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                  <text>32 - The Sunday Times · Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 5, 1976

Hem...

~
·

\
e
en
•
:
;
•
Of th B d

Japanese trade booming with socialized Vietnam

, TOKYO (UPI) - Little
more than a year after the
I
last heliCopter fled the ro:of Of
, the U.S. embassy In Sa1gon,
B IJob 11 ,w 11
Japan is having a trade
.r
oeJ' II'
boom let with a Vietnam
•
united IUider socialist rule.
A steady stream of
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. John lhle of Racme have Japanese
ships calls at
returned home from Newport News, Va., where they visited
·Haiphong
harbor
- once
their 80114n-law and daughter, Mike and Patty Struble.
blocked
by
U.S.
Navy
The Strubles were resi ~nts of the county until recenUy - to pick up coal mines
when they moved to Newport News. Patty ls currently Vietnam's rich Hong Galfrom
pits.
teaching In the Jenkins Elementary School and Mike Is
On the way home, the coal
continuing his education at Christopher Newport College, a carriers pass other Japanese
branch of William and Mary. lie earlier received his bachelor ships. They are headed for
degree at Ohio University and is now in pre-law and will also Vietnam with trucks,
receive training as a govenunent teacher.
bulldozers
and
farm
While in Newport News, tile Strubles treated tbe Ihles to. chemicals lzi their holds. •
trips to BDBch Gardens, Virginia Beach and a harbor cruise
In Tokyo the Japanwhich took them up the James River for sightseeing at · Vietnain
trade . association
U.esapeake Bay and the naval yards at Norfolk.
SI!YS. tile two-way flow of
goods between the two
'MlE FREE CANCER clinics for Meigs area women have counties this year could reach
~en set for Sept. 10 and 24. To make an appointment call 992$200 million.
5832 evenings ; 992·3382 during the dsy or the cancer office in
That would be more than
Middleport, 992-7531 Tuesdays or Thursdays.
triple the $68.6 million worth
of business they did in 1975.
TilE MEIGS ATHLETIC Boosters will have quite a group (The. figure indudes Japan's
from Ohio University on hand for their next meeting to be held trade with North Vietnam for
at 7: 30p.m. on Sept. l5at the high school.
all of \975, and with South
On hand to speak oo the 0. U. athletic program will be Bill Vietnam after tlie fall of
Hess, head football coach; Dale Bundy, head basketball Saigon).
coach; Bill f\ohr , athletic director, and Frank Morgan,
Japan gave America di·
publicity director. All members of the boosters are asked to plomatic and economic
attend as well as any other interested persons.
support dilring the Indochina
By the way, the boosters do have the Marauder winter war, but she has been quick
jackets for aale in sizes medium, large and extra large. They
flexible about coming to
run $15 each but if you've seen them then you know they're a and
terms with the North
pretty good buy. Those interested may purchase their jacket Vietnamese.
from Rich Jones at tile Meigs Branch of the Athens County
Dllring the war, the late
Savings and Loan.
Japanese Premier Eisaku
I
Sato ordered his country's
CURTIS 'JENKINSON OF Dan Thompson Ford was good ships to stay out of North
enough to drop by a copy of the October edition of "Ford
Times", a comPli"Y publication.
The edition contains an interesting four page article by
former resident, Dave DUes, on Meigs County plus some
Interesting paintings by Gary Pettigrew. A real highlight is a
two page color painting of Pomeroy done from the Ohio Rivet
showing a part of Main St. and the courthouse at tile end of
Court St.
It's a great layout, really, and Dave did a nice job on
putting tile Meigs picture Into an effective · relatively
thumbnail story,
Curt ooly got 25 copies of the magazine but is trying to get
more.

Vietnamese perU. Damaged
American tanks were
repaired in Japan, and
shipped back to tile Indochina
battlefields. When left-wing
demonstrators protested,
Japanese riot police ~t the
tanks moving to Saigonbound ships.
Six months after tile !aU of
Saigon - now Ho Oli Minh
City - Japan gave Hanoi the
diplomatic recognition It had
refused all through the
FJ:ench and·American phases
of tile Indochina War .
Sle also granted a $46.6
million non-repayable foreign
aid credit to be used for
purchases of Japanese goods.
Early this year a Japanese
embassy opened in tile Vietnamese capital.
Missions of JaPliOese busineS&lt;Dlen now ·are a regular
sight in Hanoi.
Sanyo Electric Co. sends a
team soon to help rehabilitate
a radio and television factOry
it built in Saigon when South
. Vietnam still was IUider the
rule of former President
Ngnyen Van Thieu.
Nippon Koei Co . and Mitsubishi Electric have agreed
to repair a damaged
hydroelectric power plant
near Ho &lt;lli Minh City at a
cost of $300,000. Nihon Koei
built the dam for the old
American-backed regime.
A blue ribbon panel of 15
company executives leaves
for Hanoi in mid-September

to work out the nu\Hnd-tolts
JrOblelliS of puttJnc trade oo
a regular basis and
eiPlllldlng it In the future. It
will deal with quealons lib
insurance, payments, and the
commercial laws of the two
countries. It includes
· representative&amp; of three big
Japanese banks, Mitsui,
$1nwa and Bank of Toky6.
A two-way trade of $200
million still ls chickenfeed for
a country like Japan, whose
foreign trade now runs at
around $120 billioo a year.
The
Japanese
are
optimistic about the future .
They say Vietnam's two goals
at the moment are to grow Its
own food, and lay the
groundwork . for
industrialization in the
future.
Japanese economists gue!IS ..
tile food battle wiU be )Von,
and tllat Vietnam ·will be
exporting grain in the future.
They are offering Vietnam

technical aid to boost its
harvest of American com.
Japan hopes to be buying
aome of ll in tile future.
Hllh grade anthracite from
the Hong Gal mines now
acCOWJta for more than half
of Japan's imports from

Hair

MONDAY, SEPT. &amp;-LABOR DAY

' '

•

FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8 AND SAtURDAY, 9:30 TO 5

pa rt time by appointment.

Bill Warner , Mclnager

.

A

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 99

Carter hegins
his ·campaign

.

INe;;: ·"~-: i~~Bri~f~
By United Press International
·
AT LEAST 25 PERSONS WERE KilLED ON OHIO
roadways during the long Labor Day weekend, 12 more tbail
.died last year during tile aame period, according to 'the State
Highway Patrol.
Although this year's death count was higher tban 1975, it
was .cooslderably less .than 1966 when 44 persons died, the
. highest traffic toll on rocord for a Labor Day weekend. Last's
year count ·was lowest since statistics were kept.
The Patrol count, which began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended
midnight Moliday, included four deaths Friday night, nine
Saturday, seven Sunday and five Monday.
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - A COMMUTER

TRAIN carrying blacks to a segregated township hurtled into a

.

parked express train outside Johannesburg Monday, killing
more than 30 persons in one of South Africa's worst rail
disasters, ·
Although Johannesburg has been the scene of racial
violence for more than two months, railroad officials ruled out
aabotage. Officials aald at least 31 persons were killed and
more than 70 injilred when the conunuter carrying blacks to
the segregated township at Benoni, 30 miles east of
Johannesburg, slammed into tbe rear of a parked express
taking hundreds of mine workers home to Mozambique.
WASIDNGTON - WlLUAM 0.· DOUGLAS, a Supreme
Court justice longer than any other person before retiring last
November. w•• H.t..n in serious condition today following
surgery for a broken l)lp.
·
Douglas, who will be 78 on Oct. 16, fractured hb left hip when
be slipped and fell at hls home Sunday. He entered Walter
Reed Army Hospital Sun&lt;!ay night and underwent a tw~our
operation Monday to .repair tbe fracture. A hospital
spokesman aald his condition was considered serious
''because of his age and pa~t medical history." The operation
went well, the spokesman aaid, and the surgeon was optimistic
be would recover. The spokesman said Douglas was "resting
comfortably" In the recovery room and had experienced .no
difficulties.

Plecee priced Individually:
Sofa ......... . .. 1299.95
Loveteat ....... 1249.95
Chair ........... 1166.00

.
enttne
'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy,,
.,~ ~·:::::·&gt;·m.··:o:·•w.:g;:····w.;:w-:.·• ·w.-.··~«-

This is beautiful American Coloni~l- f~r more luxurious
than our forefathers ever had. A gracefUl wing back design
with solid wood trim, with comfy side pillows on the arms
and covered In an outstanding rayon velvet with '
contrasting welts, Scotchgard treated for carefree pleasure.
lf"massive" luxury is what you want. it's yours now at a
very unluxurious price. Come see! .

cooclude nesottaUons of a master agreement, Bowen said. It
was ezplained lila t a master agreement II between the
8SSI&gt;Ciatioo and the oo.rdand govema such worklni condiUGIIII
as fair dismlsaal policy, salaries, slcll leave, inlurance
coverage and grievance procedures.
According to Don Dix&lt;r~, chalnnan r1. ·the teachen'
association nesotlating team, the teachers have been
attempting to nesotlate a new cootnct since January. 'lbey
report that the negotiatiooa reached 1n1paqe atatua oo April
'tl. Bibler said lllat he, Bowen and Dixon villted the board at
approximately 9:30p.m. Monday and attempted to eatabliah 1
communication to talk out the probl~.
However, ha aaid, tile three men were told btthe board
that tile board ls waiting for recommendat!GIIII from the
impasse panel.
MeaDIIme, Dowler IDDOIIIIced that all extra ~rrlclliar
acUvltl.,. II! tile dlltrtct luclwllnc the 1por11 Jll'll«raiD bave
been discontinued uatll further DOtice, He said U.t the bo.rd II
sllll'!l'altlng for lbe recommendatloo of the lmpalle paael.
On behalf of the board, Clerk-Treasurer John Triplett
Continued on page 7

Sandy

Ohlinger Miller, working

CHAIR

COLUMBUS - This week, litigation started on Sep·
Senator Gene Slagle ( D- tember 5, 1973, bringing the
Gallon) on hehalf of Gene .total admitted daJ1Uiges by
Slagle, Inc. and over 300,000 General Telephone Company
subscribers of General of Ohio to approximately $50
Telephone Company of Ohio, million. Even though we do
filed an appeal to tile United not agree to these lo'!l'er
States Supreme Court from figures, a $50 million refund
the decision of the Ohio to the 300,000 Ohio sub-.
Supreme Court allowing scribers would be of subGeneral Telephone to charge stantial benefit to them- an
rates which were Initially average of $165 to every
ruled unlawful.
su~?scrlber!
The legal question filed
Senator Slagle has further
willl the high court states, instructed tiis attorneys to
"Are · a public utility's appeal from the decision of
customers deprived of their the Public Utilities Comproperty without due process mission dismissing the
of law when they are required complaint on the basis of the
to continue to pay lncrea.sed Ohio Supreme Court decision.
rates and charges for utility His final comments on his
services under an order of a , most recent actions are, "I
state agency which was intend to pursue Ibis matter
Issued contrary to state to its ultimate completion!"
law?" It is very clear to
Senator Slagle lllat this is a
violaUon of the people's 14th
Constitutional Amendment
rights, which read, " ... nor
shall any S~te dep!'ive any TANAKA'S PLAN
person of life, liberty, or TOKYO (UPI)-Analdeof
property, without due process indicted former Premier Kaof law ... "
kuei Tanaka today was
In 1975, the Ohio Supreme quoted by Tokyo newspapers
Court agreed with Senator as aaying Tanaka will seek ·
Slagle's point of view. On an rHlection to parliament Ibis
appeal by General Telephone year.
'
Company, the U. S. Supreme
Tanaka, 58, was Indicted
Court refused to review the Aug. 18 oo a charge of
Ohio Supreme Court's initial receiving a $1.67milllon bribe
dec~on in Senator Slagle's . from Lockheed Aircraft
favor. Now, since the Ohio Corp. and violating Japan's
Supreme Court reversed foreign ciUTency _controllaw.
their decision, it will be in· Newspapers quoted Taljl
teresting to see the pollition Yamada, Tanaka's private
that lhe U.S. Supreme Court secretary and business aswill take.
sociate, as saying that
Senator Slagle believes that Tanaka intends to stay in
• thla Is one of the most im- politics.
portant decisions for proper
regulation of utilities or we - - - - - - •
are going to see accelerated
increases In utility rates in
Ohio. He further stated, "I
.J TAfl UIM
believe that the Ohio
Supreme Court was wrong,
and I'm hopeful that the U.S.
INIUIANU
Supreme Court will take
'
jurisdiction of the question."
Wnh State farm insuriiCe )QJ get ·
In a "Special Bulletin" of
fiSt. friendly ooice wherewr and
General Telephone ComPlllly,
~ you reed ~ 11001 15.500
they admitted coUecting a
agents
and clain repmentafii'I!S
total of $14.3 million from
across
the
nation. I'm ooe o1 then
June 21, 19'12 to February 10,
and
nt
be
there
llllen you need me.
1975 when a new rate order
from the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio went Into
effect. According to Section
49011.81 of the Ohio Revised
Code, when a utility does not .
comply with the law, they are
liable for treble damages,
which mew tlult the utility
would be penali1ed $42.9
miDlcln. Alao, we believe that
... ,... ....,...ocaw•
O..al Telephone Company
NDMt CMfictrl: .IINIIIDft, IIIMil
It liable for 6 percent inlerest
· in IICCOI'dance with the Ohio . ._ _..._ _ _...
llltule from the date our , 7401

The impasse panel has yet to produce recommendations
which would be subject to approval of both groups. At a special
meeting of the board of education Friday night, attended by a
number of teachers, Dowler said tbe impasse panel had not
made recmunendations and was scheduled to meet again oo
Sept. 14.
.
•
Neither aald l)as disclosed why the negotiations reached
the impasse point, or in just what area the disagreement Ues.
However, it has been hinted that the teachers are asking for a
pay Increase. They have been in nesotiatlons with the board
since January, it ls reported. Teacbe~ were given salary
tncrea!les in November and in January, this year, Dowler
stated.
"We are willing to sit down and negotiate at any time, any
place," Ted E. Bibler, Uniserv Consultant of the Ohio
Education A88n. aaid today in reference to the strike by
teachers in the Meigs Local School IMilrict. .
·
"The strike will remain 111 effect lUlU! a aatisfactory
agreement Is reached on a .master contract," David Bowen,
president of tile Meigs Local Teachers A!ISn. aaid.
The central issue revolves around the board's refuaal to

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, SeptembP-r 7. 1976

SOFA&amp;

, telephone case

oca teac ers strr e

The 154 teachers of the Meiglr Local School District are on teachers, a few non-certified employes and a few students at
strllr;e, Schooll ol the district are "officially open,"
the various schooll. However, with most buses not running the
Thill was the confused picture In the diltrlct Tuesday attendance wu practically zero. Dowler aald be knew of three
morning after teachers, meeting in a long session at the Rock bUses which did at least make part of their routes ·Tuesday
~ings Gr~Dge Hall Monday night, voted to strike. The morning. He said lllat attendance of students to achools wbich
diatrlct's board of education and princlpalll of aU of the schoola are open, Is up to the "individualized judgment of pai.ents."
were in special necutiw ae!IS!on at the office of Supt. Charles ·'
He pointed out lllat tile board has a !leparate employment
Dowler In Middleport Monday night.
agreement willl non-&lt;:ertified employes who were recenUy
At 10:03 p.m., Supt. Dowler said he was Informed by Ted given pay Increases plus another increase to go into effect the
Bibler, Ohio Education A88n. official, lllat the teacheraln their first of the year.
,
llellllon had voted to atrike.
Meigs Local School District has 154 teachers and
In announcing the telephone call at 10:50 p.m., Monday, approximately 2,1100 students.
&amp;!pt. Dowler said lllat schools of the dlstrlct would be open in
.The problem arose after negotiations betwee1 the teacbers
spite of tile atrike. Principall of the various achoola left the association and the school board reached "impasse" status on
meeting with the board to notify non~rtlfled employes of the May 'tl. Dowler said the teachers association declared tbe
atrikedeclaloo and returned to meet with Dupt. Dowler and the situation at "ln\pasae." In accordance with an agreement beboard early Tuesday morning.
tween the asaociation and tile board an impasse panel was
However, noo-certified employes who include bus drivers. named composed of Mike Rose representing tile teachers
custodians and cooks refused for the most part to cross the Dennis Whalen, an attorney representing the board o/
picket lines set up today al all of the schools by the teachers. educatloo, and Charles Muiilns from tile American Arbitration
Tuesday morning, Dowler aaid that there were a few A!ISn.

rice!

Appeal filed in

•

SHOP TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, 9:30 10 5

WHILE TALKING TO EVERETT DAILEY the other day
about one of l)ls rare garde.n crops (he loves trying to grow the
unusual), he mentiooed that he and Mrs. Dailey celebrated
their 5~d wedding anniversary on May 28. So - belated
congratulations to a nice couple.

'I

e1gs

WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY

Ph. 9!2·3130

Stylists ,

•

It II not involvtlln the SinoSoviet confrontation. · If
VIetnam ltlcb to lla line of
lr·itperldence, It could draw
c'-r to Europe llld lht
United Slalel,acceptq evtm
technical cooperation and
in•eatment."

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

WARNERS BARBER
.&amp;·BEAUTY SHOP
Pomeroy

Vietnam . Froaen ahrimp
from around Salicin are the
second largellt Item.
"At present Vle&lt;nam hu
deep economic cantacta with
the Soviet Union, OUna IIIII
East Europe,'' says Tokyo's
Asaltl new!pllper. "Howewr

COLUMBUS - ABOUT 150 PERSONS FROM around
Ohio, including a number wearing masks, staged a rally
outside tbe statehouse Monday urging lawmakers·to adopt a
law to ensure job security and · other civil rights for
homosexua)s. Although 1,000 persons were expected for the
Labor Dayrally,only a few people gathered to watch.
A 26-ye~r-old woman told the group that when she. and
some other lesbians approached a state legislator about
sponsoring such a bill, they were told he would never be
reelected if be did. The legislator proposed the group make a
grass-roota campaign. The mask-wearing protesters aaid IIIey
were demonstrating against "social repression," and pointed
out that they might lose their jobs, apartments ahd children if
they did not hide their sexual prefer~nce from society.
COLUMBUS - COLUMBIANA COUNTY DEPUTY
Registrar Fred Gosney was charged by Slate Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson today with failure to deposit $00,265,35 in motor
vehicle license plate aales between March 15, 1975 and Feb. 3,
1975.
Most of the shortages, according to state examiner
Antoinette C. Bloch, came from the sale of "commercial truck,
trailer and farm plates." In addition to the cash shortages, the
audit aaid Gosney had delayed, sometimes for up to three
weeks, the deposit of aale_receipls in the state account he .is
(Continued 011 pqe 7)

OCCUPANTS of 13 l&gt;!odel A Fords, r:nembers of the
Penn.Ohio Club, stood beside their vehicles in Pomeroy
&amp;lnday afternoon to he photographed before continuing on
llleir trip to Rio Grande.

Sleek Model A Fords
make stop in Pomeroy

No one killed
in 6 accidents
the Meiga County Sheriff's
Department investigated six
accidents over the Labor Oay
weekend.
The first occurred Satur·
day at 8:28 a.m. on SR 7. A
southbound van opera ted by
Darrell Mitchell, 29, Mason;
W. Va., was struck in ·the
headlight by an object thrown
from a northbound vehicle in
flight from law enforcement
officers. There was slight
damage, and the driver was
uninjured.
Anolller Saturday accident
took place at 11 aJD. in
Racine on Third St. An auto
driven by Howard G. Roush,
60, Racine struck an opened
door of an auto parked by Jill
L. Holter, 21, Rt. 1 Bashan.
There were no injuries and no
citations.
The next accident was at
2:36 a.m. Sunday in Chester
Twp. on CR 36, 1.1 miles north
of SR 7 when an auto driven
by Roger W. Karr, 22, Rt. I
Long Bottom, struck the rear
of a car opera ted by Garland
Caldwell, 61, Rt. 3, )'omeroy.
Caldwell had stopped his auto
In tile ·road to sleep. Karr
came around a curve and
swerve&lt;\ to avoid tile Caldwell
auto but still clipped its rear
end. Caldwell claimed injury.
There were no citations. Both
vehicles were demolished.
The next accident on
Suriday came at )2:30p.m. in
Sutton Twp. near Dorcas on
SR ' 124. A car driven by
Edward R. Chapman, 36,
Pickerington, was eastbound
on SR 124 when his auto went
off the tdge of the road into a
ditch, striking a culvert, and
mailboxes. The vehicle
continued acro!IS a driveway .
· and hit another culvert before
finally coming to rest on the
roadway. Chapman claimed
Injury. No cital10114 were

issued.
Tbe last Sunday mishap
occurred in Olive Twp. at the
intersection of SR 124 and OR
50 at 7:30p.m. An auto driven
by Ted Jay Linscott, 16,
Athens, struck a car driv~n
Continued on page 7

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of
showers Thursday and
Friday and lair Saturday.
IUghs wlU be in' the 80s
Thursday and io the 70s
Friday and Saturday. Lo'!l's
will be Ill the 60s early
Thunday and In the 50s
early Saturday.
Clear tonight, lows in tile
mid 50s . Mostly sunny
Wednesday. highs in the
lower 80s. ProbabiUty of rain
near zero per cent today,
tonliht and Wednesday. •

·-Aslt DJ880WTION
Gecqla M. Smith, Rt: 3,

Pllmeror, and Paul L. Smith,

~·

MEI08 LOCAL lelcherl were polled at aD dlltrtct llchoola 'nleaday morning when
classei were to haw begun after the long Labor Day weekend. Teachers voted to strike at a
meetillg held Mooday night. Theae teachers made up the picket line at the bus entrance to
Meigs Junior High Schrol in Middleport.

,r

124 to Pomeroy. The occupants- all members of the
Penn.Ohio Club stopped at
the Buffington Island State
Memorial, and 111 Pomeroy
were at the Landmark ser·
vice station where the
vehicles were gassed up and
a tlre on one was changed.
The group then traveled
through Middleport and on .to
Rio G~ande .
Melvin McKenna was
tourmaster for the trlp.
(,eaving Rio Grande the
group drove to Nelsonville for
another stop.

THE MEIGS IDGH SCHOOL BAND, directed by
Dw1ght Goms, sang and tllen played as IIIey moved along
in a Labor Day parade.
·

·SEMINAR PLANNED
A drug semill&amp;t for Meigs
Counttans will be held
Wednesday at 7:30pJD. at the ·
Middleport United Pentecostal Church on . South
Third Ave.
The seminar will be
conducted by Larry Baker of
Middleport and Meigs County .
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach. The' pastor of the
church, the Rev. Wllllam
' Knittel, urgea the public to
attend.

Rt. 3, Plimeroy, llled for
dlllolullon of lllln'ilge in
· Meigs County Common Pleas

Attracting attention In this.
county Sunday was a fleet of
13 Model A Fords - many
times greater in value now
lllan when they were builtwhich moved through the
county enroute to Bob Evans
Farms at Rio Grande.
The 13 beau tifuUy maintained vehicles ranging from
the 1928 through Uie 1931
models, left Perrysville, Ohio
oo Saturday f&lt;ir a three day
tour. Saturday '!Vas spent In
Marietta at historical points,
then on Sunday, the 13
vehicles moved down Route

By DE!N REYNOLDS
United Press International
Jimmy Carter, a clear
favorite to reclaim the presidency for · the Democrats,
began his campaign by
drawing oo mem&lt;i-ies of John
· Kennedy and Franklin
Roosevelt. President Ford, a
decided underdog, watched
and waited from the White
Hou,se,
While Carter revved up his
campaign from weeks of
summer inactivity in a Labor
Day .swing through his native
South oo up the Eastern
Seaboard, Ford dealt with
matters of state, projecting
the Image his adVIsers insist
will help hlni. stay in office.
Carter's remarks came at
Warm Springs, Ga. - the
Little White HoUse of FOR
'and a campaign stop of
Kennedy's in 1960. "If
el~ted, " Carter declared,
"I'll try to be a worthy leader
of our great country."

I~

Labor Day
observed in
two towns

Squad takes

Volunteer fire depariments
ln Pomeroy and Chester
sponsored activities Monday
In Pomeroy and Chester in
'
observance of Labor Day.
THE
RIGGS
ROYAL
KADETTES
marching in Labor
In Pomeroy, firemen
Day parades.
.
·
served barbecued chicken on
Sunday and headed a parade
on Monday. In Chester, •
f1remen served 'barbec!led
chicken on Monday and
The· Meigs County Comstaged their ·annual parade missioners have learned Henry Wells, Warden Ours
the aame day . There '!Vas from the Housing Urban and and Bernard Gilkey, cornhomemade ice cream on Development Agency that missioners, Wesley Buehl,
hand and a tractor pulllng money for a block grant of county engineer, and Martha
contest was staged during the $310,325 has been approved, Chambers, clerk.
Chester celebration.
depending upon completion of
C,LIMBERSAT19,f00 .
While the day was a holiday requiremenla contained in
KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI)
for many, it was a bit of a the Environmental Review
- The American Bicenwork day for those who Regulations.
turned out to take part In the . There will be add! tiona! tennial expedition trying to
parades and for the firemen paper work to complete and climb Mt, Everest was exwho not only paraded in both submit to HUD before any pocted to pitch its second high
COIJURunltles but worked at funds on the grant are made altitude camp within t'!l'o
days, the foreign ministry
money-making activities for avallable.
aaid
today, quoting a radio
their organizations during the
The grant includes access message from the climbers.
weekend.
road construction, house The 12-member team, led by
numbering and housing 39-year~ld Philip R. Trimble
rehabilitation. MeetJnc with of Washington, D. C.,
the commissioners this' established its first high
ASK TOWED ..
morning to be considered for altitude camp at 19,400 feet
A marriage license was the work Involved in the funds Sept. 3 after crossing the
issued to Charles William was R. C. Glasgow of R. C. treacherous Khumbu icefall,
Roberts, 29, Rt. 2, Racine and Glasgow &amp; Associates of a constantly shifting gigantic
Diana Kay Jones, 18, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
mass of ice that lines the face
Racine.
Others ) attendinR were of the inountal~fo

several to
hospitals

Grant made tentative

1

·'

Carter, who campaigns
today in New York,
Philadelphia and Groton,
Conn ., spoke to aeveral
tllousand persons Monday in
stops at Warm Springs, the
Southern 500stock car race in
Darlington, S.C., ·and
Norfolk, Va.
Ford, waiting unW nea
week fer the "official" start
of'his ·election effort, stayed
in the White House and
studied the Vietnamese
decision to release a list of
American soldiers mi!ISing In
actloo from the war and the
new
Korean
front
devel(l!lments.
President Ford's advtsen
believe Carter's Inexperience
in foreign policy matters may
be a weak spot and !1ft
counseUng Ford to project a
presidential image to COWiter
an expec;ted partiaan posture
of his Democratic chaUenger.
"I don 'I owe special
interests anything," Carter
said at Warm Springs. "I owe
·Uie people of this country
everything."
.
In New Yrrk today, Carter .
discussed his policies for
urban areas.
He criticized cocruption in
urban programs and blamed
it for a decline in the number
of American families who can
own their homes from more
than 50 to 32 per cent in the
last eight years.
"If we are to save our clUes
we must revitalize our neighborhoods first," Carter aaid.
"If we are to save our
country, we must give our
families and neighborhoods a ~·
chance. lf I am elected, that
is what we will do."
Carter briefly shared the
stage with GOP vice
presidential candidate
Robert Dole, who met him at
the stock car race in
Darlington. A Carter aide
caUed the Dole appearance
"gross bad manners," but
carter aald he 11'8811'1 disturbed.

'

The Pomeroy ER Squad

was called three times
Sunday and once on Monday.
At 8 a.m. on Sunday the unit
transported Ita Zickefoose to
.Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
at 1:10 p.m. for Wilbur
Logan, and at 5: 17 p.m. for
Kenny Romine, both taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Monday at 9:25 pJD. the
squad went to the lower
parking lot where police say
Ted Frank Keene, Collllllbua,
had fallen over the parking
lot waD. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and admitted.
There were reporta,
unofficial and unconfirmed,
lllat Keene, beaten up in a
fight on the parklnt lot,
leaped over the wall into the
river to escape his assallant.
It was also reported - and
also unconfirmed -that the
Pomeroy Emargency squad
retrieved the injured Keene
froiD the river before taklnfl
him to Veterans Memorial
Jlospital. r·
0:.

�'-Tile Olllly Sentinel MldcDeport Pocneroy 0

3- The Olllly Sentinel Middleport P&lt;rneroy
TUesday Sept 1 1976

o un on Avenue o ht

o Thom•s Fo k C nk hence
down 11 d C ttk o a C&gt;O n
wh ch s ht souttlwtt corntr
of • one fourth acre t act of
end dtsc bed n vo 91 Ptoe
6 2 Ond \_RKDrds Me gs

Soviet pilot asks for asylu1n

Coun 'I

By TEIJl SHIMJZU
TOKYO (UP!) - A SoVIet
pilot who outwitted radar
screens to land his highly
soplistlcated Soviet MIG25 m
northern Jarsn Mooday woo
penn.illsloo today frOCil the
Japanese government to seek
political asylum in the Uruted
States
The government also
refused a Soviet request to
Immediately return the
plane cooSidered to be the
world s most advanced
aircraft
Foreign Min ster K ichl
Miyazawa SBJd the Japanese
government approved the
pilot s request from a
humanitarian stMdpomt
The foceJgn Ministry sa d
one of tis
off cials
mtervtewed the ptlot
dentified as Viktor IvanOVlch
Belenko 29 and confinned
he made the dec ston
volwttarily
The
Japanese
and
Amertcan govenunents were
mcoosulta lion oo his posst ble

Olgtt to the Uruted States
Mtyuawa said no final
decisloo had been made m
whether asylwn would be
gran!A!d because Washing\m
was beUeved to be taking
'vanous circumstances into
consideratlcn
Moscow
whtch also
demanded the return of the
pilot satd it wan!A!d one of its
daplomats to ntervlew
Belenko
The request was den ed m
grounds the pilot did not want
to see his oowttryman and
had
sought
asylum
volwttarily
The nauonal pol ce agency
quoted Belenko as saying he
had been plamlng foc two
years w seek asylum m the
United States
Ute in the Soviet Uruoo
today IS like that of the
czarut regune am there is no
freedOm he was quo!Ald as
saymg
Belenko 11111d he flew out of
a Soviet 1111' bUe m Siberia
Monday intending to fty mto

OJ!tose a Japanese airp&lt;rt In
northern Japan used by
domest c a rlines and
Japan s A r Self Defense
Force
But IIISiead he landed at
Hakodate Airport on the
rorth1!1'nin081 Japllnese mam
Island of Hokkaido about !iOO
miles north of Tokyo after
flymg at low all tude to avOid
radar and chasers
The defense radar at
O!ltose had spotted Belenko s
plane but lost track of II as t
descended and lamed at
Hakodate The plane also
known as the Foxbat
overS!ot the atrport s 1,201).
fool nmway and crashed mto
two radar antennas
Belenko then hopped out of
the cockptt and fired a piStol
an the atr lilt did rot resiSt
capture
I m a lieutenant in the
SoVIet atr force the pil(ll
told an mlerpreter I '111111\ ID
go to the United States The
plane is a MIG25 Please
cover t up and take good care

Bigger Fair planned in '77
~ams

I.XlLUMBUS (UPI)- Even
beroce the 1976 Ohio State
Fair was over Mooday the

for next year The Ulmission for pemUSSIIII \o
ammission decided the next have parunutuel wagenrtg at
State Fatr will open Tuesday the 1917 State Fal.r Be also
Ohio
Exposttaons Aug 16 1917 and run through was urged to iovestlgate the
Olmmlssion planned an all SUnday Aug 28
possibility of expanding the
Admission Irtces next year horse racing program and
new 197'1 State Fair to be an
extra day lmg and open Dille will be $2.50 roc adults and 75 ratsmg the horse racmg
days earlier so more school cents for children except pw:ses to lll$ft the best
chtldren would have the youngsters uJK!er 12 wtth an racmg program possable
adttlt will coounue to be
chance to attending
Woods also proposed a
This year s
world s admitted free IDllil noon on building and remodeling p:oliggest fal.r finished Ill! 12- week days Advance tid&lt;et gram for the state
day stand by drawmg a sales f&lt;r adults will be $2 and fatrgnnrads wtth the General
reCord 1,294 '702 customers senior otizens will be Sl
Assembly prov ding the
u.:.ludlng ISS 290 the final Woods also said ~ will be necessary funds
day Mooday The !~tal a serv ce charge on all
The chairman SBld Evans
lllpped the record 1m state parking and admattance Should
pur sue
a
p8S9eS
Fair t.oW crowd by 12,115
beautiftcatlm program, smce
1be commtsg(ll dulinnan !be 1917 State Fair wottld be
llCJ1 Woods cbairman of
the Ohao E:~:posittons sqggested that State FAir 1n1re attractive wtth greater
CcimmiSSaon
announced Manager John F Evans emphaSIS on a pleasant
plans
and
suggested apply to the Ohio Raang se~

Ford pushes mid-sized, luxury cars
DETROrr (UPJ &gt; Redellgned llmli'Y models and
new DUd-&amp;zed cars the
hottest segment of the
Amencan auto market
liPii&amp;bl the Fan! Motor
()) s lfll !lrategy to 111m
beads any from tbe highly
touted smaller can a
mmp•hl« 11 ~ 'full
lliRd

Fan! 11 c.wntirc m ill new

Fttrd LTD R and Mercury
Cwg.- (blown a~ ago as
the ToriDO and Mmlfl!o) to
hh bu1en away from lbe
.new llaJIIIankized General
Motors producbl whose
oullide dVMniODS 11'1! DO
bauer than the Ford
Dermedlates 'lbe prlcelag5,
......... will be luDcftds of
apart.
Ford's MW llne sbcnring
~J Ia just ooe week away
from a pnooible strike Oft!' a
new CG~tract roc 11a 110 ooo

mnn

-vn.

A atdown 1IOIIId a ipple
lla ..ltle !lrategy md lbe
llrm s daief ""!Pi•!« Vaoe
Pl ... .. SdDeJ McJerm
..,. be • act gnmlndful that
tbe . , mv1el• are due oa

later lhls month
Focd also as olfenng a new
COntinental
Mark
V
basically With just a slleet
IDetal facelift, and an aD new
Thunderb rd which like

GM s larger cars as jUSt a
shadow of ts ftrnler self wtth
a fool shaved fnm the a. eraD
lmgth and 150 pounds off the
wahtlioe

Rocks fascinate
11J AL ROSSI1ER JR.
e Edit«
PASADENA Calif {UPI )
Geologuts are both
fucinated and fnlstrated by
the rvcb littering Viking t's
UPI Sd

Utopia bue ou ~
'll s scmelhing like a little
boy outade a baRry shop
Wltb his face riglt up to the
WlDdow seemg aU these
goodies but DOt being able lo

bandle them, said Dr Elliot
Morris the U£ Geaqiai

«

!mvey
But ViiiDg does haft the
CBjXlbiiJty of digging Into the
Marti.m sarUce aod It 1rill
be8in Ita lOll aooopmg Satar
day to delh&gt;er a !pOODfuJ «
IDil to the robot s three
IDIDlature life delectaon

labocatories

DR. LAMB

The 10-foot mecbarucal
SlJWO'ed to collect
more soil Sunday for lbe
crafts orgaruc che1n1stry
Jab
Theorgaruc lltwly II 0'1ICial
lo the Martian life «Jleslllll
Viking 1 s detectors fouDd
suggestions at life but "'
ocgaruc molecules m the soiL
W"tlbout tbeir pr Ill ace, bioJo.
guts canoot di ""P'PIl the
possbility the life stgiiS
formed by unexpected
arm IS

*"'"'

dlemical reactions

lbOU

of t
The plane whidl can fly Ill

a different answer
I lmagme we Ifill look it
over he said smiling

1'11'1 llut

It Ia r.l A neet

"

rqu "

( YI

us

by he Oh a ftu es of

P OCI'CIU

f

htdgmtn b't

•

4 2l!OS;I 61'&lt;

• l

olaes

lj THE
COMMO!j PlEAS COURT
OF ME GS COUNTY OHIO
PROBATE OIV S ON
HOMER
IAXTER
Ad
m n st jjfor of tf\~ Est1tt ef
Hlte A. Moo 't Dttta•td
Pia nt tf

.

T .. e Urtknown Spouu He rs

Dew ' ' ' '
l.ttatees
Execu o 'I Adm n Sfrato s •r
A." tns a H ant ;t Moore
alu known •s Hattl Moor.
Jt e ~ Oe-U·IS~ E A.
Defend• ars

ljo 21 i u
NOT CE IY PUB~ CAT10N
Olj KNOWN AND UN KNOW~
OEFENOAtjTS
TO

DDrO hoy RObe

S WI'IOU

as known add ess was R 0
4 Pom M'.OY Oh o C arence
SWII'Qt
whose- as known
ado us was A beny Oh o

Ml on Moo e
Cha es
Moo I! Dona d Moo e JDhn

Moo e A hu Moo e 'Ranr:o
Moo e Ga t'lt Moo t F ed
Moarl!! M,anna'h Re be a so
known u
Hannah Moo e

Ma y

Sapp a so "nown as

Ma y !l ane Moo e a so known
as Ma :r Sapp ~ -che Bess e
Chea hem
Jess e McGu e
Ranzo Moo e
Ha e
Ebe SbiCh

M

I Cl

Pffe S

whose
add uses
a e
ufl known
be
un k.nown
dev sees
spouses lf'l e n
ega us
execu a s
ad
m n s • o s o tss gns of
t1aze A Moo e Ma on
Moo e J
Ghar.les Moo e
Dona cs Moo e John Moo e
Arffl u Moo t Rante Moo e
Game Moo t' F ed Moore
Hanneh Re bf' a so litnown as
Hannah Moo e Ma 'f
Sepp
al so .k!"lown as Marv Ja"t
M:oo e a so known as Ml y
Sapp
Arche
Bns r
Cheatnem
esse McGu e
Ra.n1o Moo e J
Hil e
Ebonboch M • d Jeffers
Ooi'IO hy Robe sand C a ence
Sweugt
Yov 1 e he-reobv no f ed tna
you have been named
defendants n a l t!QI ac ton
«~" t'&lt;l Homer Bax H'
ACI
mns ao of ttt!' Esae of
Half' A MGD e DKused
f:l' I n I
¥S T.ht UnknOwn
Spouse
He rs
Oev sen
Le-oa ees
Exe.cu o s Ad
mn~: aa.s
cr Assons. ot
Han A Moo r also 'known as
~ aze
Moore
Jeff~ s
Deceased E A.
Defen
din s Thi s ec on has been
as.s onec~ Case Number 2 714
and s peon.d ng n the Gourt of
Common P ees
Proba e

o

f'S 1

h

co ne

of

E Zlbe h SWIV9H" S foU

on

North
Chins o
he southwes co net of he
r.c
thence
Robe
Hyse
Eas twen y one end so 00
etta ns along the south 1 ne of
sa d Hyse
rae ot lanCI
him[! muth n ne 91 chi ns to
he Nor h till co ntf' of H d
E tabe h Swauger s Uiel •o
hence wnt twen y one and 50
00 cha ns to he p •ce of
beg nn no conta n no n ne Hn
and 25 00 1cre.s ~ he ume
more or us sa d and be ng
he nme deeded o MariOn
Moo e Jr
by Charlotte
wo ahan on F ebrue r 2S ~
and KD ded n he Me gs
County Deed Re&lt;o ds n Vo
d

No 26

ne nne {'

Radao Caty Statton New
walh IIU problem rai3ed the Yock, NY 10019 And I would
question of tla bemg Ulte to ltnow bow your
beredllary
program works out by
Dr Elmar G Lutz a avotding these beverages
psycbialrial and neurologl.st Let me know as I am mrep«tod tbal be had good leresled an your problem
SIICCI!IIIIIl trea llog IUcb cues
DEAR DR LAMB - Some
by elimlnatlllc CGftee and all lime ago there were news
clrlnb lbal Cllltain caffeine atocia about chemicals Uled
and giVIDg tbe palleota a m decatrelnalirc coffee being
IDIIICJe relaunl 'ibere II a darcerous and coald cauae 91 Poae sn
ng 1 lind y ng on
pollllbility that the problem cancer I would greaUy ap. heExcep
no the y s de of Un on
In JOllie people Is related ID predate t If you would Jet me Avenue 10 d to Ar hur Moo e
M1 on Moore J
by
clrlnklrc coffee am other know 10111ething about tbla as from
wer enly deed de ted June 10.
caffeine CODIBIDIDg we drinlt this CGftee quite I~ Jnd eco ded n Vol 93
219 Me gs Coun ., Deed
beverages
frequently and do not 1tnow Page dl
ln 'Oiew of UU report I whether to give at up or not Re&lt;O
Excep ng 25 acre sold to
would IUIIIell that you
DEAR READER - You Edwa d F ench by Marton
e
l&gt;y deed dl eel
eHmanale all coffee tea doo t need to worry about MOO
December 13
907 and
colas cocoa and all fOI'Dll of lba t The story coocerned tbe KO dtd n Vo 97 Plgt 612
chocolate AI the same lime chemical process Uled to Me os Coun y Oetd Aecords
no 96 acrr sold to
perhaps your doctor will degrease lbe CGftee There F Euept
ank Sapp and Nlo y S.pp I&gt;Y
Ma on Moore Jr by deed
pre~tnbe a mucle reluant
waa no real evidence that the dl
Decembt I 1923 and
You might aetliOIDe relief by amount Wled was in anyway a ecoedCfed
n Vo 2S Page 3U
tailog Benadryl
au an- health hazard In fact to be Me gs Coun y Deed Records
Except no he coa un
Uhlatamlnic at bedtime A subject to the l8llle tlreat derly
ng II d •rae Of fllnd
good l!ltl!l'd8e JJI'OBI"&amp;Dl Ia observed an animal ex
The p ope ty
s more
advlaable and I 1m gild lo perimenta a person would I) OPtrh diSC bed II fOI OWl
Bt ng I tu•te n Sl SbUry
hw' lbat you do enrclae haft had to drlnlt a miWon Townsh
p Me gs Countv
regularlJ
CliJlB of decaffeinated coffee a Oh o boundtd end dnc bed
fol OWl to W
n Sec on
To atve you more in day for life - a rather IS
26 Town 2 ond Ringe 13
funnallm on cal&amp;lne COII- unlikely pGIIIIbllity
Bf'O nn no et 1ht Northeest
of Ben Eblen s land
talnlrc driDb I 1m aendlrc
Despite the ablence of real corner
hence No h 332 feel 10 he
you Tbe Health Letter evidence of harm to con SOU h I dt Ol Un on AYtnUt
hen[lt South II degrees lO
number I I Coffee Tea aumera the
company wes
2S6 IH o ttlt North ••••
Cola Cocoa Olben wbo want manufacturlna the two eo ner o 1 96 DO acre tot
llil lnfOI'IIIIUon can leild a lJI'IMI in q-tiCII changed hence Soul~ 1 dog ee 15 Wnl
16 teet o ht crHk thenct
lona
stamped
self the procedure rather than be sou
h 13 door- )0 west 321
Mdr II I ~ envelope with 50 hal'llllled 10 tbe quesUon II 1ft along u d creek lhenco
North l dooreeo )0 wn 139
lllllta roc 11 Addrella your DO lonpr relenDI If II ever lett!
0 the IOUlh I de Ol Union
NqaeSI to me in care of thla was m the flnt place
A venue 1nd the north wnt
corner of ht 96 100 acre lot
aewijMper P 0 Boz 1661
hence lot ow ng he south side
i

•

4
I Twina 3 Wblle Sox 2

Craag Kusack hit a solo
ffimer wtth two out in the
botlom of the ninth mnmg to
g~ve B ll Campbell the third
Mmnesota p tcher his 15th
wm agarns\ four defeats The
15 vtctor es are lops among
.maJor league relief pltcbers
Indians 2-3 Brewers 3-2
John Lowenste n scored
from second base m the fifth
mnmg of the n ghtcap on
catcher Charlie Moore s
lhr ow ng error to gave

The State Farm
.4) A consp • y

or a emp
o comm
or comp c y n
omm ng o a ernpr ng o
omm
any offense unde
subsec on {f)
(2• o
3
he eof
u
Fe orw d ug abuse
o fense
means 1ny d u~
abus.e offense hat wou d
cons ute a fe onv unde he
aws of tft 1 s are exupt •

a match
f0 r lI'fe.

(l

Any

s mp e You te

abuse lncl that at one t me

had bHn p aced In a con a ne
pan y ma ked IS I Mr'T'Ptt by
a manufec urer

us a

tt e

about you se I you lam y
you goa s We feed th s n
to mal on to ou compute

and n a matte of seconds
t p nts out a State Fa m
lie nsu a nee p og am that
matches you needs One
you can ve w th
See o ca

BILL A.ETCHER

vo 1 e o gan c

so ven p ast c cemen mOde
cement f nge na I pot lh
rem oyer
ecque th nne
cle11n ng f u d 9110 ne anCI
any o he p epa at on con
11 n no 1 vola e organ c
50 ven
2 Any ae oso prope an
J)
Any
f uo ocarbon
tfr geranl
• Any anH he c gas
w
Manutac u e mt1ns
to pant cu t Yate ha ns
Procell m•ke p epa e or
otherw se engage n any pa
Of he p oduc lon of a drug by
P opaga on eK raction
chem cal syn htl 1 o com
POUnd ng or any comb na on
Of he tame and ncludes
packa.gtng
repec:kag ng
lebe ng and o her act y es
nc den o produc: on
xl
Possess
o
possus on means hav n~
con rol over a h no or sub
s ancebufmayno be nferred
so ey f om mere acess to the
h nv o subl anc.t h ougfl
owne sh p or occupi! on of he
prem ses upon Wh ch the h ng
o subs a nee s found
Y Sampled ug meens a
drug or pha m1ceu ca
prepa 11 on ha would bt
hill doua to heat h a safe y
t used wi hour he supe v son
of 1 practlct oner o a drug of

~
A.
GC»

State Fa m Matchmaker
Serv ce s free And so

¥011 on of Oho RC ~2SJ
~Y
H•rmfu
ntox can
dors not nc ude bee o n
OK ca ng I quor bu means
any compound
m xtu e
p epe at on o subs ance he
911 fumes or vapor of wh ch
.wtlen nha ~ can induce n
ox n on fKC ement g d
d Mt'U
rrat ona behav or
dtpress on supefaco a,
pa a ys s
unconsc ousne5S
nphyK a tion o a her I'll m ul
l)hys olog cal ef ec s and
Inetudes w thou I m at on
any o he fo low nv

Cleveland a split Roolde Dan
Th&lt;mas doubled in 8 run in
the ninth inning lo give the
firlt game to the Brewers
A I 2, Allge!J 1
Phil Garner s single crove
In Claudell Washinglon from
second base with one out n
the lith inning to pull
Oakland a game closer to
Kansas City Frank Tanana
struck out 15 in 10 Innings but
wasnotaroundforadeclsion p~
Yllllaees I Red Sox 5
.1..1.
Gralg Nettles hit his 25th
homer to take over the AL
lead am New York Increased BY NEIL HERSHBERG
ts lead in the East to ll l'l UP! Sporta Writer
The way the Philadelphaa
games over Baltimore
Nettles homer followed Lou Phtllles played Labor Day
Plnaella ssingleand a walk to they might just as well have
Olris Chambliss with one out taken the dsy off
The Pittsburgh Pirates
lit the fifth tog ve New York a
swep
a doubleheader from
fl.O lead
the faltermg Phillies 11-2 and
Tlaers 5 Orioles 4
Ben Ogilvie s bloop single r.-1 to move to w thin m
over shortstop scored pinch games of Phlladelphl8 in the
numer Bruce Klmm from Nattonal League East The
second ._se to cap a four-run Phillies had led by 16\'l
eighth Inning and knock Bal games just two weeks ago
tim&lt;re another game behind before !hell' current slide
the Yankees Dave Roberts started Aug 25
The Phlllies who have now
raised his record to 13-14
despite glvmg up all four runs
in the first inning

ONoCoil•
FooiiNiilkileduil

1258 Powell Sl
M ddleport 0

PH 992-7155
ITATE FARM L"E
INSURANCE COMPANY

Bengals
ready for
'76 opener
TAMPA Fla (UPI) Tampa Ba~ Buccaneers
Coach John McKay called hts
teams 24-13loss to Cincinnati
dunng the weekend a
terrible effort on our part
OUr offense moved the
ball only m spurts We didn I
protect the passer Our
offense didn t keep the hall
long enough and the defeme
was on the field too much
McKay complained
The Bucs rushed for only
160 yards on the groUnd anll
got only 122 yards passmg out
of the three quarterbacks
used against the Bengals
Saturday night
Veteran Steve Spurr er
completed only four of nine
passes m the half he played
for 57 yards Larry Lawrence
connected on two of ftve
passes for 30 yards and
Parnell Dickmson connected
on two of eaght for 35
Reserve quarterback John
Reaves p eked apart the
Bucs secondary hiiUng on 21
of 32 passes lor 272 yards and
three touchdowns and the
Bucs offense spultered
throughout most of the game
The baggesl play for the
Bucs was a 102-yard kickoff
return for a touchdown by
Isaac Hagms lit the third
quarter Another Bucs score
came on a two-yard plunge by
point nullified by a penalty
After the penalty was walked
off his kick h t the upright
and feU back after Moore s
t.ouchdown Rajecld kicked
the extra pomt after Hagins
run
The Bucs closed out the
National Football Leagu pre
season play with a record of
1~ and Will open at Houstoo
next Sunday against the
Oilers The Bengais finished
3-2 and wUI open against
Denver at Cincinnati
GRASSLEY REBATES
CEDAR FALLS Iowa
(UP! l
Rep Charles
Grassley Rlowa said he
returned most of last year s
congressional JlllY raise lit
commemoration of Labor
Day
The
3rd
District
Republican said he wrote the
U S Treasury a check for
$1
to cover the amount of
the ra111e he has received
since Jan I

•oo

!************************•····~~
TRY OUR DEliCIOUS HAMBURGERS.
:
!

~

MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY
FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES

~~

~

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~~

II-

10 00 A M. Tll12 00 P M. Frl &amp; Sat

W MAIN

research by Doug Bureman
a member of the Reds
adminiStrative staff reveals
that Morgan s the only
p ayer tn major league
history who hilS opped the
100 mark m runs scored
RBis and walks while also
steaimg 50 &lt;r more bases and
hltttng 25 or moce homers ma
single season
If you are a htUe weary of
reading about Morgan s
accompl shments then think
how the pa chers who have to
face him must feel
Morgan s home run came
durmg an etght-run thtrd
mnang which outed Astro
sta er James Rodney

R chard The first nm of the
anning came when Johnny
Bench crossed the plate oo
the Iron end ora double steal
executed wtth George Foster
In seventh inning Foster
left the game with a puffed
eye when struck by a hall off
the bat of Enos Cabell after it
caromed off the left field
fence X-rays were negative
but Foster w 11 s t out
ton ght s game when the
Reds and Astros wind up
thetr tw&lt;&gt;ilame ser es
Santo
Alcala
a
replacement for Gary Nolan
who was sent home wath a
!ever and an upset stomach
couldn t stand the prosper ty

m~~

:

:t

POMEROY n

***************************~
i

lost 10 or their last 11 games
made a total of four errors
and had two wald patches n
the double defeat as
PI tsburgh won for the 12th
time m ts last 13 games
The two dressang rooms
after the doubleheader were
a study m contrasts
It s fantastic cr ed an
enthus astlc B II !WblllSOn Ill
the
bubbhng
P ra e
clubhouse
Usually when a team goes
mto a slump I s two or three
guys sa d Larry Bowa he
Ph lUes shortstop We ve

got seven or e ght guys m a
slump
F ve d fferen
Prates
drove m a run m the opener to
ba k the combmed f ve hit
p chrng of Bruce Kison and
Ken Tekulve Every player
n the startmg lineup except
catcher Duffy Dyer had at
least one hit n the 2-hi
atak
In the n gh ca p Larry
Demery hurled a !our-hitter
while the Ptrates col ected 0
hi s of! three dif!e en Ph Ia
de ph a p chers qobmson
who had an RBI s ng e n the

f rst game had a WtH'Iln
lr pie m the second game
wh le R ch e Hebner showmg
s gns o! breakmg out of a
season long slump Slnashed
a solo homer
In other NL games New
York beat Ch cago 7-1 San
Franc sco n pped Atlanta 43 S LoUIS bea Montreal 31 be! ore los ng 3 2
CmcmnaU edged Houston ~
8 and Los Angeles defeated
San D ego 4-1
Meis 7 Cubs 4
D~e Kmgman
egamed
he maJOr league lead an

Bucks will be at full strength
for 1976 opener against MSU

s.tu.-y

Mlch St at 011 o Sl
at
Bow lno
Green
Syracuse
Kent St el Centra Mlch

of an eight-rwt lead He
departed during a three-run
fourth Inning It was Manny
Sarmiento the ~year old
rookie right-hander who
wouJKI up with the victory his
fifth in six declslms since
JOUIUlg the Reds July 30
In the nmth a one-out walk
followed by three straight
Aslro htta gave Houston three
rwts and the Reds a scare
be!oce Ed Hemnann popped
to Morgan to end the game

Miami at Ma 1/1111
Toledo at M.ISI
Tempe at Akron (nl

Ashland at Franklin (lnd)
Adrian (M ch l 1t Bluffton
tnl
Centra Sl at MtK a Brown
CGa I

C n al Tulane (n)
Youngolown St al Dayton (n)
Del ance at A bon (Mch)
n - night game

Amtr can League

sf t•me
C eve ond

020 000 ooo- 2 0 0

M wauk.. 1100 o 00
J 60
S Thomas 3 2 and Fon~
Co bo n Cas o 9 and Ftor e
WP

Cas 0 A A

homers wlth has 34th a tworun shot and also knocked In

Clnnn~•

another run w th a double as Oak end POO 000 0 0 0 - 210 0
000 000 00 oo- 1 6 2
New York beat Chicago for CoB foue n F ngera
9 and Tene
Jerry Koosman s 18th wlit ce Tanena Verhoeven 1
R ck Monday drove In three and Humph ev WP F ngen
9
L.P Ve hoeven (0 J
uns !oc the Cubs wtth his 28th HR-oak
and RUd
homer and a two-rwt Single
Giants 4 Braves 3
Gary Alexander smgled
"' This Week s Sl*:l«l
home what proved to be the
wmnmg run m the sixth
mnmg w gave San Francisco
a victory over Atlarlta Jim
Wynn h t hiS 15th homer for
the Braves
USED
Curds 3-2 Expos I 3
Earl Wall ams smgled
home the wmnmg run with
two out m the nmth mnmg to
g ve Montreal its second
game victory over St Louis
alter the Cards woo he
Oa k green
gh! grMn
opener behind Pete Falcone s
v ny top and green vinyl
four-h I p tchmg
nte o V I aulomallt
l\eds 9 Astros 8
power steering &amp; brlktl

74 PONnAC

LIMANS

SPORTS COUPE

Real sharD on,.

By GENE CADDEll
UP! Sporta Writer
I.XlLUMBUS Oh o(UPI)
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes bemg careful not w
rock the Michigan State boat
more than he already has
said Monday has 26th editaon
of the Buckeyes wUI go int.o
Saturday s season opener
against the St&gt;l\rtans at full
strength
We ve expounded on
about everything we can
concemmg the game Hayes
lold an unusual Labor Day
press luncheon Anything

else you say could be
detrimental to your chances
of wlitrung
Hayes was especaal y
careful not wcomment on he
touchy s tuation mvolVlng the
suspensaons o!
seven
Mich gan State players
Those suspens ons have
been appealed tn federal
court and a decis on on the
appeals
s
expected
sometune Wednesday m East
Lans ng Mtch
I m not go ng lo even talk
about that Hayes rep aed to
a questton

h1 fact he started o add

then stopped and sa d No
I m not even goang to tell you
that one
Hayes got things sttrred up
seve al weeks ago a the B g
Ten s yearly pre seaso n
luncheon m Chicago when he
public y admitted !or the ftrst
tame he had turned n
Mich gan State for alleged
recru mg v olations
Hayes although no be
ooly coach and reportedly not
the fi st to do so has taken
the blame for reporlmg the
VIOla ons which resulted an

Browns cut
Today's

4 veterans

Sport Parade
By MU..TON RICHMAN
UPl Sporll Editor
NEW YORK UP!)

Most of tbe other Phillies wouldn

adm t at if it killed them They like to !eel they re r gh up w lh

the times m lhetr th!nkmg but they re not They re like all
other hallplayers of the past They d rather ftght than confess
they feel any pressure
Tug McGraw IS the exception The Phillies lefty rei ever
C&lt;llles nghl out and says he has been feeUng a whole lot more
pressure the past two weeks durmg wh ch the club watched an
e ghl game loslitg streak shrink ts Eastern D vasion lead rn
the Nataonal League loan alarming 5\1.! games from what had
been a carefree 1510
Certainly I feel the pressure McGraw says w thou! any
self-conscaouness I m human But I m not ntlmida ed by the
pressure and I think that s because of the nature of my JOb
There s always pressure on you as a relief pttcher Sometimes
when I m m the bullpen antlctpating a s tuation m the ball
game the phone wall rmg and I Jwnp That s how wound up
you can get
Always candid McGraw whop tched for the Mets 1969 and
1973 pennant winners says he sn I the only one wath the
Phillies who s feeling the pressure
I see some signs Of tightness McGraw says The mental
IDIStakes we ve made on the f eld are a s gn of pressure When
sportswriters ask dumb quest ons and the players don I have
the patience to be pobte and point out the nature of he
question that s a SJgn o! pressure When a guy s n a good
frame of mind and there 1sn t any pressure on hun he ets
thmga like that slide by
Before the Phlls put the brakes on thetr longest losang streak
of the year by beating the Mets Sunday more and more
writers kept remlitding them about the 1964 Phallies who had a
610-game lead With mly 1210 play am then lost the pennantlo
the Cardinals
The present Phlls naturally were somethmg less than
enchanted with the comparison
Nobody likes to hear about the 64 Phillies McGraw says
Everybody says t s a dumb question when tbe subJect s
brought up but at s part of baseball htstory
There s nothmg wrong wtth feeling pressure It s part of
life The greatest thing about baseball Is that it creates thiS
kind of pressure on a dally basis for the players and the fans
With the blend of players we have on this team I don t think
the pressure IS go ng to make that much differen~
I believe we ll win McGraw says Anytime a ball club
goes mto a slump this late m the season it s someth ng to be
concerned about On the plus side though I can see some good
from it Ifyougetused to pam then you know how to endure t
I d rather us go mto the playoffs commg out of a slump than go
in overly relaxed wltb a great b g lead You can ose your
momentum that way
When the Phlls were at the deepest po nt m thetr slump
some of them went out of !hell' way to show the pressure wasn t
bothermg them ih what tnlght have been notbmg more than a
clear case of overcompensation
I m not nervous about thas whole thing at ali am I JOked
Ron Schueler walking around the Phillies clubhouse wear ng
the shirt or his unifocm Inside out
Caught up m the spirit Ron Reed another of the Phlls
pitchers echoed 'This game doesn t bother me a bit either
Reed had his wtlform on right Except for one th ng He was
wearing his athletic supporter outalde h s pants

·~~~~~To~~?~~~~~ !
i
~

the league in halting wtth a
341 average after pounding
out two hlta mea grand slam
homer while leading the
Reds to a 9-8 VICIDry over
Houston Monday night
What s nore Morgan s
name Is also bemg linked
with those of Ty Cobb and
Honus Wagner two of
baseball s all-time greats and
charter of members of the
game 8 Hall o! Fame
The three are the only
players lit the histocy of the
game who have scored a 100
rwts driven home a similar
number and stolen 50 bases m
a single season
That 8 not all r&lt;:xtensave

UnliMI'rnslnienlaiioMI

...ates jolt Phillies, cut East lead

~~ :;~ehad an extra

faflJCHf':lflKB1
Can fmd you

cu a y

west

The Texas Rangers tbe
mly team with a winning
record agalitll the Kansas
City Royals this season
made it 11 victories in 15
games Monday night with a r..
4 vicwry
Toby Harrah singled home
Dave Moates to cap a four
run Texas ninth inning and
hand American League West
frontnmner Kansas City ita
seventh loss in the last eight
games ena bUng second
place Oakland to crawl within
six games of firSl-!llace
But Texas Manager Frank
Lucchesi whose team has
wm only 17 of Its last 57
games was quick to praise
his team s patsy after the
victory
The pressure is still not on
them Lucchesi srud of the
Jloyals When you get just
two or hree games ahead
watch out That s when the
pressure starts mounting
But I d rather be In Kansas
City s place w lh a stx.game
lead than try and catch
them
The Rangers trailed 4 1
entering the runth mning but
singles by Roy Howell Joe
Lahoud and Juan Benlquez
produced one run off Kansas
City starter and loser Doug
B1rd Moates followed wlth a
two-out twtH'un double to
~base Bird out of the game
and t e the score 4-4 Royals
reliever M!ll'k UtteU then
walked Gene Clines before
surrendenng the game
,wummg hit to Harrah
ln other games Minnesota
beat Chicago 3-2 Milwaukee
and Cleveland split a double
header with both games
endtng at 3 2 Oakland
defeated Clalforrua 2-1 New
York downed Boston &amp;..; and
Detroat lr pped Baltimore [&gt;.

'::

No 2 Range No 13. and
SKI on Number 26 of thr 0t1 o
Com:pany s Purc hase and
df'SCI' bed
8eQ nn ng at tl'le

•

Tlllt WHII I

CINCINNATI {UP!) Others may find the stati8tlcs
Joe Morg~~n has compiled this
season awesome The Cincin
naU Reds aeoond baaeman
doellll
After Morgan won the
National League s Most
Valuable Player Award last
year he predicted he d have
an even better season in 1976
No way you said to
yourself
So whose wagging 8 linger
In front or your race and
saying So you wouldn 1
believe me'
That s right Morgan
Today Morgan owns a 17
game hltUng streak am tops

Rangers rock
Royals again

: ~:;:::::-::;;:=:::::::::-=::::::::::::

e o-w t .S tuale n Town

PI I

he
0

v 'Son
MtiiS Count y
'lbe first results from the 0Pomeroy
Oh o ASJ.69 The
aeardl roc &lt;qamcs wbicb ob' ec o flle Comp a n s o
re1 es a e n wh d1 Haze1
may have had a biological se
A Moo r naa an n erest o
Cll'lglll are expect.ed SepL 17
deltf"m ne be-r n er~ t tnrore n
The first life detection aM o qvtet 1 e o the
to l ow ng desc be-d re1l
eJ:perlment results are H i t owif
The to ow ng dncr bed eaJ
scheduled Sepl M.

mo e

reaeardt rep«t of a family

hs

Tueaday Sept 1 1916

Morgan Reds' hottest gun in 9-8 win
By RICK GO&amp;'IEUN
UPI Spor11 Writer

au
w
be
enderea
101 ns rou to
he tl tf
demandt&lt;l n ne c 1 m
d~

t

SKI

DEAR READER - For

o

PobatDYSOf'l
Me gs C.oun y Otl o

on u

'-lib' IIIII Cllldllilll II

mort

' ' f'S

13

Menn noD Webs t
JUdQ!'
Common Peas Cou

' ~~~.:· .:. ~·· ~: :t ..eenh~
Reauer suffiers 'restless lous
"'-e'
lhonce

1111

conta n ng

y n; on tfle eel s de ol
Thomas Fo It Creek •nd

_J-

MJ lleep periods last from
IS mbllllea to al11101l one and
abd boun Between periods
I walt lbe Ooar 25 to 30
mlou'- late bol tub ..lbs
ftlr lt adoates cold IOweia
an WI itppiCIIlQWIII the lep
aad I have deep beat
0
. . 01' reid
I at lellllbly exerclae
l'fl1llli'IJ' walt daiiJ am
tab nllmlnl I am bella- . Ill feel lind and .....,
ax boura lleep d-'t aeem
to .. enoteb I would be 11101t
wallf1lllf ,.ou could qgat
- - lbat 1IOIIId blip

0 ht p IU Of

ertntt Th s deser p on s
more I 850 miles per hour and At
lkf'l'l from Mo gage Dnd
set an altitude record of Ateo ds ~~ gs Coun y Oh o
99
nearly 119 000 feet more tban VoYou1211 eP1gt
rtqu e4 o enswtr
three years ago IS cmsidered w h n 21 days a tr he lu
a maj&lt;r mtelligence prize for pub ca on of no ce wh ch
w
be pub She&lt;t onct etch
the West
wHk for s. • success ve weeks
A State Department bf9 nn no 7 Sep ember 976
Tht as pub ca on w
be
spokesman an Washington m1de
on 1 0 obe
916 and
S&amp;d disposiUoo of the )et was t1t ?I ~IYI 0 IOIWf W
commence on ht da e
n
a Japanese problem, but cue
of vo ur fr.l ure or
an adminlstral!oo JOurce had 0 hltW S.t 0 tSpOnCI IS

No

DEAR Dlt LAMB-I am a
DIP Tl yan of age and I
._ve a cmdll!oo Jmown u
reatlesa !ega syndrome
wblch LS becommg ln
cr-slrcly worae as time
.,._. and leans me shlky
lind and nervous
I bue DO ~rouble getting to
lleep but a crawlirc aen•lloo of !be thigbs awakens
me out of a SOWJd aleep aod
maku il lmpoutble to
n11111n in bed I have been
lolauood by doet«a thaI
medlatl aclence has not come
ap wllb a cure roc tiU strarce
coadltloa I have tried
__.al drup to no avail
brJud!rc acupuncture

lhtntt en

0~11&gt;

1 67 ftt

beg nn ng

as to ows

11J Lawtm E. Lamb, M.D

ob a n pouen or use 1
ha mfu lniOK cent
b, Whoever 11oatn hit
sec on I gu tty of lbUt Of
hamu
nOI(centt
e
m sl1tmunor of he fou h
drgree
f he offendt hat
p tv ous y been conv cted of 1
d uv abun offense abus no
ha mful nrox cen 1 1 1
m sdtmtanor of he firs
deg ee See Oh o RC 792S 31
SECT ON VI
llEGAll Y
0 SPENS NG ORVG SAM
PlES

ctf'l tr

o

CLEVELAND UPI
Coach Forrest G egg cu 10
players
nc ud ng !our
ve erans wge the Cleveland
Browns roster down to the 43man !unit ne cessa y before
they pract1~ he !mal week
before open ng he NFI
season Sunday agams he
New York Jets at home
Announcement of the relea
ses mclud ng vete an
Browns grtdders MI Mo n
Hugh McKlnrus Jun Baley
and Henry Hynosk was
made Monday as the squad
reported to the trammg camp
at nearby Baldw n Wallace
Ceil ege !or the ftrs drUls o!
the week
Mo m a t gh end "\IOU d
have been entermg h s lith
season w th C eveland
McKinrus a unrung back
was preparmg for his fourth
year
Bailey was a defens ve
tackle and seven ) ear man
acqutred from the New York
Jets tn a Ju y trade Hynosk
was a second year runrung
back from Temple
Rook es re ea se d were
Br an Murray an offens ve
tackle from Anzona M Ire
Jackson a w de ece ver
from Central State Cra g
Nagel a quarterback !rom
Pu due Arthur Moore a
defens ve
back
Iron
Masstss pp Valley and M ke
McDonald a lmebacker from
Catawba
The last cut announced
after some delay was that of
w de
ece ver George
Farmer who had been s gned
as a free agent last week He
preVIously played for the
Ch cago Bears
Ten players had lo be
released through trades or
by bemg placed on wa vers
for the Browns to get down to
the regular season player
limit unposed by Ue National
Football League Apparently
the dec slons were made
Sunday when Gregg mel wath
his ass slant coaches owner
Art Modell and Modell sa de
Peter Hadhazy
The B owns wound t 1e
exhib lion season last Fr1day
night at Buffalo absorbing a
28-IOdefeat The Bills handed
the Browns their second
delea n stx pre season
games

three years NCM probation
!or the school the ultimate
eplacemen of Denny SIDlz
as head coach by Darry
Rogers and the suspenSions
of vanous lengths foc the
seven players
Hayes said the startmg
Buckeye I neup barr ng
nJury between now and
Saturday would be the same
as fm shed Sprang practice
w th uruor Jeff Logan Hllmg
the g ant shoes vacated by
the graduated twotime
Hetsman Trophy w nner
Archie G iff!n
Work obv ously wm I be
as heayy th s week sa d
Hayes What we try ID do as
every great team does s try
to taper off
The rna n concern for
Hayes and the rest o! the
Buckeye coaches s he
change m head Cl)aches at
MSU

Wth no scout ng reports
available Hayes and his staff
don know qwte what to
expe t !rom Rogers former
San Jose Sta e mentor
We re gomg to have to be
on our toes and the coaches
are gomg ID have 10 be ready
to do a qwck analySis sa d
OSU ass s an
George
Chaump We have to expect
anythmg
Chaump sa d desp te the
developmg hard feelings be
ween the two B g Ten r vais
there would be no great
emo onal bu ldup n the
Buckeye camp
From our v ewpo nt
srud Chaump the best thing
we can do s have our k ds
prepared Emot ona!ISUI and
that rah rah stuff s great
Bu the best thmg you can do
s be prepared
Defens ve coord nator
George H ll echoed Chaump s
remarks say ng
the
unknown is always a
challenge when you are going
agamst a new head coach It
forces you w have a little
more breadth n your
defens ve thinkmg because
you don t know what to
expect
AI ough
here were
lim ted reserved and f e d
seats gong m sale loday the
opener was almost certam to
be Oh o State s 44th stra ght
home se lout of more than
87 000 persons

3495
karr &amp; Van landt
1

Dodgers 4 Padres 1
Don Sutton clos ng m on a
~VIctory season for the first
tune m an 11 year career
tossed a four-h Iter for hiS
8th wm and Steve Garvey
drove m a pair of runs to lead
Los Angeles over 21J.game
wmner Randy Jones and San
Dego

You I LlkeOtJ Qua 1ty

Way of Do ng Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
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Tl'~mS.I

Banking
Services
HAVE

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M ddltport 01110
m2342

•

�'-Tile Olllly Sentinel MldcDeport Pocneroy 0

3- The Olllly Sentinel Middleport P&lt;rneroy
TUesday Sept 1 1976

o un on Avenue o ht

o Thom•s Fo k C nk hence
down 11 d C ttk o a C&gt;O n
wh ch s ht souttlwtt corntr
of • one fourth acre t act of
end dtsc bed n vo 91 Ptoe
6 2 Ond \_RKDrds Me gs

Soviet pilot asks for asylu1n

Coun 'I

By TEIJl SHIMJZU
TOKYO (UP!) - A SoVIet
pilot who outwitted radar
screens to land his highly
soplistlcated Soviet MIG25 m
northern Jarsn Mooday woo
penn.illsloo today frOCil the
Japanese government to seek
political asylum in the Uruted
States
The government also
refused a Soviet request to
Immediately return the
plane cooSidered to be the
world s most advanced
aircraft
Foreign Min ster K ichl
Miyazawa SBJd the Japanese
government approved the
pilot s request from a
humanitarian stMdpomt
The foceJgn Ministry sa d
one of tis
off cials
mtervtewed the ptlot
dentified as Viktor IvanOVlch
Belenko 29 and confinned
he made the dec ston
volwttarily
The
Japanese
and
Amertcan govenunents were
mcoosulta lion oo his posst ble

Olgtt to the Uruted States
Mtyuawa said no final
decisloo had been made m
whether asylwn would be
gran!A!d because Washing\m
was beUeved to be taking
'vanous circumstances into
consideratlcn
Moscow
whtch also
demanded the return of the
pilot satd it wan!A!d one of its
daplomats to ntervlew
Belenko
The request was den ed m
grounds the pilot did not want
to see his oowttryman and
had
sought
asylum
volwttarily
The nauonal pol ce agency
quoted Belenko as saying he
had been plamlng foc two
years w seek asylum m the
United States
Ute in the Soviet Uruoo
today IS like that of the
czarut regune am there is no
freedOm he was quo!Ald as
saymg
Belenko 11111d he flew out of
a Soviet 1111' bUe m Siberia
Monday intending to fty mto

OJ!tose a Japanese airp&lt;rt In
northern Japan used by
domest c a rlines and
Japan s A r Self Defense
Force
But IIISiead he landed at
Hakodate Airport on the
rorth1!1'nin081 Japllnese mam
Island of Hokkaido about !iOO
miles north of Tokyo after
flymg at low all tude to avOid
radar and chasers
The defense radar at
O!ltose had spotted Belenko s
plane but lost track of II as t
descended and lamed at
Hakodate The plane also
known as the Foxbat
overS!ot the atrport s 1,201).
fool nmway and crashed mto
two radar antennas
Belenko then hopped out of
the cockptt and fired a piStol
an the atr lilt did rot resiSt
capture
I m a lieutenant in the
SoVIet atr force the pil(ll
told an mlerpreter I '111111\ ID
go to the United States The
plane is a MIG25 Please
cover t up and take good care

Bigger Fair planned in '77
~ams

I.XlLUMBUS (UPI)- Even
beroce the 1976 Ohio State
Fair was over Mooday the

for next year The Ulmission for pemUSSIIII \o
ammission decided the next have parunutuel wagenrtg at
State Fatr will open Tuesday the 1917 State Fal.r Be also
Ohio
Exposttaons Aug 16 1917 and run through was urged to iovestlgate the
Olmmlssion planned an all SUnday Aug 28
possibility of expanding the
Admission Irtces next year horse racing program and
new 197'1 State Fair to be an
extra day lmg and open Dille will be $2.50 roc adults and 75 ratsmg the horse racmg
days earlier so more school cents for children except pw:ses to lll$ft the best
chtldren would have the youngsters uJK!er 12 wtth an racmg program possable
adttlt will coounue to be
chance to attending
Woods also proposed a
This year s
world s admitted free IDllil noon on building and remodeling p:oliggest fal.r finished Ill! 12- week days Advance tid&lt;et gram for the state
day stand by drawmg a sales f&lt;r adults will be $2 and fatrgnnrads wtth the General
reCord 1,294 '702 customers senior otizens will be Sl
Assembly prov ding the
u.:.ludlng ISS 290 the final Woods also said ~ will be necessary funds
day Mooday The !~tal a serv ce charge on all
The chairman SBld Evans
lllpped the record 1m state parking and admattance Should
pur sue
a
p8S9eS
Fair t.oW crowd by 12,115
beautiftcatlm program, smce
1be commtsg(ll dulinnan !be 1917 State Fair wottld be
llCJ1 Woods cbairman of
the Ohao E:~:posittons sqggested that State FAir 1n1re attractive wtth greater
CcimmiSSaon
announced Manager John F Evans emphaSIS on a pleasant
plans
and
suggested apply to the Ohio Raang se~

Ford pushes mid-sized, luxury cars
DETROrr (UPJ &gt; Redellgned llmli'Y models and
new DUd-&amp;zed cars the
hottest segment of the
Amencan auto market
liPii&amp;bl the Fan! Motor
()) s lfll !lrategy to 111m
beads any from tbe highly
touted smaller can a
mmp•hl« 11 ~ 'full
lliRd

Fan! 11 c.wntirc m ill new

Fttrd LTD R and Mercury
Cwg.- (blown a~ ago as
the ToriDO and Mmlfl!o) to
hh bu1en away from lbe
.new llaJIIIankized General
Motors producbl whose
oullide dVMniODS 11'1! DO
bauer than the Ford
Dermedlates 'lbe prlcelag5,
......... will be luDcftds of
apart.
Ford's MW llne sbcnring
~J Ia just ooe week away
from a pnooible strike Oft!' a
new CG~tract roc 11a 110 ooo

mnn

-vn.

A atdown 1IOIIId a ipple
lla ..ltle !lrategy md lbe
llrm s daief ""!Pi•!« Vaoe
Pl ... .. SdDeJ McJerm
..,. be • act gnmlndful that
tbe . , mv1el• are due oa

later lhls month
Focd also as olfenng a new
COntinental
Mark
V
basically With just a slleet
IDetal facelift, and an aD new
Thunderb rd which like

GM s larger cars as jUSt a
shadow of ts ftrnler self wtth
a fool shaved fnm the a. eraD
lmgth and 150 pounds off the
wahtlioe

Rocks fascinate
11J AL ROSSI1ER JR.
e Edit«
PASADENA Calif {UPI )
Geologuts are both
fucinated and fnlstrated by
the rvcb littering Viking t's
UPI Sd

Utopia bue ou ~
'll s scmelhing like a little
boy outade a baRry shop
Wltb his face riglt up to the
WlDdow seemg aU these
goodies but DOt being able lo

bandle them, said Dr Elliot
Morris the U£ Geaqiai

«

!mvey
But ViiiDg does haft the
CBjXlbiiJty of digging Into the
Marti.m sarUce aod It 1rill
be8in Ita lOll aooopmg Satar
day to delh&gt;er a !pOODfuJ «
IDil to the robot s three
IDIDlature life delectaon

labocatories

DR. LAMB

The 10-foot mecbarucal
SlJWO'ed to collect
more soil Sunday for lbe
crafts orgaruc che1n1stry
Jab
Theorgaruc lltwly II 0'1ICial
lo the Martian life «Jleslllll
Viking 1 s detectors fouDd
suggestions at life but "'
ocgaruc molecules m the soiL
W"tlbout tbeir pr Ill ace, bioJo.
guts canoot di ""P'PIl the
possbility the life stgiiS
formed by unexpected
arm IS

*"'"'

dlemical reactions

lbOU

of t
The plane whidl can fly Ill

a different answer
I lmagme we Ifill look it
over he said smiling

1'11'1 llut

It Ia r.l A neet

"

rqu "

( YI

us

by he Oh a ftu es of

P OCI'CIU

f

htdgmtn b't

•

4 2l!OS;I 61'&lt;

• l

olaes

lj THE
COMMO!j PlEAS COURT
OF ME GS COUNTY OHIO
PROBATE OIV S ON
HOMER
IAXTER
Ad
m n st jjfor of tf\~ Est1tt ef
Hlte A. Moo 't Dttta•td
Pia nt tf

.

T .. e Urtknown Spouu He rs

Dew ' ' ' '
l.ttatees
Execu o 'I Adm n Sfrato s •r
A." tns a H ant ;t Moore
alu known •s Hattl Moor.
Jt e ~ Oe-U·IS~ E A.
Defend• ars

ljo 21 i u
NOT CE IY PUB~ CAT10N
Olj KNOWN AND UN KNOW~
OEFENOAtjTS
TO

DDrO hoy RObe

S WI'IOU

as known add ess was R 0
4 Pom M'.OY Oh o C arence
SWII'Qt
whose- as known
ado us was A beny Oh o

Ml on Moo e
Cha es
Moo I! Dona d Moo e JDhn

Moo e A hu Moo e 'Ranr:o
Moo e Ga t'lt Moo t F ed
Moarl!! M,anna'h Re be a so
known u
Hannah Moo e

Ma y

Sapp a so "nown as

Ma y !l ane Moo e a so known
as Ma :r Sapp ~ -che Bess e
Chea hem
Jess e McGu e
Ranzo Moo e
Ha e
Ebe SbiCh

M

I Cl

Pffe S

whose
add uses
a e
ufl known
be
un k.nown
dev sees
spouses lf'l e n
ega us
execu a s
ad
m n s • o s o tss gns of
t1aze A Moo e Ma on
Moo e J
Ghar.les Moo e
Dona cs Moo e John Moo e
Arffl u Moo t Rante Moo e
Game Moo t' F ed Moore
Hanneh Re bf' a so litnown as
Hannah Moo e Ma 'f
Sepp
al so .k!"lown as Marv Ja"t
M:oo e a so known as Ml y
Sapp
Arche
Bns r
Cheatnem
esse McGu e
Ra.n1o Moo e J
Hil e
Ebonboch M • d Jeffers
Ooi'IO hy Robe sand C a ence
Sweugt
Yov 1 e he-reobv no f ed tna
you have been named
defendants n a l t!QI ac ton
«~" t'&lt;l Homer Bax H'
ACI
mns ao of ttt!' Esae of
Half' A MGD e DKused
f:l' I n I
¥S T.ht UnknOwn
Spouse
He rs
Oev sen
Le-oa ees
Exe.cu o s Ad
mn~: aa.s
cr Assons. ot
Han A Moo r also 'known as
~ aze
Moore
Jeff~ s
Deceased E A.
Defen
din s Thi s ec on has been
as.s onec~ Case Number 2 714
and s peon.d ng n the Gourt of
Common P ees
Proba e

o

f'S 1

h

co ne

of

E Zlbe h SWIV9H" S foU

on

North
Chins o
he southwes co net of he
r.c
thence
Robe
Hyse
Eas twen y one end so 00
etta ns along the south 1 ne of
sa d Hyse
rae ot lanCI
him[! muth n ne 91 chi ns to
he Nor h till co ntf' of H d
E tabe h Swauger s Uiel •o
hence wnt twen y one and 50
00 cha ns to he p •ce of
beg nn no conta n no n ne Hn
and 25 00 1cre.s ~ he ume
more or us sa d and be ng
he nme deeded o MariOn
Moo e Jr
by Charlotte
wo ahan on F ebrue r 2S ~
and KD ded n he Me gs
County Deed Re&lt;o ds n Vo
d

No 26

ne nne {'

Radao Caty Statton New
walh IIU problem rai3ed the Yock, NY 10019 And I would
question of tla bemg Ulte to ltnow bow your
beredllary
program works out by
Dr Elmar G Lutz a avotding these beverages
psycbialrial and neurologl.st Let me know as I am mrep«tod tbal be had good leresled an your problem
SIICCI!IIIIIl trea llog IUcb cues
DEAR DR LAMB - Some
by elimlnatlllc CGftee and all lime ago there were news
clrlnb lbal Cllltain caffeine atocia about chemicals Uled
and giVIDg tbe palleota a m decatrelnalirc coffee being
IDIIICJe relaunl 'ibere II a darcerous and coald cauae 91 Poae sn
ng 1 lind y ng on
pollllbility that the problem cancer I would greaUy ap. heExcep
no the y s de of Un on
In JOllie people Is related ID predate t If you would Jet me Avenue 10 d to Ar hur Moo e
M1 on Moore J
by
clrlnklrc coffee am other know 10111ething about tbla as from
wer enly deed de ted June 10.
caffeine CODIBIDIDg we drinlt this CGftee quite I~ Jnd eco ded n Vol 93
219 Me gs Coun ., Deed
beverages
frequently and do not 1tnow Page dl
ln 'Oiew of UU report I whether to give at up or not Re&lt;O
Excep ng 25 acre sold to
would IUIIIell that you
DEAR READER - You Edwa d F ench by Marton
e
l&gt;y deed dl eel
eHmanale all coffee tea doo t need to worry about MOO
December 13
907 and
colas cocoa and all fOI'Dll of lba t The story coocerned tbe KO dtd n Vo 97 Plgt 612
chocolate AI the same lime chemical process Uled to Me os Coun y Oetd Aecords
no 96 acrr sold to
perhaps your doctor will degrease lbe CGftee There F Euept
ank Sapp and Nlo y S.pp I&gt;Y
Ma on Moore Jr by deed
pre~tnbe a mucle reluant
waa no real evidence that the dl
Decembt I 1923 and
You might aetliOIDe relief by amount Wled was in anyway a ecoedCfed
n Vo 2S Page 3U
tailog Benadryl
au an- health hazard In fact to be Me gs Coun y Deed Records
Except no he coa un
Uhlatamlnic at bedtime A subject to the l8llle tlreat derly
ng II d •rae Of fllnd
good l!ltl!l'd8e JJI'OBI"&amp;Dl Ia observed an animal ex
The p ope ty
s more
advlaable and I 1m gild lo perimenta a person would I) OPtrh diSC bed II fOI OWl
Bt ng I tu•te n Sl SbUry
hw' lbat you do enrclae haft had to drlnlt a miWon Townsh
p Me gs Countv
regularlJ
CliJlB of decaffeinated coffee a Oh o boundtd end dnc bed
fol OWl to W
n Sec on
To atve you more in day for life - a rather IS
26 Town 2 ond Ringe 13
funnallm on cal&amp;lne COII- unlikely pGIIIIbllity
Bf'O nn no et 1ht Northeest
of Ben Eblen s land
talnlrc driDb I 1m aendlrc
Despite the ablence of real corner
hence No h 332 feel 10 he
you Tbe Health Letter evidence of harm to con SOU h I dt Ol Un on AYtnUt
hen[lt South II degrees lO
number I I Coffee Tea aumera the
company wes
2S6 IH o ttlt North ••••
Cola Cocoa Olben wbo want manufacturlna the two eo ner o 1 96 DO acre tot
llil lnfOI'IIIIUon can leild a lJI'IMI in q-tiCII changed hence Soul~ 1 dog ee 15 Wnl
16 teet o ht crHk thenct
lona
stamped
self the procedure rather than be sou
h 13 door- )0 west 321
Mdr II I ~ envelope with 50 hal'llllled 10 tbe quesUon II 1ft along u d creek lhenco
North l dooreeo )0 wn 139
lllllta roc 11 Addrella your DO lonpr relenDI If II ever lett!
0 the IOUlh I de Ol Union
NqaeSI to me in care of thla was m the flnt place
A venue 1nd the north wnt
corner of ht 96 100 acre lot
aewijMper P 0 Boz 1661
hence lot ow ng he south side
i

•

4
I Twina 3 Wblle Sox 2

Craag Kusack hit a solo
ffimer wtth two out in the
botlom of the ninth mnmg to
g~ve B ll Campbell the third
Mmnesota p tcher his 15th
wm agarns\ four defeats The
15 vtctor es are lops among
.maJor league relief pltcbers
Indians 2-3 Brewers 3-2
John Lowenste n scored
from second base m the fifth
mnmg of the n ghtcap on
catcher Charlie Moore s
lhr ow ng error to gave

The State Farm
.4) A consp • y

or a emp
o comm
or comp c y n
omm ng o a ernpr ng o
omm
any offense unde
subsec on {f)
(2• o
3
he eof
u
Fe orw d ug abuse
o fense
means 1ny d u~
abus.e offense hat wou d
cons ute a fe onv unde he
aws of tft 1 s are exupt •

a match
f0 r lI'fe.

(l

Any

s mp e You te

abuse lncl that at one t me

had bHn p aced In a con a ne
pan y ma ked IS I Mr'T'Ptt by
a manufec urer

us a

tt e

about you se I you lam y
you goa s We feed th s n
to mal on to ou compute

and n a matte of seconds
t p nts out a State Fa m
lie nsu a nee p og am that
matches you needs One
you can ve w th
See o ca

BILL A.ETCHER

vo 1 e o gan c

so ven p ast c cemen mOde
cement f nge na I pot lh
rem oyer
ecque th nne
cle11n ng f u d 9110 ne anCI
any o he p epa at on con
11 n no 1 vola e organ c
50 ven
2 Any ae oso prope an
J)
Any
f uo ocarbon
tfr geranl
• Any anH he c gas
w
Manutac u e mt1ns
to pant cu t Yate ha ns
Procell m•ke p epa e or
otherw se engage n any pa
Of he p oduc lon of a drug by
P opaga on eK raction
chem cal syn htl 1 o com
POUnd ng or any comb na on
Of he tame and ncludes
packa.gtng
repec:kag ng
lebe ng and o her act y es
nc den o produc: on
xl
Possess
o
possus on means hav n~
con rol over a h no or sub
s ancebufmayno be nferred
so ey f om mere acess to the
h nv o subl anc.t h ougfl
owne sh p or occupi! on of he
prem ses upon Wh ch the h ng
o subs a nee s found
Y Sampled ug meens a
drug or pha m1ceu ca
prepa 11 on ha would bt
hill doua to heat h a safe y
t used wi hour he supe v son
of 1 practlct oner o a drug of

~
A.
GC»

State Fa m Matchmaker
Serv ce s free And so

¥011 on of Oho RC ~2SJ
~Y
H•rmfu
ntox can
dors not nc ude bee o n
OK ca ng I quor bu means
any compound
m xtu e
p epe at on o subs ance he
911 fumes or vapor of wh ch
.wtlen nha ~ can induce n
ox n on fKC ement g d
d Mt'U
rrat ona behav or
dtpress on supefaco a,
pa a ys s
unconsc ousne5S
nphyK a tion o a her I'll m ul
l)hys olog cal ef ec s and
Inetudes w thou I m at on
any o he fo low nv

Cleveland a split Roolde Dan
Th&lt;mas doubled in 8 run in
the ninth inning lo give the
firlt game to the Brewers
A I 2, Allge!J 1
Phil Garner s single crove
In Claudell Washinglon from
second base with one out n
the lith inning to pull
Oakland a game closer to
Kansas City Frank Tanana
struck out 15 in 10 Innings but
wasnotaroundforadeclsion p~
Yllllaees I Red Sox 5
.1..1.
Gralg Nettles hit his 25th
homer to take over the AL
lead am New York Increased BY NEIL HERSHBERG
ts lead in the East to ll l'l UP! Sporta Writer
The way the Philadelphaa
games over Baltimore
Nettles homer followed Lou Phtllles played Labor Day
Plnaella ssingleand a walk to they might just as well have
Olris Chambliss with one out taken the dsy off
The Pittsburgh Pirates
lit the fifth tog ve New York a
swep
a doubleheader from
fl.O lead
the faltermg Phillies 11-2 and
Tlaers 5 Orioles 4
Ben Ogilvie s bloop single r.-1 to move to w thin m
over shortstop scored pinch games of Phlladelphl8 in the
numer Bruce Klmm from Nattonal League East The
second ._se to cap a four-run Phillies had led by 16\'l
eighth Inning and knock Bal games just two weeks ago
tim&lt;re another game behind before !hell' current slide
the Yankees Dave Roberts started Aug 25
The Phlllies who have now
raised his record to 13-14
despite glvmg up all four runs
in the first inning

ONoCoil•
FooiiNiilkileduil

1258 Powell Sl
M ddleport 0

PH 992-7155
ITATE FARM L"E
INSURANCE COMPANY

Bengals
ready for
'76 opener
TAMPA Fla (UPI) Tampa Ba~ Buccaneers
Coach John McKay called hts
teams 24-13loss to Cincinnati
dunng the weekend a
terrible effort on our part
OUr offense moved the
ball only m spurts We didn I
protect the passer Our
offense didn t keep the hall
long enough and the defeme
was on the field too much
McKay complained
The Bucs rushed for only
160 yards on the groUnd anll
got only 122 yards passmg out
of the three quarterbacks
used against the Bengals
Saturday night
Veteran Steve Spurr er
completed only four of nine
passes m the half he played
for 57 yards Larry Lawrence
connected on two of ftve
passes for 30 yards and
Parnell Dickmson connected
on two of eaght for 35
Reserve quarterback John
Reaves p eked apart the
Bucs secondary hiiUng on 21
of 32 passes lor 272 yards and
three touchdowns and the
Bucs offense spultered
throughout most of the game
The baggesl play for the
Bucs was a 102-yard kickoff
return for a touchdown by
Isaac Hagms lit the third
quarter Another Bucs score
came on a two-yard plunge by
point nullified by a penalty
After the penalty was walked
off his kick h t the upright
and feU back after Moore s
t.ouchdown Rajecld kicked
the extra pomt after Hagins
run
The Bucs closed out the
National Football Leagu pre
season play with a record of
1~ and Will open at Houstoo
next Sunday against the
Oilers The Bengais finished
3-2 and wUI open against
Denver at Cincinnati
GRASSLEY REBATES
CEDAR FALLS Iowa
(UP! l
Rep Charles
Grassley Rlowa said he
returned most of last year s
congressional JlllY raise lit
commemoration of Labor
Day
The
3rd
District
Republican said he wrote the
U S Treasury a check for
$1
to cover the amount of
the ra111e he has received
since Jan I

•oo

!************************•····~~
TRY OUR DEliCIOUS HAMBURGERS.
:
!

~

MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY
FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES

~~

~

i,..

~~

II-

10 00 A M. Tll12 00 P M. Frl &amp; Sat

W MAIN

research by Doug Bureman
a member of the Reds
adminiStrative staff reveals
that Morgan s the only
p ayer tn major league
history who hilS opped the
100 mark m runs scored
RBis and walks while also
steaimg 50 &lt;r more bases and
hltttng 25 or moce homers ma
single season
If you are a htUe weary of
reading about Morgan s
accompl shments then think
how the pa chers who have to
face him must feel
Morgan s home run came
durmg an etght-run thtrd
mnang which outed Astro
sta er James Rodney

R chard The first nm of the
anning came when Johnny
Bench crossed the plate oo
the Iron end ora double steal
executed wtth George Foster
In seventh inning Foster
left the game with a puffed
eye when struck by a hall off
the bat of Enos Cabell after it
caromed off the left field
fence X-rays were negative
but Foster w 11 s t out
ton ght s game when the
Reds and Astros wind up
thetr tw&lt;&gt;ilame ser es
Santo
Alcala
a
replacement for Gary Nolan
who was sent home wath a
!ever and an upset stomach
couldn t stand the prosper ty

m~~

:

:t

POMEROY n

***************************~
i

lost 10 or their last 11 games
made a total of four errors
and had two wald patches n
the double defeat as
PI tsburgh won for the 12th
time m ts last 13 games
The two dressang rooms
after the doubleheader were
a study m contrasts
It s fantastic cr ed an
enthus astlc B II !WblllSOn Ill
the
bubbhng
P ra e
clubhouse
Usually when a team goes
mto a slump I s two or three
guys sa d Larry Bowa he
Ph lUes shortstop We ve

got seven or e ght guys m a
slump
F ve d fferen
Prates
drove m a run m the opener to
ba k the combmed f ve hit
p chrng of Bruce Kison and
Ken Tekulve Every player
n the startmg lineup except
catcher Duffy Dyer had at
least one hit n the 2-hi
atak
In the n gh ca p Larry
Demery hurled a !our-hitter
while the Ptrates col ected 0
hi s of! three dif!e en Ph Ia
de ph a p chers qobmson
who had an RBI s ng e n the

f rst game had a WtH'Iln
lr pie m the second game
wh le R ch e Hebner showmg
s gns o! breakmg out of a
season long slump Slnashed
a solo homer
In other NL games New
York beat Ch cago 7-1 San
Franc sco n pped Atlanta 43 S LoUIS bea Montreal 31 be! ore los ng 3 2
CmcmnaU edged Houston ~
8 and Los Angeles defeated
San D ego 4-1
Meis 7 Cubs 4
D~e Kmgman
egamed
he maJOr league lead an

Bucks will be at full strength
for 1976 opener against MSU

s.tu.-y

Mlch St at 011 o Sl
at
Bow lno
Green
Syracuse
Kent St el Centra Mlch

of an eight-rwt lead He
departed during a three-run
fourth Inning It was Manny
Sarmiento the ~year old
rookie right-hander who
wouJKI up with the victory his
fifth in six declslms since
JOUIUlg the Reds July 30
In the nmth a one-out walk
followed by three straight
Aslro htta gave Houston three
rwts and the Reds a scare
be!oce Ed Hemnann popped
to Morgan to end the game

Miami at Ma 1/1111
Toledo at M.ISI
Tempe at Akron (nl

Ashland at Franklin (lnd)
Adrian (M ch l 1t Bluffton
tnl
Centra Sl at MtK a Brown
CGa I

C n al Tulane (n)
Youngolown St al Dayton (n)
Del ance at A bon (Mch)
n - night game

Amtr can League

sf t•me
C eve ond

020 000 ooo- 2 0 0

M wauk.. 1100 o 00
J 60
S Thomas 3 2 and Fon~
Co bo n Cas o 9 and Ftor e
WP

Cas 0 A A

homers wlth has 34th a tworun shot and also knocked In

Clnnn~•

another run w th a double as Oak end POO 000 0 0 0 - 210 0
000 000 00 oo- 1 6 2
New York beat Chicago for CoB foue n F ngera
9 and Tene
Jerry Koosman s 18th wlit ce Tanena Verhoeven 1
R ck Monday drove In three and Humph ev WP F ngen
9
L.P Ve hoeven (0 J
uns !oc the Cubs wtth his 28th HR-oak
and RUd
homer and a two-rwt Single
Giants 4 Braves 3
Gary Alexander smgled
"' This Week s Sl*:l«l
home what proved to be the
wmnmg run m the sixth
mnmg w gave San Francisco
a victory over Atlarlta Jim
Wynn h t hiS 15th homer for
the Braves
USED
Curds 3-2 Expos I 3
Earl Wall ams smgled
home the wmnmg run with
two out m the nmth mnmg to
g ve Montreal its second
game victory over St Louis
alter the Cards woo he
Oa k green
gh! grMn
opener behind Pete Falcone s
v ny top and green vinyl
four-h I p tchmg
nte o V I aulomallt
l\eds 9 Astros 8
power steering &amp; brlktl

74 PONnAC

LIMANS

SPORTS COUPE

Real sharD on,.

By GENE CADDEll
UP! Sporta Writer
I.XlLUMBUS Oh o(UPI)
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes bemg careful not w
rock the Michigan State boat
more than he already has
said Monday has 26th editaon
of the Buckeyes wUI go int.o
Saturday s season opener
against the St&gt;l\rtans at full
strength
We ve expounded on
about everything we can
concemmg the game Hayes
lold an unusual Labor Day
press luncheon Anything

else you say could be
detrimental to your chances
of wlitrung
Hayes was especaal y
careful not wcomment on he
touchy s tuation mvolVlng the
suspensaons o!
seven
Mich gan State players
Those suspens ons have
been appealed tn federal
court and a decis on on the
appeals
s
expected
sometune Wednesday m East
Lans ng Mtch
I m not go ng lo even talk
about that Hayes rep aed to
a questton

h1 fact he started o add

then stopped and sa d No
I m not even goang to tell you
that one
Hayes got things sttrred up
seve al weeks ago a the B g
Ten s yearly pre seaso n
luncheon m Chicago when he
public y admitted !or the ftrst
tame he had turned n
Mich gan State for alleged
recru mg v olations
Hayes although no be
ooly coach and reportedly not
the fi st to do so has taken
the blame for reporlmg the
VIOla ons which resulted an

Browns cut
Today's

4 veterans

Sport Parade
By MU..TON RICHMAN
UPl Sporll Editor
NEW YORK UP!)

Most of tbe other Phillies wouldn

adm t at if it killed them They like to !eel they re r gh up w lh

the times m lhetr th!nkmg but they re not They re like all
other hallplayers of the past They d rather ftght than confess
they feel any pressure
Tug McGraw IS the exception The Phillies lefty rei ever
C&lt;llles nghl out and says he has been feeUng a whole lot more
pressure the past two weeks durmg wh ch the club watched an
e ghl game loslitg streak shrink ts Eastern D vasion lead rn
the Nataonal League loan alarming 5\1.! games from what had
been a carefree 1510
Certainly I feel the pressure McGraw says w thou! any
self-conscaouness I m human But I m not ntlmida ed by the
pressure and I think that s because of the nature of my JOb
There s always pressure on you as a relief pttcher Sometimes
when I m m the bullpen antlctpating a s tuation m the ball
game the phone wall rmg and I Jwnp That s how wound up
you can get
Always candid McGraw whop tched for the Mets 1969 and
1973 pennant winners says he sn I the only one wath the
Phillies who s feeling the pressure
I see some signs Of tightness McGraw says The mental
IDIStakes we ve made on the f eld are a s gn of pressure When
sportswriters ask dumb quest ons and the players don I have
the patience to be pobte and point out the nature of he
question that s a SJgn o! pressure When a guy s n a good
frame of mind and there 1sn t any pressure on hun he ets
thmga like that slide by
Before the Phlls put the brakes on thetr longest losang streak
of the year by beating the Mets Sunday more and more
writers kept remlitding them about the 1964 Phallies who had a
610-game lead With mly 1210 play am then lost the pennantlo
the Cardinals
The present Phlls naturally were somethmg less than
enchanted with the comparison
Nobody likes to hear about the 64 Phillies McGraw says
Everybody says t s a dumb question when tbe subJect s
brought up but at s part of baseball htstory
There s nothmg wrong wtth feeling pressure It s part of
life The greatest thing about baseball Is that it creates thiS
kind of pressure on a dally basis for the players and the fans
With the blend of players we have on this team I don t think
the pressure IS go ng to make that much differen~
I believe we ll win McGraw says Anytime a ball club
goes mto a slump this late m the season it s someth ng to be
concerned about On the plus side though I can see some good
from it Ifyougetused to pam then you know how to endure t
I d rather us go mto the playoffs commg out of a slump than go
in overly relaxed wltb a great b g lead You can ose your
momentum that way
When the Phlls were at the deepest po nt m thetr slump
some of them went out of !hell' way to show the pressure wasn t
bothermg them ih what tnlght have been notbmg more than a
clear case of overcompensation
I m not nervous about thas whole thing at ali am I JOked
Ron Schueler walking around the Phillies clubhouse wear ng
the shirt or his unifocm Inside out
Caught up m the spirit Ron Reed another of the Phlls
pitchers echoed 'This game doesn t bother me a bit either
Reed had his wtlform on right Except for one th ng He was
wearing his athletic supporter outalde h s pants

·~~~~~To~~?~~~~~ !
i
~

the league in halting wtth a
341 average after pounding
out two hlta mea grand slam
homer while leading the
Reds to a 9-8 VICIDry over
Houston Monday night
What s nore Morgan s
name Is also bemg linked
with those of Ty Cobb and
Honus Wagner two of
baseball s all-time greats and
charter of members of the
game 8 Hall o! Fame
The three are the only
players lit the histocy of the
game who have scored a 100
rwts driven home a similar
number and stolen 50 bases m
a single season
That 8 not all r&lt;:xtensave

UnliMI'rnslnienlaiioMI

...ates jolt Phillies, cut East lead

~~ :;~ehad an extra

faflJCHf':lflKB1
Can fmd you

cu a y

west

The Texas Rangers tbe
mly team with a winning
record agalitll the Kansas
City Royals this season
made it 11 victories in 15
games Monday night with a r..
4 vicwry
Toby Harrah singled home
Dave Moates to cap a four
run Texas ninth inning and
hand American League West
frontnmner Kansas City ita
seventh loss in the last eight
games ena bUng second
place Oakland to crawl within
six games of firSl-!llace
But Texas Manager Frank
Lucchesi whose team has
wm only 17 of Its last 57
games was quick to praise
his team s patsy after the
victory
The pressure is still not on
them Lucchesi srud of the
Jloyals When you get just
two or hree games ahead
watch out That s when the
pressure starts mounting
But I d rather be In Kansas
City s place w lh a stx.game
lead than try and catch
them
The Rangers trailed 4 1
entering the runth mning but
singles by Roy Howell Joe
Lahoud and Juan Benlquez
produced one run off Kansas
City starter and loser Doug
B1rd Moates followed wlth a
two-out twtH'un double to
~base Bird out of the game
and t e the score 4-4 Royals
reliever M!ll'k UtteU then
walked Gene Clines before
surrendenng the game
,wummg hit to Harrah
ln other games Minnesota
beat Chicago 3-2 Milwaukee
and Cleveland split a double
header with both games
endtng at 3 2 Oakland
defeated Clalforrua 2-1 New
York downed Boston &amp;..; and
Detroat lr pped Baltimore [&gt;.

'::

No 2 Range No 13. and
SKI on Number 26 of thr 0t1 o
Com:pany s Purc hase and
df'SCI' bed
8eQ nn ng at tl'le

•

Tlllt WHII I

CINCINNATI {UP!) Others may find the stati8tlcs
Joe Morg~~n has compiled this
season awesome The Cincin
naU Reds aeoond baaeman
doellll
After Morgan won the
National League s Most
Valuable Player Award last
year he predicted he d have
an even better season in 1976
No way you said to
yourself
So whose wagging 8 linger
In front or your race and
saying So you wouldn 1
believe me'
That s right Morgan
Today Morgan owns a 17
game hltUng streak am tops

Rangers rock
Royals again

: ~:;:::::-::;;:=:::::::::-=::::::::::::

e o-w t .S tuale n Town

PI I

he
0

v 'Son
MtiiS Count y
'lbe first results from the 0Pomeroy
Oh o ASJ.69 The
aeardl roc &lt;qamcs wbicb ob' ec o flle Comp a n s o
re1 es a e n wh d1 Haze1
may have had a biological se
A Moo r naa an n erest o
Cll'lglll are expect.ed SepL 17
deltf"m ne be-r n er~ t tnrore n
The first life detection aM o qvtet 1 e o the
to l ow ng desc be-d re1l
eJ:perlment results are H i t owif
The to ow ng dncr bed eaJ
scheduled Sepl M.

mo e

reaeardt rep«t of a family

hs

Tueaday Sept 1 1916

Morgan Reds' hottest gun in 9-8 win
By RICK GO&amp;'IEUN
UPI Spor11 Writer

au
w
be
enderea
101 ns rou to
he tl tf
demandt&lt;l n ne c 1 m
d~

t

SKI

DEAR READER - For

o

PobatDYSOf'l
Me gs C.oun y Otl o

on u

'-lib' IIIII Cllldllilll II

mort

' ' f'S

13

Menn noD Webs t
JUdQ!'
Common Peas Cou

' ~~~.:· .:. ~·· ~: :t ..eenh~
Reauer suffiers 'restless lous
"'-e'
lhonce

1111

conta n ng

y n; on tfle eel s de ol
Thomas Fo It Creek •nd

_J-

MJ lleep periods last from
IS mbllllea to al11101l one and
abd boun Between periods
I walt lbe Ooar 25 to 30
mlou'- late bol tub ..lbs
ftlr lt adoates cold IOweia
an WI itppiCIIlQWIII the lep
aad I have deep beat
0
. . 01' reid
I at lellllbly exerclae
l'fl1llli'IJ' walt daiiJ am
tab nllmlnl I am bella- . Ill feel lind and .....,
ax boura lleep d-'t aeem
to .. enoteb I would be 11101t
wallf1lllf ,.ou could qgat
- - lbat 1IOIIId blip

0 ht p IU Of

ertntt Th s deser p on s
more I 850 miles per hour and At
lkf'l'l from Mo gage Dnd
set an altitude record of Ateo ds ~~ gs Coun y Oh o
99
nearly 119 000 feet more tban VoYou1211 eP1gt
rtqu e4 o enswtr
three years ago IS cmsidered w h n 21 days a tr he lu
a maj&lt;r mtelligence prize for pub ca on of no ce wh ch
w
be pub She&lt;t onct etch
the West
wHk for s. • success ve weeks
A State Department bf9 nn no 7 Sep ember 976
Tht as pub ca on w
be
spokesman an Washington m1de
on 1 0 obe
916 and
S&amp;d disposiUoo of the )et was t1t ?I ~IYI 0 IOIWf W
commence on ht da e
n
a Japanese problem, but cue
of vo ur fr.l ure or
an adminlstral!oo JOurce had 0 hltW S.t 0 tSpOnCI IS

No

DEAR Dlt LAMB-I am a
DIP Tl yan of age and I
._ve a cmdll!oo Jmown u
reatlesa !ega syndrome
wblch LS becommg ln
cr-slrcly worae as time
.,._. and leans me shlky
lind and nervous
I bue DO ~rouble getting to
lleep but a crawlirc aen•lloo of !be thigbs awakens
me out of a SOWJd aleep aod
maku il lmpoutble to
n11111n in bed I have been
lolauood by doet«a thaI
medlatl aclence has not come
ap wllb a cure roc tiU strarce
coadltloa I have tried
__.al drup to no avail
brJud!rc acupuncture

lhtntt en

0~11&gt;

1 67 ftt

beg nn ng

as to ows

11J Lawtm E. Lamb, M.D

ob a n pouen or use 1
ha mfu lniOK cent
b, Whoever 11oatn hit
sec on I gu tty of lbUt Of
hamu
nOI(centt
e
m sl1tmunor of he fou h
drgree
f he offendt hat
p tv ous y been conv cted of 1
d uv abun offense abus no
ha mful nrox cen 1 1 1
m sdtmtanor of he firs
deg ee See Oh o RC 792S 31
SECT ON VI
llEGAll Y
0 SPENS NG ORVG SAM
PlES

ctf'l tr

o

CLEVELAND UPI
Coach Forrest G egg cu 10
players
nc ud ng !our
ve erans wge the Cleveland
Browns roster down to the 43man !unit ne cessa y before
they pract1~ he !mal week
before open ng he NFI
season Sunday agams he
New York Jets at home
Announcement of the relea
ses mclud ng vete an
Browns grtdders MI Mo n
Hugh McKlnrus Jun Baley
and Henry Hynosk was
made Monday as the squad
reported to the trammg camp
at nearby Baldw n Wallace
Ceil ege !or the ftrs drUls o!
the week
Mo m a t gh end "\IOU d
have been entermg h s lith
season w th C eveland
McKinrus a unrung back
was preparmg for his fourth
year
Bailey was a defens ve
tackle and seven ) ear man
acqutred from the New York
Jets tn a Ju y trade Hynosk
was a second year runrung
back from Temple
Rook es re ea se d were
Br an Murray an offens ve
tackle from Anzona M Ire
Jackson a w de ece ver
from Central State Cra g
Nagel a quarterback !rom
Pu due Arthur Moore a
defens ve
back
Iron
Masstss pp Valley and M ke
McDonald a lmebacker from
Catawba
The last cut announced
after some delay was that of
w de
ece ver George
Farmer who had been s gned
as a free agent last week He
preVIously played for the
Ch cago Bears
Ten players had lo be
released through trades or
by bemg placed on wa vers
for the Browns to get down to
the regular season player
limit unposed by Ue National
Football League Apparently
the dec slons were made
Sunday when Gregg mel wath
his ass slant coaches owner
Art Modell and Modell sa de
Peter Hadhazy
The B owns wound t 1e
exhib lion season last Fr1day
night at Buffalo absorbing a
28-IOdefeat The Bills handed
the Browns their second
delea n stx pre season
games

three years NCM probation
!or the school the ultimate
eplacemen of Denny SIDlz
as head coach by Darry
Rogers and the suspenSions
of vanous lengths foc the
seven players
Hayes said the startmg
Buckeye I neup barr ng
nJury between now and
Saturday would be the same
as fm shed Sprang practice
w th uruor Jeff Logan Hllmg
the g ant shoes vacated by
the graduated twotime
Hetsman Trophy w nner
Archie G iff!n
Work obv ously wm I be
as heayy th s week sa d
Hayes What we try ID do as
every great team does s try
to taper off
The rna n concern for
Hayes and the rest o! the
Buckeye coaches s he
change m head Cl)aches at
MSU

Wth no scout ng reports
available Hayes and his staff
don know qwte what to
expe t !rom Rogers former
San Jose Sta e mentor
We re gomg to have to be
on our toes and the coaches
are gomg ID have 10 be ready
to do a qwck analySis sa d
OSU ass s an
George
Chaump We have to expect
anythmg
Chaump sa d desp te the
developmg hard feelings be
ween the two B g Ten r vais
there would be no great
emo onal bu ldup n the
Buckeye camp
From our v ewpo nt
srud Chaump the best thing
we can do s have our k ds
prepared Emot ona!ISUI and
that rah rah stuff s great
Bu the best thmg you can do
s be prepared
Defens ve coord nator
George H ll echoed Chaump s
remarks say ng
the
unknown is always a
challenge when you are going
agamst a new head coach It
forces you w have a little
more breadth n your
defens ve thinkmg because
you don t know what to
expect
AI ough
here were
lim ted reserved and f e d
seats gong m sale loday the
opener was almost certam to
be Oh o State s 44th stra ght
home se lout of more than
87 000 persons

3495
karr &amp; Van landt
1

Dodgers 4 Padres 1
Don Sutton clos ng m on a
~VIctory season for the first
tune m an 11 year career
tossed a four-h Iter for hiS
8th wm and Steve Garvey
drove m a pair of runs to lead
Los Angeles over 21J.game
wmner Randy Jones and San
Dego

You I LlkeOtJ Qua 1ty

Way of Do ng Bus ness
GMAC FINANCING
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IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
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M ddltport 01110
m2342

•

�t - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor~-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1976

F"ltimorrll. KC 15-10 1 Tr~:vers,
Mil 15·12.

earnH •un Averatt

HBnratty, Snow cut
B)' RICK. GO&amp;'lEUN
tlleit rosters to 43 players.
UPI Sp&lt;rts Writer
The two incaning expansion
"What though the odds he teams, Tampa Bay and
gre: t or small, old Notre Seattle, trimmed doWJJ to 49
Dame wiU win over aUu."
players.
Except on the final
Otber established players
· National Football League sent into the unemployment
waiver lisl Monday when two ranks included running backs
of the greatest players in Rm Johnson, Duane Them as,
Notre Dame history were cut Dave Osborn and Robert
. asthe28teamspareddown to Holmes ; kickers George
the 43 and 49 player limits in H.llllt, Bruce Gossett and n,By
preparation for tllc season- Wersching ; wide receiver
opening weekend .
Otis Taylor; tight e.nd "MUt
Terry Hanratty, the most Morin ; defensi••e lineman
prolific passer in NOire Dame John
Matuszak ;
and
histor)', was pink.&amp;ipped by defensive
ba cks
Jim
the Super Bowl champion Marsalis, AI Clark and Pete
Pittsburgh Steelers and Jack Athas.
Snow, who caught 60 passes
There were all&lt;~ a number
in ooe year at South Bend, • of · trades consummated :
wa s wa ived by the Los Dallas dealt Tooifiitseh-;-tbe
Angeles Rams.
highest scoring kicker in the
Hanratty and Snow were league last year , to San
among a host of high-priced Diego ;
Detroit
sent
Veterans to get the ax as the quarterback Bill Munson to
26 estJiblislled teams reduced
·

Seattle and wide receiver
Marlin Briscoo to New England; Green Bay shipped
kicker Joo Danelo to tile New
York Gi.ants ; and San
Francisco traded safety Tim
~nderson to Buffalo . All
players were dealt for draft
picks. ·
Johnson and Thomas were
both attempting ccmebacks
this season with the Dallas
Cowboys, but were found
expendable
with
the
continued development :of
yollllger running backs, ScOit
Laidlaw and Doug Dennison.
Osborn was an 11-year
garbage man runner for the
Minnesota · Vikings, appearing in two Super Bowls.
Hunt, ·who missed an ettra
point and a 26-yard field goal
as the Giants fell, 14-·13, ~ the
San Diego Chargers in the
preseason · finale
last

"We didn't want to throw as
much as we did, " said
Chlebeck, making his debut
at tile Eastern helm. ''Our
defense played weU tile first
half, but our offense left them
oo the field too much in the
serond half."
Ohio coach Bill Hess said
he was particularlY pleased
wi.th · the performances 'Of
quarterback An&lt;IY Vetter and
tailback Arnold Welcher .
Welcher, who had 11! carries
for 121 yards, left. the game
midway in the fDUMh quarter
wi.th a 1ruised rib, but Hess
said he didn't Lhinlt it was

..

Mlillf L1'8fV.~ St•ndlntt

Saturday,
became
expendable when New Ycrk
acquired Danelo; Gossett and
Wersching became excess
baggage when the Chargers
picked up Fritsch.
Mocin, a !~year veteran
wilhCleveland, lost his job to
Oscar Roan last aeason ; both
Oark (by Los Angeles) ' and
Athas (by Minnes«a) were
released in favor myounger
player's; and the mystery
man Matuszak, the No. 1
choice of the 1973 draft, was
cot by Wasllmgtoo, his fourth
team in three years.
The acquisiUoo of Munson,
who asked to be traded when
Detroit Coach Rick FCI'zano
named Joo Reed as his No. 1
quarterback, gives Seattle an
established QB to provide
insurance should left-bander
Jim Zorn falter at the
position.

IV Unlttd

serious.

" II. •took us the firs! half to

eut

Nicklaus was two sbOLS up

AKRON. Obio (trnl )
.Jack N"'c:tiaus has cured his .
case or tbe " small head.,.
Nicklaus " a little tired of
reading bow poorly rve beeu
playing," regained a Wnd1e
d his m}"Steriously slipping
• statute Sunday with a
oaovincing vid.ory in the
rMsed ·PJ),1100 Wll'ld Series
or Golf at Firestone Qxmtcy
Oub.
.
" Vou'w l:leaPd of peopilo
rea&lt;ting tlleir Jl('eSS dijlpings
aod getting tile lag bald,6
Slid IN'...tl8!1S ''Well, )'DU can

also get the small bead."
Jl&lt;l&lt;tl.... ...00 bad a final
•
round &amp;lifer a 7UJd.e soore Ill'
:m, liVI! lllllkr par Ul the

Firestone .Soatb Course,

pickrdap $llll,lllllf11r lbe will,
~lillg him into tint place
&lt;~~Ibis year'.s mooer winning
list wiih mere 1ban .$161,000.
n also Jl""hed his career
,.;nn;np 011 llle Firestone
South It) just rmdfr f49(1,000
abicil, if il bad all been
dflcia! m&lt;mey,

oo Hubert Green and Talta&lt;;j
Murakami when tile tina!
round began. He stumbled rn
a couple early boles,
bogeying lhe ;third and double
boge~ing llle four11.h, but,
fmn \here &lt;n be was the
Golden Bear a! ·old.
''At that pdD1,7' sald Nicklaus, referring 11! !lis fourth
bole problems, " I ..as
obviously unhappy oritb
myself, baVillg 'jwi. lost my
lead, · and I ihougbt 1 bad
betrer get back to wort. 1
· pia yed pretty •ell after
lhat.ll
JuSt as in bls final round in
las1 year's PGA win at
Firestone, Nicklaus was
~ly perfect the final I!
boles.
Although be bit ODe fine
.shot aller another lifter .that,

Ntw York
Chicago
Sl , LOU IS

NTISTRY
DR. A .J .STA'EHU
-D.R.X.K.CtU!I.NG
OR V(CTOR ' · UAJIIG ,

lllooe¥ u..
" [ polxibly !boul!tl't.read
ihe ~ft said Nick·
l.s, ll'bo's m tAJtal 'III'&amp;S five

fOR PRICES ·CI.U. ClOUECT
r-AREA OOOE (614~

L

ihan .nl!mei'Up .Hale

plaJiDg. Sin I baw:o'l - ·
Bill ju!t b&lt;ca- SGII baw:o't

daesa' mean
•a5bed up."

1fSI

YIN'"'

7~

.oliO 21 "'

Cincinnati
LOS AnQtlt\

II SO .631 " 57 ,S.l I

Houston
· S.n D l~o

. ~3

69 11

'*

20

6-1 16.. 4.57 2S
San Francisco 61
.439 27
Atlanta
59 1&amp; . 431 ~

Monday's. R•tults
Plttlbuf11P\ 6 Pf'llll !2, IS'
P lttsDurQh S Pr\ill l , ~
Sl. LOUiS, Mon -t rHI l , 1st
MontrNil St . louis 2, 2M
N~ ·York 7 Chicego 4
San Francisco -4 Atlanta 3

MaddO• Ph il129 470
Rost, cln
llt 561

f:osttf' , Cin 121 S02
Gffonmo, Cn 126 •26
Montnez , All 138 !53
Garvey, LA Jli .531
Ptrktf , Pit 114 4.0

TOdiY 11 Probeblt Plt(fttrl
(All Times EDT)

1-

252-3181

~

One or Two Oay Fu ll Doo!Jlre
Service. Pania ts, Ext&lt;act ions,

z

154 .J78

Lynn , 8os
120 •M_ "' l.t• .309
Mufl$00, NY 130 526 67 159 .302

C.rly, Cit

Hous,tOn (McLaugr.lln 3·2} at
Cinc innati (Norman 1?-4), 8:05

NY 25 ; L..May~ Salt and Sando,
Oak 24 ; JacksOrh Se lf end
H,tndrlck , Clev

· S, . Louis ( Rasmussen S-10) at

p.m.

.

93 ;

Chambli SS ~

Weclftti"IV'S Gimes

New York at Chi cago
Mtl &amp;1 St . l-OuiS, 2, tw l..ni ght
F!'hila at P'ittsb(lrgh , 'l'\iDt'lt
San Fran a1 L'DS Angeles, n lgM
Atlanta at San D i ~o . nigl]t
Ci ncinnati 1t HoUS;ton, .night

Bait

Stolen a.ses ·
Nati onal Le•gue: . Morgan ,
Cln and Taveras. Pit1 .$2 ;
Brock. St .L 48 ; Cedeno, Hou
anc1 Lopes , LA .i~,
Amtric•n l~llle : . North,

70 66 .515 l l
6S 7\ .• 71 11

CleVeland ·

!oslon

l9' 12

63 72 .167
61 7l .4.5.1 11
West

&gt;etroit
Mitwauket
Ka'n~s

GB

W.. L .. Pet.
79 57 .511

City

.m

Oa~land

73 63
6
111 70 .-..96 111 ~
63 73 .463 16
:.t lltorn iJ
61 16 •49 18V:
ChicaGo
5fl 78 .426 2·1
Mond•y's Re,ufts
Mlnnesoto 3 Ch icago 2
Mil w 3 C.leoveland 2. 1st
Mlnneson
Tex•s

Cleveland 3 Milw

LeF lore,

Koosm~n ,

NY

lB-8 :

16-S; Richard , Hoo 16-\4 .

America n Leltut: -.Pa lmer ,
sa lt 19-12 ; Tiant , BO$ 17-10 ;
Leonar~ .

KC 16-7 ; Figueroa ,
NY 16·8; CampDtl l, Minn 15-4;
Garland, ·B ait 15·6; F1dryc:h,
Det' 15-1; Tanar~a 1 Cat 15-9 :

RIVERSIDE MEDICAL
GROUP

New Yor·k 6 aosto~ ~ ·

R A

fri.

Californil ( KirKWOOd 5-10} ·a t

M0

PMON.E 992-3331.

the right to limit quantities.

MIDDLEPORT, O,
'

79~

LB.

. 0.
79

HOMEMADE.

CHUCK
LB.

HAM SALAo ...... LB; .

89~

LB.

·

mamtenan ce

MINUTE

.,

STEAKS
FRESH &amp;

GROUND

••' .

DAY CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 8

;-_'

(A class schedule to f it anyone's work schedule.)

5 LB. OR MORE

•"
"~ FAVORITE

.

~BREAD
••••••••••••
·
,
•••••
••

ALL COURSES APPROVED FOR VETERANS BENEFITS
OF "270 TO '498 .A MONTH.

~ GEISHA

3

LOAVES

WESTERN SALISBURY, CHOPPED BEEF AND MEAT LOAF

$1

BANQUET
. 49~
DiNNERS •••••••••••••~c~.

lSih oz.

;MACKEREL ••••••••••• ?."~ •••
'

~ LIQUID

GIANT SIZE

~ MIGHTY BEEF

Accredife4 by the Accrediting Commission of AI CS
Locust &amp; Second Av.enue
State R. N. 75-02-0472 B

· 24 oz.

, 12t

SINGLE CHEESE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••

S.pl&lt;ember 7-11

Riijlit Resen&lt;lid to'limit Quanlities
W.. G.. dly Accept Fed. Food Slom,.
.--· ~.
.......,daytl&gt;r·u Friday
9:00to 7:00

3LB. 49~

OHIO VALLEY

FRENCH CITY

SAUSAGE WIENERS

oz.'159

20 CT.

'129

KRAFT

BORDEN~

COFFEE CREAMER

.

·

JAR

HAM
POUSH

ALSO PURE

. SPRING OR DISTILI:ED WATER~~~~ ••
PURE BREW

WllH 110.00 PURCHASE OR MORE

I

.

. Grapefruit Juice .•••~.2A.~o~ •• 99~
· 16 OZ. 89~
CREMORA ••••••••••••••••••

BOILED

-

. COFFEE FIL
I•

.

60 CT. BOX

••••••••••••••
••

'1

CANS

·

PlASTIC

$

39
~

3t

1
BROUGHTON'S
HOMO MILIC ••••••••••••••••• 79t;
~GALLON

VALlEY BELL

CHOCOLATE MILK ...2.~u.A~~••

· .

'

oz.

2% MILK ............ , •~~~o,N, .. ,

••

KRAFT PURE

6

DAIRY

BOffiES

PUNCH

SLICED

I

oz.

·

LEMONADE ........ 5

BROUGHTON'S

CAT FOOD··~· .. ••••••• 3 ~"~z. $1
DETERGENT .~ •.••••••K!N:.s~~ $179
ORANGE JUICE ••••• ~.G!~~".• 99~

5 LB.
99c
JACK FROST ·sUGAR ,.•..........••.•

t

16

1

24.1.

LB.

8 PAK

FRISKIES
BEEF &amp; EGG, _BEEF STEW, CHICKEN LIVER, LIVER &amp; EGG, OR BEEF

BOLOGN

PEACHES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

oz.$1

68
CANS

24

21h SIZE

&amp;CHEESE OR BEEF &amp; BACON

DOG FOOD ••••••••••••• 4

.window'wrl'lice ,

. PHEBE'S STORE

DOZ£N

'

.

!U.m.to ll p.m.

Racine, 0. ·

SCOT LAD

:PALMOLIVE
79~
~
······••·······•

GALliPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Fri. &amp; Sit.

E"DS

••'

'

IDo.m. Ill ·1tp,m.

BACON

•

ASSOCIATE DEGREE &amp; DIPLOMA COURSES
IN BUSINESS

ACT. :NOW...
.for. complete into. call our admissions office. 446-4367 ,
or stop mat 504 Second Avenue. We want to help you.

S111. tllru lllurs.

99~

.GROUND ROUND
99~

BEEF 69~
LB.

''

Evening and o11lternating classes begin Sept. 14

LB.

KAHN'S

FRESH LEAN

LEAN

ENROLl NOW FOR NEW FALl CLASSES

Open

BUCKET
STEAKS ·
$
39
NO WASTE

.

WANT TO GET AHEAD1

Calitornit 1t Kan Cil'r , night
'CieveJanCia1 Ba ltim ore, nigt)f
Milwe~&gt;' · "'e at NeW York., ,nigt-1 1
1Det r ,'Jt ·BDS·ton, ni!i,th1

ON MONDAY AND
TUESDAY NtGHTS

KRAFT AMERICAN

•

I)

WIENERS •••••••••••••

GREEN GIANT
, 100
303 CAN
41
GREEN BEANS •••• ••• •••••
' ••••··· · •• •••

GRAPES

We rese.

Minnesota (GOltz 11-aJ) at ...

w
0

MASON FUR.NITURE

GROUND

PHONE 992-3480

SUPERIOR.$ ALL MEAT

GREEN GIANT PEAS •••• !1}.~...... 4/'1 oo

LEMONS

Ac~ept Federal Food Sta~ps ~ ~ ~

._._.._;.,.;...;;.,..;.:;..;;;:.;;.;;.-..l

'T-exas (·Perry U -12 ), 8: 35 'p . m .
Ghic-.go (Gossege 8·14 ) at
Oakland (Torrez 11.10), 11 p.m .
Weelneida_y 's Game.J
ChicaQO a t Olk·land , nlght
'Minnesota 11 TeJCes, nl;ht

!BIG :BEEF PLAMR "1.40
SAVE 25•
FISH FILEr PLAmR •lAO
SAVE 25•
TRIPLE MEAL-TRIPU TREAT,
FISH, FRIES AND TURNOV!R

FRIDM' .UNTIL 8 PM

FRESH LEAN

Mon ..·S.t., 2~ p. m . MonFri., '7-1 p.m. Mon ., Wed.

Milwavtc.ee 1(,6,ugustlne 8.9), 8: 30

X •flaa.!:y!;s·~~~

N"ri"J!m• bad WilD only
Glbor !Oim&amp;llll5111bis year lhe Tournament Players
Champimshi;&gt;-and f« only
lhe secood time sinre l!lli9
failed 10 'llin tile or the lour
ma j&lt;r e&gt;'ellls.

•-

Narcotics, Orvgs, Alcohol

- A1tudonlshail not pouess.
usa. transmit, conceal, or be
under the Influence of
marlluana. ntrcotlc .drugs,
hallucinogens ,
am .
phetamlnes,
barbiturates.
alcoholic bovoragH. or ln.
, toxicant&amp; of any ~Ind.
Tobacco - A student shell
not use or smoke tobacco In
areas and at times nol
dnlgnaled for such u11. ·
Accumutattoo of Beh&amp;vlor
Reports - A file of Behavior
Reports (demerltal 11 kept In

JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON , M. D.
.
~ce Hours; ,11)..12 .il .fl'l.

p.m .

·

A.VERION

' .
' · ·
ll. G. SOLA, M.D.

Ba ltimore '{Garland 15-M a t
~fToi t {Fldrych 15-7), ,8 p.m.
Cle-veland (S.r.own 8-10) at

6-ll l. 1:30

stoat or allompt to stoat
school or private property.

masrercarp

Memorial Hospital

8oston l~l ant 17-10) at New
Yorl&lt; !Ell is 1Hl. S p.m .

We

qo,ner&gt; Mill and Second Sts.

.Ad•••iraL

Veterams

Te.::as S Kansas City 4
Tod•r's.Proba.bte Pllchers
. . I All Times ,EOTI ·

.}$.. ~ ·~

RELIABILITY ...
No one makes a T.V .. that lasts forever ...
Adm iral trys . .. careful inspection in the
plant . . . inspected aga in at our store,
reducing the chance that service wi'll be
needed. If service is needed you ' ll get it
promptly . .. if it needs to be in the shop
over a day we'lll.oan you a set at no charge .

Adiacentto

oe.rroi, ·s Baltimore •

clubl, organizations. alttletic ·
teama, and-or achoot ot which
he Is a member.
Assault - A studont shall
nol cauH or attempt to cause
physical lnlury to another
persoo.
Dangerous Weapons and
coercion,
threat ,
Instruments - A sludonl
herr•sament,
In · shall
not po11111. handle, ·
subordination_, or rowdyism.
create, conceal, or
Dellon.;e - A student ahall transmrt,
use
any
dangerous
notdlfy the valid euthorlty of and Instrument&amp;. · weapon
teachers, administrators, or
Damage and-or Theft of
supervlsora.
or Private PropertyStudent AcllviliH - A School
sludont shall comply with !he A studlnl ohatt no! cauoe or
allempt to causa &lt;lamaae to
rules and &lt;et~ ulalions of the achool
or prl~at~ properly,

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily ·9 to
~un. 10 to 10

models to choose from
so

'SuttOn , LA 18·9; Car lton , Ptl it

2. 2nd

achool :
Olsruptloo of School - A
student ahell not ceuw or
attempt to c.eu11 a disruption
or ob1fructlon to the
educallon11 curricular or
e&gt;tra curricular proceu by
use of violence. terce ,

'

Pitching

20-!2;

'

•More. than twenty

53 ;

·Most Victoritl
N1t1ona1 LIISJIII: Jones,

Oakiand 2 Calif 1, 11 inns .

.Kansas Citv !Pattin
P.m..

Det

Oak 46 ; Pa tek , KC 45.

82 51 .61 2 7l lt.t .526 11 ''2

~ll l mc;~re

6.S ;

Campanerls , Oak SO ; Sayl or ,

EUI
W .. L . Pd. G8
N~ -York

-M\,InSOf\, NY 89 ;
NY 8?; Jac.kson,

and Maybtrry , KC as.

Oak

A.ne'r iun LNtiUt

."

eSave from '30 to. •200
On these fine televisions
which must be sold to
make room for the
'77 models (coming soon).

:2.

Bart

(On ly gamH scheduled )

.,

"_Rules for atudont conduct
.,,.. been adopted by the
Mtiga Loc.l Scl\001 Dl1trtct
lloli'd 01 Educallon,
·
The rul• 11 approved by
the boerd 1ro:
While a atudont It under the
lur]ldlcllon of the achool, e
vloll~on on the PIJrt of th1t
atudont of eny 0111 or more of
lito following ruiH of cooduct
1h1l.l rHulf In disciplinary
action , Including but not
limited to corporal punish·
ment, 1u1penslon, emergency
remov11, ancs.or e•pul1lon
from 1 currlculer or e&gt;tre
currlculer activity or from

OF 1976 MODELS

129 .41!8 59101 .301

Montreal '(Stanhovse 1·9l. S:OS

p.m.

•'

Board lays down rules for student. behavior

l~a antatanl principal's shaft drHs In accordance
office. Accumulation of ten with the adopted drHI codt
MAifON I!URNitVIIII
Behavior RtpQI'to will rHult of the Meigs Local Board of
In
a
three
day Education .
suspension or
corporal
Gambling - A 1ludonl
STORE HOURS
punlshrnent. Accumulation of shall not participate In
•
lwelve Behavior Reports will gambling for money or
result In a five day suspen. valuabiH.
slon. Accumulalloo of lwetve
Repealed VIolations - A
INJn,, Tues., Wid . &amp; s.t...... :JOtji.S:OO
Behavior Reporlt will result student shall nof repeatedly
In I five day SUSptfl$100. fall to comply with .. tstlng
THURSDAY tiL1211100N
Ac~umulallon
of fifteen ruiH of the school. These '· ,
Behavior Roports will result rules Include bu1 are- not
In a ten day SUSptflSion. limited to truancy , tardiness.
Accumutallon of tlphteen class cutting, loitering ,
Behavior Reports wit resull parking lot tntracllon ,
In a second 1011 day suspen· fatslflactton of records ,
slon. Accumulation of twenty leaving school ground~ , and
Behavior Reports will resuft profanity -obscenities In ·
In a recommendation for eluding the Bus Discipline
••pulsion.
Guide.
773-5592
Henn1n Gi-lte
Mlaon, W. Y1.
Repealed Use oi tnap·
proprlale Dress - A student

11 • ,uJ ~ 139 .3U
125 55" t9 171 .309

Home fl:ur"
Nltional LeeQut: Kingman ,
NY 3-4 ; Sct'lm idt , Phil 33 ;
FOUN , (in 19; Mond&amp;V, Ctl! 28;
MorG.,n. Cin .27 .
Americari Leavue: . Nettles,

New York (M.atlack l•·l ) at
Chlc..ago (Burr is 12 -12 ), 2 ~ 30

ADMIRAL
Color Television

.
G. AB· R. H. Pet
McRae, KC 125 437 6S 152 .loll
Carew, M in 135 522 84 174 .333
Breit, KC
134 54! 11110 .329
Bostck. Min 110 •o3 ll m .321
LtFtort. Ott 129 5l2 89 166 .311
'G arr , Chi
Rivtfl, NY

Los Angeles 4 san Diego l
Cinc innati 9 HOUston 8

61

t11112.l2•
791S7 .313
Sl 132 .310
St 169 .306
70 l6A .305
64 135 .305

A:mitrican Ltlave

Extra Value A·t
County Couslnsl

defending World Series
ohampioo Tom Watsoo and
Lee trevino ""'re at ZB3.

woold place

Irwin, wbo won 150,000
.doiiJn. "'( get a lillle lir&lt;d of
reading bow poorly l'&lt;'t! heoo

l \&lt;1

.515 14

From S:OO p.m. to clo$ing. Enjoy fine fixens ,
at low, low prices.

bim l9!lh 011 the alllime PGA

btlur

5I .. 572

66

59 73 .«7 23
t.5 17 .3A1 l7
Wt:tt
W.. L . Pel. Gl

Y.ontreal

Eastern's anocher wi.th 3:30to go in the
weaknesses," he said. "We. se&lt;.'OIId period.
Vetter scored a touchdown
· made some adjustments at
m
a three-yard run and
halftime, and they worked
Green
kicked the extra point
weU."
with
a
little more than one
Eastern Michigan was
minUte
left
in the game.
slapped wi.th 1~ penalties, 12
The
Hurons
got on the
of them in the firSt half, tying
SC&lt;I'e'board
loc
lhe
on]y lime
the MAC rec&lt;rd held by
when
Doug
Oisan
·
t
allied
on a
Central Michigan and
IS-yard
pass
from
Steve
Western Michigan.
''We played some sloppJ' Raklovits! : ~into the seoond
offense tonight," said stanza, leaving Ohio wi.th .a
Clllebek.. "Five oc sil of our 13-7 halftime •lead.
Green. came back in the
penalties were foolish .''
third
quarter wiih a 2:&gt;-Y,.rd
Sieve Green kicked field
fielder
. Kevin Babcock
goals of 37, 47 and 25 ya"ds.
clinched
the win foc the
He ·booted his first with 4:37
Bobcats
in
the fourth quaner,
le!'l in the opening quarter
scoring
oo
a 14-yard pass
and then loDowed up wi.th .
from Vetter, Green again
toeing the point..Ut.er.
ln other weekend games
involving Ohi.o oollege teams,
Eastern Kentucky . defeated
Dayton 21-7, North carolina
a punched seven iron to stnpped 'favoced Miami. 14-10
within sil ,feet of the pin on and Central State whi.pped
the par four eighth tUrned Linooln (Mo.) University 2li'
20.
Nicklaus roo the most.
It took Eastern Kentucty's
" That was about as
junior
quarterbac·k, Ernie
pleasing an iron a.s I've ever
House,
ooe quarter 10 get ·
hit," be said. ''1 •think llult
warmed
up at Dayton F'ridsy
was a sbOI l1JJ. remember lor
night,
wt
w11en he did hit the
a loog time."
groove,
'he
was almost
Dave. Hill finished third
with .an even par '280, .and unstoppable.
HDU!Ie cmJpleted 11 of 14
picked up P!l,OOO. Another
shot hack was 'David passes fer 177 ywds and two
Grahalll, who won tbe touchdowns.
.Amerian Golf &lt;Cllassi.c mly
last :week 00 the Firestooe
Ncrth Course. · The. 'Sl5i000

Green had • 73.Sunday .ll!ld
slipped ·lo fifth at 282, while

L . Pet. Gl
52 .611 -

p.m .

out

Gr:abam :woo pushed his tw~
week total at f1irestone to
$55,000.

W..
..
11
70
63

Phlladelphlo
Pitl&gt;llvllth

. .
Runs 8-lfff&lt;l In
Los ·AnQtiH !Hooton '9·121 at
National LtaQut : Fost~ , Cin
San Dieoo (Fre isi tbet'1 8-12-&gt;. 10 U• ; Moroan , &lt; ln 104 ; Watson ,
p.m .
.
Hc;tU 89 ; Schmi dt, Phil 88 :
Atl&amp;nta (Niel(ro u . Hll at San Lul iA!.ki. Ph il 85.
Franclsco ( Barr 11 -11 ), 10. 15
Ameriuft Lu;ve: L. MIY r

Bear in convincing win
By GENE CADDES
UPI Spans Writer

Pren lftttrnalional

NIU. .al Ltttvt

p.m .

find

5 -1be DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tul!llday, Sept. 7, 1976

Oft US lnnints pilehed) 145.
Natlon•j Luavt : Seever, NY'
2.41 ; Norman . Cln 2..U ; Rtu,
LA 1.55; Jonts , SO 2.71 ;
Zachry, Cln 2.72.
Amtrlun ltiiUt: Fldrych, Houston
000 300 203- 1 t 2
Ott 2.35 ; Tr~vrrs , Mll and
Mtior Ltllvt LtaHn
Blue, Oak 2.38 .• Tanane. Cel Cincinnati 001 DOt -"""'- 9 12 o "
ly Unitlif Prtn tnternatlonat
I
•·it c:
Ric hard. Nitkro (3), Rondon ""'
I11Hin'
2.63 ; Pe m~ . IHI 2• 6~ Ul , Ptntt (6) and Herrmann;
StrUctoutt
'I En 1·
(bind on 371 at bits)
N•tional Ltatut: Sea~o~er , N'V Alcala, Sarm 1en t 01. I•.
Nllionll LIIIUI
lOt ,· Rlct'l.rel , Hov l7l; Koot · wick {7) and &amp;eneh . WPG AI R H Pet
SF s.rmtento (5-U . LP--RicherCI 1,1-1
Morotn, Cin 119.401 lot "t39·.,,.1 mtn, NY 156• Montefusco,
(16.1•). HR-clnc!Mttl, Mof . 1.
152 ; Nlekro, All 14,
J 1 -• 1 I
MadiO(k 1 C"ll ,. ••• S9 1SO .331
Amtrlc•n Le.IIUt : RVI, , Cal gan (27 ortuu 11m ·
Gr iffey , C1n 127 1182 101 162 .3311 r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.... .'.10 ii v~ . Pit
109 Cl6 59 \31 .332
( bjjt~

OU ·slaps EMU by 23·7 count
Ohio College Football
Rowxlup By United Press
lDtematiooal
.
lt's bad enough when a
team finds its strauogy gonerendered useless by tbe sheer
power of an oppooent-but
when its tactics faD b)• the
wayside at the outset of' a
home game, ...en, the rest of
the
roritesl can · be
JX'I'di.ctably frustrating.
' 'Ohio took our game plan
away from us really earlY,"
sai.d Eastern· Michigan coach
Ed Chlebed after OU's Bobcats mashed the Hurons 23-7
Saturday night in tbe Mld.luneri.can Conference opener
far bWl schools.

240; T•nana, C.l 2'22 : lfyteven,
TeK 110,· Hunter , Hv· 1S..;
~almer , Bolt 1nc1 11... Dlk

c
DIET RITE

COLA
8 PAK 16 Oz. BOffiES

~: S. GRAD.E B lARGE

. DOZEN

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
.PRODUCE

89t;
69t;

-~-----

BANANAS ......~~....! 1
RED DEUCIOUS

APPLES ..... ~.~~79~

�t - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor~-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1976

F"ltimorrll. KC 15-10 1 Tr~:vers,
Mil 15·12.

earnH •un Averatt

HBnratty, Snow cut
B)' RICK. GO&amp;'lEUN
tlleit rosters to 43 players.
UPI Sp&lt;rts Writer
The two incaning expansion
"What though the odds he teams, Tampa Bay and
gre: t or small, old Notre Seattle, trimmed doWJJ to 49
Dame wiU win over aUu."
players.
Except on the final
Otber established players
· National Football League sent into the unemployment
waiver lisl Monday when two ranks included running backs
of the greatest players in Rm Johnson, Duane Them as,
Notre Dame history were cut Dave Osborn and Robert
. asthe28teamspareddown to Holmes ; kickers George
the 43 and 49 player limits in H.llllt, Bruce Gossett and n,By
preparation for tllc season- Wersching ; wide receiver
opening weekend .
Otis Taylor; tight e.nd "MUt
Terry Hanratty, the most Morin ; defensi••e lineman
prolific passer in NOire Dame John
Matuszak ;
and
histor)', was pink.&amp;ipped by defensive
ba cks
Jim
the Super Bowl champion Marsalis, AI Clark and Pete
Pittsburgh Steelers and Jack Athas.
Snow, who caught 60 passes
There were all&lt;~ a number
in ooe year at South Bend, • of · trades consummated :
wa s wa ived by the Los Dallas dealt Tooifiitseh-;-tbe
Angeles Rams.
highest scoring kicker in the
Hanratty and Snow were league last year , to San
among a host of high-priced Diego ;
Detroit
sent
Veterans to get the ax as the quarterback Bill Munson to
26 estJiblislled teams reduced
·

Seattle and wide receiver
Marlin Briscoo to New England; Green Bay shipped
kicker Joo Danelo to tile New
York Gi.ants ; and San
Francisco traded safety Tim
~nderson to Buffalo . All
players were dealt for draft
picks. ·
Johnson and Thomas were
both attempting ccmebacks
this season with the Dallas
Cowboys, but were found
expendable
with
the
continued development :of
yollllger running backs, ScOit
Laidlaw and Doug Dennison.
Osborn was an 11-year
garbage man runner for the
Minnesota · Vikings, appearing in two Super Bowls.
Hunt, ·who missed an ettra
point and a 26-yard field goal
as the Giants fell, 14-·13, ~ the
San Diego Chargers in the
preseason · finale
last

"We didn't want to throw as
much as we did, " said
Chlebeck, making his debut
at tile Eastern helm. ''Our
defense played weU tile first
half, but our offense left them
oo the field too much in the
serond half."
Ohio coach Bill Hess said
he was particularlY pleased
wi.th · the performances 'Of
quarterback An&lt;IY Vetter and
tailback Arnold Welcher .
Welcher, who had 11! carries
for 121 yards, left. the game
midway in the fDUMh quarter
wi.th a 1ruised rib, but Hess
said he didn't Lhinlt it was

..

Mlillf L1'8fV.~ St•ndlntt

Saturday,
became
expendable when New Ycrk
acquired Danelo; Gossett and
Wersching became excess
baggage when the Chargers
picked up Fritsch.
Mocin, a !~year veteran
wilhCleveland, lost his job to
Oscar Roan last aeason ; both
Oark (by Los Angeles) ' and
Athas (by Minnes«a) were
released in favor myounger
player's; and the mystery
man Matuszak, the No. 1
choice of the 1973 draft, was
cot by Wasllmgtoo, his fourth
team in three years.
The acquisiUoo of Munson,
who asked to be traded when
Detroit Coach Rick FCI'zano
named Joo Reed as his No. 1
quarterback, gives Seattle an
established QB to provide
insurance should left-bander
Jim Zorn falter at the
position.

IV Unlttd

serious.

" II. •took us the firs! half to

eut

Nicklaus was two sbOLS up

AKRON. Obio (trnl )
.Jack N"'c:tiaus has cured his .
case or tbe " small head.,.
Nicklaus " a little tired of
reading bow poorly rve beeu
playing," regained a Wnd1e
d his m}"Steriously slipping
• statute Sunday with a
oaovincing vid.ory in the
rMsed ·PJ),1100 Wll'ld Series
or Golf at Firestone Qxmtcy
Oub.
.
" Vou'w l:leaPd of peopilo
rea&lt;ting tlleir Jl('eSS dijlpings
aod getting tile lag bald,6
Slid IN'...tl8!1S ''Well, )'DU can

also get the small bead."
Jl&lt;l&lt;tl.... ...00 bad a final
•
round &amp;lifer a 7UJd.e soore Ill'
:m, liVI! lllllkr par Ul the

Firestone .Soatb Course,

pickrdap $llll,lllllf11r lbe will,
~lillg him into tint place
&lt;~~Ibis year'.s mooer winning
list wiih mere 1ban .$161,000.
n also Jl""hed his career
,.;nn;np 011 llle Firestone
South It) just rmdfr f49(1,000
abicil, if il bad all been
dflcia! m&lt;mey,

oo Hubert Green and Talta&lt;;j
Murakami when tile tina!
round began. He stumbled rn
a couple early boles,
bogeying lhe ;third and double
boge~ing llle four11.h, but,
fmn \here &lt;n be was the
Golden Bear a! ·old.
''At that pdD1,7' sald Nicklaus, referring 11! !lis fourth
bole problems, " I ..as
obviously unhappy oritb
myself, baVillg 'jwi. lost my
lead, · and I ihougbt 1 bad
betrer get back to wort. 1
· pia yed pretty •ell after
lhat.ll
JuSt as in bls final round in
las1 year's PGA win at
Firestone, Nicklaus was
~ly perfect the final I!
boles.
Although be bit ODe fine
.shot aller another lifter .that,

Ntw York
Chicago
Sl , LOU IS

NTISTRY
DR. A .J .STA'EHU
-D.R.X.K.CtU!I.NG
OR V(CTOR ' · UAJIIG ,

lllooe¥ u..
" [ polxibly !boul!tl't.read
ihe ~ft said Nick·
l.s, ll'bo's m tAJtal 'III'&amp;S five

fOR PRICES ·CI.U. ClOUECT
r-AREA OOOE (614~

L

ihan .nl!mei'Up .Hale

plaJiDg. Sin I baw:o'l - ·
Bill ju!t b&lt;ca- SGII baw:o't

daesa' mean
•a5bed up."

1fSI

YIN'"'

7~

.oliO 21 "'

Cincinnati
LOS AnQtlt\

II SO .631 " 57 ,S.l I

Houston
· S.n D l~o

. ~3

69 11

'*

20

6-1 16.. 4.57 2S
San Francisco 61
.439 27
Atlanta
59 1&amp; . 431 ~

Monday's. R•tults
Plttlbuf11P\ 6 Pf'llll !2, IS'
P lttsDurQh S Pr\ill l , ~
Sl. LOUiS, Mon -t rHI l , 1st
MontrNil St . louis 2, 2M
N~ ·York 7 Chicego 4
San Francisco -4 Atlanta 3

MaddO• Ph il129 470
Rost, cln
llt 561

f:osttf' , Cin 121 S02
Gffonmo, Cn 126 •26
Montnez , All 138 !53
Garvey, LA Jli .531
Ptrktf , Pit 114 4.0

TOdiY 11 Probeblt Plt(fttrl
(All Times EDT)

1-

252-3181

~

One or Two Oay Fu ll Doo!Jlre
Service. Pania ts, Ext&lt;act ions,

z

154 .J78

Lynn , 8os
120 •M_ "' l.t• .309
Mufl$00, NY 130 526 67 159 .302

C.rly, Cit

Hous,tOn (McLaugr.lln 3·2} at
Cinc innati (Norman 1?-4), 8:05

NY 25 ; L..May~ Salt and Sando,
Oak 24 ; JacksOrh Se lf end
H,tndrlck , Clev

· S, . Louis ( Rasmussen S-10) at

p.m.

.

93 ;

Chambli SS ~

Weclftti"IV'S Gimes

New York at Chi cago
Mtl &amp;1 St . l-OuiS, 2, tw l..ni ght
F!'hila at P'ittsb(lrgh , 'l'\iDt'lt
San Fran a1 L'DS Angeles, n lgM
Atlanta at San D i ~o . nigl]t
Ci ncinnati 1t HoUS;ton, .night

Bait

Stolen a.ses ·
Nati onal Le•gue: . Morgan ,
Cln and Taveras. Pit1 .$2 ;
Brock. St .L 48 ; Cedeno, Hou
anc1 Lopes , LA .i~,
Amtric•n l~llle : . North,

70 66 .515 l l
6S 7\ .• 71 11

CleVeland ·

!oslon

l9' 12

63 72 .167
61 7l .4.5.1 11
West

&gt;etroit
Mitwauket
Ka'n~s

GB

W.. L .. Pet.
79 57 .511

City

.m

Oa~land

73 63
6
111 70 .-..96 111 ~
63 73 .463 16
:.t lltorn iJ
61 16 •49 18V:
ChicaGo
5fl 78 .426 2·1
Mond•y's Re,ufts
Mlnnesoto 3 Ch icago 2
Mil w 3 C.leoveland 2. 1st
Mlnneson
Tex•s

Cleveland 3 Milw

LeF lore,

Koosm~n ,

NY

lB-8 :

16-S; Richard , Hoo 16-\4 .

America n Leltut: -.Pa lmer ,
sa lt 19-12 ; Tiant , BO$ 17-10 ;
Leonar~ .

KC 16-7 ; Figueroa ,
NY 16·8; CampDtl l, Minn 15-4;
Garland, ·B ait 15·6; F1dryc:h,
Det' 15-1; Tanar~a 1 Cat 15-9 :

RIVERSIDE MEDICAL
GROUP

New Yor·k 6 aosto~ ~ ·

R A

fri.

Californil ( KirKWOOd 5-10} ·a t

M0

PMON.E 992-3331.

the right to limit quantities.

MIDDLEPORT, O,
'

79~

LB.

. 0.
79

HOMEMADE.

CHUCK
LB.

HAM SALAo ...... LB; .

89~

LB.

·

mamtenan ce

MINUTE

.,

STEAKS
FRESH &amp;

GROUND

••' .

DAY CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 8

;-_'

(A class schedule to f it anyone's work schedule.)

5 LB. OR MORE

•"
"~ FAVORITE

.

~BREAD
••••••••••••
·
,
•••••
••

ALL COURSES APPROVED FOR VETERANS BENEFITS
OF "270 TO '498 .A MONTH.

~ GEISHA

3

LOAVES

WESTERN SALISBURY, CHOPPED BEEF AND MEAT LOAF

$1

BANQUET
. 49~
DiNNERS •••••••••••••~c~.

lSih oz.

;MACKEREL ••••••••••• ?."~ •••
'

~ LIQUID

GIANT SIZE

~ MIGHTY BEEF

Accredife4 by the Accrediting Commission of AI CS
Locust &amp; Second Av.enue
State R. N. 75-02-0472 B

· 24 oz.

, 12t

SINGLE CHEESE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••

S.pl&lt;ember 7-11

Riijlit Resen&lt;lid to'limit Quanlities
W.. G.. dly Accept Fed. Food Slom,.
.--· ~.
.......,daytl&gt;r·u Friday
9:00to 7:00

3LB. 49~

OHIO VALLEY

FRENCH CITY

SAUSAGE WIENERS

oz.'159

20 CT.

'129

KRAFT

BORDEN~

COFFEE CREAMER

.

·

JAR

HAM
POUSH

ALSO PURE

. SPRING OR DISTILI:ED WATER~~~~ ••
PURE BREW

WllH 110.00 PURCHASE OR MORE

I

.

. Grapefruit Juice .•••~.2A.~o~ •• 99~
· 16 OZ. 89~
CREMORA ••••••••••••••••••

BOILED

-

. COFFEE FIL
I•

.

60 CT. BOX

••••••••••••••
••

'1

CANS

·

PlASTIC

$

39
~

3t

1
BROUGHTON'S
HOMO MILIC ••••••••••••••••• 79t;
~GALLON

VALlEY BELL

CHOCOLATE MILK ...2.~u.A~~••

· .

'

oz.

2% MILK ............ , •~~~o,N, .. ,

••

KRAFT PURE

6

DAIRY

BOffiES

PUNCH

SLICED

I

oz.

·

LEMONADE ........ 5

BROUGHTON'S

CAT FOOD··~· .. ••••••• 3 ~"~z. $1
DETERGENT .~ •.••••••K!N:.s~~ $179
ORANGE JUICE ••••• ~.G!~~".• 99~

5 LB.
99c
JACK FROST ·sUGAR ,.•..........••.•

t

16

1

24.1.

LB.

8 PAK

FRISKIES
BEEF &amp; EGG, _BEEF STEW, CHICKEN LIVER, LIVER &amp; EGG, OR BEEF

BOLOGN

PEACHES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

oz.$1

68
CANS

24

21h SIZE

&amp;CHEESE OR BEEF &amp; BACON

DOG FOOD ••••••••••••• 4

.window'wrl'lice ,

. PHEBE'S STORE

DOZ£N

'

.

!U.m.to ll p.m.

Racine, 0. ·

SCOT LAD

:PALMOLIVE
79~
~
······••·······•

GALliPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

Fri. &amp; Sit.

E"DS

••'

'

IDo.m. Ill ·1tp,m.

BACON

•

ASSOCIATE DEGREE &amp; DIPLOMA COURSES
IN BUSINESS

ACT. :NOW...
.for. complete into. call our admissions office. 446-4367 ,
or stop mat 504 Second Avenue. We want to help you.

S111. tllru lllurs.

99~

.GROUND ROUND
99~

BEEF 69~
LB.

''

Evening and o11lternating classes begin Sept. 14

LB.

KAHN'S

FRESH LEAN

LEAN

ENROLl NOW FOR NEW FALl CLASSES

Open

BUCKET
STEAKS ·
$
39
NO WASTE

.

WANT TO GET AHEAD1

Calitornit 1t Kan Cil'r , night
'CieveJanCia1 Ba ltim ore, nigt)f
Milwe~&gt;' · "'e at NeW York., ,nigt-1 1
1Det r ,'Jt ·BDS·ton, ni!i,th1

ON MONDAY AND
TUESDAY NtGHTS

KRAFT AMERICAN

•

I)

WIENERS •••••••••••••

GREEN GIANT
, 100
303 CAN
41
GREEN BEANS •••• ••• •••••
' ••••··· · •• •••

GRAPES

We rese.

Minnesota (GOltz 11-aJ) at ...

w
0

MASON FUR.NITURE

GROUND

PHONE 992-3480

SUPERIOR.$ ALL MEAT

GREEN GIANT PEAS •••• !1}.~...... 4/'1 oo

LEMONS

Ac~ept Federal Food Sta~ps ~ ~ ~

._._.._;.,.;...;;.,..;.:;..;;;:.;;.;;.-..l

'T-exas (·Perry U -12 ), 8: 35 'p . m .
Ghic-.go (Gossege 8·14 ) at
Oakland (Torrez 11.10), 11 p.m .
Weelneida_y 's Game.J
ChicaQO a t Olk·land , nlght
'Minnesota 11 TeJCes, nl;ht

!BIG :BEEF PLAMR "1.40
SAVE 25•
FISH FILEr PLAmR •lAO
SAVE 25•
TRIPLE MEAL-TRIPU TREAT,
FISH, FRIES AND TURNOV!R

FRIDM' .UNTIL 8 PM

FRESH LEAN

Mon ..·S.t., 2~ p. m . MonFri., '7-1 p.m. Mon ., Wed.

Milwavtc.ee 1(,6,ugustlne 8.9), 8: 30

X •flaa.!:y!;s·~~~

N"ri"J!m• bad WilD only
Glbor !Oim&amp;llll5111bis year lhe Tournament Players
Champimshi;&gt;-and f« only
lhe secood time sinre l!lli9
failed 10 'llin tile or the lour
ma j&lt;r e&gt;'ellls.

•-

Narcotics, Orvgs, Alcohol

- A1tudonlshail not pouess.
usa. transmit, conceal, or be
under the Influence of
marlluana. ntrcotlc .drugs,
hallucinogens ,
am .
phetamlnes,
barbiturates.
alcoholic bovoragH. or ln.
, toxicant&amp; of any ~Ind.
Tobacco - A student shell
not use or smoke tobacco In
areas and at times nol
dnlgnaled for such u11. ·
Accumutattoo of Beh&amp;vlor
Reports - A file of Behavior
Reports (demerltal 11 kept In

JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON , M. D.
.
~ce Hours; ,11)..12 .il .fl'l.

p.m .

·

A.VERION

' .
' · ·
ll. G. SOLA, M.D.

Ba ltimore '{Garland 15-M a t
~fToi t {Fldrych 15-7), ,8 p.m.
Cle-veland (S.r.own 8-10) at

6-ll l. 1:30

stoat or allompt to stoat
school or private property.

masrercarp

Memorial Hospital

8oston l~l ant 17-10) at New
Yorl&lt; !Ell is 1Hl. S p.m .

We

qo,ner&gt; Mill and Second Sts.

.Ad•••iraL

Veterams

Te.::as S Kansas City 4
Tod•r's.Proba.bte Pllchers
. . I All Times ,EOTI ·

.}$.. ~ ·~

RELIABILITY ...
No one makes a T.V .. that lasts forever ...
Adm iral trys . .. careful inspection in the
plant . . . inspected aga in at our store,
reducing the chance that service wi'll be
needed. If service is needed you ' ll get it
promptly . .. if it needs to be in the shop
over a day we'lll.oan you a set at no charge .

Adiacentto

oe.rroi, ·s Baltimore •

clubl, organizations. alttletic ·
teama, and-or achoot ot which
he Is a member.
Assault - A studont shall
nol cauH or attempt to cause
physical lnlury to another
persoo.
Dangerous Weapons and
coercion,
threat ,
Instruments - A sludonl
herr•sament,
In · shall
not po11111. handle, ·
subordination_, or rowdyism.
create, conceal, or
Dellon.;e - A student ahall transmrt,
use
any
dangerous
notdlfy the valid euthorlty of and Instrument&amp;. · weapon
teachers, administrators, or
Damage and-or Theft of
supervlsora.
or Private PropertyStudent AcllviliH - A School
sludont shall comply with !he A studlnl ohatt no! cauoe or
allempt to causa &lt;lamaae to
rules and &lt;et~ ulalions of the achool
or prl~at~ properly,

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily ·9 to
~un. 10 to 10

models to choose from
so

'SuttOn , LA 18·9; Car lton , Ptl it

2. 2nd

achool :
Olsruptloo of School - A
student ahell not ceuw or
attempt to c.eu11 a disruption
or ob1fructlon to the
educallon11 curricular or
e&gt;tra curricular proceu by
use of violence. terce ,

'

Pitching

20-!2;

'

•More. than twenty

53 ;

·Most Victoritl
N1t1ona1 LIISJIII: Jones,

Oakiand 2 Calif 1, 11 inns .

.Kansas Citv !Pattin
P.m..

Det

Oak 46 ; Pa tek , KC 45.

82 51 .61 2 7l lt.t .526 11 ''2

~ll l mc;~re

6.S ;

Campanerls , Oak SO ; Sayl or ,

EUI
W .. L . Pd. G8
N~ -York

-M\,InSOf\, NY 89 ;
NY 8?; Jac.kson,

and Maybtrry , KC as.

Oak

A.ne'r iun LNtiUt

."

eSave from '30 to. •200
On these fine televisions
which must be sold to
make room for the
'77 models (coming soon).

:2.

Bart

(On ly gamH scheduled )

.,

"_Rules for atudont conduct
.,,.. been adopted by the
Mtiga Loc.l Scl\001 Dl1trtct
lloli'd 01 Educallon,
·
The rul• 11 approved by
the boerd 1ro:
While a atudont It under the
lur]ldlcllon of the achool, e
vloll~on on the PIJrt of th1t
atudont of eny 0111 or more of
lito following ruiH of cooduct
1h1l.l rHulf In disciplinary
action , Including but not
limited to corporal punish·
ment, 1u1penslon, emergency
remov11, ancs.or e•pul1lon
from 1 currlculer or e&gt;tre
currlculer activity or from

OF 1976 MODELS

129 .41!8 59101 .301

Montreal '(Stanhovse 1·9l. S:OS

p.m.

•'

Board lays down rules for student. behavior

l~a antatanl principal's shaft drHs In accordance
office. Accumulation of ten with the adopted drHI codt
MAifON I!URNitVIIII
Behavior RtpQI'to will rHult of the Meigs Local Board of
In
a
three
day Education .
suspension or
corporal
Gambling - A 1ludonl
STORE HOURS
punlshrnent. Accumulation of shall not participate In
•
lwelve Behavior Reports will gambling for money or
result In a five day suspen. valuabiH.
slon. Accumulalloo of lwetve
Repealed VIolations - A
INJn,, Tues., Wid . &amp; s.t...... :JOtji.S:OO
Behavior Reporlt will result student shall nof repeatedly
In I five day SUSptfl$100. fall to comply with .. tstlng
THURSDAY tiL1211100N
Ac~umulallon
of fifteen ruiH of the school. These '· ,
Behavior Roports will result rules Include bu1 are- not
In a ten day SUSptflSion. limited to truancy , tardiness.
Accumutallon of tlphteen class cutting, loitering ,
Behavior Reports wit resull parking lot tntracllon ,
In a second 1011 day suspen· fatslflactton of records ,
slon. Accumulation of twenty leaving school ground~ , and
Behavior Reports will resuft profanity -obscenities In ·
In a recommendation for eluding the Bus Discipline
••pulsion.
Guide.
773-5592
Henn1n Gi-lte
Mlaon, W. Y1.
Repealed Use oi tnap·
proprlale Dress - A student

11 • ,uJ ~ 139 .3U
125 55" t9 171 .309

Home fl:ur"
Nltional LeeQut: Kingman ,
NY 3-4 ; Sct'lm idt , Phil 33 ;
FOUN , (in 19; Mond&amp;V, Ctl! 28;
MorG.,n. Cin .27 .
Americari Leavue: . Nettles,

New York (M.atlack l•·l ) at
Chlc..ago (Burr is 12 -12 ), 2 ~ 30

ADMIRAL
Color Television

.
G. AB· R. H. Pet
McRae, KC 125 437 6S 152 .loll
Carew, M in 135 522 84 174 .333
Breit, KC
134 54! 11110 .329
Bostck. Min 110 •o3 ll m .321
LtFtort. Ott 129 5l2 89 166 .311
'G arr , Chi
Rivtfl, NY

Los Angeles 4 san Diego l
Cinc innati 9 HOUston 8

61

t11112.l2•
791S7 .313
Sl 132 .310
St 169 .306
70 l6A .305
64 135 .305

A:mitrican Ltlave

Extra Value A·t
County Couslnsl

defending World Series
ohampioo Tom Watsoo and
Lee trevino ""'re at ZB3.

woold place

Irwin, wbo won 150,000
.doiiJn. "'( get a lillle lir&lt;d of
reading bow poorly l'&lt;'t! heoo

l \&lt;1

.515 14

From S:OO p.m. to clo$ing. Enjoy fine fixens ,
at low, low prices.

bim l9!lh 011 the alllime PGA

btlur

5I .. 572

66

59 73 .«7 23
t.5 17 .3A1 l7
Wt:tt
W.. L . Pel. Gl

Y.ontreal

Eastern's anocher wi.th 3:30to go in the
weaknesses," he said. "We. se&lt;.'OIId period.
Vetter scored a touchdown
· made some adjustments at
m
a three-yard run and
halftime, and they worked
Green
kicked the extra point
weU."
with
a
little more than one
Eastern Michigan was
minUte
left
in the game.
slapped wi.th 1~ penalties, 12
The
Hurons
got on the
of them in the firSt half, tying
SC&lt;I'e'board
loc
lhe
on]y lime
the MAC rec&lt;rd held by
when
Doug
Oisan
·
t
allied
on a
Central Michigan and
IS-yard
pass
from
Steve
Western Michigan.
''We played some sloppJ' Raklovits! : ~into the seoond
offense tonight," said stanza, leaving Ohio wi.th .a
Clllebek.. "Five oc sil of our 13-7 halftime •lead.
Green. came back in the
penalties were foolish .''
third
quarter wiih a 2:&gt;-Y,.rd
Sieve Green kicked field
fielder
. Kevin Babcock
goals of 37, 47 and 25 ya"ds.
clinched
the win foc the
He ·booted his first with 4:37
Bobcats
in
the fourth quaner,
le!'l in the opening quarter
scoring
oo
a 14-yard pass
and then loDowed up wi.th .
from Vetter, Green again
toeing the point..Ut.er.
ln other weekend games
involving Ohi.o oollege teams,
Eastern Kentucky . defeated
Dayton 21-7, North carolina
a punched seven iron to stnpped 'favoced Miami. 14-10
within sil ,feet of the pin on and Central State whi.pped
the par four eighth tUrned Linooln (Mo.) University 2li'
20.
Nicklaus roo the most.
It took Eastern Kentucty's
" That was about as
junior
quarterbac·k, Ernie
pleasing an iron a.s I've ever
House,
ooe quarter 10 get ·
hit," be said. ''1 •think llult
warmed
up at Dayton F'ridsy
was a sbOI l1JJ. remember lor
night,
wt
w11en he did hit the
a loog time."
groove,
'he
was almost
Dave. Hill finished third
with .an even par '280, .and unstoppable.
HDU!Ie cmJpleted 11 of 14
picked up P!l,OOO. Another
shot hack was 'David passes fer 177 ywds and two
Grahalll, who won tbe touchdowns.
.Amerian Golf &lt;Cllassi.c mly
last :week 00 the Firestooe
Ncrth Course. · The. 'Sl5i000

Green had • 73.Sunday .ll!ld
slipped ·lo fifth at 282, while

L . Pet. Gl
52 .611 -

p.m .

out

Gr:abam :woo pushed his tw~
week total at f1irestone to
$55,000.

W..
..
11
70
63

Phlladelphlo
Pitl&gt;llvllth

. .
Runs 8-lfff&lt;l In
Los ·AnQtiH !Hooton '9·121 at
National LtaQut : Fost~ , Cin
San Dieoo (Fre isi tbet'1 8-12-&gt;. 10 U• ; Moroan , &lt; ln 104 ; Watson ,
p.m .
.
Hc;tU 89 ; Schmi dt, Phil 88 :
Atl&amp;nta (Niel(ro u . Hll at San Lul iA!.ki. Ph il 85.
Franclsco ( Barr 11 -11 ), 10. 15
Ameriuft Lu;ve: L. MIY r

Bear in convincing win
By GENE CADDES
UPI Spans Writer

Pren lftttrnalional

NIU. .al Ltttvt

p.m .

find

5 -1be DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tul!llday, Sept. 7, 1976

Oft US lnnints pilehed) 145.
Natlon•j Luavt : Seever, NY'
2.41 ; Norman . Cln 2..U ; Rtu,
LA 1.55; Jonts , SO 2.71 ;
Zachry, Cln 2.72.
Amtrlun ltiiUt: Fldrych, Houston
000 300 203- 1 t 2
Ott 2.35 ; Tr~vrrs , Mll and
Mtior Ltllvt LtaHn
Blue, Oak 2.38 .• Tanane. Cel Cincinnati 001 DOt -"""'- 9 12 o "
ly Unitlif Prtn tnternatlonat
I
•·it c:
Ric hard. Nitkro (3), Rondon ""'
I11Hin'
2.63 ; Pe m~ . IHI 2• 6~ Ul , Ptntt (6) and Herrmann;
StrUctoutt
'I En 1·
(bind on 371 at bits)
N•tional Ltatut: Sea~o~er , N'V Alcala, Sarm 1en t 01. I•.
Nllionll LIIIUI
lOt ,· Rlct'l.rel , Hov l7l; Koot · wick {7) and &amp;eneh . WPG AI R H Pet
SF s.rmtento (5-U . LP--RicherCI 1,1-1
Morotn, Cin 119.401 lot "t39·.,,.1 mtn, NY 156• Montefusco,
(16.1•). HR-clnc!Mttl, Mof . 1.
152 ; Nlekro, All 14,
J 1 -• 1 I
MadiO(k 1 C"ll ,. ••• S9 1SO .331
Amtrlc•n Le.IIUt : RVI, , Cal gan (27 ortuu 11m ·
Gr iffey , C1n 127 1182 101 162 .3311 r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.... .'.10 ii v~ . Pit
109 Cl6 59 \31 .332
( bjjt~

OU ·slaps EMU by 23·7 count
Ohio College Football
Rowxlup By United Press
lDtematiooal
.
lt's bad enough when a
team finds its strauogy gonerendered useless by tbe sheer
power of an oppooent-but
when its tactics faD b)• the
wayside at the outset of' a
home game, ...en, the rest of
the
roritesl can · be
JX'I'di.ctably frustrating.
' 'Ohio took our game plan
away from us really earlY,"
sai.d Eastern· Michigan coach
Ed Chlebed after OU's Bobcats mashed the Hurons 23-7
Saturday night in tbe Mld.luneri.can Conference opener
far bWl schools.

240; T•nana, C.l 2'22 : lfyteven,
TeK 110,· Hunter , Hv· 1S..;
~almer , Bolt 1nc1 11... Dlk

c
DIET RITE

COLA
8 PAK 16 Oz. BOffiES

~: S. GRAD.E B lARGE

. DOZEN

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
.PRODUCE

89t;
69t;

-~-----

BANANAS ......~~....! 1
RED DEUCIOUS

APPLES ..... ~.~~79~

�• I

•

I- Tile Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 7. 1171

Surprise party fetes ~So-c...ia-1 Pianist
Roush anniversary Calendar scheduled
The children of Mr. and
Mn. Albert Rouah, BaUey
Run Road, aurprlsed their
parenli Sunday with a 40th
nddinl annlveraary dinner
plrty.
A sliver, pink and white
motU wu carried out In the
table decoraUons. Featured
on the table was a three
llered anniversary cake
ilecorated with 40 multlcolcndroset and topped with
1 mlnlature bride and groom.
lbe cake had been baked by
""'· Garnet Herdlll8n of
Le!ln, W. Va., sister of Mrs.
Rouah. A1IO !lied on the.table
!I'U 1 110ft!' arrangement
· made by Mrs. Gerrl
Kelllnier. It was later sent to
John Sayre of New Haven, a
abut-ln.
Mrs .
Larry (Judy)
Flowers and Mrs. Dale Roush
aerved the cake and punch.
Numerous gifts were
preaented ro the honored
couple;
Attending !Jere Mrs.
S.tbl Jaques, Toledo; Mr.
and Mn. Harold Johnson,
Sr., folr, and Mrs. Steve
Pinons, Kelly and Stacey,
Jimmy and Penny Eubanks,
Grand Rapids, Ohio; Mrs.
Mildred Meade, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Miller and Carl, ,folr. and
Mrs.
Larry
Flol!'ers,

Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Whaley and David,
Roger Roush and Douglas,
Grove clty; Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Mlller, Joe and
Melissa, Mrs. Garnet Herdlll8n, Leon, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Roush , Sherry and
David, St. Albans; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Hudson and Cindy,
Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Hudson, Angie,
Pam, Sammy and Tammy,
Marlon ; Chris Judge, Mid·
dleport ; Gerrl Kessinger,
Lola Ann and Kim, Kenny and
Becky Rouah, Kevin and
Christi Smllh, Mrs. Nellie
Canterbury, Mrs . Dora
Balley and Herman Ter
Keursl, Portland, Mich., and
Leona Jacques, New
Haven, W. Va.
While Mr. and Mrs.
.Roush's anniversary Is not
unUl Oct. 12 the celebra Uon
was held early because Mr
arid Mrs. Bill Hudson (Jean
RlniBh) and Cindy are leaving
today for C&amp;lifornla and from
there will fly to Okinawa
where Sgt. Hudson will be
sta tloned for the next tlu'ee
years.
On Friday evening Mr, and
Mrs. Roush's grandson, Jeff
Matheny called
from
Shepherd Air Force Baae in
Texas.

Marshal/series sold out
~GTON, W. Va. Marahall Artists Series
manapr, James A. Martin
bu amouncecl that !lea80n
memberahlps are sold out for
tbe 1,.,.77 Forum Seriea and
for tile main floor-loge areu
fi tbe Buter Serlea.
"We are delighted to be
doing ao Well, especially since
our Orillnal advance aale for
the Suter Series went so
poorly," marlin noted.SIIIce no uCl!eta are sold to
individual Forum Series
-~~. odtnlyillll is now
limited to CWTellt !lea80n
me!llbers and Manhall
llildenll with acllvlty cards.
Martin noted, however,
t b l t - memberships are
ltlll aYiilable in the balcony
far tbe Suter Series
and a.t tlc:bta for'lnillvtduai
· en~~li 11111 be available In the

balcony, i!aJcony season
memberships are $18 1..adulls and $9 for youth
through the age of 18. Tickets
for Individual Baxter Series
programs will be sold for $6
for adults and f3 for youth.
Forum events, held in Old
Main Auditorium , Include
journalist Hugh Sldey, actor
Jose Ferrer, ventriloquist
Edgar Bergen, the Pickwick
Puppet Theatre, tbe Cologne
Chllmber Orchestra, and five
travel film lectures.
.The
Baxter
Series
programs are held in the
Kellh-Albee Theater and
include pianist Lazar Berman. sjngers Robert Merrill
and Louise Russell, the Royal
W'mnlpe£ Ballet, and the
Leningrad Symphony Orchestra.

Polly's Pointers

By

Pell)'

Vinegar has many
non-cooking uses

Cramer.

POLLY'S PROBLEM

DEAR POLLY- Do you
bnealiltofnon.cooldng
- for v!Depr? Tbere must
be lola ol - for it. I would
appreciate bowing "hat
PDe af tbem are.
My ~~ Peeve lJ 'lritll
JDICheNI who come IG the
~ ID make repaln and
lbea lmarlably have IG go
back IG tile IJIIap for cme 11J1ng
or llllllber. Remember IIIey
an beiDI paid by the hour
and tbe IJIIap never 1ee1011 to
be jult around the corner. L M.
DIWl L M. -llldeed tllere
are ..., lllne~lld- for
rt JV.AE 'IEJfal•lkl
are Ill • 1w ~......, 1
.... Jr.; h II fo1 DIIIIY
tJpel If lile; !I'IIIIIDI
,_
__
wI
••'wa;
•..- .
..,,.....
a
.. I I clllll te be aaed OD
tile ~ left Hell I bem
lill .._Ill ....; ud pat 1D
lllwll 811 , tile ....., to
........... AIM, wfdle
tl · JIT II Wlllll nler ril
.... I
1ft alaiW ltiJu
rn. ew;al U.ve • aboal
......, ......... tlll!ll
......... Da tat flnll8lllw II llleell tile Nler. 'l1le

.......... IIIIer

,_Mildred

.... - - .... viaepr.
-POlLY.
.

DEAR POLLY - InnJlllllive pilln vinegar can be
efflcllve ID aolvinll many

"•Jdir

problema 1n 111e
lllat. I ..ve uaed it and
fGIIIId lt ftrJ good l&lt;l' the
follcNIDI tlliDp. Soak gar·

Dall

11mD1 1 per~lraUon
.
'

'

GUARANTEED
INCOME
.. .... Y" tr.. A, WI &amp;'Y
IMf llet' ntoill INIII nt

tla,, we cever food,
~·trten
cart,
~a·-J•

•••'"'
-.o:•f."..............

..,

....... -;.ltetm. .......
....
' " lit
ftr.itllel

o

I CIIIIEHI I d.
A-a,OH

I

lo·.

YHr NIVY

'"'.,._....

odor in warm vtnegar.
Lightly rub discoloration left
by a slight scorching with
vinegar. A teaspoon of
vinelar In oil !lied lor frying
prevents the food from absorbing so much oU. Rub
v~ne~ar on the banda to
remove onion or fish odors as
weD as fruit stains. When you
buy a new fry pan, b&lt;il a little
vinelar In it prl..- to uae and
lhla 11111 prevent sticking: MILDRED.

DEAR POLLY - I am an
avid reader of the column and
alao a registered nune : I
want to disagree with lhe
reader who suggested usiilg a
clean, "roll-oo" cleod..-ant
bottle for applying lotion ro a
skin rash, etc. Please do not
do IIU. The baD rolla across
the infected area and carries
bacteria back lniD the
medica lion
lbus conlaminating it. Instead, I
BUggest usiilg a pullliKype
hair spray or deodorant
bottle properly labeled. A
strip of ~ve tape put on
the bottle could have the
name of the lotion and the
dlrections written on it. Thla
!l'ould be much aaler. SHARON.
DEAR POLLY- I uae TV
dinners from time to time and
lind II a terrible wute of
energy to heat the oven just
r..-.that. So, I ael my electric
fry pan to the desired ternperalllre, remove the TV
dinner from ita boa:, place in
the pan and put the cover on.
In a very few minutes It is
bubbtlng hot and cooks much
quicker than when In the

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

I

Yard sak slated
The Middleport Firemen'•
Allldllary lrill have a yard
sale Friday from 8 a.m. to f
p.m. at the llrehou.e.
~oceeds frOIJI'tbe Hle wiD
be !lied to JUrchaae IIOIIIe
ne" equipment for the flnt
aid truck. A. goal of ~ baa
been aet for the sale to be held
Inside the engine room.
. Contributions are needed
and realdenll with anything
to contribute - and the
emphasii lrill be on things
other than clothing, although
some clothing will be for aalil
- may call Mrs. Larry
Baker, . Mrs. · Tom Darst,
Mrs. Bob Byer or Mrs .
Kenneth Imboden to arrange

ADlflereat Kflld orJJaa.()a
Young American pianist Rap:
ThOIJla!l Schumacher is one of
IS, a girl, and I snore I Thla 1.1 so embarnulng that I
TUESDAY
lhree concerts scheduled for won I'm
't
sleep
over at any of·'W' girl friends' hOUJet. 'Ibey laugh
XI G~A MU Chapter, the 1978-77 Tri-County
at
me.
.
Beta Sigma Phl Sorority, Communlty Concer t
The
last
time
I
stayed
overnight
at my belt friend's, I ·
Tuesday night progre~lie association aeason.
lll8~e her late for work. I feel Ulte I can't lace her or her family
dinner· The appellzer will be
Schumacher an artist who &amp;gam.
served at Carol Adams, the consistently ~ins acclaim
Please help me stoP sriorlng, - PROBLEMS
~In course and salad at b(Jth In recitals and u aoloist
en Stanley's home, and with lll8jor orchestras will
the dessert and meeting at be In Galllpolls Frlday,'Aprll Dear P.:
a&amp;ve youcon$111ted a doctor? Perhaps you have a'nOse or
the home of Mrs. Annie 22, 8 p.m. at the Gallia
~~ condition that needs treabnent. Enlarged adenoids,
Chapman. Unda Riffle and Acade!lly High School SUIUS trouble, even bay fever can e&amp;Ulle snoring.
Phyllis Bennett to give the auditorlwn. This will be the
If ~e finds no physical cause, he'D recommend that you
cultural report entitled Inaugural concern for the sleep on your stomach, and avoid rolling over on your back.
"Introductions."
seven loot lltelnway grand · (And don't say, "I have no control over bow my body turns
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, plano recently purch8.!1ed by when I'm asleep." You can train youraelf to favor certain
Daughters of America , Bp.m. the asaoclallon.
positions lf you concentrate on it.) - Helen
Tuesday at the haD. AU
Hehasbeenthereclplentof
+++
.
members urged to attend and some of the most important
NOTE FROM SUE: About ''lacing your friend and her
wear whi_te. InspecUon will be prizes In music. They Include famlly ," I lmo• how embarr8S8ed you feel, and how the
BACK IN AKRON
held.
the BUIOnl Competition ub kid~ buns, but really -snoring is such a small flaw. They
Mrs. Nina Bland, here lor
MEIGSFAIRBoard,Bp.m. Boluno, Italy; the Harold don t hold 11 against you, any more than you'd blame your girl several weeks visiting her
Tuesday at fair board office Bauer Award· the Morris friend for, say, biting her nails.
· sister, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
on Rock Springs grounds.
Loeb. Memorl~l Prlte, the
Discuss ~ur problem with them and maybe they'D ~e returned to AkrOn Sunday.
REGULAR MEETING , Frank Damroscll Scholarship upwl hasoluuonwecoulduselnthecolumn.
Mr. and Mrs. Clai'ence Ar·
Middleport Masonic Lodge and the J .U.G .G. Award
+++
cher of Akron drove down for
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 . p.m. which led to his New York Dear Helen and Sue :
her.
Tuesday at temple ; all Town HaD recital debut.
This is directed ID the girl with lll8DY friends who are boys
Master Masons invited.
In October of 1972 he but no real boyfriends In high scllool.
SPECIAL MEETJ['jG , traveled to Manhattari lor a
Patience, girl !
My son, when he was in college, was astounded to learn
Band recltalln Alice Tully ilall of
Southern Local
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday the new Uncoln Center for that by far the majority of young men he met had not dated in
in band room for completion the Performing Arts. Of a high school - which accounts for the seemingly
of plans for faD activities. diffic.ult
and
unusual "unpopularity" of teenage girls. The fellows preferred
Parents and interested program, Winthrop Sargeant friendships to relationships; or the fear of being turned do'llll
persons invited .
told his New Yorker stopped them.
My son kept hlrnseU In spending money by amnglng dates
POMEROY ClW'TEK 186 magazine readers: "He is a
Order of the Eutern star' performer of sensitive style and double dates for young college men who were afraid of
·
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at ~ and a special kind of in• rejection. He has many m81Tiages to his crei:ut.
.
The
highly
popular
"prom
queen"
o(ten
bums
out
In
adult
Pomeroy Masonic Temple lellectual insight. Mr..
WEDNESDAy
. ~umacher is a musiCil life. Nothlng_can ever quite top her high school triumphs. How
MIDDLEPORT
mtelligence ro be watched, sad? LikewiSe the tren "stud" often remains somewhat
.AMATEUR Gardeners, 8 and his technical accomplish- adoleljCellt .au his life. - T.F .L .
p.m. Wednesday, home of ments . are those . of a
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring lhoro~~hly equipped Dear Rap:
I'll tell you why lots of girls don't gel invited to high school
Ave., Pomeroy. Installallon p!llrust.
of officers
Today, when not touring, -he proms : tlley're too.expensive! By the time a guy rents a tui
POMEROY
MID- · is on the music faculty of the pays. for tickets and cocsage, dinner for two, after-dan~
.
DLEPORT Lions Club University of Maryland. His goodies, e.tc. he's blown fifty clams.
How ~y are with me when I say: "Forget formal p-oms
WedJiesday noon at the Mfi8~ promnity IAl the capital has
Inn.
made him a great favorite and stay With weekly dances or parties in the gym, where
POMEROY CHAPTER 89 with Washington music everyone can go stag." - SENIOR PROM DROPOUT
Royal Arch Masons, ?:lO Ioven. In August, 1971,
p.m. Wednesday at the n:arkmg the l_OOth an- Dear SPD:
I, for one, am with you, but of course my vote doesn't
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, IJ!versa_ry of the blrtb of the
count:
I'm a parent. -HELEN
followed by Bosworth Council R u s Sl a n c o m p o s e r ,
+++
46, Royal and Select Masla's Ale:under Scriabin, Mr.
at 8:30 p.m. AU companions ~umacher and three ar- DearS.:
I don't agree. Let's leave Junior or Senior proms for those
urged to attend.
·
tisticcoUeaguesperformed in
- -- .
two concerts all 10 of the who en)Oy the:'". Many ~oung people don't these days, just as
SENIOR ~ZEN Golden composer's monumental many aren 'I mlel'ested m football or basketball games. But ·
Age Oub p1auc Wednesday sonatas. The Washington m~ we knock down EVERY tradition just beCause lt isn't
at PorUand Park. Take o'!"' Post reported : "Thomas uruversally accepted? .
table sei'Vlce, everyone m- Scllumacher's ninth sonata
Conunents, everyone 1 - SUE
vlted.
was ·highly illuminating. His
WlDTE !WoSE Lodg•, 1:30 playing of the fourth sonata
Wednesday at the American was probably the outstanding Tbe Alm•nat
STILL CHECKING
Legion Ha!l in Middleport. . realization of tbe entire
COLUMBUS (UPI)
,
WAS '12.99
TIIURSDAY ·
aeries. He Is a stunning ar· United PreulDtematioaal
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 7, RobertShaw Controls Co.,
MEIGS COUNTY Humane list.''
uniCil and state and federal
Society, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
The Tri.COunty Olnmunity !he 25151 day ol 1976 with 115 health olflcials met at the
at the Thrift Shop across Concert Association is fD follow.
suburban Grove City plant
from the Pomeroy Post 01_ currently conducting its
The moon is approaching again
today, trying fD cocoe ·
fice.
membership drive. Mem- its full stage.
up with a reason why almOIII
The morning stars are 100 emplo,es have taken sick
POMEROY
YOU'I1i bershlp is $30, Family; $10,
adults and $5, students. For Jupiter and Saturn.
at the facility in the last two
League (baaeball) will more lnformaUon, t:ontacl
The evening · star is
weeks.
have a !fOrk party · on the
their ne!l' diamonds at
Uaociation headquarters Mercury.
aI the Gallipolis Olamber of
Those born on UUs date are
Meigs _H!gb School, Thurs- Comlnerce office, 16 State St. under the sign of VIrgo.
day, 5:30p.m. unw dart. AU
American novelist James
inla'ested pei'IIOIIS aaked ID
Fenimore Cooper was born
attend.
' Sept. 7, 1789.
On this day ·in history:
. FRIDAY
VISITS LINDs
In 1813, the nickname ·
MARY SHRINE, Order of
Mrs. Alma Thompson of ''Uncle Sam"waa coined by a
tbe White Shrine of Columbus spenl the weekend
Jerusalem, Friday, a p.m. at in Pomeroy visiting Mr. and writer for the Troy, N.Y.,
Post as a symbolic refereoce
the Pomeroy Masonic Mrs. Reino Und . .
ro the United States.
Temple.
.
In 1940, the Nazis began the
HAPPY HARVESTERS
London
air blitz that Hitler
Class, Trinity Church, 7:30
expected
to 110ften Britain lor
Friday night at the church. them ro that meeting,
an
invasion
that never .
Hos\esse!l will be Mrs. Eva
Refreshments were aerved materialized.
Desaauer and Mrs. Lillie ~ Alice Freeman, Catherine
In l!Mi:i, Hurricane Betsy
Hauck.
Biron, Harris.
Pbyllia H""Hilda
------:-, and swept iniAl Florida. II left
behind 75 dead.

Death toll
prediction
shattered

pickup.

Articles IIIIJ be 11ft at 8!e
flrebouH any tlmt Wecl·
netday
or' ·· 'l'bunday.
Alllltance ri! be needed to
mll'k tile fllml aad tile
prtllldlnt ub tbt audlary

can

memben
her about a
time 1rhen !bey can 'IIU't.

Wedneaday and Thurada;y
aflernoonl and eventnca wiD
be waecl for anarklnl tile
ltema.
.
Furniture, novelty lllml,
some cloiiJlng and oddl and
ends ril be for aale.

ABOVE ,\RE a few of the young people who took part
.with enthuslallll In a watermelon eating contest at
Sunday's "Almost Anything Goes for O!rlst" activiUes.lt
was messy, but fun, according to the contestants who
were not permitted to use their hands.
·

TO RETURN HERB

Mrs. Ji'atrlck Lochary,
High St., Pomeroy, IC·
comPIInied Mrs. Elillbeth
Chase to Dayton Monday.
Mrs. Olase,in Pm!eroy with
her sister, Miss Helen
Lochary, for the put-~~
weeks, will be retumln8 here.

IT WAS'ROUGH GOING In the "person relay" contest
' Middleport Firat Baptist group which won rop honors of
the day.

:t;hurch youth groups
~enjoyed day of games
'•

Sunday in Middleport
•• A

~keoff on ihe unique
1elevlslon show, "Almost
Anything Goes" was used as
!he th,eme for .8 young
,peoples program at the
Meigs ~unior High School
field In Middleport Sunday

-' ..
,.•

EXTEIIOR
lATEX HOUSE PAtNl

~

•

NOW

'9"

with youth groups from 13
churches laking part. .
Just as the television show
featured some unusual
stunts, so did the local event.
There was an obstacle race, a
beach ball relay (the baD was
carried for 100 yards between
the legs of each particlpimt),
a(! w:termelon eating event
New for today .•.
oo • ~a. with no hands
allowed yet), a pole climb, a
four person sack race, an egg
in the spoon relay race and a
person relay (the person was
moved roughly along by a
learn of four others lilting
them over a 50 yard path).
A tricycle race · was
scheduled
but
didn't
materialize, apparently due
. to the breakdown of .a vehicle
tnc.s• ll or two.
.
· Youth groups were given
ataiS. fl points lor the places they won
in the various events and
· th
tl)ere were
"finals" following
cases, "e&gt;:i.bl••l
...
cha1~s. They ·
e prelim
· !nary. competition.

BULOVA
BICENTENNIAL

antique .
They ' re
very new,

oday 's

timely

accessory
for ·vested
fuhlons.

U.d---"

Tomorrow
's treasured

he irloom .

one

piece of the energy puzzle.

Card party
plans made

Plana for the Sept. 23 card
p1rty were made durinll a
meeting of tile Sacred Heart
Guild 'lbUI'IIday nlt!ht al the
Catholic Church.
Work
1esslons
In
preparation for lhe card
p1rty were sel for 1p.m. and
7 p.m. on Sept. 22. Each
member lJ to take cookie8 or
·sandwiches or two unwapped prizes. 1be baU 11'111
be decorated In the !aU moUI.
Mrs. Ann .Biacinl'ood is ro
make the IaWes. Tbereisa$2
donstion for a Uctet. Cleanup
will lake place the following
morning at 9 a.m.
Mrs. Susan Blaker presided
at the meeting which opened
with prayer by the Rev. Fr.
Welton and the flag aalute.
.Mrs. Barbara Mullen was
acting secretary.
The nallvlty deanery
meeting wu announced for
oven.
Sept. 12 at Tuppera Pialns. A.
Tbanka for the Pointer on ..sement sale was planned
renewing old typewriter for Oct. 4 at 8 a.m. ro 3 p.m.
rlbbona. Mine wu almost and preparations wlll be
llleglbleandyoucanleefrtm made for the aale on Oct. 1.
myletterthatltlaliO!I'almost Alao announced ,.,., a
like new. - MRS. C. M.
pilgrimage to Loretta, Pa. on
PoOy wiD lend y11 eae of Sept. 19. Several members
ber "peaeby" tbnk·you are plamlng to attend.
carda, Ideal lor fnmllll or , Also discussed was a
pladnl ID ;raur family ~~enp- . candle sale, aa well as the
belli, If llle- Jlltlr faverfte amual buaar to be held In
,...., Peeve or Problem ill November. Craflltema are ro
ller col w
Write PoUy'a be made at the October
PaiMen ID eare of IIIII aew1- meeJinC and members with
Jllper.
crafta to make are to take
I

·GOESSLER
Jewelry Store

nRES &amp; lAmilES

St.

AT
DISCOUNT PRICES
SI'ICIAI.

UFEIIME GUARAmE MUfflER

t500

OFF ALL OF

SIPTIM- No LAIOI
TUNI.UP SPICIAL

v...
6 CYLINDD
4 CYLINDER

.,..00
'28.9t
•19.95

Includes ,_, Paints, Condlllae, Liller.
RESISIOI PLUGS.

SUO EXTRA

When It all boiled down the
young people of the Middleport First Bapllst Church
won first place; aecond went
to the Racine Methodist
Church and the Eden United
Brethren Church was third.
Ba~ers were presented the
winning teams.
Adding llle to the program,
enlltled "Almost Anything
Goes lor Christ," were the
banda of Southern and Meigs
High Schools and following
the events, on excellent vocal
and Instrumental group,

of the "Almost Anyt!llng Goes for Christ.'' This is the

'

GAL

Holur Medical Ceoier
IBlrlba, Sept. 5)
Mr.
and
Mrs. Curtis Rouah,
son, West Columbia, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beckner,
son, Henderson, W. Va ; Mr.
and Mrs. James Souders,
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hill, son,
United Pre10 lnlemaUonal
Gallipolis.
The Labor Day · weekend
(Blrtbs, Sept. 6)
traffic death toll exceeded
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Johnsafety experts' worst ex- son, daughter, Jackson.
pectations as throngs of
holiday motorists headed
TALKS BEGIN
home from their last swnmer
SEOUL, Sout~ Korea
fling.
(UPI) - The U. N. Command
The Na tiona! Safety and North Korea today began
CouncU, In Its preholiday talks on Implementing an
projections, had estlmated agreement lor nell' security
that 360 to 480 persons could arrangements at the Pan·
die In traffic mishaps during munjom truce villsge where
the 7&amp;-hour weekend, which Communist guards k,illed two
began at 6 p.m. local lime American officers last
Friday and ended at midnight month.
Monday night. ·
A Unl ted Press In• of Columbia. The boost In
ternaUonal count showed at traffic deaths was attributed
least 414 persons bad been ro increased wiving.
kUled in traffic accidents.
The figure was expected to
Increase with late reports.
A breakdown of accidental
deaths :
Traffic
484
Drownings
38
Planes
17
Total
537
Texas reported 44 deaths,
California 43, Ohio 25, IDinois
and New York 23 each,
Michigan 22, and Penn·
sylvania 19.
Traflic-falalily - free
holiday weekends were
reported in Alaska, Vermont,
North Dakota and the District

Two mishaps
in Middleport
over weekend
Middleport police reported
two accidents over the
weekend.
At 10:10 p.m. Friday, a car
driven by Bonnie Proctor, 41,
Middleport, traveling south
on South Third Ave., struck
the rear ul a parked vehicle
owned by Dale E. Walburn,
Middleport. There were
extensive damages to the
vehicles and the driver of the
Proctor car will be charged.
At 11 :30 a.m. Saturday on
Mills St., a pickup truck
driven by Harold W. Fetty,
47, Route I, Langsvllle,
struck the rear of a car
driven by Hubert H. Stewart,
42, Middleport, who was
attempting a turn onto
Seventh St. from Mills St.
Damages were heavy and
Sally Lambert, 22, a
passenger In the Stewart
vehicle was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad along with two
children who were checked
for possible Injuries. Felty
also has been clted to court.

Me~gs Lo ca}-.

.

You.r Taxes
Su.pport One!

Her name. is El P.ISo Columbia, and s~e·s one of a new
breed
tankers designed to carry na turd., gas
1· f ofd ocean-going
,
ique ~e at -U,O F. She's a very sophisticated lady.
··
Shes as big as an aircraft carrier and can carry enou h
natural gas m one trip lo supply fourteen thousand h g
fo~ a full yedr.
omes
~ut .she's expensive. In fact, ~he's the .costliest co~rticrclal
sh l~ e.ver launched. Over one hundred million d II , i' A d , .
shes lUSt ·one of ";".'' such tankers being built toob~~- vi~~ I
~;;~rdl gas to Amenca from overseas. Deliveries Stdrt fn ldtl' ,

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE/
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Solving the natural gas shortage is a big job (; f .
overse~s will help. It W(m't b~ cheap but it'll ~ /l:t ~:'- .
expensive than doing without.
~

'

FAU. REGISTRATION SEPT. 13, -1976

ALLEN HAlL~ 9:00 A.M. • 9:00 P.M.

I
"

I . Jew•lry 1nd Other

Valutbltl
t . luslnus Ptckltt
Policies
10. Lltblllry lnsur•nCt "
1'1 . Fum lnsunnce

l Mobile Homes
•· Heann tnsur~nce

s. Lite

lnilur•nce

4. &amp;o•t Insurance
1. MqtorcycJu ·

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
PACKA~E POLICY -

Put your auto, h()fl1e, health

and life msuran ce into ONE policy. Save money and
have one premi um .due date for all your insurance.

.

Se rv1ce

Some Of Our Olher Services :
Copy Servlc&amp;-Nolary Servlc,_C.r Leasl~

....

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
"The Insurance .Stone"

214 E. MAIN

PH. 992-5130

I

nm

SOFA BY DAY!

••~v-the U/~
· iFn

1~1

by

I1

News •• in Briefs

SLEEPER BY NIGHT!

(Continued from page I)
required to maintain. ,
. State l~w mandates that deputy registrars are to make
daily depoSits of motor vehicle license plate sales.
IN ANOTHER GESTURE DESIGNED TO IMPROVE
r.elations with ~e United States, Hanoi has given Washington
list of 12 Amencan fliers it says were killed during the Vietnam
War. Washmgton welcomed the Information but said the
United States ~d no Intention of normalizing relations with
the newly reumted country before Hanoi had accounted for all
the 795 missing U.S. servtcenien in Southeast Asia.
Another 1,710 were killed but their bodies have not been
returned, according ro the Pentagon. Vietnam, which bas been
showing increasing willingness to patch relations with the
United Slates, announced Monday through its Plll'ris embassy
1tha~sent the U.S. Embassy a list oll2men missing in action.
It sa1d au were dead.
ikna
'\ ,press. statement accompanying the move expressed
Hanoi s des~re to restart at the earliest possible date the
Middleport, 0.
stalled talks on U.S. aid to war&lt;iamaged Vietnam.
,__ _ _..:__....:__ _

a

h

er.Wfi.. house

This is the sofa sleeper . you've been
searching for with either a regular double
. bed or queen srze mattress included .
Fabrics include prints and solid s in stain
and fade resistant olefins, corduroy
and vinyl.

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDL£PORT, 0.

992-2635

COLUMBUS, OHIO - LQCAL RATIFICATION of the
tentative three-year contract agreement between United
Rubher Workers and the B.F. Goodrich Co. Wed!.esday will
mean an end IG the longest URW strike in the tire Industry's
history. Monday the company became the last of the nation's
Big Four rubber producers to·settle with the union.
Fast said the setUement follo•s the basic economic
pattern for the tire and rubber Industry set up in Washington
last month by the union and Firestone Tire and Rubber Co on
a recommendation from Labor Secretary W. J . Usery. ·The
. new Goodrich pact calls for wage Increases of $1.35 per hour
over the life of the agreement, including 80 centS the first year
30 cents the second year and 25 cents the third year. Goodrich
also agreed to an additional ''wage level-up" of 4.7per cent the
first hour for hourly employes.
NOW YOU KNOW
Paul Revere designed the
first seal of the United.
Colonies, and printed the first
continentalt;ond issue.

No one
(Continued from page

I)

by Robert E. Johnson, 54,
Vermillion on a sharp hill
crest. There was severe
damage to both vehicles.
There were no Injuries and no

LOOKING
FOR ABEITER
OPPORTUNITY?

a.Qd expensive.

t . Auto Insurance
2. Home lnsu rane:t

SUPER VALUES IN SOFA BEDS!

rugged

(Continued from page I)
announced that special meetings of the board will be held at
7:30 each evening this week. The meetings are to consider
.~rsonnel problems, salary iiems, pending or imminent
lillgatlon, transfer of funds and the hiring 'of staff members he
.said.
'
Dowler has suggested that .parents of children attending
schools of the district send lunches with their children during
the. strike period.
· aasse!J of the district got underway lor the new school
year last Tuesday and students attended four days last week,
and then were excused for the Labor Day weekend.

"The Insurance Store"

H,0 M E F U R N I S H I N G S

0

• - . .~---••••••••••-. citations
issued.accident
The lastwere
weekend
occurred at 7:25a.m. Monday
on Letart Twp. Rd. 95, 1.7
miles west of SR 338.
A car driven by Edward E.
Sellers, 19, Rt. 2 Racine went
leflllf center and struck a car
driven by Herschel E. Roush,
63, Rt. 2, Racine, who had
stopped to talk with · a
pedestrian. The Herschel
vehiCle was partly on the
'
roadway. Roush claimed
Injury. The Sellers vehicle
was demolished, while the
Roush vehicle had moderate
damage. There were no
'
etta lions.

Thel.ady .
•
• bigbe
IS
, AUitwfu)

"True Spirit" of Dayton,
presented a fast-moving show
on the field.
. Walter Robb presided as
master of ceremonies and
leading the singing of .the
National Anthem to open the
afternoon. of action was his
daughter, Rita. Youth
leaders and ministers were In
strategic spots during all of
the events assisting in many
ways.
And - to lop It all off there were free refreshments
for all of the young people.

REUTER-BROGAN

PREVENTIDM

IS lHE
BEST POUCY
FOR KEEPING AN ·
ACCIDENT FROM
HAPPENING

Put a little glory
•
1n your rec room.
Every Amcr1 can

Traffic accidents are often
c&amp;u!ed by non .trafflc
problems .
Maybe

sa·mewhere

your

mind

else .

Is

Yo.u 're

daydreaming . · Or perhaps
you're In a hurry, so vou

drive too
chances .

fast

There could
when you ~ re

or

hom~

our Stars and Stripes Candlestick fun ohoM ,. the
conversatton piece th at s t ;:~rts evt?rybody t al krng .
Ask our business offi ce ·today to tell vov hov'v easy
it is 10 put one 1n your own rec room

take

be times

Irritated ·,
uptight . aehlnd the wheel
is no place to let oft steam .
If you 're tired, resting
while driving could lead to

a long rest In e hospital

bed .

Every motorist needs a
good driving attitude.
Make safe, senslple driving
your No . 1 priority.
Our agency provides

ODDS &amp; END

financial protection and

urvlce when accidents
happen .. . but many can be
prevented . That 's why we
sa - J)revent lon Is the best

SHOP

policy .

tfOW OPEN

Gilts
Hand Blown Glass
Imports
Yard Decorations
L~cated i!J mite b 1

Mnldleporl .. ,, L' t ow
Rl r 7
Y 1mlts on

·

DALE C. WARNER
.

shoul d have one A red.

wh1te ar'd 1ruc-blue touch o f the twen tt es It' s

INS.
99'1-2145
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

-

\

•'

�• I

•

I- Tile Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 7. 1171

Surprise party fetes ~So-c...ia-1 Pianist
Roush anniversary Calendar scheduled
The children of Mr. and
Mn. Albert Rouah, BaUey
Run Road, aurprlsed their
parenli Sunday with a 40th
nddinl annlveraary dinner
plrty.
A sliver, pink and white
motU wu carried out In the
table decoraUons. Featured
on the table was a three
llered anniversary cake
ilecorated with 40 multlcolcndroset and topped with
1 mlnlature bride and groom.
lbe cake had been baked by
""'· Garnet Herdlll8n of
Le!ln, W. Va., sister of Mrs.
Rouah. A1IO !lied on the.table
!I'U 1 110ft!' arrangement
· made by Mrs. Gerrl
Kelllnier. It was later sent to
John Sayre of New Haven, a
abut-ln.
Mrs .
Larry (Judy)
Flowers and Mrs. Dale Roush
aerved the cake and punch.
Numerous gifts were
preaented ro the honored
couple;
Attending !Jere Mrs.
S.tbl Jaques, Toledo; Mr.
and Mn. Harold Johnson,
Sr., folr, and Mrs. Steve
Pinons, Kelly and Stacey,
Jimmy and Penny Eubanks,
Grand Rapids, Ohio; Mrs.
Mildred Meade, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Miller and Carl, ,folr. and
Mrs.
Larry
Flol!'ers,

Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Whaley and David,
Roger Roush and Douglas,
Grove clty; Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Mlller, Joe and
Melissa, Mrs. Garnet Herdlll8n, Leon, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Roush , Sherry and
David, St. Albans; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Hudson and Cindy,
Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Hudson, Angie,
Pam, Sammy and Tammy,
Marlon ; Chris Judge, Mid·
dleport ; Gerrl Kessinger,
Lola Ann and Kim, Kenny and
Becky Rouah, Kevin and
Christi Smllh, Mrs. Nellie
Canterbury, Mrs . Dora
Balley and Herman Ter
Keursl, Portland, Mich., and
Leona Jacques, New
Haven, W. Va.
While Mr. and Mrs.
.Roush's anniversary Is not
unUl Oct. 12 the celebra Uon
was held early because Mr
arid Mrs. Bill Hudson (Jean
RlniBh) and Cindy are leaving
today for C&amp;lifornla and from
there will fly to Okinawa
where Sgt. Hudson will be
sta tloned for the next tlu'ee
years.
On Friday evening Mr, and
Mrs. Roush's grandson, Jeff
Matheny called
from
Shepherd Air Force Baae in
Texas.

Marshal/series sold out
~GTON, W. Va. Marahall Artists Series
manapr, James A. Martin
bu amouncecl that !lea80n
memberahlps are sold out for
tbe 1,.,.77 Forum Seriea and
for tile main floor-loge areu
fi tbe Buter Serlea.
"We are delighted to be
doing ao Well, especially since
our Orillnal advance aale for
the Suter Series went so
poorly," marlin noted.SIIIce no uCl!eta are sold to
individual Forum Series
-~~. odtnlyillll is now
limited to CWTellt !lea80n
me!llbers and Manhall
llildenll with acllvlty cards.
Martin noted, however,
t b l t - memberships are
ltlll aYiilable in the balcony
far tbe Suter Series
and a.t tlc:bta for'lnillvtduai
· en~~li 11111 be available In the

balcony, i!aJcony season
memberships are $18 1..adulls and $9 for youth
through the age of 18. Tickets
for Individual Baxter Series
programs will be sold for $6
for adults and f3 for youth.
Forum events, held in Old
Main Auditorium , Include
journalist Hugh Sldey, actor
Jose Ferrer, ventriloquist
Edgar Bergen, the Pickwick
Puppet Theatre, tbe Cologne
Chllmber Orchestra, and five
travel film lectures.
.The
Baxter
Series
programs are held in the
Kellh-Albee Theater and
include pianist Lazar Berman. sjngers Robert Merrill
and Louise Russell, the Royal
W'mnlpe£ Ballet, and the
Leningrad Symphony Orchestra.

Polly's Pointers

By

Pell)'

Vinegar has many
non-cooking uses

Cramer.

POLLY'S PROBLEM

DEAR POLLY- Do you
bnealiltofnon.cooldng
- for v!Depr? Tbere must
be lola ol - for it. I would
appreciate bowing "hat
PDe af tbem are.
My ~~ Peeve lJ 'lritll
JDICheNI who come IG the
~ ID make repaln and
lbea lmarlably have IG go
back IG tile IJIIap for cme 11J1ng
or llllllber. Remember IIIey
an beiDI paid by the hour
and tbe IJIIap never 1ee1011 to
be jult around the corner. L M.
DIWl L M. -llldeed tllere
are ..., lllne~lld- for
rt JV.AE 'IEJfal•lkl
are Ill • 1w ~......, 1
.... Jr.; h II fo1 DIIIIY
tJpel If lile; !I'IIIIIDI
,_
__
wI
••'wa;
•..- .
..,,.....
a
.. I I clllll te be aaed OD
tile ~ left Hell I bem
lill .._Ill ....; ud pat 1D
lllwll 811 , tile ....., to
........... AIM, wfdle
tl · JIT II Wlllll nler ril
.... I
1ft alaiW ltiJu
rn. ew;al U.ve • aboal
......, ......... tlll!ll
......... Da tat flnll8lllw II llleell tile Nler. 'l1le

.......... IIIIer

,_Mildred

.... - - .... viaepr.
-POlLY.
.

DEAR POLLY - InnJlllllive pilln vinegar can be
efflcllve ID aolvinll many

"•Jdir

problema 1n 111e
lllat. I ..ve uaed it and
fGIIIId lt ftrJ good l&lt;l' the
follcNIDI tlliDp. Soak gar·

Dall

11mD1 1 per~lraUon
.
'

'

GUARANTEED
INCOME
.. .... Y" tr.. A, WI &amp;'Y
IMf llet' ntoill INIII nt

tla,, we cever food,
~·trten
cart,
~a·-J•

•••'"'
-.o:•f."..............

..,

....... -;.ltetm. .......
....
' " lit
ftr.itllel

o

I CIIIIEHI I d.
A-a,OH

I

lo·.

YHr NIVY

'"'.,._....

odor in warm vtnegar.
Lightly rub discoloration left
by a slight scorching with
vinegar. A teaspoon of
vinelar In oil !lied lor frying
prevents the food from absorbing so much oU. Rub
v~ne~ar on the banda to
remove onion or fish odors as
weD as fruit stains. When you
buy a new fry pan, b&lt;il a little
vinelar In it prl..- to uae and
lhla 11111 prevent sticking: MILDRED.

DEAR POLLY - I am an
avid reader of the column and
alao a registered nune : I
want to disagree with lhe
reader who suggested usiilg a
clean, "roll-oo" cleod..-ant
bottle for applying lotion ro a
skin rash, etc. Please do not
do IIU. The baD rolla across
the infected area and carries
bacteria back lniD the
medica lion
lbus conlaminating it. Instead, I
BUggest usiilg a pullliKype
hair spray or deodorant
bottle properly labeled. A
strip of ~ve tape put on
the bottle could have the
name of the lotion and the
dlrections written on it. Thla
!l'ould be much aaler. SHARON.
DEAR POLLY- I uae TV
dinners from time to time and
lind II a terrible wute of
energy to heat the oven just
r..-.that. So, I ael my electric
fry pan to the desired ternperalllre, remove the TV
dinner from ita boa:, place in
the pan and put the cover on.
In a very few minutes It is
bubbtlng hot and cooks much
quicker than when In the

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

I

Yard sak slated
The Middleport Firemen'•
Allldllary lrill have a yard
sale Friday from 8 a.m. to f
p.m. at the llrehou.e.
~oceeds frOIJI'tbe Hle wiD
be !lied to JUrchaae IIOIIIe
ne" equipment for the flnt
aid truck. A. goal of ~ baa
been aet for the sale to be held
Inside the engine room.
. Contributions are needed
and realdenll with anything
to contribute - and the
emphasii lrill be on things
other than clothing, although
some clothing will be for aalil
- may call Mrs. Larry
Baker, . Mrs. · Tom Darst,
Mrs. Bob Byer or Mrs .
Kenneth Imboden to arrange

ADlflereat Kflld orJJaa.()a
Young American pianist Rap:
ThOIJla!l Schumacher is one of
IS, a girl, and I snore I Thla 1.1 so embarnulng that I
TUESDAY
lhree concerts scheduled for won I'm
't
sleep
over at any of·'W' girl friends' hOUJet. 'Ibey laugh
XI G~A MU Chapter, the 1978-77 Tri-County
at
me.
.
Beta Sigma Phl Sorority, Communlty Concer t
The
last
time
I
stayed
overnight
at my belt friend's, I ·
Tuesday night progre~lie association aeason.
lll8~e her late for work. I feel Ulte I can't lace her or her family
dinner· The appellzer will be
Schumacher an artist who &amp;gam.
served at Carol Adams, the consistently ~ins acclaim
Please help me stoP sriorlng, - PROBLEMS
~In course and salad at b(Jth In recitals and u aoloist
en Stanley's home, and with lll8jor orchestras will
the dessert and meeting at be In Galllpolls Frlday,'Aprll Dear P.:
a&amp;ve youcon$111ted a doctor? Perhaps you have a'nOse or
the home of Mrs. Annie 22, 8 p.m. at the Gallia
~~ condition that needs treabnent. Enlarged adenoids,
Chapman. Unda Riffle and Acade!lly High School SUIUS trouble, even bay fever can e&amp;Ulle snoring.
Phyllis Bennett to give the auditorlwn. This will be the
If ~e finds no physical cause, he'D recommend that you
cultural report entitled Inaugural concern for the sleep on your stomach, and avoid rolling over on your back.
"Introductions."
seven loot lltelnway grand · (And don't say, "I have no control over bow my body turns
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, plano recently purch8.!1ed by when I'm asleep." You can train youraelf to favor certain
Daughters of America , Bp.m. the asaoclallon.
positions lf you concentrate on it.) - Helen
Tuesday at the haD. AU
Hehasbeenthereclplentof
+++
.
members urged to attend and some of the most important
NOTE FROM SUE: About ''lacing your friend and her
wear whi_te. InspecUon will be prizes In music. They Include famlly ," I lmo• how embarr8S8ed you feel, and how the
BACK IN AKRON
held.
the BUIOnl Competition ub kid~ buns, but really -snoring is such a small flaw. They
Mrs. Nina Bland, here lor
MEIGSFAIRBoard,Bp.m. Boluno, Italy; the Harold don t hold 11 against you, any more than you'd blame your girl several weeks visiting her
Tuesday at fair board office Bauer Award· the Morris friend for, say, biting her nails.
· sister, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
on Rock Springs grounds.
Loeb. Memorl~l Prlte, the
Discuss ~ur problem with them and maybe they'D ~e returned to AkrOn Sunday.
REGULAR MEETING , Frank Damroscll Scholarship upwl hasoluuonwecoulduselnthecolumn.
Mr. and Mrs. Clai'ence Ar·
Middleport Masonic Lodge and the J .U.G .G. Award
+++
cher of Akron drove down for
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 . p.m. which led to his New York Dear Helen and Sue :
her.
Tuesday at temple ; all Town HaD recital debut.
This is directed ID the girl with lll8DY friends who are boys
Master Masons invited.
In October of 1972 he but no real boyfriends In high scllool.
SPECIAL MEETJ['jG , traveled to Manhattari lor a
Patience, girl !
My son, when he was in college, was astounded to learn
Band recltalln Alice Tully ilall of
Southern Local
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday the new Uncoln Center for that by far the majority of young men he met had not dated in
in band room for completion the Performing Arts. Of a high school - which accounts for the seemingly
of plans for faD activities. diffic.ult
and
unusual "unpopularity" of teenage girls. The fellows preferred
Parents and interested program, Winthrop Sargeant friendships to relationships; or the fear of being turned do'llll
persons invited .
told his New Yorker stopped them.
My son kept hlrnseU In spending money by amnglng dates
POMEROY ClW'TEK 186 magazine readers: "He is a
Order of the Eutern star' performer of sensitive style and double dates for young college men who were afraid of
·
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at ~ and a special kind of in• rejection. He has many m81Tiages to his crei:ut.
.
The
highly
popular
"prom
queen"
o(ten
bums
out
In
adult
Pomeroy Masonic Temple lellectual insight. Mr..
WEDNESDAy
. ~umacher is a musiCil life. Nothlng_can ever quite top her high school triumphs. How
MIDDLEPORT
mtelligence ro be watched, sad? LikewiSe the tren "stud" often remains somewhat
.AMATEUR Gardeners, 8 and his technical accomplish- adoleljCellt .au his life. - T.F .L .
p.m. Wednesday, home of ments . are those . of a
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring lhoro~~hly equipped Dear Rap:
I'll tell you why lots of girls don't gel invited to high school
Ave., Pomeroy. Installallon p!llrust.
of officers
Today, when not touring, -he proms : tlley're too.expensive! By the time a guy rents a tui
POMEROY
MID- · is on the music faculty of the pays. for tickets and cocsage, dinner for two, after-dan~
.
DLEPORT Lions Club University of Maryland. His goodies, e.tc. he's blown fifty clams.
How ~y are with me when I say: "Forget formal p-oms
WedJiesday noon at the Mfi8~ promnity IAl the capital has
Inn.
made him a great favorite and stay With weekly dances or parties in the gym, where
POMEROY CHAPTER 89 with Washington music everyone can go stag." - SENIOR PROM DROPOUT
Royal Arch Masons, ?:lO Ioven. In August, 1971,
p.m. Wednesday at the n:arkmg the l_OOth an- Dear SPD:
I, for one, am with you, but of course my vote doesn't
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, IJ!versa_ry of the blrtb of the
count:
I'm a parent. -HELEN
followed by Bosworth Council R u s Sl a n c o m p o s e r ,
+++
46, Royal and Select Masla's Ale:under Scriabin, Mr.
at 8:30 p.m. AU companions ~umacher and three ar- DearS.:
I don't agree. Let's leave Junior or Senior proms for those
urged to attend.
·
tisticcoUeaguesperformed in
- -- .
two concerts all 10 of the who en)Oy the:'". Many ~oung people don't these days, just as
SENIOR ~ZEN Golden composer's monumental many aren 'I mlel'ested m football or basketball games. But ·
Age Oub p1auc Wednesday sonatas. The Washington m~ we knock down EVERY tradition just beCause lt isn't
at PorUand Park. Take o'!"' Post reported : "Thomas uruversally accepted? .
table sei'Vlce, everyone m- Scllumacher's ninth sonata
Conunents, everyone 1 - SUE
vlted.
was ·highly illuminating. His
WlDTE !WoSE Lodg•, 1:30 playing of the fourth sonata
Wednesday at the American was probably the outstanding Tbe Alm•nat
STILL CHECKING
Legion Ha!l in Middleport. . realization of tbe entire
COLUMBUS (UPI)
,
WAS '12.99
TIIURSDAY ·
aeries. He Is a stunning ar· United PreulDtematioaal
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 7, RobertShaw Controls Co.,
MEIGS COUNTY Humane list.''
uniCil and state and federal
Society, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
The Tri.COunty Olnmunity !he 25151 day ol 1976 with 115 health olflcials met at the
at the Thrift Shop across Concert Association is fD follow.
suburban Grove City plant
from the Pomeroy Post 01_ currently conducting its
The moon is approaching again
today, trying fD cocoe ·
fice.
membership drive. Mem- its full stage.
up with a reason why almOIII
The morning stars are 100 emplo,es have taken sick
POMEROY
YOU'I1i bershlp is $30, Family; $10,
adults and $5, students. For Jupiter and Saturn.
at the facility in the last two
League (baaeball) will more lnformaUon, t:ontacl
The evening · star is
weeks.
have a !fOrk party · on the
their ne!l' diamonds at
Uaociation headquarters Mercury.
aI the Gallipolis Olamber of
Those born on UUs date are
Meigs _H!gb School, Thurs- Comlnerce office, 16 State St. under the sign of VIrgo.
day, 5:30p.m. unw dart. AU
American novelist James
inla'ested pei'IIOIIS aaked ID
Fenimore Cooper was born
attend.
' Sept. 7, 1789.
On this day ·in history:
. FRIDAY
VISITS LINDs
In 1813, the nickname ·
MARY SHRINE, Order of
Mrs. Alma Thompson of ''Uncle Sam"waa coined by a
tbe White Shrine of Columbus spenl the weekend
Jerusalem, Friday, a p.m. at in Pomeroy visiting Mr. and writer for the Troy, N.Y.,
Post as a symbolic refereoce
the Pomeroy Masonic Mrs. Reino Und . .
ro the United States.
Temple.
.
In 1940, the Nazis began the
HAPPY HARVESTERS
London
air blitz that Hitler
Class, Trinity Church, 7:30
expected
to 110ften Britain lor
Friday night at the church. them ro that meeting,
an
invasion
that never .
Hos\esse!l will be Mrs. Eva
Refreshments were aerved materialized.
Desaauer and Mrs. Lillie ~ Alice Freeman, Catherine
In l!Mi:i, Hurricane Betsy
Hauck.
Biron, Harris.
Pbyllia H""Hilda
------:-, and swept iniAl Florida. II left
behind 75 dead.

Death toll
prediction
shattered

pickup.

Articles IIIIJ be 11ft at 8!e
flrebouH any tlmt Wecl·
netday
or' ·· 'l'bunday.
Alllltance ri! be needed to
mll'k tile fllml aad tile
prtllldlnt ub tbt audlary

can

memben
her about a
time 1rhen !bey can 'IIU't.

Wedneaday and Thurada;y
aflernoonl and eventnca wiD
be waecl for anarklnl tile
ltema.
.
Furniture, novelty lllml,
some cloiiJlng and oddl and
ends ril be for aale.

ABOVE ,\RE a few of the young people who took part
.with enthuslallll In a watermelon eating contest at
Sunday's "Almost Anything Goes for O!rlst" activiUes.lt
was messy, but fun, according to the contestants who
were not permitted to use their hands.
·

TO RETURN HERB

Mrs. Ji'atrlck Lochary,
High St., Pomeroy, IC·
comPIInied Mrs. Elillbeth
Chase to Dayton Monday.
Mrs. Olase,in Pm!eroy with
her sister, Miss Helen
Lochary, for the put-~~
weeks, will be retumln8 here.

IT WAS'ROUGH GOING In the "person relay" contest
' Middleport Firat Baptist group which won rop honors of
the day.

:t;hurch youth groups
~enjoyed day of games
'•

Sunday in Middleport
•• A

~keoff on ihe unique
1elevlslon show, "Almost
Anything Goes" was used as
!he th,eme for .8 young
,peoples program at the
Meigs ~unior High School
field In Middleport Sunday

-' ..
,.•

EXTEIIOR
lATEX HOUSE PAtNl

~

•

NOW

'9"

with youth groups from 13
churches laking part. .
Just as the television show
featured some unusual
stunts, so did the local event.
There was an obstacle race, a
beach ball relay (the baD was
carried for 100 yards between
the legs of each particlpimt),
a(! w:termelon eating event
New for today .•.
oo • ~a. with no hands
allowed yet), a pole climb, a
four person sack race, an egg
in the spoon relay race and a
person relay (the person was
moved roughly along by a
learn of four others lilting
them over a 50 yard path).
A tricycle race · was
scheduled
but
didn't
materialize, apparently due
. to the breakdown of .a vehicle
tnc.s• ll or two.
.
· Youth groups were given
ataiS. fl points lor the places they won
in the various events and
· th
tl)ere were
"finals" following
cases, "e&gt;:i.bl••l
...
cha1~s. They ·
e prelim
· !nary. competition.

BULOVA
BICENTENNIAL

antique .
They ' re
very new,

oday 's

timely

accessory
for ·vested
fuhlons.

U.d---"

Tomorrow
's treasured

he irloom .

one

piece of the energy puzzle.

Card party
plans made

Plana for the Sept. 23 card
p1rty were made durinll a
meeting of tile Sacred Heart
Guild 'lbUI'IIday nlt!ht al the
Catholic Church.
Work
1esslons
In
preparation for lhe card
p1rty were sel for 1p.m. and
7 p.m. on Sept. 22. Each
member lJ to take cookie8 or
·sandwiches or two unwapped prizes. 1be baU 11'111
be decorated In the !aU moUI.
Mrs. Ann .Biacinl'ood is ro
make the IaWes. Tbereisa$2
donstion for a Uctet. Cleanup
will lake place the following
morning at 9 a.m.
Mrs. Susan Blaker presided
at the meeting which opened
with prayer by the Rev. Fr.
Welton and the flag aalute.
.Mrs. Barbara Mullen was
acting secretary.
The nallvlty deanery
meeting wu announced for
oven.
Sept. 12 at Tuppera Pialns. A.
Tbanka for the Pointer on ..sement sale was planned
renewing old typewriter for Oct. 4 at 8 a.m. ro 3 p.m.
rlbbona. Mine wu almost and preparations wlll be
llleglbleandyoucanleefrtm made for the aale on Oct. 1.
myletterthatltlaliO!I'almost Alao announced ,.,., a
like new. - MRS. C. M.
pilgrimage to Loretta, Pa. on
PoOy wiD lend y11 eae of Sept. 19. Several members
ber "peaeby" tbnk·you are plamlng to attend.
carda, Ideal lor fnmllll or , Also discussed was a
pladnl ID ;raur family ~~enp- . candle sale, aa well as the
belli, If llle- Jlltlr faverfte amual buaar to be held In
,...., Peeve or Problem ill November. Craflltema are ro
ller col w
Write PoUy'a be made at the October
PaiMen ID eare of IIIII aew1- meeJinC and members with
Jllper.
crafta to make are to take
I

·GOESSLER
Jewelry Store

nRES &amp; lAmilES

St.

AT
DISCOUNT PRICES
SI'ICIAI.

UFEIIME GUARAmE MUfflER

t500

OFF ALL OF

SIPTIM- No LAIOI
TUNI.UP SPICIAL

v...
6 CYLINDD
4 CYLINDER

.,..00
'28.9t
•19.95

Includes ,_, Paints, Condlllae, Liller.
RESISIOI PLUGS.

SUO EXTRA

When It all boiled down the
young people of the Middleport First Bapllst Church
won first place; aecond went
to the Racine Methodist
Church and the Eden United
Brethren Church was third.
Ba~ers were presented the
winning teams.
Adding llle to the program,
enlltled "Almost Anything
Goes lor Christ," were the
banda of Southern and Meigs
High Schools and following
the events, on excellent vocal
and Instrumental group,

of the "Almost Anyt!llng Goes for Christ.'' This is the

'

GAL

Holur Medical Ceoier
IBlrlba, Sept. 5)
Mr.
and
Mrs. Curtis Rouah,
son, West Columbia, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beckner,
son, Henderson, W. Va ; Mr.
and Mrs. James Souders,
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hill, son,
United Pre10 lnlemaUonal
Gallipolis.
The Labor Day · weekend
(Blrtbs, Sept. 6)
traffic death toll exceeded
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Johnsafety experts' worst ex- son, daughter, Jackson.
pectations as throngs of
holiday motorists headed
TALKS BEGIN
home from their last swnmer
SEOUL, Sout~ Korea
fling.
(UPI) - The U. N. Command
The Na tiona! Safety and North Korea today began
CouncU, In Its preholiday talks on Implementing an
projections, had estlmated agreement lor nell' security
that 360 to 480 persons could arrangements at the Pan·
die In traffic mishaps during munjom truce villsge where
the 7&amp;-hour weekend, which Communist guards k,illed two
began at 6 p.m. local lime American officers last
Friday and ended at midnight month.
Monday night. ·
A Unl ted Press In• of Columbia. The boost In
ternaUonal count showed at traffic deaths was attributed
least 414 persons bad been ro increased wiving.
kUled in traffic accidents.
The figure was expected to
Increase with late reports.
A breakdown of accidental
deaths :
Traffic
484
Drownings
38
Planes
17
Total
537
Texas reported 44 deaths,
California 43, Ohio 25, IDinois
and New York 23 each,
Michigan 22, and Penn·
sylvania 19.
Traflic-falalily - free
holiday weekends were
reported in Alaska, Vermont,
North Dakota and the District

Two mishaps
in Middleport
over weekend
Middleport police reported
two accidents over the
weekend.
At 10:10 p.m. Friday, a car
driven by Bonnie Proctor, 41,
Middleport, traveling south
on South Third Ave., struck
the rear ul a parked vehicle
owned by Dale E. Walburn,
Middleport. There were
extensive damages to the
vehicles and the driver of the
Proctor car will be charged.
At 11 :30 a.m. Saturday on
Mills St., a pickup truck
driven by Harold W. Fetty,
47, Route I, Langsvllle,
struck the rear of a car
driven by Hubert H. Stewart,
42, Middleport, who was
attempting a turn onto
Seventh St. from Mills St.
Damages were heavy and
Sally Lambert, 22, a
passenger In the Stewart
vehicle was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency
Squad along with two
children who were checked
for possible Injuries. Felty
also has been clted to court.

Me~gs Lo ca}-.

.

You.r Taxes
Su.pport One!

Her name. is El P.ISo Columbia, and s~e·s one of a new
breed
tankers designed to carry na turd., gas
1· f ofd ocean-going
,
ique ~e at -U,O F. She's a very sophisticated lady.
··
Shes as big as an aircraft carrier and can carry enou h
natural gas m one trip lo supply fourteen thousand h g
fo~ a full yedr.
omes
~ut .she's expensive. In fact, ~he's the .costliest co~rticrclal
sh l~ e.ver launched. Over one hundred million d II , i' A d , .
shes lUSt ·one of ";".'' such tankers being built toob~~- vi~~ I
~;;~rdl gas to Amenca from overseas. Deliveries Stdrt fn ldtl' ,

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE/
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Solving the natural gas shortage is a big job (; f .
overse~s will help. It W(m't b~ cheap but it'll ~ /l:t ~:'- .
expensive than doing without.
~

'

FAU. REGISTRATION SEPT. 13, -1976

ALLEN HAlL~ 9:00 A.M. • 9:00 P.M.

I
"

I . Jew•lry 1nd Other

Valutbltl
t . luslnus Ptckltt
Policies
10. Lltblllry lnsur•nCt "
1'1 . Fum lnsunnce

l Mobile Homes
•· Heann tnsur~nce

s. Lite

lnilur•nce

4. &amp;o•t Insurance
1. MqtorcycJu ·

"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
PACKA~E POLICY -

Put your auto, h()fl1e, health

and life msuran ce into ONE policy. Save money and
have one premi um .due date for all your insurance.

.

Se rv1ce

Some Of Our Olher Services :
Copy Servlc&amp;-Nolary Servlc,_C.r Leasl~

....

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
"The Insurance .Stone"

214 E. MAIN

PH. 992-5130

I

nm

SOFA BY DAY!

••~v-the U/~
· iFn

1~1

by

I1

News •• in Briefs

SLEEPER BY NIGHT!

(Continued from page I)
required to maintain. ,
. State l~w mandates that deputy registrars are to make
daily depoSits of motor vehicle license plate sales.
IN ANOTHER GESTURE DESIGNED TO IMPROVE
r.elations with ~e United States, Hanoi has given Washington
list of 12 Amencan fliers it says were killed during the Vietnam
War. Washmgton welcomed the Information but said the
United States ~d no Intention of normalizing relations with
the newly reumted country before Hanoi had accounted for all
the 795 missing U.S. servtcenien in Southeast Asia.
Another 1,710 were killed but their bodies have not been
returned, according ro the Pentagon. Vietnam, which bas been
showing increasing willingness to patch relations with the
United Slates, announced Monday through its Plll'ris embassy
1tha~sent the U.S. Embassy a list oll2men missing in action.
It sa1d au were dead.
ikna
'\ ,press. statement accompanying the move expressed
Hanoi s des~re to restart at the earliest possible date the
Middleport, 0.
stalled talks on U.S. aid to war&lt;iamaged Vietnam.
,__ _ _..:__....:__ _

a

h

er.Wfi.. house

This is the sofa sleeper . you've been
searching for with either a regular double
. bed or queen srze mattress included .
Fabrics include prints and solid s in stain
and fade resistant olefins, corduroy
and vinyl.

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDL£PORT, 0.

992-2635

COLUMBUS, OHIO - LQCAL RATIFICATION of the
tentative three-year contract agreement between United
Rubher Workers and the B.F. Goodrich Co. Wed!.esday will
mean an end IG the longest URW strike in the tire Industry's
history. Monday the company became the last of the nation's
Big Four rubber producers to·settle with the union.
Fast said the setUement follo•s the basic economic
pattern for the tire and rubber Industry set up in Washington
last month by the union and Firestone Tire and Rubber Co on
a recommendation from Labor Secretary W. J . Usery. ·The
. new Goodrich pact calls for wage Increases of $1.35 per hour
over the life of the agreement, including 80 centS the first year
30 cents the second year and 25 cents the third year. Goodrich
also agreed to an additional ''wage level-up" of 4.7per cent the
first hour for hourly employes.
NOW YOU KNOW
Paul Revere designed the
first seal of the United.
Colonies, and printed the first
continentalt;ond issue.

No one
(Continued from page

I)

by Robert E. Johnson, 54,
Vermillion on a sharp hill
crest. There was severe
damage to both vehicles.
There were no Injuries and no

LOOKING
FOR ABEITER
OPPORTUNITY?

a.Qd expensive.

t . Auto Insurance
2. Home lnsu rane:t

SUPER VALUES IN SOFA BEDS!

rugged

(Continued from page I)
announced that special meetings of the board will be held at
7:30 each evening this week. The meetings are to consider
.~rsonnel problems, salary iiems, pending or imminent
lillgatlon, transfer of funds and the hiring 'of staff members he
.said.
'
Dowler has suggested that .parents of children attending
schools of the district send lunches with their children during
the. strike period.
· aasse!J of the district got underway lor the new school
year last Tuesday and students attended four days last week,
and then were excused for the Labor Day weekend.

"The Insurance Store"

H,0 M E F U R N I S H I N G S

0

• - . .~---••••••••••-. citations
issued.accident
The lastwere
weekend
occurred at 7:25a.m. Monday
on Letart Twp. Rd. 95, 1.7
miles west of SR 338.
A car driven by Edward E.
Sellers, 19, Rt. 2 Racine went
leflllf center and struck a car
driven by Herschel E. Roush,
63, Rt. 2, Racine, who had
stopped to talk with · a
pedestrian. The Herschel
vehiCle was partly on the
'
roadway. Roush claimed
Injury. The Sellers vehicle
was demolished, while the
Roush vehicle had moderate
damage. There were no
'
etta lions.

Thel.ady .
•
• bigbe
IS
, AUitwfu)

"True Spirit" of Dayton,
presented a fast-moving show
on the field.
. Walter Robb presided as
master of ceremonies and
leading the singing of .the
National Anthem to open the
afternoon. of action was his
daughter, Rita. Youth
leaders and ministers were In
strategic spots during all of
the events assisting in many
ways.
And - to lop It all off there were free refreshments
for all of the young people.

REUTER-BROGAN

PREVENTIDM

IS lHE
BEST POUCY
FOR KEEPING AN ·
ACCIDENT FROM
HAPPENING

Put a little glory
•
1n your rec room.
Every Amcr1 can

Traffic accidents are often
c&amp;u!ed by non .trafflc
problems .
Maybe

sa·mewhere

your

mind

else .

Is

Yo.u 're

daydreaming . · Or perhaps
you're In a hurry, so vou

drive too
chances .

fast

There could
when you ~ re

or

hom~

our Stars and Stripes Candlestick fun ohoM ,. the
conversatton piece th at s t ;:~rts evt?rybody t al krng .
Ask our business offi ce ·today to tell vov hov'v easy
it is 10 put one 1n your own rec room

take

be times

Irritated ·,
uptight . aehlnd the wheel
is no place to let oft steam .
If you 're tired, resting
while driving could lead to

a long rest In e hospital

bed .

Every motorist needs a
good driving attitude.
Make safe, senslple driving
your No . 1 priority.
Our agency provides

ODDS &amp; END

financial protection and

urvlce when accidents
happen .. . but many can be
prevented . That 's why we
sa - J)revent lon Is the best

SHOP

policy .

tfOW OPEN

Gilts
Hand Blown Glass
Imports
Yard Decorations
L~cated i!J mite b 1

Mnldleporl .. ,, L' t ow
Rl r 7
Y 1mlts on

·

DALE C. WARNER
.

shoul d have one A red.

wh1te ar'd 1ruc-blue touch o f the twen tt es It' s

INS.
99'1-2145
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

-

\

•'

�1.- 'nle Dilly Sellllnel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., 'l'lllldly, Sept. 7, IWTI
I.IGAL NOTICE

Cllfforo Jtcobs , Otlo Lohn,

Em11t Powell, Robert &amp;erton /

s
P .M .
Dar
l!letore
Publ lclt lon .
Canc:tll•tlons,
correc tions accepted fi rs t de y o f
pvbllcet Jon .

GM'ttO Pullins ond Ka thy
Pullins, 11 trustees Of the
Uurtt Cliff Fru Meth Od ist

Church , Inc. have f il ed their
Pttltlon In the Common Pleas

Court

olltQing

following

tha t

described

REGULATIONS

t he

The Publisher rtStrv es
the ri ght to td lt or re je ct
anv ads deemed ob ·
te cflo ne l. Th e publ ish e r
w ill not be respons ible for
m or t tha n one ln cor r ec t
lnnrtlon .

real

"'"' Ia no lonoer needed for
church purposu end rtquest
author ity to transf er sa id real
wtate, Wh lctt . reel estat e Is

Otscr lbed • • fol lows, to -wit :
Situated
In
Se ll sbur y
Townsh i p ,

Me i gs

Count y,

EAR CORN.

Inser t ion .
M inim um Charge 11.00.
lA cents per word t hre e
consecutive Insertions .
26 ctn ll per word t h(
consec ut ive Insert ions.
25 Per Cent Discount on
pa id ecu •nd ad s pa id
w fth ln 10 da-;s .

fOllOWs:

Commencing at the nor fh.

lilt corner of Fra ction 30 ;

then(e nor.ftl 87 deg . 00 m in.

w101 367.36 reot to a po int;

thence south' deg . 49 m i n. 16
aec . eut 682..U feet to a point ;
sec. wHf 132 fee t t o a point ;
tt\ence south 4 deg . 49 m in . 16
sec . east (passi ng a c oncrete -'
monument at 165 fH tl for 1
total distan c e of 189 fe et to a

12 .00

~mln l m_!,lm .

for

SO

992-2181

D•d Records :

Said petlflon will be for:
Maring on the 21st dav of
September, 1976, at the
Common Pleas Courtroom at

Pomeroy , Ohio.
Clifford JacobS

Otto Lohn
Ernest Flowe! I
Robert Barton

Gerald Pullins

Kathy Pull ins
Trustees Laurel Cliff Free
Metho ldst Church , Inc .

Ill 2,, 31 ; (91 7, 14

Sloc:k , Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. Coli

(3().0)675·5267.

day:

Sl&amp;mund Freud, Austrian

founder of psychoanalysis,
lllld, "Being entirely hmest
with

Is

oneself

good

awciae."

LOST : Female Bluetk:k t\ound, no
name plate, in Red Brush orea .
Coll985·3338, Che~ter , Oh io, E.

L. Rlebal.
· ~OST : Small mole dog , reddish

. JiO•

.Grapt-1
Bemict 8 - Oaol
for WICll 11 ftJ, hpL 1, 1171
AIIIEI (Miwclt 21-Aprll 11)

ton color, Dochshund·Terrier
wearing red Collar when disap·
peened. Phone 992-3928.
lOST in t'-,,. For•01t Run a•a , one
Hertford c:ow , 600 lbs. wearing
.yellow ear tag. If seen , please

call992·7692o•992
. ·3944.

You have the faculty today for

creating problems that cOuld
easily be avoided . Be very
careful. The toes vou trod upon

ADDRESSERS wanted IMMEDIATE LVI Work at h'o me, no ••·
perience necessary - _ exceUent pay. Write Amerkan
Service, 6950 Woyzoto Blvd.,

TAUIIUI (Aprii20-Mar 20) in

S..ilo 132, M;nn.apolls , MN

dee/ing with your -peers today,
don't tru t be 1h0 b'
,
.. , o
tg cheese.
Your usociates will respond

~=::'c=:cc--::-:--:-:----

may be your own.

ss.t26.

DEMONSTRATORS
AND
MANAGER needed to work
- t o consultation.
w;th ""'cld.st Toy &amp; Gift shop
QEIIIIII ("'- 21-.lune 20) 11
Party Plan In tho CCI&lt;Int~,
_,
Hi""".,
· have the authority over
"'~--t
.... t commissions
• No
fn•-Call
·
1
....,._,
othetti. use it wisely today.
.,.........,., ·
or wr te t....._, ,
Abuse of pawer will make
SANTA'• Parties, Avon 1 Conn.
enemleo whO ere not likely Ia
06001 . Phone I (203) 673·3455.
forget your tranoQressions.
AlSO lOOKING PARTIES.
CA
AVERAGE $10 on O'ltnlng or
IICIII · (olunl 21-.luiJ 22)
ofto•noons domonotrollng
UnPOpular causes may be your ·. g'uoranteed toys and gifts. No
lot to champion today. That's
Cosh lnvtilment, no delivery or
your prerogative. Just don't try
collecting. Com/i
- ten do you
to force !hem on olher people.
poporwarl&lt;. Co 1 9~9·2800 c•
LIO (.lutr U-Aug. 22) Your
992-2977. Aisoboaklngportjoo .
flnanclll tlilultlcn Is extremely AVERAGE $10 on avaning or
Cfltical today. Be. sure that in
aft•rnoon1 demonstrating
joint ventures everyone Is
guorontud toys and gifts. No
carrying hia lhare of the' load
cosh investment, no delivery or
or VOU won't make out.
collecting. Computers do your
, poporworl&lt;. Call 949·2800 or
YIIIQO IAUI. 23-Sopl. 22)
992·2977.Aioobookingportlos.
While you may toel domineer- ,
lng today, that 's no indication SOMEONE to do yard work .
lhll you're •lght. friends could
Phono 992-2677.
·
81tf1M you're trying to impose

COINS , 1929 and older currency.

gold and silver sc rap . Will buy
or trde. Ha... e o good sele&lt;;tion
of coins· to st11 or trade . Al$0
have ·suppl ies and m8ta i
detecors . Roger Wamsley on
leading Creek and Rutlo.,d
Rood . Phone 742·2331 for on of.
fer .

fo•

junked

outcs.

Phone 742·2081 . Frye's Truck &amp;
Auto Parh, Rutland .
WANTED: Gosoline driven ce ment mixer, Iorge one prefer -

red , I yard or I ~ yard . Call
after 6 p .m. 843 · ~.

IF YOU hove a service to ·o ffe r,

want to buy or sell something ,
oe loofting for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

)lOur wfll on them.
LlaiiA (lepl. n-Oel. 23 )

SOMEONE to cl.an cars, espedol·
ly Go bocly ond point job. Call
7C2-3154 o• soo Harold Hyooll In

mort dlgrnalon will make 11

Sta,.lng poy $361.20 single:

Nrd for you to catch up.

$,.77 .30 ,

0

ICOIII'IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Whllt you may be able. to get
things done .by coerc ing
Critndl, It _,., be worth It In
the end. Your methods could
brtleG tong-ltlndlng gru~ges .

married;

Army
(61~)

WILL DO odd jobs. roofing, pointing, hauling, tru work , and
IAGITTAIItUI (N1111. 2:1-0ec.
mowing. P~one992·7A09.
21) Normally you'(e not enVious. but today you could gel
NOTICE OF
green tyt1 If someone outAPPOINTMENT
· y 'd b e WISe
·
Cllt No. 21f11
• hi nea you. ou
not l!ototo of Eaworo
J. Griffith
to let It show.
,4 DtC.IItd.
'
11
CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 2•- •en.
Notice
hereby Ulven !hot
• •
Chorles E. Griffith, R.D .,
111 You know that certain Pomeroy, Ohio, and Gary
lopfca can lgltote an acqualn- Griffith, Long Bottom, Ohio,
tance. Avoid them today. You have b&amp;en duty 'fpolnted co .
1re better off to let sleeping Administrators o the Estate
of Edwara J. Griffith
dog• He.
deceesed, late of Melg~
F
County, Ohio,
AQU ••tul ('
·
~
•""· 20" ob. It)
Creditors ore required to
A v.ry tricky day where your file thtlr clolms with uld
PII'IQnlf rlnantea or business fiduciary Within four months
notcllngo ore concerned. You'd
Dattd lhla 27th iloy oi
be .. ry amort to postpone August , 1976.
oectlions In theoe areaa ,
Manning D. Webster
fiiiCU (M. 20-March 201 (II 30, (9) 7, 13
Judge
One-to-one relationships could
.be dlfflcuH lor you loday. Let
~.::;:~LINT
compenfont have their · way
84 Lu~~tber 1 1 Mene;tr
K flley come on a linle
Trelnee · Progr•m offers
ocrong, buC don 't demean
rep 1d advenctmtnt- ovtr
150 i'niRICitrl •nd CO ·
youl1tll.
manegtra developed from

ri:\Your

fills prOQrom. Flrol lull
calender year tarnlnos

IXCHO 110,000 PIUS btnollts
1nd 1 m•n•gtr's timings
cin txCOIG 120,000 Ptr

~Birthday
..,.. .. 1171 '
Thll , _ Hwould be wf..,. to
r-'Y upon yourlllf then upon
Olhert, Tlltrl'l IIOihlng . you
Clll'l ICCOfftpnoh If yo(j put
,our mind to It

rear.

Wt

havt

stores

lllroughout 27 atotos end

open • new. store every 30

ciiJI. Join 1 compony on
..._,rewl
ltMRoaumilo:
Don Wilton
.
Ill Shorwooo
. Wtf1111111111wn, w. va. 26111

(614) 698·3290, Ruth Reeves .
AKC Reglster.d English Springer
Sponlel pups, $85. Phone 992-

7897 .
7 Week old puppies, one-half

Sholtie. Roglitored . $15. Phone
949-2~66 .

&amp;eAGLE rabbit dog, 9 weeks to 6
y.ar1 old . Some started and
$OIM well trained. Phone Virgil

Yal'b'Dugh, 7A2·2521.
TO GIVE awoy lo good homes , 2
f.mole pups. 10 weeks old .
Beo9le and Manchester crossed, good hunters. Phone 742-

23()1.

-

after 4 p .m.

Mond1y

---

1952 GEN ERAL 8k30, 1 bedroom.
Phone 985-3350.

191 1 Merc ury Mon tego , p .s,, p.b.•
a ir, "ery nice . $1~5 , Phone
Glen Bissell. 949&lt;1801 or 9•9·

2860.
1971 Ford Mave rick, p .s., p. b.,
a ir , lots of chrome , ri'O! sharp,
low mil eage , $1395. Phone
POSTS. round or split .
Gle n Binell 949-280l or 9-49Phone 949·2774.

COAl. li mestone, a nd r:o.lci um
chloride arid calcium brine for
du st con trol ond sped ol miking
sa lt fo r formers . Ma in StrEtet ,
Pomeroy . Ohio or phone 992.

3891.
CANNING tomatoes and
peppers .
Geroldine
Ohio,

1'171

Cl•lo nd
Cleland .

s~ee t

Fa rm1 .
Rocine,

HONOA CL-&lt;50, 12,000

mile,, siuy bar , crash ba rs ,

Phone 992·711J7.

Winter
thru

Thl•d and Mill St'"'' In Mid· 1962 Convertible Grovely tractor,
model LS. good condition, No
aHachments, $175. Phone 7-42- ·
3().05.
992·7721 .
I Pair girl's leather 1hoe skates,
1iz:e 5: 1 boy's 26 in . Huffy bicy ·
AVAILAIILE ot Rlvo,ld. Apo•l·
c:le las thon one y.ar old.

Phone 992-3090.
ments, $100 per month; 2
bedroom opottment1, $133 per HOMELITE Xl-12 powe• saw
month. One prlc• for all . Phon•
$150. Phone 843-2645.
·
992-3273.

2 hdroom troller, rltOI nlc:e,
odulto only. Phono 992-3324 .
5 room furn11h.d apt. for rent,

close to Powell'• Super Valu.

Phono 992·3658.
HOUSE, 5 •ooms and both in Mid ·
dleport. Ohio. .;ontact 992.
3457.
TRAILER tpoc:e for rent , one 3

miles from Pomeroy , one ln
Dexter, 5 mil•• from No. 2

mlno. Phone 992-5858.
21edroom mobile home, Deder,
Ph.... 992·5858.
2 &amp;.droom mobile home in Racine
area. Phone 992·siss .

•

m -7320 Evening•

~2- n97

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE .
9-2· 1 mo .

Syraeutt,

••

' .... s,.dllll--"

o.

SMITH NELSON
MoTORS, INc.::

,...,

The Complete·
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

6-n! '""·

WINE
CARPET SHOP

r-pQ.LY-FOAM
UPHOLSTERY
FABIIfiC
F,or sofa, charr cushions·,
maHresses, paddi~ . Ideal
lOr campers. Varoely of

ASSORTED RUBBER .
BACK CARPETING

'6.95
Squora Yord lnslallod

' David Parsons, Owner

SALE

One good- usea 1&gt;1oson
copperlone side-by-side Make us an offer.
Good

u .. d

G. E.
1200

refriger~tor .

One good used Homellle EZ
Chain Saw
noo
One good used Homellle
Super XL Clwtln Saw. S200

.- ...

~ ··

a

":'""·'''''

:" · P1 IIQ lJnj

11;l..... w..c.,..,, M•'·

....__·-~2111

~~22 • 1 -;;;~ . .

Velvets , nylon prints ,
here~ ions, vinyls~lids, and
fancy prints, accessories.

DIRECT FABRIC SALES

minerals,

close

to

recreation, good
some timber. $16,600.00
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR NEWER,
HOMES- LET US SELL
YOURS,
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROK.U •..
992-2251 or 9!2-2561 _

r

24 CT.
BOX

DAYTI_ME

24 CT.
BOX

HOMESITES for 5ale , 1 acre ond

INSTANT START

'

915-4155

'

'.

8-18-1 mo.

up. Middl9port, near Rutland .

Call 992·7481.

'

Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service , Phone 949-2-487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt

BRADFORD,

2•28.

Bradford.

Will do roOfing, constructio.n, ~lWOOD , BOWERS REPAIR _
oll elec. , I acre, Middl8port,
plumbing ond heating. No job . Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
close to Rutland . Phone m . . too large or too small . Phone
small oppllances . Lawn mower,
7481.
742-23-48.
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6U) 985·
SMAll farm for sole , 10•;. down, CARPENTER, flooring , ' ceiling,
paneling . Phone 992-2759.
3825.
owner financed . Monroe County, W. Va. Phone (304) 772- BUI~DING , ••modeling, ond REMODELING, Plumbing. healing
3102"' (304) 772-3227.
repairs. Quality work, efficient
and all types of gent?ral repair.
ser.. ice. Jene Rodman , phone
Work gu~ronteed 20 years ex·
COUNTRY farmland with seclud 992·5980.
perlence. Phone992-2409.
ed woods. water and good ac cess in Monroe County , W. Vo. DOZER work ond welding . Con - 0&amp;0 TREE Trimmlf1g, 20 .,.ears ex$1.000 down , call (3041 772·
perlenCir. insured free
tact James Parsons, At . 1,
3102"' (304)772-3227.
Racine, on Carmel Rood.
,stlmotes. Call 992·238-4 or
(61.4) 698-7257 Albonv.
3 bedroom house for sale at 520
EXCAVATING; BACKHOES AND
'
Sycamore St., Middleport, good
.DOZER - LARGE AND SMAlL, SEWING MACHINE Repolro se•·
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bQths.

buy fa. $8,000. Phone 992·3578,
"'992·7667.

TEAFORD

Winterizing kits , covers, an-

DITCH Diggin9. Phano (304) 7735!l39"' (3().0) 773·5788.

nat. gas, T.P. water, and
modern kll. 516,!100.
ADS DRAW LOOKERS,
BUT SALESMEN SELL,
CALL US, TO GET RID OF
HEADACHES
IN
SELLING,

phone

SHOULDER
ROAST
LEAN 'N TENDER

s

3 BAGS

992-7009

00

Syotems

bedrooms . Phone 7•2·3122.

lnotalled

ln1taller.

by
.

DYNAMO

HEAR NEWS FIRST
ON

WMPOAM·FM

I

WHITE POTATOES '1

Shepard

Controcton, P.h one 742-2-409.

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

•

''•
•

8 A. M., The Noon.Report,

and. 5 P~

69!

20 LB. BAG

THIS YEAR'S CROP OF NEW

Held , Bock Hot Service
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742·2008.'

licensed

FAMILY SIZE PKG.

POLISH SAUSAGE 69~

night phone 992-3525 o• 992:
5232.

2 Mobile homes for rent, 1 hos 3
bedrooms and the other has 2 SE/'TIC

69~

GROUND BEEF

--"-'--'---"-'-"-'.:..::..:cc= -,== EXCAVATING. dom. backhoe
and dltcher . t;horles R. Hat-

DRIVE-IN - Equipment,
building and land. Only
$10,500.

room home, small barn 1

day

19

MARSHMALLOWS

fill dirt, to soil, llme1tone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers,

BONELESS STEW BEEF

CAMPFIRE

backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul

tifreeze, service lor above ·or
in ground pools. D. Bumgardn_
er Solea , Middleport, Ohio,
Phone 992-5724.

99~

.BONELESS ENGLISH

BAG

SfPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
vice. all mokeo. 992·22fl4: Tho
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
Fob•lc Shop, Pomeroy.
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY · Autho•lzed· Slngel Solos ond
OR NIGHT .
. Service. We sharpen Scissors.
PROTECT your swimming pool! EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and

Virgil B. Sr., Reollor
110 Mec:honi( Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-33).11

4 BEDROOMS - Large
double living · with gas .
fireplace . Cook and bake
units, dining, basement &amp;
garage. $20,000.
MODERN- 3 bedrooms, 2
ceramic llle baths, copper
plumbing, full baaement,
wood burning II replace and
dbl. garage . $34,000.
J
REASONABLE
bedrooms, one tloor, large
living, 2 porches, carport &amp;
large lat. $12,000.
VICTUALS - You can eat
by owning this place. Has a
bedroom, bath &amp; garden.
SIS,500.
5 ACRES - Some ft~~~ced. 5

$

69e

BONELESS CHUCK

CHARCOAL
10 LB•

LB.

ENJOY EVERY OUNCE YOU BITE

'

Chester, OhiO

'

CHUCK STEAK

69

'1''

'

Photography

SEPTIC TANKS deanfitd, Modern
Sanitation, 992-395.4 or 992-

s 1·

KINGSFORD

'

992-3975 o• 992-2571.

REEDSVILLE - Rt. 681,
135 acres~ 100 acres has all '

NEW. BORN

LEAN 'N TENDER

'''
•
••

Progress

KEN GROVER

&lt;•

DIAPERS

- Aerl•l-lndustrl•l

- Wedflnvs--

Bo•2t-A
Rutland, Ohio 45715
Ph. 14) 742-2409
· We Deliver
7 - 28·~ mos.

LB.

'

-Complete School Service
undergraduate &amp;
Elementary
School Package Pictures
Seniors &amp; Y earboolc

Southeastern OhiO
Truss Rafter Co.

JOHNSON'S

PHOTOGRAPHY
Constru~tlon

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

carpeted , full basement ,
refrigerator, s love, di1persol ,
double range, $38,500. Phone

trailer, $3,300.00

COMhiQ: i'i.CIAL

~i!l too

sires.

l28 Main Street
Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675·3469
,9:30-5 :00 O.lly
Tilla,ooo Fridays

WIMhlold Rtp!Actmenl
I
Frti Estlmatn
On BodyWork
Expert Painting
lnsuronct Work
I
We Ieoine
51. R'-1
Coolville, Ohio
'·
667-3127
7-21-1 mo.
-- '

Racine, Ohio

U9·2124

'

American
Auto Sales

'

3 Bedroom brick, oil electric,

RUTLAND LOVELY
2 large
INSIDE
bedrooms. bafh, vlillfy R.
dine In kitchen, carpeted,
paheled, basement porrh,
level lot. You must see this
112,000.00.
' '
OVERLOOKSTHE RIVER,
- · 3 bedrooms, bath,
carpeted, j&gt;Oneled, st01raa1e
building, corport,
MIDDLEPORT brick &amp; frame Ccorni1rl
apartments
loll.
4
furnished II vein one, rent J .
and pay off the mortgage,
to
shopping.
close
$25,800.00
RUTLAND Leading
Creek, 1.72 acres, mostly In
lawn, Ideal for home or

•
'
'

-

Alum inurn Siding,~
Roofing, Gutlels,
Painting and Repair

Clonch 992·5795.

MAIN
-POMEROY, 0.

lEAN 'N
TENDER

CHUCK ROAST

.....

.to suo .

or

Phone 247·2192 .

We Accept Federal food Starn Ps

Radiator:,........~

992·7275,
1970 Pontia c Tempest . p .s ., p.b .•
V-8 automa tic, good condition.

()pen Eves. Ti19 :00 .

EXPERIENCED

planh. Over 50 v1rlttlt1 In
111 . From ... toe·· poll &amp; 6 11
to 10 11 hantine baskett. 7Sc

marble top dresser , 6 room hou~e . modern kitche n, HOUSE for sale , 3 bedrooms , all
over 100 .,.ears . old. 30 gallon · carpeting, in HarriSonville, conelectric. Fam ily room fully
copper apple but-t er kettle.
venient to mines, $9,01X),
carpeted with wood·burning
Phone 992 · 5.39~.
Phone 742 ·2796.
fireplace , Iorge lot with storage
building and garden space .
RCA 25" color console, walnut 5 rooms, both, 1 ocre land , newly
Ru stic Hills, Syr~cuse . Phone
c:obinet, $175. Royal adding
remodeiiKJ, storm windows,
992·7836.
aluminum •iding, $1'2,900.
mach ine , $50. Phone 742·3038,
Phone 742·2769.
2 bedroom , Iorge modern kit·
PIERCE Simpson Super Lynks 23
chen , forc:ed air furnace', linC.B., OlO..mikeSuperSkanner, 68 Acres for sole near Ruflond,
coln Hli . Phone 992-5737.
f
antenno. Phone992·5495.
house with 6 rooms ond both ,
FA furnace. basement on 20 ocre form with pond, born ,
USED Hoover sweeper, upright ,
blacktop rood . Call evenings ,
1 mo~e house ond cellar plu1
tank and canister, $18.00.
992·3630.
apple orchard and peach tre•s .
Phone 992·711J7.
·
-:--':.:..:=::_-,--,.,..,.---Also on prop.arty ~ 2 story
4 rooms and bOth in Chester
SCHOOL sewing machines ,
Village, Phone 992-7365.
house , 2 years old double wide
Singer, feoturs buttonhole ,
trailer on County Rood 18. All
blind hem, sews on knits. 6 room1 and both home, nice
fo• $29,000. Phone 992-7590.
SAS.OO cOsh. Also Singer Touth
garden ond yard, Vine St. ,
ond Sew, like new, S31.00cosh .
Racine, Ohio . $7900. Phone 50 Acre, farm , 5 room house, out ·
buildings, fruit trees , 2 loca Phone992·7187 ,
247-2192 .
tion• , mode for oil and gas
WARM Morning tool stove and
wells, own water system , on
Stokermotic atove. Phone U2- '
good blacktop •acd. Call Bill

dleport. irond new high quail.
ty apartments . See the
manag.,. at Apt . 16, or call

apart-

••

full of FforiOI fDIIIII

-AI. TROMM CONST

!on , $350. Phone

USDA
CHOICE BEEF·

•

•

WAlNUT

to 1hopplng on

bedroom

..

Phone t4t-2114
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

••

2860.
1966 F.o rd .Folcon , sta nda rd , 6 cyL '
Coll 992-7492.
1966 Chevy Impa la . 2 doo•. good
Rutland
7C2·2328 .
work cor. Coil 992-2572 or 992All Work Guoranlted
613.&lt; .
· Free Eslimoles
1968 Ford, Pickup truck one -ha lf

Phone 7•2·2166.

f"' $1114 monthly plus elec. or 1'9-n .Yamaha 175 Endura motor$130 Including ofect•lc. LOWER
cycle , $300 or best offer.
RATES FOR ·SENIOR CITIZENS.
Phone 992-7567 after 3.:30 p.m .

1

•

to

YGUI'IIH. S,.clol prlcn

bllllden.

Phone 992 ·n51 .

miles aouth Middleport, At.' 7.
Lorge lots with concrete potioa,
sidewalks, runners and off GREEN beans . canning tomatoes.
strHI parking. Phone 992-7-479,
Pick your own, bring containers. Phone 247·2852 or An ONE bedroom apartments at
drew Cross; letart Falls, Ohio,
VILLAGE MANOR In Middleport

ments,

Jltct

""'----= -a-_n_-=-'·;.mo.. .;: : .'-\ ~'

Saturday to to s.
~• hevt one wr••n houae

9fl.SJJI

1972 Corvett e, steel -city groy1 I·
top. s'ida pipes , 350 automatic ,
MOBilE home lor lole or rent . 3
air conditioning , 32,500 miles ,
bedrooms , ol ut ilities poid.
SS.OOO. Phone 992·5630.

3151.
edullo only. In Mlddlopo•t.
NATIONAL Ch&amp;ckout Register;
Phone 992·3874.
pop rnochine cooler; 1974
3 AND 4 RM. fumlohed ond un·
Monte Corio in good condition ,
furnished ,opt1. Phone 992will trade for mobile' home of
5434 .
aquol value . Also, 10 room
brick , 3 baths , full basement, I
COUNTRY Mobllo tlomo Pork . Rt.
acre on Rt. 7, John Sheet! 3 •; ,
33, ten nliles north of Pomero.,..

ConY8'nlent

ent

11Utltn. Wt Mnltlf, w de H

Abbott •

;:::::=::~i;;i~Jiin

FURNISHED, 2 j)edrm . apartment,

-~

..

St•aon,

====== = ===

You've reached 1he outer li mits . ;;;;""-;-;:-n:::ln:;g;;':::·::--:=-:::-c=::::-:= -:-~ lelttng things slip by. Any GUARANTEED JOIHOCATION.

Recrulling. Call collect
593-3022o•3B5-6318.

Open lor Fall &amp;

p.u lf back handle bars. ne W tire
Thursday , Sept . 7 and 8th' at
ond seals , Scrambler side 59 Corvette , 283, 4 speed . Phone
61 078·6217.
Clair Boso , Great Bend .
pipe5, $650. Co/1949-2480.
Someth ing for everyone, 9 a ..
196'2 Dodge with 1968 Motor,
till dark .
. IN DASH 23 channel CB, om-fm .
good runn ing cond ition, $150.
mpx roc:Ho , 3 frock stereo. Colt
·Pi)cne 843·21&gt;05.
PORCH So le Wednesday thr u
992-3965.
Saturday, 10 til '? Also· some
glais , Depression and H~i sy for FOR SALE : good uied T.V. 's, color
ond block a nd whit e. Harrison 's
private 5howing a t 611J High St.,
TV Service , 276 Sycamore St . ,
Middleport .
Middlepor t. Ohio . Phone 992- PUBLIC Auction , Sept. 8, 1976.
YARD Sola, Chu"h of GoG .
2522.
Time : 1:00 p. m. townsh ip RoOd
Syracuse . Sept . 7 &amp; 8 from 10
1~, 4 .miles 50ulh of Coolville ,
SHOT shell5 fresh stock. A ll
4
a .m. till p .m .
Stole R:t. 7. 3 pc, bedroom 5uite,
brand1. High pow@red , $3.83
YARD Sole , Tues.day, Sept. 7, 9 to
2 pc. living room suite, stereo,
per ~x ; Target loads, $3; 22
3 p.m. Sewing mach ine , baby
bronze applebuHe r kettle a nd
Magnum , $2.60: long rrfle5, 79
items , children's ond odvlts .
sta nd , sma ll tractor and equip·
ce nts: deer slugs , $L 4S. Ovet
nice coots and clothing, plus
ment , Homelite choinsaw.
200 uJed and new gu n1, commisc . Come out Georr.'s Creek
Ou tboard motor, J 1h h .p. Many
potmcl ond croubows . l owes t
R d •Lk
00 · ~ut 1 mi 8 · ma •
Items too numerous to men·
price, anywhere.' ·No deGier~
sharp riyht' turn , third house on
lion . Not responsible fo r oc·
pteose . Fife'1 , 711 3rd .St .. Mid ·
right.
ciden ts . Owner . lawrence Gif.
di"PP't. Phono992·7494.
fen , Auc tio nee r, tc:•n neth
YARD SAle. Weds.. Thu'&gt;day , 1967 V.W. run1 good, 1966 V.W.
Hetger_
Sept. ~ and 9. Lots of nice
Sqvorebock; Model 10 Remclothing. elec. stove, , lots ·of
ington. new blue, good motother items across from Brod·
chgun: Stevelu 410-22 ove r
· -=bu
.=.:.!
'Y;.S:=h
c ;.o=l.:-:--:---c---~
o
and under, on old but nice:
~-- FAN.
d 1
Rare Model tJJ Morfin Sigle bar·
4
ILY Yar So e , S.pt. 9, 9 till
rei 12 go. very good 1hope. CAMPER . Starcraft Gala~ti 8 with
' p.m. Baby, ch;khn cloth., ,
Phono
1 (61•) 378-6376 .. G•ant
OWr'jing. Pho~e 992-2514.
jeans, something for all .
l'oung, l ong Bottorn ~ Ohio.
William Schultz on Cherry
Rldgo.Phone992·6138.
KENNEBEC pototOO$. 50 lb . $3.50
or 100 lb . $6.00. Bring con2 FAMILY Yard Solo. Sopt. 8 ond
tainers. Phone 667-3737 or ~~~~~~~~~~~
9th . Sixth St•oet. Sy•acuso. 9
667 ·3974.
'
a.m. tU13 p .m . Blue Rocker and
56oue farm for sole, 6 room5 ar1d
green rae 1lner, dorhing and SCHOol sewing machine, Singer,
both , 2 outbuildings, dug bo$8 ·
mile:.
features bultorthole,. blind
ment and drilled well, located
hem, sews on knits , $48.00
neor Danville near the mines .
Some tillable land , and balance
cash. Also Singer Touch and
in pasture. Priced $26,(0).
Sew, like ntw, $31.00 to~h .

PLEASURE horses and ponies.
Also, will d_o tra ining. Phone

Continuous

NOTICE

models of mobile homes .
Phone a"tCI code 61&lt; -~23 ·95.31 .
$SCoshSI for junked auto. Frye's
Truck Au tp Parts . Rutland .
• WILl do ironing in my home. 1970 Buick Riviera , good condi·
Phone 7~2·2081.
Phone 992·7394 .
tlon, new tire s , $900. Phon e
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest · Pro·
742·2796 .
Will
do
baby1i!li
ng
in
my
ho
me
duct1. Top price for standing
k om 8 till 5. Call a fter 6 p .m . 1910 Ford Mav&amp;rick. Phone 992 sawtimber. Colt .Kent Hanby,
992·7808.
. '2377 any time . or m -611 ..
1·«6·8570.

LOOKING FOR A BETTER OPCall 992·2156.
PORTUNITY ... ? YOUR TAXES
SUPPORT ONE I ! ! Ria Grondo YARD Sale, Tuesday , Weds .,
1976. Allen Hall. 9A .M.·9P.M.

949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8-9-761 month

CASH paid for all makes ond

SHooTING Match . Fo•ked Run

HAIR TRANSPLANT, Dr . Rlcha.d L.

OR

beds, wall teltphonts and
par II .. or complee households ,
Write M . 0 , M iller, Rt . 4 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992-7760 .

10

Sportsman Club. Stofts ot noo11 .
Sunday, Sept . 5 an4 e very Sunday thereafter .
'

AT949-2801

•
'

your own home

·No muss. No fuss.
~o odor. Use the
s~me day.
Allwork
auarantnd.

GLEN R. BISSEU.

.'

GUTTER SERVICE

1

real ni ce one .

OLD furniture . lc:;e boxes, bran

SSCASHU

Re~"•
of
your'"'rup.

by Von Schr.der
dry-!01m method.

CONTACT

1173 CHEVROLET
SlitS
Che velle Estate St . Wagon, local 1 owner car and less
than 28,500 tTt iles, .v.e eng ine, automat ic tran s ., power
steer ing and brakes, new fires, rad io, gr een fi nish. a

.

p .m .
Mo de rn
and
blackpowder guns und sup·
piles. New ' shipment of turquoise lndiO:n jewelry , 248
Riverview Drive, Pomeroy,
Ohio Qr phone 992-3090.

FREE_E_SnMATES!

'

power steer ing , tent gl a ss, luggage rack , radio, radial
w·w t ir es, clean.

BLIND ADS

Coll..,e-Community College,
Fall Registration, Sept . 13,

A tholqibt fer the

fin ish . Sharp and nice.

Eacfi add itional word 3
c ents .

lONG Rifle Shop , hours 5 p.m . t.ill

,.ra

1975 PINTO WAGON
S289S
~ocal car andon ly6,600 mil es, 4 cyl., automatic trans ..

S,R, 1 an d 12A ; then ce along
Add itional 25c Charge
tht tenterllneof sa l ~ h l ~hW!JY ·
p e r Adver ti sement .
s.u deg , .tO m in . .u sec. west,
OFFICE HOURS
419. 21 fee.t to a point; th ence
8 :30 a,m. to 5 :00 p .m .
•tong the ust lfne of L. aure l
O- Il y, 8:30 a .m . to 12, 00
Cliff Free Me thodist Church _ Noon Saturday .
lond , N. Udeg . 34m ln. 54 sec.
Phone today 992·21$6.
east 363, 66 teet t o a c on c rete
monument and the true point
Of btolnnlng ror the following
NOTICES
descr ibed tract ; thence north ·
ATTN ., II
75 deg . 25 min . 06 sec . west
ALL HOUSEWIVES .
(passi ng
a
concrete
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
monument at 6.2:5 feet and a
Porctl and Basement Porch
aplke In the c en terl ine of T .R. and Buement Sales. etc .
No. 2051 for a total d istance of
must be paid In advance ,
uo.ls feet to a double E lm Get yours In early by
lrH at the northwes t corner or \topping by our Offlte at
·Trlct· 1 described in Vol . 65
The Dally Sentinel , 111
pagl!' 430 of the Me igs County
Court St . or writlnCJ Box
Deed R:ecords ; thence south u
729, Pomeroy, Oh io "5769
d~ . 3A m in . SA se'c . wnt 50
with your rem ittance .
feet to an Iron pin ; thence
south 15 deg , 25 m in , 06 sec .
east 140.7! feet to an Iron pin ;
tntnce north Udeg . 34 m in . !i4
sec. east 50 feet t o the point or
begJnnlng, conta i n i ng , 161 NOW accepting piano students ,
beginners, Intermediate, od·
acre, and being part of a 1.06
vanced students . Coli 992·
acretractdncrlbedas Tract 1
County Deed Records .
Being pert of tne 5ime real
estate conveyed to sal~ cnorch
by deed recorded In Volume
239 page 971 Meigs county

Y 011 CM SIVI hundreds
oven lhouund1 of dol
wltlt tlumlnum or vinyl
siding, ,

$teerlng a nd brake s , rad io, tires show li t t le wear, gold

word

2270.

Motor Co.

1974CHEVY .NOVA4 DOOR'
U795
local low mileag e car , v.e eng ine, automatic power

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

point In the cen terli ne of Old

In Vol . 6S poQe 430 Of the Meigs

QUAUlY .

CALL US lODAY.

For Wlnt Ad Strvlte
5 t ent! per word on e

pertlculerly describe d as

thence south 84 deg . 40 mi n ..u

WE NEED

RATES

OhiO, In F ract ion No . 30. Town
2 N, R1noe 13 W, end more

OPEN SUNDAYS - 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 7 THRU SEPT. 11

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi/ieds
••
2 SIGNS Pomerety
Business
Se"'ices
OF

WANT ADS
tNFOfiMATION
DIADI.INI!S

Not1c1 II hereby g iven tl'lat

LIQUID
DETERGENT
$ 19

29

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE
TEA BAGS
NO. 355
100 CT. PKG.

32 OZ. BTL.

$119

LB.

1

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS; FRESH., CRISP

W/C

O,ffe r Expires 9-11 -76
Twin City GatPway

.

••

•••

••

Mon., Tues., Wed.

e

I:OOtll 5:00
.

1

Thursday I til12

-

(

..

•.
• ...

noon;

\

I

t

;\ FRIDAY TIL 8 J,4
•. . Close
At 5 p.m. , • r

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

~t.

RUTLAND

14'1-2211

'

-

()I II'

-

BORDEN ORANGE

BREAKFAST DRINK

3~0~~:0 $139. W/C
Offer Expires 9-11-76
T~ City ~ateway

'

l

I I'~

-

-

l __cOUPON

COUPON

Offer Expires 9-11-76
Twin City Gateway

o

o

o

I

0

I

SNACK PAK PUDDINGS

C. C. DROPS
W/C

7

l:~:~~G. g~

4 PACK

W/C

.79 ~

W/C

Olfer Expires 9-11 -76
Twin City Gateway

Ofter Expires 9-11-76
Twin L'ity Gateway

ARNOLD &amp;ItATIE

v

0

HUNT'S

'

TOMATO SAUCE.

3l~A~~ gg•

o

KEEBLER

HUNT'S

NO.l25

•

'·'

�1.- 'nle Dilly Sellllnel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., 'l'lllldly, Sept. 7, IWTI
I.IGAL NOTICE

Cllfforo Jtcobs , Otlo Lohn,

Em11t Powell, Robert &amp;erton /

s
P .M .
Dar
l!letore
Publ lclt lon .
Canc:tll•tlons,
correc tions accepted fi rs t de y o f
pvbllcet Jon .

GM'ttO Pullins ond Ka thy
Pullins, 11 trustees Of the
Uurtt Cliff Fru Meth Od ist

Church , Inc. have f il ed their
Pttltlon In the Common Pleas

Court

olltQing

following

tha t

described

REGULATIONS

t he

The Publisher rtStrv es
the ri ght to td lt or re je ct
anv ads deemed ob ·
te cflo ne l. Th e publ ish e r
w ill not be respons ible for
m or t tha n one ln cor r ec t
lnnrtlon .

real

"'"' Ia no lonoer needed for
church purposu end rtquest
author ity to transf er sa id real
wtate, Wh lctt . reel estat e Is

Otscr lbed • • fol lows, to -wit :
Situated
In
Se ll sbur y
Townsh i p ,

Me i gs

Count y,

EAR CORN.

Inser t ion .
M inim um Charge 11.00.
lA cents per word t hre e
consecutive Insertions .
26 ctn ll per word t h(
consec ut ive Insert ions.
25 Per Cent Discount on
pa id ecu •nd ad s pa id
w fth ln 10 da-;s .

fOllOWs:

Commencing at the nor fh.

lilt corner of Fra ction 30 ;

then(e nor.ftl 87 deg . 00 m in.

w101 367.36 reot to a po int;

thence south' deg . 49 m i n. 16
aec . eut 682..U feet to a point ;
sec. wHf 132 fee t t o a point ;
tt\ence south 4 deg . 49 m in . 16
sec . east (passi ng a c oncrete -'
monument at 165 fH tl for 1
total distan c e of 189 fe et to a

12 .00

~mln l m_!,lm .

for

SO

992-2181

D•d Records :

Said petlflon will be for:
Maring on the 21st dav of
September, 1976, at the
Common Pleas Courtroom at

Pomeroy , Ohio.
Clifford JacobS

Otto Lohn
Ernest Flowe! I
Robert Barton

Gerald Pullins

Kathy Pull ins
Trustees Laurel Cliff Free
Metho ldst Church , Inc .

Ill 2,, 31 ; (91 7, 14

Sloc:k , Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. Coli

(3().0)675·5267.

day:

Sl&amp;mund Freud, Austrian

founder of psychoanalysis,
lllld, "Being entirely hmest
with

Is

oneself

good

awciae."

LOST : Female Bluetk:k t\ound, no
name plate, in Red Brush orea .
Coll985·3338, Che~ter , Oh io, E.

L. Rlebal.
· ~OST : Small mole dog , reddish

. JiO•

.Grapt-1
Bemict 8 - Oaol
for WICll 11 ftJ, hpL 1, 1171
AIIIEI (Miwclt 21-Aprll 11)

ton color, Dochshund·Terrier
wearing red Collar when disap·
peened. Phone 992-3928.
lOST in t'-,,. For•01t Run a•a , one
Hertford c:ow , 600 lbs. wearing
.yellow ear tag. If seen , please

call992·7692o•992
. ·3944.

You have the faculty today for

creating problems that cOuld
easily be avoided . Be very
careful. The toes vou trod upon

ADDRESSERS wanted IMMEDIATE LVI Work at h'o me, no ••·
perience necessary - _ exceUent pay. Write Amerkan
Service, 6950 Woyzoto Blvd.,

TAUIIUI (Aprii20-Mar 20) in

S..ilo 132, M;nn.apolls , MN

dee/ing with your -peers today,
don't tru t be 1h0 b'
,
.. , o
tg cheese.
Your usociates will respond

~=::'c=:cc--::-:--:-:----

may be your own.

ss.t26.

DEMONSTRATORS
AND
MANAGER needed to work
- t o consultation.
w;th ""'cld.st Toy &amp; Gift shop
QEIIIIII ("'- 21-.lune 20) 11
Party Plan In tho CCI&lt;Int~,
_,
Hi""".,
· have the authority over
"'~--t
.... t commissions
• No
fn•-Call
·
1
....,._,
othetti. use it wisely today.
.,.........,., ·
or wr te t....._, ,
Abuse of pawer will make
SANTA'• Parties, Avon 1 Conn.
enemleo whO ere not likely Ia
06001 . Phone I (203) 673·3455.
forget your tranoQressions.
AlSO lOOKING PARTIES.
CA
AVERAGE $10 on O'ltnlng or
IICIII · (olunl 21-.luiJ 22)
ofto•noons domonotrollng
UnPOpular causes may be your ·. g'uoranteed toys and gifts. No
lot to champion today. That's
Cosh lnvtilment, no delivery or
your prerogative. Just don't try
collecting. Com/i
- ten do you
to force !hem on olher people.
poporwarl&lt;. Co 1 9~9·2800 c•
LIO (.lutr U-Aug. 22) Your
992-2977. Aisoboaklngportjoo .
flnanclll tlilultlcn Is extremely AVERAGE $10 on avaning or
Cfltical today. Be. sure that in
aft•rnoon1 demonstrating
joint ventures everyone Is
guorontud toys and gifts. No
carrying hia lhare of the' load
cosh investment, no delivery or
or VOU won't make out.
collecting. Computers do your
, poporworl&lt;. Call 949·2800 or
YIIIQO IAUI. 23-Sopl. 22)
992·2977.Aioobookingportlos.
While you may toel domineer- ,
lng today, that 's no indication SOMEONE to do yard work .
lhll you're •lght. friends could
Phono 992-2677.
·
81tf1M you're trying to impose

COINS , 1929 and older currency.

gold and silver sc rap . Will buy
or trde. Ha... e o good sele&lt;;tion
of coins· to st11 or trade . Al$0
have ·suppl ies and m8ta i
detecors . Roger Wamsley on
leading Creek and Rutlo.,d
Rood . Phone 742·2331 for on of.
fer .

fo•

junked

outcs.

Phone 742·2081 . Frye's Truck &amp;
Auto Parh, Rutland .
WANTED: Gosoline driven ce ment mixer, Iorge one prefer -

red , I yard or I ~ yard . Call
after 6 p .m. 843 · ~.

IF YOU hove a service to ·o ffe r,

want to buy or sell something ,
oe loofting for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .

)lOur wfll on them.
LlaiiA (lepl. n-Oel. 23 )

SOMEONE to cl.an cars, espedol·
ly Go bocly ond point job. Call
7C2-3154 o• soo Harold Hyooll In

mort dlgrnalon will make 11

Sta,.lng poy $361.20 single:

Nrd for you to catch up.

$,.77 .30 ,

0

ICOIII'IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Whllt you may be able. to get
things done .by coerc ing
Critndl, It _,., be worth It In
the end. Your methods could
brtleG tong-ltlndlng gru~ges .

married;

Army
(61~)

WILL DO odd jobs. roofing, pointing, hauling, tru work , and
IAGITTAIItUI (N1111. 2:1-0ec.
mowing. P~one992·7A09.
21) Normally you'(e not enVious. but today you could gel
NOTICE OF
green tyt1 If someone outAPPOINTMENT
· y 'd b e WISe
·
Cllt No. 21f11
• hi nea you. ou
not l!ototo of Eaworo
J. Griffith
to let It show.
,4 DtC.IItd.
'
11
CAPRICOIIN (Doc. 2•- •en.
Notice
hereby Ulven !hot
• •
Chorles E. Griffith, R.D .,
111 You know that certain Pomeroy, Ohio, and Gary
lopfca can lgltote an acqualn- Griffith, Long Bottom, Ohio,
tance. Avoid them today. You have b&amp;en duty 'fpolnted co .
1re better off to let sleeping Administrators o the Estate
of Edwara J. Griffith
dog• He.
deceesed, late of Melg~
F
County, Ohio,
AQU ••tul ('
·
~
•""· 20" ob. It)
Creditors ore required to
A v.ry tricky day where your file thtlr clolms with uld
PII'IQnlf rlnantea or business fiduciary Within four months
notcllngo ore concerned. You'd
Dattd lhla 27th iloy oi
be .. ry amort to postpone August , 1976.
oectlions In theoe areaa ,
Manning D. Webster
fiiiCU (M. 20-March 201 (II 30, (9) 7, 13
Judge
One-to-one relationships could
.be dlfflcuH lor you loday. Let
~.::;:~LINT
compenfont have their · way
84 Lu~~tber 1 1 Mene;tr
K flley come on a linle
Trelnee · Progr•m offers
ocrong, buC don 't demean
rep 1d advenctmtnt- ovtr
150 i'niRICitrl •nd CO ·
youl1tll.
manegtra developed from

ri:\Your

fills prOQrom. Flrol lull
calender year tarnlnos

IXCHO 110,000 PIUS btnollts
1nd 1 m•n•gtr's timings
cin txCOIG 120,000 Ptr

~Birthday
..,.. .. 1171 '
Thll , _ Hwould be wf..,. to
r-'Y upon yourlllf then upon
Olhert, Tlltrl'l IIOihlng . you
Clll'l ICCOfftpnoh If yo(j put
,our mind to It

rear.

Wt

havt

stores

lllroughout 27 atotos end

open • new. store every 30

ciiJI. Join 1 compony on
..._,rewl
ltMRoaumilo:
Don Wilton
.
Ill Shorwooo
. Wtf1111111111wn, w. va. 26111

(614) 698·3290, Ruth Reeves .
AKC Reglster.d English Springer
Sponlel pups, $85. Phone 992-

7897 .
7 Week old puppies, one-half

Sholtie. Roglitored . $15. Phone
949-2~66 .

&amp;eAGLE rabbit dog, 9 weeks to 6
y.ar1 old . Some started and
$OIM well trained. Phone Virgil

Yal'b'Dugh, 7A2·2521.
TO GIVE awoy lo good homes , 2
f.mole pups. 10 weeks old .
Beo9le and Manchester crossed, good hunters. Phone 742-

23()1.

-

after 4 p .m.

Mond1y

---

1952 GEN ERAL 8k30, 1 bedroom.
Phone 985-3350.

191 1 Merc ury Mon tego , p .s,, p.b.•
a ir, "ery nice . $1~5 , Phone
Glen Bissell. 949&lt;1801 or 9•9·

2860.
1971 Ford Mave rick, p .s., p. b.,
a ir , lots of chrome , ri'O! sharp,
low mil eage , $1395. Phone
POSTS. round or split .
Gle n Binell 949-280l or 9-49Phone 949·2774.

COAl. li mestone, a nd r:o.lci um
chloride arid calcium brine for
du st con trol ond sped ol miking
sa lt fo r formers . Ma in StrEtet ,
Pomeroy . Ohio or phone 992.

3891.
CANNING tomatoes and
peppers .
Geroldine
Ohio,

1'171

Cl•lo nd
Cleland .

s~ee t

Fa rm1 .
Rocine,

HONOA CL-&lt;50, 12,000

mile,, siuy bar , crash ba rs ,

Phone 992·711J7.

Winter
thru

Thl•d and Mill St'"'' In Mid· 1962 Convertible Grovely tractor,
model LS. good condition, No
aHachments, $175. Phone 7-42- ·
3().05.
992·7721 .
I Pair girl's leather 1hoe skates,
1iz:e 5: 1 boy's 26 in . Huffy bicy ·
AVAILAIILE ot Rlvo,ld. Apo•l·
c:le las thon one y.ar old.

Phone 992-3090.
ments, $100 per month; 2
bedroom opottment1, $133 per HOMELITE Xl-12 powe• saw
month. One prlc• for all . Phon•
$150. Phone 843-2645.
·
992-3273.

2 hdroom troller, rltOI nlc:e,
odulto only. Phono 992-3324 .
5 room furn11h.d apt. for rent,

close to Powell'• Super Valu.

Phono 992·3658.
HOUSE, 5 •ooms and both in Mid ·
dleport. Ohio. .;ontact 992.
3457.
TRAILER tpoc:e for rent , one 3

miles from Pomeroy , one ln
Dexter, 5 mil•• from No. 2

mlno. Phone 992-5858.
21edroom mobile home, Deder,
Ph.... 992·5858.
2 &amp;.droom mobile home in Racine
area. Phone 992·siss .

•

m -7320 Evening•

~2- n97

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE .
9-2· 1 mo .

Syraeutt,

••

' .... s,.dllll--"

o.

SMITH NELSON
MoTORS, INc.::

,...,

The Complete·
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

6-n! '""·

WINE
CARPET SHOP

r-pQ.LY-FOAM
UPHOLSTERY
FABIIfiC
F,or sofa, charr cushions·,
maHresses, paddi~ . Ideal
lOr campers. Varoely of

ASSORTED RUBBER .
BACK CARPETING

'6.95
Squora Yord lnslallod

' David Parsons, Owner

SALE

One good- usea 1&gt;1oson
copperlone side-by-side Make us an offer.
Good

u .. d

G. E.
1200

refriger~tor .

One good used Homellle EZ
Chain Saw
noo
One good used Homellle
Super XL Clwtln Saw. S200

.- ...

~ ··

a

":'""·'''''

:" · P1 IIQ lJnj

11;l..... w..c.,..,, M•'·

....__·-~2111

~~22 • 1 -;;;~ . .

Velvets , nylon prints ,
here~ ions, vinyls~lids, and
fancy prints, accessories.

DIRECT FABRIC SALES

minerals,

close

to

recreation, good
some timber. $16,600.00
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR NEWER,
HOMES- LET US SELL
YOURS,
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROK.U •..
992-2251 or 9!2-2561 _

r

24 CT.
BOX

DAYTI_ME

24 CT.
BOX

HOMESITES for 5ale , 1 acre ond

INSTANT START

'

915-4155

'

'.

8-18-1 mo.

up. Middl9port, near Rutland .

Call 992·7481.

'

Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service , Phone 949-2-487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt

BRADFORD,

2•28.

Bradford.

Will do roOfing, constructio.n, ~lWOOD , BOWERS REPAIR _
oll elec. , I acre, Middl8port,
plumbing ond heating. No job . Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
close to Rutland . Phone m . . too large or too small . Phone
small oppllances . Lawn mower,
7481.
742-23-48.
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6U) 985·
SMAll farm for sole , 10•;. down, CARPENTER, flooring , ' ceiling,
paneling . Phone 992-2759.
3825.
owner financed . Monroe County, W. Va. Phone (304) 772- BUI~DING , ••modeling, ond REMODELING, Plumbing. healing
3102"' (304) 772-3227.
repairs. Quality work, efficient
and all types of gent?ral repair.
ser.. ice. Jene Rodman , phone
Work gu~ronteed 20 years ex·
COUNTRY farmland with seclud 992·5980.
perlence. Phone992-2409.
ed woods. water and good ac cess in Monroe County , W. Vo. DOZER work ond welding . Con - 0&amp;0 TREE Trimmlf1g, 20 .,.ears ex$1.000 down , call (3041 772·
perlenCir. insured free
tact James Parsons, At . 1,
3102"' (304)772-3227.
Racine, on Carmel Rood.
,stlmotes. Call 992·238-4 or
(61.4) 698-7257 Albonv.
3 bedroom house for sale at 520
EXCAVATING; BACKHOES AND
'
Sycamore St., Middleport, good
.DOZER - LARGE AND SMAlL, SEWING MACHINE Repolro se•·
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bQths.

buy fa. $8,000. Phone 992·3578,
"'992·7667.

TEAFORD

Winterizing kits , covers, an-

DITCH Diggin9. Phano (304) 7735!l39"' (3().0) 773·5788.

nat. gas, T.P. water, and
modern kll. 516,!100.
ADS DRAW LOOKERS,
BUT SALESMEN SELL,
CALL US, TO GET RID OF
HEADACHES
IN
SELLING,

phone

SHOULDER
ROAST
LEAN 'N TENDER

s

3 BAGS

992-7009

00

Syotems

bedrooms . Phone 7•2·3122.

lnotalled

ln1taller.

by
.

DYNAMO

HEAR NEWS FIRST
ON

WMPOAM·FM

I

WHITE POTATOES '1

Shepard

Controcton, P.h one 742-2-409.

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

•

''•
•

8 A. M., The Noon.Report,

and. 5 P~

69!

20 LB. BAG

THIS YEAR'S CROP OF NEW

Held , Bock Hot Service
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742·2008.'

licensed

FAMILY SIZE PKG.

POLISH SAUSAGE 69~

night phone 992-3525 o• 992:
5232.

2 Mobile homes for rent, 1 hos 3
bedrooms and the other has 2 SE/'TIC

69~

GROUND BEEF

--"-'--'---"-'-"-'.:..::..:cc= -,== EXCAVATING. dom. backhoe
and dltcher . t;horles R. Hat-

DRIVE-IN - Equipment,
building and land. Only
$10,500.

room home, small barn 1

day

19

MARSHMALLOWS

fill dirt, to soil, llme1tone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers,

BONELESS STEW BEEF

CAMPFIRE

backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul

tifreeze, service lor above ·or
in ground pools. D. Bumgardn_
er Solea , Middleport, Ohio,
Phone 992-5724.

99~

.BONELESS ENGLISH

BAG

SfPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
vice. all mokeo. 992·22fl4: Tho
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
Fob•lc Shop, Pomeroy.
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY · Autho•lzed· Slngel Solos ond
OR NIGHT .
. Service. We sharpen Scissors.
PROTECT your swimming pool! EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and

Virgil B. Sr., Reollor
110 Mec:honi( Pomeroy, 0.
Phone 992-33).11

4 BEDROOMS - Large
double living · with gas .
fireplace . Cook and bake
units, dining, basement &amp;
garage. $20,000.
MODERN- 3 bedrooms, 2
ceramic llle baths, copper
plumbing, full baaement,
wood burning II replace and
dbl. garage . $34,000.
J
REASONABLE
bedrooms, one tloor, large
living, 2 porches, carport &amp;
large lat. $12,000.
VICTUALS - You can eat
by owning this place. Has a
bedroom, bath &amp; garden.
SIS,500.
5 ACRES - Some ft~~~ced. 5

$

69e

BONELESS CHUCK

CHARCOAL
10 LB•

LB.

ENJOY EVERY OUNCE YOU BITE

'

Chester, OhiO

'

CHUCK STEAK

69

'1''

'

Photography

SEPTIC TANKS deanfitd, Modern
Sanitation, 992-395.4 or 992-

s 1·

KINGSFORD

'

992-3975 o• 992-2571.

REEDSVILLE - Rt. 681,
135 acres~ 100 acres has all '

NEW. BORN

LEAN 'N TENDER

'''
•
••

Progress

KEN GROVER

&lt;•

DIAPERS

- Aerl•l-lndustrl•l

- Wedflnvs--

Bo•2t-A
Rutland, Ohio 45715
Ph. 14) 742-2409
· We Deliver
7 - 28·~ mos.

LB.

'

-Complete School Service
undergraduate &amp;
Elementary
School Package Pictures
Seniors &amp; Y earboolc

Southeastern OhiO
Truss Rafter Co.

JOHNSON'S

PHOTOGRAPHY
Constru~tlon

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

carpeted , full basement ,
refrigerator, s love, di1persol ,
double range, $38,500. Phone

trailer, $3,300.00

COMhiQ: i'i.CIAL

~i!l too

sires.

l28 Main Street
Pl. Pleasant
Ph. 675·3469
,9:30-5 :00 O.lly
Tilla,ooo Fridays

WIMhlold Rtp!Actmenl
I
Frti Estlmatn
On BodyWork
Expert Painting
lnsuronct Work
I
We Ieoine
51. R'-1
Coolville, Ohio
'·
667-3127
7-21-1 mo.
-- '

Racine, Ohio

U9·2124

'

American
Auto Sales

'

3 Bedroom brick, oil electric,

RUTLAND LOVELY
2 large
INSIDE
bedrooms. bafh, vlillfy R.
dine In kitchen, carpeted,
paheled, basement porrh,
level lot. You must see this
112,000.00.
' '
OVERLOOKSTHE RIVER,
- · 3 bedrooms, bath,
carpeted, j&gt;Oneled, st01raa1e
building, corport,
MIDDLEPORT brick &amp; frame Ccorni1rl
apartments
loll.
4
furnished II vein one, rent J .
and pay off the mortgage,
to
shopping.
close
$25,800.00
RUTLAND Leading
Creek, 1.72 acres, mostly In
lawn, Ideal for home or

•
'
'

-

Alum inurn Siding,~
Roofing, Gutlels,
Painting and Repair

Clonch 992·5795.

MAIN
-POMEROY, 0.

lEAN 'N
TENDER

CHUCK ROAST

.....

.to suo .

or

Phone 247·2192 .

We Accept Federal food Starn Ps

Radiator:,........~

992·7275,
1970 Pontia c Tempest . p .s ., p.b .•
V-8 automa tic, good condition.

()pen Eves. Ti19 :00 .

EXPERIENCED

planh. Over 50 v1rlttlt1 In
111 . From ... toe·· poll &amp; 6 11
to 10 11 hantine baskett. 7Sc

marble top dresser , 6 room hou~e . modern kitche n, HOUSE for sale , 3 bedrooms , all
over 100 .,.ears . old. 30 gallon · carpeting, in HarriSonville, conelectric. Fam ily room fully
copper apple but-t er kettle.
venient to mines, $9,01X),
carpeted with wood·burning
Phone 992 · 5.39~.
Phone 742 ·2796.
fireplace , Iorge lot with storage
building and garden space .
RCA 25" color console, walnut 5 rooms, both, 1 ocre land , newly
Ru stic Hills, Syr~cuse . Phone
c:obinet, $175. Royal adding
remodeiiKJ, storm windows,
992·7836.
aluminum •iding, $1'2,900.
mach ine , $50. Phone 742·3038,
Phone 742·2769.
2 bedroom , Iorge modern kit·
PIERCE Simpson Super Lynks 23
chen , forc:ed air furnace', linC.B., OlO..mikeSuperSkanner, 68 Acres for sole near Ruflond,
coln Hli . Phone 992-5737.
f
antenno. Phone992·5495.
house with 6 rooms ond both ,
FA furnace. basement on 20 ocre form with pond, born ,
USED Hoover sweeper, upright ,
blacktop rood . Call evenings ,
1 mo~e house ond cellar plu1
tank and canister, $18.00.
992·3630.
apple orchard and peach tre•s .
Phone 992·711J7.
·
-:--':.:..:=::_-,--,.,..,.---Also on prop.arty ~ 2 story
4 rooms and bOth in Chester
SCHOOL sewing machines ,
Village, Phone 992-7365.
house , 2 years old double wide
Singer, feoturs buttonhole ,
trailer on County Rood 18. All
blind hem, sews on knits. 6 room1 and both home, nice
fo• $29,000. Phone 992-7590.
SAS.OO cOsh. Also Singer Touth
garden ond yard, Vine St. ,
ond Sew, like new, S31.00cosh .
Racine, Ohio . $7900. Phone 50 Acre, farm , 5 room house, out ·
buildings, fruit trees , 2 loca Phone992·7187 ,
247-2192 .
tion• , mode for oil and gas
WARM Morning tool stove and
wells, own water system , on
Stokermotic atove. Phone U2- '
good blacktop •acd. Call Bill

dleport. irond new high quail.
ty apartments . See the
manag.,. at Apt . 16, or call

apart-

••

full of FforiOI fDIIIII

-AI. TROMM CONST

!on , $350. Phone

USDA
CHOICE BEEF·

•

•

WAlNUT

to 1hopplng on

bedroom

..

Phone t4t-2114
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

••

2860.
1966 F.o rd .Folcon , sta nda rd , 6 cyL '
Coll 992-7492.
1966 Chevy Impa la . 2 doo•. good
Rutland
7C2·2328 .
work cor. Coil 992-2572 or 992All Work Guoranlted
613.&lt; .
· Free Eslimoles
1968 Ford, Pickup truck one -ha lf

Phone 7•2·2166.

f"' $1114 monthly plus elec. or 1'9-n .Yamaha 175 Endura motor$130 Including ofect•lc. LOWER
cycle , $300 or best offer.
RATES FOR ·SENIOR CITIZENS.
Phone 992-7567 after 3.:30 p.m .

1

•

to

YGUI'IIH. S,.clol prlcn

bllllden.

Phone 992 ·n51 .

miles aouth Middleport, At.' 7.
Lorge lots with concrete potioa,
sidewalks, runners and off GREEN beans . canning tomatoes.
strHI parking. Phone 992-7-479,
Pick your own, bring containers. Phone 247·2852 or An ONE bedroom apartments at
drew Cross; letart Falls, Ohio,
VILLAGE MANOR In Middleport

ments,

Jltct

""'----= -a-_n_-=-'·;.mo.. .;: : .'-\ ~'

Saturday to to s.
~• hevt one wr••n houae

9fl.SJJI

1972 Corvett e, steel -city groy1 I·
top. s'ida pipes , 350 automatic ,
MOBilE home lor lole or rent . 3
air conditioning , 32,500 miles ,
bedrooms , ol ut ilities poid.
SS.OOO. Phone 992·5630.

3151.
edullo only. In Mlddlopo•t.
NATIONAL Ch&amp;ckout Register;
Phone 992·3874.
pop rnochine cooler; 1974
3 AND 4 RM. fumlohed ond un·
Monte Corio in good condition ,
furnished ,opt1. Phone 992will trade for mobile' home of
5434 .
aquol value . Also, 10 room
brick , 3 baths , full basement, I
COUNTRY Mobllo tlomo Pork . Rt.
acre on Rt. 7, John Sheet! 3 •; ,
33, ten nliles north of Pomero.,..

ConY8'nlent

ent

11Utltn. Wt Mnltlf, w de H

Abbott •

;:::::=::~i;;i~Jiin

FURNISHED, 2 j)edrm . apartment,

-~

..

St•aon,

====== = ===

You've reached 1he outer li mits . ;;;;""-;-;:-n:::ln:;g;;':::·::--:=-:::-c=::::-:= -:-~ lelttng things slip by. Any GUARANTEED JOIHOCATION.

Recrulling. Call collect
593-3022o•3B5-6318.

Open lor Fall &amp;

p.u lf back handle bars. ne W tire
Thursday , Sept . 7 and 8th' at
ond seals , Scrambler side 59 Corvette , 283, 4 speed . Phone
61 078·6217.
Clair Boso , Great Bend .
pipe5, $650. Co/1949-2480.
Someth ing for everyone, 9 a ..
196'2 Dodge with 1968 Motor,
till dark .
. IN DASH 23 channel CB, om-fm .
good runn ing cond ition, $150.
mpx roc:Ho , 3 frock stereo. Colt
·Pi)cne 843·21&gt;05.
PORCH So le Wednesday thr u
992-3965.
Saturday, 10 til '? Also· some
glais , Depression and H~i sy for FOR SALE : good uied T.V. 's, color
ond block a nd whit e. Harrison 's
private 5howing a t 611J High St.,
TV Service , 276 Sycamore St . ,
Middleport .
Middlepor t. Ohio . Phone 992- PUBLIC Auction , Sept. 8, 1976.
YARD Sola, Chu"h of GoG .
2522.
Time : 1:00 p. m. townsh ip RoOd
Syracuse . Sept . 7 &amp; 8 from 10
1~, 4 .miles 50ulh of Coolville ,
SHOT shell5 fresh stock. A ll
4
a .m. till p .m .
Stole R:t. 7. 3 pc, bedroom 5uite,
brand1. High pow@red , $3.83
YARD Sole , Tues.day, Sept. 7, 9 to
2 pc. living room suite, stereo,
per ~x ; Target loads, $3; 22
3 p.m. Sewing mach ine , baby
bronze applebuHe r kettle a nd
Magnum , $2.60: long rrfle5, 79
items , children's ond odvlts .
sta nd , sma ll tractor and equip·
ce nts: deer slugs , $L 4S. Ovet
nice coots and clothing, plus
ment , Homelite choinsaw.
200 uJed and new gu n1, commisc . Come out Georr.'s Creek
Ou tboard motor, J 1h h .p. Many
potmcl ond croubows . l owes t
R d •Lk
00 · ~ut 1 mi 8 · ma •
Items too numerous to men·
price, anywhere.' ·No deGier~
sharp riyht' turn , third house on
lion . Not responsible fo r oc·
pteose . Fife'1 , 711 3rd .St .. Mid ·
right.
ciden ts . Owner . lawrence Gif.
di"PP't. Phono992·7494.
fen , Auc tio nee r, tc:•n neth
YARD SAle. Weds.. Thu'&gt;day , 1967 V.W. run1 good, 1966 V.W.
Hetger_
Sept. ~ and 9. Lots of nice
Sqvorebock; Model 10 Remclothing. elec. stove, , lots ·of
ington. new blue, good motother items across from Brod·
chgun: Stevelu 410-22 ove r
· -=bu
.=.:.!
'Y;.S:=h
c ;.o=l.:-:--:---c---~
o
and under, on old but nice:
~-- FAN.
d 1
Rare Model tJJ Morfin Sigle bar·
4
ILY Yar So e , S.pt. 9, 9 till
rei 12 go. very good 1hope. CAMPER . Starcraft Gala~ti 8 with
' p.m. Baby, ch;khn cloth., ,
Phono
1 (61•) 378-6376 .. G•ant
OWr'jing. Pho~e 992-2514.
jeans, something for all .
l'oung, l ong Bottorn ~ Ohio.
William Schultz on Cherry
Rldgo.Phone992·6138.
KENNEBEC pototOO$. 50 lb . $3.50
or 100 lb . $6.00. Bring con2 FAMILY Yard Solo. Sopt. 8 ond
tainers. Phone 667-3737 or ~~~~~~~~~~~
9th . Sixth St•oet. Sy•acuso. 9
667 ·3974.
'
a.m. tU13 p .m . Blue Rocker and
56oue farm for sole, 6 room5 ar1d
green rae 1lner, dorhing and SCHOol sewing machine, Singer,
both , 2 outbuildings, dug bo$8 ·
mile:.
features bultorthole,. blind
ment and drilled well, located
hem, sews on knits , $48.00
neor Danville near the mines .
Some tillable land , and balance
cash. Also Singer Touch and
in pasture. Priced $26,(0).
Sew, like ntw, $31.00 to~h .

PLEASURE horses and ponies.
Also, will d_o tra ining. Phone

Continuous

NOTICE

models of mobile homes .
Phone a"tCI code 61&lt; -~23 ·95.31 .
$SCoshSI for junked auto. Frye's
Truck Au tp Parts . Rutland .
• WILl do ironing in my home. 1970 Buick Riviera , good condi·
Phone 7~2·2081.
Phone 992·7394 .
tlon, new tire s , $900. Phon e
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest · Pro·
742·2796 .
Will
do
baby1i!li
ng
in
my
ho
me
duct1. Top price for standing
k om 8 till 5. Call a fter 6 p .m . 1910 Ford Mav&amp;rick. Phone 992 sawtimber. Colt .Kent Hanby,
992·7808.
. '2377 any time . or m -611 ..
1·«6·8570.

LOOKING FOR A BETTER OPCall 992·2156.
PORTUNITY ... ? YOUR TAXES
SUPPORT ONE I ! ! Ria Grondo YARD Sale, Tuesday , Weds .,
1976. Allen Hall. 9A .M.·9P.M.

949-2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8-9-761 month

CASH paid for all makes ond

SHooTING Match . Fo•ked Run

HAIR TRANSPLANT, Dr . Rlcha.d L.

OR

beds, wall teltphonts and
par II .. or complee households ,
Write M . 0 , M iller, Rt . 4 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 992-7760 .

10

Sportsman Club. Stofts ot noo11 .
Sunday, Sept . 5 an4 e very Sunday thereafter .
'

AT949-2801

•
'

your own home

·No muss. No fuss.
~o odor. Use the
s~me day.
Allwork
auarantnd.

GLEN R. BISSEU.

.'

GUTTER SERVICE

1

real ni ce one .

OLD furniture . lc:;e boxes, bran

SSCASHU

Re~"•
of
your'"'rup.

by Von Schr.der
dry-!01m method.

CONTACT

1173 CHEVROLET
SlitS
Che velle Estate St . Wagon, local 1 owner car and less
than 28,500 tTt iles, .v.e eng ine, automat ic tran s ., power
steer ing and brakes, new fires, rad io, gr een fi nish. a

.

p .m .
Mo de rn
and
blackpowder guns und sup·
piles. New ' shipment of turquoise lndiO:n jewelry , 248
Riverview Drive, Pomeroy,
Ohio Qr phone 992-3090.

FREE_E_SnMATES!

'

power steer ing , tent gl a ss, luggage rack , radio, radial
w·w t ir es, clean.

BLIND ADS

Coll..,e-Community College,
Fall Registration, Sept . 13,

A tholqibt fer the

fin ish . Sharp and nice.

Eacfi add itional word 3
c ents .

lONG Rifle Shop , hours 5 p.m . t.ill

,.ra

1975 PINTO WAGON
S289S
~ocal car andon ly6,600 mil es, 4 cyl., automatic trans ..

S,R, 1 an d 12A ; then ce along
Add itional 25c Charge
tht tenterllneof sa l ~ h l ~hW!JY ·
p e r Adver ti sement .
s.u deg , .tO m in . .u sec. west,
OFFICE HOURS
419. 21 fee.t to a point; th ence
8 :30 a,m. to 5 :00 p .m .
•tong the ust lfne of L. aure l
O- Il y, 8:30 a .m . to 12, 00
Cliff Free Me thodist Church _ Noon Saturday .
lond , N. Udeg . 34m ln. 54 sec.
Phone today 992·21$6.
east 363, 66 teet t o a c on c rete
monument and the true point
Of btolnnlng ror the following
NOTICES
descr ibed tract ; thence north ·
ATTN ., II
75 deg . 25 min . 06 sec . west
ALL HOUSEWIVES .
(passi ng
a
concrete
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
monument at 6.2:5 feet and a
Porctl and Basement Porch
aplke In the c en terl ine of T .R. and Buement Sales. etc .
No. 2051 for a total d istance of
must be paid In advance ,
uo.ls feet to a double E lm Get yours In early by
lrH at the northwes t corner or \topping by our Offlte at
·Trlct· 1 described in Vol . 65
The Dally Sentinel , 111
pagl!' 430 of the Me igs County
Court St . or writlnCJ Box
Deed R:ecords ; thence south u
729, Pomeroy, Oh io "5769
d~ . 3A m in . SA se'c . wnt 50
with your rem ittance .
feet to an Iron pin ; thence
south 15 deg , 25 m in , 06 sec .
east 140.7! feet to an Iron pin ;
tntnce north Udeg . 34 m in . !i4
sec. east 50 feet t o the point or
begJnnlng, conta i n i ng , 161 NOW accepting piano students ,
beginners, Intermediate, od·
acre, and being part of a 1.06
vanced students . Coli 992·
acretractdncrlbedas Tract 1
County Deed Records .
Being pert of tne 5ime real
estate conveyed to sal~ cnorch
by deed recorded In Volume
239 page 971 Meigs county

Y 011 CM SIVI hundreds
oven lhouund1 of dol
wltlt tlumlnum or vinyl
siding, ,

$teerlng a nd brake s , rad io, tires show li t t le wear, gold

word

2270.

Motor Co.

1974CHEVY .NOVA4 DOOR'
U795
local low mileag e car , v.e eng ine, automatic power

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

point In the cen terli ne of Old

In Vol . 6S poQe 430 Of the Meigs

QUAUlY .

CALL US lODAY.

For Wlnt Ad Strvlte
5 t ent! per word on e

pertlculerly describe d as

thence south 84 deg . 40 mi n ..u

WE NEED

RATES

OhiO, In F ract ion No . 30. Town
2 N, R1noe 13 W, end more

OPEN SUNDAYS - 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 7 THRU SEPT. 11

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classi/ieds
••
2 SIGNS Pomerety
Business
Se"'ices
OF

WANT ADS
tNFOfiMATION
DIADI.INI!S

Not1c1 II hereby g iven tl'lat

LIQUID
DETERGENT
$ 19

29

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE
TEA BAGS
NO. 355
100 CT. PKG.

32 OZ. BTL.

$119

LB.

1

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS; FRESH., CRISP

W/C

O,ffe r Expires 9-11 -76
Twin City GatPway

.

••

•••

••

Mon., Tues., Wed.

e

I:OOtll 5:00
.

1

Thursday I til12

-

(

..

•.
• ...

noon;

\

I

t

;\ FRIDAY TIL 8 J,4
•. . Close
At 5 p.m. , • r

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

~t.

RUTLAND

14'1-2211

'

-

()I II'

-

BORDEN ORANGE

BREAKFAST DRINK

3~0~~:0 $139. W/C
Offer Expires 9-11-76
T~ City ~ateway

'

l

I I'~

-

-

l __cOUPON

COUPON

Offer Expires 9-11-76
Twin City Gateway

o

o

o

I

0

I

SNACK PAK PUDDINGS

C. C. DROPS
W/C

7

l:~:~~G. g~

4 PACK

W/C

.79 ~

W/C

Olfer Expires 9-11 -76
Twin City Gateway

Ofter Expires 9-11-76
Twin L'ity Gateway

ARNOLD &amp;ItATIE

v

0

HUNT'S

'

TOMATO SAUCE.

3l~A~~ gg•

o

KEEBLER

HUNT'S

NO.l25

•

'·'

�Television .log for easy viewing
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Presents 33; At The Top 20.
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Made !he Movies :10.
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10 :30-Biack Perspective on lht News 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl
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11 :3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
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II :45--Movle " Where Eagles Dare" B.
12 :00'-Movle "The Shedtf of Fractured Jaw" 10;
Janak! 33.
I:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Flvt
·
7:1l0-Biue Ridge Quartet (c)
7:30--Home Dlgesl (c)
8:30-Dayllme (c)
9:30--Testlmony Time (c)
10:1l0-700 Club (')

TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 7,1976
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth4; Bowling for
Oollars6: Let'sGoToTheRa,es8; News 10; Name
That .Tune 13; Family Altair 15; Romagnolls'
Table 20 ;' American Issues Forum 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6;'
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil · Lehrer Report :10.33;
School Convocation 1976 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Nashville on the Road 15.
CAPTAIN EASY
AT lAST OUR TRIO HA:" F00ND A oAF6
TO CO NFER . UN% EIJ BY E NEMY

PLACE
$Pt E

WIN AT BRIDGE

Two-level response is heftl·
6

NORTII IDI
. AJ 973
¥ KJ
t91
i1o

,,. IN;!' rO E' A PARk: liD

K J 10 2
EAST .
•KQ10 6

WEST

BORN LOSER

• 85

-.-.,.----.:---,
f\ELi, WH ~f&lt;e ·
AA~

• a1 3

¥ A IQ96 5

t KJ 107
. 87 .

111£;

t6 5

• A94 3

SOUTH
• 42
• Q 72

A.Wf&lt;[;$'2

tAQ8 32
• Q6 5 .
Both vulnerable
Wtsl

North East

South

I•
Pass

1

Pass

Pass
Pass

N.T.

Opening lead - 10 ¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald : " Standard
AAO YOU FRifHD- American with variations is
vou MUSt RETU~ the system used by almost
HOME BFFa!F .every American expert. Some
YOU ARE MISSED - variati~ns are way out. Others
just common
&gt;ense
:· developments that haven ' t
· really reached the general
public as yet. "
Jim : "Standard American
goes back to !he Culbertson
·system of forty-five years
ago. In those days the simple
two-over-one suit response
might be made with a very
_.-:L.S==::!-.weak
hand. Within the last
U
twenty-five . years this

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
I WA5 GOING TO
TUil H THEM 0'/ER
TO THE POliCE BUT I MUST

6EEtl
WEAK··

HA~E

STUPID·· ·

BUT TliAT

FOREIGN

!'GENT.. THAT
AMER1C'Af'.C
TRAITOR.- •
THEY MUST,
NOT BE

ALLOWED TO
GET AWAY-

... IF

YOU DON'T HEAR

AN~ING FI10M ME 8V
T&gt;1' 'fiME 'THE SUN

MOVES 00WN TO 'THAT
BO'T'TOM I!RA~ ,..

ON iHIWIJ&lt;SH ~ ·
'NARRoWs: A,N'

by THOMAS
ACROSS
· 1 Deserve
s Lift up
10 Chinese·
port
11 Greeting
12 Twining
stem
13 Typewriter

I 'Ll MEE'Tt&gt;IA ON
~E ~ER SIDE!

part

14 Here (Fr. )
15 ~ing

want

triPr'P

here
qaraqe?

i$
parked
in

minimum has risen to ten
points In general and many ex·
perts make their minimum an
eleven point hanq .'
Oswald : Forty years ago
South would respond two
diamonds and the partnership
would probably climb to an
impossible game contra ct.
The modern expert responds
one notrump . His partn er
passes and our expert makes
his rontract and may ~ven
score an extra lrick."
Jim : " The main point Is
that this balanced len points
with no high-spot cards is not
considered to be worth a twoover-&lt;Jne response."

r

Clear-cut;

settled
I 19 Fiver

~~sioux

·

"'7--::c~--

City _,

of mLJ

house,
sarqe!

~ ~~~~
We continue to get questions
about scoring an unfinished
rubber .
The answer is that a side
with a part score on an un·
finished game is given a 5().
point bonus ; a side with a
game in on an unfinished
rubber is given a 300-point
bonus.
·
(Do you have a question
tor the e&lt;perts ? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care of th is
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
11' stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The

most rnteresting quest;ons
wr/1 be useci In this column
and will re ceive copies of
JACOB Y MODERN.!

JOSEPH

DOWN

grOup

COnsumed

'--"""'%! School of b--t--t--

=•

psychology

"'""=':'":::~:::-:~::-:--"""T---~~~:::-"'"":""'T"::-:'-=-::--:-:::-~:--:::"'&lt;:""""--, 33 Landlord's

COJ'f THINK 0' MG AS A

FRESH KID... BUT f:VERY

C.ARS 10 BASH
CRIM

CARS AROUND IN!.'

35

31 EventuaUy t;;-;-t-t-t-

S'-

&lt;2 wds.l

:~!

OTHER

sle..ta

Jlll!JWIDil.JE®Ik.i

sounds

3t Advantage h;+-t-1--t-+~
40 American
jurist,
l&gt;lrl---iri--t---irRoger-

~~~;;;;-:~~41EnroMier ~~~--~~-lOOK, IT8 MY 'TREAT!
BE&amp;IDEf71 YOOVE 60T ID
WASH TI-IOOE CUTS
AND I'RUISES !

CAN YOU

IMA131NE THE
AWE SOME
POTEI/T IAL
OF A 5 PY
WITH ESP

OTtiER WORD$,

MA~E$ PEOPl-E

1ELEPATHiC!

South's slam bid just right
NORTH

~

7

•QlH

• 92
tAK84 3

WEST

4Dt ....

EAST
. 9
¥ K 1063

.. J 8

.QJ 75
tJ7 2
tt095
• K98 2
• Q 10 7 6 3
SOUTH (D)
• A K 10 6 3 2
• A84

'[IIJ!;m'(-'5€~BJ.l ,TVJ~fJ14 - 51b(tT,
\Wi"IJll.i-tJitJB , 1HIRT'1 1.

.. !'lot~ ~1 1-lb I
1DIX+l Mi1 SHoe?
~

1lr't£S.

• Q6

• J&gt;

Both vulnerable

West

North East

Soutb

Pass

2•

2•

Pass

t•

Pass 3 •
pass 4 •
Pass 5+ Pass 6 •
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - Q • .

.&lt;) "

I.ITrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

I

'

.

LITTLE .,aPHAN ANNIE-.B.ROTHERI UNDER THE SKIN
I NEVER HAVE
BeliEVED IN
MAGIC OR IM

DISAPI'E~lNG

I:

FUNNY BUSINESS

WIN AT BRIDGE

f)\ACTLY: ..

ACTSI

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South wins the heart lead,
draws trumps and goes after ·
' ,....
diamonds. The suit breaks 3-3
so he gets to discard two
hearts and a club and wraps
up 13 tricks.
This doesn't mean that seven
was a good contract. It made
...srE because diamonds broke 3·3
11ME 11'1 and suits break 3·3 just 36 per
IDlE cent of the time. .
CltATTER · On the other hand , the con·
of six was a very good
It was sure to make
irresllf(tive of trump and dia·
mond breaks since South

~0,

could always discard his los·
ing club on a high diamond
and ruff his third heart with
dummy's fourth trump.
The hand shows a weakness
of standard American. When
played ·in a matchpoint game
the basic standard bidding
went one spade- three spades·
four spades-pass ; or one
spade-two diamonds -two
spades-four spades-pass.
The bidding in the box
shows one expert way of
reaching six. Most experts
play that the jump raise . to
three is invitational but not
forcing . Hence, North 's threespade bid was forcing and ask·
ed South to make some below·
game slam try if he could.
South could and did when he .
bid four hearts. North showed
the club ace and South bid the
slam.

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

PAWMS

I

[D I

hints, Earh day lhr code letters arc dille rent.

IEXFLAN!

CRYPTOQUOTES

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN , send $1 to: " Win
a t Br i dge ." cl o th i s
newspape r. P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City Station, /lew York ,
N. Y. 100 19)

R

Minsk
1f Biblical

mOuntain
15 Put into .
lyJl!!
11 Wiretap
li"'Ibe
Gentleman

-Dope''
(2 wds.)

Good! That saves
me a trip to the
citl.l ,· - -

dump!

&amp;t.J-.~ , _

I brouqht LlOUr .
iced tea, Mr.Turnipr

YOU NEVE.~ 'r!..NOW,

DOWN

Whips
13 John, in

Starting
point
JohnDruten
Great

Lakes

1 EasUy
crumbled
"I'm Juat
a Vag•
bond_..
3 Subside
4 Craving
5 Part of a
sentence

ERNIE. ...11-\1$ M.AY
'1-\EL..P YOU (fROW I .

z

a Clothing

size
7 Sly- fox
(2 wds.)
a Wither
9 Son of the
soil
12 Pedestals
16 Whirring
sound
19 Friune of

'mind

"
Z2 Baby
soother
Z3 u _ the
Wide

~
!fPJll
(

~

Uiinker
31 Fragrance
32 Erstwhile

Russian
farmer

24 Slide along

Z5 Italian
cheese

33Finliish

lake
38Slnging
Starr
D camper's
bed

Zl Not

"touched"
!I Chinese
port

1--1--H

~ll!JMill)1[E;tkat k4~•""'-' ,_
hy HENRI ARNOLD ,,nd BOB LEi['

..,.,-+-t-+--1 Unscra~bte· thesefourlumbles,

•

,.,'
'

_,

· ~·
---..

30Greek

Missouri'!

.

\'

Yesterday's Aoawer

•

o

0 1

I

JumM,., PHOTO .lADED

(CJ 1916 Khtl Feah&amp;rft Syndicate, Inc. )

Sa1unlay'•

=+--+....,1'--1

~':..,=

one letter to each square, to

-..,..,"fr.rrt/r,...

form four ordinar)' words.

THYAS

I I

0010~!: IADIES'ROCM
AND TAkE CARE OF IHOSE
cure AND 13RU!SI:t7 ... WHILE MEIV7
I. ORDER OOMF:.-

. WHAT THETA!
TUII:NEC' t'OLI'TICIAN
HAD-WHEN IT CAME .
TO E:.LECTION TIME.

IGANDEA

THIN610EAT.

SLEIGH

yp

GRWF

yp

EJDTB,
PYYCB . -

WDT

cy QT

HAR

AYCJ· ILARREB

0 ARB H R Q •.

leam wa•-A OOD SKATE

MEAN~TO WHOM
DID I '1.{00 HOO'?"

i.(OU

[)

CIJ

I 01

HE 6REW OLD IN

)I I

Now arranre the circled letters
to fonn the aurpriee answer, aa
auneated by Ihe above cartoon.

L

[

I

T HE;; "ATTEMPT'
10 PLAY IT.

IPrine RISE AHSWift m I "rn -( I XX]-0 "

,,'

(A.IItwer•

LACKEY

A.ru'Wm What thular&amp;la11erollhe ltotkeJJ

·

WHO 01 D 1./0IJ
" "100 HOO" TO

by Jon Peterson

MR. FLUGG

43 Gate
receipts

Beach wear

{A. .. wen lomorrow)

CRAYONS~!

~

An Oklahoma reader wants
to know if it is ever proper to
incur a penalty deliberately.
The answer is a most decid·
ed "no." Penalties are there
merely to prevent uninten·
tiona! wrong doing.·

'

HALF A BOX OF

•

0

~

ACROSS
1 Kind of
pigeon
5 Fastener

,.

ET ANOTHER

P~SON~L N\ATTER /

by THOMAS JOSEPH

••

I ' WONDER WHAT
TH' LEETLE ·VARMINT
LIKES ABOUT TH'
FOOL THINGS
ENNI/HOW··

I FEEL Tt-lltr A MAN'S WAGeS
ARE A lJei&lt;C( PRIVATE AND

~t1M'6td

••

MAW!! TATER

I \llOOLOt.l1T CARE TO
· DISCUSS 4Q()R SALAR4-

...

apostrophes. the l r nj..lt h nnrl forrnati on of th~:~ words . are all

GUWNW

f NA8L Ef&gt;

PERCEPTION .. IN

Unscramble these foorJumble!,
one letter to each square, to
1:.;-i-+__,1--1 ·form four ordinary word1.

One ·leller simply stands for another. In 1his. sample A is
used lor lhr 1hrcr I.'s. X lor the two O's. ctr . Single letters.

DF

IOXTRA~EN50 RY

B LAZES : ... IT

THEM TO REAP /MIN~~

lty lfl Nil! AHNOI D .on!l U()U Ll:i:

HAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

$ TIM ULATE,S

Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club B; ' Mister
Rogers 20,33; Movie "Babes In Arms" 10; Dinah!
13.
4: 3&lt;f-Bewitched J; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
Sesame Street 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible
15.
5:3&lt;f-Adam·l2 4; News 6; Famil y Affairs 8; Electric
Company 20,33; Adom.l2 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:3&lt;f-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodg e Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You· 33. ·
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Pop! Goes The Counlry 8;
News 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Famil y Affair 15;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; World War I 33.
7:3&lt;f-Last of .the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Malch
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Pat Boone and the
Llltle Ones 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
s:oo-Jubllee 3,4; Bionic Wom.an 6,13; Billy Graham
Crusade 8,10, 15; Nova 20,33;.
9:1l0-World At War 6; Movie "Babe" 6.10; Thealer In
America 33; Heart A!lack 13; To Be Announ"d 15;
Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
9:3&lt;f-PIIot 3,4,15.
IO:IlO-NBC Reports 3,4,15; Sta rsky &amp; Hutch 6; Ne.ws
20 .
10 :3&lt;f-Aimanac 20.
II :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil' Lehrer Reporl
33.
11 :3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Only With
Married Men" 6, 13; U.S. Open Tennis Highlights 8;
Mary Hartman, Mar·Y Hartman 10; ABC Ne.ws 33.
11 :45--Movle "Duel at Diablo" 8.
12 :0G-Movle " The Man With The Golden Arm" 10;
Jasnakl 33.

Patriotic
women's

PLE,t:&gt;.5t, BW65IONt;, -HAS A FLEEr O'

A DR UG Tt&lt;AT

4:oo-Mister Carton 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;

1 Fanatical
t While
vestment
3 Gin complement
4 Look
over
Bundled
5
I Hebrew
X~l~rda)"S Ansl!~r
universe
7 No longer
Zl Queen's
29 FuU of
a candidate
pastry
pluck
(3 wds. )
Z% Samuel
(var.) ·
8 Barreri
Pepys, e.g. 3G Actor's
23 Lobster
monologue
9 Lease
part
31
Shelf
holders
24
New
Jersey
32
Aviary
11 "Toot"
.17 Palmist's
city
sound
words
%5 Kind of jet 34 Exhaust
18 Failure
:1 Crossed out 37 COnfine

(2 wds.)

.......,!&lt;!'.,

WHAT DO 'IOU
\ol EAN .. A "BRAIN
t!&gt;OO~ TER""'

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1976
6:oo-Summer Semester 10.
6:15--Farm Report 13.
6:20-The Story 13.
6:31)--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10 .
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
6:5()-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13 .
6:55-Good Morning Trl Stale 13.
7:01;-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; C~S
News 8; Chuck White Reports tO .
7:05--Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
I.
7:3&lt;f-Schoolles 10.
8:1l0-Lossle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame Street
33. .
.
8:3&lt;f-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Lucy
ShowS; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-Cross·Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattlelales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
IO :oo-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Prl" Is Rlght.8,.10.
10 : Is-General Hospital 6.
10:31)--Cetebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;.
Love of Life B, 10; Sesame Street 33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :1l0-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10.
12 :31)-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :55--NBC News 3,15.
1:llO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Concentration 8;
Young and the Restless 10; To Be Announced IS,
I :3&lt;f-Days of our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns ~. 10.
·
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6.
2:3&lt;f-Do,tors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:1l0-Anolher World 3,4,15; All in the Family 8, 10;
. Romagnolis' Table 20.
3: 15--General Hospital 13.
3:3&lt;f-Bewltched6; Match GameB,IO; Lilias, Yoga and
You 20.
.

21 Pinball
word
~1122 Unfeshionable
Sluices
Regarding b.:--t--t---t--

front

CAPTAIN EASY

.A4

~cat 'Hill

...~EN YOU 50

He HAD rr DONE
1'0 FOOL 'l).IE COPS

Jumbl"' PUPIL

I

·

Ye•terd•y'•

I

I

SWAMP

FLAXEN DOOMED
.· , .

Aalwen H?ial th e taiiortllrned polltu:mn had- whe,n

.

it c•me to election t.ime-IT ALL SEWED UP

OADBURN

FORGET IT !

ROAD
SIGNS!!

-

1 DIDN'T THINK THE'&lt;'D
EVER 6ET 1.{00 !!UlLT!

I SUPPOSE I.{OU HEARD
THAT OUR LAST SCHOOL

ONE OAt{ flE JOST COUAP.lED!

I THINK HE WAS 100
SENSITIVE... ""' 518H ~

FIRST [il6.1{
ON 'TI-lE JOB.
I RUN INTO

A I!.'€1RDO!

HAD A NfR\()05 ~KDOWN

! •• •

..
'•.

7

(OID'Jr'rOW)

I

'

... , ..' .

...
•I

•/

'•

'

�Television .log for easy viewing
8:00-Movln' 011 3.4; Happy Days 6,13; Billy Graham
10,15; CBS Salurday Preview 8; Must' Proltct
Presents 33; At The Top 20.
8:3G--Laverne a. Shirley 6,13; Billy Graham Crusade
8; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
9:oo-Poll" Woman 3.4.1~; Movie "The Hearlbtoak
Kid" 6,13;- Evenlng at Pops 33; Mash 10: Men Who
Made !he Movies :10.
9:3G--PIIol 8.10.
10:00-Pollce Story 3,4; Madada : Monument t~
Fr-m 10,15; Switch a; News 20; Olymp•a&lt;l JJ.
10 :30-Biack Perspective on lht News 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl
33.
11 :3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mystery of the Week
6.13; U.S. Open Tennis Highlights 8; Mary Hart.
man 10; ABC News 33.
II :45--Movle " Where Eagles Dare" B.
12 :00'-Movle "The Shedtf of Fractured Jaw" 10;
Janak! 33.
I:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Flvt
·
7:1l0-Biue Ridge Quartet (c)
7:30--Home Dlgesl (c)
8:30-Dayllme (c)
9:30--Testlmony Time (c)
10:1l0-700 Club (')

TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 7,1976
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth4; Bowling for
Oollars6: Let'sGoToTheRa,es8; News 10; Name
That .Tune 13; Family Altair 15; Romagnolls'
Table 20 ;' American Issues Forum 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal With II 6;'
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil · Lehrer Report :10.33;
School Convocation 1976 10; To Tell the Truth 13;
Nashville on the Road 15.
CAPTAIN EASY
AT lAST OUR TRIO HA:" F00ND A oAF6
TO CO NFER . UN% EIJ BY E NEMY

PLACE
$Pt E

WIN AT BRIDGE

Two-level response is heftl·
6

NORTII IDI
. AJ 973
¥ KJ
t91
i1o

,,. IN;!' rO E' A PARk: liD

K J 10 2
EAST .
•KQ10 6

WEST

BORN LOSER

• 85

-.-.,.----.:---,
f\ELi, WH ~f&lt;e ·
AA~

• a1 3

¥ A IQ96 5

t KJ 107
. 87 .

111£;

t6 5

• A94 3

SOUTH
• 42
• Q 72

A.Wf&lt;[;$'2

tAQ8 32
• Q6 5 .
Both vulnerable
Wtsl

North East

South

I•
Pass

1

Pass

Pass
Pass

N.T.

Opening lead - 10 ¥

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Oswald : " Standard
AAO YOU FRifHD- American with variations is
vou MUSt RETU~ the system used by almost
HOME BFFa!F .every American expert. Some
YOU ARE MISSED - variati~ns are way out. Others
just common
&gt;ense
:· developments that haven ' t
· really reached the general
public as yet. "
Jim : "Standard American
goes back to !he Culbertson
·system of forty-five years
ago. In those days the simple
two-over-one suit response
might be made with a very
_.-:L.S==::!-.weak
hand. Within the last
U
twenty-five . years this

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
I WA5 GOING TO
TUil H THEM 0'/ER
TO THE POliCE BUT I MUST

6EEtl
WEAK··

HA~E

STUPID·· ·

BUT TliAT

FOREIGN

!'GENT.. THAT
AMER1C'Af'.C
TRAITOR.- •
THEY MUST,
NOT BE

ALLOWED TO
GET AWAY-

... IF

YOU DON'T HEAR

AN~ING FI10M ME 8V
T&gt;1' 'fiME 'THE SUN

MOVES 00WN TO 'THAT
BO'T'TOM I!RA~ ,..

ON iHIWIJ&lt;SH ~ ·
'NARRoWs: A,N'

by THOMAS
ACROSS
· 1 Deserve
s Lift up
10 Chinese·
port
11 Greeting
12 Twining
stem
13 Typewriter

I 'Ll MEE'Tt&gt;IA ON
~E ~ER SIDE!

part

14 Here (Fr. )
15 ~ing

want

triPr'P

here
qaraqe?

i$
parked
in

minimum has risen to ten
points In general and many ex·
perts make their minimum an
eleven point hanq .'
Oswald : Forty years ago
South would respond two
diamonds and the partnership
would probably climb to an
impossible game contra ct.
The modern expert responds
one notrump . His partn er
passes and our expert makes
his rontract and may ~ven
score an extra lrick."
Jim : " The main point Is
that this balanced len points
with no high-spot cards is not
considered to be worth a twoover-&lt;Jne response."

r

Clear-cut;

settled
I 19 Fiver

~~sioux

·

"'7--::c~--

City _,

of mLJ

house,
sarqe!

~ ~~~~
We continue to get questions
about scoring an unfinished
rubber .
The answer is that a side
with a part score on an un·
finished game is given a 5().
point bonus ; a side with a
game in on an unfinished
rubber is given a 300-point
bonus.
·
(Do you have a question
tor the e&lt;perts ? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " care of th is
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
11' stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The

most rnteresting quest;ons
wr/1 be useci In this column
and will re ceive copies of
JACOB Y MODERN.!

JOSEPH

DOWN

grOup

COnsumed

'--"""'%! School of b--t--t--

=•

psychology

"'""=':'":::~:::-:~::-:--"""T---~~~:::-"'"":""'T"::-:'-=-::--:-:::-~:--:::"'&lt;:""""--, 33 Landlord's

COJ'f THINK 0' MG AS A

FRESH KID... BUT f:VERY

C.ARS 10 BASH
CRIM

CARS AROUND IN!.'

35

31 EventuaUy t;;-;-t-t-t-

S'-

&lt;2 wds.l

:~!

OTHER

sle..ta

Jlll!JWIDil.JE®Ik.i

sounds

3t Advantage h;+-t-1--t-+~
40 American
jurist,
l&gt;lrl---iri--t---irRoger-

~~~;;;;-:~~41EnroMier ~~~--~~-lOOK, IT8 MY 'TREAT!
BE&amp;IDEf71 YOOVE 60T ID
WASH TI-IOOE CUTS
AND I'RUISES !

CAN YOU

IMA131NE THE
AWE SOME
POTEI/T IAL
OF A 5 PY
WITH ESP

OTtiER WORD$,

MA~E$ PEOPl-E

1ELEPATHiC!

South's slam bid just right
NORTH

~

7

•QlH

• 92
tAK84 3

WEST

4Dt ....

EAST
. 9
¥ K 1063

.. J 8

.QJ 75
tJ7 2
tt095
• K98 2
• Q 10 7 6 3
SOUTH (D)
• A K 10 6 3 2
• A84

'[IIJ!;m'(-'5€~BJ.l ,TVJ~fJ14 - 51b(tT,
\Wi"IJll.i-tJitJB , 1HIRT'1 1.

.. !'lot~ ~1 1-lb I
1DIX+l Mi1 SHoe?
~

1lr't£S.

• Q6

• J&gt;

Both vulnerable

West

North East

Soutb

Pass

2•

2•

Pass

t•

Pass 3 •
pass 4 •
Pass 5+ Pass 6 •
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - Q • .

.&lt;) "

I.ITrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

I

'

.

LITTLE .,aPHAN ANNIE-.B.ROTHERI UNDER THE SKIN
I NEVER HAVE
BeliEVED IN
MAGIC OR IM

DISAPI'E~lNG

I:

FUNNY BUSINESS

WIN AT BRIDGE

f)\ACTLY: ..

ACTSI

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
South wins the heart lead,
draws trumps and goes after ·
' ,....
diamonds. The suit breaks 3-3
so he gets to discard two
hearts and a club and wraps
up 13 tricks.
This doesn't mean that seven
was a good contract. It made
...srE because diamonds broke 3·3
11ME 11'1 and suits break 3·3 just 36 per
IDlE cent of the time. .
CltATTER · On the other hand , the con·
of six was a very good
It was sure to make
irresllf(tive of trump and dia·
mond breaks since South

~0,

could always discard his los·
ing club on a high diamond
and ruff his third heart with
dummy's fourth trump.
The hand shows a weakness
of standard American. When
played ·in a matchpoint game
the basic standard bidding
went one spade- three spades·
four spades-pass ; or one
spade-two diamonds -two
spades-four spades-pass.
The bidding in the box
shows one expert way of
reaching six. Most experts
play that the jump raise . to
three is invitational but not
forcing . Hence, North 's threespade bid was forcing and ask·
ed South to make some below·
game slam try if he could.
South could and did when he .
bid four hearts. North showed
the club ace and South bid the
slam.

I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

PAWMS

I

[D I

hints, Earh day lhr code letters arc dille rent.

IEXFLAN!

CRYPTOQUOTES

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN , send $1 to: " Win
a t Br i dge ." cl o th i s
newspape r. P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City Station, /lew York ,
N. Y. 100 19)

R

Minsk
1f Biblical

mOuntain
15 Put into .
lyJl!!
11 Wiretap
li"'Ibe
Gentleman

-Dope''
(2 wds.)

Good! That saves
me a trip to the
citl.l ,· - -

dump!

&amp;t.J-.~ , _

I brouqht LlOUr .
iced tea, Mr.Turnipr

YOU NEVE.~ 'r!..NOW,

DOWN

Whips
13 John, in

Starting
point
JohnDruten
Great

Lakes

1 EasUy
crumbled
"I'm Juat
a Vag•
bond_..
3 Subside
4 Craving
5 Part of a
sentence

ERNIE. ...11-\1$ M.AY
'1-\EL..P YOU (fROW I .

z

a Clothing

size
7 Sly- fox
(2 wds.)
a Wither
9 Son of the
soil
12 Pedestals
16 Whirring
sound
19 Friune of

'mind

"
Z2 Baby
soother
Z3 u _ the
Wide

~
!fPJll
(

~

Uiinker
31 Fragrance
32 Erstwhile

Russian
farmer

24 Slide along

Z5 Italian
cheese

33Finliish

lake
38Slnging
Starr
D camper's
bed

Zl Not

"touched"
!I Chinese
port

1--1--H

~ll!JMill)1[E;tkat k4~•""'-' ,_
hy HENRI ARNOLD ,,nd BOB LEi['

..,.,-+-t-+--1 Unscra~bte· thesefourlumbles,

•

,.,'
'

_,

· ~·
---..

30Greek

Missouri'!

.

\'

Yesterday's Aoawer

•

o

0 1

I

JumM,., PHOTO .lADED

(CJ 1916 Khtl Feah&amp;rft Syndicate, Inc. )

Sa1unlay'•

=+--+....,1'--1

~':..,=

one letter to each square, to

-..,..,"fr.rrt/r,...

form four ordinar)' words.

THYAS

I I

0010~!: IADIES'ROCM
AND TAkE CARE OF IHOSE
cure AND 13RU!SI:t7 ... WHILE MEIV7
I. ORDER OOMF:.-

. WHAT THETA!
TUII:NEC' t'OLI'TICIAN
HAD-WHEN IT CAME .
TO E:.LECTION TIME.

IGANDEA

THIN610EAT.

SLEIGH

yp

GRWF

yp

EJDTB,
PYYCB . -

WDT

cy QT

HAR

AYCJ· ILARREB

0 ARB H R Q •.

leam wa•-A OOD SKATE

MEAN~TO WHOM
DID I '1.{00 HOO'?"

i.(OU

[)

CIJ

I 01

HE 6REW OLD IN

)I I

Now arranre the circled letters
to fonn the aurpriee answer, aa
auneated by Ihe above cartoon.

L

[

I

T HE;; "ATTEMPT'
10 PLAY IT.

IPrine RISE AHSWift m I "rn -( I XX]-0 "

,,'

(A.IItwer•

LACKEY

A.ru'Wm What thular&amp;la11erollhe ltotkeJJ

·

WHO 01 D 1./0IJ
" "100 HOO" TO

by Jon Peterson

MR. FLUGG

43 Gate
receipts

Beach wear

{A. .. wen lomorrow)

CRAYONS~!

~

An Oklahoma reader wants
to know if it is ever proper to
incur a penalty deliberately.
The answer is a most decid·
ed "no." Penalties are there
merely to prevent uninten·
tiona! wrong doing.·

'

HALF A BOX OF

•

0

~

ACROSS
1 Kind of
pigeon
5 Fastener

,.

ET ANOTHER

P~SON~L N\ATTER /

by THOMAS JOSEPH

••

I ' WONDER WHAT
TH' LEETLE ·VARMINT
LIKES ABOUT TH'
FOOL THINGS
ENNI/HOW··

I FEEL Tt-lltr A MAN'S WAGeS
ARE A lJei&lt;C( PRIVATE AND

~t1M'6td

••

MAW!! TATER

I \llOOLOt.l1T CARE TO
· DISCUSS 4Q()R SALAR4-

...

apostrophes. the l r nj..lt h nnrl forrnati on of th~:~ words . are all

GUWNW

f NA8L Ef&gt;

PERCEPTION .. IN

Unscramble these foorJumble!,
one letter to each square, to
1:.;-i-+__,1--1 ·form four ordinary word1.

One ·leller simply stands for another. In 1his. sample A is
used lor lhr 1hrcr I.'s. X lor the two O's. ctr . Single letters.

DF

IOXTRA~EN50 RY

B LAZES : ... IT

THEM TO REAP /MIN~~

lty lfl Nil! AHNOI D .on!l U()U Ll:i:

HAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

$ TIM ULATE,S

Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club B; ' Mister
Rogers 20,33; Movie "Babes In Arms" 10; Dinah!
13.
4: 3&lt;f-Bewitched J; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
Sesame Street 20,33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:00-FBI 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible
15.
5:3&lt;f-Adam·l2 4; News 6; Famil y Affairs 8; Electric
Company 20,33; Adom.l2 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:3&lt;f-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodg e Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You· 33. ·
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Pop! Goes The Counlry 8;
News 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Famil y Affair 15;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; World War I 33.
7:3&lt;f-Last of .the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Malch
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Pat Boone and the
Llltle Ones 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
s:oo-Jubllee 3,4; Bionic Wom.an 6,13; Billy Graham
Crusade 8,10, 15; Nova 20,33;.
9:1l0-World At War 6; Movie "Babe" 6.10; Thealer In
America 33; Heart A!lack 13; To Be Announ"d 15;
Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
9:3&lt;f-PIIot 3,4,15.
IO:IlO-NBC Reports 3,4,15; Sta rsky &amp; Hutch 6; Ne.ws
20 .
10 :3&lt;f-Aimanac 20.
II :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MacNeil' Lehrer Reporl
33.
11 :3&lt;f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Only With
Married Men" 6, 13; U.S. Open Tennis Highlights 8;
Mary Hartman, Mar·Y Hartman 10; ABC Ne.ws 33.
11 :45--Movle "Duel at Diablo" 8.
12 :0G-Movle " The Man With The Golden Arm" 10;
Jasnakl 33.

Patriotic
women's

PLE,t:&gt;.5t, BW65IONt;, -HAS A FLEEr O'

A DR UG Tt&lt;AT

4:oo-Mister Carton 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;

1 Fanatical
t While
vestment
3 Gin complement
4 Look
over
Bundled
5
I Hebrew
X~l~rda)"S Ansl!~r
universe
7 No longer
Zl Queen's
29 FuU of
a candidate
pastry
pluck
(3 wds. )
Z% Samuel
(var.) ·
8 Barreri
Pepys, e.g. 3G Actor's
23 Lobster
monologue
9 Lease
part
31
Shelf
holders
24
New
Jersey
32
Aviary
11 "Toot"
.17 Palmist's
city
sound
words
%5 Kind of jet 34 Exhaust
18 Failure
:1 Crossed out 37 COnfine

(2 wds.)

.......,!&lt;!'.,

WHAT DO 'IOU
\ol EAN .. A "BRAIN
t!&gt;OO~ TER""'

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1976
6:oo-Summer Semester 10.
6:15--Farm Report 13.
6:20-The Story 13.
6:31)--Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10 .
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
6:5()-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13 .
6:55-Good Morning Trl Stale 13.
7:01;-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; C~S
News 8; Chuck White Reports tO .
7:05--Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
I.
7:3&lt;f-Schoolles 10.
8:1l0-Lossle 6; Captain Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame Street
33. .
.
8:3&lt;f-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4; Phil Donahue 15; Lucy
ShowS; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-Cross·Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattlelales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
IO :oo-Sanford and Son 3,4,15; Prl" Is Rlght.8,.10.
10 : Is-General Hospital 6.
10:31)--Cetebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4, 15; .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;.
Love of Life B, 10; Sesame Street 33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 :1l0-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10.
12 :31)-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :55--NBC News 3,15.
1:llO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6.13; Concentration 8;
Young and the Restless 10; To Be Announced IS,
I :3&lt;f-Days of our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns ~. 10.
·
2:00-$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6.
2:3&lt;f-Do,tors 3,4,15; One Lite to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:1l0-Anolher World 3,4,15; All in the Family 8, 10;
. Romagnolis' Table 20.
3: 15--General Hospital 13.
3:3&lt;f-Bewltched6; Match GameB,IO; Lilias, Yoga and
You 20.
.

21 Pinball
word
~1122 Unfeshionable
Sluices
Regarding b.:--t--t---t--

front

CAPTAIN EASY

.A4

~cat 'Hill

...~EN YOU 50

He HAD rr DONE
1'0 FOOL 'l).IE COPS

Jumbl"' PUPIL

I

·

Ye•terd•y'•

I

I

SWAMP

FLAXEN DOOMED
.· , .

Aalwen H?ial th e taiiortllrned polltu:mn had- whe,n

.

it c•me to election t.ime-IT ALL SEWED UP

OADBURN

FORGET IT !

ROAD
SIGNS!!

-

1 DIDN'T THINK THE'&lt;'D
EVER 6ET 1.{00 !!UlLT!

I SUPPOSE I.{OU HEARD
THAT OUR LAST SCHOOL

ONE OAt{ flE JOST COUAP.lED!

I THINK HE WAS 100
SENSITIVE... ""' 518H ~

FIRST [il6.1{
ON 'TI-lE JOB.
I RUN INTO

A I!.'€1RDO!

HAD A NfR\()05 ~KDOWN

! •• •

..
'•.

7

(OID'Jr'rOW)

I

'

... , ..' .

...
•I

•/

'•

'

�•

.
12-The !)ally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O ., Tuesday, Sept, 7, 1976

Ohio men are free on bond
Two young Meigs County
men were arrested Sunday by
Mason County Sl)erlfls
Deputies and charged with
poSJesslon or controlled
substances.
Arrestedat3 :15a.m. on Rt.
331n Hartford, were MarUn J.
Chasteen, 21, Middleport, and
John D. Schneider, 23
Pomeroy. Chasteen was also
charged with driving under
the Influence of an alcoholic
beverllf!e.
Both men were arraig~ed
before Justice of the Peace
Charles "Sonny " Smith
Sunday who set bond at $1,000
each, which both posted.
Deputies Detiler Rpush III
imd Thomas Hatfield stopped

'

Ben Franklin said "A
Penny Saved is a Penny

or

GaiUpollo, Ohio
Sepl. f , lf76
Sales Report of
Ohlo VaUey Uveatock Co.
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 250 to 30(J'lbs. 24
to 31.50 ; 300 to 400 lbs. 24 to
33; 400 to 500 lbs. 25 to 34.50;
500 to 600 lbs . '1:1 to 35; 600 to
700 lbs . 24.50 to 35 ; 700 lbs.
and Over 28 to 36,
HEIFER' CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 20 tO 25; 300 to 400 lbs.
21.50 to 27,75; 400 to 500 lbs. 22
to 28; 500 to 600 lbs. 21 to 28;
600 to 700 lbs. 21 to 28; 700 lbs.
and Over 22.50 to 31.
STOCK COWS &amp; BUUS
{By The Head)- Stock Cows ·
140 to 230; Stock Cows and
Calves 165 to 290; Stock Bulls
140 to 250; Baby Calves 10 to
37; (By Tbe Pound~ Canners &amp; Cut~rs Cows 17 to
22.50; Hols~ln Cows 21 to 24;
Commei-clal Bulls (1,000 lbs.
and Over) - 24 to 30.
PIGS - 16 to 38.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. to 250 47 to 58; Medlwn
200lbs. to300;l(lto42; Culls30
down.
sows - 350 up 37 to 40.

SEPT. I0-11-12

THE BREAKING
POINT
Bob Svenson Robert Culp,
Belinda J, ontgomery

.

POUCEMAN SHOT ·
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI )
Raul Rendon, 22, Genoa, was
to be arraigned today on a
of attempted
charge
aggravated murder of a
Toledo policeman.
Rendon and officer Henry
Lawson were in fair cooditioo
at a Toledo hospital Saturday
af~r a shirt gun battle oo the
city's South Side.
A police spokesman said
Lawson had stopped a suspicious automobile and was
. checking out its occupant,
Rendon, when the suspect
broke away and shot him in
the face.
.
The bullet struck Lawson In
the mouth and passed
through his cheek. He then
fired four shots at the fleeing
Rendon, hitting him once ln
the leg,

( Rl

ShowStan7p.m.

SPECIAl.
SEPT. 7 THRU SEPT. 12

AU. BEEF
1fAMBURGER
FRENCH FRIES
SMALL DRINK

Miss

Den nis

was

a

daughter ot the la le William
and louisa Dennis of Mld&lt;lleport . Besides her parents
she was preceded in death by
a brother, Dale O.,nnls of
Texas, i;'lnd four sisterS. Mrs.

Katie Heines, Middleport ;

Helnes J

tnt ant sister .

S.urvlvl ng are a sister, Mrs.

Ethel Gregg ot Pasadena,
Clatf. ; seven nieces. Mrs.
Gltklnson, Mrs. Miry Kay
Whitling ton, Mrs. Marg-lle
Laughlin , all of East

Liver pool ; Mrs . Mary
Frances Burns and ,Mra.
Marlon Louise Pepper, both
ol Texas; Mrs. Paula Gregg
Talbott of Pasadfna, Calll.,
and Mrs. Betty Hammer,
Columbus, and a n'l)htw.
Bob Hoelllch, Pomeroy. A
number or great nieces and
nephews and two greal.greal

nieces also survl._..
Funeral sarviCH will ' be
held at 1 p.m. Thundly tl tt..
Ewing F~tl ~ with
burial lo be In Growl Hill
Cemetery at Chtshirt.
Friends may call tl the
funeral homt from 1 p.m.
Wednesday until llmt of
servi-.

ELBERFELD$
IN POME
.
Drive to Elberfelds Warehouse See the fine selection of linoleum
floor covering - excellent patterns
by Armstrong and Congoleum - 9
and 12 foot widths.

Herbert Skap;gs
PORT WIL LIAMS
Herbert Lee Skoggs, 54, died
.,t his residence at Port
Williams, Ohio Mqnda y.
The soo of'the late Charles
and Della Etem Skaggs, he
was also preceded In death by

two brothers and one si ster.

He was employed at Wright

PaHerson Air Force Base

until his rellremenl.

He -Is survived by

,

two

two si sters, Mildred Clarke,

and Mrs. Doyle I Henr ietta)
Shuler. both of Cheshire and

several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Thursday, 10 a.m. at Ewing

Chapel with the Rev . William
Uber offlclallng . Burial will
be In Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home alter 9 a.m.
Wednesday.

992-5248

DAIRY ISLE
Middleport,
· Ohio

Derailed chemical carendangered Dyesville
DYESVILLE - .,Homes
1r!Utln 3,000 feet of this rural
commwdty were evacuated
Tueaday afternoon when an
overtlll'tled tank car of a
Conrail traln leaked the
dl!rigerous liquid~
''acetaldehyde,''
W. H. Dunfee of the
rallroid yards In Hobson aald
the call pertaining to the
derallmenl was received be·
tween 12:30 and , 1 p,m.
Tuesday. Dunfee aald three
cars of the 71-car train went
over a hill and a fourth was
derailed at the crosm"8 In
· Dyesvllle at CoWlty Road 11.
Only one leaked the toxic
ehemlcal.
He said that the chemical
"&amp;C!!taldehyde" la dangeroua
and reBldents wlthln 3,000 feet
wefe
eyacuated .

"Acetaldehyde" Is described
as a "flammable, colorleSJ
fuming , liquid with a
characterl.stlc pungent odor,
u~~ed . chiefly In organic
synthesis, In photography
and for the slivering of
mirror~ . Workers uprlghtlng
the cars. wore gas masks,

Finn asks for consideration
Meeting with the Meigs
County Commissioners
Tuesday morning were
James JeMings, , Sr., illld
James Jennings Jr., of
Jennlllgs illld Assoc., who
formally asked to be considered If illld when a HUD
block grant is approved.
The Grant Is for an access
road from Mulberry to Unlon
Ave., ~ounty·wide house

Fq_r Natural Gas

. and Fuel 011 -

ELBERFELDS MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

38,000 to 70,000 B. T. U.

.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, September 8, 1976

HEATERS

'

.
.
~~News • . . zn Brzefi ~,

.

.111e

.

.

.

iS to help~u wi_. .
your job.

;'

.

4

-

~.

·;··

.

,_

p,

• •

•

• ·•

···· -· -

·· ~

.. ' .

• •

•

•. :. - ·:-· '.

.. '

. .

OM

0

-·

o

-,..., . ~ - -~· '

• •

'

J

o

0

~

~-- ~ ·

~

-

l.!lwn.
'.

HACKENSACK, N, J. - AN INVESTIGATION of the
"black market" baby business has resulted in the indictment
of. seven persons, including five lawyers, who allegedly sold
Infants to adoptive parents at prices up to $9,100. A Bergen
County, N.J., grand jury handed up the Indictments Tuesday,
alleging that Edward Terner, a lawytk with offices in West
Orange, N. J., was at the center of a baby sale network
Involving five states. The other attorneys named were Harry
D. Cohen, of Chicago, J. George Ivler, of Pa~rson , N. J.,
Bemard Lampear, of. Southfield, Mich., and Harold
Rosenstein, . of New York. Ivler's wife, Enid, and Robert
Mkel'Ill81l, a landlontln Port Murray, N. J., were also named
In a tw!H!Ourtt indictment.
WASHINGTON - STATES WILL GET addltionai federal
funding for child day-care programs thanks to a bill President
Ford called "the result of oompromise and cooperation be·
tween the Congress and my administration.'' Ford signed the
bill into law TI..JSday, af~r vetoing an earlier, more costly
measure . His veto was Sll'ltalned by Congress.
The leglslation, for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, adds $240
million to the roughly $600 million states were getting to
operate day-care centers. The vetoed version called for a $375
million increase. The compromise legislation, Ford said,
ensured "lldequate day care for children" - something he
considers "an important social service."

.

... ' -. ...........
0•

0

0

:
i

THE SAFE, CONVENIENT,
f
INEXPENSIVE WAY TO SEND MONEY

.

•'Fa
t

t. t t

POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.011 Maximum Insurance For Each. DePOsitor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
:

·-

--...·--·--·,.-··---·······..·-·'

... . ...

On a motion by Ralph
Werry, . seconded by Lou
Osborne, the license of H &amp; P
Sanitation was reinstated by
Pomeroy Vlllage Council
Tuesday nlght.
At il8 last meeting, council
revoked the llcense following
complaints of service and
because of rumors the
businelll was for sale. At that
Urne It was agreed to iasue a
license to Lawrence Manley
of Middleport.
A delegation met with
council Monday night on
H&amp;P's beh~ll presenllng ·
petitions ·to keep the service.
1b8 petitions contained 88

•

The Farmers Bank
Money Order

.

-

...

Union claims suppoJ1

for_strike is growing
and resolve the differences."
The teachers association
attendance of ~achers on stressed to the community
picket lines is near 100 per that the association 's
requests will require no new
cent.
Several of the eight taxes, In its opinion, and that
teachers who went to school many of the unsolved items
on Tuesday joined the are non-mon,etary in nature.
~achers strike ranks today,
David Bowen, association
president, said.
OAPSE reported only one
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
bus r811 on Wednesday, and
Friday through Sunday,
no students were present at fair Friday, Saturday and
the
distr ict's
school Sunday with blghs ln. the
buildings.
70s and lows in the upper
The teachers association
40s to tbe 50s.
voted Monday not to Interfere
with the first football game
on Friday night. This decision
Included band participation .
PAPER WANTED
The teachers reached the
Members of Pomeroy Boy
decision by pointing out the Scout Troop 249 are conproblem is with the board of ducting a newspaper - no
education and clerk of the magazines permitted board, not with the boys and collection drive. Residents
girls of the district.
are asked to save their
President Bowen said, "It newspapers and call 992--7761
is due time the board of or 985--4276 for pickup service
education and clerk sit down of they may give them to any
with the teachers association member of the troop .

The Meigs Local Teachers

Assn . reported today the

H&amp;P Sanitation is relicensed

"1
::\ L;"

as

All of our jobs, as weU the basic quality of
our lives, depend, in part, on a stable supply 1
of electric power.
But the price of electricity has been
going up. And a lot of people are worrying·
about the possibility of shortages in a few
years.
·
·
These are serious problems. Not ju,st for
you. For all of u8.
Because without electricity, machines
stop. Work stops. Paychecks stop. The economy suffers. And progress stops.
So, how do we deal with this?
By working together.

'

.

,

teacher, and Archie Swartz streets, bridges, viaducts,
spoke on behalf of H&amp;P and traffic signs and markers. A
noted that H&amp;P dld give good similar tax has been defeated
service, for whlch they were three times lp Middleport.
pleased.
Mayor Andrews reported
Mayor Clarence Andrews , that he attended a meeting In
stated that he nor council do Colwnbus recently In regard
not want to create any to grants that may become
problems, only to do what Is available if a bill is passed.
best fOr the village. The There may be $61.6 mlllion to
mayor thanked the people for be distributed throughout
coming to COWlcll to iron out Ohio.
the problems.
The grBIIts range from
Max Dremmer met with $100,000 to $500,000, The
councllln regard to the bad mayor pointed out that the
roiUI conditions .going to his low Wlemployment rate in
properly on Union Terrace. Meigs County would hinder
Mayor Andrews and COWl· ·them somewhat in obtaining .
cllmilll Harry Davis are to a grant Blld also the fact that
names.
.
check the area.
the city hall they purchased,
Council, to be fair, reinThe first reading of an the old Pomeroy Senior High
stated the Ucenae of H&amp;P and ordinance was approved with Bulldlng, ls In the flood prone
ll!l'eed to Issue Manley a all members voting yes ex- area. 'ntey · are seeKing a
Ucenae, slilce Manley had cept Phil Globokar. It grant to restore the new city
ordered a new truck, with the provides_ for the establish· building which will cost
lllpulallon lhlt be Is not to ment of a motor vehicle \IX ln $137,200.
IOIIdt Cllllmler1 of H&amp;P, but Pomeroy. The tax will be $6 a
The mayor commented
penons wilhlng his services year for each motor vehicle. that, "We have aU got to work
may uk for lt.
The money from the tax will hard and work together to get
Robert Roberts, retired be used to help maintain the abead."

. .

At the power company, we re continutng
to expand our search for economical fuel
sources. Planning for new facilities that will .
be needed in the future. And, we're continuing
our effortS to hold our operating costB in line
so we can efficiently provide the electricity
that helps all of us get our jobs done.
How can you help? By using electricity
wisely. On the job. And at home; too. .
You can also help by understanding and
sharing the joint responsibility we have in
assuring our electric supply.
And working together offers the best
chance for all of us to get the job done.

Ohio Power
Working together is the only way.
••

Fifteen Cents
Vol . 28, No. 100

oar wants to meet
Wit teac er ea ers

The Meigs Local B&lt;Jard of Education Wednesday was
trying to arrange a meeting with the Meigs Local Teachers
Association in an attemp! to negotiate an end to the teachers
strike, SUpt. Charles Dowler said today.
BOSTON - BLACK STUDENTS ARRIVED without
Dowler Said the board of education met six hours Tuesday
Incident at schools In Ute white South Boston and Charlestown · nlght to discuss the effect of the' strike on children of tbe
neighborhoods today as the clty started its crucial third year of district.
,
cO\Il't-()rdered desegregation.
Dowler
said
attempts
are
being
made
today
to meet with
Six buses carrying about ll!O black students rolled up to
union leadership and set up an acceptable, agreed upon
Charlestown High School without trouble. Three busloads of schedule for m~tings with that leadership·,
black students arrived P."Bcefully at South Boston Hlgh School.
Dowler said if the board is unable to sel up negotiation
Police escorted all of the yellow school buses. Optimistic meetings
with the unlon, then the board will have to consider
!»'ediction~ of a peaceful school opening were marred Tuesday
other alternatives dealing with what he called' the "illegal
night in Souitlo Boston when white youths at~cked a bus driven
by a black 1JU!n. There were scat~red incidents in Charles,

, . :,-.&lt; -,- ·. :_r. &lt;"

l

en tine

...

By United Presslnternatlolllll
. JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - RIVAL black
groups battled In nearby Soweto today and Hames set by fire
bombs killed three persbns in the all-black township. In the
Cape town area, pollee fired shotguns Into crowds of rioting
mulattoes.
The rioting In the mulatto township of Ravensmead and
the violence in Soweto, 15 miles southeast of Johannesburg,
Oared only hours before Prime Minister John Vorster was to
go before the aMual COIIgress of his National party to deliver a
speech expected to deal with the racial unrest that bas left 306
dead since mid-June. The new outbreaks followed a day of
violence Tuesday in which four persons were shot to death by
pollee in the Cape Town area during demonstratloris by
thOW!IIIlds of mulattos and a fifth was killed in Soweto.

~rcompanys 'ob

bat boy; second row, 1-r, Jeff Hubbard, John Arnott, Mlck
Ash, Jim Hemsley, Rick A.sh, Gary Clark; back.row, Bill
Hubbard, coach; Jim Hubbard, Mike Rose, Rev. George
Glaze, Randy Clark, Bob Cunningham, Rudy Stewart,
Ron Quillen and Cl~de Triplett, coach.

'!;F
·:-:·:·:::·:·:·:::·::::·:·:.:•:«v;o;•;:;•;•;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·;·,·.•,·;·;·;·.·;·;·;·;·.·······
·.·········o:·······;.~·····~··::;$
.. • • ••' .. •• •.. .. " " ..,.,._,,_.,._,•-•-•'·'·'•'·'·'·'·':"·'• '·'·"·'·''....m.•.•.•
..•.•,•• ...,,~
•• '•
:;:;

rn;._

SYRACUSE INDEPENDENT BASEBAU. TEAM This team, won the league championship with a 14-2
record. The team is sponsored by Hubbard's Greenhouse,
Syracuse, and Vista Setvice Station, Racine. Team
members and coaches pictured are, front, Wally Haynes,

at y

PERFECTION ROOM

Main Store, Mechanic Street Warehouse and Home Furnishings
Ann ex . Open Monday thru Thursday 9:30 to S p.m . - Friday 9; 30 to 8
p.m. - Saturday 9:30 to 5 p,m,

AKRON, OHIO - mE NATION'S TIRE Industry will sell
(Continued on page 16)
- ~

numbering, and housing
rehabilitation, The amoiUJt of
the grant Is t310,325. Before
the grant Is given final approval certain requirements
have to be met.
In other buslne_ss Ute board
named Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews as a
member of the board of
trustees of the Emergency
Medical Services.

Highway Patrol were on the
evacuating the area
which was sealed off when
the cars were uprlghted.
Pomeroy and Middlepor t .
Fire Departments were
called later to assist.
The drailment occurred
near a stream and the Ohlo
Envl.ronmental Protection
Aj!ency sald any residents
who have grazing livestock
should move them to another
area unUJ Ute gas is flushed
out of the creek.
Local 'officials had no
record of how many, if any,
homes were evacuated from
the area. Neither did
authorities have any
knowledg e of stream
pollution mounting danger to
livestock.
(Cootinued on page 16)
11001e

•

MIDDLETOWN, OHIO- AFTER FIRST_"postponing" a
proposed U per cent !»'ice hike, Amico Steel Corp. has now
decided to cancel the planned Increase. Annco, the nation's
fifth largest steel producer and a major supplier to the auto
Industry, anoounced Tue&amp;day it is "rescinding" the' price hike
it had planned for Its flat-rolled carbon steel products, No
reasons were given.

.. .

ammonia suits, and other
protective garments.
The train was enroute from
Columbua to Dicklnaon, W.
Va. The head of the train was
moved on to Dexter after Ute
four cars derailed . The
department of Sheriff Robert
Hartenbach and the State

BE SURE
TO SEE lHE NEW

brothers, Raymond, Detroit,
Mich .. and VIrgil. Mar ietta ;

DOLLAR RALLIES
BRUSSELS , Belgium
(UPI) - The U. S. dollar
rallied today on all but one of
Europe's ,money markets.
Gold, whose price had risen
Monday, declined In London.
Gold opened In EnglAnd at
$ll4.50, down 50 cents';from
Monday's . remarkable close
after a day-long climb fi&lt;!in
$107.35. But Its price
remained steady In Zurich -at
$113.50, and lt gained In other
money centers.

Phone

McClure's

Miss Mary Ann Dennis, 90,
E.. t Liverpool. former
Middleport resident and a
long-time teacher all he ,Ohio
School of the Dear In
Columbus. died at Cily
Hospital In East Liverpool
Monday evehlng follow ing a
10 day Illness.
A graduate of Middleport
High School, Miss Dennis
many vears ago was an
employe by the Ohio $tate
School for the Deaf and later
taught there . Aller her
rellrementshe moved to East
Liverpool where she resided
with a niece and nephew, Mr .
and Mrs. Glen (l(ay Heines)
Gllklnson . She maintained •
home In Middleport a number
of years during her teaching
career ahd was a frequent
visitor here.
'

Bertha ·

Pomeroy; Mrs . Addle
Hoef lich. Pomeroy, and an

died on Monday

Fri.-Sat.-Sun.

The Department Store of
Bulldi"ll_ Since 1915
'

funerar home anytime.

Tuesday thru Thursday
SEPT. I-I
NOT OPEN

charcoal and is Sl97.95 .
(Ben would have been
proud of us),

CEMENT BLOCK

and neohews.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday , 2 p.m. at E\Ying
Chapel with the Rev . Timothy
Smith olllclatlng , Burial will ,
be In Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friend~ mav call at the

MEIGS THEATRE

" FRIENDLY ONES"
about the sso.oo saving on
lhe Ben Franklin Colonial
Fireplace and Stove - il

POMEROY

Columbus, and several nieces

VIDTIMS OF RITUAL
PORT MORESBY, Papua·
New Guinea (UPI) - A
father and son who were
clubbed to death on a Papua·
New Guinea island Friday
were believed to be victims of
a ritual tribal e~ecution, a
pollee spokesman said today.

Earned' 1 , Ask one of our

wood1 co a I

RACINE - Ruth Dqnohew,
83, Rt. 2, Racine died at her
residence Monday.
The daughter or the late
Mildred and Etta Sayre
Burton, she 'was also
preceded In death by her
husband, Chester Arthur
Oonohew. She was a member
of the AJ)ple Grove United
Methodlsf Ch urch .
She Is survived by two
sisters. Dolly Wolle, Apple
Grove, and Hazel Taylor,

Vtlerarul Mtmorlal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Janice Smith, Middleport :
Tina Smith , Middleport ;
Okey Paynter, Portland;
Michael Wa rner, Minersville : Frankie Stafford,
Pomeroy: Moggle
Rosenkrans. Pomeroy,
. SATURDAY
,
DISCHARGES - Clarence
Tribbett, ,Eunice Halsey ~
Raleigh
Sayre,
Bonle
Proctor, Iva Howell , Debra
Qulvey, Lela Robinson.
George Cundiff, Evelina
Pauley, Roy Frecker. Mary
Park.
SUNDAY ADMISSION$ Ira Zl~ke-foose, Pomeroy ;
Louise Zickefoose, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Neva Grimm, Charles
McGrath, Lono Hart.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS -.
Flora Farra, Recine : Mark
Coleman , Cheshire ; Julia
Spencer, Pomeroy ; Btssle
Erwin, Racine; Marvin
Darst; Pomeroy ; Barbara
Richards, Long Bottom ,
Teddy Keene, Columbus.
MONDAY DISCHARGES
- Tina Smith.

Ultd to be, the moM wno
sa ved tnoney wo1 a mher· now.

burns

of Racine dies

was intoxicated. After
searching Ute vel!lcle, they
discovered a quantity or
marijuana and smoking
parapheruilia.

,.,........,
adoys he's a wonder."

Ruth Donahew

the car, believing the driver'

Mrs.

Fonner resident Miss Ot•nnis dies

The enforcement of the no
loitering ordinance , on the
Parking lot wall at night ls
being enforced, Mayor An·
drews told council, and the
situation is much Improved.
He commended the police
deparlment for dolng a fine

jo~e report of Pollee Chief
Jed Webster was read and
approved. His departmem
investigated 22 accidents,
made ~7 arrests, Issued 1,221
parking tickets, collected
$814, from parking tickets,
collected $3,488.50 from
parking me~rs, drove 4,470
miles and had the cruiser
serviced twice.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Werry Osborne,
Harry Davis, Dr. Harold
Brown, Globokar and Charles
Bartles, councibnen, Chief
Webster, Phyllis Hennessy,
treusurer, Jane Walton, clerk
and the Rev. Wllliam Middleswarth who opened the
meeting with prayer.

strike."
"Right oow we are operating on a day to day basis. We are
hopeful that this matter will be resolved quickly and tbe
schools wiU be back to nonnal, Tbe board Is sincerely trying to
do what is best for the children and taxpayers of the Meigs
[A)cal School District, " Dowler said,

Substitute pay
voted increase
On a 3--1 vo~, the Meigs dismissed at that time.
Local School District Board Aecordlng to the agenda,
of Education voted to in· the executive session was for
crease the pay for substitute the purpose of ~usslng
teachers from $20 to $35 a day "possible lmmlnent litigation
for the duration of the and persoMel problems."
teachers strike In the district. Before moving into
T.1e board met In special executive sesslon, the board
se~on last night. At~nding transferred $10,000 from the
the meeting In addition to transportation fWld into the
hoard members were prin· legal services fund .
cipals of the schools of the . Dowler said today schools
district and a delegation from remain " officially open. "
the Meigs !Alcal Teachers Teachers were
again
Assn.
(Continued on page 16)
At the request of Supt.
Charles Dowler, the board
passed the substitute pay
increase to $35 a day due to
the duties, demands and
responsibilities to be placed
on substitute teachers during
the strike period ,
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, board
member, cast the dissenting
By LEE LEONARD
vote . After Supt. Dowler
UPI Sta~bouse Reporter
ashrl for passage of Ute
inu·ease, Mrs, Sheets asked
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
for a report on how many chief spokesman for a state-students had attended school wide utilty reform group has
Tuesday, the first day of the accused opponents of its lour
strike by the district's ballot
initiatives
of
teachers. Supt. Dowler said "distortion, misrepresenthat he would rather report tation and outright falseon that in execuUve session hoods" in seeking defeat of
la~r in the m~ting . Board the utility reform issues.
member Robert Snowden
asked Mrs. Sheets what
"The utilities are wagu1~ a
bearing such a report would desperation campaign of
have on her vote.
deception against the four
Mrs. Sheets asserted she issues," said Robert Loib: of
helleved substitu~ teachers Ohioans for Utility Reform
. should nol be employed if (OUR) as his group filed an
there were too few students · additional 91,960 signatures
· reporting for classes at the Tuesday to place the issues
schoo. ls which have been on the Nov. 2 ballot .
declared by Dowler as being
"The propaganda cranked
"officially open." She said ·out by the utilities' opposition
that she felt, perhaps, it committee even sinl&lt;s to outwould be bet~r to close the right lies," Loib: told a news
schools and sit down and talk conference.
for 24, 36 or 48 hours and iron
Loltz especially disputed
out the problems Involved be· claims by Cilkens for Safe,
tween the board and the LowerCE Cost
h. Electricity
,h
il'
teachers a••""lation.
(CSL
•
)
t
at t e ut 1ty
~
A vo~ was called on the
motion Increasing the substltute teachers pay and
board members, Wendell
Hoover, Snowden and Dr.
Keith Riggs voted In favor of
SEOUL, South Korea
the measure with Mrs. Sheets (UPI) - The 42,000 U.S.
voting 'against it.
troops in South Korea were
Board member Virgil King returning to normal alert
had not arrived at the Status today In the wake of an
meeting when the vote was agreement wlth the North
taken but -dld arrive later Koreans on new security
af~r the board had moved arrangements at the truce
into executive session With village of PanmWljOJll.
the media, principals and the
There were indications that
teachers association th e 600,000-strong South
representatives being Korean army was also

-':::"""

Trophies ready
for 15 events
There will be 15 trophies
awarded to winners of events
staged at Ute bicentennial
celebration, "Y~steryear"
Sept. 18 on the grounds of the
former Pomeroy Junior High
School.
The celebration willlnclu_de
a wide range of activities
during the day including
races, a fiddler's contest, a
bicentennial costume con~st,
decor a ted bicycle competition to name only a few.
Contri5liting to the trophy
fund are Smith-Nelson
Motors , Marguerite Shoe
Store, Elberfeld's, the Klddle
Shop arid Mr. and Mrs.
Ferm811 Moore, and the R. C.
. Bottling Co. at Middleport
will provide free of charge all

of the cola used during the
day.
'
The celebration is being
staged by the Meigs County
Senior Citizens. Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, executive director
of Uoe -Meigs Council on
Aging, today named some or
the judges of the events. They
Include Mayor Cllarles Pyles
of Racine , Mrs. Lucille Lelf·
bel t and Mrs. Debbie Buck,
husband calling contest; Paul
Smart, Richard Poulin ,
Mayor Hennan London of
Syracuse, wife calling contest, and Sen. Oakley Collins,
Orien RoUSh and Carl Barnhart, the hog calling contest.
The publlc is invited to
attend the celebration.

Utility reformers say
opposition is lying .
reform Issues would actually
rai5e utility rates.
" H Ute issues did indeed
raise rates,n said Ulitz, ''the
utilities wouldn't oodget $1
million to fight the proposals.
When was the last time any
utility spent a nickel to
oppose a rate hike before the
Public
Utilities
Cmnmission?''
Loi tz said CSLCE, a
coalition of utilities and
organized labor, will
probably spend more than $1
million to defeat the issues.
"We obviously can't match
that amount or even 1 per
cent of it," said Loib: 1 adding
he. is hopeful of collecting
$10,000 or more in small
contributions to p~ss the
issues.
Changes proposed by the
group would:
- Establish
"lifeline "
utility rates to assure the
poor and elderly a minimum
amoWlt of gas and electricity
at the lowest posslble cost.
- Create a "consumer

__ ,

action group" to contest rate
increase applications before
the
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
-Require stric~r controls
for
construction
and
operation or nuclear power
plants in Ohio .
-Make it easier for
citizens to place initiatives
and referenda on tl!e stare
ballot.
The office of Secretary of
State Ted W. Brown must
now check OUR's additional
signatures for validity. Lee
Wurster, elections counsel,
said the process would take at
least a week.
The group needs 21,000
more valid signa tures to
reach the required figure of
307,000 for placing the four
issues on the ballot.
OUR
filed
382,000
signatures Aug. 3 but only
286,000 were found valid by
Brown's office, which gave
the group an . additional 10
days to collect legitimate
signatures.

U.S. Korean forces relax
lowering its high alert 8\BtUS
in effect since last month's
Communist ax-&amp;aying of two
American officers at the
border village, about 30 miles
north of Seoul.
It was not officially known
whether the lifting of alert
order had affected the temporary stationing here of two
American Fill and F4 squadrons sent to Korea following

the Panmunjom Incident but
American military sources
said the fighter-bombers
were still In ·South Korea
today.
In · a
statement
commending members under
his command for their
response follow ing the
Pamnunjom incident, ~n.
Richard
G.
Still'f'll,
(~ntlnued on page 16)

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