcher with
victories in double figures
this season. The others are

I

I
l
I

•

Lay Away For
Christmas Now!

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St., Pomeroy

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - J J's Nino scored an
easy two~ength victory over
Amnesia Wednesday night to
win the third leg of the
Painesville Series for twoyear.&lt;Jlds at Northfield park.
The winner, driven by Bill
Zendt, paced the mile in 2:04
4-5 and paid $2.80, $2.40 and
$2.40. OLark Freddie was
third.
The final leg of the $12,500
series will be held next week.
The big triple combination
in the tenth race paid $846.80
on the 9-:Hi combination.

Designed
For Cool Weather
Hooded

.

I

interested persons are asked

Nmeteen persons attended Community School, Ohio
a recent meeting of the University Medi cal Linkage
Human Resources Council at Project and the Leading
the Me1gs Inn.
Creek Conservancy District.
Repr ese nte&lt;)';~b,J' .'&gt;'!'he 19
Eleanor Thomas, executive
per:; ons were the BurJau of director of the Meigs County
Voca tional
Rehabilitation Co uncil on Aging, sum~
Co unty
Health marized services available to
Mei gs
Oeparlment. Meigs Com~ older
Meigs
Countians
mun ity Mental
Health through the various senior
Ce n ter, Meig s Planned citizens programs .
Parenthood, Pomeroy
Mrs. Leafy Chasteen, inChamb er of Commerce
formation and referral
Personal
Advoca c ; c oordinator for the se nior

St. Louis
010 000 001-2 9 2
Montreal
00210J00,.;- 6102
Rasmussen , Curtis (61 , Rey
notds (7J and Simmons ; Car
r ithers
( 5 3)
and
Car ter ,
Rudolph (!IJ LP -Rasmussen 15
Cincinnati

SWEAT
SHIRT
Zip Front

Pouch pockets ...
. lined or unlined .
Wash 'n' dry ,

Sizes
Small
thru Size 50
Colors

Kerm 's Korner
•

·~ew York Cothin_g House
POMEROY OHIO

Utility's rate fonnula is
, changed in new eriergy bill

Marathon meet solves nothing

..

11 st, 11 innings)
Atlanta

'·

Fred
Norman ,
Jack
Billingham, Don Gullett,
Gary Nolan and Pat Darcy.
The 1965 Baltimore Orioles
were the last American
League team to have six
pitchers in double figures and
the 1949 St. Louis Cardinals
were the last Nat ional
League team. The six Oriole
double-figure winners in 1965
were Milt Pappas, Steve
Barber, Dave McNally,
Wally Bunker, Stu Miller and
Dick Hall. The Cardinals'
was comprised of Howie
Pollet, Harry Brecheen,
Alpha
Brazle,
George
Munger, Jerry Staley and
Ted Wilks.

tllarlnO/ornlnil
&lt;

to attend . Anyone wishing
more information may call
Mrs. Chasteen at 992-7886.

with sufficient interest and

STORM DOOR KIT

representation of agencies

and organizations within the
county, a formal organization
will be possible. Meigs
County could benefit in that

3611 x 84" plaatlc sheet
with moulding and nalla

better
better
human
of the

RfPLACf WrrH

The next meeting will be
held at 12 noon on Tuesda y,
Oct. 21 at the Meigs Inn . All

1

LOSE UGLY FAT
Start losing weight today or
money back . MONADE X is a
tiny tablet and easy to tak e.
MONADEX will help curb
your desire tor excess food .
Eat le ss - weigh less. Contains no dangerous drugs and
will not make you nervous. No
stre nuou s exercise. Change
your life ... start loday .
MONA DEX cost S3.00 for a 20
day supply . Large economy
size
is ss . oo.
Also
try
AQUA TABS : they work Aenlly
to help you lo se water· bloat.
AQUATABS- a "wa ter pill"
that works n.oo. Both
gu-aranteed and sold by:
Swisher &amp; Loh se Pharmacy •
112 E. Main. Pomeroy &amp;
Dutton Drug Store · Mid·
dleport . Mail Orders Filled .

Be sure this
marlr of
Safely

~

M%t-©-r§W~

approval ,~I

.
ICICC•111
lM.
ACII't'UC LV1TY OLAZtflll .

141 .
Chicago
001 100 000-- 2 13 4
Oakland
211 430 20x-13 13 1
Jefferson, Hinton (4), VUck ·
ovich (5) and Downing ; Blue,
Todd (7), Lindblad (8), Fingers
{9) and Tenace, Fosse (9) . WP .
Blue (21 · 11 1. LP ·Jefferson (5 ·
11) . HRs .Jackson 2 (33rd, 34th) .
.

..

WNII' . . 01.
CHICAGO IDIIf

8-8:00

sllttt

A contribution to the fund
for shipping clothing and
other items to the Grundy,
Va. children's home was
made by the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport

Fri. &amp; Sat.

'

MOoEL701

Film depicts
smoking effects

FOR ONLY

WOOD BURNING

'18.50

THEY Will RECEIVE 9 MONlltS OF
lltEIR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER
BY MAIL

SUDE·DUT ASH DRAWER •
CAST·IRON GRATES • POR·
CElAIN ENAMH FlNISH •
AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT •
FORCED AIR BlOWER (Op-

• FIREBitlCIHINED FIREBOX
• LARGE SIDHOA.DIMG DOOR

OFFER GOOD AT
ANY

&amp;O~GE

7&lt;

EXPIRES
SEPT. 30, 1975

/Darm 0/ornlng
COAL HEATERS
CLIP

MAIL

------------------------------------.
-The
Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, ,Ohio 45769
Dai~

more and beller heat
for your home.

Also Available
MODEL 523
100 lb. capacity

~ND

Model 617, America 's most
popular .AO lb . capacity·ra•
diant ~ coal heater.

Ebersbach Hardware
"Everything In Hardware''
110 W. Main , 992·2811 Pomeroy

-------------------------------CnY---------------------------------·
STATL--~-----------ZIP CODL-----------·
NAME
ADDRESS-------------------·- -----------·

lJ

CHECK

1J

POINT PLEASANT - The
film "I'm Sorry Baby" will
be shown at 7 p. m . Tuesday
at the Appalachian Power
Building in Point Pleasant.
The fihn is one of the
services' being offered by the
Stop Smoking Clinic and iS
made available to the general
public in the hopes of helping
mothers understand the
relationship smoking has on
an unborn child. It shows the
drama of a mother and child
and depicts the role smoking
plays in their relationship.
The movie will precede the
regular clinic session. The
public is invited to attend the
movie free of charge.

IN lltE UNITED STATES.

The Be sf There Is I

Regardless which of the 11
models you c:hoose, o WARM '.
MORNING coal heater gives

:
'

·
.
·

OFFER

you

BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
(UP!) - Fullback Bill
Brown, 37, who was released
by the Minnesota Vikings
before the start of training
camp, has officially announced his retirement from
. professional football.
Bro\Vn, a Viking for 13
years, Is the club's all-tin)e
leading rusher and pass
receiver. He , gained 5,757
yards on the ground, and
caught 282 passes for another
3,177 yards.

Class contributes to fund

Nitti DJ.t-ttn .oeou

ttpptllfS
011 tvtry

THE DAILY SENTINEL
AND SUNDAY TIMES SENTINEL

Plent iful, lo'l¥ cost waod becomes the most modern of f~.Jels when bu r r~ed in this
sreat new ci rculator ol WARM MORNING'S .. the Mod ~ I 701!
You'll enjoy t he w~rm floor com'fcrt and ease of heating )Our home with this ultramodern, automatic wood ·burning circ ulator t hat pro~ ides ample heat for up to five
rooms. A buiU -in thermostat automatically controls drall to maintain the d£1Sirl.!d
rate of burning and a three-speed blower !an optional feature) spreads a carpet of
warmth 0\'er the floor'
The be!lutilully. styled cab inet hu a !eng lil stmg parctlain tnamtl fini sh. The 11'111!1
11de door mak~ loading easy !you can put in lirew«&gt;d up to 26" lcnQ!l and ash removal' s 1 cmch w1th the handy a!la.&lt;&gt;ut 11h draw11r. No liner wood heater has ever
been built!

Minnesota
000 000 200-2 8 0
Kansas Citv
002 000 02x- 4 8 o
Hughes , Burgme ier (8) and
Borgmann ; L i ttell , Sadecki (7) ,
McDaniel (7), Mingori
(7),
Pat t in {7J and Sti nson. WP ·
Pat tin ( 10 -10). LP .Hughes ( 16·

Mon.-Thurs.'

SEND ALONG ·THE

(34th) .

2nd

Dear Modern :
This is a copout, but it seems to me you careerists would be
naturals as owners of a smaU town newspaper, with Jack the
editor, you the advertising manager. And then you'd never
worry about transfers.
Of course, there would be other worries, such as red ink
mixed with the printer's ink; irate readers; IS-hour days; and
how to stump for school bonda without losing your biggest
advertiser (who hates kids and taxes).
But you'd never be bored. Take it from a former smalltown editor, who knows! - HELEN
P. S. As for Jack's assumption that the woman follows the
man wherever his jobs leads : most of the time it works out
better that way, even in these liberated times. But com·
promise can uusually bring abo! a solution.

SHATTER·PROOF SAFETY PLASTIC

COLLEGE BOUID

tlonJI) • HOLDS zs ·· WOOD

Detroit at
Baltimore
game. postponed, rain.

••

J.

(8 )
and
Porter ;
Peterson .
Brown (2 ), LaRoche (9) and
Ashby . WP -Colborn (ll -13). LP .
Peterson
( 14 · 8) .
HR - Scott

. (1st game)
D etroit
OlOOOOOOG-1 61
Baltimore
010 052 Oh:-8 10 0
Coleman , L aG r ow {5) and
Freehan; Pa l mer ( 22 · 11) and
Hendricks. LP .Colema n (10 · 18 ).

59

FLEX·D·GLAZ.E

council report.

Fearur es:

at New York , 2,
postponed, .rain
Milwa"Ukee 230 000 005-10 12 1
Cleveland
000 001 20o- J 8 3
Colborn , Austin (7) , Murphy

area !bat offers many opportunities in the other's field. So
instead of fighting over a problem that hasn't arrived why
don't you each put out feelers in places where there mirlbt be
possible transfers? Then, if the promotion comes the mate
who must quit and start over will have a pretty good cbance of
making it in the new location.
Which mate follows, and which leads? That shouid depend
on the joll offer, not sex! A woman has as much right as a man
to be involved In a career.
As for loving your job more than your partner, how can
you compare? You have the best life only when you're happy
with both, and ooe complements the other.- SUE

WHEN GLASS BREAKS IN
SCREEN-STORM DOORS

community services and

IU11111IIhmlfll

Boston

Look~ you're both in " big city" work, which means that
whoever IS transferred, he or she will land in a metropolitan

36 11 x 72" plastic sheet
with moulding and nails

W1/h These Greal

American L eague

M.C.:

STORM WINDOW KIT

munication
and
more
coordination of services in
Meigs County. It is felt that

CIRCULATOR

Linescores

Turns out he expects me to be the "Whither thou goes! 1
will go" type. He said the man ALWAYS takes advanceme~ts
and his wUe follows. It never occurred to him that 1 wouldn't
quit tomorrow, if he got a bigger editorship somewhere else .
Then I asked, "Would YOU quit your job, if my company
gave me a great opportunity in New York? He answered "Are
you kidding? "
'
Well, I'm not kidding, and that's when the battle started If
a woman is expected to leave work she loves because her
husband gets _a promotion to another town, then why shouldn't
a man be willing to qu1t HIS JOb, if the wife has the chance of a
great future elsewhere?
Of course, this led to the inevitable question, which do you
love better, your job or your future husband? And I threw it
right back in his face.
Comments please? - MODERN COUPLE

to Install
Inside or Outside

better com-

projects can be
coordi nated with
utilization of existin g
resources, members

here?"

...

EaS

council consists of agencies
and organizations which are

interested in

A Hypothetical Problem?
Rap:
. My fiance , Jack, and·I bad a terrible argument the other
rught, and unless we settle it, we may break up. What would
you two say to this?
Bo~ Ja~k and I have great jobs that will lead to big oppo~tunil!~ m. our comparues. I'm in advertising and he 's
ed.Jtor of a reg1~al magazme here in the west . It's owned by a
rrudwestern chwn.
. We earn approximately equal salaries. If either of us left
his or her job, we'd have a hard time climbing back up the
ladder .I love my work as much as he loves his.
Talking about ou~ futur,e, Jack mentioned, "When 1 get
transferred to the mam office, we'D live in my hometown near
Chicago ... " And I said, "Whoa, there, what about MY 1·ob out

AMT.___ _

MONEY ORDER
.

SORRY NO REFUND

•

ANGELA W·ILEY

Democrats

recommendation

Rows of bright colored
balloons decorated the lawn
with pink
and white
streamers being featured in
the decorations . Games were

played with prizes going to all
of the children .
A Sesame Street puppet
show with Bert, Ernie and the
Cookie Monster highlighted
the activities . Following the
puppet show, 63 guests were
served a pi cnic supper.
Seated at three tables
decorated with pink and
white paper dolls the guests
were served hotdogs, various
salads and vegetable dishes.
The centerpiece, a twolayered birthday cake, held a
large " Rebecca Sue" doll.
Numerous gifts were
presented to Angela by
relatives, neighbors and
friends.

Family meets
for reunion

After

four

months

of

testimony from consumers,

SAUNDRA KOBY demonstrates Oragami, the oriental
art of paper foldmg. Through this skill, animals can be
made which can then be used to const ruct mobiles . Mrs.
Koby will teach Oragami in the first of the monthly
Parent-Child workshops which begin Sunday at River by .

FA C workshops begin
The fall sessions of the
monthly Parent-Child
Worksho\&gt;s, sponsored by the
French Art Colony will
resume Sunday . This week's
two-hou r
workshop ,
sc heduled from 2 p.m . until 4
p.m . on Sunday will meet at
Riverby .
Featured as the instructor
for this first workshop of the
season will be Mrs. Saundra

Speaker set
HARRISONVILLE
Charles Dowler , superin-

tendent, and Danny Morris,
assistant superintendent,
were speakers at the recent
meeting of the Harrisonville
P.T.O.
Also present for the
meeting and. speaking on the
PEP I Parent Education
Program ) was Mrs. Bonnie
Fisher of the Meigs Teacher
Corps. Classes are being' held
at several locations in the
district on Thursday ~ights
for parents interested in
learning how to assist their
children with reading.

Koby, who will teach the art
of Oragami, which is the
oriental art of paper folding.
Using this special skill , the
class will be able to make
animals that can then be
made into mobiles.
If possible, those attending
should bring a fine tipped
black felt pen and a pair of
manicure scissors. All other

materials will be provided .
There is no charge for
materials or the class

in~

struction.
Small children who come to
t he class should be accompanied by a responsible
teenager or adult.
The
Parent-Child
Workshops at Riverby are
open to all who are interested . It is not necessary
to be a member of the French
Art Colony to attend these

assets is established as
"original" and thereafter not
r e-&lt;!stablished
or
reestimated in succeeding rate
valuations, as in RCN .
" It is the committee's
co nc lus ion

that

electric utilities, fuel suppliers and federal and state
officials, the committee
fou'1_d that RCN is a "complicated, antiquated and
outdated method of fixing
utility rates .
" It is not in the best interest
of Ohio's utility customers,
nor in the long-range interest
of Ohio's utilities, to retain
RCN as the base for utility
ratemaking in Ohio," said a
committee report.
RCN produces revenue requirements by considering
investments not actually
made by utility invest&lt; s and
supported by inves ment
costs not actuaUy paid to
investors by utilities, the
COmmittee noted .
More than 30 other states
and the Federal Power
Commission and Federal

origina l cost, rates in Ohio
will most assuredly not be
any higher than they would
be if RCN were continued ,
would most likely be lower
and definitely lower than they ··
would be if utilities took full
advantage of the RCN law as
it now exists," the report
stated.
Release of the report was

convey the appearance that
they concurred.
•:Tiiat certainly wa s not the
case," said Rep. Paul
Wingard, R-Akron. " We have
anticipated
issuing
a

Support (;enter

•

Elastic

this important subject, and
we expect to have that
statement ready by the weekend."
The proposed formula
would give the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
complete discr e tion in
determinin g the rate of

•

•

Drug Co.
"Your
Prescription
Drug Store "

return utilities are going to

get, taking some of that
determination from the
hands of elected public officials, Republicans said.

992-3106
Middleport, U.

VICKS
VAPORUB

Under the recommended
plan, the cost for utility

'

.

, ''

SALE

REG . $1.09
In 1926, the Ford Motor Co.
put its workers on an eight.
hour day , five-day week
schedule for the first time .

12-2 ROMEX W /GROUND

250 ft. '24.95

89'

3 oz. Jar

TYLENOL

Forthe millions
who should not
~e aspirin;::_
D'~!1:.~--

~-

l~.......

~ ,.,

SAFE, FAST
PAIN RELIEF
SALE

'
Ol.

o~ "' " .

::~~~r

Box 100
REG.

I . . ·"

1/ ~

$1.98

99~
SALE

MYLANTA ANTACID

•169
'

12 oz . Bottle Reg . $2.17

SWITCH BOX

'

DON NAGEL
For diarrhea
SALE
and its
discomforts.
Pleasant
REG.
mint taste.
'1.49
4 oz. bottle

98l

For use with
wire. ( 102)

STAR SUPPLY

RIOPAN ANTACID
TABLETS BOX 100

REG .
$2.39

SALE

'1.89

GERITOL

RACINE, OHIO

IRON AND VITAMIN
TONIC SALE
. .. and so will you when
you wear the Nature
Soie(r)! It's the natural
. way to walk . ... a super
sole full of fool plantin'
pleasure . Take your stand
in blue-denim suede .

REG.
1.19

89~

CONTACT COLD CAPSULES SALE
REG.
20's
•2.29
$2.95
CREST
MINT FlAVOR
3 oz . Tube

PREPARATION-H
OINTMENT 2 oz• .

REL&gt;.
69c

SALE

49'

.

•

-

•

• •

•

•

••

ALL

~

•

BRECK

WALLY (sa m\

·. Nature Sole®

SH

%

OFF

POO

•

Sale Groups For Men, Women , Chi ldren

Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

heritage house
MlDDLEPORT, OHIO,

VILLAGE PHARMACY
PHONE 992-5759
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
t

1sull~~~;:sirJa

DUTTON

See The New
Fall Selection.

Shop Our B~rgain Buys! !

•

a· JO to B: 30 Daily
11 · 00 to 4: 00 Sunday

minority report all along on

recommended process.

•'
HERE OVERNIGHT
' SYRACUSE- Rev. M. C.
; Larimore ami'Mrs. Larimore
: were
overnight g~ests
J recently of Alice and George
• Freeland and other relatives
: and friends in Syracuse. He
; has been a former pastor of
. Syracuse Nazarene Church
· for nine years and their many
friends . extended them a
cordial welcome.

AND SURGICAL

Wh eel Chairs
Walkers
Crutches and Canes
Ba ck Braces
Bedside
Commodes
Support Stockings
Trusses
Traction Equipment

members of the committee
said it was issued so as to

cost" method . All major
electric utilities in Ohio and
the interstate business of
Ohio's telephone companies
are already regulated to
some degree under the

250 ft. '16.50

takes astand

PRESCRIPTION

"a ridiculous turn of events, "

12-2 ROMEX (NMP)

nATURE SOLE®

It would lead utility
customers to believe they will
realize lower utility rates,
they said.
" We don't want to be party
to giving false hope to eon.
sumers," said Rep. Scribner
Fauber, R-Elyria .

Comm uni ca lions
Commission now use the "original

SEE US FOR YOUR
WIRING NEEDS.

OUTLET BOX

under

said Kurfess. Republi can

the committee ,.

RACINE- Descendants of
James C. and Ethelinda
Stone Moore held a family
reunion at the Sutton United
monthly sessions.
Methodist Church Sept. 14
with 50 relatives and friends
attending.
A basket dinner was held at
noon and the afternoon was
spent singing. Music was by
Douglas Circle , Brent Patterson and Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Hager.
The group sang "Happy
Birthday" to Laura Moore
Eiselstein who celebrated her
HAYRIDE ENJOYED
9jstbirthday on Sept. 8. A gift
A hayride and wiener roast
was presented to her by the · of the Hillbillies 4-H Club was
group.
held recently at Forest Acres
Attending were Mr . and Park. Attending were Mr.
Mrs. George Genheimer, Mr. and Mrs. Buster Barrett and
and Mrs. Lawrence Rose, Crystal Roush, Lelia RumMrs. Dana Van Meter, David field, Maxie Dyer, Opal, ·
and Lori Van Meter, Mr. and Patty and Billy, Mary and
Mrs. Roger Grueser, Lisa, Dean Colwell, Mike and Mark
Susie and Jennifer, Harriett McGuire. Games were
Barnett, Paul Moore, Mr. and played .
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Hager, Kim
Follrod, Amy Wagner, Mr .
$1600 PLEDGED
and Mrs. Garrett Circle, Mr .
A pledge 9f $1600 to the
and Mrs. Roger Keller,
building fund was made by
Randy, Rodney and Russell,
the Meigs County Junior Fair
·Mr. and Mrs. Norman Rose,
Board during a meeting held
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr.
Monday night at Meigs High
and Mrs. Robert Lee, Bob
School. Vice President
and Becky, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Wood presided when
Dana Fell, Mr. and Mrs .
the board also voted that in
Clarence Grueser , Cecil the future any project
Eiselstein and Mrs. Laura
'.
receiving a grade lower than
Eiselstein, Roy Bookman,
an "A" in the judging will not
Dorothy Bookman Call , Mr.
be eligible for either a grand
and Mrs. Fred Smith, Todd
or reserve champion ribbon.
Tripp, Edna Wolfe, Terry
Patterson, Brent Patterson
and Florence Circle.

..,...,.14,.+..,H14•+..,H14•+..,H14•._

Wed~

nesday, charged House
Minority Leader Charles F .
Kurfess , R.Bowling Green ,
and House GOP members of

The first birthday of Angela
Wiley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Wiley , 8 Bethel
Place. Parkersburg, W. Va.,
and granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Wilbur Bailey,
Pomeroy, was observed with
a party recenUy at the Wiley
residence.

circumvented

Republican viewpoints ,
however, in releasing the

Birthday
honored .

Church of Christ during a
meeting Tuesday night at the
church.
Collecting the articles for
the home is an annual project
of the Men's Fellowship of the
Meigs County Churches of
Christ. The class also will
provide some cookies and
candy for the country store at
the Athens Mental Health
Center on Oct. 2. Contributions are to be at the
church not later than 10 a. m.
that morning.
The annual Christmas
party was set for Dec. 2.
There will be no meeting in
November and the men of the
class will be hosts for the
October meeting.
Mrs. Cathryn Ervin had the
·opening prayer with Mrs.
Grace Hawley reading "We
Do Not Walk Alone"; Mrs.
Eula Rice, "Prayer Changes
Things"; Mrs. Regina Swift,
"Do We Have Enough"; Mrs.
Martha Childs, "Religion In
You". Each member gave
thoughts on something for
which they are thankful.
Mrs . Louise McElhinny
thanked the class for flowers
during her illness. Reported
ill were Tom Bowen, Thelma
Collins, Mrs. Donna RusseU
and Mrs. Mary Meinhart.
Members sang "Happy
BAKE SALE SET
Birthday" to Mrs . Rice .
A bake sale will be held by
Donuts and coffee were the Syracuse Brownie Troop
served by Mrs. McElhinny, 01254 'Saturday at the
Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Ruth Syracuse Post Office, 9 a. m.
Karr.
to 12 noon.

ARTICLES NEEDED
Articles are still needed for
. an auction sale to be staged
· Saturday beginning at noon'
· at the Meigs County Senior
Citizeno Center in Pomeroy.
Persons having contributions , . . .
are asked to call 992-7884, 9927886 or they may take their
· donations to the center.
· Lunch will be available. Jim
:. Carnahan and Dan Smith,
; auctioneers, have donated
' their services for the auction.

COLUMBUS IUPI )
Enactment of legislation to
replace the cu~rent Reconstruction Cost New (RCN 1
utility rate-making formula
with one consisting only of the
original cost of a utility's
tangible assets has been
recommended by the HouseSenate Select Committee on
Energy .

\

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�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept.

Wood reunion held .

Mr.r. Richards

to be honored
Mrs. Florence Richards,

The fourth ·annual Wood
family reunion was held
Sunday at Forest Acres Park.
Officers elected were Virgil
King, President; Kenneth
Y{elsh , vice president and
Jean
Wood , secretary-

Eighth Dislrict president for
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary, will be honored
with a reception Sunday from
2 to 4 p. m. at the FeeneyBennett Post 128 hall in
Middleport.
Hosting the reception will
be Lewis Manley Unit 263 ;
Feeney-Bennett Unit 128 ;
Drew Webster Unit 39 ,
Racine Unit 602, and the
Meigs County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty.

treasurer .
Recognized were Weber
Wood, the oldest attending
and Steven Wood, one-yearold son of Mr. and Mrs. Eerie
Wood. Prizes were won by
Sleven and Peggy Wood, K.
C. Welsh, Emma

FOR THE TODDLER

BOY
Ages 2 to 4
Slacks

Jeans
Bib Overalls
and Shirts
2 and 3 Piece Suits
by Health Tex and Carters

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio

WEEKEND SPECIALS
COATS &amp; ClARK
WINTUK YARN

SALE

s2.99 yd.
s1.49 yd.
$1.29 yd.

'3.99 yd.
1

2.49 yd.

1.98 yd.

1

~:::::::::::::::::::::x::::::::::::::;::=:=:=:::::::::::::::~:::::·

·:

Soc1al
Calendar

THURSDAY
FREE
CANCER
SCREENING clinic fourth
Thursday each month . Call
992-7684 or 992-7531, 9 a.m ..to 4
p.m., Monday through Friday
for appointment.
TWIN CITY SH.J:t!NETTES
will ent&lt;&gt;rtain 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 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents are welcome
who are in need of clothing.

MIDDLEPORT DEPT.

"Reward"
auditions

by

MADE IN ll S

·: '

®

14.

the total look
for fall ...
of soft genuine leather, Reward lets
you go anywhere, anytime in ·total
comfort and up to the moment styling.

CAMEL

GREEN
RUST

amy OHLIN~ER.

Shoes

102 i. f:'AIN

POMEROY

.,

·I

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•

.. ....
_

.

'

No Smoking Clinic
scheduled for area
A Five Day Stop Smoking Friday, Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m.
Clinic is planned for the Point The
American
Heart
Pleasant-Gallipolis Area at Association, Cancer Society
the Appalachian Power and local SevenU1-day AdCompany, Jefferson ventist Church are the
Boulevard, Point Pleasant. sponsors.
The clinic will meet
The five day plan to stop
Mond\ Sept. 29 through smoking has been called one
of the most effective methods
used in the United States and
throughout the world to help
smo)&lt;ers kick the habit. It
utilizes information gained
from over 20 years of success
T~ annual Dislrict 25, in assisting thousands of
Order of the Eastern Star, smoke rs, many of whom have
party and reception honoring failed with various oUter
Mrs. Maryln Wilcox, district meUtod s. It has been ofpresident, will be held at the ficially adopted by the U. S.
Middleport Masonic Temple Navy, the Rev. Bill Clark
on Oct. 4.
explained .
All Eastern Star members
Dr. Allen Boyer, head of the
of Dislrict 25 are invited to department of Cardiology,
attend . There will be a West Virginia University
potluck dinner at 6:30 p. m. Medical School, will parwith everyone to take a ticipate during the opening
covered dish and their own night. OUter clinic staff intable service. Reservations clude KenneUt Lauren, M.D.,
are to be in by Sept. 29 from Pastor Bill Clark, M.P.H.,
each chapt&lt;&gt;r's secretary to Gayle Clark, R.N. and Dr.
Mrs. Robert King, Rt. I, lsmael Jamora.
Middleport. All members of
A registration fee of $5 will
Evangeline Chapter planning be charged. Pre-reglslratlon
to attend are asked to contact will take place this week by
Mrs. Wilcox before that date . phone at 446-2688 or 77~il9.
Babysitting will be available.
The clinic is opened to all
interested persons. Nonsmokers may attend without
charge. ·

OES plans
reception

Potluck dinner
enjoyed by_
youth group

CHESTER - Plans for a
Halloween carnival and
jitney supper on Oct. 11 were
made when the Chester PTA
met Monday night at Ute
school.
During
the
meeting
presided over by Mrs. Jean
Spencer, it was reported that
the Senior Citizens are
making new stage curtains
for the school. Mrs. Elsie
Folmer read a letter from the
Ohio PTA stating that the
Chester unit had won a
membership award for the
1974-75 school Yea!i and that it
will be presented at the Oct.
15 state convention in
Columbus. Mrs. Spencer will
be present to accept the
award.
Parent and teacher inlroduclions were made and
the new COilllJlitt&lt;&gt;es for Ute
year were. announced. They
are Mrs. Folmer, Linda
Hudson, Unda Ben 12 and
Mrs. Spencer, program; Mrs.
Hudson, publicity; Joy Clark,
hospitality; Linda Flinner
and Celia Bailey, membership; Jackie Starcher
'
hea!Ut; Mike Will, safety;
Linda Bentz, legislation;
Glenna Riebel, devotions ;
Betty Frederick, coordination; Becky Pullins,
Louise Pitzer, Eleanor
Leonard, Doris Grueser,
Grace Stout, Mildred Bissell,
lnzy Newell, ways and
means; Roger Spencer,
Robert Elberfeld, and Larry
Hudson, repair.
The pledge to Ute flag and
the parent-teacher prayer
opened the meeting . Officer
reports were given. The attendance award was won by
the third grade, first place,
and Ute fourth and fifth
grades !fed for second place.
Room mothers named for
the year were Jo" Ann
McLaughlin, Jean Norton,
Rosemary Keller and Linda
Flinner, first grade; Jackie
Starcher, Susan Oliver,
Glenda Hunt, Doris Grueser
and Linda Edwards, second
grade; Grace Stout, Jean
Spencer, Becky Mankin and
Joy Clark, third grade;
Louise Pitzer, Evelyn Bailey,
Cella
Bailey,
Norma
Hawthorne
and
Jean
Trussell, fourth grade.
Becky Pullins, Betty
HONOR BmTHDA YS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel and sons, Rl!cine,
held a wiener roast honoring
Jean Roush and Lewis
Hudson recenUy. Both were
celebrating birthdays. Attending were Elva Hudson,
Harry E. Roush, Rt . . I,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Otho Young, Rt. 2, Wooster
and the honored guests.

Frederick, Linda Bentz ,
Selma Call, . Mrs. Henry
Thomas, fourth and fifth
grades; Judy Eichinger,
Helen Boatright, Flossie
Maxson and Mary Newell,
fifth grade; and Pat Wilson,
Hazilee Riebel, Shirley
Smith, Glenna
Riebel,
Darlene Buckley and Judy
Ginther, sixth grade.
The delegates for county
council are Wilma Parker,
Linda Edwards, · Sharon
Louks and Rosemary Keller.
Alternates
are
Jackie
Starcher, Glenna Riebel,
Linda Hudson and Betty
Newell.
On the executive commlttee are Becky Pullins,
Glenna
Riebel,
Jackie
Starcher, Celia Bailey, Linda
Benl%, Linda Flinner, Joy

SPENT WEEK HERE
CHESTER- Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Wessel and niece, Mrs.
Roy · Youngberg of New
•Hartford, Iowa, have spent
the past week at the home of
Mrs. Purley Karr, Chester.
Mr. Wessel was formerly of
Meigs County having taught
school here for several years
before moving to Iowa to take
up farming. For the past 13
years, Mr. and Mrs. Wessel
have spent their' winters in
Bradenton, Fla., living near
the Karr residence there .
RUMMAGE SALE
The Happy Harvesters of
Trinity Church will hold a
rummage sale Oct. 2 and 3
from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. in the
church basement. ·

I

C~RE
lor
f~mate p&amp;tlent in

9·75 -Stc

PICK YOUR own green beans
at $~ . 00 bu . Brin9 own

AMONG THE 2M UNIVERSITY of Kentucky students in the UK Wildcat Marching
Band th1 s fall are, fro~ left, Ken Meadows, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Meadows Sr., {15
Warw~od Ave., Wbeehng, W. Va . ; Marilyn Goodnite, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Goodmte, Hartford, W. Va., and Duane Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Johnson,
Mason, W. Va . The UK band will march at all home football games, including a televised
game between UK and Maryland Sept. 27.

Chester, Ohio
Phone 985_3537

1.---------•

Liberals to try again
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Senate liberals say they will
make one more attempt to
preserve the Department of
Health , Education and
Welfare's power to use busing
and other tools to achieve
racial balance in public
schools.
Sen. Edward Brooke, RMass., the chamber 's only
black and leader of Ute busing
supporters, has drafted an
amendment to negate the
impact of two antibusing
provisions attached to a $45.1
billion appropriations bill for
HEW and the Department of
Lahor .
The bill has been tied up for
more than a week hecause of
the busing dispute, but the
Senate voted 64-33 Wed11esday to limit debate and
bring the measure to a final
vote, which could come
today.
The Brooke amendment
says regardless of the antibusing language, none of the
fund s in the bill could be used
in a manner inconsistent with
full enforcement of the 5th
and 14t h a mendments to the
Constit ution and the 1964 Civil
Rights Act.
A parliamentary blunder in
submitting the amendment
may for~e Brooke and his
supporters to launch a floor
fight just to bring it up for
Senate consideration and
vote.
The busing dispute began
last week when the Senate
passed an amendment by

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·

Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
intended to bar HEW officials
from compelling a school
district
to
bus
for
desegregation purposes
under Utreat of a cutoff of
federal funds.
However,
the
Biden
language is so broad that
HEW and civil rights groups
fear it would jeopardize other
areas of antidiscrimination
enforcement.
As liberals worked last
Friday to overturn the Biden
language, the antibusing
forces began their filibuster,
which culminated Wednesday in passage of a second
amendment, by Assistant
.
•

__,

9- lUI~

1010 JOHN DEE R"E dozer, 6ft.
blade ,
canapy ,
wlncl"',
rever$er
ber; gasoline
engine $45 ,000 .00. 985 -359o4.

r

·

9-19-81p

SEPT. SPECIAL!
251h -30th

D&amp;J's
House of Fabrics

For Sale

Notice

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

"

Senare Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd. The Byrd
amendment prohibits the
busing of students except to
the schools closest hmxir
homes.
Although Byrd's language
is more specific than Biden 's,
opponents say it will not
overcome Ute damage done
by the Biden amendment to
HEW's other enforcement

powers.
NeiUter of the amendments
would affect court-{)rdered
busing or busing initiated
under Utreat of court order,
which constitute most of the
busing cases.

EnVIronmental impact
.

statement published.

Opening Oct. 1

D&amp;M APPLIANCE
Sales and Service
Located AI
Junction 7-33
Pomeroy

NEW
"OI L
OF MINK"
products , new catalogs . Get
on our growing customer
list. Or maybe you would
l i ke to take orders? Phone
Helen J . Brown, 992 -5113 ,
KOSCOT
lndep endenl
Distributor .
9·21 ·tfc

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

Excelsior SaH
WOib, Inc.

Also proposed is the
No Significant Effect on the development of additional onEnvironment" is pr~nted at . site parking space. The total
the request of the Senior project cost will be $160,000.
Box 267
Pom eroy . Oh io
It has been assessed that no
Citizens Center in order to
comply
with
federal significant effect on the
NO HUNTING on George
Free l and's premises or
requirements in the · En- environment will result from
nearby woods .
vironmental Protection the proposed activity. This
9-23 ·31c
statement is predicated on
Agency.
TAKING orders for f ir ewood .
Project: Meigs County several factors. First, since
Cave Bass. Syracuse, Ohio .
the facility will receive water
Senior Citizen Center.
Phone 992 .5006.
9 -23 -Jtc
It is proposed that a vacant and sewer service from the
structure (formerly Pomeroy Village of Pomeroy, safe and
Senior High School) and its sanitary conditions will
accompanying . land be persist in the vicinity of the
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
purchased for Ute purpose of project. Second, even though
Case No. 21,561
renovating the building for an area will be paved for Est•teofTHELMA B. WILEY
use as a senior citizen center. parking purposes, the area Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
will be too small (less Ulan Larry L. Wiley of New Haven.
900 square feet) to influence West Virgir'\ig, has been duly
appointed Executor of th e
local flooding conditions by Estate of .. Thetma B . Wiley ,
increasing the amount of deceased , late of Meigs
County. Ohio.
water runoff. Third, since the
Creditors are required to
project is in a flood hazard file their claims with sa i d
fiduciary within four months .
area, measure will be taken
Da te d this 22nd day of
to reduce or minimize any September 1975 .
possible effect a flooding
Mann ing D . Webster
Judge
condition might conceivably
Cou r t of Common Pleas .
have on the facility. Fourth, a
Probate Division
Meigs Co un l y, Ohio
coal burning furnace will be
DEAR POLLY - My Pet operated in the facility . It is (9 ) 25, ( 101 2, 9, 3tc
Peeve really concerns possible that some partoday's high costs. It is no ticulates could be emitted in
wonder teen-agers are the air. However, the
consuming more beer and capacity of the unit is not of
wine as they are cheaper to sufficient size to promote any
buy than a six pack of a soda significant environmental
SATURDAY
drink or canned fruit juice. impact.
MIDDLEPORT
Fire
ANN.
The environmental review
DEAR POLLY - Just record respecting this project Department will hold a fish
recenUy I decided I needed may be examined and copied fry beginning at ll a.m. at
Sandwiches
several
new
plastic in the County Commissioners headquarwrs.
wastebaskets around the ·• office. No further en- and dinners will be served.
house. The old ones looked Vironmental review or the
faded and scratched, but project is anticipated and
HYMN SING at Hazel
after experimenting a bit Meigs County intends to Community Church, 7:30
with a few cleaning and request HUD to release funds p.m. All singers welcome.
waxing products I hit on one for the project.
that made my old baskets
Comments may be subSUNDAY
shine and gleam like new. mitted to applicant up until
CHESTER
UNITED
What I used was that mop and the 17th of October. - Meigs Methodist
Church
wax product we use on our County Commissioners, homecoming, with regular
kitchen floors.
Henry Wells, Executive Sunday School and chilrch
I always carry an extra set Officer.
· services in the morning. A
of windshield wipers in the
basket
dinner
with
··•:-.;.•-• • .._. •,y,• '•" 'o"o" ._. •,•.-.·,-.-:.,· , · ••, •••, -, -, -, -• .,
trunk of my car since one $:x-:·~·~·=-=·~·=-.·:·.·.~o:·&gt;.•;o.•.·.·-·.o!o&gt;.:·
. . !·:-~7:~:.· tableware furnishedI , will be
flew off and was lost while I
~
I.
served at 12:30 p.m. followed
was driving to the counlry on ~
by a 1:30 p.m. program. Rev .
a Sunday. I had to driv~ home
,
' Eddie Buffington, Pomeroy,
in the rain minus- a wiper
wiU be afternoon speaker and
since I found no stations open.
SJ&gt;eciiilmusic provided by the
This . experience prompted
Angelatres of Lancaster.
,
my Pointer. - MRS. G. L.
CHESTER Fire Dept.
DEAR POLLY - My
"
thank-you dinner for those
FRIDAY,
Pointer is for Utose who have
who
donated food or time and
'
PAST
MATRONS,
terrariums ." Put a straw
flower in the terrarium. If Evangeline Chapter, Mid- their families at departthere is enough moisture in dleport Masonic Temple, 7:30 ment's counly fair booth;
the container the flower will p.m. with Mrs. Roma take covered dish, 5 p.m. at
fire house.
cloSe und if more moisture Is Hawkins, hostess.
REUNION
of
the
SATURDAY
needed the flower will stay
descendants
of
Carl
and
E:lla
SQUARE
DANCE
sponopen. - MILDRED
DEAR POLLY, -When the sored by Shade River Belles Manley Sunday at State Park
suds get low while washing and Beaus Western Square on U.S. 33 on left !raveling
disbes, instead of . adding Dance Club at Royal Oak norUt toward Athens. PoUuck
more detergent I turn the P;~rk from 8 to II p.m. A at I p.m.
REUNION of des~endants
·sink spray attachment on full donkey party will follow the
force with hot water. This dance. Caller will be Denver of W. L. and Marne Whaley,
shows I have enoug h suds ' to Britton from Williamstown, 12:30 at the Rock ·Springs
W. Va. Everyone welcome. Grange.
finish the JOb . .- CHERYL.

"This

11

Notice of Finding

Stripping paint
a major job

DEAR POLLY - lbave an
antique solid brass bed with
several coats of paint on it
that I would like to remove
and then shine the brass and
keep it shining. Can you tell
me how to do this? - SANDY .
DEAR SANDY - You can
do this- I know for I once did
' is part Iron and
a bed that
part brass - but It really is a
job: Of course, the Ideal way
would be to take or send It to a
brass company to he stripped
and refinished.
To do this yourself use a
good commercial paint
remover. Tell the dealer what
you are using it for and he
may suggest one brand that
would be better than another.
After every bit of the paint is
removed, clean and shlne
with a good brass polish
(follow directions on the
container) but be sure to
wash the polish off well with
hot "sudsy water, rinse with
bot water and dry thoroughly.
To keep the shine it will be
necessary to lacquer the
brass.
After bed is washed and
shining bright, touch as Utile
as possible to avoid fingerprints. Apply denatured
alcohol (poison) to the entire
surface. Let dry and then
apply a clear and transparent
metal lacquer with a paint
brush, or better still, spray It
on. When the lacquer does
wear off, and It eventually
wil~ remove it with the
denatured alcohol and then
relacquer. Dust with untreated soft cloth. - POLLY.

!

871Mill St •., Middleport

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Polyester Double Knit
Red . 2.98 yd .

NOW-2 .59yd.
Super

.

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Soc aI :
CaIendar

Yard Sale

Help Wanted
NAl , ..... ~AL Company now
l"' ir ing help for Christmas .
Start ing Date Sept . 27 . Send
in format ion to Box 729 ·C, c .o
The
Daily
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy , Ohio
9·21·4tC

For Rent
7 RM . 2 stOry house in Mid ·
dleport , furn ished . Phone
( 304 ) 675 . 1831.
9·25 ·6t c
4 RM apartment. couple only .

Pl"'one 992 .3975 .
9-25 -lfc
4 ROOM house , double car
garage in Pomeroy . For
information ca ll 992 ·2502
9 -24 ·Jtc
TRAILFR 101. good locat ion .
dose to schoo l b us·, gas ,
water, elec . Availab le in
Middleport Phone 992 -2864 .
9 .24 ·M C

4

RM . and bath furnished
upstairs apt . Phone 992 -5908 .
9-24 .tfc

4 RM . FURN I SHED apt. for
ren t . Phone 992 -3658.
9 3-1t c
3 A ND II R O OM f u rn is h ed an d
un turn is hed
apar tme nt s
Ph on e 99? 5434
4 17 lfc
3 RMS . furnished and bath
apt. on ground floor . Adu l ts
only , reference . Call 992 ·
2050 affer 1 p .m .
9·23 ·51c

..

YARD SALE , baby lhlngs ,
play pen . nlce clothing ,
ceramics , curtains . toys ,
misc . Items . 1 mite from
Chester , bridge apposite
Golf Course, 9 till 5 Friday
and Satu rda y , Pl"' ne (614)

Compare At 4.98 yd.
Ph . 992-2810
1 Mile South of

Mlditleport on Rt . 7

Just Arrived!

4

BEDRM . upstairs and bath ,
6 rms . downstairs , new
kitchen on Rt . 33. Mason. W .
Va ., natural gas , elec ., c i ty
wate r Phone l -304 -71 3 5147 ,
avai~able 17th of Sept .
9 14 -lOtc

Att

TRA I LER space for rent.
ut i lities . Phone 992 .5535 .
9 -16 .tfc
"J:

9-25-2tc

--------------BASEMENT SALE, Thurs .

In 1973, the American
Sky lab 2 crew ended a record
59-&lt;lay stay in space and
returned safely to earth.
A thought for the day:
American author William
Faulkner said, "I decline to
accept the end of man."

'

In The Spring.•

TULIPS
HYACINTHS
NARCISSUS

9 ·25 .2tc

--------------YARD
SALE ,
Saturday ,
September 27, 9 : 00a.m . till
dark . Winter coats, dresses .
slacks , stereo. TV. etc. GuY
SARGE NT RESIDENCE Wolfe Pen Road Cflfth house
on right up Wolf Pen Rd .
from 143).
9 -25 -2tc
~---;: AM~

Y

~-;rd -;~;:--.;;U~S ·

dlly
through
Sllt urda y
beginning at 10 a .m . Wilma
Casto , Portland , Ohio .
9.2J ·3t c

-------------MISC . SALE. Hemlock Grove

e omeroy

our Shoooing Center

BEN'S _i.CANKI
'!'\f
200-202 l:ast ,._tn t.

PHONE

I'IJ.\U-:HOY. (~QlO.

992-3498

,

OPEN Fill DAY &amp; SATtlltuAY NIGHTS
..____________________
J

n u

11

••as

&amp;

Gr.,nge ,
Thursday
and
Fr iday, 9 a .m . to o4 p .m .
9-2J .)tp

a a

··-- I

til •

a

I

I

ill

Sears

-------------SEVERAL families , n i ce
select ion of men's and
women ' s clothing , sizes 24 111
to infants. l"lousehold fur .
niture , bllbY furn i ture , drop ·
m elec . range unit and hood .
bicycles , (26" boys and
girls, 24" girts ), toy s.
houseplants. trop i cal fish ,
ducks, and rabbits. Earl
Hunt ' s residence, 21!2 miles
east of Cheste r iust off 248 .
Watch for signs . From 9
a .m . fill 4 p .m . Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday.

9 23 -3tp
YARD Sate Rt. 124 across
from Syracuse Park . Old
Avon bottles, some fur n i ture . baby mattress. lo ts
of girt ' s clothes. sized 1·6,
and other misc . Thursday
and Friday. Sept. 25th and
26th. 9 : 30a .m . to 4 p.m .
9 -23 ·3tc

CWalt 011nay Productions

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

SAVE $5 on order of
$50 or more from our
Christmas Wish Book

BARNYARD Yard Sale, Sept.
26 and 27,9 a.m . t i ll 5 p .m .
Foo l of Massar Hill, Stat e
Rt. 7. Anliques, Aladdin
lamp , telephone . lo ts of
d i shes . Clotl"'ing .
9.2J .Jtc

Your copy of our 1975

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

Manning D . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate Division
Meigs County, Oh lo
)9) 25 ( 10 1 2, 9, Jtc

Plant Now to Bloom

day , Fri da y . and Sllturday
across
from
Village
Pharmacy in M iddleport 9
a . m . IJII ? .

PORCH Sale, Laure l Cltff,
Sept .
22
through
26 .
Middleport .
Clothing. old bottles, toys .
·
Pl"lone 992 ·7075.
3·25 ·ffC
9-23 ·3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20,893
•
Estate of LAWRENCE R .
W'LEY, Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Larry L. Wiley of New Haven,
West Virginia. has been duty
appointed Executgor of the
Estate..Qt Lawrence E . W i ley,
deceased, late of Meigs
County, Ohio.
. Creditors are requ ired to
file their claims w i th said
fiduciary Within four months .
Dated this 22nd day of
September 1975.

FAI! PLANnNG

/

u RNI S HED___apit~ ,m~n-;,
adults only i"
Phone 992 .J8H

SPRING BUlBS
FOR

---------

985 -1335 .

~C O U N T RY

Mobil e Hom e
Park , Rt . 33. len mi le s north
of Pomeroy . Large tot s w i th
c oncrete patios: si dewa l ks .
ru n ners a n d off s treet
~ a r~~:. i ng P h one 991 7H9 .
11 31 lfc 1

(wash &amp;

Suede ,

tumble dry). 2.98 yard.

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

Polly's Pointers

PICTURE TUBES
INSTA LLA liON

---------""1
OFFICE SPACE

Sale

JOHN DE"ERE dozer.
diesel engine, So4S,OO:O.oo. 985 3594 .

Pels

Smalley'S Gift Shop

161.00
----------40.00

LA SAL.. LE HvTEL. MlD BASEMENT S~le Monday on
DLEPORT , OHIO . ROOM S
t il? , IOa .m . fll Sp .m. Rock
St .
off
Spring
Ave .•
\5 UP . SPE C IAL RATE S
OY' WEEk OR MONTH .
Pomeroy . Watch for signs .
T . V . AIR CONOITIONING .
9 -21 -5tc
826 261 C
YARDs'ALE :- ant iqu-;;:·

WANT ADS
depression glass , kitchen
cabinefS, baby llems , and
INFORMATION
conta iners . Arnold Hupp ,
children's
an·d
adult
DEADLINES
· Letart Falls , 2-47 . 2623 .
clothing , all sizes, old
5 P'. M . Day Sefore Pub · ___ __
_ _ _ -- ~ ~~!~
rad i os. used furniture . long
loc-ation .
dresses . office lypewrlter, .
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
glassware •. porch glider with
SWEEPER
and
-sewing
Can &lt;:ellat ion -- Correc t ions
MASONIC TEMPLE
cusl"llons , 9 a .m . till? Friday
Machine
Repair
.
Parts
.
and
Will be acc;_epled until 9 a .m .
lind SaJurday. Sept . 26 and
Suppt
les
.
Oavis
Vac.uurn
BUILDING
for Day of Publlcat ion
'17 . Four.th and Crooks St..
Cleaner , 1h mile up George' s
POMEROY, OHIO
REGULATIONS
Syracuse . Phone 992 · 3717 or
·Creek Road off State Route
The Publis.her reserves the
CONTACT:
99·2 ·5866 . Rain or shine .
7. Phone 446 ·0294 .
right to edit or reject any ads
DALE E. SMITH at 99'l9 -24 ·3tc ·
d ee med o biectionat . The ___ _ ____ ___ _! ~S~ tc
ll29
publ i sher
will
not
be .
.
.
or
~espons i bl~ for "!'ore than one
1ncorrect 1nsert1on .
C'A~' -.
. . --·THOMAS C. EDWARDS at
RATES
' .::~ " pa 1d tor all makes and
992 ·2052
1974 SUZUKI T.F 185 . Lots of
For Want Ad Service
mod e ls ~ mobile homes .
or
ex t ras , extra low m lleage .
5 cents per word one insertion
Phone a rea code 6 14 423 ·
Priced to sel l. Phone 9•9 Minimum ChargeSl .OO
953 1.
TED REED JR . at m -2052
_.551 .
14 cents per word ' three
4 lJ fie
9·23 .3tc
consewtive insertions .
------- ----NEW
VILLP.,GE
Manor
l6 cents per word six con .
Apartments in M iddleport, 1
secutive insertion~
bedroom apts from $10• ptus IN DASH 23 Channel Citizen's
25 Per Cent Oiscount on paid C
~·
Band transceiver , am .fm
elec . Ca ll 992 -3273 or see
.
1
1
10
HICHUAHUA
c!ogs
,
One
Mrs . Keatle-y . Ap t. 101 ,
mpx radio . 8 track stereo .
ads and ads P it ld w lh n
bt:~~ck Female , J yr . old . and
Call9923965 .
days .
6
R i verside Apartments .
CAROOFTHANKS
month old pup . Phone J.t2 .
1-21 -261p
9-4.tfc
4465
&amp; Obituary
·
~----------S2 .00 for SO word minimum . ___ __ _____ _ __! ·25·3tc
TRAILER
spa-ce
for
rent
~
E a -::~ oddilional word Jc .
Middleport . Phone 992 5·0• .
BLIND ADS
WELL TRAIN EO Beagle$ .
8-29·26tc
A ddi t ional 25c Charge per
At so , pups from 5 weeks to 5
Advertisement.
months . Phone 742 ·3810, or
3 BEDROOM total electric ·
OFFICE HOURS
afler Oct . J . 142 ·2521.
home In Rutland , furn i shed
B· lOa . m . to 5 : 00p .m . Daily , -----------~·~6_!tP
or unfurnished . Phone 992 ·
8 · 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
AKC Reg . Irish Setter , male . 1
7336 after 5 during week .
Saturday .
days .
year 5 months old , $65 .
Contact . Dean Schrack . Bo•
9 -21 -61p
92 Rutland . Ohio .
9·24 ·41p PRIVATE meeting roOffi tor
PIANO Tuning, Lane Daniels ,
any organizat ion . phone 99'2
Phone 992 -2082.
TO GIVE AWAY - 7 puppies ,
3915
1-28-261
part
Beegle and
part
3 11 -lfc
Bluetick . Phone 949 .5172 .
__ _________ __! · 24 ' 6 tc '1
BEDROOM
furnished
mobile home No pets Call
2 AKC APR I COT Poodles
99 2 7479
puppies . I male. 1 female , 8
B-22 -lf c
weeks Old Phone 949 ·5992 .
9 .2J .31p -· -· ~----------

(Wanted

NOVELTIES

'
OTHER
DEALERS
GUAR.
AA25VBWP22 EACH1 YEAR
ADDITION YR. 4.00

For

-'
1010

FOR RENT .

SAVINGS ON
(

mv home.

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

AND

UP THESE

rldeHIV

Phone- (6J.it 667 -3402.

FLOWERS FOR
AU OCCASIONS

WCD/

Yard Sale

For Rent

. WILL

Clark, Linda Hudson, Elsie
Folmer and Jean Spencer.
Mrs. Glenna Riebel gave
devotions to conclude the
meeting using as her topic,
"Freedom in Time" with the
group giving the Lord's
Prayer in unison. Refreshments were served by the
program committee .

Pierce, Brenda Graham,

PUFF comfort, stacked heel. Made

.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED ~· Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne H. Budd, Grants, N. M., announce the engagement
of their daughter, Susan Kay, to Donald E . Wise, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Phil E. Wise, Beverly . The bride-&lt;!lect is a
1972 graduate of Fort Frye High School, Beverly and a
1975 graduat e of the Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing. Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Fort Frye High
School and is employed at Phil Wise Chevrolet, Inc.,
McConnelsville. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Timmy, Debbi and Beverly
Spires, the Rev. Mr. Tillis,
Ruth, Susie, Barbara, Becky,
Joey and Donald Tillis, Mrs.
Glenna
Cochran,
Jeff
Cochran, Chris Bauer, Clifton
Durham, Dorothy Durham,
Johnny Durham and Anna
Durham, Jerry, Crystal and
Greg Williams, Darlene
Cochran and Carlos Steele.

This one has it all -open styling, PILLOW

~arg~eri•e's

Miss Susan Budd:

RUTLAND - A wiener
roast and potluck dinner was
held at Ute Forest Acres Park
recently by Ute youth group of
the Rutland Community
Church. The Rev. Amos Tillis
gave the blessing .
Attending were Melissa
Durham, Sharon Durham,
Theron Durham, Kathleen
Durham, Patty, Norman,
Bruce, Terry, Norma and
Steven Hysell, Rhonda
Jeffers, Gladys Barrett,
Crystal Barrett, Cheryl

FRI. &amp; SAT. 9-3

MON.-THURS. 9-5

.NIItice

Halloween carnival plans made
~t Chester PTA meeting

Margaret Wood, Virgil King
and Ernest Wood .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wood and Earl,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
Helen and David, Mr . and
Mrs . Weber Wood, Mr . and
Mrs . Norman Wood and
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs . K. C.
Welsh and Letha Cowan,
Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs .
Earie Wood and Steven ,
Edith Wood , Middleport; Mr .
and M.rs . Pearl Chase,
Chauncey, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Will, Rutland, Mr .
and Mrs. Ed Harris, Emma
Cline, Spring bora, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Claud Wood ,
Dayton , Grace White and
Ruth Graham, Langsville .

WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
United Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, potluck dinner at
6:30 p.m. Group II to be
hostesses . Miss Susan Fleshman to present slides of her
life as the daughter of
missionaries in Rhodesia.
Mrs. Guy Harper will have
devotions. Everyone bring a
covered dish.
- SENIOR CITIZENS will
present program at the Meigs
·county women's Fellowship
of Churches of Christ, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Tuppers Plains Boosters Club
concerning upcoming car~
nival, 7:30p.m. at the school.
PARENT EDUCATION
Program, 6:30 until 8 at
Pomeroy
Elementary,
Rutland Elementary,
Harrisonville Elementary
and Meigs Junior High to aid
parents helping their children
to read; child care center for
younger children of parents
wishing to attend at any
cenwr.

FIRST QUALITY .
DOUBLE KNIT
POLYESTER
REG.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept . 25, 197~

25, 1975

Christmas Catalog is now

NOTICE OF FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Counrv Court of C-ommon
Pleas, Probate Division .
·
To the Administratrix of the
es tate, to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Ohio. viz ; the surviving
spouse, the nex t of kin, the
beneficiaries under the w i ll ;
and to the attorney or at .
torneys representing any of
the aforementioned pe1 sons :
Marron McClure. Deceased ,
Dexter. Ohio , Salem Town ·
ship, No. 21583
You are hereby notified that
t he
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the eslate of the
aforementioned,
deceased .
late of said County , was filed
in this Court. Said Inventory
and Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Courl on
the 2nd day of October. 1975, at
10 : 00 o'clock A .M.
. Any p erso n desiring to f i le
exceptions thereto mu st file
them at least five days prior to
the date .set for hear rng .
Given under mv hand and
seat of said Court, this 16th
day of Septem ber 1975.
Manning D. Webster
Judge
By An n B. Watson
Deputy Clerk
(9) 18 ·25-2tc

available at your Pomeroy
Sears Catalog Store.

Early Christmas shopping pays double at Sears.
You save time when you shop by catalog. And
shopping earlY assures you of getting the items you
want, without delays. Plus you get a $5 discount on
any order of $50 or more, if you order before October 13. Slop Sears Chr~s Catalog.-

Use one

Sears credit plans

o(

$5 Discount Expires October 13, 1975
Call Sears Catalog Shopping today

INSULATION
Blown Into

992·2178
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back

The Walls ·

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

For Free Estimates
Call Today

Mi~dleport,

POMEROY, OHIO

Authorized

CATALOG SALES
MERCHANT

89th

Owned and

Operafedby

.\li,~nml.lllr

Cll.fiiRATIIII

Lou Osborne

Ohio
'

..

STREET

ISears I

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
992-5321

220 E. MAIN

'

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•

•

t

•

•

\

•

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•

•

_,

•

~

~

•

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept.

Wood reunion held .

Mr.r. Richards

to be honored
Mrs. Florence Richards,

The fourth ·annual Wood
family reunion was held
Sunday at Forest Acres Park.
Officers elected were Virgil
King, President; Kenneth
Y{elsh , vice president and
Jean
Wood , secretary-

Eighth Dislrict president for
the
American
Legion
Auxiliary, will be honored
with a reception Sunday from
2 to 4 p. m. at the FeeneyBennett Post 128 hall in
Middleport.
Hosting the reception will
be Lewis Manley Unit 263 ;
Feeney-Bennett Unit 128 ;
Drew Webster Unit 39 ,
Racine Unit 602, and the
Meigs County Salon 710,
Eight and Forty.

treasurer .
Recognized were Weber
Wood, the oldest attending
and Steven Wood, one-yearold son of Mr. and Mrs. Eerie
Wood. Prizes were won by
Sleven and Peggy Wood, K.
C. Welsh, Emma

FOR THE TODDLER

BOY
Ages 2 to 4
Slacks

Jeans
Bib Overalls
and Shirts
2 and 3 Piece Suits
by Health Tex and Carters

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio

WEEKEND SPECIALS
COATS &amp; ClARK
WINTUK YARN

SALE

s2.99 yd.
s1.49 yd.
$1.29 yd.

'3.99 yd.
1

2.49 yd.

1.98 yd.

1

~:::::::::::::::::::::x::::::::::::::;::=:=:=:::::::::::::::~:::::·

·:

Soc1al
Calendar

THURSDAY
FREE
CANCER
SCREENING clinic fourth
Thursday each month . Call
992-7684 or 992-7531, 9 a.m ..to 4
p.m., Monday through Friday
for appointment.
TWIN CITY SH.J:t!NETTES
will ent&lt;&gt;rtain 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 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. All
area residents are welcome
who are in need of clothing.

MIDDLEPORT DEPT.

"Reward"
auditions

by

MADE IN ll S

·: '

®

14.

the total look
for fall ...
of soft genuine leather, Reward lets
you go anywhere, anytime in ·total
comfort and up to the moment styling.

CAMEL

GREEN
RUST

amy OHLIN~ER.

Shoes

102 i. f:'AIN

POMEROY

.,

·I

'
•

.. ....
_

.

'

No Smoking Clinic
scheduled for area
A Five Day Stop Smoking Friday, Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m.
Clinic is planned for the Point The
American
Heart
Pleasant-Gallipolis Area at Association, Cancer Society
the Appalachian Power and local SevenU1-day AdCompany, Jefferson ventist Church are the
Boulevard, Point Pleasant. sponsors.
The clinic will meet
The five day plan to stop
Mond\ Sept. 29 through smoking has been called one
of the most effective methods
used in the United States and
throughout the world to help
smo)&lt;ers kick the habit. It
utilizes information gained
from over 20 years of success
T~ annual Dislrict 25, in assisting thousands of
Order of the Eastern Star, smoke rs, many of whom have
party and reception honoring failed with various oUter
Mrs. Maryln Wilcox, district meUtod s. It has been ofpresident, will be held at the ficially adopted by the U. S.
Middleport Masonic Temple Navy, the Rev. Bill Clark
on Oct. 4.
explained .
All Eastern Star members
Dr. Allen Boyer, head of the
of Dislrict 25 are invited to department of Cardiology,
attend . There will be a West Virginia University
potluck dinner at 6:30 p. m. Medical School, will parwith everyone to take a ticipate during the opening
covered dish and their own night. OUter clinic staff intable service. Reservations clude KenneUt Lauren, M.D.,
are to be in by Sept. 29 from Pastor Bill Clark, M.P.H.,
each chapt&lt;&gt;r's secretary to Gayle Clark, R.N. and Dr.
Mrs. Robert King, Rt. I, lsmael Jamora.
Middleport. All members of
A registration fee of $5 will
Evangeline Chapter planning be charged. Pre-reglslratlon
to attend are asked to contact will take place this week by
Mrs. Wilcox before that date . phone at 446-2688 or 77~il9.
Babysitting will be available.
The clinic is opened to all
interested persons. Nonsmokers may attend without
charge. ·

OES plans
reception

Potluck dinner
enjoyed by_
youth group

CHESTER - Plans for a
Halloween carnival and
jitney supper on Oct. 11 were
made when the Chester PTA
met Monday night at Ute
school.
During
the
meeting
presided over by Mrs. Jean
Spencer, it was reported that
the Senior Citizens are
making new stage curtains
for the school. Mrs. Elsie
Folmer read a letter from the
Ohio PTA stating that the
Chester unit had won a
membership award for the
1974-75 school Yea!i and that it
will be presented at the Oct.
15 state convention in
Columbus. Mrs. Spencer will
be present to accept the
award.
Parent and teacher inlroduclions were made and
the new COilllJlitt&lt;&gt;es for Ute
year were. announced. They
are Mrs. Folmer, Linda
Hudson, Unda Ben 12 and
Mrs. Spencer, program; Mrs.
Hudson, publicity; Joy Clark,
hospitality; Linda Flinner
and Celia Bailey, membership; Jackie Starcher
'
hea!Ut; Mike Will, safety;
Linda Bentz, legislation;
Glenna Riebel, devotions ;
Betty Frederick, coordination; Becky Pullins,
Louise Pitzer, Eleanor
Leonard, Doris Grueser,
Grace Stout, Mildred Bissell,
lnzy Newell, ways and
means; Roger Spencer,
Robert Elberfeld, and Larry
Hudson, repair.
The pledge to Ute flag and
the parent-teacher prayer
opened the meeting . Officer
reports were given. The attendance award was won by
the third grade, first place,
and Ute fourth and fifth
grades !fed for second place.
Room mothers named for
the year were Jo" Ann
McLaughlin, Jean Norton,
Rosemary Keller and Linda
Flinner, first grade; Jackie
Starcher, Susan Oliver,
Glenda Hunt, Doris Grueser
and Linda Edwards, second
grade; Grace Stout, Jean
Spencer, Becky Mankin and
Joy Clark, third grade;
Louise Pitzer, Evelyn Bailey,
Cella
Bailey,
Norma
Hawthorne
and
Jean
Trussell, fourth grade.
Becky Pullins, Betty
HONOR BmTHDA YS
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel and sons, Rl!cine,
held a wiener roast honoring
Jean Roush and Lewis
Hudson recenUy. Both were
celebrating birthdays. Attending were Elva Hudson,
Harry E. Roush, Rt . . I,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Otho Young, Rt. 2, Wooster
and the honored guests.

Frederick, Linda Bentz ,
Selma Call, . Mrs. Henry
Thomas, fourth and fifth
grades; Judy Eichinger,
Helen Boatright, Flossie
Maxson and Mary Newell,
fifth grade; and Pat Wilson,
Hazilee Riebel, Shirley
Smith, Glenna
Riebel,
Darlene Buckley and Judy
Ginther, sixth grade.
The delegates for county
council are Wilma Parker,
Linda Edwards, · Sharon
Louks and Rosemary Keller.
Alternates
are
Jackie
Starcher, Glenna Riebel,
Linda Hudson and Betty
Newell.
On the executive commlttee are Becky Pullins,
Glenna
Riebel,
Jackie
Starcher, Celia Bailey, Linda
Benl%, Linda Flinner, Joy

SPENT WEEK HERE
CHESTER- Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Wessel and niece, Mrs.
Roy · Youngberg of New
•Hartford, Iowa, have spent
the past week at the home of
Mrs. Purley Karr, Chester.
Mr. Wessel was formerly of
Meigs County having taught
school here for several years
before moving to Iowa to take
up farming. For the past 13
years, Mr. and Mrs. Wessel
have spent their' winters in
Bradenton, Fla., living near
the Karr residence there .
RUMMAGE SALE
The Happy Harvesters of
Trinity Church will hold a
rummage sale Oct. 2 and 3
from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. in the
church basement. ·

I

C~RE
lor
f~mate p&amp;tlent in

9·75 -Stc

PICK YOUR own green beans
at $~ . 00 bu . Brin9 own

AMONG THE 2M UNIVERSITY of Kentucky students in the UK Wildcat Marching
Band th1 s fall are, fro~ left, Ken Meadows, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Meadows Sr., {15
Warw~od Ave., Wbeehng, W. Va . ; Marilyn Goodnite, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Goodmte, Hartford, W. Va., and Duane Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Johnson,
Mason, W. Va . The UK band will march at all home football games, including a televised
game between UK and Maryland Sept. 27.

Chester, Ohio
Phone 985_3537

1.---------•

Liberals to try again
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Senate liberals say they will
make one more attempt to
preserve the Department of
Health , Education and
Welfare's power to use busing
and other tools to achieve
racial balance in public
schools.
Sen. Edward Brooke, RMass., the chamber 's only
black and leader of Ute busing
supporters, has drafted an
amendment to negate the
impact of two antibusing
provisions attached to a $45.1
billion appropriations bill for
HEW and the Department of
Lahor .
The bill has been tied up for
more than a week hecause of
the busing dispute, but the
Senate voted 64-33 Wed11esday to limit debate and
bring the measure to a final
vote, which could come
today.
The Brooke amendment
says regardless of the antibusing language, none of the
fund s in the bill could be used
in a manner inconsistent with
full enforcement of the 5th
and 14t h a mendments to the
Constit ution and the 1964 Civil
Rights Act.
A parliamentary blunder in
submitting the amendment
may for~e Brooke and his
supporters to launch a floor
fight just to bring it up for
Senate consideration and
vote.
The busing dispute began
last week when the Senate
passed an amendment by

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BAKER ·FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

-·
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Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
intended to bar HEW officials
from compelling a school
district
to
bus
for
desegregation purposes
under Utreat of a cutoff of
federal funds.
However,
the
Biden
language is so broad that
HEW and civil rights groups
fear it would jeopardize other
areas of antidiscrimination
enforcement.
As liberals worked last
Friday to overturn the Biden
language, the antibusing
forces began their filibuster,
which culminated Wednesday in passage of a second
amendment, by Assistant
.
•

__,

9- lUI~

1010 JOHN DEE R"E dozer, 6ft.
blade ,
canapy ,
wlncl"',
rever$er
ber; gasoline
engine $45 ,000 .00. 985 -359o4.

r

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9-19-81p

SEPT. SPECIAL!
251h -30th

D&amp;J's
House of Fabrics

For Sale

Notice

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

"

Senare Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd. The Byrd
amendment prohibits the
busing of students except to
the schools closest hmxir
homes.
Although Byrd's language
is more specific than Biden 's,
opponents say it will not
overcome Ute damage done
by the Biden amendment to
HEW's other enforcement

powers.
NeiUter of the amendments
would affect court-{)rdered
busing or busing initiated
under Utreat of court order,
which constitute most of the
busing cases.

EnVIronmental impact
.

statement published.

Opening Oct. 1

D&amp;M APPLIANCE
Sales and Service
Located AI
Junction 7-33
Pomeroy

NEW
"OI L
OF MINK"
products , new catalogs . Get
on our growing customer
list. Or maybe you would
l i ke to take orders? Phone
Helen J . Brown, 992 -5113 ,
KOSCOT
lndep endenl
Distributor .
9·21 ·tfc

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

Excelsior SaH
WOib, Inc.

Also proposed is the
No Significant Effect on the development of additional onEnvironment" is pr~nted at . site parking space. The total
the request of the Senior project cost will be $160,000.
Box 267
Pom eroy . Oh io
It has been assessed that no
Citizens Center in order to
comply
with
federal significant effect on the
NO HUNTING on George
Free l and's premises or
requirements in the · En- environment will result from
nearby woods .
vironmental Protection the proposed activity. This
9-23 ·31c
statement is predicated on
Agency.
TAKING orders for f ir ewood .
Project: Meigs County several factors. First, since
Cave Bass. Syracuse, Ohio .
the facility will receive water
Senior Citizen Center.
Phone 992 .5006.
9 -23 -Jtc
It is proposed that a vacant and sewer service from the
structure (formerly Pomeroy Village of Pomeroy, safe and
Senior High School) and its sanitary conditions will
accompanying . land be persist in the vicinity of the
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
purchased for Ute purpose of project. Second, even though
Case No. 21,561
renovating the building for an area will be paved for Est•teofTHELMA B. WILEY
use as a senior citizen center. parking purposes, the area Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
will be too small (less Ulan Larry L. Wiley of New Haven.
900 square feet) to influence West Virgir'\ig, has been duly
appointed Executor of th e
local flooding conditions by Estate of .. Thetma B . Wiley ,
increasing the amount of deceased , late of Meigs
County. Ohio.
water runoff. Third, since the
Creditors are required to
project is in a flood hazard file their claims with sa i d
fiduciary within four months .
area, measure will be taken
Da te d this 22nd day of
to reduce or minimize any September 1975 .
possible effect a flooding
Mann ing D . Webster
Judge
condition might conceivably
Cou r t of Common Pleas .
have on the facility. Fourth, a
Probate Division
Meigs Co un l y, Ohio
coal burning furnace will be
DEAR POLLY - My Pet operated in the facility . It is (9 ) 25, ( 101 2, 9, 3tc
Peeve really concerns possible that some partoday's high costs. It is no ticulates could be emitted in
wonder teen-agers are the air. However, the
consuming more beer and capacity of the unit is not of
wine as they are cheaper to sufficient size to promote any
buy than a six pack of a soda significant environmental
SATURDAY
drink or canned fruit juice. impact.
MIDDLEPORT
Fire
ANN.
The environmental review
DEAR POLLY - Just record respecting this project Department will hold a fish
recenUy I decided I needed may be examined and copied fry beginning at ll a.m. at
Sandwiches
several
new
plastic in the County Commissioners headquarwrs.
wastebaskets around the ·• office. No further en- and dinners will be served.
house. The old ones looked Vironmental review or the
faded and scratched, but project is anticipated and
HYMN SING at Hazel
after experimenting a bit Meigs County intends to Community Church, 7:30
with a few cleaning and request HUD to release funds p.m. All singers welcome.
waxing products I hit on one for the project.
that made my old baskets
Comments may be subSUNDAY
shine and gleam like new. mitted to applicant up until
CHESTER
UNITED
What I used was that mop and the 17th of October. - Meigs Methodist
Church
wax product we use on our County Commissioners, homecoming, with regular
kitchen floors.
Henry Wells, Executive Sunday School and chilrch
I always carry an extra set Officer.
· services in the morning. A
of windshield wipers in the
basket
dinner
with
··•:-.;.•-• • .._. •,y,• '•" 'o"o" ._. •,•.-.·,-.-:.,· , · ••, •••, -, -, -, -• .,
trunk of my car since one $:x-:·~·~·=-=·~·=-.·:·.·.~o:·&gt;.•;o.•.·.·-·.o!o&gt;.:·
. . !·:-~7:~:.· tableware furnishedI , will be
flew off and was lost while I
~
I.
served at 12:30 p.m. followed
was driving to the counlry on ~
by a 1:30 p.m. program. Rev .
a Sunday. I had to driv~ home
,
' Eddie Buffington, Pomeroy,
in the rain minus- a wiper
wiU be afternoon speaker and
since I found no stations open.
SJ&gt;eciiilmusic provided by the
This . experience prompted
Angelatres of Lancaster.
,
my Pointer. - MRS. G. L.
CHESTER Fire Dept.
DEAR POLLY - My
"
thank-you dinner for those
FRIDAY,
Pointer is for Utose who have
who
donated food or time and
'
PAST
MATRONS,
terrariums ." Put a straw
flower in the terrarium. If Evangeline Chapter, Mid- their families at departthere is enough moisture in dleport Masonic Temple, 7:30 ment's counly fair booth;
the container the flower will p.m. with Mrs. Roma take covered dish, 5 p.m. at
fire house.
cloSe und if more moisture Is Hawkins, hostess.
REUNION
of
the
SATURDAY
needed the flower will stay
descendants
of
Carl
and
E:lla
SQUARE
DANCE
sponopen. - MILDRED
DEAR POLLY, -When the sored by Shade River Belles Manley Sunday at State Park
suds get low while washing and Beaus Western Square on U.S. 33 on left !raveling
disbes, instead of . adding Dance Club at Royal Oak norUt toward Athens. PoUuck
more detergent I turn the P;~rk from 8 to II p.m. A at I p.m.
REUNION of des~endants
·sink spray attachment on full donkey party will follow the
force with hot water. This dance. Caller will be Denver of W. L. and Marne Whaley,
shows I have enoug h suds ' to Britton from Williamstown, 12:30 at the Rock ·Springs
W. Va. Everyone welcome. Grange.
finish the JOb . .- CHERYL.

"This

11

Notice of Finding

Stripping paint
a major job

DEAR POLLY - lbave an
antique solid brass bed with
several coats of paint on it
that I would like to remove
and then shine the brass and
keep it shining. Can you tell
me how to do this? - SANDY .
DEAR SANDY - You can
do this- I know for I once did
' is part Iron and
a bed that
part brass - but It really is a
job: Of course, the Ideal way
would be to take or send It to a
brass company to he stripped
and refinished.
To do this yourself use a
good commercial paint
remover. Tell the dealer what
you are using it for and he
may suggest one brand that
would be better than another.
After every bit of the paint is
removed, clean and shlne
with a good brass polish
(follow directions on the
container) but be sure to
wash the polish off well with
hot "sudsy water, rinse with
bot water and dry thoroughly.
To keep the shine it will be
necessary to lacquer the
brass.
After bed is washed and
shining bright, touch as Utile
as possible to avoid fingerprints. Apply denatured
alcohol (poison) to the entire
surface. Let dry and then
apply a clear and transparent
metal lacquer with a paint
brush, or better still, spray It
on. When the lacquer does
wear off, and It eventually
wil~ remove it with the
denatured alcohol and then
relacquer. Dust with untreated soft cloth. - POLLY.

!

871Mill St •., Middleport

\i _,''

.

.

'

__ ___________

Polyester Double Knit
Red . 2.98 yd .

NOW-2 .59yd.
Super

.

\' ;,j

Soc aI :
CaIendar

Yard Sale

Help Wanted
NAl , ..... ~AL Company now
l"' ir ing help for Christmas .
Start ing Date Sept . 27 . Send
in format ion to Box 729 ·C, c .o
The
Daily
Sentinel ,
Pomeroy , Ohio
9·21·4tC

For Rent
7 RM . 2 stOry house in Mid ·
dleport , furn ished . Phone
( 304 ) 675 . 1831.
9·25 ·6t c
4 RM apartment. couple only .

Pl"'one 992 .3975 .
9-25 -lfc
4 ROOM house , double car
garage in Pomeroy . For
information ca ll 992 ·2502
9 -24 ·Jtc
TRAILFR 101. good locat ion .
dose to schoo l b us·, gas ,
water, elec . Availab le in
Middleport Phone 992 -2864 .
9 .24 ·M C

4

RM . and bath furnished
upstairs apt . Phone 992 -5908 .
9-24 .tfc

4 RM . FURN I SHED apt. for
ren t . Phone 992 -3658.
9 3-1t c
3 A ND II R O OM f u rn is h ed an d
un turn is hed
apar tme nt s
Ph on e 99? 5434
4 17 lfc
3 RMS . furnished and bath
apt. on ground floor . Adu l ts
only , reference . Call 992 ·
2050 affer 1 p .m .
9·23 ·51c

..

YARD SALE , baby lhlngs ,
play pen . nlce clothing ,
ceramics , curtains . toys ,
misc . Items . 1 mite from
Chester , bridge apposite
Golf Course, 9 till 5 Friday
and Satu rda y , Pl"' ne (614)

Compare At 4.98 yd.
Ph . 992-2810
1 Mile South of

Mlditleport on Rt . 7

Just Arrived!

4

BEDRM . upstairs and bath ,
6 rms . downstairs , new
kitchen on Rt . 33. Mason. W .
Va ., natural gas , elec ., c i ty
wate r Phone l -304 -71 3 5147 ,
avai~able 17th of Sept .
9 14 -lOtc

Att

TRA I LER space for rent.
ut i lities . Phone 992 .5535 .
9 -16 .tfc
"J:

9-25-2tc

--------------BASEMENT SALE, Thurs .

In 1973, the American
Sky lab 2 crew ended a record
59-&lt;lay stay in space and
returned safely to earth.
A thought for the day:
American author William
Faulkner said, "I decline to
accept the end of man."

'

In The Spring.•

TULIPS
HYACINTHS
NARCISSUS

9 ·25 .2tc

--------------YARD
SALE ,
Saturday ,
September 27, 9 : 00a.m . till
dark . Winter coats, dresses .
slacks , stereo. TV. etc. GuY
SARGE NT RESIDENCE Wolfe Pen Road Cflfth house
on right up Wolf Pen Rd .
from 143).
9 -25 -2tc
~---;: AM~

Y

~-;rd -;~;:--.;;U~S ·

dlly
through
Sllt urda y
beginning at 10 a .m . Wilma
Casto , Portland , Ohio .
9.2J ·3t c

-------------MISC . SALE. Hemlock Grove

e omeroy

our Shoooing Center

BEN'S _i.CANKI
'!'\f
200-202 l:ast ,._tn t.

PHONE

I'IJ.\U-:HOY. (~QlO.

992-3498

,

OPEN Fill DAY &amp; SATtlltuAY NIGHTS
..____________________
J

n u

11

••as

&amp;

Gr.,nge ,
Thursday
and
Fr iday, 9 a .m . to o4 p .m .
9-2J .)tp

a a

··-- I

til •

a

I

I

ill

Sears

-------------SEVERAL families , n i ce
select ion of men's and
women ' s clothing , sizes 24 111
to infants. l"lousehold fur .
niture , bllbY furn i ture , drop ·
m elec . range unit and hood .
bicycles , (26" boys and
girls, 24" girts ), toy s.
houseplants. trop i cal fish ,
ducks, and rabbits. Earl
Hunt ' s residence, 21!2 miles
east of Cheste r iust off 248 .
Watch for signs . From 9
a .m . fill 4 p .m . Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday.

9 23 -3tp
YARD Sate Rt. 124 across
from Syracuse Park . Old
Avon bottles, some fur n i ture . baby mattress. lo ts
of girt ' s clothes. sized 1·6,
and other misc . Thursday
and Friday. Sept. 25th and
26th. 9 : 30a .m . to 4 p.m .
9 -23 ·3tc

CWalt 011nay Productions

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

SAVE $5 on order of
$50 or more from our
Christmas Wish Book

BARNYARD Yard Sale, Sept.
26 and 27,9 a.m . t i ll 5 p .m .
Foo l of Massar Hill, Stat e
Rt. 7. Anliques, Aladdin
lamp , telephone . lo ts of
d i shes . Clotl"'ing .
9.2J .Jtc

Your copy of our 1975

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

Manning D . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas
Probate Division
Meigs County, Oh lo
)9) 25 ( 10 1 2, 9, Jtc

Plant Now to Bloom

day , Fri da y . and Sllturday
across
from
Village
Pharmacy in M iddleport 9
a . m . IJII ? .

PORCH Sale, Laure l Cltff,
Sept .
22
through
26 .
Middleport .
Clothing. old bottles, toys .
·
Pl"lone 992 ·7075.
3·25 ·ffC
9-23 ·3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Case No. 20,893
•
Estate of LAWRENCE R .
W'LEY, Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Larry L. Wiley of New Haven,
West Virginia. has been duty
appointed Executgor of the
Estate..Qt Lawrence E . W i ley,
deceased, late of Meigs
County, Ohio.
. Creditors are requ ired to
file their claims w i th said
fiduciary Within four months .
Dated this 22nd day of
September 1975.

FAI! PLANnNG

/

u RNI S HED___apit~ ,m~n-;,
adults only i"
Phone 992 .J8H

SPRING BUlBS
FOR

---------

985 -1335 .

~C O U N T RY

Mobil e Hom e
Park , Rt . 33. len mi le s north
of Pomeroy . Large tot s w i th
c oncrete patios: si dewa l ks .
ru n ners a n d off s treet
~ a r~~:. i ng P h one 991 7H9 .
11 31 lfc 1

(wash &amp;

Suede ,

tumble dry). 2.98 yard.

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

Polly's Pointers

PICTURE TUBES
INSTA LLA liON

---------""1
OFFICE SPACE

Sale

JOHN DE"ERE dozer.
diesel engine, So4S,OO:O.oo. 985 3594 .

Pels

Smalley'S Gift Shop

161.00
----------40.00

LA SAL.. LE HvTEL. MlD BASEMENT S~le Monday on
DLEPORT , OHIO . ROOM S
t il? , IOa .m . fll Sp .m. Rock
St .
off
Spring
Ave .•
\5 UP . SPE C IAL RATE S
OY' WEEk OR MONTH .
Pomeroy . Watch for signs .
T . V . AIR CONOITIONING .
9 -21 -5tc
826 261 C
YARDs'ALE :- ant iqu-;;:·

WANT ADS
depression glass , kitchen
cabinefS, baby llems , and
INFORMATION
conta iners . Arnold Hupp ,
children's
an·d
adult
DEADLINES
· Letart Falls , 2-47 . 2623 .
clothing , all sizes, old
5 P'. M . Day Sefore Pub · ___ __
_ _ _ -- ~ ~~!~
rad i os. used furniture . long
loc-ation .
dresses . office lypewrlter, .
Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
glassware •. porch glider with
SWEEPER
and
-sewing
Can &lt;:ellat ion -- Correc t ions
MASONIC TEMPLE
cusl"llons , 9 a .m . till? Friday
Machine
Repair
.
Parts
.
and
Will be acc;_epled until 9 a .m .
lind SaJurday. Sept . 26 and
Suppt
les
.
Oavis
Vac.uurn
BUILDING
for Day of Publlcat ion
'17 . Four.th and Crooks St..
Cleaner , 1h mile up George' s
POMEROY, OHIO
REGULATIONS
Syracuse . Phone 992 · 3717 or
·Creek Road off State Route
The Publis.her reserves the
CONTACT:
99·2 ·5866 . Rain or shine .
7. Phone 446 ·0294 .
right to edit or reject any ads
DALE E. SMITH at 99'l9 -24 ·3tc ·
d ee med o biectionat . The ___ _ ____ ___ _! ~S~ tc
ll29
publ i sher
will
not
be .
.
.
or
~espons i bl~ for "!'ore than one
1ncorrect 1nsert1on .
C'A~' -.
. . --·THOMAS C. EDWARDS at
RATES
' .::~ " pa 1d tor all makes and
992 ·2052
1974 SUZUKI T.F 185 . Lots of
For Want Ad Service
mod e ls ~ mobile homes .
or
ex t ras , extra low m lleage .
5 cents per word one insertion
Phone a rea code 6 14 423 ·
Priced to sel l. Phone 9•9 Minimum ChargeSl .OO
953 1.
TED REED JR . at m -2052
_.551 .
14 cents per word ' three
4 lJ fie
9·23 .3tc
consewtive insertions .
------- ----NEW
VILLP.,GE
Manor
l6 cents per word six con .
Apartments in M iddleport, 1
secutive insertion~
bedroom apts from $10• ptus IN DASH 23 Channel Citizen's
25 Per Cent Oiscount on paid C
~·
Band transceiver , am .fm
elec . Ca ll 992 -3273 or see
.
1
1
10
HICHUAHUA
c!ogs
,
One
Mrs . Keatle-y . Ap t. 101 ,
mpx radio . 8 track stereo .
ads and ads P it ld w lh n
bt:~~ck Female , J yr . old . and
Call9923965 .
days .
6
R i verside Apartments .
CAROOFTHANKS
month old pup . Phone J.t2 .
1-21 -261p
9-4.tfc
4465
&amp; Obituary
·
~----------S2 .00 for SO word minimum . ___ __ _____ _ __! ·25·3tc
TRAILER
spa-ce
for
rent
~
E a -::~ oddilional word Jc .
Middleport . Phone 992 5·0• .
BLIND ADS
WELL TRAIN EO Beagle$ .
8-29·26tc
A ddi t ional 25c Charge per
At so , pups from 5 weeks to 5
Advertisement.
months . Phone 742 ·3810, or
3 BEDROOM total electric ·
OFFICE HOURS
afler Oct . J . 142 ·2521.
home In Rutland , furn i shed
B· lOa . m . to 5 : 00p .m . Daily , -----------~·~6_!tP
or unfurnished . Phone 992 ·
8 · 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
AKC Reg . Irish Setter , male . 1
7336 after 5 during week .
Saturday .
days .
year 5 months old , $65 .
Contact . Dean Schrack . Bo•
9 -21 -61p
92 Rutland . Ohio .
9·24 ·41p PRIVATE meeting roOffi tor
PIANO Tuning, Lane Daniels ,
any organizat ion . phone 99'2
Phone 992 -2082.
TO GIVE AWAY - 7 puppies ,
3915
1-28-261
part
Beegle and
part
3 11 -lfc
Bluetick . Phone 949 .5172 .
__ _________ __! · 24 ' 6 tc '1
BEDROOM
furnished
mobile home No pets Call
2 AKC APR I COT Poodles
99 2 7479
puppies . I male. 1 female , 8
B-22 -lf c
weeks Old Phone 949 ·5992 .
9 .2J .31p -· -· ~----------

(Wanted

NOVELTIES

'
OTHER
DEALERS
GUAR.
AA25VBWP22 EACH1 YEAR
ADDITION YR. 4.00

For

-'
1010

FOR RENT .

SAVINGS ON
(

mv home.

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

AND

UP THESE

rldeHIV

Phone- (6J.it 667 -3402.

FLOWERS FOR
AU OCCASIONS

WCD/

Yard Sale

For Rent

. WILL

Clark, Linda Hudson, Elsie
Folmer and Jean Spencer.
Mrs. Glenna Riebel gave
devotions to conclude the
meeting using as her topic,
"Freedom in Time" with the
group giving the Lord's
Prayer in unison. Refreshments were served by the
program committee .

Pierce, Brenda Graham,

PUFF comfort, stacked heel. Made

.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED ~· Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne H. Budd, Grants, N. M., announce the engagement
of their daughter, Susan Kay, to Donald E . Wise, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Phil E. Wise, Beverly . The bride-&lt;!lect is a
1972 graduate of Fort Frye High School, Beverly and a
1975 graduat e of the Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing. Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Fort Frye High
School and is employed at Phil Wise Chevrolet, Inc.,
McConnelsville. Wedding plans are incomplete.

Timmy, Debbi and Beverly
Spires, the Rev. Mr. Tillis,
Ruth, Susie, Barbara, Becky,
Joey and Donald Tillis, Mrs.
Glenna
Cochran,
Jeff
Cochran, Chris Bauer, Clifton
Durham, Dorothy Durham,
Johnny Durham and Anna
Durham, Jerry, Crystal and
Greg Williams, Darlene
Cochran and Carlos Steele.

This one has it all -open styling, PILLOW

~arg~eri•e's

Miss Susan Budd:

RUTLAND - A wiener
roast and potluck dinner was
held at Ute Forest Acres Park
recently by Ute youth group of
the Rutland Community
Church. The Rev. Amos Tillis
gave the blessing .
Attending were Melissa
Durham, Sharon Durham,
Theron Durham, Kathleen
Durham, Patty, Norman,
Bruce, Terry, Norma and
Steven Hysell, Rhonda
Jeffers, Gladys Barrett,
Crystal Barrett, Cheryl

FRI. &amp; SAT. 9-3

MON.-THURS. 9-5

.NIItice

Halloween carnival plans made
~t Chester PTA meeting

Margaret Wood, Virgil King
and Ernest Wood .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wood and Earl,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
Helen and David, Mr . and
Mrs . Weber Wood, Mr . and
Mrs . Norman Wood and
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs . K. C.
Welsh and Letha Cowan,
Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs .
Earie Wood and Steven ,
Edith Wood , Middleport; Mr .
and M.rs . Pearl Chase,
Chauncey, Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Will, Rutland, Mr .
and Mrs. Ed Harris, Emma
Cline, Spring bora, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Claud Wood ,
Dayton , Grace White and
Ruth Graham, Langsville .

WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
United Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, potluck dinner at
6:30 p.m. Group II to be
hostesses . Miss Susan Fleshman to present slides of her
life as the daughter of
missionaries in Rhodesia.
Mrs. Guy Harper will have
devotions. Everyone bring a
covered dish.
- SENIOR CITIZENS will
present program at the Meigs
·county women's Fellowship
of Churches of Christ, 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Tuppers Plains Boosters Club
concerning upcoming car~
nival, 7:30p.m. at the school.
PARENT EDUCATION
Program, 6:30 until 8 at
Pomeroy
Elementary,
Rutland Elementary,
Harrisonville Elementary
and Meigs Junior High to aid
parents helping their children
to read; child care center for
younger children of parents
wishing to attend at any
cenwr.

FIRST QUALITY .
DOUBLE KNIT
POLYESTER
REG.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept . 25, 197~

25, 1975

Christmas Catalog is now

NOTICE OF FILING
OF INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
Counrv Court of C-ommon
Pleas, Probate Division .
·
To the Administratrix of the
es tate, to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Ohio. viz ; the surviving
spouse, the nex t of kin, the
beneficiaries under the w i ll ;
and to the attorney or at .
torneys representing any of
the aforementioned pe1 sons :
Marron McClure. Deceased ,
Dexter. Ohio , Salem Town ·
ship, No. 21583
You are hereby notified that
t he
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the eslate of the
aforementioned,
deceased .
late of said County , was filed
in this Court. Said Inventory
and Appraisement will be for
hearing before this Courl on
the 2nd day of October. 1975, at
10 : 00 o'clock A .M.
. Any p erso n desiring to f i le
exceptions thereto mu st file
them at least five days prior to
the date .set for hear rng .
Given under mv hand and
seat of said Court, this 16th
day of Septem ber 1975.
Manning D. Webster
Judge
By An n B. Watson
Deputy Clerk
(9) 18 ·25-2tc

available at your Pomeroy
Sears Catalog Store.

Early Christmas shopping pays double at Sears.
You save time when you shop by catalog. And
shopping earlY assures you of getting the items you
want, without delays. Plus you get a $5 discount on
any order of $50 or more, if you order before October 13. Slop Sears Chr~s Catalog.-

Use one

Sears credit plans

o(

$5 Discount Expires October 13, 1975
Call Sears Catalog Shopping today

INSULATION
Blown Into

992·2178
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back

The Walls ·

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

For Free Estimates
Call Today

Mi~dleport,

POMEROY, OHIO

Authorized

CATALOG SALES
MERCHANT

89th

Owned and

Operafedby

.\li,~nml.lllr

Cll.fiiRATIIII

Lou Osborne

Ohio
'

..

STREET

ISears I

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
992-5321

220 E. MAIN

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2 SIGNS Pome_
·Business Services
r o)
I@
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QUALITY Motor Co.
-·---·...
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary word s.

.

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

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197 3 PON olAC Gt&lt; AND PRIX

WH AT THE FASTEST
CONTESTANTS IN THE
"THREE·LE66ED
~ACE WERE .

/MEuNcl

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Grand Pr ix cou pe , black fini sh , black viny l top, SJ
opt ion . ste reo, r adio and tape, fa ct ory ai r , power
st eering and brak es. Whi te str ipe radi al t ires_ Nice and
sharp

1973 BUI CK LeSAB R E

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I;:~-~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~u~g~g;••=t~ed~bytheabovecarioon.
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Now arrange the circlod letters

to form the surpriae answer.

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BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisoly Service,
Collection systems,_

FREE ESTIMATES .

Blown
Insulation Services

Blown into Walls &amp; A Hies '

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINI)OWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING•SOFFITT
GUTIERS-AWNINGS

Cu stom H .T. Cpe ., locCt l ow n er , that's rea ll y sha rp
insi d e &amp; out. good w -w t i r es, custo m w heels, dark
green v iny l roo f, green fin ish , A M rad io &amp; tape, factory
a ir , wu tomatic, P. stee ring &amp; brr:tkes.

LARRY LAVENDER
.
~

Syracuse, Ohio

Ph . 992'3993
4

$1495

10-1 mo .

From the larges l Truck or
Bulldoz er R~!idiator to the '
SIJlallesT Healer Core .

lARRY .WIIlBREY,

Sft\ITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC._

Accountant
Phone 992-6173

Pom e roy

Ph . 992 ·2 174

5:3()-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.
6:3(1-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; And y Gr iffit h

..

IYAW'-1: ) ... G0 5H.

....

I WON DER I'IHAr
WOKE ME UP~

6: CBS News 8, 10; Your FUture Is Now 33 .
7j :OO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Te ll the Truth 4; Bow ling
tor Dollars 6; Space : 8 ; Black Perspective on the

HMM, TH AT 'S FUNN Y... WH Y

News 20; Let's Make a Deal 13; Fa mily Affair 15;
Family at War 33.
·

DO I HAVE TH I~ QUEER FEELIN6
THAT I"M ~EI'-16 WATCHED~

7:3G-- Ho'llywood Squares 3,4; Evenlnq Edition witt-

-·~

9-21 -JOtc

.

5:00--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.

office supply service.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist ...

.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER25, 1975
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
" The Greatest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()-Bewltcheq 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Get Smart 15 .

'

$3295

1971 MATADO R

'MBALMING

••

ACRE an Rt.
7
in
Pomeroy. e!ec .. sewer , an d
water , $3000 or would ta~e
pic kup or land in cou n try m
trad e. Phone (304) 773 -5975 .
9-25 -31p

$3895

I
HC&gt;R!;Es?l.

AU. OVER. NOW THI'Y'RE

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Thursday. Seot
1

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6 ROOM ·ana Oa m . t ir eptace,
full basement. fuel o i l h eat,
d r illed w ell, 4 r ooms , and
hall c arpeted. 2 rooms ,
hardwood fk&gt;or s, al um inum
si d i ng , s torm windows ,
ga rag e and to ol shed . Phone
247 2063 or 247 .2511 after 5.
9-25 -oltc

gDlC~I"~~""nH"&lt;'l Mi&lt;I&lt;I~P.oort·Pomeroy, 0.,

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!!

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·_MartlnAgronsky20; ; Wild Kingdom ·10; To Tell the
Truth ·13; Jimmy DeM 15 .
.
:OOMontefuscos
3,4
,
15
;
;
Barney
.Miller 6, 13;
8
Waltons 8, 10; Romantic Rebellion 33; Philosophers
&amp; Kings 20 .
8:3(1-Fay 3.4,15 ; On The Rocks 6.1 3; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.

9:QO-E llery Queen 3,4, 15; Streets ol San Francisco
6.13 ; Movie "Con rack" 8 ; Classic Theatre 33; ;

Movie ""The Presi dent 's Analyst" 10:. Firing Line
20.
10 :QO-Medlcal Story 3.4, 15; Harry 0 6. 13; News 20.
11 :oo-News 3.4,6.8, 10.10, 13.15.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; WIde World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie " Satan's School for Girls" 8; Movie
""Honky Tonk"' 10; Janakl 33 .
12 3()-Wide World Myster~ 6.
1 :oo-- 1 omorrow 3,4 ; News 13 .

FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER 26,1975

tl-door, loca I ca r , ai r condition ed , fu It eQ uipm ent .

Jumble•• lADLE OPIUM
\"r.•lerday'•
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.
Answer: (( 1/Uit du&lt;llii H yrw

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lwarw~ -

BABOON

IPOMO~~P~
••~~!l!~ co ·.®
L___

IMMUNE

.
tl'llfl

I t/4 '1 rt

MUMBLE

For Sale

Card of Thanks
everyone for mak ing our
40th Wedding Anniver sa ry a
co mplete surprise . Thanlo:.s
To all for the gifts. flowers
and cards . Everything was
greatly apprec iated .
Mr . and Mrs . Ralph Kelle r
9 25 -1tp

Lost

A L L NEW Turner M -2 plus 2
power mike, $20; and mo bil e
100 w Lienar $100. Phone
992 -5784 after 6 p m 992
2590 .
9-18-6t c

LOST - License plate s. Z -618
B, Phon e Dan ie l Davidson ,
1747 Chester Rd ., Pomeroy ,
992 -7208 .
9-25-Jtc

-

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STEREQ . RADIO, A M -F M , 8
track ta pe c ombinat io n .
Balance $10 1.29 or term s
Call 992 -3965 .
9-21 -!J c

For sale
2000 .

USE D CHAIN saws, 498
Locust S t. , M i ddlepor t .
Phone 992 -3092.
9-18-26tc

1954 FERGUSON tra c tor w i th
ac cessories Phone 84 3-2561 .
9-24 -6t c
1971 KAWASAKI 500 . Call 247 2813.

L OSE weight with New Sha pe
Tablets and Hydr ex Water
Pills a t Ou ffon
Drug ,
M i ddleport and Nel son
Drug .
9·23 -3t p

1973 FX350 Harl ey Davidson .
less than 1,000 m iles , $800 .
Phone 992 -2967 after 5 p .m .
9-24 ·41C
COMPLETE O isp 20 head of
horses , Regi s t e red and
grade , show and pleasure .
Phone ( 61 4) 388-0991 or 367 7 481 .
•
9-24 -6tc

G ;.\

$]

WI:: wfSH fu fhank each and

1972 FOR 0 tractor
Phon e 992 -2990

POM_EROY, OH _Io_ _ _ _ __

hig h powe r sh ee ts
83 box ; Rem ing !on or
Super X .n mag . $7 .60 box ,
22 L R 73c box. Save a l so on
n ew and use d gu n s many
used S B .
D B . 's , au to' s,
pumps , dis co un t on al l n ~w
Qu ns and extra barrels
Fi fe's, Bac k o f Speed Quee n
L aundry Mat, Jrd S ! ,
Midd leport
9. 12 12tc

li

9

F T . OVERHEAD g arage
door co mplet e. large vise ,
modern bathtub , la r ge roll
aboul , tool box, 308 Page St.,
M i ddleporl , phone 992 -3509 .
9-23 -Stc

AL LI S Cha l me r s tractor w ith
plow an-d cultiva tors , 547 5
A lso, Bundy B flaT c l arinel.
$50 . Phone 742 -5825 .
9-23 -3tc

LIVING room sui te , end and
coffee table , lamps , bedrm .
suite, recliner , upright
freezer . Phone 99 2-7369 .
9-24 -3tc 4 WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
flat dump tru ck, Haro ld
RADIATOR S,
doors
and
Brewer , Lon g Boflom . Ohio ,
windows·, and other used
614 -985 -3554 .
building material. Call 992 9-21 -lf c

2720.

9-24 -Jtc

CATERPILLAR D -6 bulldozer
hydraulic
angle blade ,
1975 FIREBIRO Formula 400
heavy cab . Good con dition .
A .C ., tilt wheel, · factory
Harold
Brewer ,
L on g
tape, mags and gauges. Low
Boll om, 61 4·985 ,3554 .
m il eage . Phone 742 ·5943 . .
9·21 -lf c
9·24 -41c

AUCTION

For Sales
F UE L OI L Furna ce com pl ete
wi th pipes and registers
Kenmore gas range and
d ishwasher , 19 16 Model T
Ford t r uck Phone { 614 ) 985
4 ll B.

9-25 -Ct c
1974 YAMAHA 360 MX , e)(
ce ll en t condit ion , $8 00.A i so.
8 chann el Ha ll icratter CB
radio ,
$50
J ames
L.
Chadwe ll , Rt. 1. Reedsville.
Ohi o 45772.
9-25 -51c
REMINGTON tOOauto. new 12
or 20 ga $172 .50 .
Fi l e's,
M iddle por t. Oh io.
9 25 26 1c
ITHACA Model 37 pu mp , new
12 or 20 ga . $129.95 , F if e's ,
M id dlepor t. Ohio .
9-25 -6t C
WHO L E SA LE Shot shells,
d ee r slugs, 22 lo ng rifle , 22
mag . bear and Jenn ing s
Bo s, 40 pe t . o ff li st . F if e's ,
Middl eport , Ohio.
9-25 -6tc

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER27, AT 10 A.M.
Millwood is 10 miles south of Ra1 enswaad
an St . Rt.2.
•
Having been rained out at our Saturda , Sept . 20
auction we will offer our entire stock consistmg of the

..

.

·very early · BR furniture . plat1orm rock e r and stde
chairs. walnut w ith red velvet cover, wood cupboards,
buffet, treadle sewing machine, oil lamps. quilt 'tops,
stoneware, ironware, stoves, breakfast sets, mare
pony and two colts, trunks . We w ill sell all our di sp la y
cases.
Lunch Served.

Not responsible for accidents .

Siegler &amp; Monogram

in for $15 .00 discount.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

SEPt 27, 1975 -

Phone 992-2181

Wanted To Buy
OL D turn rt ur e, . i ce boxes ,
' brass ·bed s, or comp let e
house h ol d s. Wr i t e M . o-...
Mi ll e r , Rt 4 , Pomeroy ,
Ohio Cal l 992 7760 _
10 -7 74

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a:

OLD ITEMS - J.
Mitchell muzzle loading rifle Ifull
stock). W. Richards double barrel 12 gauge shotgun,
dinner bell, oil burning tail light for Model T, Model T
Ford coils, oll lati'\p, oil tant.e rn , partial marble top
dresser , round top trunk , powder horn, pict':lre fra~es.
oak table, stone jugs, stone jars, 6 oak stratght chatrs.
iron keUies, 2 pie safes , rocking chairs, horse-drawn
mowing machine, rake , single trees, double trees . 4

Tappan

Range,

Frigidaire refrigerator , dinette set, kitchen cupboard

w-glass doors, utility cabinet, Admiral chest type deep
fr-eeze. porch glider, 2 Iron beds, ·sweepers with attachments, floor lamp, fan , 2 portable televisions , 2
studio couches, platform rocker , stands , quilts,
sausage stuffer.
'I

· fv'IISC. ITEMS. Log chains, steel traps,
hand ·tools, Sabre roto-tiller, many ather
'\ misc. Hems.
'
OWNER- FLORA McCLURE
Food served by
Rutland Fire
DeptAu,: iliary.
•
. . ·
·
1
Not responsible for Accidents.
Auctioneer...:... Lloyd Dilliriger
Rt. 1•. Shade,
Phone 696-1.269

o.,

HUNTING LAND -

Around

100 acres wi th you ng timber
and 12 acre s of bottom . All
mineral s. S235 per acre.

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

-r.

M I D D L E P 0 R
new
decorated , carpeted. gas
forced air , 3 bedroom, Jl/ 2
sto ry corner lo t. si ngle
garage , near sc hool and
sho pping center , $17,500.
992 -7624 , 586 Lincoln Sl. ,
Middleport .
9-ll:..t fc

30

ACRE
Farm,
ap .
pr oximately 17 ac r es Jar ·
m ing ground .Loca t ed one
m ile back of Philip Sporn
Plant. On blacktopped road .
Call (304) 882 -2297 after 5 p .

m.

Saturday, September 27, 10:30 A.M. at my
residence on SR 124 on the East side of
Rvtland (next to Rutland Auto Sales).
Moving into mobile home so will sell the
following:
Two complete bedroom suites. white 112 bed
and chest, 112 trailer bed, set new box
springs and mattress with metal frame,
Maple chest of drawers (5 drawer).
dressing table with stool, coppertone
Frigidaire refrigerator, coppertone hardwick double-oven gas range. set kitchen
cabinets and sink, breakfast nook, round
dinette table and four chairs, maple table
with four chairs, maple hutch, flowered
couch. Cosco porch . couch, blond desk.
coffee table. glass double door cabinet.
green rocker, orange .swivel rocker, green
leather tilt-back chair : metal wardrobe ,
Zenith AM- FM stereo, Sony tape recorder,
Dressmaker sewing machine, gas floor
furnace. table saw, electric vuitar with
amp.
ANTIQUES: Pump organ, two organ stools,
pie safe, wash stand , depression glass, old
· ,.dishes and a large amount of misc. items .
Lunch Served ·

SHERMAN TILLIS-OWNER
·L

0.

Rr AI TV
. · l;.ni.U_

608 E. . '
1.\AI N

POM"E-ROY.O
POMEROY - TOO MANY
CHILDREN TO LIVE IN A
SHOE - but not for th is
home

~

4 bedrooms - 2

baths. Large living, Utility
R .. large por c h (glass
enclosed) , N.G. hot water
heat.
Recreation
R.,

garage . JUST $30,000.00.
POMEROY - CLOSE TO
SCHOOL - 2 story frame
In excellent condition, 3
BR , bath, nice kitchen W.
range. disposal, N .G. hot
water heat . Full basement .

$17,000.
MIDDLEPORT

Beautiful lot , frame and
stone buil ding , bath , N .G .
forc e d
air
furnace,
paneling &amp; tile, alley in

rear . ASKING , ONLY
$7
.000.
CLELAND
REALTY lth e
sign of know howl ACTION
&amp; RESULTS ON THE

SALE
OF
YOUR
PROPERTY . .
PHONE 992-2259

WE SPECIALIZE in mobile
home furnace repa ir. Phone
992 -5858 .
9-18 -tfc
SEPTIC TANK S c l ean ed .
Mod ern Sani tation 992 395 4
or 99'1 7349 .
9 18 !l c
1F

·v uu

.Dan's Shoe Repair
J1BN . 2nd

Jobber In

9-'2· 1 mo.

"Mac" McCoy--, Auctioneer

·-...•

-....,

NORTH

~­

·We
We
We
We

WOULD yQiJ . BELIEVE ?
Bui ld an all steel building at
Pole Bar n pr ices? Golden
Giant All -Steel Build in gs ,
Rt . 4 , Box 148 , Waverly ,
Ohio. Pho ne 947 -2296.
7-24 -!I C

Mason. W. Va .
HOUSEHOLD ITEM S: One livinQ room su ite, one
Zenith color T.V., 2 roc king chairs, gossip bench . 3
be droom su ites , one Whirlpool ga s cook stove,
Whirlpool refrigerator , 15 cu . ft. Westinghouse chest
freezer , auto. washer &amp; dryer. 2 ironing boards,
va c uum sw eeper , lawn f urniture and garden tools, 1
lawn mower, one porch swing, several antiques, one lot ·
of miscellaneous i~ems. ~ery larg~ sale .
·

~:::
LJ'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

PUBLIC AUCTION
SEPTEMBER 27, 1975
SATURDAY 12:00 NOON

SPONSORED .BY
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER AT .
POMEROY JUNiOR HIGH AUDITORIUM
The following items will be for sale:
Furniture
Small Appliances
Stone Jars '
Blue Mason Jars and Lids
lnsultors
Glassware
Rag Rugs
.
Other artitles too numerous to mention
Lunch Available
Not Responsible for Accidents
Auctioneer: Carnahan and Smith

:.c::::::===:::::T--1

LITTLE .ORPHAN .:A.NNIE_;IHARP PRACTICE

FY':'::::":~~~i=f'=:;;=:;;;:;;;;:;;;"'1
WH'I', SAI&lt;IDY!
I'IHAT's TH~

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MATTER? YOU

HA~e~;:w~TE!-1

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IT CAH"T

LOOK HOW NICE
IT iS? ISH' T THAT···
WAIT. A SECOND-IT
LOOKS LIKE·· LIKE·•

IIIROHU ··:.:::...;
FOOD- I -

M"l'SELF 5PE'CtAL -

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YOU BETTER TELL LEM

LEM!

WE'RE GOING OVER
TO THE BANK !

AND I ARE GOING
TO TH'..
?~I

• • •

..

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,

..where a truck ...wasdi
1s it possible this damaqe
responsi
exactl1..1 like
was incurred last niqht at
this one ...
the Bijou Drive-in Theater ...

Oe\\'48\'Y Semce
..........

--........

W.VA . .

Opening lead _ Q,.

L - - - - - - -- - - - '
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Dinadan. the worst kmght
and bridge player. knows hiS
limitations. He steers clear of
challenges at both sword and
ca rd play. WhenLancelotopened one notrump. Dmadan ra1sed
the peerless one to three m·
stead of showing his rive -card
heart suit.
Thedefensestartedwithfour
club trick s. Then , East shifted
to a spade . Lancelot, who had
discarded one spade from each
hand , rose with his ace and
started on diamonds .

Yesterday's Answer
12 Conceited
one
16 Cabbie's
passenger
22 Morsel
23 Chou En- 24 Layers of
rock
25 Savile Row
businessman

26 Seth's
sibling
28 Shabby
30 - geometry
32 Bucolic
33 Revise a
text
38 Prickly
seed
coat
39 - hinunel!

,...

OF

OUR

g~E

--...

'""
"""

..

ROYAL OAK FARM
Complete Cow Herd Dispersal
Sale of Polled Herefords
SATURDA~ SEPt 27, 1975

-mE NEW NE)(l" lXXJR
HA&amp; HARDLY HAD11ME: lD
PtJT OOWN HER 6AGE)AND
RIP IS ALREADY GETTING
HER UFE STORY! ,--._../

SPORTIN' GOODS

~
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CAN GET SOMETHING'

C&gt;OING !

10100 a.m.

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MIJPM
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XGVNO,
MIJPM. -

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Featuring VIctor Plato, Plato Domino; Battle Mischief

.,
I

'

.

Smmy &amp; Company 6; Movie "Maneater" B; Movie

" Night of the Sorcerers" I) ; Janak I 33.
1,oo-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15 ; Wide World Special 6 ;
Movie " Ten Little Indians" 10; News 13 .
" If a Man Answers" 4.
4 : 3~Movle " The Last Time I Sa~Archle" 4.
2:J~Movle

green eyed m onste r on your
shou lder. But he'll be perched
there when someone you're
f ond of Cas ts her eyes
elsewhere.

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)
You 'll be very disappointed if
you expect things to fall in yo ur
l ap ,effortless ly . You get
nothing for nothing today .

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Usually
you' re very st raig htforward in
conversations with pals. To-.
d ay, you ' r e apt t o try to
camou flage me anings .

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22) Se ll doubts could sidetrack some
i nfluences th at would prove
very favorab le to your career .
Have faith in your ab ility today.

tu nate ·-ar(erattons tn plans loday. because you place more
credence In the ideas of others
than they deserve.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Avoid trying to pull another's
chestnuls out of the lfre today .
You'll find it costly and un reward ing .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0..
21) If' s not wise to expect too
m uc h of other s today. Even
those exceptionally fond of you
ca n only perform within certain
lim ilations.

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon II)
Steer clear today of one who
ha s reason to be jealous or
your achievements . Th is pe r·
son is inclined 10 throw slumbling blocks in your path .
AQUARIUS IJ•n 20-Fob II) II
you want to acco mplish today
what you set out to , don't be
li mid . Yo u must be bold and
forthri ght. but not reck less .
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Keep con f id e nt ial matters
within the family today . Loose
talk w ill be played back and it
wil l b e d is lorted in the
transmission .

,&amp;Your

W'~irthday
Sept. 28; lt7$
You will make some major
changes in your lifestyle !his
co m ing year . They'll be well
thought thr ough Someone
now distant from you will have
a major hand in them .
! NE WSPAPI-~R

ENTERPRISE ASSN . !

These coWs will be bred to Justa G. Bodmin 18SA,

Remitall Drake 101p, Rof-LLF Victor Anx and Rupert
Vic Plato -450.

i.:

II MU~T
BE AFTER

'

AAPPENS ALL
THE TIME!

Onwer: Mr- &amp; fi/u's. Horace Karr
~ D 3, Pomeroy, Ohio . PH: 513-985-3341

''

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EARL•&lt;. ..

GVPPER IS LATE ...

~J..-.-----1

...
..

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Mi( APPETITE IS
Ml(

SIX ...

Catalogs sent on request: Buckeye Sales Management
Service, Carl. Birney_, Sec., RD I, Freeport, Ohio 43973.
PH: 61H58-~20.

,

'

Barnaby Jones 8,10;

going to make some unlor·

~~~4H~~4H~~~~t4~~~~~~t4~4 -~'
\"

Cen -

News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
ll :ro-N ews 3,4,6.8,10,13,l5; ABC News 33 .
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Wide World Special 13;

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) You·re

.,

and Vidor Anxiety pedigreed cows .

10 :oo---Pollce Woman 3,4, 15;

GEMINI (Mor 21-Juno 20) Irs
not like you to carry that little

OGJl

a

tennial 20; Thin Edge 33.

You won't have your head
together in busi ness today .
a,e cause o f you r tack o f
awareness , someth ing of value
will be lost .

One letter simply stands for another . ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differ ent.

VGM

6,13 ; Hawaii Flve -0 8,10; Memories for

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

EJM

T omorrow B, 10.

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1 :oo-News 3; Ryan"s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3,-4, 15; Let' s Make a D&amp;al ~· 13;
As the World Turns B. 10.
2 :Q0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:3&lt;&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.1 3; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13 ;
Match Game 8, 10; Interface 20.
3: 3(}-{)ne Life to Live 13 : Max B. Nimble 6; TaHielales
8, 10; Arbors 20.
4:QO-Mr . Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20.33; Movie
" The Greatest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13 . .
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6 ; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smart 15.
5:()()--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3&lt;&gt;-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20.33; Adam -12 13.
6:QO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; SesameS. 20;
Special Education 33 .
6: 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10 ; Business 33.
7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3; To cell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Welk ~ ; Aviation Weather
20,33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13 ; Family
Affair 15.
.
7: 3o-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobby VInton A; Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20: To Tell the Truth 13; Pop Goes the Country 15;
Black Perspective on the News 33.
8:QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Mobile One 6,13; Big Eddie
8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8:31}-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; MASH 8,10; Wall Street
Week 20.33.
,
9 :ro-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "Death Scream

Your p rom ises today wil t tack
your
u s u al
sincerity .
Rem embe r · You ' ll h u rl
someone more by reneg ing on
a pledge than il you didn't
make il at all

CRYPTOQUOTES

4 miles N ; llJ Pomeroy, Ohio on SR 7

Musi cal Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13 .

IO :QO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Give-NTake 8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:3&lt;&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3. 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8, 10.
11 :3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel"s World 10.
12 ,QO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showolfs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 :3()-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for

Bernice Bede Osol
For Frldoy, Sept. 28, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18)

~=·

AT THE fARM, POMEiOY, OHIO

Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7: 3&lt;&gt;-Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Ca pt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St .
33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6 .
9:ro-A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J . 13.
9: 3&lt;&gt;-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;

b

35
36 Jamaica
export
37 What a
,_,..,__ shame!
(2 wds.)
~~~ ;G Israeli port
.,.
On all
sides
41 Tribe
42 Quarry
..J.~......J.~..J 43 Maintained

OH IT GETS FAMILI E&amp;1 100.
BUT A LOT OF UNATTACHED
IMLEO ANI) FEMALE&amp; GO
THERE 10 SEE IF 11-&lt;EY

Prevention 10 .

6 : 4D-Ounce of

6· 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6: 55-C huck White Reports 10; News 13.
·
7: oo-Today 3,4, 15 ; A.M. America 6, 13 ; CBS News 8;

~Lio.ll"'l

Sons"

O

6:25-Fa rm Report 13.
6 : 30--- New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.

A -"r.Q ~ll 1

~~~~;()tj~\(tv~CXijLj~)f~~{6~~~~i;lj)(;;~NV~~jL~~)\~~----~Greekletter~
AH CCULD
THAT'S
LOOKS MORE: L/i&lt;E: A
~ ~ol~y

•

· Selling 160 lots
150 bred cows and calves
10 bulls ready for use

(Do you have a question for
the Jacobys? Write " Ask the
J aco h y s· care o f thi s
newspaper The mos t in teres tm g ques tio ns will be
used m _lh1s ~o lumn _ and
wnlers w111 rece1ve co p tes of
JACOBY MODERN )

r-

··.-..-

HERMAN GRATE-

Pass

1 N T.
Pass

A reader from Quebec wants
to know what he should have lod
from :
• 2 y AQ87. KQ32"' AQ98
after his partne r passed to his
takeout double of a one spade
opening bid .
There is an old expert conventi on here . This conve ntiOn IS
when your pa rtner passes your
takeout doub le of a one bid . he
wants you to lead a trump if you
have one . Our correspondent
s hould h ave o pened hi s
s ingleto n trump .

24 Accumulate h-4-~f--+-­
U Plebe
27 Pungent
28 Levantine
ketch
29 Inlet (Sp.) , -4-+-

,

'·

South

part

..

.

3N T

East

by THOM AS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Wedding,
I Wine dissponge or
order
angel
2 "Tempest"
5 Lather
spirit
9 River past
3 Give a
Pisa
telling
10 Conunem&lt;&gt;blow
• rative tablet
( 4 wds .)
13 Noun suffix 4 Two
14 Lacking
eras
legend
5 Shrubby
15 Part of a
plant
min.
6 Forearm
1&amp; "- Diavolo"
bones
17 Fuss
7 " - Rhein~"5;; 18 Wapiti
gold" ·
'l :.c.&amp;&lt;~ 19 Grow old
8 Boxing
20 King (Fr.)
ring
21 Duffer's
(2 wds.)
shout
11 Not com23 Camera
pleted

GASOI.JNE ALLEY
\

North

HEY, LEM! ORVILLE

.,

~"" ~~hon• 713-5592
.MASON FURNITURE

.J8 76
10 5
SOUTH 101
.. A K

.

GJ:l()UND

'

. '

Auctioneer _
Signed, James A. King . Aammtstrator
Not Responsible for Accidents

.. Q J 4

West

UPPER SECTION Rustic
Hills ,
Syracuse .
Ohio ,
Modern 3 bedroom, all
electric, 52,000 BTU a ir
conditioner.
Just buill.
Recreation room . All car peted 27x14, S24.000 . Phone ·
992 -7523 .

Located 1 block above Pomeroy--Mason Bridge at

¥14

t4 2

Ne ither vu ln era ble

Free Estimates
AI Tromm
. Ph. 742-5081 ·

. . MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

¥J 953

.'

FOR'GREATCOUNTRY
STEREO'
Listen to Geno Khan
Week Nights from 7:30 to
Midnight
on
WMPO-FMSTERE092

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

E AST
• 9; 3

• K Q 10 53
.. 7 6 3

Real Estate for Sale

3 BEDRM . home and bath.
basement, double garage.
carport, workshop over
garage , 3 outbuildings,
Salem St ., R:utland . Phone
742 -4111 .
9·23-6tc

WEST
• K 10 8 4

.. A Q7
¥A 2

I

BED ·RM . home ,
just
finished . remodeling , Salem
St ., Rutland . Phone 742 -3615
after 4 p .m . or see Milo B.
Hutchison .
9-23 -lfc

.. 9 8 2

THIIJb
sau;w ME IF
ml!J07 J ./- ~ l1QD

are iOterested in
bu i lding a new home or ExcAVAT tN'G', do ze r , toaoer
hav in g y_
o ur present home
and backhoe work ; septi c
remodeled , con tact Rous h
tank s
i nsta ll ed .
du.mp .
9-17 l mo .
ConsTrue l ion , 992 -7583 , Greg
tr uc k s and 10 boys for h1r~ ;
Roush
--'
will hau l fill dirt. top sod , 9-17 12tc
li nieston e and gravel.; Call . S EWING
MA· c ·H -INE .
-------------Bob or Roger Jeffers. daY
Rep, irs, serv ice . all makes .
DO ZER W~i&lt; : E~&lt; cavatin g ,
phon e 99 2·7089 . night phone
992-2284.
The F,:~bri~ ~ho p • •
la nd clearing, ponds and
992 3525 or 992 -52 32
Pomeroy . Autho't'rzed Smg er :
basements ,
and
la nd .
2-11 -tfC
Sales and Se r vic e . ·we
sc aplng .
Pull i ns
Ex
- - -----.- ,.,_
sha rpen Scissors .
cavat ing , phon e 99 2-2478 .
3-29 -ttc
backhoe ,
B-26 ·30tc '"'EXCAV ATtN .G,
dozer and dltch'er . Gas , - - - --=--- ------- - - - - ._
TOILET
electric and water line P O RTABLE
BA CKH-OE tor r en t, hour or
RENTAL ,
Construction
burl~l. basements, footers ,
c ontra c t
Reg . or
ex Ou ldo o r events . Phone
se pti c systems and brush
cavat ing type . Se pti c tank s
Gall ipolis ,
446 - 478?,
cleaning
.
Will
haul
fill
d
irt.
inst alled . Bi ll Pullins . Phone
RuSsell ' s Plu mbin g and
top
soil,
sand
and
gravel
,
992 2478
Healing .
limes tone tor driveways and
6·27 -tfc
e 19 -tf c
roads . Phone Charles R .
--- -·------.- Hatfield , Backhoe Service,
Rt . 1, Rutland , Ohio , 742 - WilL TRIM or cut trees and
6092 .
shrubbery . . Phone 949 -3221
7-ll -90tc
or 742 -4441.
9-7-24tc
tL II/"C)"dlY"Il"OWE~ SREPA IR·.
Swee per s, toasters, ir"on!i ,
HOU SE , 51h acres in Portla nd .
all small appliances . Lawn . WE. DO aluminum siding ,
Call (614) 864 -1876, after 5
gutter
work,
roofing,
mowe r , n exT to Sta te High -J
p.m .
paneling , painting , plum .
way Garage on Route 7~ ,
Phone 98 5 3825 .
bing. We fix th e whole
9-24 -12tc
house . At Tromm , 742 -5081.
4. 16 -lfc
NEW 3 bedrm. home. brick
.9-24 -tf
I
front. 1 car garage , modern
all elec . 1 mile out of
Chester . Call 949 -4692 or 843 2667'.
9-24 -12tp
3

When it fai led to drop . it was a ll
up to the hea rt suit.
Lancelot stopped to anal yze
the opening lead and decided
that ,if West had been dealt a
five-card major suit he would
ha ve led it. Hence, his distribution would be 4+2·3.
Thus hearts we re go ing to
break 4-2. After that analys is it
wa s no proble m to fine sse
against the jack of hearts and
score the notrump game

. A9

BORN LOSER
P"SCM6~ \I.UI(.()tj'T

Paint Houses
Paint Barns
Paint Roofs
Paint Anything

He had no r eason to try a
finesse for the jack of that suit .

2S

.. J 6 2
¥ K Q 10 8 6

'i()() .

CONCRETE
delil/ered righ t to your
project . r:as t and easy . Fre e
es t imates . Phon e 992 -3284 ,
Goeg lei n Ready M ix Co ,
Midd leport, Ohio..
•1
6 30 -tfc

6 :oo--columbus Today 4 : Sunrise Semester 10.
6 : 15- F olk Literature 3.

Lancelot's finesse traps knave

~

MlX

PUBLIC SALE

Henry Lewis -

~

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete air conditioning
sales and service. healing ,
plumbing , roofing lind
general sheet metal work .
Free Estimates
9-14-1 mo .

Dan's Shoe Repair

WIN AT BRIDGE

N

Your Heil Dealer
Third St.
Racine, Ohio
Ph . 949-5961

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoes

·~-. E A DY

..

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Middleport, 0.

Real Estate for Sale

AUCTION

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
County Rd. No. 4. The following "items will
be sold :

3 ac re

t r a i ler or building l ot i n
Le ban on
tow n ship .
Also
bu i lding lot at Dorcas.

CAR PENTRY ,
pan e l i n~ ,
fl oo ring and cei ling . Phon e
992 -2759 .
9. 17-26tc

'-==-- -----..J - - -- - - -- - -- ----

DEXTER, OHIO

l

$35.000.
NEW LISTING -

9·25 -6t c

11:00 A.M.

,

1966 FALCO N, 80,000 m i les, home, modern kit., bat h, 2
good dependable ca r for por c hes, basement and al l
$260, or best o ff er . Phone ut ili ties . $15,000 .
992 5190 .
NEW LISTING Near
9-23 -5tp Coolv i ll e. 4 bedroom ins ulated
~------- -----home, 2112 baths , hot water
1968 DODGE. good cond itio n ,
k't
·th
air condi lio ning, see at 131 heat , large ·modern 1 ., wt
Lau r el SL, Pomeroy, Ohio rang e, dishwasher. disposal .
·
9-23 -6t c and birch ca bin et s, 5 acres.

-- --- --- ~ -- -----.--

CLIP THIS AD and bring it

round bac~ chairs, sideboard.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 36"

9-23 -3tc MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom

GUNS and Ammo . Our fall
stock
is
now
here .
Complete line of Rem ington,
Winchester, ONE 1969 Community Homes.
lthica , Sa vag e. SluQ barrels
( 3 bedrm . ) all electric
in stock for mo st br an d sho t mobile home and I ac re lat.
guns, but in sh or t supply .
Ready to live in . Pri ce
Get them whil e th ey last .
$9 , 500 .
2
mile s
fro m
Money short , lay -a .way
R uttand . Ca n b e seen by
your fall hun ting nee d s. New
appt . by calling 992-3537
Fall Slor' e ho ur s sta rtin g
aft er 5 p .m .
Sept . 5, 10 am . to 9 p .m .,
9-23 -tfc
Monday -Saturday . Village
Gun Shopp e, 266 Mill Sf_.,
Ph on e 992 -5177 , fin ancing
ava i lable .

All sizes on hand , prices
start at $324.69. •
·-1 Wood Burning Stove

PUBLIC AUCTION

NEW LISTING - 9 r oom s, 3
bedr ooms wi th close ts, hot
water hea t, large li ving and
nice front porch in Middleport ,

Mobile Homes for Sale

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

MURRAY AND DURST AUCTION SERVICE

$6.000.

NEW LISTING -- J14 ac re
business lot on Rt. 7 East .
11 ROOMS - Pl us basement
a nd 2 porches on 2 lots n e)(t to
~ 67 -RAMEiLER~Phon ;-99T store . Above all floods with
26 92. Ca n be se en at 957 r iver view . Ci ty water , Nat.
Broa d way, M id dleport .
ga s, and bath . Asking $8500.

5 FT . 3 PT . H1 . . ._ ,, , ttU sh h og ,
$225 .00 Ph one 985 -359 4
CA STLER
12x65
2
9·19 -8tp 1974
bedroom , 2 full baths , tot a l
3 PT . H I T CH mower to f i t
electric , furn i ture . Phone
F or d or Fer gu son tracto r
949 -3655 or 992 -767 I
$125 .00 . Phone 985 -3594 .
9. 19-6tc
'
9-19 -Bip
WHEN CHECKING the ads
3 SET S- 4 chair dinetles. S75
fo r mobi le hom e sa tes , you
ea ; 2 dr . refr igerator duo ,
will note many dea le rs ar e
$17 5; eye level oven an d
offering di Scoun ts . Mos t of
rangetop; gas , harvest gold,
these deals are on homes
$125 ; art i ficial firepla ce.
that have been on the lot
SSO ; beds, 525 ea.; coffee
several mO nths or perhaps a
year . AI Kingsbury Hom e
t able and end table. SJS;
Sear's stereo AM -FM Tape
Sales, 1100 E . Main St .,
Track console. S200 . All
Pomeroy, Ohio. we can offer
you a better d'eal on a Fom .
these are new . Phone 992 7777 .
Cor . wrapped 1976 model
home . Call 992 -70 34
9-25 -Jtc
9-21 -Stc
--- -~------- -- -

~------

WANTED TO BUY
WILL PAY
.26 fo r 1964 and ol d er
dim es
.65 fo r 1964 and o ld er
quarters
$1.30 for 1964 and o ld er
halves .
$3 .&lt;10 for 1935 and older
dollars .
_
- - - - FOR SALE---WHEAT BACK PENNIES
. 85 A ROLL
BUF~ALO NICKELS $7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
51.25 EACH
52 .00 Bills- U.2S each.
SS.OO Gold coins XF cond .
588 .00
CALL142 -l651
Rutland - RagerWamsley

1966 CHRY SLE R N ew port , 4
new tires Phon e (614) 985 3307 or 98 5 3334.
9-25 -3tc

Employment Wanted

CLARINE T, goad condit ion ,
reasonab le. Phone 949 -4114
9-25 -3tc

U.S. COINS

--- - - - --- ------- -- $16.500.

1971 MOBILE Home , close to
Meigs M ines . Phone 742 6582.
9-23 -6tp

MILLWOOD, V. VA

SATURDA~

•
1965 MUSTANG , phone 992
318 1
9 -21 -lfc

T WO BLAC K POODLES . 1
ma te and 1 female A KC
Registered ; Conn trumpet , RE-MODELIN G,
Plumbing ,
t year old : like new Sear's
he ating and all types of
1
Ted W il liamson ' s 7 12 h .p
general
repair .
Work
ou t boa rd moto r ; Se ar 's am p
quaran!eed . 20 years ex'
tor etec . gui-tar , 3 hookups .
pe ri ence . PhO n e 992 2409 .
Phon e ( 304) 88 2·3205.
5 - 1-llt;:1
9-25 -6tc

HANDLEY'S JUNQUE MARKET,

following :

NEW LISTING - 1'12 a cres on
the Ohio River on Slate Rt .
338 . O ld conc ret e blOck
1 building, 2 d r illed wells . A
good pla ce fo r a home . Aski ng

'

' '

..
I.

'

.. AND I'M CAU6HT
IN THE MIDOLE!

1.....,"1-...:_--1

•

�,.
,.

• I

~iWIDiiJf.=::::;;;::;:,:po.r Fast Results Use The SentinefClassifieds ..,,
.....
...
2 SIGNS Pome_
·Business Services
r o)
I@
t
QUALITY Motor Co.
-·---·...
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to
form four ordinary word s.

.

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

........._,

, ,• ._,., ,.. c.... , ......_ .
~

"'!

r

.OF

TUNDA

)L__IJ.::......LXJ.::......L)'------JI-

197 3 PON olAC Gt&lt; AND PRIX

WH AT THE FASTEST
CONTESTANTS IN THE
"THREE·LE66ED
~ACE WERE .

/MEuNcl

rI

)I
('.{)U.AB±
r
~

Grand Pr ix cou pe , black fini sh , black viny l top, SJ
opt ion . ste reo, r adio and tape, fa ct ory ai r , power
st eering and brak es. Whi te str ipe radi al t ires_ Nice and
sharp

1973 BUI CK LeSAB R E

I I
I;:~-~~~~~~~~~~~·~·~u~g~g;••=t~ed~bytheabovecarioon.
I

I ......

Now arrange the circlod letters

to form the surpriae answer.

lUI

I [ X I I I JTO [ I I J

_..SW!I...

BOOKKEEPING,
Tax Advisoly Service,
Collection systems,_

FREE ESTIMATES .

Blown
Insulation Services

Blown into Walls &amp; A Hies '

STORM
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINI)OWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING•SOFFITT
GUTIERS-AWNINGS

Cu stom H .T. Cpe ., locCt l ow n er , that's rea ll y sha rp
insi d e &amp; out. good w -w t i r es, custo m w heels, dark
green v iny l roo f, green fin ish , A M rad io &amp; tape, factory
a ir , wu tomatic, P. stee ring &amp; brr:tkes.

LARRY LAVENDER
.
~

Syracuse, Ohio

Ph . 992'3993
4

$1495

10-1 mo .

From the larges l Truck or
Bulldoz er R~!idiator to the '
SIJlallesT Healer Core .

lARRY .WIIlBREY,

Sft\ITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC._

Accountant
Phone 992-6173

Pom e roy

Ph . 992 ·2 174

5:3()-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.
6:3(1-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; And y Gr iffit h

..

IYAW'-1: ) ... G0 5H.

....

I WON DER I'IHAr
WOKE ME UP~

6: CBS News 8, 10; Your FUture Is Now 33 .
7j :OO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Te ll the Truth 4; Bow ling
tor Dollars 6; Space : 8 ; Black Perspective on the

HMM, TH AT 'S FUNN Y... WH Y

News 20; Let's Make a Deal 13; Fa mily Affair 15;
Family at War 33.
·

DO I HAVE TH I~ QUEER FEELIN6
THAT I"M ~EI'-16 WATCHED~

7:3G-- Ho'llywood Squares 3,4; Evenlnq Edition witt-

-·~

9-21 -JOtc

.

5:00--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.

office supply service.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist ...

.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER25, 1975
4:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie
" The Greatest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()-Bewltcheq 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Get Smart 15 .

'

$3295

1971 MATADO R

'MBALMING

••

ACRE an Rt.
7
in
Pomeroy. e!ec .. sewer , an d
water , $3000 or would ta~e
pic kup or land in cou n try m
trad e. Phone (304) 773 -5975 .
9-25 -31p

$3895

I
HC&gt;R!;Es?l.

AU. OVER. NOW THI'Y'RE

" '
,..

lit..

[o,.L(

:I:&gt;:=.;:W;;IO~~;::;:::-\fillliF-;~~M~U~S'~BSJE~"T':;:;O;;U;G;r-t;-, r-~~~cl;;isi~~-~~g-i~ ;-;;~; ~;;n;g

.f.

Thursday. Seot
1

'

'

6 ROOM ·ana Oa m . t ir eptace,
full basement. fuel o i l h eat,
d r illed w ell, 4 r ooms , and
hall c arpeted. 2 rooms ,
hardwood fk&gt;or s, al um inum
si d i ng , s torm windows ,
ga rag e and to ol shed . Phone
247 2063 or 247 .2511 after 5.
9-25 -oltc

gDlC~I"~~""nH"&lt;'l Mi&lt;I&lt;I~P.oort·Pomeroy, 0.,

..,.
!!

..

·_MartlnAgronsky20; ; Wild Kingdom ·10; To Tell the
Truth ·13; Jimmy DeM 15 .
.
:OOMontefuscos
3,4
,
15
;
;
Barney
.Miller 6, 13;
8
Waltons 8, 10; Romantic Rebellion 33; Philosophers
&amp; Kings 20 .
8:3(1-Fay 3.4,15 ; On The Rocks 6.1 3; Classic Theatre
Preview 33.

9:QO-E llery Queen 3,4, 15; Streets ol San Francisco
6.13 ; Movie "Con rack" 8 ; Classic Theatre 33; ;

Movie ""The Presi dent 's Analyst" 10:. Firing Line
20.
10 :QO-Medlcal Story 3.4, 15; Harry 0 6. 13; News 20.
11 :oo-News 3.4,6.8, 10.10, 13.15.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; WIde World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Movie " Satan's School for Girls" 8; Movie
""Honky Tonk"' 10; Janakl 33 .
12 3()-Wide World Myster~ 6.
1 :oo-- 1 omorrow 3,4 ; News 13 .

FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER 26,1975

tl-door, loca I ca r , ai r condition ed , fu It eQ uipm ent .

Jumble•• lADLE OPIUM
\"r.•lerday'•
.
.
Answer: (( 1/Uit du&lt;llii H yrw

I

.

lwarw~ -

BABOON

IPOMO~~P~
••~~!l!~ co ·.®
L___

IMMUNE

.
tl'llfl

I t/4 '1 rt

MUMBLE

For Sale

Card of Thanks
everyone for mak ing our
40th Wedding Anniver sa ry a
co mplete surprise . Thanlo:.s
To all for the gifts. flowers
and cards . Everything was
greatly apprec iated .
Mr . and Mrs . Ralph Kelle r
9 25 -1tp

Lost

A L L NEW Turner M -2 plus 2
power mike, $20; and mo bil e
100 w Lienar $100. Phone
992 -5784 after 6 p m 992
2590 .
9-18-6t c

LOST - License plate s. Z -618
B, Phon e Dan ie l Davidson ,
1747 Chester Rd ., Pomeroy ,
992 -7208 .
9-25-Jtc

-

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

STEREQ . RADIO, A M -F M , 8
track ta pe c ombinat io n .
Balance $10 1.29 or term s
Call 992 -3965 .
9-21 -!J c

For sale
2000 .

USE D CHAIN saws, 498
Locust S t. , M i ddlepor t .
Phone 992 -3092.
9-18-26tc

1954 FERGUSON tra c tor w i th
ac cessories Phone 84 3-2561 .
9-24 -6t c
1971 KAWASAKI 500 . Call 247 2813.

L OSE weight with New Sha pe
Tablets and Hydr ex Water
Pills a t Ou ffon
Drug ,
M i ddleport and Nel son
Drug .
9·23 -3t p

1973 FX350 Harl ey Davidson .
less than 1,000 m iles , $800 .
Phone 992 -2967 after 5 p .m .
9-24 ·41C
COMPLETE O isp 20 head of
horses , Regi s t e red and
grade , show and pleasure .
Phone ( 61 4) 388-0991 or 367 7 481 .
•
9-24 -6tc

G ;.\

$]

WI:: wfSH fu fhank each and

1972 FOR 0 tractor
Phon e 992 -2990

POM_EROY, OH _Io_ _ _ _ __

hig h powe r sh ee ts
83 box ; Rem ing !on or
Super X .n mag . $7 .60 box ,
22 L R 73c box. Save a l so on
n ew and use d gu n s many
used S B .
D B . 's , au to' s,
pumps , dis co un t on al l n ~w
Qu ns and extra barrels
Fi fe's, Bac k o f Speed Quee n
L aundry Mat, Jrd S ! ,
Midd leport
9. 12 12tc

li

9

F T . OVERHEAD g arage
door co mplet e. large vise ,
modern bathtub , la r ge roll
aboul , tool box, 308 Page St.,
M i ddleporl , phone 992 -3509 .
9-23 -Stc

AL LI S Cha l me r s tractor w ith
plow an-d cultiva tors , 547 5
A lso, Bundy B flaT c l arinel.
$50 . Phone 742 -5825 .
9-23 -3tc

LIVING room sui te , end and
coffee table , lamps , bedrm .
suite, recliner , upright
freezer . Phone 99 2-7369 .
9-24 -3tc 4 WHEEL DRIVE Ford 7x9
flat dump tru ck, Haro ld
RADIATOR S,
doors
and
Brewer , Lon g Boflom . Ohio ,
windows·, and other used
614 -985 -3554 .
building material. Call 992 9-21 -lf c

2720.

9-24 -Jtc

CATERPILLAR D -6 bulldozer
hydraulic
angle blade ,
1975 FIREBIRO Formula 400
heavy cab . Good con dition .
A .C ., tilt wheel, · factory
Harold
Brewer ,
L on g
tape, mags and gauges. Low
Boll om, 61 4·985 ,3554 .
m il eage . Phone 742 ·5943 . .
9·21 -lf c
9·24 -41c

AUCTION

For Sales
F UE L OI L Furna ce com pl ete
wi th pipes and registers
Kenmore gas range and
d ishwasher , 19 16 Model T
Ford t r uck Phone { 614 ) 985
4 ll B.

9-25 -Ct c
1974 YAMAHA 360 MX , e)(
ce ll en t condit ion , $8 00.A i so.
8 chann el Ha ll icratter CB
radio ,
$50
J ames
L.
Chadwe ll , Rt. 1. Reedsville.
Ohi o 45772.
9-25 -51c
REMINGTON tOOauto. new 12
or 20 ga $172 .50 .
Fi l e's,
M iddle por t. Oh io.
9 25 26 1c
ITHACA Model 37 pu mp , new
12 or 20 ga . $129.95 , F if e's ,
M id dlepor t. Ohio .
9-25 -6t C
WHO L E SA LE Shot shells,
d ee r slugs, 22 lo ng rifle , 22
mag . bear and Jenn ing s
Bo s, 40 pe t . o ff li st . F if e's ,
Middl eport , Ohio.
9-25 -6tc

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER27, AT 10 A.M.
Millwood is 10 miles south of Ra1 enswaad
an St . Rt.2.
•
Having been rained out at our Saturda , Sept . 20
auction we will offer our entire stock consistmg of the

..

.

·very early · BR furniture . plat1orm rock e r and stde
chairs. walnut w ith red velvet cover, wood cupboards,
buffet, treadle sewing machine, oil lamps. quilt 'tops,
stoneware, ironware, stoves, breakfast sets, mare
pony and two colts, trunks . We w ill sell all our di sp la y
cases.
Lunch Served.

Not responsible for accidents .

Siegler &amp; Monogram

in for $15 .00 discount.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

SEPt 27, 1975 -

Phone 992-2181

Wanted To Buy
OL D turn rt ur e, . i ce boxes ,
' brass ·bed s, or comp let e
house h ol d s. Wr i t e M . o-...
Mi ll e r , Rt 4 , Pomeroy ,
Ohio Cal l 992 7760 _
10 -7 74

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

a:

OLD ITEMS - J.
Mitchell muzzle loading rifle Ifull
stock). W. Richards double barrel 12 gauge shotgun,
dinner bell, oil burning tail light for Model T, Model T
Ford coils, oll lati'\p, oil tant.e rn , partial marble top
dresser , round top trunk , powder horn, pict':lre fra~es.
oak table, stone jugs, stone jars, 6 oak stratght chatrs.
iron keUies, 2 pie safes , rocking chairs, horse-drawn
mowing machine, rake , single trees, double trees . 4

Tappan

Range,

Frigidaire refrigerator , dinette set, kitchen cupboard

w-glass doors, utility cabinet, Admiral chest type deep
fr-eeze. porch glider, 2 Iron beds, ·sweepers with attachments, floor lamp, fan , 2 portable televisions , 2
studio couches, platform rocker , stands , quilts,
sausage stuffer.
'I

· fv'IISC. ITEMS. Log chains, steel traps,
hand ·tools, Sabre roto-tiller, many ather
'\ misc. Hems.
'
OWNER- FLORA McCLURE
Food served by
Rutland Fire
DeptAu,: iliary.
•
. . ·
·
1
Not responsible for Accidents.
Auctioneer...:... Lloyd Dilliriger
Rt. 1•. Shade,
Phone 696-1.269

o.,

HUNTING LAND -

Around

100 acres wi th you ng timber
and 12 acre s of bottom . All
mineral s. S235 per acre.

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

-r.

M I D D L E P 0 R
new
decorated , carpeted. gas
forced air , 3 bedroom, Jl/ 2
sto ry corner lo t. si ngle
garage , near sc hool and
sho pping center , $17,500.
992 -7624 , 586 Lincoln Sl. ,
Middleport .
9-ll:..t fc

30

ACRE
Farm,
ap .
pr oximately 17 ac r es Jar ·
m ing ground .Loca t ed one
m ile back of Philip Sporn
Plant. On blacktopped road .
Call (304) 882 -2297 after 5 p .

m.

Saturday, September 27, 10:30 A.M. at my
residence on SR 124 on the East side of
Rvtland (next to Rutland Auto Sales).
Moving into mobile home so will sell the
following:
Two complete bedroom suites. white 112 bed
and chest, 112 trailer bed, set new box
springs and mattress with metal frame,
Maple chest of drawers (5 drawer).
dressing table with stool, coppertone
Frigidaire refrigerator, coppertone hardwick double-oven gas range. set kitchen
cabinets and sink, breakfast nook, round
dinette table and four chairs, maple table
with four chairs, maple hutch, flowered
couch. Cosco porch . couch, blond desk.
coffee table. glass double door cabinet.
green rocker, orange .swivel rocker, green
leather tilt-back chair : metal wardrobe ,
Zenith AM- FM stereo, Sony tape recorder,
Dressmaker sewing machine, gas floor
furnace. table saw, electric vuitar with
amp.
ANTIQUES: Pump organ, two organ stools,
pie safe, wash stand , depression glass, old
· ,.dishes and a large amount of misc. items .
Lunch Served ·

SHERMAN TILLIS-OWNER
·L

0.

Rr AI TV
. · l;.ni.U_

608 E. . '
1.\AI N

POM"E-ROY.O
POMEROY - TOO MANY
CHILDREN TO LIVE IN A
SHOE - but not for th is
home

~

4 bedrooms - 2

baths. Large living, Utility
R .. large por c h (glass
enclosed) , N.G. hot water
heat.
Recreation
R.,

garage . JUST $30,000.00.
POMEROY - CLOSE TO
SCHOOL - 2 story frame
In excellent condition, 3
BR , bath, nice kitchen W.
range. disposal, N .G. hot
water heat . Full basement .

$17,000.
MIDDLEPORT

Beautiful lot , frame and
stone buil ding , bath , N .G .
forc e d
air
furnace,
paneling &amp; tile, alley in

rear . ASKING , ONLY
$7
.000.
CLELAND
REALTY lth e
sign of know howl ACTION
&amp; RESULTS ON THE

SALE
OF
YOUR
PROPERTY . .
PHONE 992-2259

WE SPECIALIZE in mobile
home furnace repa ir. Phone
992 -5858 .
9-18 -tfc
SEPTIC TANK S c l ean ed .
Mod ern Sani tation 992 395 4
or 99'1 7349 .
9 18 !l c
1F

·v uu

.Dan's Shoe Repair
J1BN . 2nd

Jobber In

9-'2· 1 mo.

"Mac" McCoy--, Auctioneer

·-...•

-....,

NORTH

~­

·We
We
We
We

WOULD yQiJ . BELIEVE ?
Bui ld an all steel building at
Pole Bar n pr ices? Golden
Giant All -Steel Build in gs ,
Rt . 4 , Box 148 , Waverly ,
Ohio. Pho ne 947 -2296.
7-24 -!I C

Mason. W. Va .
HOUSEHOLD ITEM S: One livinQ room su ite, one
Zenith color T.V., 2 roc king chairs, gossip bench . 3
be droom su ites , one Whirlpool ga s cook stove,
Whirlpool refrigerator , 15 cu . ft. Westinghouse chest
freezer , auto. washer &amp; dryer. 2 ironing boards,
va c uum sw eeper , lawn f urniture and garden tools, 1
lawn mower, one porch swing, several antiques, one lot ·
of miscellaneous i~ems. ~ery larg~ sale .
·

~:::
LJ'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

PUBLIC AUCTION
SEPTEMBER 27, 1975
SATURDAY 12:00 NOON

SPONSORED .BY
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER AT .
POMEROY JUNiOR HIGH AUDITORIUM
The following items will be for sale:
Furniture
Small Appliances
Stone Jars '
Blue Mason Jars and Lids
lnsultors
Glassware
Rag Rugs
.
Other artitles too numerous to mention
Lunch Available
Not Responsible for Accidents
Auctioneer: Carnahan and Smith

:.c::::::===:::::T--1

LITTLE .ORPHAN .:A.NNIE_;IHARP PRACTICE

FY':'::::":~~~i=f'=:;;=:;;;:;;;;:;;;"'1
WH'I', SAI&lt;IDY!
I'IHAT's TH~

.
....
•
.
.'

MATTER? YOU

HA~e~;:w~TE!-1

'

IT CAH"T

LOOK HOW NICE
IT iS? ISH' T THAT···
WAIT. A SECOND-IT
LOOKS LIKE·· LIKE·•

IIIROHU ··:.:::...;
FOOD- I -

M"l'SELF 5PE'CtAL -

I

IT 1.,_ ·'
!.X

f

~~G;l~AiS~S~,~~;;;::~J

~~~~

~
YOU BETTER TELL LEM

LEM!

WE'RE GOING OVER
TO THE BANK !

AND I ARE GOING
TO TH'..
?~I

• • •

..

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

..where a truck ...wasdi
1s it possible this damaqe
responsi
exactl1..1 like
was incurred last niqht at
this one ...
the Bijou Drive-in Theater ...

Oe\\'48\'Y Semce
..........

--........

W.VA . .

Opening lead _ Q,.

L - - - - - - -- - - - '
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Dinadan. the worst kmght
and bridge player. knows hiS
limitations. He steers clear of
challenges at both sword and
ca rd play. WhenLancelotopened one notrump. Dmadan ra1sed
the peerless one to three m·
stead of showing his rive -card
heart suit.
Thedefensestartedwithfour
club trick s. Then , East shifted
to a spade . Lancelot, who had
discarded one spade from each
hand , rose with his ace and
started on diamonds .

Yesterday's Answer
12 Conceited
one
16 Cabbie's
passenger
22 Morsel
23 Chou En- 24 Layers of
rock
25 Savile Row
businessman

26 Seth's
sibling
28 Shabby
30 - geometry
32 Bucolic
33 Revise a
text
38 Prickly
seed
coat
39 - hinunel!

,...

OF

OUR

g~E

--...

'""
"""

..

ROYAL OAK FARM
Complete Cow Herd Dispersal
Sale of Polled Herefords
SATURDA~ SEPt 27, 1975

-mE NEW NE)(l" lXXJR
HA&amp; HARDLY HAD11ME: lD
PtJT OOWN HER 6AGE)AND
RIP IS ALREADY GETTING
HER UFE STORY! ,--._../

SPORTIN' GOODS

~
. .· .·. ·,---..
~(__;

CAN GET SOMETHING'

C&gt;OING !

10100 a.m.

••
."
'.... ._,
_,

ZJM

EJM

OGJI

MIJPM
XGVNO

HV
HV

XGVNO,
MIJPM. -

'

~,

,..,

' I

. ...._,
_,__

Featuring VIctor Plato, Plato Domino; Battle Mischief

.,
I

'

.

Smmy &amp; Company 6; Movie "Maneater" B; Movie

" Night of the Sorcerers" I) ; Janak I 33.
1,oo-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15 ; Wide World Special 6 ;
Movie " Ten Little Indians" 10; News 13 .
" If a Man Answers" 4.
4 : 3~Movle " The Last Time I Sa~Archle" 4.
2:J~Movle

green eyed m onste r on your
shou lder. But he'll be perched
there when someone you're
f ond of Cas ts her eyes
elsewhere.

CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22)
You 'll be very disappointed if
you expect things to fall in yo ur
l ap ,effortless ly . You get
nothing for nothing today .

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Usually
you' re very st raig htforward in
conversations with pals. To-.
d ay, you ' r e apt t o try to
camou flage me anings .

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopl 22) Se ll doubts could sidetrack some
i nfluences th at would prove
very favorab le to your career .
Have faith in your ab ility today.

tu nate ·-ar(erattons tn plans loday. because you place more
credence In the ideas of others
than they deserve.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Avoid trying to pull another's
chestnuls out of the lfre today .
You'll find it costly and un reward ing .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0..
21) If' s not wise to expect too
m uc h of other s today. Even
those exceptionally fond of you
ca n only perform within certain
lim ilations.

CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jon II)
Steer clear today of one who
ha s reason to be jealous or
your achievements . Th is pe r·
son is inclined 10 throw slumbling blocks in your path .
AQUARIUS IJ•n 20-Fob II) II
you want to acco mplish today
what you set out to , don't be
li mid . Yo u must be bold and
forthri ght. but not reck less .
PISCES (Fob 20-Morch 20)
Keep con f id e nt ial matters
within the family today . Loose
talk w ill be played back and it
wil l b e d is lorted in the
transmission .

,&amp;Your

W'~irthday
Sept. 28; lt7$
You will make some major
changes in your lifestyle !his
co m ing year . They'll be well
thought thr ough Someone
now distant from you will have
a major hand in them .
! NE WSPAPI-~R

ENTERPRISE ASSN . !

These coWs will be bred to Justa G. Bodmin 18SA,

Remitall Drake 101p, Rof-LLF Victor Anx and Rupert
Vic Plato -450.

i.:

II MU~T
BE AFTER

'

AAPPENS ALL
THE TIME!

Onwer: Mr- &amp; fi/u's. Horace Karr
~ D 3, Pomeroy, Ohio . PH: 513-985-3341

''

·~

EARL•&lt;. ..

GVPPER IS LATE ...

~J..-.-----1

...
..

I

'

Mi( APPETITE IS
Ml(

SIX ...

Catalogs sent on request: Buckeye Sales Management
Service, Carl. Birney_, Sec., RD I, Freeport, Ohio 43973.
PH: 61H58-~20.

,

'

Barnaby Jones 8,10;

going to make some unlor·

~~~4H~~4H~~~~t4~~~~~~t4~4 -~'
\"

Cen -

News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33.
ll :ro-N ews 3,4,6.8,10,13,l5; ABC News 33 .
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3.4, 15; Wide World Special 13;

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) You·re

.,

and Vidor Anxiety pedigreed cows .

10 :oo---Pollce Woman 3,4, 15;

GEMINI (Mor 21-Juno 20) Irs
not like you to carry that little

OGJl

a

tennial 20; Thin Edge 33.

You won't have your head
together in busi ness today .
a,e cause o f you r tack o f
awareness , someth ing of value
will be lost .

One letter simply stands for another . ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differ ent.

VGM

6,13 ; Hawaii Flve -0 8,10; Memories for

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
A.XYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

EJM

T omorrow B, 10.

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1 :oo-News 3; Ryan"s Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3,-4, 15; Let' s Make a D&amp;al ~· 13;
As the World Turns B. 10.
2 :Q0-$10,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
2:3&lt;&gt;-Doctors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6.1 3; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13 ;
Match Game 8, 10; Interface 20.
3: 3(}-{)ne Life to Live 13 : Max B. Nimble 6; TaHielales
8, 10; Arbors 20.
4:QO-Mr . Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers 20.33; Movie
" The Greatest Show on Earth" 10; Dinah 13 . .
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6 ; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gel Smart 15.
5:()()--Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
5:3&lt;&gt;-Adam-12 4; News 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec.
Co. 20.33; Adam -12 13.
6:QO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; SesameS. 20;
Special Education 33 .
6: 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10 ; Business 33.
7:QO-Truth or Cons. 3; To cell the Truth 4; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Welk ~ ; Aviation Weather
20,33; News 10; Don Adams Screen Test 13 ; Family
Affair 15.
.
7: 3o-Porter Wagoner 3; Bobby VInton A; Candid
Camera 6; Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky
20: To Tell the Truth 13; Pop Goes the Country 15;
Black Perspective on the News 33.
8:QO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Mobile One 6,13; Big Eddie
8, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
8:31}-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4,15; MASH 8,10; Wall Street
Week 20.33.
,
9 :ro-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "Death Scream

Your p rom ises today wil t tack
your
u s u al
sincerity .
Rem embe r · You ' ll h u rl
someone more by reneg ing on
a pledge than il you didn't
make il at all

CRYPTOQUOTES

4 miles N ; llJ Pomeroy, Ohio on SR 7

Musi cal Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13 .

IO :QO-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Give-NTake 8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:3&lt;&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.4, 15; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3. 15; I Dream of Jeannie 4;
Gambit 8, 10.
11 :3&lt;&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,15; Happy Days 13;
Midday 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan lmel"s World 10.
12 ,QO-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Showolfs 13;
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 6,8, 10.
12 :3()-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for

Bernice Bede Osol
For Frldoy, Sept. 28, 1975
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 18)

~=·

AT THE fARM, POMEiOY, OHIO

Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

7: 3&lt;&gt;-Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Lucy Show 6; Ca pt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St .
33.
8:3o-Big Valley 6 .
9:ro-A M. 3; Phil Donahue 4. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J . 13.
9: 3&lt;&gt;-Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;

b

35
36 Jamaica
export
37 What a
,_,..,__ shame!
(2 wds.)
~~~ ;G Israeli port
.,.
On all
sides
41 Tribe
42 Quarry
..J.~......J.~..J 43 Maintained

OH IT GETS FAMILI E&amp;1 100.
BUT A LOT OF UNATTACHED
IMLEO ANI) FEMALE&amp; GO
THERE 10 SEE IF 11-&lt;EY

Prevention 10 .

6 : 4D-Ounce of

6· 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6: 55-C huck White Reports 10; News 13.
·
7: oo-Today 3,4, 15 ; A.M. America 6, 13 ; CBS News 8;

~Lio.ll"'l

Sons"

O

6:25-Fa rm Report 13.
6 : 30--- New Zoo Revue 4; News 6; Bible Answers 8;
Farmtlme 10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.

A -"r.Q ~ll 1

~~~~;()tj~\(tv~CXijLj~)f~~{6~~~~i;lj)(;;~NV~~jL~~)\~~----~Greekletter~
AH CCULD
THAT'S
LOOKS MORE: L/i&lt;E: A
~ ~ol~y

•

· Selling 160 lots
150 bred cows and calves
10 bulls ready for use

(Do you have a question for
the Jacobys? Write " Ask the
J aco h y s· care o f thi s
newspaper The mos t in teres tm g ques tio ns will be
used m _lh1s ~o lumn _ and
wnlers w111 rece1ve co p tes of
JACOBY MODERN )

r-

··.-..-

HERMAN GRATE-

Pass

1 N T.
Pass

A reader from Quebec wants
to know what he should have lod
from :
• 2 y AQ87. KQ32"' AQ98
after his partne r passed to his
takeout double of a one spade
opening bid .
There is an old expert conventi on here . This conve ntiOn IS
when your pa rtner passes your
takeout doub le of a one bid . he
wants you to lead a trump if you
have one . Our correspondent
s hould h ave o pened hi s
s ingleto n trump .

24 Accumulate h-4-~f--+-­
U Plebe
27 Pungent
28 Levantine
ketch
29 Inlet (Sp.) , -4-+-

,

'·

South

part

..

.

3N T

East

by THOM AS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Wedding,
I Wine dissponge or
order
angel
2 "Tempest"
5 Lather
spirit
9 River past
3 Give a
Pisa
telling
10 Conunem&lt;&gt;blow
• rative tablet
( 4 wds .)
13 Noun suffix 4 Two
14 Lacking
eras
legend
5 Shrubby
15 Part of a
plant
min.
6 Forearm
1&amp; "- Diavolo"
bones
17 Fuss
7 " - Rhein~"5;; 18 Wapiti
gold" ·
'l :.c.&amp;&lt;~ 19 Grow old
8 Boxing
20 King (Fr.)
ring
21 Duffer's
(2 wds.)
shout
11 Not com23 Camera
pleted

GASOI.JNE ALLEY
\

North

HEY, LEM! ORVILLE

.,

~"" ~~hon• 713-5592
.MASON FURNITURE

.J8 76
10 5
SOUTH 101
.. A K

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GJ:l()UND

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Auctioneer _
Signed, James A. King . Aammtstrator
Not Responsible for Accidents

.. Q J 4

West

UPPER SECTION Rustic
Hills ,
Syracuse .
Ohio ,
Modern 3 bedroom, all
electric, 52,000 BTU a ir
conditioner.
Just buill.
Recreation room . All car peted 27x14, S24.000 . Phone ·
992 -7523 .

Located 1 block above Pomeroy--Mason Bridge at

¥14

t4 2

Ne ither vu ln era ble

Free Estimates
AI Tromm
. Ph. 742-5081 ·

. . MAINTAINED DURING
CLOSING POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

¥J 953

.'

FOR'GREATCOUNTRY
STEREO'
Listen to Geno Khan
Week Nights from 7:30 to
Midnight
on
WMPO-FMSTERE092

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

E AST
• 9; 3

• K Q 10 53
.. 7 6 3

Real Estate for Sale

3 BEDRM . home and bath.
basement, double garage.
carport, workshop over
garage , 3 outbuildings,
Salem St ., R:utland . Phone
742 -4111 .
9·23-6tc

WEST
• K 10 8 4

.. A Q7
¥A 2

I

BED ·RM . home ,
just
finished . remodeling , Salem
St ., Rutland . Phone 742 -3615
after 4 p .m . or see Milo B.
Hutchison .
9-23 -lfc

.. 9 8 2

THIIJb
sau;w ME IF
ml!J07 J ./- ~ l1QD

are iOterested in
bu i lding a new home or ExcAVAT tN'G', do ze r , toaoer
hav in g y_
o ur present home
and backhoe work ; septi c
remodeled , con tact Rous h
tank s
i nsta ll ed .
du.mp .
9-17 l mo .
ConsTrue l ion , 992 -7583 , Greg
tr uc k s and 10 boys for h1r~ ;
Roush
--'
will hau l fill dirt. top sod , 9-17 12tc
li nieston e and gravel.; Call . S EWING
MA· c ·H -INE .
-------------Bob or Roger Jeffers. daY
Rep, irs, serv ice . all makes .
DO ZER W~i&lt; : E~&lt; cavatin g ,
phon e 99 2·7089 . night phone
992-2284.
The F,:~bri~ ~ho p • •
la nd clearing, ponds and
992 3525 or 992 -52 32
Pomeroy . Autho't'rzed Smg er :
basements ,
and
la nd .
2-11 -tfC
Sales and Se r vic e . ·we
sc aplng .
Pull i ns
Ex
- - -----.- ,.,_
sha rpen Scissors .
cavat ing , phon e 99 2-2478 .
3-29 -ttc
backhoe ,
B-26 ·30tc '"'EXCAV ATtN .G,
dozer and dltch'er . Gas , - - - --=--- ------- - - - - ._
TOILET
electric and water line P O RTABLE
BA CKH-OE tor r en t, hour or
RENTAL ,
Construction
burl~l. basements, footers ,
c ontra c t
Reg . or
ex Ou ldo o r events . Phone
se pti c systems and brush
cavat ing type . Se pti c tank s
Gall ipolis ,
446 - 478?,
cleaning
.
Will
haul
fill
d
irt.
inst alled . Bi ll Pullins . Phone
RuSsell ' s Plu mbin g and
top
soil,
sand
and
gravel
,
992 2478
Healing .
limes tone tor driveways and
6·27 -tfc
e 19 -tf c
roads . Phone Charles R .
--- -·------.- Hatfield , Backhoe Service,
Rt . 1, Rutland , Ohio , 742 - WilL TRIM or cut trees and
6092 .
shrubbery . . Phone 949 -3221
7-ll -90tc
or 742 -4441.
9-7-24tc
tL II/"C)"dlY"Il"OWE~ SREPA IR·.
Swee per s, toasters, ir"on!i ,
HOU SE , 51h acres in Portla nd .
all small appliances . Lawn . WE. DO aluminum siding ,
Call (614) 864 -1876, after 5
gutter
work,
roofing,
mowe r , n exT to Sta te High -J
p.m .
paneling , painting , plum .
way Garage on Route 7~ ,
Phone 98 5 3825 .
bing. We fix th e whole
9-24 -12tc
house . At Tromm , 742 -5081.
4. 16 -lfc
NEW 3 bedrm. home. brick
.9-24 -tf
I
front. 1 car garage , modern
all elec . 1 mile out of
Chester . Call 949 -4692 or 843 2667'.
9-24 -12tp
3

When it fai led to drop . it was a ll
up to the hea rt suit.
Lancelot stopped to anal yze
the opening lead and decided
that ,if West had been dealt a
five-card major suit he would
ha ve led it. Hence, his distribution would be 4+2·3.
Thus hearts we re go ing to
break 4-2. After that analys is it
wa s no proble m to fine sse
against the jack of hearts and
score the notrump game

. A9

BORN LOSER
P"SCM6~ \I.UI(.()tj'T

Paint Houses
Paint Barns
Paint Roofs
Paint Anything

He had no r eason to try a
finesse for the jack of that suit .

2S

.. J 6 2
¥ K Q 10 8 6

'i()() .

CONCRETE
delil/ered righ t to your
project . r:as t and easy . Fre e
es t imates . Phon e 992 -3284 ,
Goeg lei n Ready M ix Co ,
Midd leport, Ohio..
•1
6 30 -tfc

6 :oo--columbus Today 4 : Sunrise Semester 10.
6 : 15- F olk Literature 3.

Lancelot's finesse traps knave

~

MlX

PUBLIC SALE

Henry Lewis -

~

Emergency
949-2211 or 992-5700
Complete air conditioning
sales and service. healing ,
plumbing , roofing lind
general sheet metal work .
Free Estimates
9-14-1 mo .

Dan's Shoe Repair

WIN AT BRIDGE

N

Your Heil Dealer
Third St.
Racine, Ohio
Ph . 949-5961

TEXAS WESTERN
BOOTS
KNAPP SHOES
SHEBOYGAN
Steel Toe Safety Shoes

·~-. E A DY

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Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Middleport, 0.

Real Estate for Sale

AUCTION

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
County Rd. No. 4. The following "items will
be sold :

3 ac re

t r a i ler or building l ot i n
Le ban on
tow n ship .
Also
bu i lding lot at Dorcas.

CAR PENTRY ,
pan e l i n~ ,
fl oo ring and cei ling . Phon e
992 -2759 .
9. 17-26tc

'-==-- -----..J - - -- - - -- - -- ----

DEXTER, OHIO

l

$35.000.
NEW LISTING -

9·25 -6t c

11:00 A.M.

,

1966 FALCO N, 80,000 m i les, home, modern kit., bat h, 2
good dependable ca r for por c hes, basement and al l
$260, or best o ff er . Phone ut ili ties . $15,000 .
992 5190 .
NEW LISTING Near
9-23 -5tp Coolv i ll e. 4 bedroom ins ulated
~------- -----home, 2112 baths , hot water
1968 DODGE. good cond itio n ,
k't
·th
air condi lio ning, see at 131 heat , large ·modern 1 ., wt
Lau r el SL, Pomeroy, Ohio rang e, dishwasher. disposal .
·
9-23 -6t c and birch ca bin et s, 5 acres.

-- --- --- ~ -- -----.--

CLIP THIS AD and bring it

round bac~ chairs, sideboard.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 36"

9-23 -3tc MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom

GUNS and Ammo . Our fall
stock
is
now
here .
Complete line of Rem ington,
Winchester, ONE 1969 Community Homes.
lthica , Sa vag e. SluQ barrels
( 3 bedrm . ) all electric
in stock for mo st br an d sho t mobile home and I ac re lat.
guns, but in sh or t supply .
Ready to live in . Pri ce
Get them whil e th ey last .
$9 , 500 .
2
mile s
fro m
Money short , lay -a .way
R uttand . Ca n b e seen by
your fall hun ting nee d s. New
appt . by calling 992-3537
Fall Slor' e ho ur s sta rtin g
aft er 5 p .m .
Sept . 5, 10 am . to 9 p .m .,
9-23 -tfc
Monday -Saturday . Village
Gun Shopp e, 266 Mill Sf_.,
Ph on e 992 -5177 , fin ancing
ava i lable .

All sizes on hand , prices
start at $324.69. •
·-1 Wood Burning Stove

PUBLIC AUCTION

NEW LISTING - 9 r oom s, 3
bedr ooms wi th close ts, hot
water hea t, large li ving and
nice front porch in Middleport ,

Mobile Homes for Sale

FUEL OIL
Heating Stoves

MURRAY AND DURST AUCTION SERVICE

$6.000.

NEW LISTING -- J14 ac re
business lot on Rt. 7 East .
11 ROOMS - Pl us basement
a nd 2 porches on 2 lots n e)(t to
~ 67 -RAMEiLER~Phon ;-99T store . Above all floods with
26 92. Ca n be se en at 957 r iver view . Ci ty water , Nat.
Broa d way, M id dleport .
ga s, and bath . Asking $8500.

5 FT . 3 PT . H1 . . ._ ,, , ttU sh h og ,
$225 .00 Ph one 985 -359 4
CA STLER
12x65
2
9·19 -8tp 1974
bedroom , 2 full baths , tot a l
3 PT . H I T CH mower to f i t
electric , furn i ture . Phone
F or d or Fer gu son tracto r
949 -3655 or 992 -767 I
$125 .00 . Phone 985 -3594 .
9. 19-6tc
'
9-19 -Bip
WHEN CHECKING the ads
3 SET S- 4 chair dinetles. S75
fo r mobi le hom e sa tes , you
ea ; 2 dr . refr igerator duo ,
will note many dea le rs ar e
$17 5; eye level oven an d
offering di Scoun ts . Mos t of
rangetop; gas , harvest gold,
these deals are on homes
$125 ; art i ficial firepla ce.
that have been on the lot
SSO ; beds, 525 ea.; coffee
several mO nths or perhaps a
year . AI Kingsbury Hom e
t able and end table. SJS;
Sear's stereo AM -FM Tape
Sales, 1100 E . Main St .,
Track console. S200 . All
Pomeroy, Ohio. we can offer
you a better d'eal on a Fom .
these are new . Phone 992 7777 .
Cor . wrapped 1976 model
home . Call 992 -70 34
9-25 -Jtc
9-21 -Stc
--- -~------- -- -

~------

WANTED TO BUY
WILL PAY
.26 fo r 1964 and ol d er
dim es
.65 fo r 1964 and o ld er
quarters
$1.30 for 1964 and o ld er
halves .
$3 .&lt;10 for 1935 and older
dollars .
_
- - - - FOR SALE---WHEAT BACK PENNIES
. 85 A ROLL
BUF~ALO NICKELS $7 .00
A ROLL
SILVER CERTIFICATES
51.25 EACH
52 .00 Bills- U.2S each.
SS.OO Gold coins XF cond .
588 .00
CALL142 -l651
Rutland - RagerWamsley

1966 CHRY SLE R N ew port , 4
new tires Phon e (614) 985 3307 or 98 5 3334.
9-25 -3tc

Employment Wanted

CLARINE T, goad condit ion ,
reasonab le. Phone 949 -4114
9-25 -3tc

U.S. COINS

--- - - - --- ------- -- $16.500.

1971 MOBILE Home , close to
Meigs M ines . Phone 742 6582.
9-23 -6tp

MILLWOOD, V. VA

SATURDA~

•
1965 MUSTANG , phone 992
318 1
9 -21 -lfc

T WO BLAC K POODLES . 1
ma te and 1 female A KC
Registered ; Conn trumpet , RE-MODELIN G,
Plumbing ,
t year old : like new Sear's
he ating and all types of
1
Ted W il liamson ' s 7 12 h .p
general
repair .
Work
ou t boa rd moto r ; Se ar 's am p
quaran!eed . 20 years ex'
tor etec . gui-tar , 3 hookups .
pe ri ence . PhO n e 992 2409 .
Phon e ( 304) 88 2·3205.
5 - 1-llt;:1
9-25 -6tc

HANDLEY'S JUNQUE MARKET,

following :

NEW LISTING - 1'12 a cres on
the Ohio River on Slate Rt .
338 . O ld conc ret e blOck
1 building, 2 d r illed wells . A
good pla ce fo r a home . Aski ng

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.. AND I'M CAU6HT
IN THE MIDOLE!

1.....,"1-...:_--1

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The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday,

Area bands

Saudis demand freeze

(Continued Iron. page 11
music and show formations in
tha t time. "
Awards will he made to the
top three bands in each class
and a special trophy will be
given to the band judged best
overall, he said. Additionally,
the top three majorette corps
in each class will · receive
awards.
"One of the best plums, "
Large said, "is that the
number one band in each
division will be presented at
the Marshall-Il li nois State
foo tball game that night."
One of the top three bands
will participate in pre-game
activities with Marshall's Big,
Green Marching Band. The
other two will participate in
half-time activ ities.

I

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By RAY MOSELEY
VIENNA, Austria (UP!) Saudi
Arabia
today
demanded a freeze on oil
prices until Jan . I, provoking
bitter opposition from other
major producers of the
world's oil.
Sheikh
Ahmed
Zaki
Yamani, the Saudi oil
minister, presented the
demand to a special session
of the Organization of

Four fined in
mayor's court
Four defendants were fined
an d lwo ot hef s forfeited
hands in Pomeroy Mayor
Dale E. Smith 's court Thursday night.
Fined were Alfred Evans,
Middleport, $!i and costs,
trespassing, and $10 and
costs, destroying property;
Warren Prine, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, failin g to pay an
old fine; Ray Yerian, New
Car lis le, $40 and costs,
dfiving without an opera lor's
license and $125 and costs and
three days in jail driving
while intoxicated, and Franklin !hie, Racine, $10 and
costs, sque~ling tires.
Forfeiting bonds of $30 each
were
Jerry
Hubbard,
Syracuse, open flask, and
Timmy Gilli lan, Ches ter,
sq uealing tires.

September
NEW TROOP - A new junior girl scout troop was
or ganized Tuesday night al t he Pomeroy Elementary
School by Mrs. Gert rude Casto, leader, and her assista nts,
Mrs. Patty Michael and Mrs. Es ther DeMoss. Assisting
with the presentation or pins during a rededication
ceremony were Barbara Whitlatch, Tammy Pettit, and
F.die Grinun . ln t he new Pomeroy Junior Troop 180 are,
pictured left to right, front row, Laura Van Meter,
Tammy Capehart, Kim Morrow, Sandy Reed, Edie

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Melinda
Custer, Langsvi lie ; Judy
Holter, Long Bottom; Marvin
Bennett, Point Pleasant;
James
Harrah ,
P oint
Pleasant.
DISCHARGED
Betty
Morton, Kenneth GuinU1er,
Pauline Hysell, Patricia
Rous h, Ethel Boyd, Edna
Deem, Selim Yates, Orv ille
Graham , General Hall , Billy
Herald , Loraine Wilson,
Mabel
Wolfe,
Charles
McGranes .

Pleasant Valley Hospita l
DISCHARG ES Mrs.
Emmett
Locke t ,
son,
Gallipolis; AlfredCasto, Pt.
Pleasant; John McClintock,
Jr., Point Pleasant; Theresa
Campbell, Gallipolis; Susa n
Grinstead, Point Pleasant;
Herbert Webb , Southside;
Floyd Bush, New Haven ;
Angela Warner, Gall ipolis
Fe rry; Mrs. Carl Neal,
Henderson ; Mrs. Char les
Fowler, Point Pleasant. Birth
- Sept. 25, a son to Mr. and
Mrs .
Murle
Hig g ins,
Gallipolis Ferry .
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. 241
Ida
Aldridge,
Sylvia
Allinder, Deborah Arrington,
Gwendolynn Carter, Lessie
Clary, Nancy Cline, Dorothy
Clonch, Carol Eubanks, Nell

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonite

SepL25
NOT OPEN
F ri . thru Tues.

Sept. 26-30
THE GREAT
WALDO PEPPER

Grimm, Carolyn Casto, and Carla DeMoss; second row,
Kim Salser, Julia Hayes, Anna Baxter, Angelia Curtis,
Barbara Whitlatch, Angela Triplett and Tammy Pettit ;
and back row, Angela Baker, Pricilla Herdman, Shilpa
Gordie, Angela Hubbard, Deanna Van Meter, Dixie Eblin,
Kim DeMoss, Anita Campbell, Cindy CUrtis, Robin McDaniel Annette Johnson, Amy Sisson, and Patty Duffy.
Not pr~sent for the picture were Belinda Grimm, Vicki
Morrison , and Alberta Richards.

Paul Turnbull of Mason dies

MASON, W.Va. - Paul E.
Frankli n, Thomas Gaspers,
Turnbull died Tuesday in
Willa Gilm ore, Matthew
Pleasant Valley Hospital. A
Glasgow, Wanda Hager,
plunnber, he served in the U.
Francis Halley , Sheila
S. Army in WW II a nd was a
Harmon , Charles Hawbaker,
member of VFW Post 1064 of
Sally Heber, Robert Hunt,
Huntington.
Maxine Ki nn aird, Rella
Mr. Turnbull was born
Kinnaird, Ruth Lafferty,
La ura
Lemley,
Louise
Morris, Roberta Neville ,
Britishers are
Linda
O'Brie n, · Joyce
Phillips, Cecil Roush, Mrs.
John Sanders and so n, first up slope
Christopher Scott, Er nest
Scott, Geraldine Scott, Clara
KATHMANDU, Nepal
Selb, Edith Sheward, Linda (UP!) - Two members of a
Shotts, Arizona S tewart, British exped iti on have
Pearl Welker, Elizabet h become the first persons to
Woods .
conquer Mt. Everest from its
(Births)
treacherous, rocky, south·
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin west s lope, t he Nepalese
Betts, Jr ., son, Wellston ; Mr . Foreign Ministry announced
and Mrs. Terry Bowman, today .
daug hter, Wellston; Mr. and
The ministry said the two
Mrs. Ja c k Jonas, son, Britons reached the world's
Wellston .
highest sunnmit Wednesday.
It identified them as Dougal
Haston, 32, direc tor of the
international sc hool of
BOAT SINKS
MASON, W. Va. - An Ill- mountaineering in Leysin,
foot pleasure boat belonging Switzerland, and Doug Scott,
to Robert Sizemore, Mason, a 33-year-&lt;Jld teacher, writer,
was sunk when an Wliden- a nd photographer fr om
lified barge hit it Tuesday Nottingham, England.
evening while docked in

Mason. No inj uri es were

October 19, 1909, in Hartford,
a son of the late Richard
James an d Cla r a Riffle
Turnbull.
He is survived by his wife,
Erma, Mason; six brothers,
William and Richard, both of
Mason; George of Hartford,
John of Clifton, Howard of
Windsor, Ont., and Harry,
Albuquerque, N. M.
Funeral services will be
conducted Friday from the
Fogles'o ng Funeral Home ,
Mason , at I :30 p. m . Burial
will be in the Kirkland
Memorial Garde ns. Christian
Science services will be read
by Mrs . Carolyn Towley, C.
S., of Nitro. Visitation hours
will be after 3 p. m. today at
the funeral home.

..

RKtwin.

SWISHER · LllHSE .~
'
Pharmacy

Kenneth McCulloYVh, R. Ph. Cherie• Rittle, R. I'll
Open Dilly t:ooe.m. to 9:Jvp.m.
Sund•~ lO:lOto 12:30 end sto 9 p.m .

'.. -. :

.;:;,&amp;;:,;-............. .;.; ·

.....

11

And

Ped -

wi ns
wi ll

price
help

in
sha pe.
Step into a
pair

· PRESCifiPTIONS
~H: 992-2955 ~
Friendly Service
1
112 E~ MAIN .
.
.F!.OME.ROY, o. ';
r+ _.,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•

Pre-Washed

DENIM
JEANS SALE
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THE SHOE BOX
Middleport. 0 .

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Famous maker Pre-Washed Denim
Jeans for Juniors-Misses. Choose from
several popular styles.

PRE-WASHED DENIM JACKETS, SIZES S-M-l

Sale Prices .
JUNIOR DEPT., SECOND FLOOR

PRE-WASHED DENIM JEANS
Waist si~es 27 to 38 in western flar e
bottom style.

SALE PRICES

PRE-WASHED DENIM JEANS
AND WESTERN JACKETS
Sizes 'a to 18 in Regular and Slims.

SALE PRICES

MADE-TO-MEASURE DRAPERY SALE
Big selection of fabrics and colors in lined or unlined styles. Please bring window
measurements.

ON SALE IN THE HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN BOTH
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 8 PM.

. I

ELBERF,ELDS IN POMIEROY.
•

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However , Yamani said
after t'Qnsulting his government he has gone back to his
original
proposal
of
demanding a price freeze
until the end of this year, with
a ''moderate" in Crease in
1976.
Before Yamani returned,
Iranian oil minister Yams hid
Amouzegar told reporters, in
reference to Saudi Arabia,
" No one is going to dictate to
12 other countries."
Amouzegar, outl inin g
Iran's position for the first
time, said_he is pushing for a
"moderate" inccease of 15 to
16 per cen ~ when the curre nt
nine-month-old OPEC price

free.., expires Sept. 30. He
said the hike could take place
in two stages.
"I hope so," Amouzegar
said when asked If he thought
a compromise could he found.
Under the OPEC charter,
prices can only be raised by
unanimous decision. A 10 per
cent increase would raise the
world's oil bill by SIO billion
and boost U.S. oil import
costs by $2.5 billion.
At the height of Thursday's
ta lks, Yamani unexpectedly
left and flew to London to
consult with his government.
1l1e oil ministers delayed the
start of today's meeting 90
minutes so he co uld attend.

Mistrial declared
Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge J ohn C. Bacon
today declared a mistrial in
the State versus Calv in
Mayle, 22, Pomeroy, indi c!e,d for breaking and
enterinl:{
lhe
Goess le r
Jewelry Store and receiving
stolen property .
In a statement to The Daily
Sentinel this morning the
court said: " Judge Bacon
extends his thanks to the
jurors for bein~ diligent .

They took 10 ballots Thursday
and when they could not come
to a decision, the case was
declared a mistriaL"
The Judge indicated it will
he up to the prosecuting attorney's offi ce as to whether
the case will he retried.
Mayle was one of five men
the State charged in the
burglary which occurred on
Aug. 24, 1975. Charges have
been dismissed against

y

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COLUMBUS - ACROSS-THE-BOARD UQUOR prices in
Ohio are going to be raised in November , state Liquor Director
Clifford E . Reich said Thursday. Reich said prices will he
increased a maximunn of 5 cents on pints and fifths and a
II!aximum of 10 cenl'i on half gallons.
The increase, the first general price boost since 1969 , will
bring in an additional $3 million annually for the state, Reich
estimated. In addition to the general price hike which will
affect every one of the 687 brands on state liquor store shelves,
the prices of some selected brands will be raised to reflect the
quarterly pass-through to the consunner of distiller costs.

VOL XXVII

Stephen Pullins, Middleport,
and Doug Burns, Pomeroy .
Charges against Roger
Butcher, 26, Rutland, have
been
reduced
to
a
mi s demean or,
and
ditipOSition of his case is
pending. A warrant for Earl
Phelps was issued but he had
not been apprehended.
Serving on the jury were
Pearl Edwards, Harry
Richard, Harold E. Kauff.

Ilah
Roush,
Linda
Damewood, Kenneth Caldwell, Evelyn Lucke, Eloise
Connoly, Rachel Downie,
Bernice Lavalley, Peter
Chase and Terry Shane.
Charles Knight represented
the Stale and Mayle was
represented by William
Conley of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs . N. W.
Compton valued the jewelry
taken at $850.

present. The industry, he
said, reacts in the only way it
can to control the price of gas
at the wellhead destined for
interstate commerce. This
price, much lower than the
price the industry can obtain
for gas sold inside the state of
origin, results in gas not
moving into the ·interstate
lines, and thus becoming
scarce, and thus costly.
In reply to a question ,
White said he loo ks favorably
on the bill being sponsored by
Ohio Senator John Glenn and
two other Democrats. With
some
amendments
he
thoug ht the bill could be
helpful.
"Sen . Glenn knows the
problem, and this bill gets at
it," White said.
_.
White repeated warnings
that up to 65 per cent of the
Industry in Ohio could be hurt
by lack of gas this winter, and
by the winter of 76-77, there
could .be no gas at" ''·' r Ohio
industry .

enttne
PRICE 15'

'

Senators reimpose controls on oil

By WILUAM E . CLAYTON launched .
WASHINGTON (UPI I Sen. Dewey Bartlett, RThe Sena1e today approved Okla ., opposed the extension
legislation reimposing oi l because " it doesn't make
price controls until Nov. 15 to sense to retroactively adopt
gi ve Congress time to agree controls that haven't done t he
on a national energy policy.
The action will head off any
immediate conswner price
increases for gaso line and
other petroleunn products.
President
Ford
and
EAST LANSING, MICH. - THE NCAA has scheduled an
congressional leaders agreed
Oct. 13 hearing in Denver for Michigan State University to
on the compromise Thursanswer charges involving alleged , football recruiting
day,
and
the
Senate
violations .
Democratic Caucus later
The hearing , postponed twice during the summer without.
approved it. The controls
explanation, culminates an NCAA investigation that was first
m ade public last April. MSU President Clifton Wharton .J r. would he retroactive to Sept.
WASHINGTON. (UP!) _
I.
Thursday said the university is fully prepared to address the
Ohio electric power comSen. Edmund Muskie, Dcharges. Wharton will attend the proceeding, along with MSU
panies, with the exception of
Maine, sa id he expected
Executive Vice President Jack Breslin, Athletic Director Burt
Ohio Power, were not rated
quick Ho~e action and hoped
Smith head football. coach DeiUly Stolz and members of the
highly in a report by the
special committee Wharton appointed to conduct an internal the measure can be sent to
the White House for Ford's
Nat ional Associat ion of
probe of the charges.
Regulatory
Ut ilit y Comapproval later in the day.
missioners Thursday.
The plan specifies that
WASHINGTON - SENATE UBERALS HAVE failed in a Ford will not submit any plan
The report , designed to
final attempt to strike . strong antibusing language from a to Congress for the gradual
highlight good and bad utility
major appropriations bill. They had to settle for a compromise lift'ing of price controls before industry performance which
Thursday that leaves intact other antidiscrimination tools Nov. I , and either the House
state regulatory agencies can
ava ilable to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. or Senate could disapprove
study as a model for other
The Senate sched uled a vote today on a $45.1 billion ap- the proposal within five days
companies or examine for
propriations bill for the Departments of Labor and HEW that of its receipt.
possible
needed
imhas been tied up for more than a week by the busing dispute.
provements,
gave
Ohio
The agreement also insures
Although more amendments may come up, the major battle the Senate will reach a fina l Power seven favo rab le red
appeared to be over and the bill was headed for expected vote on the decontrol plan in
flags. OP was one of only
(Continued on page 2)
five days even if a filibuster is eight of the 213 U.S. electric
companies
rated
th at
received seven favorable
fl ags and no unfavorable
ones.
Other Ohio companies,
however, didn't t·ate as well.
Those companies listed in

PORTSMOUTH - " Too
damn much regulation."
That's precisely how
Marvin Whi te, president of
Columbia Gas Inc ., pinpointed the causes of today's
energy crunch as related to
natural gas in an address
Thursd ay even in g to the
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council at Elks Country Club
here following an afternoon of
golf and dinner.
Said White: " When artificial controls are laid to
rest and the law of supply and
demand comes back to our
great industry - then, and
only then - can we supply
our customers in a manner in
which they were formerly
accustomed."
Introduced by , master of
ceremonies Jim Secrest,
executive secretary of the
Portsmo uth Chamber of
Commerce, White reviewed
the history of regulalions in
the gas industry when first
imposed In 1954 to the

•

Devoted To The llltere.~ts uf The Meigs-Mason A re11
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1975

NO. 116

job." He said only un·
controlled prices will in·
crea se s upplie s and so lv e the
energy problem .
The controls, holding most
domestically produced oil to

$5.25 per barrel-half the
price of uncontrolled oilexpired Sept. I. Oil companies held their prices,
waiting to see what Congress
would do.

Ohio Power wins
7 favorable ·n ods

Regulation blamed for
natural gas shortages

BOYS

MENS

• . zn Brzefs\\l

.

SIZES 3!4 TO 15/16

Petroleunn Count ries on his proposai was for a 5 per cent
return from London where he price increase now and
consulted his government another 5 per cent at the
Thursday night.
beginning of 1976 and a freeze
Oil ministers from other for the whole of 1976.
member nations were bit" I was prepared to accept
terly opposed . Jamshid that proposal with certain
Amouzegar of Iran, told conditions."
reporters, in reference to
Saudi Arabia, " No one
country is going to dictate its
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
views to 12 others."
Sunday
through
Yamani said, "My position
Tuesday, fair Sunday and a
is to freeze prices ." He
chance of showers Monday
denied reports he had
and Tuesday. Highs will be
proposed a 5 per cent in·
In th e upper 60s lo th e lower
rrease.
70s and lows will be in the
' 'That was an AJgerian
50s.
proposal which I accepted ,"
he said . " The Algerian

~lt;:;:;:::::::::::::;;;;::::;;;::.:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:: ::: :::::::: : :::::::: :::::;:: :~:::::::::::::::::::::::t

By United Press Internationa l
DOWNPOURS THAT FOLLOWED HURRICANE
ELOISE forced the evacuation of some 5,000 residents in
Pennsylvania and left awash or closed most major roads today
m the Washmgton, D. C. metropolitan area.
A total of 13'!, inches of rain fell in the last few days in the
Patuxent River basin and a 3•,&lt;, inch deluge in a seven-hour
period ending at 6 a.m. forced evacuation of downtown Laurel
and Detour, Md ., and along a four-mile run of the Patuxent
River. Stalled cars on flooded roads hampered traffic moving
into the nation's capital. Metropolitcan area officials called the
traffic snarl the worst since the blizzard of 1966 and the
heaviest rains since Hurricane Agnes in 1972.

FINAL TWO DAY$, ••

you
keep
your budget

f

Union, Pearl St., Middleport,
Sunday, Sept. 28, at 7:30p.m.

Save This Weekend on
Pre-Washed Denim Jeans
For Men, Women and Boys.

Pedwin won't let you come
up short. Platform so les
a nd tall hee ls set yo u up in
styl e. An t iq ued leat her

,_ ,

Columbus, will speak at the
Church of Christ in Christian

I!!Ne~vs •

PANAMA CITY BEACH, FLA. - A STATE executive
surveyed the damage left by Hurricane Eloise and reported:
"For a ll intenl'i and purposes, Panama City Beach is gone."
The bill for restoration and cleanup in northwest Florida alone
will equal $200 million, state officials estimated. The Alabama
Gulf Coast suffered another $100 million damage.
W. T. Carlton, chief of the state Bureau of Beaches and
Shores, and Gov. Reubin Askew flew over the Florida
Panhandle's "Miracle Strip" by helicopter Wednesday. Askew
said he would ask President Ford to declare the 100-mile strip
of coast a disaster area.

THE BALBONI

-

SPEAKER NAMED
The Rev. Carroll Sheets,

(Continued from page 1)

Reull Super Pltm1mln1 .•. aYa lleble
to and um In the training lacltl tlu
of all 2t1 NFL teamt.

----

CHEERS FOR SEVENTH GRADE - These girls are leading cheers for the Meigs
Junior High School seventh grade football squ ad this fall . They are front , 1 t:'J:-Jtnda
Kovalchik, chaplain; Nancy Wallace, Kenda Braun, co-&lt;:aptain; second row, ~i nope,
Linda Eason (holding Patty Cremeans) and Beth Perrin. Becky Chisholm, an intern with
the Meigs Loca1 Ohio University Teacher Cor;ls, is advisor.

ASK TOWED
Mark Anthony Pierce, 18,
Rt. 1, Middleport , and Lisa
Renee Herald, 16, Rt. I,
Middleport;
J ohn
Olaf
Atkins, Jr ., 29, Pataskala;
and Linda Ann Sauvage, 28,
Pomeroy .

WASHINGTON - PENNSYLVANIA GOV. Milton J .
Shapp, a determined dark horse a ccustomed to bucking to~ g
odds, is joining the crQWded field for the 1976 Democratic
preside ntial nomination .
.
.
. Shapp's formal declaration today makes hJID the e1ghth
announced Democratic candidate, with at least two more
hopefuls expected to enter hefore the end of the year. The 63year-&lt;Jld Philadelphia businessman-turned -politician has had
a presidential campaign committee in tbe field organizing and
raising funds since midsummer .

EQl!!f-MENT MOVING IN - Ray Goodman, ieft, Meigs Hi gh School vocational
education director, and Dorsel Smith , Gallia County , mining instructor of Meigs High
School, are nioving equipment into the Pomeroy Junior High School Auditorium
preparatory to an expansion of the mining instruction program. TI1e Meigs Local Board of
Education recently approved the expansion of the program and the acceptance of $30,000
from the Governor's Fund for extensive improvemenl'i to the junior high building. The
building has been used as a senior citizens center and will continue to be used for thai
purpose. However, the senior citizens are expecting a federal grant which will enable them
to purchase and repair the old Pomeroy Senior High School building nearby as a ce nter. The
senior citizens have been using the junior high auditoriunn for a hot lun ch program.
However, Wednesday of next week will be the last time the auditoriunn can be used for that
purpose due to the moving in of the mining equipment. The hot lunch program will be
continued in other rooms of the building .

N

BOSTON TEACHERS IGNORED A JUDGE'S ORDER
and fines mounting at $0,000 a day today to continue a walkout
that left classrooms virtually desolate and crippled a controversial desegregation plan in the nation's oldest public
school system. But Rhode Island's last three teachers strikes
ended Wednesday with agreement on new contracl'i and the
release of 14 Pawtucket and Woonsocket union leaders from
jaiL
CALL ANSWERED
The settlements in Pawtucket and Woonsocket, plus one in
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered a call to Route 143 Tiverton, R . I. , meant resumption of school today for a total of
at 1:49 a . m. Thursday for 22,700 youngsters who had had their education disrupted for
Rita Roush, a m e di ca!' three weeks. Strikes in 13 RhO&lt;;le ISland commumt1es affected
patient, who was taken to more than 70,000 public school students during the month.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Striking, rain-soaked Boston teacher walked their picket lines
Wednesday in defiance of i·a $0,000-a-day fine against their
union.

MULTI-VITAMINS WITH MINERALS

1

Meigs County's three local
sc hool
districts,
arter
deductions for employes a nd
teachers reti r ement, and
a llotments to the county
.boa rd of education received
$191,136.45 in the state school
foundation subsidy payments
for Septemher .
According to the office of
State
Auditor
Thomas
Fergu son, Eastern Local
received $40,960.63 ; Meigs
Local, $110,944.44 and Southern Local, $39,183.38. The
county board of education
received a total of $11 ,311.75
including a direct allotment
of $6,667.99.

News •• in Briefs

reported. The Marine Safety
Office of the Coast Guard in
Huntington is investigating.
It was reported the barge that
struck the boa t was unloading
a passenger at the time. No
dam age estimates have been
released .

()ltpexa~

•

subsidy
received

.

In other business, SEORC
Presid~nt Bob Evans of
Gallipolis welcomed the more
than 75 representatives of the
region 's business and industry. He reviewed developments in the council's
ongoing project to increase
tourism in the area, He
praised the work of John
Irwin who masterminded the .
new "Ohio Southland"
magazine distributed through
AAA clubs and other travel·
oriented groups. Over 45,000
copies have been printed.
One of the events featured
in the magazine is the Bob
Evans Farm Festival Oct. I().
12 at Rio Grande where over
100,000 guests are expected.
Others attending from
Gallia County were Ken
Morgan, Bob Saunders,
Lowell Call, Ike Wiseman,
John Weeks, Gilbert Bush,
Roger Barron and Sylvan
White . From Meigs County
were John Reece and Chet
Tannehill.

the report and the red flags
(favorable-unfavorable) they
received incl uded:
Cincinnati Gas and Elec·
tric, 1·1. Cleveland Electric
llluminat ing, ().J; Colunnbus
and Southern Ohio Electric ,
0-4; Dayton Power and Light,
1-1 ; Ohio Edison, H .
Indiana and Michigan
Electric ranked best among
electric power companies,
while Consolidated Edison of
New York was worst , the
report showed.
Ralph Wickberg, president
of the quasi-governmental

nonprofit association, neither
endor~ .no~ rejected the
reports fmdmgs . •~e sa1d ,
however, It should . be made
ava1Ia~~e for scrutmy by the
ru.~hc. .
..
.
Soarmg utility b1lls have
ca~ed consumers to hecome
cr!t1cal!y . ?wa~e of the
electric ut1ht~. mdustry as
never before, sa 1d Dr. J .
Edward Sm1th Jr., author of
th~. report.
.
The comparues a:e no
long~r. r egarded as JUst a
muniCipal se.~VJce to be taken
for granted .

The Senate action came
shortly
after
House
Democratic leaders today
defiantly challenged Ford to
accept longtenn controls on
oil prices, saying the public
has flatly rejected Ford's
plan to "force crushing oil
price in crea Ses on the
people."

Barsotti

named ·
to post
'

Weather
Light drizzle today and
tonight. Lows in the lower
50s. Partly cloudy Sat urday,
highs in the upper 60s .
Probability of rain 40 per cent
today , 30 per cent tonight , 20
per cent Saturday.
SIX KILLED
PADERBORN,
West
Germany (UP! 1 An
American military helicopter
Carrying U.S. service m en
cras hed today in central West
Gr many , killing at least six
pc1 .,on's aboard, police said.
Police said they believed the
helicopter was a huge
Chinook , commonly called
the ' "IJ'e Jolly Green Giant,"
flying from an American
base near Wiesbaden.

WELLSTON - E lection of
a vice-ehainnan, passage of a
resolution urging location of
the proposed coal gasification
plant at Haverhill, and a long
discussion on agency certifica lion hig hli ghted a
meeting of the Ohio Valley '
Reg ional
Development
Commission at Wellston this
wee k.
Joseph Barsotti, Executive
Director of the Galli a-Meigs
Community Action agency,
was elected vice-chairman of
the OVRDC, filli ng the
vacancy created by the
resignation of Paul Willer ,
former
Gallipolis
c ity
manager.
Over 40 commission and
OVRDC staff personnel atte nded the dinner meeting at
the Coach House, with Roger
H. Howard, Executive
Director of the local government services department of
th e Ohio Department of
Economic a nd ConunWJ ity
Development
as
guest
spea ker.
Howard , arguing that
regionalism
fs
not a

"dangerous conce pt, " urged

Emhoff
killed
DAYTON (UP!) - The
body
of
a
wealthy
businessman who was kidnaped Tuesday and whose
son had paid $400,000 for his
release was found to da y
along a road in nearby Jefferson Township, the FBI
said.
The FBI said Lester C.
.1Ennhoff, 67, who owned three
furni ture stores here, had
been shot in the back. His
body was found along Olt
Road by FBI agents and
Montgomery County sheriff's
deputies.
An FBI spokesman said
two ·suspects had been taken
into custody. They were not
identified.
The cav belonging to
Emhoff, a go ld colored
Cadillac, was found Thursday .
night
in
suburban
Miamisburg.

NEW MASONIC LODGE -Members of Harrisonville Masonic Lodge 411 have rolled up
their sleeves and buill a new -Masonic Hall next door to Harrisonville Elementary School.
All money and lahar has been donated for the 36xl00 foot cement block building . Members
hoP., to brick the exterior when money is available. Shown on the front porch of the building
Thursday are four members who were working, 1-r, Norman Will, David Riggs , Harold Riel
and Junior Howard. Jerry Well is worthy ma ster .

the OVRDC commission to
take Immediate steps to
become a certified slate
agency either as a council of
governments or a regjonal
pla!Wing commission.
"The Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission is
a
needed
areawide
multi-jurisdictional agency,
controlled by local elected
offic ials" Howard s taled,
continuing , dThe regionalism
concept helps keep decisionmaking in the hands of local
government" .
The commission wtll meet
in the immediate future to
decide which avenue to take
toward state certification.
Passed unanimously was a
resolution urging the Coalcon
Corporation to locate a coal
gasification demonstration
plant at Haverhill in Scioto
County since the area is rich
in coal deposi Is and since the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission has predicted a
doubling of coal production in
the Appalachian area within
the next decade becailse of
increased energy demands.

,

}

..

'·

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