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                  <text>'1iclt!lr!J9rt·Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 13, 1976

1· ·i y stunt may prove
costly to four hijackers
(&gt;!'rhap~ with th~ir lives. ·

!y Wil .lAM t:!ll. 11&amp; 'lll.Ar.
NI~W \!IRK P'l'l 1 'II'"
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mlj'S~&lt; v tlJ,,l tndudnl · a

lf,,,.,,tl,onl•f hiotu ~J og, the
bho:kl&gt;&gt; ilt,,g of four major
U S. ~~ ,·t :ifJli pe1 s ami t1 H.,
~~

H_th -,(

~~ f~-J!h,'1i"lliU II

Hospital News

Fl•l' rtNI OJC1\$UrC, they
drliQu.•:l 11opagandu leaflets

t.ver l.qn&lt;Jon

~ml

P~ris,

fu~"C:td mrU1oritieJ to rn1~~
';lmil;;t rln1~H nver New Yo•;:,
t1ll"!H o Hilt! Muntrt·~l, 'fld
. -,st;:~'i.l !11 il'~ak by phoue tu

Ptt•&lt;,)':t1'' 1t l1irJ ur S(!t'l'tll!lr·v

o~ s...:·tv P .J • K·h·singu·. .
'lhy •h•l il .oil , they 'nid, lu

l:mgain '"' •·uLlirJ tY l~r nn
ob~rur"

location."

The plane landed at Mon·
They surrendered Sunday
in Paris and were flown back lreal, and again at Gander,
to New York to f~cc , charges Newfoundland. At Gander,
of Hlr plrncy and perhaps the five released 35
mw d•••· _, the former for passengers, negotiated tbe
America's first hijacking in assistance of a Boeing 7rtl jet
nearly lour years, the latter to guide them because tbeir
lor !lie deaU&gt; of New York own pilot did not know tbe
pollee Ollil-er Brian Murray, way, and beaded for
26, killed trying to dlsann " Reykjavik, Iceland.
Behind, their propaganda
bomb they Jefl behind.
Murder of n police officer In leanets were nultering down
New York is punishable by over New York, Chicago and
denth in the electric chair. Mootre;ll. From Iceland lhe
11&gt;e hijacked flight took hijacked plane swung over
lhem
to
Mon treal, London and circled to land In
Nuwloundland, Iceli!Ild and Paris. They dropped still
Paris and, when they more leaflets over those two
surrendered Sunday, ba\·k !Q capitals.
New Ym·k where they started
~ this lime in handcuffs.
The New Yot·k-to-Chicago
flight was near Buffalo, N.Y.,
Veteran Memorial Hospital
wl11i1i the hijackers forced it
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
to turn iwrth, toward - Ra leigh Sayre, New
MontreaL
Haven; Barbara Smith ,
In a locker in New York's Midd le port;
Mam ie
Granrl Central Slation, they Buchanan, Middleport; Neal
srud, authorities would find a ..Tellers, Dexter ; Jean etta
2,400-word manifesto of the Roush, Mason ; Edward
"l'ree Croatia" movement Sarver, Pomeroy .
with a drmand it be published
SATURDAY
DIS.
in il• entirety in the New CHARGES
Patty
York Times, the CNCl1go Harmon, William Hunt,
Tribune, tile Washington Post Hobart Templeton, Anthony
and U1e UJS Angeles Times. Sayers, Vergie Blake, Julia
With lhe manifesto police · Roush, Michael Warner.
found a bomb - the one that
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS .exploded and killed Murray. warner Baker, l;Jng Bottom ;
Unless their demands were Paul
Stewart,
West
published, the terrorists said, Columbia; Palricia Bauer,
a second bomb would be Marion; Marjorie Hunt,
detona ted in a . " busy fu!Ci ne ;
Erma
Yoho,
Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Cha rles Cooper, Marilyn
Powell, Mark Coleman,
Barbara
Smilh , Janice
(Omtinued from page I)
Smith, Iris Collins, Gladys
Pollster Cla1bourne Darden Rumlield, Clara Pullins.

1ep:u ationist

;ifuggle m YuP,osla\ lit
· · 1r~~~ thtir success. thL• fi t~!:}
sr~·' I.J'le&gt;l' F'lgloleril for F'n'C
Cruatin'' m~y pqy dearly ~

Ford

Jr. said

as{.cnce • .lnd

... I\

StiOW&lt;h iH'$

arrr. ab6Ut th~::

unty
ptobl ems
that
dts"pp.--ar if you ignore
:1\!tn

11uq onouqh. "

.ifl0\'1 ~~d r ~in urn ~wo

llP:fbkms. thilt you

tto~er

think ct •mtil the m iMure
stilrt"'. 3l'f'ping lhro\ll!ltl. your
c~i!ing. rher:k your roOf
lur wNllt ~puh or
nat.• :~ ,;;nd t l f~ u come to
oot " H&lt;IENOLY ONES"
tuJll';

for the maff'J"ic1IS you
n•ert.. .B€HER TO BE
S~FF

THAN WET!

POMEROY

CEMENT BlOCK

~~there

are strong

indic'lllion: 1t Carter's support in l deep South is
eroding" I cause ·~ it appears
that Jimmy Carter has
placed himself too far to the
lefl to make most Southern
voters happy."
D em o c r a t i c v.i c e
. pr~sidential candidate Sen.
Waiter Mondale, in a
weekend interview with UPJ
and AP, predicted U1at If
Carter is el&lt;'cted the Peace
Corps will be revived into an
organization "more like the
Peace Corps th a~ John
Kennedy envisioned .. : where
we rc,ny tap idealism arid
help from the young."
Meanwhile, the League ol
Women Voters aru&gt;ounced in
Washingtoh It will seek more
.lliau $150,000 in public dona·
Uons to fund U1e upcoming
campaign debates between
Ford and carter, whkh begin.
Sept. 23.

THE INN PLACE

Monday Night .
Special

)

II

\11si.t our Snl~ d Bar
1..r ~~m(irJ Baked ·
Ulio;l1en on Bis~uit
Wga1abl~

Hill R!ll ls

torr~-.,

Tea or 'Milk

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy, 0.

Holzer Medical Center
(Births, SepL 10)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Haggy, daughter ,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
James Kelly, daughter,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Kuhn, daughter,
Jackson.
(Birtbs, Sept.ll)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Keller,

son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
TerryMatheney,son, Vinton;
Mr. and Mrs. Da~id Evans,
daughter, Oak Hill.
(Births, Sept. 12)
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Parsons, siln, Bidwell; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Bostwick;
son, Gallipolis.

Driver cited in
Main St. mishap
Medium da111ages were
incurred to two vehicles and
one drlver was cited to co.urt
as the result of an accident on
East Main St. at 9:09 pm.
Sunday.
'Pomeroy Police said a
wes.tbound vehicle driven by
Dana Aldridge, Pameroy,
struck a westbound pickup
IIuck, pulling a trailer, which
was attempting to tl)fli Into
Landmark. Neither driver
was injured; Aldridge was
cited lor reckless operation.
INJUNCfiON ASKED
An injunclion has been
asked in Common Pleas
Court by Robert Bowen,
Meigs County Superintendent, John Riebel,
superintendent of Eastern
Local, District and Easlern
Local ~hool Board against
James and Celia B~iley, Rt.
I, wng Bottom. The peiiUon
states that James and Celia
Bailey have violated an attendance IWignment of their
son by placing l1im at Chester
· Elementary where he was not
assigned for attendance.
Robert Burson and Jeanne
Burson, Rt. I, Shade, have
filed for dissolution of
marriage.

11
•
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L
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lftl
atre
aun
ru7
Fr ':IJ

center

•• · · - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - .
11

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only 2 feet wide.
Every Frigidaire Laundry Center makes II
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with tho special care today's modern
fabrics demand. Yet It takes up a
minimum of space, fits just about
anywhere -in the kitchen, bath, even a
hallway. Choose any of five attractive.
colors to match or complement your
decor. (Also available in woodgrain at
extra charge.)

Model LC..;t.

$499

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A chance of s~owen
Wednesday. Fair and . a
little cooler Thunday and
Friday. Highs Ia the 80s
Wednesday and In tbe 70s
Thursday and Friday.
Laws .Ill the SOs.

·Driver forced
offofSR 124
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a single
car accident Sunday at 6:35
p.m.inSalemTwp.onSRI24.
JamesA.Schuler, 26,Rt.l,
Middleport said be was eastbound on 124, and had gone
into a left hand curve when an
orange (or red) Chevrolet
Camara came at him on his
side. Schuler swerved to the
right, struck a guardrail,
went across the road to the
left and ran into an embank·
ment. The Camara did not
stop. There was heavy
damage to the Schuler
vehicle. No injuries were
reported and no citation
issued .

Two injured in
SR 124 accident
Two persons were lreated
and released at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Sunday
morning following a single
car accident In Rutland
Township Sunday at HO a.
m. on SR 124. William D.
Stewart, 57, RuUand, was
traveling wesl when he
dropped off the berm, pulled
back on the road and lost
-control. The car rolled over
and skidded down the highway on its top. Stewart and a
passenger Gary George,
RuUand, were laken to the
hospital by private car. There
was heavy damage.

Listeners sought
from everywhere
.
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UPI) - Enticing the
average hlgb schooler away
from his hmch break f!r a
sidewalk lesson lit the Bible
Is no easy task.
When Harry Zain bunted
listenera ThUI'llday, he was
greeted by embarraued
smiles, cigarette smoke,
outright refusals and an
occasional "maybe another
time."
UndalUlted, be plans to take
his bicycle and eight
paperback Bibles to the
'sidewalk In front of the achool
each day thll term.
"Some o! tbe11e klda have
never heard anything from
the Bible," says the ~yearold Zaln.
An anti-abortion figure,
Zain trled to get a foothold in
Kaliawha COunty polllles this
year, but ran Into a cool
reception lnm both parties.
Putting polltlca aside, Zain
has returned to the streets,
this time to preach the
. Gospel. His second day out
wasadlaappolnting one, even
thnugh he attracted a ama11
audience at his first
appearance.
Zain said his efforta might
pertly soothe hurt feellnga
preclpltaled by the 197t textbook revolt, when many
.Kana.wha countlana protested
booka they felt were franght
with antl-Chrlatian and onAmerican teacblnga.
"I just hope thlll.a e~~e good
&amp;Qiutlon to the textbOok

MEIGS
ntEATRE
Monday
Thursdly
thr~

Sept.1).16
NOT OPEN

Friday, Saturday, ·sunday
Sept.l7-11-19
ONE FLEW OVER

crisis," aays Zaln. "'They're

teaching anti-Christian
thought, antiSemitism,
sociallam and everything
else. If they can learn all that
In schools, why not the
Bible?"
Zaln and his Bibles must
keep their diatance.
School officials bave
palltely warned him kl stay
off achcol property, and Zain
has religiously complied,
walking up and down the
sidewalk, seeking oonverta.
"I tell them not to be
ashamed of the Bible," be
saya. "You know who's the
· 111081 receptlw? Thealhletes.
The football playera. 'They're
the ones who really take thll
seriously. People who are
most agalnat Bible teaching
In schools are the people who
yell the loudest In fav~r of
freedom of apeeclt."
For half an hour each day,
Zaln conducts hla Bible
re.ms to anyone WIDing to
lend him an ear.
"I'm riot going to f~rce It
down the.lr throats," be aays.'
"'l'lley might laugh at flral,
but. they're Cllly trying to
· cover up the !act they're
seriously Interested."
BACIIRACIIS SPIJT

HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
COmpoaer Burt Bacharach
and Actress Angle Dlcklnaon,
married 11 years qo, have
decided to aeparate for a
wbtla In an effort to save their
marriage.
"The lrial seperatlou will
give them lime to dealra lllch
other moce,'' a . ~poke~~~~~~~
explained, "and In elfact
make them want to be near
each othar.
''There Ia no desire f~r a
dlv~rce and they hope ·to
resolve the problem."

;

Carl A. Baker, 71, a
re.~ldent of Lolftr River Rd.,
Gallipolis, dled around 2:15
p.m. Sunday at hll home. He
had been ill the put live
mmlha. He waa a Ufellme
farmer, apec!Jilzlnlln truck
tl'oPI and beef caWe.
Mr. Baker wu born July 5,
1905, In Clay Twp., son of the
late 'Charles w. and Addle
Boster Baker .
He married Marcella
Reibel of Pomeroy on May 29,
1942. She survives, along with
. two children, Mrs. William B.
(Frances)Thomaaand Uoyd
· Baker, both of GaiUpolll. Two
granddaughters · survive,
along with tllree brothers and
one sister: Ralph Baker,
Bradenton, Fla. ; Wayne and
Vance, both of GaWpoUs;
Mrs. Uncoln (Mary) CaD,
E~ka. One sister, Mrs.
Mll'l'ls (Clarice) Brown and
one brother, Uoyd Baker and
an Infant sister preceded him

leigh Ellioll, and Iwo slaters,
Mrs. Janice Chapman, and
Miss Charlotte Ellioll, Rand,
W. Va.
Funeral services will be
held at lhe Chrlsllan
Brethren Church on Tueaday
al2 p.m., "ith Rev. Jamea H:
lewis offlclaUnt. Burial will
follow at the Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may caD at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. today or one hour prior
to services at the church.

Teachers
(COnUnlied frccn page I)
latest offer.
"At a rally Sunday af·
ternoon , Meigs teachers
heard Ohio . Education
AssoclaUon president &amp;illy
Savage pledge continued
support from the 85,000
member slale assoclatioo.
Area teacher association
1 leaders also attended the
rally to demonstrate their
concern for the crisis in
Mei~ Local.
"The board's latest offer
through the media could
easily have been the Idea of
its Akron altorney, Mr.
Whalen . The move was
clearly outside of the
collecllve bargaining
process. It also leaves the
misla.ken Impression that
teachers care about money
only. Key non-economic
issues are sUD unresolved.
Teachers want and need an
effective . grievance
procedure. They also
strongly believe In a lair
· dismissal policy, And the
board's bargaining team has
proposed drastic chantes in
the teacher evaluation
procedure which has worked
well in the district.
"Board clairDs thai the
dislrict is without sufficient
funds .to provide an equitable
salary increase are not
substantiated by fact. If the
dislricl is strapped for
money, then why is there a
clerk-treasurer at $15,000
plus? Why does the district
need a $400 per ·month
computer,
with
two
assistants? And, why has the
board taken $10,000 from the
education fund to hand over
to an Akron attorney when it
could have free legal advice
as provided by law?"
Meanwhile, Bowen and
Dowler reported ·that talks
between representatives of
the two groups will be held
today. The board of education
willmeetat7:30 this evening,
which is expecled to be an
executive session. ·
WAY, WAY BEHIND
LONDON
(UPI)
Weekend storms flooded
parts of Britain but
aulhoriUes said it would take
'"a month of continuous rain"
to ease the country's worst
drought In 500 years. ·
PTOTOMEET
SYRACUSE - SyracUBe
PTO will meet Tuesday at
7::10 p.m. at Ute school. New
officers wUI serve refresh·
rnents.

·-- - - -

In death.
Mr. ljalur attended GaD1a

Academy lflch School. He
wu a lq lime membll' of
the Farm Bureau.
In 11e1t of nowera, the
family requeill donaUOIII to
the GalUs COunty Clncer~
Society. ·
Funeral aervlcea will be •
held 2 p.m. Tuelday al the 1
WIWa Funeral Home with ,
Rev. Wllaon Wahl offlctaUng.
Burial will follow In Oay •
Olapel Cemetery.
:
· Frlenda may call at the
funeral home from :1-4 and 7-t •
p.m. today.
Pallbearer&amp; will bt •
Raymmd WWIJ, Rllll WWII,•
Tom Ruaaell, Bob Marchi, •
Don CaD, and Charlea CUi;:
nutle.
MEETING CAlLED . ,
The Pioneer and Hlltorlcal
Society will meet uda evenl~ !
at 7:30 at the m~~~eum .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
• •
•

•

•

•

,,,,.

CLUB TO MEET
A resular meeting of the
R Twin aty Shrine Club will be
Show st•rts at 7 p. m.
at the dubhouae at 7:30
._
_ _ _ __ . _.. held
Ionlghl.
i

;Court action threatened to·provide
:. school for Meigs' mentally retarded
i:

'lbe Mttp Cotllty C'4mmllllonn caa -llld ma;t. wiU
1!1! - hlaled lnlo court It IIMJ do not IIPIIfUPI'IIIe a_, to
iducate the IIMIIIIIJyretardld II_rll)uJred by In ICCIII'dllli to
lllry Coben of the llllo IApl Rl&amp;hll Slnlce.
Qlhen, of Columbus, alteaded a meetq In the omc:e o1 the

~ty ~t

of IChooll Mandly laletber with the
COWley boRd of mental rellrdata, ~ MlaDlnC Webller,

ehalrinan; the COilllllllllanll'l, the llll*lnllndlntlvlldlaoll
In Eut1m and SOuthern dlllrlctl, IIIII lllte orlldall With
~lillty in ~lion of the meagJJf relltded.
.
. Cohen, IPIIklnal to media felll'8-llllvt1 after the
meetlnl, llld hll boll, Doua Rosen, dlrtctcr ol the I.ecal
!Ughll Senlce, would dlclde Cll whether to take the
Cllllllllllllonra to court.
The problem, acecrdinJto II!• clilllmlllkrlen, II lick of
·money. '1bla !'II their JIOIIIion at the meet1n1 called to get a
commitment fr(lm t11em uto whatmoney,lf any, II available
either to ~et up alk:hoolln Melp County or ~end them asatn to
'GaiUpolla, u waa done laat year,
.
Aeeurdtng to Judith Koch, repl'elelltlnB the Mental Health
bivlllon, Athena DI&amp;Uict approximately 40 adultund chUdren

would allend lchool. 'lbe coli, icccrdlrJC to Koch, to operate a
lchcolln the dlltrlct wuuld run appt'Oilmately tt70,000 with a
llate rtlmbua - t o1•.ooo. To aend the chUdren to Gallla
County wuuld COil
but It Ia unknown If thll flglD'e
lnchllel trllllpDI'talion. . 1
It wu pointed out thltlf the comml.ulonen do not allocate
lunda hr the lllllltally m.t"ded achcol, Eastern, Southern and
Melp Sebool Dlllrlctl wiU loae all federal lunda for preaent
IPidal education cia e .
. llev. Bill Perrin pointed out! to the colllll)la8loners tbe state
aaya they mUll, not may, appropriate money for a achcol for
the mentally ret.ded. "Melga County II the only c:otmty In
auo not meeUng Ita fiiiPOIIIIblllty," Perrin c:oounentad.
Judge Weblter aald three y111rs ago the county had t"
mUilon dollar• Cll Ill tax wpHcate and ioday there are $96

.,..,,1

mUilon.

"Three years ago we were told there was no money for the
pr08f1111 and today we .are told the.re Ia no money !or the
program," Webster aald. Webster added that aa a member of
the board and the probate judge, he 'Intend, to •'fight the issue

,,

•

·',,

'
•

L;'
\

through."
Henry Weill, president of the board of CXIOIIlllasloners,
when Biked if \he l.'atlllliasloners would or could aupport the
program, stated that the. CCIIliDlsSioners, "will not commit
themselves at ihls time."
Rev. Perrin asked the l.'atlllliaslonel'l If they would
coounlt themselves to appropriate money foc the mentaUy
retarded. Commlssioner Warden Ours said, "! llon't know If
we can at thla point." At this point both Perrin and Ours left the
meeting.
.
. .
..
During tbe long sesslm some of the arguments became
heated.
.
Bobby Ord, &amp;!pt. of Southern Local and John Reibel, Supt. of
Eastern Local agreed they are hampered by space problems.
Reibel said he has one vacant room at Olester Elementary,
but even it Is programmed.
:t'uiUon at Eastern laat year was ~.29 a student and this
year $35. 72; Southern laat year was U3.12 and this year is
$41.67. Bowen stated that It was t19.671aat year at Meigs .and
he does not know what It Is this year.

••

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, september 14. 1916

•••. »:w.v.w.w,.,v.w.•,w.:••:•.•:~'""·""'"'

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fNews. • •in Briefi

I

·f

1

Ateachers strike In tbe Meigs Local School Dlstrlct·!llOved · the sixth meeting In the past seven days - but no report was
into ill alsth day today witb Wendell Hoover, president of tbe issued from it. Charles L. Dowler, superintendent, said that
Melp Local Board of Education pleading for local control of the executive sessions are being held to fill the board In on the
latest negotiations.
schools.
Dowler has annolDiced that school Is officially open.
· Pickets were again at the schools of the d!Jtrict after
However,
· only a handful of students are reporUng to the
negotlaUons between the d!Jtrict's board of education and tbe
By Utdted Prell Illt.erllldGaal
schools.
Buses
have not been rwming and other non-certified
WASHINGTON - SWINE FLU SHOTS hr adults can district's teacher 8880ciaUon Monday . failed to bring a employes for the 111011 psrt have not crossed tbe picket lines.
.
begin next month, with a shot by Olrlslmas foc everyone who !letllement.
ilooYW i..ed tbe fGIIDwiDa lllatemenl:
The
board
met
In
ezecutive
'= apln lllltd8Y Dilbt~anta it, says the government's top doctor. A declllon on
. cltUdrenaged3to 18won'tbemadeuntllrnld.()etober.
.
The govenunent, far behind achedule In Ita maaa·
·Immunization program, signed tentative conttacta MCIIday
with three companies to buy all the swine flu vaccine they can
prowce for vaccinating !~dulta by the end qf the year.
Negotiations continue with a fourth flrrll. However, said Dr.
Theodore Cooper, "the flow of vaccine between now and the
middle of November will not be lltfflclent to meet the needs of
the delivery systems which have been eatabllahed."
,
., WASHINGTON- THE ENVIRONMENTAL Protection
·Agency Is forcing the recall ol35,000 1975 Ford Mustanga which
It says have malfunctlonlhg air poUuUon controll)'llem.s.
. :. 'fl1e agency llld Jta.analy..lif telill'made on Ford's own
data "indicated that a subltailtlal number of theae. v,ehlclea
, llad hydrocarbon emissions In e~eess of the 1. gran~~ per mile
· standard required by the Clean Air Act."
Vehicular homicide
charges
have been filed by
WASHINGTON- A NATIONAL ACADEMY ol Sciences
the
Ohio
Highway Palrol
eommitiee says tile uftlinate declllon on regulating aome
spray can gues beeaUlle of thelr·threat' to the ozone radiation again$! Pablo·J. .Bannoy, 22,
tiarrler will have to be Ql8de by Congress and the President. Newport, Ohio, in the traffic
The study panel CCIIcluded Monday that a selective ban on use accident last Thursday which
of the gaaes known as fluorocarbons "Ia almOIII certain to be claimed the lives of two
neceasary at aome lime," but It said any regulatory action Meigs COunty women.
Bilru&gt;oy, driver of a Land·
should be delayed f~r up to two years to gel more facts. .
' "The choice of when to make decisions about regulatkin is mark food truck from
:-political one In the higheat 11e111e of the word," the committee Marietta, was also charged
said in its final report. The ~ttee said the evidence wiUt failure to stop within the
clearly supporta the Idea that fluorocarbons are rising Into the assured clear distance.
The accident occurred at
stratosphere where they · eventuallY wW destroy some
8:15
a.m. on SR 7, apmolecules of ozone that shield earth .from harmful ultraviolet
proximately
one-half mile
radiation. JUII how much ozone will beerodedlanot clear.
south of Tuppers Plains.
. WASHINGTON- THE HOUSE HAS VOTED to disband Killed were Helen Boat·
the Women's Anny Corps and Ill slater organlutlona In the wright, 46, Rt. 1, Long Bot,tnllltary. 'The WAC's, born at the start of Wocld War n to tom, and her mother, Cora
bo!Bier America'&amp; mWtary forces, would be dllbanded In the Schartlger, Rt. I, Long
Interest of women'! equality. The same fate awaits the Navy Bottom. Three other persons,
Raymond
Boatwright,
WAVES and lady Marines in the bW ~ent to the Senate.
Debbie
Boatwright,
and her
'.. The blll .was approved Me~~day 343 to f. The action was
.
These three residents exemplify the age range In a decorated bicycle contest Saturday
lllcluded in an overall biU drafted by the House Armed 10-year old brother were
at the bicentennial celelration at tbe Meigs COunty' Senior Citizens Center and on the
Services C&lt;mmlttee which would e01110Udate promotion Injured in the wreck.
grounds of the center. From theleft are Chrisiy Baer, Pomeroy, 90; Anthony Moore, and
According to the patrol, the
procedures for aenlor officers -between major and general
Curtis Spencer.
·
'and commander and admiral - In all the mWtary branches Landmark truck . was
A bicentennial theme is to be carried out in the decorated bicycles with prizes to be
following an Eastern District
aild also reduce the number of IUch officers.
awarded In three categories which Include tricycles with riders through age Six; bicycles
school bus which stopped for
"'' CHICAGO - CHARGING THE UNITED Sleelworkel'l of passengers. The truck was . with riders through age 16, and one, two or three wheelers witb riders over 16.
The Racine Home National Bank and the Citizens National Bank In Middleport are the
' America has grown "aoft at the top," rebel leader E;dward E. unable to slop and attempted
latest
donors of silver dollars to be Included In prizes for various events. There will also be
&amp;ldlowakl announced Monday hll candidacy foc the to go around it and struck the
trophies and craft ilellls for prizes in the day's contests.
'prealdency of the 1.4 mlllloo member unloo. SatllowUI, head of Boatwright car headon.
the USW'a Dlatrlct 31 enccmpeulng the Chicago and Gary,
Ind., mUla, will challenge Uoyd McBride of St. Loul.a, who hu
the tacit support of retiring union
I. W. Abel. The USW
'election will be held Feb. 8.
"Working men and women have come a long way since
corporate goons and c:ourta of In prevented ua from
organizing peacelaUy ~~J~d bargaining eollectlvely," Sadlowski
told a new11 conference.
"But along the.way, the IDIIon hu grown soft at the top,"
he said. "Our leadera aaaume thai the company'slntereat and
·the workers are the same, that the union Ia part Ql the
Ciorporate team. The memberahlp of lbla union needs and
deserves a different kind of leadership."
.
Grants-iri'-aid
.
on
three
to
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
who,
Mayor
Hoffman
said
that
structlon
of a tennis court at
ILWACO, WASH. - TEN·FOOT WAVES and 35-blot projects In Middleport either
presided
over
Lhe
regular
he
has
made
application
with
the
Middleport
Park .and
·'winds hampered a Coast Guard aearch today foc eight pei'IIOII8
have
been
applied
for
or
are
first
meeting
of
town
council
the
Appalachian
Regional
representatives
already
have
who vanilbed With their capsized charter boat at the mouth of
being
lnveallgated,
according
Monday
night.
Commission
for
help
in
the
visited
Middleport
to
confer
the COlumbia River.
Page St ..improvement. It was on the rna Iter. The request is
Sb: men and two women were feared drowned In the
orlginaUy
planned that Page now being reviewed as a
milbap Monday night, I Cout Guard llpoDIIIIID aald. There
St.
would
be wideqed and possible project by the
alao wu no trace of lltelr boat, the U.foo! re.r1 Sea, which
improved by State Issue I bureau.
·
Cjlpelzed whUe undar tow by 1 Cout Guard Ufe boat acrou the
lunds,
but
those
funds
ran
The
Middleport
mayor
said
' Columbia River bar. The~tUfeboetalao overturned but
Meigs County Sheriff .then turned onto SR 144,
sh.
o
rt
before
the
project
could
also
that
he
attended
a
. iiShted ltaelf. Four a-ewmen, who were strapped or roped to Robert C. Harten bach, tt'aveUng easl, when they
be
carried
out.
meeting
in
Columbus
on
the boat, were saved. Two pei'IIOII8 who were throWII Into the Deputies Randall Carpenter, wreeked 'ibe vehicle. Taken
Mayor Hoffman said tba t provisions of the Public
water ftuD the Pearl Sea were picked out of the water by a Steve Hartenbach and Frank mto custody were Leroy
the
commission can give Employment Act which is
belleopter a-ew and one of lhlm wu flown to 1 nearby Altorla, Caito; Jim Sheela of the Smith, Pittsburgh and An·
_granta
up to 70 percent on the designated to put money Into
_Ore., hOIJIIItalto be lrellted for ahock.
State Highway Patrol, and drew Barnett, ZanesviUe.
cost
of
such a project. He areas where there Is high
At large in the COolville
...
Middleport PoH~ Chief J. J.
'" OOLUMBUS. OIUO - GOLF DIGEST'S ClEARING Cremeana Monday J1881ated area Is the third man who is reported also that Glen unemployment. Mayor
ho1llre sayslhlodcla on mlklnl• hole-ln-4111e are U,IB0-l. But Wuhlncton COunty In pursuit believed to be Anthony Paul Smith, division engineer of Hoffman said that he plaits to
(tow about two ollbem In Clltroand -IIIII by 1 WlliiWI.
of a car contalnlnc three Harris, s,feet 9 Inches tall, the Ohio Department of High- make an application, but
Well, noodda 11'1!" lmmedla~ avallable but Mn. Robert black men suspected of weighs 160 polUlds, has black ways has written a let"r to doubts if much help wUI be
Kranz of Columbul did It MCIIday dwtnllbe Rlvlara Country - stealing CB radios
in hair and brown eyes, and has the commission indicating forthcoming since the money
Cub Ladlea ID"talkrlal Golf TOUI'IIIIIIent. Mra. Knna got her Wuhlncton COunty.
wearing a white t. shirt. that the project is ready to go for the program is ear·
, flralac:e 011 the I~YII'd flna1b bale wllb • nine Iron aad then
The sheriff received 1 call AsaiaUng in the search are from a planning and sur- marked for communities with
unemployment in excess of
ltled lhal-dubjo-the lOl.,ardnbbbole.
at 1:40 p.m. from Wuhlngton Wuhlngton county officers, veying angle.
Mayor Hoffman said also the official 5.7 percent In
• llle !lnlahed bll' round with a aeepeutaiJie. rl. COunty asking fat ualltanee Meigs County Sheriff's
.
In apprebeatdlna a 11168 car Deparlment, Slate Highway tbat be Is in touch with Ute Middleport.
", OOLUMBUSof
Outdoor
DORD1'BY BENHAM, Mill America 19'17, the· tllree men were In.
Patrol, and Athena County Bureau
(COnUnued on page 10)
Recrea
lion
on
the
con11
t
(Cwt 1'1el OD )lilt 10)
·
The car went south on SR 7 o!ficers.
~
1~
'~
:.:··-:·····..........................,.,......~..:~.:···;•.~'-"-"-'_....,.:o:oXQ··y···g ·

1

)ump

rlcht In •. • and away. you 101 Vicky Vaughn

a raal softie of a zip-up jumpsuit. Sauy
self·tle picks up where elasticized back-walslleaves
off. ·IQ.polyester interlock knit, machine wash-dry:
shi~-coll'\.'s

.. .. ,

ELBERFELDS

Contest for the old and young
'

.

.

..

.

,., ,

'

,,

"

'

'·

t

le•

•

The Farmers Bank
Money Order.
THE SAFE, CONVENIENT,
INEXPENSIVE WAY_TO SEND MONEY

·POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For l:ach Deposfi9r
Member Federal Deposit lnsurance .Corporitlon ·

. ····
...------······
\

'l'lley dlacuued using . the former Be\fol'd EJementary
School, wbidl waa aold to a church group by the Melp 1«al
Board ol Education . Busing wu alao dllculled, lt1d It wu
agreed that It would be il.\lpractlcal to bua mentally marded
with other cltUdren.
I( was painted out by Judge Webller that the
cmunluloners have t58,000 In a contingency fund, but be did
not know what thll money wu for.
At !lrlll Qura llld "maybe" they could 111e eome of the
conUngency flDid rnciney, th.in later indicated he waa not lltl'il.
Wella said Inflation wu Clle of the factors In not having
additional funds . Healao lnvitedanyme to view the budlet. '
II wu decided that Miss Koch would meet with the
coounllsioners and get a definite money · !Iaure. ~
C(liJUil(salonera next Monday will give a final decijllon.
Attending were Bowen, Webster, Ord, ~bel, P.-rln,
Ours, Wells, Bernard GOkey, Hank Cleland, Eric Ownbera,
Richard Clambers, Grace Weber, Frederick Crow, BW Clrr,
Koch, Leonard IngUsh., district representative frool .\lbenl,
and Bob Miller.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28,

No. !04

;Hoover pleads for local control of schools

THE CUCKOO'S NEST"
Loulu Flflther

H~~~~7--~~~----------M-IOOU
___
~_RT_,o_.
t

Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Ritter and girls of Fort Knox,
Ky. spent a lew days with her
mother, Mrs . Emma Ledlie
and other rela lives.
Mrs. Dorothy Handley
spent the ' weekend at
Hurricane, W. Va. guest of
her brother,
Howard
Spurlock and her mother. She
took her sister-in-law,
Martba Handley home who
had spent two weeks with her
sister, Mrs. Florence Nelson.
Mrs. Louise Wells and
family of Reynoldsburg, 0.
were Friday guests of her
mother-in-law, Mrs. Clara
Wells.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Rilter
and children and Emma
Ledlie wenl to Columbus to
visit · her daughter and
husband, Mr. and Mrs. John
Merrill and attended the
Slate Fair.
Mrs. Emma Ledlie and Mr. ·
and Mrs. Dick !Utter and
children went to Charleston,
W. Va . to visit with Bernard
Ledlie where he is working.
Dorothy Handley visited
Mrs. Elvira Barr Sunday
evening .
Mrs. Sharon Barr called on
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma Sunday af·
ternoon. Friends and neighbors were so sorry to leam of
the death of Mrs. Norma
Nicholson, a former resident
of Langsville.

Jock Nlcllolwm. Rtdflold

BAKER FURNITURE

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Stephen L. Elllolt, 33, Oak Sl.,
New Haven, died Sunday at
Pleasant Valley Hospllal.
Born November 10, 1942, In
Charleston, he Will the son of
Evelyn Arnold Elliott, of
Rand, W. Va., and the late
Charles Stephen Elliott. He
was a purchasing agent for
the Point Pleasant Division of
Arnhersl ·lndustrles.
Surviving are his wife,
Cynthia Blake EUiott, New
Haven; a son, John Charles
Elliott ; two daughters,
Kimberly Ann i"i' Tammy

Langsville

LEWISI'ON, Idaho (UP!)
- SteYe Ford, President
Ford's youngest soo, won't
speculate on whether his
father, if elected In
November, would retain
Henry Kissinger as secretary
of state. .
''Thanlt God I don't have to
make that decision," young
Ford said Sunday.
The 20-year-&lt;Jid agriculture
student made the comment at
a news conference during a
campaign
stop
and
appearance al the arurual
Lewistm Rqundup.

Carl Baker dies S11nday

Stephen EUiott died on Sunday

SPEAKERS NOTED
Speaking at tbe Melgo
Athletic Boostet meellnt
Wt:daesday at 7:30 p. m.
will be WUHam R. Heu.
he.ad footbaU coach at Ohio
Unlvenlty; William D.
Rohr, atblellc director;
Dale
Bandy,
head
basketball coach, and
Frank Morgan, of lhe
Sports lnlormallon Dept.
'l'lle meeltn~ wUI be held at
Meigs High School. 'l'lle
public Is welcome.

Sl'EVE DOESN'T KNOW

•

I

Middleport looking for
help on three projects
Officers help pursuit .

·~As you well know, we are having a very severe crl.sla In
our schOol district. The problem Is not so much money or
working conditions or lnaurance or sick leave or slmllar Items.
The question Is a matter of survival of local school boardl.ln
other words, who Is going to control the achool diBtrlct, let
pa\icl~ and 80 forth, a board of education duly elected !IY !he
people of the district, or outside fcrces from Cohunbua?
"The board believes that It Is ablolutely neclllllar)' to
provide a fair and equitable salary schedUle for our tescherl
Ill! well as all of our employees. The board hu maintained thll
pasltion In the past and will continue to maintain thll poaltlon
In the future. If the teachers would accept our salary offer,
their achedule would compare favorably with lhoee teachers'
salaries in school systems In thlll'Ollllty as weU as the adjacent
countl~. We have offered an e~eellent package to the teacher~
associations, but they are not allowed to vote upon lt.
''Important to you and me Is the fact that the Items offered
wUl not bankrupt tbe school district nor will they require
additional tax monies. Contrary to what hu been told to you,
the agreement demanded by tbe teachers assoctatlon wUl
require additional tax me~~i~ from U8ln 1m or 1978. I refuse
to beat the bushes asking you for more money when we can
operate oo what we have, and still grant reasonable PI!Y
lncreaaea to our e~j~ployees. We are additionally preuured by
the reminder that we must ask you for renewal monies neu
year, not new montes, but renewal monies.
"Ladles and gentlemen, these oui.side fore~ I mentioned
are detennined kl upset our schools and our community at any
cost. They wUI make every effort to set our citizens against
each other. They even tried to split the board of education. I
assure you that the board 13 fully united In this cause. If you,
'the people, want us to cave In to theae forces, teD ua. If not, we
need your full support in this struggle for survival. TeD ua this
also.
.
"Last, but most important of all, I ran for thll post on the
board of educatiooln an attempt kl create better rell!tlona between the board and Meigs Local Teachers AsSociation. No
matter what the outcome of this crisis, I will conUnue to love
and admire this dedicated group of people. My prayer Is that
God will touch us all and that saneness will prevail and that we
might ctmUnue to have some local control over the education of
our own children. God bless you all, and please come back to
work, everyone."

Shelley makes
on asphalt bid
The Meigs Couinty Commissioners Monday accepted
the only bid received for
asphalt concrete in the
amount of $281,838.39 submitted by lhe Shelly Com·
pany of Thornville.
Roads to be resurfaced are
CR I, 1-A and 27 near the
Meigs Mines area.
Meeting with the commissioners were Joe Barsotti
on housing rehabilitation
under the block grant; R. C.
Glasgow on the three
proposals in the block grant
(access road, house numbering
and
housing
rehabilitation), James Page
on the same project, and
James Jennings, consultant
of James Jennings Assoc.
· Jenning told the commissioners
thaI
ad·

ministration will have to be
added 'to the three listed. He
suggested a local person be
hired in the admlnlstraUon
He has filled out th :
necessary papers tbat are t
be inaiied to the liousin1
Urban Development for theh
10 day study. The com~
missioners wW be noU!Ied by
HUD after their 10 day study
as to whethe~ the proposed
recommendations meets
their approval. If so the
money for block granl will be
available. The amount of the
grant is $310,325.
A!tending were Henry
Wells, Warden Ours, and
Bernard Gilkey, com·
missionets, Wesley Buehl,
engineer, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Discarded eye-glasses

wanted by Lions Club

.

.

The Uons club "Eyes for
Needy" 'program is un-.
derway in Ibis county in
which any old eye gla~
one has no need for can be put
to good use by the PomeroyMiddleport Lions club.
They are sent overseas for
the use of needy people who
have no money for glasses.
The Lions club has boxes at
. tbe following places In Meigs
County for public use:
In Middleport at Citizena
Bank, Dutton Drug Store and
Columbia Gas Office.
·'~~

In Pomeroy at the Farmers
Bank, New York Clothing
House and Pomeroy'NaUonal
Bank.
In Syracuse al Baer
Grocery .
In Racine at the Racine
Home National Bank.
In Harrisonville al Larry
Hance's Service Station.
In Rutland at Pomeroy
National Bank, Rutland
Branch, and Walker Funeral
Hof11e ..
And in Chesler at Gaul'•
Store .

I

�•

1-TIIe Daly 8entlnel,Midcllepor!·l'uneroy, 0., TUeaday, Sept. H, 11176

Ohio State number One
'n first UPI grid poll Bengal' briefs ..•
-

.Strike seems certain at Ford plants
87)a)WARDS.U!X:8IZIN

UPI.Aalo Wrller
DETROrr (UPI)- Unllcld
Auto Workers President
x-rd Woodcoct Wll'lled It
II "8blolutely fmpwl~" to
reacb a new ccettrlct by
t.onlcbt'• 11 :se pm. deadline
IIIII 1711,000 Ford workers
'INI'e set for an ecmomy.
-~ lllrlte.
In 11ut attempt to Jl'event
Its lleCCCid na Uonal lllrlte In
nine yean, the No. 2
automater put 11 third
contract proposal oo the ~ble
Mooday, then made It publlc
In a blghly unual move 10
cloae to 1 lllrtte deadline.
~ugh the third proposal
finally offered the Irion aome
concealoo on Its key demand
- reduced wid Ume bt the
auto plants to create lllCll'e

jobe - It wu quickly rejected milJICIIIIIrlb fund that could
by Wood~ct. He then pay benellta for up to 17
reru.ed a company request to weeks. Woodcodt refused to
mend the current three-year apeculate how loog a lllrlte
contract put the deedllne would Jut If wlders do waDI
llld talta broke olf unUl tbla olf the job. The atrike in 198'1
IDIX'IIln«.
luted 88 days.
.
"There Ia much, mucb 1Qo
Company and union
big a gap to IJrid8e In the negotiators hne refused
short time remaining," federal mediltlon, though
Woodcock lllld. '"lbere II too chlef federal mediator: J1111ea
much work to be done, it's: Scearce was trlefed MCIIday
abeolutely impoulble In my on the 11egotlationa. The.auto
oplnon."
companies and
UAW
'nle uniCII hal ael the traditionally !hun what they
11)8Chlnery In motion to pull consider outside interfi!mlce
Ford worker&amp; o¢ oh nbly In contract talb.
llld manufacturing plants In
Labor observer&amp; had
22 states. Pickel ligna ~ve thought Ford would go out of
been printed and union ita way to avoid a lltrlke tiWI
treasurers ~ve been )'elll' becallll! of the IIJI"M'Ing
lnatru&lt;;ted Cll how .to begin Jalea bettie with General
paying strike benellts of •
Motors at the Introduction rl
~a week out of a re&lt;Ud $1110 the 1m modela. They said

Ullled PnN lllleraalioaal

A United Auto Workers
1lliCII lllrike apinll Ford
Motor Co., IICheduled for
llllml&amp;bt.~, would idle
33,230 OIIIOanl, abut down 12
planlll and ooe parts depot In
Ohio and would begin
· Immediately to tate $1.8
mf!llm a day from lbe state 'a
lcooca)' In Jolt ......
tlmlcld Auto Worllera Unlan
Pnllldllll x-rd Woodcock
lllld Monday It II "ablolutey
"'' ....tble" to n.ch a new
contract by lbe m"'l&amp;lt
cleplllne,

Plcbt atcna hiYe been
printed and clllrlbuled at the
Ford fadlitee In Oblo ......
miuta Jll'll*allaaa for the
llriD lnmued.
lbl Fwd employes wiD
receiMbetRGal$toand$110a
nell In llriD beoeflta .. the
UAW lu a llrlte fund cl
fUD miDim wblcb could I.Mt
Ufmc.aaiJ,.....
llowGi•, lbe f40 ar 810 a
'11111111 II bat a hdlm rl the
$I'1Ul 1l'llllkiJ . . UAW
. . . . . . baft been lll'lllng.
The Jut UAW wallllni was

aua,

in 1970 when General Motors
Corp. wu lllruciE.
The lar(!est concentration
rl UAW emplo)'llll In Oblo Ia In
the Cleveland suburb of
Brook Park wbere about
10,000 peraona are tinployed
at two engine plants mi a
fOundry.
The Brook Pwt workers
are repreaenled by lAc81 U50
wblcb bu dlatrlbuted a fl,yer
entitled "Stay Cool" to unlCII
members.
"It tatea cool bud to win a
hot tight," the . unlm flyer
said. "In tbla ._Ue, the
stabs are high. SettHmenta
aometlmea came in lbe llna1
boln. We urge all of )'011 oot
to lllten to nllllOI'I but to
ignore tbole . wbo - t to

of

with ! liDO snployes.
. lnlctol'~ tnJc:t and two
- .\ shnnpina plsnt Iii cars olf the 1111oot bigh
Ma•UMe with 5liO workers. llnie!liie.
- A parts plant In
Tbe tnEk landed (II the
Sandnaty
wltb
1 100 deck of the barce. but lbe two
employ&amp;

'

- A forge plant in canton
with !,liDO employes
·

ArMuments against energy
issues demanded by OUR
OOLUIIBUS (UPI) -()Ill.
oua for Utility Reform
(008) a"* add today It
..... IDe lilt ..... the
Oblo Gtaeral Auembly
"'"
I&amp; laiJed to meet Ill
eGPitllaiolll daly
In

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

llzrsU ......
OUR II elteu.flrC to

~

._....,r~t..CII

lie Nor

w

ballot and
Olll. . . lblhP'"'nhlla

.,..... ,.h............,
datJ' to ......,... .........
. .1

1

the,_ _ _

..,. .. 11111111111 "'" •••

• dDIIIIt ta.. tbe ra•tlfb.
..... Ill 1111 fain by the
leplztzre," aald the
••

.-..

.Jt·-:::

Ina . . . . . .

In

IL

1 ·-· w_ ·•• •••
b 111111 be Cllly I
IIIBr' 7 I zl!lr,bstwedo
.a Will&amp; IIIII te
to
... ,.. 11117, Ia ....
- - - ..,, Flann the
~ IIIII 7lp7 acliCII.we .,.
u.

M£

.....

• cledlrlai

'*"HIJ

the a.-at

aiQ ._ clellbnte1y

I

defanlted on Ill obllgatlm,"
OOR lllld. ''We do £eel,
however, tbat onr lltlit
o... I'IIIUIIUI for
tUIDI
directly to
lbe ~.
''The tepllltn'l failtft
to pabm 17111 mlllllnbP!al
dol¥ t6da Ita Inability ·to
tlllpGIId . . . .!ely Cll tillty
and lalliatlft nifnn," OUR
llld.
"'lbe trae t1lllprlta In IIIII
..t "'imde ili'e lbe utility
monopoUes," said OUR.
"They bave re10rted to
deulfAioJD and ~ bt
lbelr
to keep
U,.t.Bfrcmamerlthe
peaple. The 'W"'fllm does
not11111ttoputiii111Ji"owU
nnt to CJilrl. lnlleacl We lllllli
faree tbem out Ill lbe open.
''We 111111t dtiNind lbat the
oppollltloa atiJilllllnts are
pr
ldl," OUR said. "We
11111ttlle peaple ol Oblo to see
all lidee ol these illueil
bea.- our pnpoeal• are
good. The utlllties are
lporing tbla OjijiUIIwity to

wda-.u---

_.,lim

DR. LAMB

-~~~~~ olflrlal pabllc forum
pro'rided by the Oblo
Constitution. Inatead the

fllwl DR. LAMB- What

... I,_... feel cold? I
-

;
1

'• '
1

• mi wiMn the !an·
psnlanla below 70 c~esr­
Fall ' 111 feel c:Gid. 7 stay
llll!le . _ IIICIIl rltlle Ume
...,_lllallbGft70--.I
doo't lhw'
bee p I
cu't 1111117 l7lt water tem-

••c

,. etwe. n dolal't

maUer
wiiii'W It II • ladoor or
Clltdoll' !JDGI, IIIII feel cold.

...

DEAl RIAI&gt;Il -

I

'lbe

thla condit!Dil results in
decreased blood now through
tile Min. By contrast if you
had an overacUft thyroid
your bociY would turn on lbe
coolin&amp; mechanisms to
eliminate lbe beat
generated by Increased
metaboliam. That would
increaae lite now of warm
blood to the Min.
Feet and hands feel cold
because they set the leut
amount of clreulsUon under
normal
reslln1 · cir·
Cillllltancel.llo what can )'011
c!o? Incnue the now of biGod
to your lidn; The best way to
do IFill Ia lo be IIICire active.
7'll)ollt:al activity pnerata
body ..., mi In tum the
blood l7ow to lbe aldn Ia lben
lncreaaad.
Anotber cauae far leellng
cold Ia a poor diet.
Inadequate calorie intalle
- beat Ia fauwd.

IU'nlllll.
''We'll haft to pat hll&lt;d bat
11vtn down there to I!P .llld
!Jeltbe people aut," lllid stale
pollee Capt. Wlll JOIII'dall.
Tbe two paw Ill the
tnJc:t WS'e - bialy injlred.
PoiiCie lllid tber did nut ll:nDw
bow IIIIIIIY paw 1lfft In

1,...,...

"""'*"

.......,.-a
_ . .

........,..,., ol

.ro..

u.J:•
of..

'

Ford watches Congress
17 BELEN TIIOftiAS

UPI ftlle a- Reporlier
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Fwd said today he
1lill mtid tile campaign ll'ail
this month and stay In
Wlillllington to "mate 11ft
Cmtgreas does! 't go off the
deep end."
"Once Congress leaves
town, I think you 1lill see
.lncreaaed 11cUV1ty by me,"
Ford aid In a live Interview
oo NBCTV's Today Show.
But be added, "I feel that I
have a very Important
obligation to stay In
Wlillllinlllon primitriiy u long
as OJagnsa Is In 1 Jon
''We have to balance the
activit)' or lack of activity In
the Congress with the
responsibility of being
president, lmd somebody bu
to be In tbe natlm'i capital to
mate Jlft. that eon-.. doest't go olf lbe deep eild,"

INOCJt roadway
tillinc three
p!l'lllll. Smnl,.,. befare
that, ·another caueway
acr' • tt ldlled 1iJ: Jll!l'lllll
wiMn I . . . ~ Into tile
late 1lbtn • 11p111 was oti.

---""

rather
than
the White Houe" and acting proce11
campai.IJnlng
tecblllquee.
"JrellidenUal" by llleppbig up
activities In the OVal OOlce Once CUigreu ieaftl tow1r, I
and slgting billa in tile Rose thlnll )'011 will see lnctll aet1
Garden with full media activity by me, bee- I wOl
have more Ume to do 10 lid
coverage.
prealdent7al
A nporter aated the Pres!· the
dent if his declalon to remain reaponllitillty in tbll olflcr1a
II
In Washington did not Jess•• ,U
Ford aaid he bu tallied to
reprennt a "llhlft" ·frQin
asaertlons Jut year tbat be former CaUfornla GoY.
would oot allow blmaelf to Ronald Reagan three 111.becCIIIe I ''boltate fll ,the slnce tile GOP natlollll
White Rouse" after two Clllventlon, and 1111 aldll
1 n•"'naU&lt;Il attempts.
for lxih have conterred. NOw .
"Not necessarily," the that Rea&amp;an bu l'lltlrtiltl
President "flied. ''The lrlpa frcm a Mel:lcan vacalloll, ·111
I made in 19'15 'INI'e Jl'imarlly said, ''It II my impr IJD'Cll nellmda and aecondly my belief-that be will ·be
they were nonpd.ltical events campa1gnlng hard far tlie
when they 'INI'e held In the ticket .. well .. the party;''
week."
""
Trips at that time 'INI'e "an
Information gathering

r-------.,

.. Ford hu been ignoring
Democrat J'IIIIIII)' Carter's
cbarges that he is ''hidin&amp; in

Co~n

meets in new
DOW

A regular schedule of
meellngs began Sunday ·at
'the . new ltingd0111 Hall of
Jebovah~s Witnesaes, localed
me mile east ·of RuUand on
Rt. 124 at Noble Stmvnlt
Road. Meetings of lbe Middleport CongregaUoo 'INI'e
formerly held at 900
...,..._._.
Broadway St·• ··
Larry Clmaban, cbairman,
said the.building is lbe result
ol hundreds of bours of
volunteer wid by members
of the congregation and
v o 1u n tee r s
from
congregations . in West
Virginia and southeastern
Ohio. Wort began at the !lite
late last October and Ia
acbeduled for completion by
tile end of December. Tbe
btlildq blllica!ly is a large
auditcriam.
rncJty!ed in lbe _,_,.,,_ of
...:liii:U.IUI:

meellngs eacb week is a
ICbool of training In public
"-'·!ian -''"'-'-, _,_

""''"
" ' · - • .....,..
the direction of Albert
Tromm, Rutland, mi Elmer
Tufts, Mlddlepart. Known u
tbe "Theocratic School",
enrolimellt Ia open to persona
of an ages.
Having the new hnjlc!hlj(
mates it,._,...., to - • · lbe achool program, COil·
dueling
two
aeuiona
almultaneous!y.

$49lleve(

-----...:..-'""""f"!,
..,.u rA-

1ll

c..t lt.. ........,., OW.

ettilj.

'

8,

•

• '-"'UUIWII;III

"'·"~ Lona and Goldie BorlniJ,
__,_..,..,,,
• Allen and Allee DIU • .._.. ,.,. • . B
' ....,.
' -·-·
·
· : ottom United Methodlet
· ~.:..:.. ~..,. ·-;;-:;,:~ Church, Harty LlnthlcU~U,
• - ... o " 1, .... ,.,
• Mr. and Mrs. VIctor Fla1q',
_ _ ,.,..,,,,,,.,,,
, . and one anonymous con·
tributor from lbe PomeiO)o
- · ., - · area.
•:
::.'.,::,:::"..;..";'~::-=;
ContrlbuUona . may be sent
. ~-.- . . _ - .,..., to Mila Barbara Eberabach,
"""""'n.a.1.11;
""_
"'• _
.... ,....
'""' Box 22 ' "'-·•-·
u- J"
""""~· ......
,!!;,
• • "'"" .._ Caldwell or Mrs. Howard
' -.
Caldwell, Sr., botll of Router,
Reedsville.
..
-

..:.:0.::; .=..,•,:•.;::.

Grist mill in Old Portland ·:
was built by the A~~ses

awi

r.tlddleawat1. ·

T!le mill operated by
lleam. When Ita torn down
the bal7en 'INI'e rolled CIVel'
the river-bank and were
vialble for many years.
N~ Eulitiltltammer 'AU
qtl'ier&gt;
Wataon fired '
tile blliler; OlztiiJ
a7lo f!nd the miD for 1 flllle.

am

Wz-

..

DeCitlle II operaled a free age, wai'liaCbiJlll m one of
ferry for Ita cuatGmers who the nelllbborhood ac:hoolJ
came on horlebact to the . about that time. Abner Prlee
West VlriJinla lide with lbe bad Purcbued the mill rGr
grist 11Wlll over the horae. salvap mi this YOUIIII fellow
When the grlndiJqj was done, · came to him mi uke!J
the ferry lranaported the pet'lllillloo to Uve In lbe ml7l
cua!Gmer bact to hla lide cl ofllce awhile. He staled tbit
the river. Trade was lfhecouldgetaUWellftrigllt .
especially good ooSaturdaya. at that Ume, "he could mate
The mill bad a ll'act froin lt."
lite mill to tbe water's edge on
P!nnlallion was
wblcb a buclr.et or buppw ... bat - day lbe fellow
drawn beck and forth bJ .., mi"''C· No one il;new
.-.. obtained frcm the mfll about him.
-::
IDIJinea. Coal to fuel the Many ,_.later be tumed
bal7en wu drawn .., In the .., In California u principal
happen.
of a lariJe lUll ICboa!. Ba
The miD bad a ..,_, nmr mirrletf, and OWDid a
and 11!0 lklrlea. In the early larJe ratd1 aawblcb ba.....,
1. . Otar!eJ Jlridez came wbealllla iiii!II'A'UI!:meiJ .
: ':::~":!!'! ~~ ~ Allen. Be l'lllll'lllld to Pwl&gt;
--...
7111dlnl!le1Miawllba$1o,a
=:~loa&amp;beforelt YlaiiD and
bow. ,

lll'ante!\i
came
:i

·

=i

a.._.

A plelan of lbla o7d m11J
T!wt ,.. Ollll'tiOIIIIIIIbe lllaJ be - I l l l7lt pielln at

'ftle mill bad a IOOd "• 111171 lbat 11M a aloft In II, Pwl7and Gil ,.1 7717 al 1111
Vlra7nl• trade probably
t8 ,.,. of MeFp Ooanty .._·1 '

T,ou":,

~~ .

NEI'i y·oRK CUPII - The

1911, United PreSt International
Boerd of Coaches top 20 college
football trams (1st week) wi th
flrst ·plact votes In parentheses.
Team
Points

I. Ohio Stole 116) (1 ·0·01
2. Michigan 1171 11-0-0)
3. UCLA Ill 11 ·01
&lt;. Plllsburgh I•&gt; 11 ·0·01
s. Oklahoma Il l 11 ·01
6. Missouri 11 ·01

3•9
30
2S•
2S6
W
t56

··~

'

· ByGENECADDES

UPIIIport1 Writer
.•~.COLUMBUS (UPI) - Not
: \t'{en Woody Hayea knows
'1tJst how good his No. 1
uNnked Oblo State football
ut.llam Is.
.
: .. "We're !101'1 of in limbo,"
:flllyea told his weekly presa
luncheon Monday afternoon.
..I'We reaUy don't know how
. ,.00 we are. But, in a lot ol
. ~JrliYS, we showed we'D be a
!Betty good football team."
-·The Buckeyes had Utile
..difficulty In rolling to a 49-21
;.mctory over Michigan State
:last Saturday, holding a fZ..O
llilll'glD with less than a
..mnute gooe in the second
.lralf and before Hayea went to
''\1~ bench in '1\'holesale
" " '·

"Their coach (Darryl Rogers) thanked me ''*' not
running up the IICore," Hayes
said. "I thought that was
good sportsmanship on his
. part."
Hayes said he felt the
Buckeyes' decision. to. take
the wind instead of the ball to
start the Michigan State
game was a key factor In the
contest.
- · "I can't think of an early
:aeason game when the wind
·•Was more of a factor" said

T

The Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio will
hold. a public hearing 111
Tuesday, Ot1aber 5, 1976,
al 10:00 A.M .• at the olllce
•
of the Commlssl111. 180
A public fund drive for
East
Broad
Street, Russell Holalnger, Jr., •II,
Columbus. ·Ohio .(1215. with Otester, confined to tile fn.
respect to an appllcallCII by tensive care unit of Holler
Columbia Gas of Orlo. Inc. Medical Center, for the ft..t
to recover a por!ICII of the
.-·
cost of certain emergency
nine weeks, bu reached MQ,
purdlases of natural gas · Holslncer wu firat slrlliin
made during the 1975-1976 ·with encephalitis and tbiin
winter period, by charging with viral merlingiUa. He liU
Its curtailed customers. At no inaurance and his falber'ls
said heerlng, all parties of a disabled war veteran.
Interest will be allorded. an
opportunity to present
The first group of conevidence material to the lribubrs of the $491 Include
Issues of the proceeding. • the Tuppers Plains OlrlaUan
Further lnformaiiCII may Church, Mr. and Mra .
be obtained by contacting Ma. • ,...,.
Reed
the Commission.
unce ~. Tom
•
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Caldwell, Sr., Mr. mi Miit.
Howard Krdght, St. Paul'.l
United Methodist Churcll,
Mr. and Mrs. Benny ·WllaCII,
Joppa United · Methodist
....
Church, Mr. and Mi:i.
,.. ..... _
, Howard CaldweU, Jr., Mr.
ro r..
and
Mra.
Her~
-0:::..~Grosanlclde, Mr. and Mrl. ·
..
Date Barr, Mr. and Mnt.
,_,.,
James S. Reea, Jr., co8,
""':',:::!":"
, tslners frOIII the Tuppera
• · • • · - - - •1• Plalna bulineu houaea, t~O;
"'".,..,. ._,' 11 11" 1 - . . • Mr and Mr J C """'--''

In the 1111h spot, Penn State
was seventh, Nelraata, lui
week's leader, wu ei&amp;bth
af~ a ~ tie with l.SU,
Georgia was ninth and Tens
A&amp;M lOth In the balloting.

!Sort·of limbo'··Woody
.

numbers.

fund is at ·

NOTICE

"

lllilla!

1

"

.,_,._ g-.... ..._ .

BYGAYLEPIUCE
PORUAND - SomeUme
late In the 11001 Taylor and
W'tlllam Adams built a flour
mi grist mW on the bank of
the Ohio River just north of
tile rillage of Old Portland
Taylor Adams operated ~
mill, then Alvar Adams
WIIDam'a son, was lbe
llllll)' years The old Adams
home 11
slantlln&amp; In Old
Ptlrtland. Thla home was
bnllt for lite Adaln• falmly
fram Umber eawed oil. the
Ada1111' latld ' by James

I

Holsinger··

Ford said.

~-,u.::

tllree

college

win over Wiaconsln. .
UCLA, with ooe flrat.place
· vote and 238 polnta, advanced
into the third slot fallowing a
2&amp;-10 trouncing of Arizona
State . No. f Pittsburgh
embarrasaed Notre Dame,
31-JO, the worst Irish openlnggame lou ever. Pittsburgh_ ·
claimed four flrst.place nod8
and a total of 256 points.
otlaboma, a 24.'1 victor
over Vanderbilt, received one
flrst.place vote and wu Nci . 5
with ooe flrsti)lace vote and
229 poltits. Ml180uri finished

7. POlin St. 11·0)
150
B. Ntbroska (0-0·II
10
' 9. Goorulo 11 ·0-0)
67
IO..To.. s A&amp;M !1·0·01
S5
1], Maryland 11·0·01
•8
12. Arkon11s 11·0,0)
39
13. Aloblma 10·1-01
IS
U . lSU 10·0·1)
13
IS. BoliO!\ College 11·0·01
1~
t6. IIIII 1exas;Tt&lt;h 11-0·01 9
16. ltiel Kansas 12·0·01
. 9'
16. !tie l North Caroline 12.0·019
19. Southern Collfornlo 10·1·01 6
:10. Oklo Sl . 11 -0.0)
5
Note: ly agretm•nt with tht
Amtrlc•n Football Cotches~
films on prObation by tht
NCAA ere Ineligible lor too 20
and natlonet ch•mplonshlp considtrJtion by tt1e UPI . Boud of
Coaches . Those
t11mt on
probation for Jf16 are: Mississippi State, Michigan St1te
SMU, Long euch State and

Southwestern Louisiana .

...

p.cm.b:• ·· · ......... quarters

aecttona,

of Coaches

:fl&gt;tball poll. ·
• •After beating Michigan
:Lte; ft-21, Saturday,_Ohio
:slate vaulted from third
place Into the top spot,
collaring 18 liraliJiace votes
· ilut a total of 348 points.
S!lcond.place Michillan was
~ oo 17 ballots and tallied
343 points following a ~27

belli! llilt ~ IIIK lied out

tile carL
The In&amp;
Jr., 'AU
"Y''"'4'7W pia ·a mlllian- pullhq two . . _ !aDd
ISARBI!ICUESET
da!Jir ......."' cl dlltorted with llbeDa into Late
NEW HAVEN - The New
JII'OP'Ipnch to obectae tbe
M
....
wiMn
tile
Haven
Volunteer Fire
mril cl tbe - - .
Odtntd.
Department
will have a
"The chairman ol tbe
"ll10
w
1111e
a
II•
•
•
chlclrea
....
....___
at lbe New
tillltJ••ud Cftimw for
.............
"
.
a••H
•
.
Ha'
O
!I!II
Oty
t.dldi~~g
starling
Safe, l..oww C4llt 7!'.ledrlclt)
l t i lmilll. a 1lilltela. at 11 a.Ill. Saturday.
. Ia PeteO'Gndy," aald OUR. aid
"'l11e flr1t UiDg l1111r 1IU I
"O'Grady II a former ... ...tim cl tbe mfctlle ~pa
cbalrman ol tbe Oblo bad fallen."
LEGAL NOTIC·E
NotJce iis hereby 91Yen that
Dtmoollic party.He lawen
State pollee Lt. Jack CUHO&lt;d Jatobl, Otto LOhn,
tuoWn to the lectalatlve Namlra lllid two Clr.l'lll oil. Emest Powoii,Jiobertll.lrton,
leaderllb.lp.
It
Ia bio the »loat11eep ..... Ger•td Pullins end KllhV
Putnns, as trustees of the
Inconceivable tbet O'Grady whlcb connec:ta lues Laurel
Cliff Fr.. Methodist
and the utilities bave Pmtdwtndu and ......... Churtb. Int. hovo filed lllelr
overlooked the opponent In I aparaely papulated petition In "'e common Plea•
court olltglng lh1t the
a}!Uibl!lllll.
foil-ing
reol
mmby aboat • mllea est1te Is no des&lt;ribtd
IDnger nHded tor
"lnatead, we strongly frcm
New Or1eena.
dl,..ch purpooes ODd nquost
iiiliiji6Ct tbat lbe ulllillel are
''The .Inlet llllded riCii oulhO&lt;Ity to transfer soid root
playq lUll Bither lrlciE In ..-e with lbe Ub Ill the •tate. whith real estate 11
desaibed os follows, to.wil :
IIIII ,..nplp," lllid OUR.
barie
ml
1be trau. !nile
Situate&lt;! In SoHsbury
"Follcnrinll a victory for 1oo1e from lbe truc:t mi ten Tow,
n shfp , Mtlgs County,
Ohio, in F raction No. 30, Town
u-iuueiiDNovember,the
in. ' '~bey • white . . 2 N.• 'RMGI ll w. and more
uUJ!Uee would bave mounted behind
them, and we can't particularly described as
a lepl clwl)!qe to the
follows:
·
·
lind it-." uld liate pollcle
Commendn.a at the norttJ.
vaUdity of the election set.
ust carnft' of Fraction 'JO;
Marillllfoore.
because
no opponent
tl!ence north 87 de9. CO min.
The
Inlet
driver'
McJenr!e
arguments were prepared." G. J!nhlnaon, 15, cl I:J.yt(ll, w•t :167.36 feet to o P!'lnt:
tMnce south,. deg . "min. 16
set. eost612.&lt;15 feot to a point;
lllontesouth.,. dog . .00 min . .u
He:. west ill feet to 1 point;
lhtncz 10uth • dog. "' min. 16
Me . Ntt (PIMing • coru:rete
monument ot 165 feet) for 1
total diSIMce of 119 !HI to a
point in tho centerline Of Old
S.A. 1 and 120: then&lt;• ·tiona
the center II no oluld hlllf;woy,
S.l4 dog. • min . u ·Me. wist,
•19.21 !eel to • point; thence
along the eest line ol Laurel
CIIH Free Methodist Cliurdl
land, N. IAdeg. 36 min. 6ue&lt; .
you, but this cauaes you to sac-IIU dilation most often ..., 36:1.61 teet to a (.,..,,.
monument and tho true point
feel cold.
occurs In middle ..ed or of beginning for the'toll-lng
So, eat right mi lncreaae older penona, ,..uy Witb desalbed tract; thence north·
15 dog. 25 min . 06 stt. west
your pbysical activity. ll 1
concrete
atheroeclerosia (fattr (pasting
could help• .If yoa still feel cboleaterol depoalta) of tile monument at 6. 25 teet and a
spike In tilt conttrllne of T.R.
cold hive a checkup of your large aorta.
NO. 20S) for o lOIII dlstonet of
thyroid mi to be tnn you are
7f the anetll')'llll II 1111a11 toiO.ZS 1111 to a double Elm ·
trM et the northwn t corner Of
not anemic.
mi the abdomen Ia lariJe it Trt&lt;t
t dts&lt;rlbod In Vol. 65
For more lnformaUon I am may be lmpnalhle to feel it pege 430
of tho Molgs Countr
aelJding you The Health on phylllcal eumlnation. Deed Re&lt;OI'Its; thenceJOutl! t4
dog. 34 min, s• Hi:. west 50
Letter number 7-e, Body When lbe stomach II ftf)' !HI
to on Iron pin; thence
Tempera lure and Fever. lean mi if the anettry1111 Ia south 7S dfll. IS min. 06 soc: .
1.00.25 feet to an Iron pin:
Olbera who want tbla illue larger then it can be felt mi _,
lllonce north lA dfll. 36 min. SA
can Plld a lq, stamped, the puleaUOIII can alao be sec: . ta11 .50 feel to tilt point of
self~ envelope with: aeen when the patient 117ylniJ beGinning, tontalnlng .1•1
ac:ro. and btlng Pill'! ot 1 1.06
10 cents for it. J,.tltilld , _ on IU beck.
ac:ro trac:td-rlbecla Trac:tl
Jetter to me in care of tbia MID)' very lbln peeple with In VOl . fo5 l)alll4300f ft1t MelDS
County Dltd Recorda.
·
ReWiplpll', P. 0. Box •• narmal .... Mul pa!sattma ol
ltlng Plll'l of tho umo roal
San Antonio, TX 711ft.
tjle aorta ~ve puiaaUOn. you ntate .. nveyedtould &lt;hurd!
DEAR DR. LAMB - Wbat can see and If you put 701r i&gt;Y CIHd re&lt;OI'&lt;Iod In Volume
Meltll County
are the I)'IIIPtoma of ari hand enr lbe aorta )'011 can 23t
DeedPille
Ro.."'
nla.
Solei potlilon wilt bt tor
abdominal aneurysm? Ia then feel lt. That does not litwlng
on the Jilt day of
there •llY Ylalbla mowment mean It II a dilated aac ~ September. lt7•. at tho
oo the oulalde of the ab- aneuryam. I would 111RU you Comman Pl•as Courtroom at
dCIIIInalarea? I am a fanale are Ill that ca~CII'J' and do PCII!troy, Ohio.Cllllord Jacobi
..... and 1llflb 117 pounda. not IIPe an IDIW)811, but
Otto Lolin
E.._tl'owoll
DEAR READER - An the way to find oat II to let
A-IIIM'ton
abdclmlnal .. fUll Ia a your c7acklr do a p1tya1ca7
Glll'ald ....lUna
Kathy Pullins
dilation of the 1zrae artery, .eumlnation and find oat
Tr,._uurtiCIIII Frlt
tha aarta, that
down what is WOn tltc you.
~tholdll Cllureh, Inc.
(I) 2•, 31'i (f) 7, lA
tha flutt
The

.,_,..dtll,.a.....,.
n
prolec:tltW
'1'111 bod7 metabclllam

Ohio, suffered 111 ankle
lnjill'f. His puaenger,
Wiiii8m S. WedeU, 26, ol
Aloedx, Alii., sulfaoed a
lro'"-"'-...
.
.... .-;o..
'lbe bridge bu I borilontal
clearance far boats ol E .feet
and is roug~Q eo feet - u
ator1ea ~abaft the water. It
lipiDI "'ncbac Pau 011 u.s.
51 - the Otily direct route
bet A EII New Orlean! and

cars fell into tile nift ·water.
!late .~ llvtn IMrcbed
-IOC I hilly for lbe cars Rwiii~n'J ~ 1 CXID!n!IDity
lor .aeveral holll'l, bat rl aboti 15,1110.
...... w .their ..m wiil Ill I fimflr atrhhet4 Aug.
today becaue of stronc 1, m4 aa t11e M.mlle Lake

Reader says she's always cold
. . . . . ee&amp;--..,M.D~

:ll1m'd

:rear

that It was lllCOIIIIitullmal
for lbe educatbl ciepWDellt
1o • minimal ataDdarda for
chwcb operated 8chools.
Deapite that ruUng,
'lbompaon aald Monda,)', ''We
1re elalcld over our l'ictory,
but indignant over tile fact
that .parents have been
ber.-1 mi tbreatl!lled."
Tbe oo.d Slid EaK was
not tD blame far ~ the
standard~~ and aa1c1 !bey were
conMeot of his ability ol
perform tile job.
In atbet ICIIon, the board
created a .a•t tilt .force
lor the education of
handicapped childrm. It will
be ~ble for audyillg
· the cWTent funding and
mana.gment of special
educat;iCII programs,

Barge smas.hes bn•dge

lleveland witb 10 A&lt;lEI.
-A tran!I!I•'XI plaat in
the Cincinnati suburb of
Fairfax with I,~ N~ , .., ROYAL BR•Ja BilL
- A traMDfaoion p1aat m -•
. •
tile Ondnnati suburb
MANCHAC, La. (UPI) - A
Sharonville with f,200 ~:large lllllllled Into I bridge
emplo7"1
CIVel' a n.:1VW pus bitwew ·
- ht ~plant In Lima two lites~· ·lllrllnc a

dilrupt necotatlons and
wboee goat II to deatroy your
local unlCII.
''01 lbe nallmal level,
Ford has olfered minor
Improvements," said the
flyer. "Bat the fact remains,
the big lsauea remain
llllre101Ved 111Ch as the.
worker plclrlng up the
propOIIed t5 per cmt incleae

: ;NEW YORK (UPI) :l)lllowlng a weekend of
plor upaeta, Ohio .St8:1C
.-...p~ btto flrat place in tltil
Ddted Press International

Essex supported
Court ruled -Uer this

.

Today's

Sport
Parade
(
.

Lyne Center Gym and Pool schedule will remain as abov.e
for llie month of September . A new g_ym and pOol schedule will
be published woel&lt;ly beginning In October. ·
. ·

cet

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Board of Ed~atlm
volcld Wllllimoally Monday
to suppart slfle School
&amp;lp«intendellt Martin ...._
after Ouiltlan Scbooli rl
Ohio tried to haw him fired.
Dr. Roy Thompson,
JftllldentrlOuiltian Scbools
ol
ubd the board to
in health care.
lire Ellex. The gro"11ald Ita
"We are acting In a serious memt-1~ve ' - ' bara.d
and responsible manner," tbe lmd tbnatened by the atalie
unioollyer said. "We ask tbllt education department for
you do the same."
~ to run its own cburcbOther Ford plants in Ohio relalcld sboob.
and tlleir 1111Dber of workers
Some members of the
include:
~ were conviclcld in 117f
-An .-mbly plant at for ql!l'ating a dmch Jchool
Lorain with 6,000 employes. In Gi-eenvi!fe In Darke Olunty
- A trw::t plant at Avon. that the Oblo ~t rl
Late with 2,000 fllllllo&gt;'es.
Ecb:atloa 'said did not meet
- A •amp;ng plant at mjnlmal state atandllrds.
Cleveland
with
3,600
But, the (J!lo ~ eme
workers.
- A parts depot at

'

••

811111e

Ohio's 12 Ford plants keep
33,230 workers employed
17 JOHN T. XADY

·

about the UAW, Ume orr a rel.r In acldltlm to
pointing 0111 au~wwtan au avence ss days !bey
ba ve been tbr011ih the llready rectift Ill VICIIlona
toqbelll two years aince the IIIII bolldaya. It Ia tied to 1
Great Depreuloa with good ~ record, bal
ilyoffa toppna the 1110,000 the ...... reje..Ud It u
IDII'It • .
punltift.
A ltrllre would oot effect
Under the propoeal, a
operations at General worker with 25 years
Motors, Chrysler and aenlar!IY could
one IQOI't
American Motors, wboae nell of paid Ume olf If he lias
530,000 wlders will remain no unucuaed absences
oo the job while the bulc durlns the year. Ford Aid the
Industry contract II first penalty would be.dwbled for .
111'111'ked out at Forll
~~~e~:cuaed abeen&lt;:et on a
The 'key to the third Mooday ot Friday when In·
Ji'OPOaalls a plan to permit plant abeenteelan aoara.
111'111'il;ers up to 40 hours of paid
the

LYNE CENTER
GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
POOL
DAY-GYMNASIUM
S.pl. Ul·10p.m. CiptnRec.
B·lOp.m. Open Swim
S.pi .1Sf.10p.m. College Rec.
8·10 p.m. College Swim
Sept. 168.10p.m. College Rec .
8-10 p.m. College Swim
8·10 p.m. Opin Swim
Sept . 17 8·10 p.m. Open Rec.
Sept. 18 2·• p.m. Open Rec.
2·• p.m. Open Swim
Sept. 19 2·A p.m. Open Rec.
2·• p.m. Open Swim
8-10 p.m. College Swim
1·10 p.m. College Rec.

'

Hayes. "In less than 12
minutes, we had three touch·
downs."
.
Hayes said the "biggest
thing was our lack of injuries.
I think we can go into this
week's game (Penn State) aU
Jitt."
"A big dlaadvantaRe," said
· Hayes, referring to the
relatively easy time the
BUckeyes lt&amp;d, "Is we might
think things are always going
to come that easy." ·
Hayes defended his stand·
In news conference following
Saturday's game by saying,
"I doo't Uke being accuaed of
aomething I didn 'I do In front
of other people."
Hayes sent assistants
Ralph Staub and George Hill
to dlsc:uss Saturday's game
against the Spartans, the first
time he had completely
skipped a post11ame meeting
in Ohio Stadium.
"There was no use getting
into anot!ter ~ntest," Hayes
tOld his weekly noon ,iuncheoo
Monday. '.'7 don't like being
accused of aometblng I didn't
do in front of other people.
I'm always afraid I'll grab
someone by the throat."
· Hayes referred to the cootroversy over Michigan
State's NCAA probation,
.

By RICK VAN 8ANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Notes and quotes frun tbe
Onclnnati Beilgals' den:
After IIJleftdlng 41 football
~~e~aons on the field, retired
&amp;I!Pia' head coach Paul
Brown watched the 11e1aon
start Sunday from a glaasenclosed private booth nen to
the press box high above
Riverfront Stadium.
"It was different," Brown
lllld after Cincy's 17·7 victory
over Denver, ''but ulong as
we're winning, It stW feela

great."
Brown, who at age 81 Is
continuing as the team's
general manager; patted his
heart to !how where the
victories stUI counted.

Veteran wide receiver Ollp ·
Myers, who says ·he enjoys
coming off the bench to catch
clutch passes In "rough,
tough, mean situations,"
belllled like a Uttle boy after
teammates awarded him the
game ball &amp;mday. He had
players, coaches and e'len the
general manager autograph
lt for him.
"Paul
Brown,
But
Joltnaon," he said as he read
the names on the baD .
"That's
some
good
company."
pa=r~or' ' :0....c:.a~~ f:~
,_
go.ahead TD ag~inst Denver,
last Saturday's fD-21 victory a1ao caught a lroten nose,
over Michigan .State and · but figured it might haw
couldn't have been much been a "good break."
better.
"Three weekli ago I had it
He carried only seven lroten on one side and this
times from scr1mmage lreak was on the other side to
against the Spartan~ lot 112 strai&amp;hten It out," he said,
yards, but scored three m8nagtng a feeble grin.
times, once on a 7~yard run
from scrimmage and an~ber
Myers may have been
on a 68:yard punt return. He giddy from one game's
also had a 7~yard TD run success, but he couldn't stop
nullified by penalty In the boasting about the 1976
first half.
edition of the Bengals.
That perfonnance earned
"I think we're better this
Logan the honor of United year than ever before," said
Press International Midwest the veteran of eight of the
Offensive Player of the Week. nine Bengsls' 11e110ns. "I
"I knew I waa going to play know the defense has
behlndArchlefortwoyears," . imJli'OVed 200 per cent over
said Logan. "It waa either last year.
play behind Arch or go to a
"Maturity is helping," he
. second rate school. I made added. Before we played as
thedecisloo.l decided to play · individuals, now it's more of
for lhe best,
a team effort."
"Af. times I wanted to qutt
and go home," said the 5-10,
Pat Mclnatly, the NFL's
18ZiJound Log111, who finally answer lo Leonardo Da Vinci,
took over the No. 1 tailback may be the Bengals' answer
spot last spring and bas lo Dave Green.
fought off the bevy of new
phenoms.

Logan named
- · f •week
Upl Back -o

Hayes' admittance he was
ooeof thoae who turned in the
8~artans
for
Ulegal
recruiting and his alleged
grabbing by the throat of a
reporter from the MSU
ily GENECADDES
student newspaper aeveral
UPI8porta Wrller
weeks ago in Chicago.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jeff
Hayes said the Penn State Logan hu IIJleDI his two plus
game at University Park, years at Ohio State trying to
Pa., would be "a highly prow he deserves to play
press.ure game; like last ' ll!libeck.
week, but under d!ffere11t
First, It waatbe Impossible
circumstances."
task of Unseating Archie
He lrought up an old Duffy Griffin, the Buckeyes' two·
Daugherty phU0110phy that a time Heimlan Trophy winner
football team Improves most wlio kept logan on the bencb
between its first and second for two yean.
games.
Then, this fall, along cilllle
"We are going to need that a crop of hlghlyiJublicized
improvement this week," he recruits rounded up by coacb
said.
Woody Hayes and Logan had
Ohio State beat Penn State to prove himself again.
17-9 last year in Columbus,
Among them were junior
the first Buclteye win In live college whiz RCII Springs, the
tries against the fl!itlany leading JC IICorer in the
Uons. The two teams haw nation I~ season, and froah
never Diet In University Ric.ky Johnson..of ·santa
Park. .
Marla, CIUf.
Asked about Penn State,
"That's the way it !sat Ohio
which slipped by Stanford I~ · State," said Logan. "We get
12 in its opener Saturday, tremendous athletes. Just
Hayes said, "they are a Uttle knowing we have guys Uke
more experienced than Springs and JohiiSOO to )XlSb
Michigan State. They throw a you makes you improve. It's
lot and have a fre~.n just an honor to play ahead of
fuUbeck (Matt Suhey) who IS them.''
running very well."
Logan Qot his first start In

Royals drop twinbill

I

.,

•

Major League standings

~Y
.. .

Unlled Prts• lnlernatlonal
National League

.• -

.'ilhlladelphla
•Pittsburgh
w York
lcogo
Louis
Montreal

j

EIS1

· W,· L,. Pd.

87 55
82 ·o60
75 67
6S 79
63 77
&lt;8 ?2

.613
.577
.528
.451
.• so
.3&lt;3

GB
s
12
23
23
38

Detroit
(Ruhle
9-11)
at
Baltimore {Grimsley 8-6), 7:30

p.m.

Wednesday's Games
Kansas City at calif., night
Detroit at Baltimore, night
New York at Cleveland, night
Boston at Milwaukee, night
Texas at Chlcago, night
Minnesota at Oakland, night

Major League Results
By United Press International
N1tion1l League
(1st •me)
Atlanla
000 000 2JQ- S 6 2
Los Angeles 100 000 ooo- 1 5 2
Lacorte (3 ·9) and CorrelL
Hooton , Sosa 181, Wall (8) and
Pasley . LP- t:tooton (9-lA )

lind game)
All~nta

ByBILLMADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Whitey Herzog has always
had a reputation for being a
stand-up guy and with his
Kansas City Royals in their
worst slump of the season,
he's not backing dolm now.
"We've got to get off our
behinds mi play baseball,"
said Herzog Monday night,
after the Royals dropped a 54, ~ doubleheader to the
Oticago White Sox and saw
their flrst.plal;e lead over
Oakland in the American
[.e
W t sJi ed to f
ague es
c
our
games,
.J'un Spencer's three-nm
homer with ooe out in the
eighth liming won the
nigh
1 Cbi
afte
tcap or
cago
r
Kevin Bell did In the Royals
· th
with
lgbth
m e opener
an e
•
Inning sacrifice Oy which
snapped a 3-3 tie
·
Herzog refused to offer
excuses for his team's bad
play, but White Sox manager
Paul Rl~rds. who's seen his
share of pennant races,
thinks maybe the Royals are.
- · _ ..

merely victimll of baseball's
game of odds.
"The bad breaks they're
having now are evening
things up, but they probably
don't realize that," said
Richards. "They lost three of
their starting pitcher&amp;, Doug
Bird, Paul Splittorff and
Steve Busby llld if that
hadn't happened they'd
probably be ahead by 20
games now."
Elsewhere In tbe American
League, Cleveland drubbed
Boston, 8;!, Detroit beat New
Baitlm d ed
York, 3-1,
ore own
Milwaukee, 1).3, in 10 innings,
CaWorma
' outlasted Texas,"'
•
2, in 14 Innings, and Oakland
at Minnesota was rained out.
Indiana 8, Red Sox 3:
Rico Carty rapped out lour
hits to raise his average to
.308 and also drove in a run
hil
ing t
ofh
W e scor
WO
ers as
Cleveland moved lo three
games over .500. Dennis
Eckersley yielded six hits
while striking out nine ir\61..'1
lnn'ftd•
to gain the win.
"'&amp;'
Tigers 3, Yankees 1:
Rust Staub and Wlllle

Horton hit back-to·back,

sixtlHnnfn$ h001ers to give

Jim Crawf'*'d his first win of

the season after six losses.
The two hcrners snapped a
scoreless duet between
Crawford and loser Ken
Holtzman, 13-9. Willie
Randolph's tiases-loaded
sacrifive fly gave the
Yankees their lone run in the
seventh.
Orioles 5, Brewers 3:
Baltlmote, detennined to
at least saiVl!ge second place
. in the AL East, won its fifth
straight game on Tony
Muser'S two-run homer in the
'
lOth Inning. It was Musers
first hcrner as an Oriole since
being acnulred from the
,
White Sox June 15, 1975.
Regale Jackson preceeded
"'
the homer with his second
double.
0
Angels 6, Rangers •:
Joe Hoerner Issued a
basesloaded walk to · Jerry
Remy to touch off a lour-run,
14th-inning rally, which
cam'ed ""
"'·Ufornla to victory.
Bruce Bochte singled home
tw th
. the
o o er runs m
r y.

lly r.GLTON IUaDIAN
UPII!plnl Zdlt«
NEW YORK (UPI)-The ;;_ kid on the bloek Ia Roy
Hartafleld.
·
He already hal been told by lbe TOI'CIIto Blue Jaya. tbt
American Lasgue's newest entry, he'a tbelr llllllllel' and the .
~icial announcement Is due any day now.
.
Harll!leld II coming to TOI'CIIto lllrlf8bl from what abow' 1111
people call a IIIIUiab engaeement, two rl them In fad, In
Hoootulu where under his llandllnc, the Hawallltl•nclm baft
woo the Pacific Coaat lague playoffJ the put two )'till.
They won it an for the aecond atraf8ht year Bunda)' by bealinl
the Salt Lake City Gulla, three gamea to two.
Peter Bavalli, Torooto'a general manaeer, 111,)'1 he'a toolrllJII
for a man with Infinite patience, one who can handle an
expanaloo club lib the Jllue Jays bound to be made uo clMtlv
of )'Dung players llld 1 few veterans, .and lbe IO-flar.old
Hartafleld hal ahown hlllllelf to be aactly tbet ldnd ol
manager.
.
He uses a firm hand mi doean't stand for a wbo!e lot rl
nonsense, but the kids he ~d at Hawaii all say they'd go to tbe
wall for him. One of them II BUI Almon, the IJOOd.Joo!IIDC liyear-old abortltop and former Brown University lltar, wbo was
the No.1 choice In the nation when the Sail !)lego Padrel ~
him in the June 11174 free ..ent draft
.
Hartsfield played ~ild base for the Bolton Br- three
seasons In the early 'lOs. He hal been manallinllln the mtnara

""
.,;nclnnatl

West

W: L: Pet. GB

:eirJ

D 1p hm· s edge Bills
0

.l

au

more auccessful In that time. Aplrt frcm two tblr!l.piace
flntsbes, he never has wound up any worse than aecond dnr7tll
the past 10 years. H you'd lib to kllow an)'lbinll about lbe ldnd
of patience Hartalleld has, be bad Joe Pepltllle u one ol hla
players for awhile earlier tbla season and if you can handle Jee
• • Ao.
Pepltooe in a place like HawaU, you can L,..,....,
anyone
anywhere.
Rod Gaspar, sonny Jactaon, Bobby Valentine, Cbucll Bar,
tensteln and Eddie watt were some of the other u..IJIII
leaguers Hartsfield had at HawaU thiJ year and he had no
!rouble with any of them either .
As they say at the race track, Hartafleld bas gotten IIOPito
calla before. He was a semjftnallat In the mana1Jerill
sweepstakes with more than tile big league club, but never ·
waa tapped before tbla.
·
.
A year agp, he, Joe AltobeW illld Alex Grammas were tbe
three lui candidates the Mllwaullee Brewers COilllidered for
their manager belore they finally decided on Grammu.
"I interviewed Roy mi was very impressed with hla ldeu
about managing," says Brewers' Genebl Mana11er Jim
Baumer. "He hu bad exceUent succeas bandllng ballplayers
wherever he.has gooe and he has woo everywhere. I know he
did a tremendoua job for the Dodgers with their Spolwte
club.''
The Dodgers lroiJI!ht him up with them u one rl the.l r
coachea In 1969 and he stayed with them four 11e1110111. He
coached briefly with the Atlanta Braves In early 1973 before
being appointed lllllll&amp;ger of the IBlandera In late May rl that
year. The Ialanders have a tieup with 8atl Diego and It waa
while he was working with the Padres that Bavsai got to know
Hartafleld best.
· As a ballplayer, the 5-1001-8, 180ilound Chattahool:ble, Ga.;
native had pretty fair power for his size. He could also run, but
he had only an average arm llld waa wbat the scouts call a
minoa hitter, meaning he didn't haw enough to Insure ltlmlelf
steady employment .in the majors. He f1nalty reached them In
1950 after putting In seven seaaona In the mlnon.
With the Braves, ''MOUIIY" Hartsfle\11 1111 overalladqnd by
the Warren .Spalms, the Johilny Sains, the Walker Coopers, the
Eddie Mathews, the Earl Torgesons. After three years, the
Braves gave up their claim oo him and he went on to pily with
such clubs as Milwaukee, Baltimore, Montreal mi Los
Angeles, all In tbe minors then. ·
Times change. Those cities are aU In the majora now. So II
Roy Hartsfield, the new kid on tile block.

m11

Friday's games
·
(SVACJ
Southern at Hannan Trace
Eastern at Symmes Valley
(Others)
Gallipolis at Coal Grove,
(7 :30p.m.)
Ironton at Portsmouth
Jackson at .Wheelersburg
Logan at Hilliard
Meigs at Ripley, W. Va .
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Wellston .at Nelsonville·York
Alexander at Trimble
Belpre at Caldwell
Federal Hocking at Wahama
(7:30p.m.)
Wll llamslown, W. Va . at
Warren Local
VInton County af Oak Hill
North Gallla at Zane Trace
(Ross)
Hannan, W. Va . at
Southwestern
Point Pleasant at Dunbar
. Saturday, Sept. 18
Athens . at Columbus St .
Charles (7 :30p.m .)
Miller
at
Zanesville
Rosecrans
Kvger.Creek at Huntington
(Ross) (1:30 p.m.)
(Games at 8 p.m. unless .
Indicated)

73 BUICK

EL£CJRA 225
.UMITED Hr CPE.

I

•3295

· Karr &amp; Van landt

11.,.--------

'******1!******-*************
***~
!.

i

: fA~'

· ~~~

,;;!

i Adolph's Dairy Valley I
*'

1:* .

I

'****************• •• ********• *..

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE~

1

U.-""

IXMNINGOIILDS MIENCY INC.

(

\

'

..

15yearsnowandno~hermlnorleaguemlnagerhalbeenany

ooo 101 oto- 3 1 o
Lo~a~~~~~:~
~~4tc:&gt;C
93 52 .641 _:
los AngelOs 81 62 .566 11
AJOR LEAGUE LEADERS· (6) , Torrealba (71. oevine C81
·l'fbuSion
71 14 · .&lt;90 22
. Br United Press lnfernallonol end Murphy ; RhOden, Hough
· . :iiJn Otego
67 79 .459 26V•
BATTING· '
' 171 otid Pasley . WP- RhOden
· Ibased on 400 at bats I
...san Francisco ~ 81 .A49 28
112 .31. LP- Leon I2·Al. HR:-p;tlonta
62 .82 .431 3111•
NATIONAL LEAGUE·. · Allanla , May 12 .
· ¥"~
Monday's Results
·Madlock.
· · Chi
· t30
G·&lt;68
AB· 62R·160
H•.3&lt;2
Pet New York - - soo-- s
AJJanta S LOS Ang 1, 1St
90
000 000
los Ang &lt;Atlonto 3, 2nd
Maddox , Phil 135 &lt;93 7t 165 .335 Plllsburgh ooo ooo ooo- o s 1
Black, has factory air, full
·1"hllodelphlo 7 Montreal 2
Oliver, Pit 111m S9 138 .33! Seaver IIJ-101 and Stearns:
power, 60·.00 seal, black
;Jj~w York 5 Plltsburgh o
Griffey , Cin 13&lt; 51W 102 168 .330 Demery, Giusti 17 ). Bolr (8)
Morgan, Cln 125 &lt;27 106 1&lt;1 .330 end sangulllen, Dyer 131. lPcloth Inlerlor, 1 owner.
.il. Loul• 4 Chicago 3
•Son Fron 3 San Otego 2, 10 Rose. Cl~
145 59• 120 192 .323 oemery 110·51
Gernlmo, Cln 133 &lt;47 57 141 .315
- ·,lhns.
·
Fosler , Cln IJO S14 80 160 .Jll Chicago
u.(Only games SCheduled l
010 000 002- 3 11 o
. '1
Todey'a Probablt Pitchers
Montnez . Pill 145 581 60 180 .310 st Lou is
ooo 012 01x- • 10 o
•u•
(All Tlm•s EDT)
Garvey,lA 143 565 73 173 .306 Bonham p Reuscnel (6),
Watson. Hou 140 533 70 163 .306 Knowles (8) ond Mltlerwold ;
• 1Lot Angeles (John 8-10) at
· an&lt;lnnotl ;. !Nolen 12·81, 8:05
AMERICAN LEAGUE·
Fomh 16.10 , end Simmons. LP
•p.m .
· ... »
M&lt;Rae,
KC
l;·,~?·
kt~l
~~~
Bonham ta_.12_1._
1
You'll Like Our Quality
"'1'1New York (Swan 5·81 at
142 sao 87 196 .338 Montreal
200 ooo ooo- 2 1 o
;p,!ttsburgh IRooKer IJ.71, 7; }5 Bretl , KC
Way of Doing BuslnHs.
p.m.
Carew, Min 141 5« 89 181 .333 Phladelphl 300 m oox- 7 13 o
GMAC FINANCING
""Chicago CR . Reuschel 11·10) ·Bostock. Min 1j 5 424 65 141 · 333
Blair,
Corrllhero
111,
Lono
992,5342
Pomll!'oy
at St. louts (Mc&lt;;lothen 12·13 ), lynn, Bos I 1 &lt;91 73 IS6 .318 121. ounnlng 15), ToyiO&lt; 16)
Open
Evtnlngs'lil6:00
LeFlore, Del 135 s;; 93 172 .316 and eerier ; car lion, Garber m
,t,:30 p.m .
.
Tll5ft . m.~t.
'Montreal IFryman 00·121 at Rivers, NY 130 573 91 118 .311 and McCarver WP- Cf!lrlton
Y
llhiladoiphla llonborg 15·91. Carty, Cle 13~ 49S 63152 .307 117 .6) LP- Btoir 10.11 . HRs7;35 p.m.
Garr, Chi
122 473 59 1&lt;5 .307 Philadelphia, S&lt;hmldt 2 (3&lt; &amp;
'San Francisco (Kneprer Q.1) Munson , ~~M~8J~9Nl2 170 .30&lt; 35 1; Montreal, Williams 113).
:.1, ,m.Son .Diego !Strom 1 -15), 10 N AT I 0 N A l lEAGUE : (tO Innings)
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS,
'
,... Houston (Lemongrllo o.o and Schmidt , Phil 35 ; Kingman , NY son Frntsc ooo ooo 200 1- 3 3 1
k Do N tUn
1
Mtlaughiln 3·3J ot Allan!a 34 ,· Monday, Chi JOi Foster, Cln San Diego 010 001 000 o- 2 8 2 r MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY
Montefusco, caldwell IS J,
By DICK USIAK
were mostly responsible for
Rtmn1ng bac
n o g. :
(Ruthven ll·IA end Autry o.OJ, 29 ; Morgen , Cin 27.
2, 6:05p .m.
AMEVR 1CAJN kLEAGUdEL: MNell · Heoverlo 191 and Alexonder, ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. Miami'S victory.
ham put Miami UP 14-7 Cll a
WedntldiY'I G1m1s
les , N 26; oc son an · ay , Roder (91; Grllfin , Menger (9),
d
in burst but
.-FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES._
Ball end tjendrl&lt;k. Clov 2S; Frelsleben llOJ, Tomlin llOI (UPI) - In a storybook Griese tossed a 3().yard ooe-yar scor g
Chicago at Montreal, night
St. LOUIS at N . Y ., ~ ~ tWI ·r"'IQht
Bondo. Oak 2&lt;.
and Kendoii.' WP- Heaverlo I&lt;· aetting, O.J. Slmption would scoring pass to Moore at 1:03 the Ferguson-to-Holland
Pittsburgh et Philo, night.
RUNS BATTED
IN· Fos . •' 1. LP- Frelsloben (9·13).
have returned to ac tion of the third quarter and cm1b'me cll'cked again-this It
NATIONAL
LEAGUE,
.
.
Houston at At·ianta, night ·
ter, Cln tl&lt;; Morgan, Cln 107; IOnly games scheduled)
Mooday night, julled, sliced Yepremian added a 3().yard time on a 58-yard scoring toss
Los Anv at Clnclnnoli, night
San Fron at Son Diego, night
S&lt;hmldt, Phil 9S; Welson. Hou
and slithered his WAV for 200 field goal with 5:42lelt in the at 7:42 of the second quarter .·
91 ; Luzlnskl, Phil as..
"'
'
h 1ft1m
AMERICAN · LEAGUE : · L.
rushing yards, caught a game to virtually clinch the
Miami had a 17·14 a
e
~-· ...-mtriCin uavue
May , Ball 99; Munson. NY 95 ;
lulndlul of paSses, IICored a game for Miami.
lead on Yepremlan's first
Mavberry, KC 92 ; Chambliss,
American League
fi td
a1 H 1Bo had a 20Eost .
few touchdowns and set up
Simpson, who worked out
e go · e a
w,. l,. Ptl. GB NY 91 ; Yostrzemskl, Bos 90. OOkiOnd at Minn. , Ppd .. rein
, &gt;New York
87 55 .613 - 1
STDLEN BASES·
several others, and ted the with the BWs just once since yarder in the third quarter. : Hrs.: !O:OOA.M. Til11:00 P.Mc ~un.·Thurs.
tteltlmore
78 65 .545 9 h
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Frt~&amp; Sat.
Jt.
Ferguaon threw his third It
'tleveland
73 70 .SID U 1h go~~~l~~~;LT~~.~~s~Ep' 11 f"l't ~;~:.","l:,~r 001000 2oo-- 3 1 o Buffalo BWs to an upset returning to the club &amp;mday
992·2556
.
:
002 000 llx- 4 8 1 victory over the Miami night after asking to be touchdown pass ol the game
-ton .
68 7S .•76 19'12 Brotk, SI.L 52 ; Lopes, LA 50 ; Chicago
Ootroll
67 76 .•69 20'12 Cedeno.
Hou
&lt;8.
leonard
116-81
and Morllnez;
"··
W MAIN
POMEROY, 0. It
AM E R I C A N LEAGUE : Kn~pp , Ham ilion
19) and DolP•w,.,
Iraded to anotber NFL clUb at 4: 19 of the final stanza for
lollllwoukee
62 so .•37 25
North , Oak 68 : LeFlore, Det 58 ; Down ing . WP- Knopp 13·11 . HR
But what really transpired Cll the West Coast, said that the Bills' last score.
...
Wnt
~
w,. l ,. Pd GB Campanerls, Oak 53; Patek, KC - Chl&lt;ego, Orlo 11•1 .
Mooday night was, that while physically he was fine but he
and Baylor. Oak &lt;7,
Kanses City 82 62 .569 PITCHING· ·
ltnd e•m•1
Slmpaon abowed flashes of wam't lotally up to par.
Oliklond
77 65 .5~2 •
· ·Most Vl&lt;torles
Konsos Clly 000 021 OlD- 4 10 I lrllllance, It was not enough
"!felt pretty good tonight,"
Mlnnoscto
73 72 .SC3 9'1•
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jone.s, Chicago
000 100 llx- S 8 2
1
d
id "I didn't f t
Colllornlo
66 79 .ASS 16'12
Fitzmorris, Mlngorl (8) , Ut. and the Do phins owned the Simpson 88 •
ee
'Fexas
6~ 79 .448 11•12 SO 21 .12; Koosman , NY 19.8;
.Q)Icigo
63 82 .•34 19'1• Sulton , LA 19.9; Corllon, Phil tell (81 and Wathen ; K. Bretl BlliB, 3().21, In a nationally llkelhadagoodsecooddrive
•
Mondlr's Results
17-6; Rltt\ard, Hou t7.u .
110·9) and Esslon. lP-Mingorl televised contest.
though. I got off the ball real
AMilRICAN LEAGUE' Pol · 1&lt;.5). HRs- Chltago, L . JohnOoklond ot Minn ., ppd ., rain
mer, Boll 21.12: Figueroa , NY son 1•1. Sponcer IIA).
"Wh8tahellavajobhe did, good."
·111&gt;1&lt;0110 A Konsos Cllv 3, '''
:thlcogo 5 Kansas Cltv •· 2nd
~~rn~~: ~ ~Y~r~~~:; g:r'"e~d ( 14 Innings)
stilting up Clliy yesterclay and
He played more than
~ell!. 6 Texas •· lA Inns.
playing 81 much as he did," expected because of the losa
leonard, KC 16·8; Tanana, C.al Colllornlo
aalilmO&lt;e 5 Mllw 3, 10 Inns.
16.9.
' too ooo oot ooo O&lt;~ 6 10 1 Dolphins' Coach Doo Sbula of fullback Jim Braxtoo, who .
Oetrolt 3 New Yqrk 1
EARNED
RUN
AVERAGE
·
Texos
t;Jevoland s Booton 3
(blltd on 144 lnnlnv• pitched)
010 100 000 000110--2 9 1' said. "Saban (Bills' Coacb stiller ed a kne e lnjury on the
- Todoy's Problblt pitchers
NATIONAL LEAGUE: sea . Ross , seoll 1101, or ego 1101 Lou)waltedall the way to the game's third play and was
••
( tllli Tlmts EOT)
Kansos City_ (Hossler 100) ~~~es~~ 2 · ~~.R~uo'r..'i:n. 2.~f~ ~,~"~~~~rt . ~t ~h·~~~~~; second plly to put him in." expected to be lost to the club
0
1 1
lit Chi&lt;OUO lt,IOnroe D·OI, 2:15
2.67; oenny, St.L 2.69.
11&lt;1, Foucault IW end Fahev . Miami cootalned SimPIOII for tile sea10n.
p.m.
The Dolphins took a 7.0Jead
. Oakland CBiuo U·ll end AMERICAN lEAGUE : Fl . WP- Drogo 17·71 . lP- Boulk fairly well BS the National
Torrez 13·10) 01 Minnesota f,~~~~~e~/ · 24 ~ ~ 1 ~~~~:~. 2a!~f lj_s)1 HR- Texos, Burroughs, Football League's leading on a five-yard .run by Benny
12 0
tt.ulbber H end Goltz (II·IJI,
2.55; Torrez, Oak 2.58.
ruaber last aeaaon gained 28 Malone at 12:23 of the first
2, 1:30 p.m.
Botton (Wise 12·10) at MII- NATIO~Tf~K~3~J~E, See- ~~ /l:;:~~~sJ
1
000 110 roo 2_ 5 12 2 yards In five carries and· quarter, but the 811ls
WaukH ISioton u .m, 8:30
ver,
NY
221;
Richard
,
Hou
179;
MllwoukO
001 000 200 o- 3 7 2 turned a short pau over the ~untered on a 53-yard
p.m.
. ) t
Set 81 LL CHI LOS, at DOWNING· CHI LOS, he KNOWS his IMurance.
Koosmon, NY 161; Montefusco, R. May, Holdsworth 17) end middle Into a
gain. scoring pass from Joe
" California IHarzell 6·4 o SF
160;
Carlton.
Phil
15•.
Ouncon.
Oempsey
(10)
;
Tra
.
~-~
fe•a• (Umbarger 9·12), 8:35
AMERICAN LEAGUE: Ryan. vers, castro (9) end Mooro. wP ~arterback Bob Griese, Ferguaon to wide receiver
Mlddltport.-Oitle
tr.m.
m.uc2
,New vor k (Hunter 15·10) • t cat 278: Tonono, cat 229 ; - Holdsworlh Jj.O). LP-Cutro wide receiver Nat Moore and John Hollslld, &amp;a«coocla Into
Cleveland IOObSOII U·lll, 7:30 ~~~~·r:r,- H~0n'\.,!~~Y ~~~r~ey, [ii~' · HR-Baltlmore, Muser placekicker Garo Y!!f,remilll : lhe second qilarter.
p.m.\
.
'

,I

.

'·,•

�•

1-TIIe Daly 8entlnel,Midcllepor!·l'uneroy, 0., TUeaday, Sept. H, 11176

Ohio State number One
'n first UPI grid poll Bengal' briefs ..•
-

.Strike seems certain at Ford plants
87)a)WARDS.U!X:8IZIN

UPI.Aalo Wrller
DETROrr (UPI)- Unllcld
Auto Workers President
x-rd Woodcoct Wll'lled It
II "8blolutely fmpwl~" to
reacb a new ccettrlct by
t.onlcbt'• 11 :se pm. deadline
IIIII 1711,000 Ford workers
'INI'e set for an ecmomy.
-~ lllrlte.
In 11ut attempt to Jl'event
Its lleCCCid na Uonal lllrlte In
nine yean, the No. 2
automater put 11 third
contract proposal oo the ~ble
Mooday, then made It publlc
In a blghly unual move 10
cloae to 1 lllrtte deadline.
~ugh the third proposal
finally offered the Irion aome
concealoo on Its key demand
- reduced wid Ume bt the
auto plants to create lllCll'e

jobe - It wu quickly rejected milJICIIIIIrlb fund that could
by Wood~ct. He then pay benellta for up to 17
reru.ed a company request to weeks. Woodcodt refused to
mend the current three-year apeculate how loog a lllrlte
contract put the deedllne would Jut If wlders do waDI
llld talta broke olf unUl tbla olf the job. The atrike in 198'1
IDIX'IIln«.
luted 88 days.
.
"There Ia much, mucb 1Qo
Company and union
big a gap to IJrid8e In the negotiators hne refused
short time remaining," federal mediltlon, though
Woodcock lllld. '"lbere II too chlef federal mediator: J1111ea
much work to be done, it's: Scearce was trlefed MCIIday
abeolutely impoulble In my on the 11egotlationa. The.auto
oplnon."
companies and
UAW
'nle uniCII hal ael the traditionally !hun what they
11)8Chlnery In motion to pull consider outside interfi!mlce
Ford worker&amp; o¢ oh nbly In contract talb.
llld manufacturing plants In
Labor observer&amp; had
22 states. Pickel ligna ~ve thought Ford would go out of
been printed and union ita way to avoid a lltrlke tiWI
treasurers ~ve been )'elll' becallll! of the IIJI"M'Ing
lnatru&lt;;ted Cll how .to begin Jalea bettie with General
paying strike benellts of •
Motors at the Introduction rl
~a week out of a re&lt;Ud $1110 the 1m modela. They said

Ullled PnN lllleraalioaal

A United Auto Workers
1lliCII lllrike apinll Ford
Motor Co., IICheduled for
llllml&amp;bt.~, would idle
33,230 OIIIOanl, abut down 12
planlll and ooe parts depot In
Ohio and would begin
· Immediately to tate $1.8
mf!llm a day from lbe state 'a
lcooca)' In Jolt ......
tlmlcld Auto Worllera Unlan
Pnllldllll x-rd Woodcock
lllld Monday It II "ablolutey
"'' ....tble" to n.ch a new
contract by lbe m"'l&amp;lt
cleplllne,

Plcbt atcna hiYe been
printed and clllrlbuled at the
Ford fadlitee In Oblo ......
miuta Jll'll*allaaa for the
llriD lnmued.
lbl Fwd employes wiD
receiMbetRGal$toand$110a
nell In llriD beoeflta .. the
UAW lu a llrlte fund cl
fUD miDim wblcb could I.Mt
Ufmc.aaiJ,.....
llowGi•, lbe f40 ar 810 a
'11111111 II bat a hdlm rl the
$I'1Ul 1l'llllkiJ . . UAW
. . . . . . baft been lll'lllng.
The Jut UAW wallllni was

aua,

in 1970 when General Motors
Corp. wu lllruciE.
The lar(!est concentration
rl UAW emplo)'llll In Oblo Ia In
the Cleveland suburb of
Brook Park wbere about
10,000 peraona are tinployed
at two engine plants mi a
fOundry.
The Brook Pwt workers
are repreaenled by lAc81 U50
wblcb bu dlatrlbuted a fl,yer
entitled "Stay Cool" to unlCII
members.
"It tatea cool bud to win a
hot tight," the . unlm flyer
said. "In tbla ._Ue, the
stabs are high. SettHmenta
aometlmea came in lbe llna1
boln. We urge all of )'011 oot
to lllten to nllllOI'I but to
ignore tbole . wbo - t to

of

with ! liDO snployes.
. lnlctol'~ tnJc:t and two
- .\ shnnpina plsnt Iii cars olf the 1111oot bigh
Ma•UMe with 5liO workers. llnie!liie.
- A parts plant In
Tbe tnEk landed (II the
Sandnaty
wltb
1 100 deck of the barce. but lbe two
employ&amp;

'

- A forge plant in canton
with !,liDO employes
·

ArMuments against energy
issues demanded by OUR
OOLUIIBUS (UPI) -()Ill.
oua for Utility Reform
(008) a"* add today It
..... IDe lilt ..... the
Oblo Gtaeral Auembly
"'"
I&amp; laiJed to meet Ill
eGPitllaiolll daly
In

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

llzrsU ......
OUR II elteu.flrC to

~

._....,r~t..CII

lie Nor

w

ballot and
Olll. . . lblhP'"'nhlla

.,..... ,.h............,
datJ' to ......,... .........
. .1

1

the,_ _ _

..,. .. 11111111111 "'" •••

• dDIIIIt ta.. tbe ra•tlfb.
..... Ill 1111 fain by the
leplztzre," aald the
••

.-..

.Jt·-:::

Ina . . . . . .

In

IL

1 ·-· w_ ·•• •••
b 111111 be Cllly I
IIIBr' 7 I zl!lr,bstwedo
.a Will&amp; IIIII te
to
... ,.. 11117, Ia ....
- - - ..,, Flann the
~ IIIII 7lp7 acliCII.we .,.
u.

M£

.....

• cledlrlai

'*"HIJ

the a.-at

aiQ ._ clellbnte1y

I

defanlted on Ill obllgatlm,"
OOR lllld. ''We do £eel,
however, tbat onr lltlit
o... I'IIIUIIUI for
tUIDI
directly to
lbe ~.
''The tepllltn'l failtft
to pabm 17111 mlllllnbP!al
dol¥ t6da Ita Inability ·to
tlllpGIId . . . .!ely Cll tillty
and lalliatlft nifnn," OUR
llld.
"'lbe trae t1lllprlta In IIIII
..t "'imde ili'e lbe utility
monopoUes," said OUR.
"They bave re10rted to
deulfAioJD and ~ bt
lbelr
to keep
U,.t.Bfrcmamerlthe
peaple. The 'W"'fllm does
not11111ttoputiii111Ji"owU
nnt to CJilrl. lnlleacl We lllllli
faree tbem out Ill lbe open.
''We 111111t dtiNind lbat the
oppollltloa atiJilllllnts are
pr
ldl," OUR said. "We
11111ttlle peaple ol Oblo to see
all lidee ol these illueil
bea.- our pnpoeal• are
good. The utlllties are
lporing tbla OjijiUIIwity to

wda-.u---

_.,lim

DR. LAMB

-~~~~~ olflrlal pabllc forum
pro'rided by the Oblo
Constitution. Inatead the

fllwl DR. LAMB- What

... I,_... feel cold? I
-

;
1

'• '
1

• mi wiMn the !an·
psnlanla below 70 c~esr­
Fall ' 111 feel c:Gid. 7 stay
llll!le . _ IIICIIl rltlle Ume
...,_lllallbGft70--.I
doo't lhw'
bee p I
cu't 1111117 l7lt water tem-

••c

,. etwe. n dolal't

maUer
wiiii'W It II • ladoor or
Clltdoll' !JDGI, IIIII feel cold.

...

DEAl RIAI&gt;Il -

I

'lbe

thla condit!Dil results in
decreased blood now through
tile Min. By contrast if you
had an overacUft thyroid
your bociY would turn on lbe
coolin&amp; mechanisms to
eliminate lbe beat
generated by Increased
metaboliam. That would
increaae lite now of warm
blood to the Min.
Feet and hands feel cold
because they set the leut
amount of clreulsUon under
normal
reslln1 · cir·
Cillllltancel.llo what can )'011
c!o? Incnue the now of biGod
to your lidn; The best way to
do IFill Ia lo be IIICire active.
7'll)ollt:al activity pnerata
body ..., mi In tum the
blood l7ow to lbe aldn Ia lben
lncreaaad.
Anotber cauae far leellng
cold Ia a poor diet.
Inadequate calorie intalle
- beat Ia fauwd.

IU'nlllll.
''We'll haft to pat hll&lt;d bat
11vtn down there to I!P .llld
!Jeltbe people aut," lllid stale
pollee Capt. Wlll JOIII'dall.
Tbe two paw Ill the
tnJc:t WS'e - bialy injlred.
PoiiCie lllid tber did nut ll:nDw
bow IIIIIIIY paw 1lfft In

1,...,...

"""'*"

.......,.-a
_ . .

........,..,., ol

.ro..

u.J:•
of..

'

Ford watches Congress
17 BELEN TIIOftiAS

UPI ftlle a- Reporlier
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Fwd said today he
1lill mtid tile campaign ll'ail
this month and stay In
Wlillllington to "mate 11ft
Cmtgreas does! 't go off the
deep end."
"Once Congress leaves
town, I think you 1lill see
.lncreaaed 11cUV1ty by me,"
Ford aid In a live Interview
oo NBCTV's Today Show.
But be added, "I feel that I
have a very Important
obligation to stay In
Wlillllinlllon primitriiy u long
as OJagnsa Is In 1 Jon
''We have to balance the
activit)' or lack of activity In
the Congress with the
responsibility of being
president, lmd somebody bu
to be In tbe natlm'i capital to
mate Jlft. that eon-.. doest't go olf lbe deep eild,"

INOCJt roadway
tillinc three
p!l'lllll. Smnl,.,. befare
that, ·another caueway
acr' • tt ldlled 1iJ: Jll!l'lllll
wiMn I . . . ~ Into tile
late 1lbtn • 11p111 was oti.

---""

rather
than
the White Houe" and acting proce11
campai.IJnlng
tecblllquee.
"JrellidenUal" by llleppbig up
activities In the OVal OOlce Once CUigreu ieaftl tow1r, I
and slgting billa in tile Rose thlnll )'011 will see lnctll aet1
Garden with full media activity by me, bee- I wOl
have more Ume to do 10 lid
coverage.
prealdent7al
A nporter aated the Pres!· the
dent if his declalon to remain reaponllitillty in tbll olflcr1a
II
In Washington did not Jess•• ,U
Ford aaid he bu tallied to
reprennt a "llhlft" ·frQin
asaertlons Jut year tbat be former CaUfornla GoY.
would oot allow blmaelf to Ronald Reagan three 111.becCIIIe I ''boltate fll ,the slnce tile GOP natlollll
White Rouse" after two Clllventlon, and 1111 aldll
1 n•"'naU&lt;Il attempts.
for lxih have conterred. NOw .
"Not necessarily," the that Rea&amp;an bu l'lltlrtiltl
President "flied. ''The lrlpa frcm a Mel:lcan vacalloll, ·111
I made in 19'15 'INI'e Jl'imarlly said, ''It II my impr IJD'Cll nellmda and aecondly my belief-that be will ·be
they were nonpd.ltical events campa1gnlng hard far tlie
when they 'INI'e held In the ticket .. well .. the party;''
week."
""
Trips at that time 'INI'e "an
Information gathering

r-------.,

.. Ford hu been ignoring
Democrat J'IIIIIII)' Carter's
cbarges that he is ''hidin&amp; in

Co~n

meets in new
DOW

A regular schedule of
meellngs began Sunday ·at
'the . new ltingd0111 Hall of
Jebovah~s Witnesaes, localed
me mile east ·of RuUand on
Rt. 124 at Noble Stmvnlt
Road. Meetings of lbe Middleport CongregaUoo 'INI'e
formerly held at 900
...,..._._.
Broadway St·• ··
Larry Clmaban, cbairman,
said the.building is lbe result
ol hundreds of bours of
volunteer wid by members
of the congregation and
v o 1u n tee r s
from
congregations . in West
Virginia and southeastern
Ohio. Wort began at the !lite
late last October and Ia
acbeduled for completion by
tile end of December. Tbe
btlildq blllica!ly is a large
auditcriam.
rncJty!ed in lbe _,_,.,,_ of
...:liii:U.IUI:

meellngs eacb week is a
ICbool of training In public
"-'·!ian -''"'-'-, _,_

""''"
" ' · - • .....,..
the direction of Albert
Tromm, Rutland, mi Elmer
Tufts, Mlddlepart. Known u
tbe "Theocratic School",
enrolimellt Ia open to persona
of an ages.
Having the new hnjlc!hlj(
mates it,._,...., to - • · lbe achool program, COil·
dueling
two
aeuiona
almultaneous!y.

$49lleve(

-----...:..-'""""f"!,
..,.u rA-

1ll

c..t lt.. ........,., OW.

ettilj.

'

8,

•

• '-"'UUIWII;III

"'·"~ Lona and Goldie BorlniJ,
__,_..,..,,,
• Allen and Allee DIU • .._.. ,.,. • . B
' ....,.
' -·-·
·
· : ottom United Methodlet
· ~.:..:.. ~..,. ·-;;-:;,:~ Church, Harty LlnthlcU~U,
• - ... o " 1, .... ,.,
• Mr. and Mrs. VIctor Fla1q',
_ _ ,.,..,,,,,,.,,,
, . and one anonymous con·
tributor from lbe PomeiO)o
- · ., - · area.
•:
::.'.,::,:::"..;..";'~::-=;
ContrlbuUona . may be sent
. ~-.- . . _ - .,..., to Mila Barbara Eberabach,
"""""'n.a.1.11;
""_
"'• _
.... ,....
'""' Box 22 ' "'-·•-·
u- J"
""""~· ......
,!!;,
• • "'"" .._ Caldwell or Mrs. Howard
' -.
Caldwell, Sr., botll of Router,
Reedsville.
..
-

..:.:0.::; .=..,•,:•.;::.

Grist mill in Old Portland ·:
was built by the A~~ses

awi

r.tlddleawat1. ·

T!le mill operated by
lleam. When Ita torn down
the bal7en 'INI'e rolled CIVel'
the river-bank and were
vialble for many years.
N~ Eulitiltltammer 'AU
qtl'ier&gt;
Wataon fired '
tile blliler; OlztiiJ
a7lo f!nd the miD for 1 flllle.

am

Wz-

..

DeCitlle II operaled a free age, wai'liaCbiJlll m one of
ferry for Ita cuatGmers who the nelllbborhood ac:hoolJ
came on horlebact to the . about that time. Abner Prlee
West VlriJinla lide with lbe bad Purcbued the mill rGr
grist 11Wlll over the horae. salvap mi this YOUIIII fellow
When the grlndiJqj was done, · came to him mi uke!J
the ferry lranaported the pet'lllillloo to Uve In lbe ml7l
cua!Gmer bact to hla lide cl ofllce awhile. He staled tbit
the river. Trade was lfhecouldgetaUWellftrigllt .
especially good ooSaturdaya. at that Ume, "he could mate
The mill bad a ll'act froin lt."
lite mill to tbe water's edge on
P!nnlallion was
wblcb a buclr.et or buppw ... bat - day lbe fellow
drawn beck and forth bJ .., mi"''C· No one il;new
.-.. obtained frcm the mfll about him.
-::
IDIJinea. Coal to fuel the Many ,_.later be tumed
bal7en wu drawn .., In the .., In California u principal
happen.
of a lariJe lUll ICboa!. Ba
The miD bad a ..,_, nmr mirrletf, and OWDid a
and 11!0 lklrlea. In the early larJe ratd1 aawblcb ba.....,
1. . Otar!eJ Jlridez came wbealllla iiii!II'A'UI!:meiJ .
: ':::~":!!'! ~~ ~ Allen. Be l'lllll'lllld to Pwl&gt;
--...
7111dlnl!le1Miawllba$1o,a
=:~loa&amp;beforelt YlaiiD and
bow. ,

lll'ante!\i
came
:i

·

=i

a.._.

A plelan of lbla o7d m11J
T!wt ,.. Ollll'tiOIIIIIIIbe lllaJ be - I l l l7lt pielln at

'ftle mill bad a IOOd "• 111171 lbat 11M a aloft In II, Pwl7and Gil ,.1 7717 al 1111
Vlra7nl• trade probably
t8 ,.,. of MeFp Ooanty .._·1 '

T,ou":,

~~ .

NEI'i y·oRK CUPII - The

1911, United PreSt International
Boerd of Coaches top 20 college
football trams (1st week) wi th
flrst ·plact votes In parentheses.
Team
Points

I. Ohio Stole 116) (1 ·0·01
2. Michigan 1171 11-0-0)
3. UCLA Ill 11 ·01
&lt;. Plllsburgh I•&gt; 11 ·0·01
s. Oklahoma Il l 11 ·01
6. Missouri 11 ·01

3•9
30
2S•
2S6
W
t56

··~

'

· ByGENECADDES

UPIIIport1 Writer
.•~.COLUMBUS (UPI) - Not
: \t'{en Woody Hayea knows
'1tJst how good his No. 1
uNnked Oblo State football
ut.llam Is.
.
: .. "We're !101'1 of in limbo,"
:flllyea told his weekly presa
luncheon Monday afternoon.
..I'We reaUy don't know how
. ,.00 we are. But, in a lot ol
. ~JrliYS, we showed we'D be a
!Betty good football team."
-·The Buckeyes had Utile
..difficulty In rolling to a 49-21
;.mctory over Michigan State
:last Saturday, holding a fZ..O
llilll'glD with less than a
..mnute gooe in the second
.lralf and before Hayea went to
''\1~ bench in '1\'holesale
" " '·

"Their coach (Darryl Rogers) thanked me ''*' not
running up the IICore," Hayes
said. "I thought that was
good sportsmanship on his
. part."
Hayes said he felt the
Buckeyes' decision. to. take
the wind instead of the ball to
start the Michigan State
game was a key factor In the
contest.
- · "I can't think of an early
:aeason game when the wind
·•Was more of a factor" said

T

The Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio will
hold. a public hearing 111
Tuesday, Ot1aber 5, 1976,
al 10:00 A.M .• at the olllce
•
of the Commlssl111. 180
A public fund drive for
East
Broad
Street, Russell Holalnger, Jr., •II,
Columbus. ·Ohio .(1215. with Otester, confined to tile fn.
respect to an appllcallCII by tensive care unit of Holler
Columbia Gas of Orlo. Inc. Medical Center, for the ft..t
to recover a por!ICII of the
.-·
cost of certain emergency
nine weeks, bu reached MQ,
purdlases of natural gas · Holslncer wu firat slrlliin
made during the 1975-1976 ·with encephalitis and tbiin
winter period, by charging with viral merlingiUa. He liU
Its curtailed customers. At no inaurance and his falber'ls
said heerlng, all parties of a disabled war veteran.
Interest will be allorded. an
opportunity to present
The first group of conevidence material to the lribubrs of the $491 Include
Issues of the proceeding. • the Tuppers Plains OlrlaUan
Further lnformaiiCII may Church, Mr. and Mra .
be obtained by contacting Ma. • ,...,.
Reed
the Commission.
unce ~. Tom
•
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Caldwell, Sr., Mr. mi Miit.
Howard Krdght, St. Paul'.l
United Methodist Churcll,
Mr. and Mrs. Benny ·WllaCII,
Joppa United · Methodist
....
Church, Mr. and Mi:i.
,.. ..... _
, Howard CaldweU, Jr., Mr.
ro r..
and
Mra.
Her~
-0:::..~Grosanlclde, Mr. and Mrl. ·
..
Date Barr, Mr. and Mnt.
,_,.,
James S. Reea, Jr., co8,
""':',:::!":"
, tslners frOIII the Tuppera
• · • • · - - - •1• Plalna bulineu houaea, t~O;
"'".,..,. ._,' 11 11" 1 - . . • Mr and Mr J C """'--''

In the 1111h spot, Penn State
was seventh, Nelraata, lui
week's leader, wu ei&amp;bth
af~ a ~ tie with l.SU,
Georgia was ninth and Tens
A&amp;M lOth In the balloting.

!Sort·of limbo'··Woody
.

numbers.

fund is at ·

NOTICE

"

lllilla!

1

"

.,_,._ g-.... ..._ .

BYGAYLEPIUCE
PORUAND - SomeUme
late In the 11001 Taylor and
W'tlllam Adams built a flour
mi grist mW on the bank of
the Ohio River just north of
tile rillage of Old Portland
Taylor Adams operated ~
mill, then Alvar Adams
WIIDam'a son, was lbe
llllll)' years The old Adams
home 11
slantlln&amp; In Old
Ptlrtland. Thla home was
bnllt for lite Adaln• falmly
fram Umber eawed oil. the
Ada1111' latld ' by James

I

Holsinger··

Ford said.

~-,u.::

tllree

college

win over Wiaconsln. .
UCLA, with ooe flrat.place
· vote and 238 polnta, advanced
into the third slot fallowing a
2&amp;-10 trouncing of Arizona
State . No. f Pittsburgh
embarrasaed Notre Dame,
31-JO, the worst Irish openlnggame lou ever. Pittsburgh_ ·
claimed four flrst.place nod8
and a total of 256 points.
otlaboma, a 24.'1 victor
over Vanderbilt, received one
flrst.place vote and wu Nci . 5
with ooe flrsti)lace vote and
229 poltits. Ml180uri finished

7. POlin St. 11·0)
150
B. Ntbroska (0-0·II
10
' 9. Goorulo 11 ·0-0)
67
IO..To.. s A&amp;M !1·0·01
S5
1], Maryland 11·0·01
•8
12. Arkon11s 11·0,0)
39
13. Aloblma 10·1-01
IS
U . lSU 10·0·1)
13
IS. BoliO!\ College 11·0·01
1~
t6. IIIII 1exas;Tt&lt;h 11-0·01 9
16. ltiel Kansas 12·0·01
. 9'
16. !tie l North Caroline 12.0·019
19. Southern Collfornlo 10·1·01 6
:10. Oklo Sl . 11 -0.0)
5
Note: ly agretm•nt with tht
Amtrlc•n Football Cotches~
films on prObation by tht
NCAA ere Ineligible lor too 20
and natlonet ch•mplonshlp considtrJtion by tt1e UPI . Boud of
Coaches . Those
t11mt on
probation for Jf16 are: Mississippi State, Michigan St1te
SMU, Long euch State and

Southwestern Louisiana .

...

p.cm.b:• ·· · ......... quarters

aecttona,

of Coaches

:fl&gt;tball poll. ·
• •After beating Michigan
:Lte; ft-21, Saturday,_Ohio
:slate vaulted from third
place Into the top spot,
collaring 18 liraliJiace votes
· ilut a total of 348 points.
S!lcond.place Michillan was
~ oo 17 ballots and tallied
343 points following a ~27

belli! llilt ~ IIIK lied out

tile carL
The In&amp;
Jr., 'AU
"Y''"'4'7W pia ·a mlllian- pullhq two . . _ !aDd
ISARBI!ICUESET
da!Jir ......."' cl dlltorted with llbeDa into Late
NEW HAVEN - The New
JII'OP'Ipnch to obectae tbe
M
....
wiMn
tile
Haven
Volunteer Fire
mril cl tbe - - .
Odtntd.
Department
will have a
"The chairman ol tbe
"ll10
w
1111e
a
II•
•
•
chlclrea
....
....___
at lbe New
tillltJ••ud Cftimw for
.............
"
.
a••H
•
.
Ha'
O
!I!II
Oty
t.dldi~~g
starling
Safe, l..oww C4llt 7!'.ledrlclt)
l t i lmilll. a 1lilltela. at 11 a.Ill. Saturday.
. Ia PeteO'Gndy," aald OUR. aid
"'l11e flr1t UiDg l1111r 1IU I
"O'Grady II a former ... ...tim cl tbe mfctlle ~pa
cbalrman ol tbe Oblo bad fallen."
LEGAL NOTIC·E
NotJce iis hereby 91Yen that
Dtmoollic party.He lawen
State pollee Lt. Jack CUHO&lt;d Jatobl, Otto LOhn,
tuoWn to the lectalatlve Namlra lllid two Clr.l'lll oil. Emest Powoii,Jiobertll.lrton,
leaderllb.lp.
It
Ia bio the »loat11eep ..... Ger•td Pullins end KllhV
Putnns, as trustees of the
Inconceivable tbet O'Grady whlcb connec:ta lues Laurel
Cliff Fr.. Methodist
and the utilities bave Pmtdwtndu and ......... Churtb. Int. hovo filed lllelr
overlooked the opponent In I aparaely papulated petition In "'e common Plea•
court olltglng lh1t the
a}!Uibl!lllll.
foil-ing
reol
mmby aboat • mllea est1te Is no des&lt;ribtd
IDnger nHded tor
"lnatead, we strongly frcm
New Or1eena.
dl,..ch purpooes ODd nquost
iiiliiji6Ct tbat lbe ulllillel are
''The .Inlet llllded riCii oulhO&lt;Ity to transfer soid root
playq lUll Bither lrlciE In ..-e with lbe Ub Ill the •tate. whith real estate 11
desaibed os follows, to.wil :
IIIII ,..nplp," lllid OUR.
barie
ml
1be trau. !nile
Situate&lt;! In SoHsbury
"Follcnrinll a victory for 1oo1e from lbe truc:t mi ten Tow,
n shfp , Mtlgs County,
Ohio, in F raction No. 30, Town
u-iuueiiDNovember,the
in. ' '~bey • white . . 2 N.• 'RMGI ll w. and more
uUJ!Uee would bave mounted behind
them, and we can't particularly described as
a lepl clwl)!qe to the
follows:
·
·
lind it-." uld liate pollcle
Commendn.a at the norttJ.
vaUdity of the election set.
ust carnft' of Fraction 'JO;
Marillllfoore.
because
no opponent
tl!ence north 87 de9. CO min.
The
Inlet
driver'
McJenr!e
arguments were prepared." G. J!nhlnaon, 15, cl I:J.yt(ll, w•t :167.36 feet to o P!'lnt:
tMnce south,. deg . "min. 16
set. eost612.&lt;15 feot to a point;
lllontesouth.,. dog . .00 min . .u
He:. west ill feet to 1 point;
lhtncz 10uth • dog. "' min. 16
Me . Ntt (PIMing • coru:rete
monument ot 165 feet) for 1
total diSIMce of 119 !HI to a
point in tho centerline Of Old
S.A. 1 and 120: then&lt;• ·tiona
the center II no oluld hlllf;woy,
S.l4 dog. • min . u ·Me. wist,
•19.21 !eel to • point; thence
along the eest line ol Laurel
CIIH Free Methodist Cliurdl
land, N. IAdeg. 36 min. 6ue&lt; .
you, but this cauaes you to sac-IIU dilation most often ..., 36:1.61 teet to a (.,..,,.
monument and tho true point
feel cold.
occurs In middle ..ed or of beginning for the'toll-lng
So, eat right mi lncreaae older penona, ,..uy Witb desalbed tract; thence north·
15 dog. 25 min . 06 stt. west
your pbysical activity. ll 1
concrete
atheroeclerosia (fattr (pasting
could help• .If yoa still feel cboleaterol depoalta) of tile monument at 6. 25 teet and a
spike In tilt conttrllne of T.R.
cold hive a checkup of your large aorta.
NO. 20S) for o lOIII dlstonet of
thyroid mi to be tnn you are
7f the anetll')'llll II 1111a11 toiO.ZS 1111 to a double Elm ·
trM et the northwn t corner Of
not anemic.
mi the abdomen Ia lariJe it Trt&lt;t
t dts&lt;rlbod In Vol. 65
For more lnformaUon I am may be lmpnalhle to feel it pege 430
of tho Molgs Countr
aelJding you The Health on phylllcal eumlnation. Deed Re&lt;OI'Its; thenceJOutl! t4
dog. 34 min, s• Hi:. west 50
Letter number 7-e, Body When lbe stomach II ftf)' !HI
to on Iron pin; thence
Tempera lure and Fever. lean mi if the anettry1111 Ia south 7S dfll. IS min. 06 soc: .
1.00.25 feet to an Iron pin:
Olbera who want tbla illue larger then it can be felt mi _,
lllonce north lA dfll. 36 min. SA
can Plld a lq, stamped, the puleaUOIII can alao be sec: . ta11 .50 feel to tilt point of
self~ envelope with: aeen when the patient 117ylniJ beGinning, tontalnlng .1•1
ac:ro. and btlng Pill'! ot 1 1.06
10 cents for it. J,.tltilld , _ on IU beck.
ac:ro trac:td-rlbecla Trac:tl
Jetter to me in care of tbia MID)' very lbln peeple with In VOl . fo5 l)alll4300f ft1t MelDS
County Dltd Recorda.
·
ReWiplpll', P. 0. Box •• narmal .... Mul pa!sattma ol
ltlng Plll'l of tho umo roal
San Antonio, TX 711ft.
tjle aorta ~ve puiaaUOn. you ntate .. nveyedtould &lt;hurd!
DEAR DR. LAMB - Wbat can see and If you put 701r i&gt;Y CIHd re&lt;OI'&lt;Iod In Volume
Meltll County
are the I)'IIIPtoma of ari hand enr lbe aorta )'011 can 23t
DeedPille
Ro.."'
nla.
Solei potlilon wilt bt tor
abdominal aneurysm? Ia then feel lt. That does not litwlng
on the Jilt day of
there •llY Ylalbla mowment mean It II a dilated aac ~ September. lt7•. at tho
oo the oulalde of the ab- aneuryam. I would 111RU you Comman Pl•as Courtroom at
dCIIIInalarea? I am a fanale are Ill that ca~CII'J' and do PCII!troy, Ohio.Cllllord Jacobi
..... and 1llflb 117 pounda. not IIPe an IDIW)811, but
Otto Lolin
E.._tl'owoll
DEAR READER - An the way to find oat II to let
A-IIIM'ton
abdclmlnal .. fUll Ia a your c7acklr do a p1tya1ca7
Glll'ald ....lUna
Kathy Pullins
dilation of the 1zrae artery, .eumlnation and find oat
Tr,._uurtiCIIII Frlt
tha aarta, that
down what is WOn tltc you.
~tholdll Cllureh, Inc.
(I) 2•, 31'i (f) 7, lA
tha flutt
The

.,_,..dtll,.a.....,.
n
prolec:tltW
'1'111 bod7 metabclllam

Ohio, suffered 111 ankle
lnjill'f. His puaenger,
Wiiii8m S. WedeU, 26, ol
Aloedx, Alii., sulfaoed a
lro'"-"'-...
.
.... .-;o..
'lbe bridge bu I borilontal
clearance far boats ol E .feet
and is roug~Q eo feet - u
ator1ea ~abaft the water. It
lipiDI "'ncbac Pau 011 u.s.
51 - the Otily direct route
bet A EII New Orlean! and

cars fell into tile nift ·water.
!late .~ llvtn IMrcbed
-IOC I hilly for lbe cars Rwiii~n'J ~ 1 CXID!n!IDity
lor .aeveral holll'l, bat rl aboti 15,1110.
...... w .their ..m wiil Ill I fimflr atrhhet4 Aug.
today becaue of stronc 1, m4 aa t11e M.mlle Lake

Reader says she's always cold
. . . . . ee&amp;--..,M.D~

:ll1m'd

:rear

that It was lllCOIIIIitullmal
for lbe educatbl ciepWDellt
1o • minimal ataDdarda for
chwcb operated 8chools.
Deapite that ruUng,
'lbompaon aald Monda,)', ''We
1re elalcld over our l'ictory,
but indignant over tile fact
that .parents have been
ber.-1 mi tbreatl!lled."
Tbe oo.d Slid EaK was
not tD blame far ~ the
standard~~ and aa1c1 !bey were
conMeot of his ability ol
perform tile job.
In atbet ICIIon, the board
created a .a•t tilt .force
lor the education of
handicapped childrm. It will
be ~ble for audyillg
· the cWTent funding and
mana.gment of special
educat;iCII programs,

Barge smas.hes bn•dge

lleveland witb 10 A&lt;lEI.
-A tran!I!I•'XI plaat in
the Cincinnati suburb of
Fairfax with I,~ N~ , .., ROYAL BR•Ja BilL
- A traMDfaoion p1aat m -•
. •
tile Ondnnati suburb
MANCHAC, La. (UPI) - A
Sharonville with f,200 ~:large lllllllled Into I bridge
emplo7"1
CIVel' a n.:1VW pus bitwew ·
- ht ~plant In Lima two lites~· ·lllrllnc a

dilrupt necotatlons and
wboee goat II to deatroy your
local unlCII.
''01 lbe nallmal level,
Ford has olfered minor
Improvements," said the
flyer. "Bat the fact remains,
the big lsauea remain
llllre101Ved 111Ch as the.
worker plclrlng up the
propOIIed t5 per cmt incleae

: ;NEW YORK (UPI) :l)lllowlng a weekend of
plor upaeta, Ohio .St8:1C
.-...p~ btto flrat place in tltil
Ddted Press International

Essex supported
Court ruled -Uer this

.

Today's

Sport
Parade
(
.

Lyne Center Gym and Pool schedule will remain as abov.e
for llie month of September . A new g_ym and pOol schedule will
be published woel&lt;ly beginning In October. ·
. ·

cet

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Board of Ed~atlm
volcld Wllllimoally Monday
to suppart slfle School
&amp;lp«intendellt Martin ...._
after Ouiltlan Scbooli rl
Ohio tried to haw him fired.
Dr. Roy Thompson,
JftllldentrlOuiltian Scbools
ol
ubd the board to
in health care.
lire Ellex. The gro"11ald Ita
"We are acting In a serious memt-1~ve ' - ' bara.d
and responsible manner," tbe lmd tbnatened by the atalie
unioollyer said. "We ask tbllt education department for
you do the same."
~ to run its own cburcbOther Ford plants in Ohio relalcld sboob.
and tlleir 1111Dber of workers
Some members of the
include:
~ were conviclcld in 117f
-An .-mbly plant at for ql!l'ating a dmch Jchool
Lorain with 6,000 employes. In Gi-eenvi!fe In Darke Olunty
- A trw::t plant at Avon. that the Oblo ~t rl
Late with 2,000 fllllllo&gt;'es.
Ecb:atloa 'said did not meet
- A •amp;ng plant at mjnlmal state atandllrds.
Cleveland
with
3,600
But, the (J!lo ~ eme
workers.
- A parts depot at

'

••

811111e

Ohio's 12 Ford plants keep
33,230 workers employed
17 JOHN T. XADY

·

about the UAW, Ume orr a rel.r In acldltlm to
pointing 0111 au~wwtan au avence ss days !bey
ba ve been tbr011ih the llready rectift Ill VICIIlona
toqbelll two years aince the IIIII bolldaya. It Ia tied to 1
Great Depreuloa with good ~ record, bal
ilyoffa toppna the 1110,000 the ...... reje..Ud It u
IDII'It • .
punltift.
A ltrllre would oot effect
Under the propoeal, a
operations at General worker with 25 years
Motors, Chrysler and aenlar!IY could
one IQOI't
American Motors, wboae nell of paid Ume olf If he lias
530,000 wlders will remain no unucuaed absences
oo the job while the bulc durlns the year. Ford Aid the
Industry contract II first penalty would be.dwbled for .
111'111'ked out at Forll
~~~e~:cuaed abeen&lt;:et on a
The 'key to the third Mooday ot Friday when In·
Ji'OPOaalls a plan to permit plant abeenteelan aoara.
111'111'il;ers up to 40 hours of paid
the

LYNE CENTER
GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
POOL
DAY-GYMNASIUM
S.pl. Ul·10p.m. CiptnRec.
B·lOp.m. Open Swim
S.pi .1Sf.10p.m. College Rec.
8·10 p.m. College Swim
Sept. 168.10p.m. College Rec .
8-10 p.m. College Swim
8·10 p.m. Opin Swim
Sept . 17 8·10 p.m. Open Rec.
Sept. 18 2·• p.m. Open Rec.
2·• p.m. Open Swim
Sept. 19 2·A p.m. Open Rec.
2·• p.m. Open Swim
8-10 p.m. College Swim
1·10 p.m. College Rec.

'

Hayes. "In less than 12
minutes, we had three touch·
downs."
.
Hayes said the "biggest
thing was our lack of injuries.
I think we can go into this
week's game (Penn State) aU
Jitt."
"A big dlaadvantaRe," said
· Hayes, referring to the
relatively easy time the
BUckeyes lt&amp;d, "Is we might
think things are always going
to come that easy." ·
Hayes defended his stand·
In news conference following
Saturday's game by saying,
"I doo't Uke being accuaed of
aomething I didn 'I do In front
of other people."
Hayes sent assistants
Ralph Staub and George Hill
to dlsc:uss Saturday's game
against the Spartans, the first
time he had completely
skipped a post11ame meeting
in Ohio Stadium.
"There was no use getting
into anot!ter ~ntest," Hayes
tOld his weekly noon ,iuncheoo
Monday. '.'7 don't like being
accused of aometblng I didn't
do in front of other people.
I'm always afraid I'll grab
someone by the throat."
· Hayes referred to the cootroversy over Michigan
State's NCAA probation,
.

By RICK VAN 8ANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Notes and quotes frun tbe
Onclnnati Beilgals' den:
After IIJleftdlng 41 football
~~e~aons on the field, retired
&amp;I!Pia' head coach Paul
Brown watched the 11e1aon
start Sunday from a glaasenclosed private booth nen to
the press box high above
Riverfront Stadium.
"It was different," Brown
lllld after Cincy's 17·7 victory
over Denver, ''but ulong as
we're winning, It stW feela

great."
Brown, who at age 81 Is
continuing as the team's
general manager; patted his
heart to !how where the
victories stUI counted.

Veteran wide receiver Ollp ·
Myers, who says ·he enjoys
coming off the bench to catch
clutch passes In "rough,
tough, mean situations,"
belllled like a Uttle boy after
teammates awarded him the
game ball &amp;mday. He had
players, coaches and e'len the
general manager autograph
lt for him.
"Paul
Brown,
But
Joltnaon," he said as he read
the names on the baD .
"That's
some
good
company."
pa=r~or' ' :0....c:.a~~ f:~
,_
go.ahead TD ag~inst Denver,
last Saturday's fD-21 victory a1ao caught a lroten nose,
over Michigan .State and · but figured it might haw
couldn't have been much been a "good break."
better.
"Three weekli ago I had it
He carried only seven lroten on one side and this
times from scr1mmage lreak was on the other side to
against the Spartan~ lot 112 strai&amp;hten It out," he said,
yards, but scored three m8nagtng a feeble grin.
times, once on a 7~yard run
from scrimmage and an~ber
Myers may have been
on a 68:yard punt return. He giddy from one game's
also had a 7~yard TD run success, but he couldn't stop
nullified by penalty In the boasting about the 1976
first half.
edition of the Bengals.
That perfonnance earned
"I think we're better this
Logan the honor of United year than ever before," said
Press International Midwest the veteran of eight of the
Offensive Player of the Week. nine Bengsls' 11e110ns. "I
"I knew I waa going to play know the defense has
behlndArchlefortwoyears," . imJli'OVed 200 per cent over
said Logan. "It waa either last year.
play behind Arch or go to a
"Maturity is helping," he
. second rate school. I made added. Before we played as
thedecisloo.l decided to play · individuals, now it's more of
for lhe best,
a team effort."
"Af. times I wanted to qutt
and go home," said the 5-10,
Pat Mclnatly, the NFL's
18ZiJound Log111, who finally answer lo Leonardo Da Vinci,
took over the No. 1 tailback may be the Bengals' answer
spot last spring and bas lo Dave Green.
fought off the bevy of new
phenoms.

Logan named
- · f •week
Upl Back -o

Hayes' admittance he was
ooeof thoae who turned in the
8~artans
for
Ulegal
recruiting and his alleged
grabbing by the throat of a
reporter from the MSU
ily GENECADDES
student newspaper aeveral
UPI8porta Wrller
weeks ago in Chicago.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jeff
Hayes said the Penn State Logan hu IIJleDI his two plus
game at University Park, years at Ohio State trying to
Pa., would be "a highly prow he deserves to play
press.ure game; like last ' ll!libeck.
week, but under d!ffere11t
First, It waatbe Impossible
circumstances."
task of Unseating Archie
He lrought up an old Duffy Griffin, the Buckeyes' two·
Daugherty phU0110phy that a time Heimlan Trophy winner
football team Improves most wlio kept logan on the bencb
between its first and second for two yean.
games.
Then, this fall, along cilllle
"We are going to need that a crop of hlghlyiJublicized
improvement this week," he recruits rounded up by coacb
said.
Woody Hayes and Logan had
Ohio State beat Penn State to prove himself again.
17-9 last year in Columbus,
Among them were junior
the first Buclteye win In live college whiz RCII Springs, the
tries against the fl!itlany leading JC IICorer in the
Uons. The two teams haw nation I~ season, and froah
never Diet In University Ric.ky Johnson..of ·santa
Park. .
Marla, CIUf.
Asked about Penn State,
"That's the way it !sat Ohio
which slipped by Stanford I~ · State," said Logan. "We get
12 in its opener Saturday, tremendous athletes. Just
Hayes said, "they are a Uttle knowing we have guys Uke
more experienced than Springs and JohiiSOO to )XlSb
Michigan State. They throw a you makes you improve. It's
lot and have a fre~.n just an honor to play ahead of
fuUbeck (Matt Suhey) who IS them.''
running very well."
Logan Qot his first start In

Royals drop twinbill

I

.,

•

Major League standings

~Y
.. .

Unlled Prts• lnlernatlonal
National League

.• -

.'ilhlladelphla
•Pittsburgh
w York
lcogo
Louis
Montreal

j

EIS1

· W,· L,. Pd.

87 55
82 ·o60
75 67
6S 79
63 77
&lt;8 ?2

.613
.577
.528
.451
.• so
.3&lt;3

GB
s
12
23
23
38

Detroit
(Ruhle
9-11)
at
Baltimore {Grimsley 8-6), 7:30

p.m.

Wednesday's Games
Kansas City at calif., night
Detroit at Baltimore, night
New York at Cleveland, night
Boston at Milwaukee, night
Texas at Chlcago, night
Minnesota at Oakland, night

Major League Results
By United Press International
N1tion1l League
(1st •me)
Atlanla
000 000 2JQ- S 6 2
Los Angeles 100 000 ooo- 1 5 2
Lacorte (3 ·9) and CorrelL
Hooton , Sosa 181, Wall (8) and
Pasley . LP- t:tooton (9-lA )

lind game)
All~nta

ByBILLMADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
Whitey Herzog has always
had a reputation for being a
stand-up guy and with his
Kansas City Royals in their
worst slump of the season,
he's not backing dolm now.
"We've got to get off our
behinds mi play baseball,"
said Herzog Monday night,
after the Royals dropped a 54, ~ doubleheader to the
Oticago White Sox and saw
their flrst.plal;e lead over
Oakland in the American
[.e
W t sJi ed to f
ague es
c
our
games,
.J'un Spencer's three-nm
homer with ooe out in the
eighth liming won the
nigh
1 Cbi
afte
tcap or
cago
r
Kevin Bell did In the Royals
· th
with
lgbth
m e opener
an e
•
Inning sacrifice Oy which
snapped a 3-3 tie
·
Herzog refused to offer
excuses for his team's bad
play, but White Sox manager
Paul Rl~rds. who's seen his
share of pennant races,
thinks maybe the Royals are.
- · _ ..

merely victimll of baseball's
game of odds.
"The bad breaks they're
having now are evening
things up, but they probably
don't realize that," said
Richards. "They lost three of
their starting pitcher&amp;, Doug
Bird, Paul Splittorff and
Steve Busby llld if that
hadn't happened they'd
probably be ahead by 20
games now."
Elsewhere In tbe American
League, Cleveland drubbed
Boston, 8;!, Detroit beat New
Baitlm d ed
York, 3-1,
ore own
Milwaukee, 1).3, in 10 innings,
CaWorma
' outlasted Texas,"'
•
2, in 14 Innings, and Oakland
at Minnesota was rained out.
Indiana 8, Red Sox 3:
Rico Carty rapped out lour
hits to raise his average to
.308 and also drove in a run
hil
ing t
ofh
W e scor
WO
ers as
Cleveland moved lo three
games over .500. Dennis
Eckersley yielded six hits
while striking out nine ir\61..'1
lnn'ftd•
to gain the win.
"'&amp;'
Tigers 3, Yankees 1:
Rust Staub and Wlllle

Horton hit back-to·back,

sixtlHnnfn$ h001ers to give

Jim Crawf'*'d his first win of

the season after six losses.
The two hcrners snapped a
scoreless duet between
Crawford and loser Ken
Holtzman, 13-9. Willie
Randolph's tiases-loaded
sacrifive fly gave the
Yankees their lone run in the
seventh.
Orioles 5, Brewers 3:
Baltlmote, detennined to
at least saiVl!ge second place
. in the AL East, won its fifth
straight game on Tony
Muser'S two-run homer in the
'
lOth Inning. It was Musers
first hcrner as an Oriole since
being acnulred from the
,
White Sox June 15, 1975.
Regale Jackson preceeded
"'
the homer with his second
double.
0
Angels 6, Rangers •:
Joe Hoerner Issued a
basesloaded walk to · Jerry
Remy to touch off a lour-run,
14th-inning rally, which
cam'ed ""
"'·Ufornla to victory.
Bruce Bochte singled home
tw th
. the
o o er runs m
r y.

lly r.GLTON IUaDIAN
UPII!plnl Zdlt«
NEW YORK (UPI)-The ;;_ kid on the bloek Ia Roy
Hartafleld.
·
He already hal been told by lbe TOI'CIIto Blue Jaya. tbt
American Lasgue's newest entry, he'a tbelr llllllllel' and the .
~icial announcement Is due any day now.
.
Harll!leld II coming to TOI'CIIto lllrlf8bl from what abow' 1111
people call a IIIIUiab engaeement, two rl them In fad, In
Hoootulu where under his llandllnc, the Hawallltl•nclm baft
woo the Pacific Coaat lague playoffJ the put two )'till.
They won it an for the aecond atraf8ht year Bunda)' by bealinl
the Salt Lake City Gulla, three gamea to two.
Peter Bavalli, Torooto'a general manaeer, 111,)'1 he'a toolrllJII
for a man with Infinite patience, one who can handle an
expanaloo club lib the Jllue Jays bound to be made uo clMtlv
of )'Dung players llld 1 few veterans, .and lbe IO-flar.old
Hartafleld hal ahown hlllllelf to be aactly tbet ldnd ol
manager.
.
He uses a firm hand mi doean't stand for a wbo!e lot rl
nonsense, but the kids he ~d at Hawaii all say they'd go to tbe
wall for him. One of them II BUI Almon, the IJOOd.Joo!IIDC liyear-old abortltop and former Brown University lltar, wbo was
the No.1 choice In the nation when the Sail !)lego Padrel ~
him in the June 11174 free ..ent draft
.
Hartsfield played ~ild base for the Bolton Br- three
seasons In the early 'lOs. He hal been manallinllln the mtnara

""
.,;nclnnatl

West

W: L: Pet. GB

:eirJ

D 1p hm· s edge Bills
0

.l

au

more auccessful In that time. Aplrt frcm two tblr!l.piace
flntsbes, he never has wound up any worse than aecond dnr7tll
the past 10 years. H you'd lib to kllow an)'lbinll about lbe ldnd
of patience Hartalleld has, be bad Joe Pepltllle u one ol hla
players for awhile earlier tbla season and if you can handle Jee
• • Ao.
Pepltooe in a place like HawaU, you can L,..,....,
anyone
anywhere.
Rod Gaspar, sonny Jactaon, Bobby Valentine, Cbucll Bar,
tensteln and Eddie watt were some of the other u..IJIII
leaguers Hartsfield had at HawaU thiJ year and he had no
!rouble with any of them either .
As they say at the race track, Hartafleld bas gotten IIOPito
calla before. He was a semjftnallat In the mana1Jerill
sweepstakes with more than tile big league club, but never ·
waa tapped before tbla.
·
.
A year agp, he, Joe AltobeW illld Alex Grammas were tbe
three lui candidates the Mllwaullee Brewers COilllidered for
their manager belore they finally decided on Grammu.
"I interviewed Roy mi was very impressed with hla ldeu
about managing," says Brewers' Genebl Mana11er Jim
Baumer. "He hu bad exceUent succeas bandllng ballplayers
wherever he.has gooe and he has woo everywhere. I know he
did a tremendoua job for the Dodgers with their Spolwte
club.''
The Dodgers lroiJI!ht him up with them u one rl the.l r
coachea In 1969 and he stayed with them four 11e1110111. He
coached briefly with the Atlanta Braves In early 1973 before
being appointed lllllll&amp;ger of the IBlandera In late May rl that
year. The Ialanders have a tieup with 8atl Diego and It waa
while he was working with the Padres that Bavsai got to know
Hartafleld best.
· As a ballplayer, the 5-1001-8, 180ilound Chattahool:ble, Ga.;
native had pretty fair power for his size. He could also run, but
he had only an average arm llld waa wbat the scouts call a
minoa hitter, meaning he didn't haw enough to Insure ltlmlelf
steady employment .in the majors. He f1nalty reached them In
1950 after putting In seven seaaona In the mlnon.
With the Braves, ''MOUIIY" Hartsfle\11 1111 overalladqnd by
the Warren .Spalms, the Johilny Sains, the Walker Coopers, the
Eddie Mathews, the Earl Torgesons. After three years, the
Braves gave up their claim oo him and he went on to pily with
such clubs as Milwaukee, Baltimore, Montreal mi Los
Angeles, all In tbe minors then. ·
Times change. Those cities are aU In the majora now. So II
Roy Hartsfield, the new kid on tile block.

m11

Friday's games
·
(SVACJ
Southern at Hannan Trace
Eastern at Symmes Valley
(Others)
Gallipolis at Coal Grove,
(7 :30p.m.)
Ironton at Portsmouth
Jackson at .Wheelersburg
Logan at Hilliard
Meigs at Ripley, W. Va .
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Wellston .at Nelsonville·York
Alexander at Trimble
Belpre at Caldwell
Federal Hocking at Wahama
(7:30p.m.)
Wll llamslown, W. Va . at
Warren Local
VInton County af Oak Hill
North Gallla at Zane Trace
(Ross)
Hannan, W. Va . at
Southwestern
Point Pleasant at Dunbar
. Saturday, Sept. 18
Athens . at Columbus St .
Charles (7 :30p.m .)
Miller
at
Zanesville
Rosecrans
Kvger.Creek at Huntington
(Ross) (1:30 p.m.)
(Games at 8 p.m. unless .
Indicated)

73 BUICK

EL£CJRA 225
.UMITED Hr CPE.

I

•3295

· Karr &amp; Van landt

11.,.--------

'******1!******-*************
***~
!.

i

: fA~'

· ~~~

,;;!

i Adolph's Dairy Valley I
*'

1:* .

I

'****************• •• ********• *..

HE KNOWS HIS INSURANCE~

1

U.-""

IXMNINGOIILDS MIENCY INC.

(

\

'

..

15yearsnowandno~hermlnorleaguemlnagerhalbeenany

ooo 101 oto- 3 1 o
Lo~a~~~~~:~
~~4tc:&gt;C
93 52 .641 _:
los AngelOs 81 62 .566 11
AJOR LEAGUE LEADERS· (6) , Torrealba (71. oevine C81
·l'fbuSion
71 14 · .&lt;90 22
. Br United Press lnfernallonol end Murphy ; RhOden, Hough
· . :iiJn Otego
67 79 .459 26V•
BATTING· '
' 171 otid Pasley . WP- RhOden
· Ibased on 400 at bats I
...san Francisco ~ 81 .A49 28
112 .31. LP- Leon I2·Al. HR:-p;tlonta
62 .82 .431 3111•
NATIONAL LEAGUE·. · Allanla , May 12 .
· ¥"~
Monday's Results
·Madlock.
· · Chi
· t30
G·&lt;68
AB· 62R·160
H•.3&lt;2
Pet New York - - soo-- s
AJJanta S LOS Ang 1, 1St
90
000 000
los Ang &lt;Atlonto 3, 2nd
Maddox , Phil 135 &lt;93 7t 165 .335 Plllsburgh ooo ooo ooo- o s 1
Black, has factory air, full
·1"hllodelphlo 7 Montreal 2
Oliver, Pit 111m S9 138 .33! Seaver IIJ-101 and Stearns:
power, 60·.00 seal, black
;Jj~w York 5 Plltsburgh o
Griffey , Cin 13&lt; 51W 102 168 .330 Demery, Giusti 17 ). Bolr (8)
Morgan, Cln 125 &lt;27 106 1&lt;1 .330 end sangulllen, Dyer 131. lPcloth Inlerlor, 1 owner.
.il. Loul• 4 Chicago 3
•Son Fron 3 San Otego 2, 10 Rose. Cl~
145 59• 120 192 .323 oemery 110·51
Gernlmo, Cln 133 &lt;47 57 141 .315
- ·,lhns.
·
Fosler , Cln IJO S14 80 160 .Jll Chicago
u.(Only games SCheduled l
010 000 002- 3 11 o
. '1
Todey'a Probablt Pitchers
Montnez . Pill 145 581 60 180 .310 st Lou is
ooo 012 01x- • 10 o
•u•
(All Tlm•s EDT)
Garvey,lA 143 565 73 173 .306 Bonham p Reuscnel (6),
Watson. Hou 140 533 70 163 .306 Knowles (8) ond Mltlerwold ;
• 1Lot Angeles (John 8-10) at
· an&lt;lnnotl ;. !Nolen 12·81, 8:05
AMERICAN LEAGUE·
Fomh 16.10 , end Simmons. LP
•p.m .
· ... »
M&lt;Rae,
KC
l;·,~?·
kt~l
~~~
Bonham ta_.12_1._
1
You'll Like Our Quality
"'1'1New York (Swan 5·81 at
142 sao 87 196 .338 Montreal
200 ooo ooo- 2 1 o
;p,!ttsburgh IRooKer IJ.71, 7; }5 Bretl , KC
Way of Doing BuslnHs.
p.m.
Carew, Min 141 5« 89 181 .333 Phladelphl 300 m oox- 7 13 o
GMAC FINANCING
""Chicago CR . Reuschel 11·10) ·Bostock. Min 1j 5 424 65 141 · 333
Blair,
Corrllhero
111,
Lono
992,5342
Pomll!'oy
at St. louts (Mc&lt;;lothen 12·13 ), lynn, Bos I 1 &lt;91 73 IS6 .318 121. ounnlng 15), ToyiO&lt; 16)
Open
Evtnlngs'lil6:00
LeFlore, Del 135 s;; 93 172 .316 and eerier ; car lion, Garber m
,t,:30 p.m .
.
Tll5ft . m.~t.
'Montreal IFryman 00·121 at Rivers, NY 130 573 91 118 .311 and McCarver WP- Cf!lrlton
Y
llhiladoiphla llonborg 15·91. Carty, Cle 13~ 49S 63152 .307 117 .6) LP- Btoir 10.11 . HRs7;35 p.m.
Garr, Chi
122 473 59 1&lt;5 .307 Philadelphia, S&lt;hmldt 2 (3&lt; &amp;
'San Francisco (Kneprer Q.1) Munson , ~~M~8J~9Nl2 170 .30&lt; 35 1; Montreal, Williams 113).
:.1, ,m.Son .Diego !Strom 1 -15), 10 N AT I 0 N A l lEAGUE : (tO Innings)
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS,
'
,... Houston (Lemongrllo o.o and Schmidt , Phil 35 ; Kingman , NY son Frntsc ooo ooo 200 1- 3 3 1
k Do N tUn
1
Mtlaughiln 3·3J ot Allan!a 34 ,· Monday, Chi JOi Foster, Cln San Diego 010 001 000 o- 2 8 2 r MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY
Montefusco, caldwell IS J,
By DICK USIAK
were mostly responsible for
Rtmn1ng bac
n o g. :
(Ruthven ll·IA end Autry o.OJ, 29 ; Morgen , Cin 27.
2, 6:05p .m.
AMEVR 1CAJN kLEAGUdEL: MNell · Heoverlo 191 and Alexonder, ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. Miami'S victory.
ham put Miami UP 14-7 Cll a
WedntldiY'I G1m1s
les , N 26; oc son an · ay , Roder (91; Grllfin , Menger (9),
d
in burst but
.-FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES._
Ball end tjendrl&lt;k. Clov 2S; Frelsleben llOJ, Tomlin llOI (UPI) - In a storybook Griese tossed a 3().yard ooe-yar scor g
Chicago at Montreal, night
St. LOUIS at N . Y ., ~ ~ tWI ·r"'IQht
Bondo. Oak 2&lt;.
and Kendoii.' WP- Heaverlo I&lt;· aetting, O.J. Slmption would scoring pass to Moore at 1:03 the Ferguson-to-Holland
Pittsburgh et Philo, night.
RUNS BATTED
IN· Fos . •' 1. LP- Frelsloben (9·13).
have returned to ac tion of the third quarter and cm1b'me cll'cked again-this It
NATIONAL
LEAGUE,
.
.
Houston at At·ianta, night ·
ter, Cln tl&lt;; Morgan, Cln 107; IOnly games scheduled)
Mooday night, julled, sliced Yepremian added a 3().yard time on a 58-yard scoring toss
Los Anv at Clnclnnoli, night
San Fron at Son Diego, night
S&lt;hmldt, Phil 9S; Welson. Hou
and slithered his WAV for 200 field goal with 5:42lelt in the at 7:42 of the second quarter .·
91 ; Luzlnskl, Phil as..
"'
'
h 1ft1m
AMERICAN · LEAGUE : · L.
rushing yards, caught a game to virtually clinch the
Miami had a 17·14 a
e
~-· ...-mtriCin uavue
May , Ball 99; Munson. NY 95 ;
lulndlul of paSses, IICored a game for Miami.
lead on Yepremlan's first
Mavberry, KC 92 ; Chambliss,
American League
fi td
a1 H 1Bo had a 20Eost .
few touchdowns and set up
Simpson, who worked out
e go · e a
w,. l,. Ptl. GB NY 91 ; Yostrzemskl, Bos 90. OOkiOnd at Minn. , Ppd .. rein
, &gt;New York
87 55 .613 - 1
STDLEN BASES·
several others, and ted the with the BWs just once since yarder in the third quarter. : Hrs.: !O:OOA.M. Til11:00 P.Mc ~un.·Thurs.
tteltlmore
78 65 .545 9 h
10:00 A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Frt~&amp; Sat.
Jt.
Ferguaon threw his third It
'tleveland
73 70 .SID U 1h go~~~l~~~;LT~~.~~s~Ep' 11 f"l't ~;~:.","l:,~r 001000 2oo-- 3 1 o Buffalo BWs to an upset returning to the club &amp;mday
992·2556
.
:
002 000 llx- 4 8 1 victory over the Miami night after asking to be touchdown pass ol the game
-ton .
68 7S .•76 19'12 Brotk, SI.L 52 ; Lopes, LA 50 ; Chicago
Ootroll
67 76 .•69 20'12 Cedeno.
Hou
&lt;8.
leonard
116-81
and Morllnez;
"··
W MAIN
POMEROY, 0. It
AM E R I C A N LEAGUE : Kn~pp , Ham ilion
19) and DolP•w,.,
Iraded to anotber NFL clUb at 4: 19 of the final stanza for
lollllwoukee
62 so .•37 25
North , Oak 68 : LeFlore, Det 58 ; Down ing . WP- Knopp 13·11 . HR
But what really transpired Cll the West Coast, said that the Bills' last score.
...
Wnt
~
w,. l ,. Pd GB Campanerls, Oak 53; Patek, KC - Chl&lt;ego, Orlo 11•1 .
Mooday night was, that while physically he was fine but he
and Baylor. Oak &lt;7,
Kanses City 82 62 .569 PITCHING· ·
ltnd e•m•1
Slmpaon abowed flashes of wam't lotally up to par.
Oliklond
77 65 .5~2 •
· ·Most Vl&lt;torles
Konsos Clly 000 021 OlD- 4 10 I lrllllance, It was not enough
"!felt pretty good tonight,"
Mlnnoscto
73 72 .SC3 9'1•
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jone.s, Chicago
000 100 llx- S 8 2
1
d
id "I didn't f t
Colllornlo
66 79 .ASS 16'12
Fitzmorris, Mlngorl (8) , Ut. and the Do phins owned the Simpson 88 •
ee
'Fexas
6~ 79 .448 11•12 SO 21 .12; Koosman , NY 19.8;
.Q)Icigo
63 82 .•34 19'1• Sulton , LA 19.9; Corllon, Phil tell (81 and Wathen ; K. Bretl BlliB, 3().21, In a nationally llkelhadagoodsecooddrive
•
Mondlr's Results
17-6; Rltt\ard, Hou t7.u .
110·9) and Esslon. lP-Mingorl televised contest.
though. I got off the ball real
AMilRICAN LEAGUE' Pol · 1&lt;.5). HRs- Chltago, L . JohnOoklond ot Minn ., ppd ., rain
mer, Boll 21.12: Figueroa , NY son 1•1. Sponcer IIA).
"Wh8tahellavajobhe did, good."
·111&gt;1&lt;0110 A Konsos Cllv 3, '''
:thlcogo 5 Kansas Cltv •· 2nd
~~rn~~: ~ ~Y~r~~~:; g:r'"e~d ( 14 Innings)
stilting up Clliy yesterclay and
He played more than
~ell!. 6 Texas •· lA Inns.
playing 81 much as he did," expected because of the losa
leonard, KC 16·8; Tanana, C.al Colllornlo
aalilmO&lt;e 5 Mllw 3, 10 Inns.
16.9.
' too ooo oot ooo O&lt;~ 6 10 1 Dolphins' Coach Doo Sbula of fullback Jim Braxtoo, who .
Oetrolt 3 New Yqrk 1
EARNED
RUN
AVERAGE
·
Texos
t;Jevoland s Booton 3
(blltd on 144 lnnlnv• pitched)
010 100 000 000110--2 9 1' said. "Saban (Bills' Coacb stiller ed a kne e lnjury on the
- Todoy's Problblt pitchers
NATIONAL LEAGUE: sea . Ross , seoll 1101, or ego 1101 Lou)waltedall the way to the game's third play and was
••
( tllli Tlmts EOT)
Kansos City_ (Hossler 100) ~~~es~~ 2 · ~~.R~uo'r..'i:n. 2.~f~ ~,~"~~~~rt . ~t ~h·~~~~~; second plly to put him in." expected to be lost to the club
0
1 1
lit Chi&lt;OUO lt,IOnroe D·OI, 2:15
2.67; oenny, St.L 2.69.
11&lt;1, Foucault IW end Fahev . Miami cootalned SimPIOII for tile sea10n.
p.m.
The Dolphins took a 7.0Jead
. Oakland CBiuo U·ll end AMERICAN lEAGUE : Fl . WP- Drogo 17·71 . lP- Boulk fairly well BS the National
Torrez 13·10) 01 Minnesota f,~~~~~e~/ · 24 ~ ~ 1 ~~~~:~. 2a!~f lj_s)1 HR- Texos, Burroughs, Football League's leading on a five-yard .run by Benny
12 0
tt.ulbber H end Goltz (II·IJI,
2.55; Torrez, Oak 2.58.
ruaber last aeaaon gained 28 Malone at 12:23 of the first
2, 1:30 p.m.
Botton (Wise 12·10) at MII- NATIO~Tf~K~3~J~E, See- ~~ /l:;:~~~sJ
1
000 110 roo 2_ 5 12 2 yards In five carries and· quarter, but the 811ls
WaukH ISioton u .m, 8:30
ver,
NY
221;
Richard
,
Hou
179;
MllwoukO
001 000 200 o- 3 7 2 turned a short pau over the ~untered on a 53-yard
p.m.
. ) t
Set 81 LL CHI LOS, at DOWNING· CHI LOS, he KNOWS his IMurance.
Koosmon, NY 161; Montefusco, R. May, Holdsworth 17) end middle Into a
gain. scoring pass from Joe
" California IHarzell 6·4 o SF
160;
Carlton.
Phil
15•.
Ouncon.
Oempsey
(10)
;
Tra
.
~-~
fe•a• (Umbarger 9·12), 8:35
AMERICAN LEAGUE: Ryan. vers, castro (9) end Mooro. wP ~arterback Bob Griese, Ferguaon to wide receiver
Mlddltport.-Oitle
tr.m.
m.uc2
,New vor k (Hunter 15·10) • t cat 278: Tonono, cat 229 ; - Holdsworlh Jj.O). LP-Cutro wide receiver Nat Moore and John Hollslld, &amp;a«coocla Into
Cleveland IOObSOII U·lll, 7:30 ~~~~·r:r,- H~0n'\.,!~~Y ~~~r~ey, [ii~' · HR-Baltlmore, Muser placekicker Garo Y!!f,remilll : lhe second qilarter.
p.m.\
.
'

,I

.

'·,•

�•

•••
•

..

•••
•••
••
•

•

••
•'

l'tiCIII

Phils up lead
.to five games
11J FRED DOWN

Vl'l 8parta Writer
Mike Schmidt speab flr aU

I

••

·
Cour111 atven Included
hlllnray
and auto
. 8choo1. estractlm;
FJ.re
·taught
01i11
Sanflrd
Sharon
Fire Department
held S11DdaYatTownship
Wlrthlngton; fire.
tactlcs, taught
Tcml
•m Jackson· Grile
o1
Baltimore,
Department; fire ex-

4-Tbe n.llySentlnel,Middleport·P&lt;IIleroy, 0 ., Thesday,Sept. 14,1976

the Philadelphia Phillles
When he says the one tiling
IIIey can't a!ord to do Is
''play the JCII'eboard."
He meana the Pbillles' !Ole
eu~cem lboWd be the game
IIIey are playing.
Applrently blasting their
way out of their slump, the
Pbll1ies increued their first.
place lead to llve games
Monday night when they
dtfeeted the Mcmtreal Expos,
7-:, wblle the New Yark Mets
lhut cut the Pirates, r.o.
Srlmidt. drove ln four I'\IIIS
wllb bll341b and 35th homers
In p!lclna Sieve Carlton. to his
17th vfetory against six
~. Srlmld\ bit .his first
bomer tl. the game with \WO
Ill In the lint IDning to glVI!
the Plillles a ~2lead and bis
aeccod in the fifth to giVI!
lbem 1 $.2 margin.
Tile homers vaulted
Sdmldt put Dave Kingman
tl. the Meta into the league
lllld, but IOO'e important to
lim Ia that he 11M kept a
''polltlve feellng" during the
Pbllllts' slump.
''I juat dm't want evl!!l to
look bacli: and try to expain
It," he said. "Maybe it will
llllke us a better team for the
playr.fta, though. II we prove
we can meet 1hla test we
lboald he a lllrfllger team."
Carlklll, a late cbaJ!rrlv.r
(or the Cy YOUDg Award,
allowed m bits in six iii1Up

before his back lightened up
and Gene Garber shut cut the
Eipos 111 cme hit over the last
three innings.
Till! Seaver pitched a fivebitter and l!truck out 12 In
rai!ing his record to 1$-10 and
dealing the Pirates' hopes a
heavy blow. Felix Millan's
twO-run single was the key hit
ol a flve-nm, seventh4nning
outburst, which dealt Larry

.

ground

II»

tw()o&lt;11Jl single in the sixth

lilly

Belid ·. wam.rs
clinched the O.V.A.F.L. tWe
of league PalSies with a ~
loss w the Wood CWnty
Raiders of West \lirgini} the
first expansioo team ' the
league.

A team spokesman said :
"The Warrim' problem is
simply lack ol support fr&lt;m
players alid fans and spoo-

sors.

."Meigs County is always
bard .for any thing to get
. starled, especially sports. It's
time for the COllllly to get.its
head up alid get willl it.
" Forty-6!J: men signed up
to ·play the 1976 season and
ooly 16 came to the first game
which lllmed out -to be a
Iaugher becall!le 16 men 1ried
to play 60 minutes ol hard
contact football both wa~-s .

GLORIA'S STUDIOS
12TH YEAR

Oblo

,

The 1976 Hocking Valley
Regiooal Fire School was
held'SundayatJackson under
the sponsorship of the
Hocking Valley Regional Fire
School, the Trade and Industrlal Educational Services
in cooperation with the
Jackson Fire Department
and the Buckeye-Hocking
Valley Career Center ~~ Rio
Gralide.
Twenty-two Southeastern
Ohio Fire departments were
represented at the school by
147 officers and firemen with
six instructors alid a guest,
Richard Cross of the Slate
fire marshall's &lt;lffice.

tingulshment; taucht by
Capt. Earl Goodin, Atbe/11;
hazardous materials, taught
by Chief Tom Grile of II»
Baltimore, Ohio depar~t;
fire exllnguilment: tauiilit by
Capt. Earl Goodin, Athena;
hazardous materials, taught
by Lloyd Kaezmarck, a
. lieutenant with the Kettertnc
Fire Department; llre scene
investigation, taught by Capt.
Will Hennosy of the Columhua
MIDDLEPORT MUSTANGS - This team was oo-champioos for 1976 in the Middleport
Fire Department, and
Pee Wee League with a recOt'd of 6 and 2, tied with Middleport Qlbs. Front, Ill! r are Scot
pumper relay operational'
Gheen Richard Gilmore, Allen Spaulding, Jell Smith, George Justice, Susie Barker, Toby
taught by Skip Hammond,
Alllt, John Baccm III; second row, Bob Southern, coach; Shawn Balrer, Bobby Southern,
assistant chief of tht
Jemlfer Meadows, Brian Wamsley, Billy Weaver, and Jack B8con, asst. coach. Not present
Pleasantville Fire Deparl.
were Jolene Moodispaugh, Olarles Knapp and Doug Freeman.
men!.
Meigs
County . was
represented at the school by
. O..tro;t
OOOOOl lOQ-JU 1
the fire departments ·of
New York
ooo ooo 1oo- , " 0
Crawford , Hlll• r (I) and
. .
Orange Township, Racine,
Wockentuss: Honzmon, Tid, ow
Middleport, Rutland and
I·Bl •nd Mun$01\ . WP.-&lt;:rawtoro
Pomeroy. The 1971 Hocking
!l ·• l. LP- Holllm a n 039 1
.d.
HRs . - O..troit , Hor1on ( 121 :
Valley
Regional Fire School
1
Staub (l&gt;J.
.
·
will be held in Gallipolis on
Clevela ncl
lOO 370 '{)Oj- 8 13 ·O
the first Sunday after Labor
1be
Faith
Baptist
Olurcb
held
a
picnic
Suliday
at
the
Bo&lt;ton
010 010 1!10- J • 1
•
Day
with Chief James NcirihRacine
Locks
and
Dam
with
approximately
60
pef!IORS
-EckerSley, LaRoche 17 ) ond
Fo$:s.e : Lee , Po1e ( 5) , Murpt'l ~ ·
up
as
host.
attending.
6) and Fis.k . WP- Ec"k.ers;tev
In the ~moon the group participated in various sports
{11. 12). LF'--l.e'&lt; (l .] ) HRSoston , Ev e ns ( t4 ),
which included playing hall, archery and croquet.
By BOB PENICK
~Y scbool attendance &lt;ll Suliday was 59. The school
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
meets each &amp;mday morning at 9:45 at the United Steel
The Oleveland Browns face Workers Union Hall on Railroad Street between Horton and
the reigning Super Bow I Pomeroy Streets.
champ
io n Pit tsburg h
&amp;mday and Wednesday evening services are held at 7:30
Five of the 16 ended up inand by lv~n CardweD of Athens, 0.
.
jured because •of exhaustion. Steelers . Sunday
directing
the
Browns'
att:l!.
e
k
MASON
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Hughes
of
Raceland,
l{y.
· " Tbe Turkey Day game
will
be
ba.
c
k
.up
quarterllaek
visited
011
S)lnday
with
his
sister
and
husband,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
can suit up 40 men on bOth
squalls. So why can't the Brian Sipe, replacing the Sberman Focd, Mlwn.
PERSONAL NOTES
Wamors get so or 40 pla)'ers injured Mike Phil&gt;Jls.
Phipps
suffered
a
By Elsie Roach
for one season·•
separation
of
his
right
Guest
speaker
at
the
Cbristian Brethern Church Sunday
" The O.V.A.F.L. league is
shoulder
in
Sunday's
38-17
~ening
services
was
the Rev. Raljil Mahmey of
ltough and 16 men can't take
win
over
the
New
York
.Jets
Parkersburg.
Rev.
Mabcmey
has been preaching the i.J?ve of .
it. 11 you wish to join the team
contact .Tun Ferguson 992- and, as his teammates God this Saving Grace for over 50 years. Rev. and Mrs.
'!"oolt:ed out Mmday, spent Mah&lt;lley will be back next Sunday and Rev. Maboney will be
7291.
1llDSt
of his time indoors with speaker for the evening service.
Meigs, Mason, Atbens or
an
ice
pack on his passing
Keiih Reynolds, !IOD of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Reyoolds of •
Vmton are welcome to play.
arm.
Mlwn
returned !lome Saturday from Holler Medical Center.
.Tile nut game is @ct. zwith
"There
CWles
a
time
wben
Keith
had
a major operatioo .and will be reruperating at leal!t
Gallia County Disciples.
a q11a11terbaek .has .w run," . me week.
coach Forrest Gregg said
Enjoying a chicli:en Der, dolphin show and rides all day ·
Mcioday at .hiS weekly news Saturday at Camden Park were Mrs. Paul Rlmlolph, Stella
cmfereoce. "You can~ teD and Stacie Krebs, Mrs. J. Robert Roach, and Larry and RDger
bim not to because .that takes Roach.
away one · element in the
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis visited last week with their
game.
daughter and family Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Jobn8on and
"Even if he fell down the Kimberly of Westerville, Ohio.
same thing oould bappen. 11
Mike Foreman, 9IXl of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrl!!lce Flreman has
oould
happen
Gil
a
sack
and
been
dirllarged from the army, Mike served most of his two
A highligbt not reported in
·you
can't
prevent
all
of
them.
years
in service In Berlin, Germany. Mike is now attending
that recent Independent
Thereccxnes
that
time
wben,
West
Vu-ginia
Tech. at Montgomery, W.Va.
llasehjlll toumament was a
Oloud Hargraves, 9011 of Mr. and Mrs. Olarles Hargraves of
ne&gt;-bitter pi!.dhed by Brady as an athlete, they're going to
Huffman of the Racine- 1tuck it in and run with it and New Havl!!l, will l!!l~ the &lt;lllldrens Hospital in Colmnbus,
l'lcrtland team. '!bat rurty that's what ,happelled,'' he Ohio Thesday. .
Jerry Keyes of New Haven bad surgery last week at
per.ftrmance came in file said.
Phipps,
who
was
booed
by
Holta:
Medical Center on his rigb( knee, · Jerry will be
We're oilerino thi~ watch
•Qpelling roWidU! a iD-4Tout Of
two ways. It's an excellent
the
h&lt;IIletown
fans
at
the
l'fCUperatiqg
at
rome
for
several
weeks.
.
Letart. The next day Radnevalue. Precltlon jeweltd.
start
of
the
,game,
was
.
Mr.
·
a
nd
Mrs.
Ottie
Roach
of
Letart
Rt.
had
Mr.
Roach's
Fortland was knocked out ·of
Classic in style. With·
U!jured
~·
in
l:he
third
sister
Alice
t.l..
Roach
at
their
me
for
dinner
&amp;mday
the tourney by the eventual
textured goldtone caM,
•champ, Point P1easant, and q,uu:ter when tacli:led by Jets' celelrating ber llrtlJ!ay. Miss Alice received many cards,
sweep
second, fuN nume~ ·
tbe toclille.am ended up with defeosive hacli: Sbafer Suggs gifts and t.elepbme calls. One lmg dist,ance call from her
dill and unbreakable ·
after gaining '24 yards on a former pastor, Rev. and Mrs. Stan Crag and son and daughter
.a fourtb place .finish.
maintprlno. Water and
of Greenvi.lle, s. c.
in that Ice tart game, tr:.llt:en .play.
shOCk resistant. Bulova
"R
a late llhdt or
Vtsi.ting Miss Roach over the weekend were David Roach,
guaranteed. And very
-Huffman fanned thil1een and
anything
else
,"
Gnu
said.
Robert,
Elsie,
Larry
and
Roger
Roach,
Richard
and
Diana
modestly
priced. ThhtiiiP
'Walked ooly two as be was
ITiodel,
S29.
95
•
..
He
bit
fbe
grotDid
111
his
.lohnsln,
Mrs.
Harold
John!on,
Ml'.
and
Mrs.
Edward
lh!e
supported by a boomlng
rigbt
sboulder
with
the
Dorma
and
Delra.
'
bome run by ·~ve Snoqgrass.
Expansion Bani
Mrs. Vera Schmitt of the IBraels Messinic Fellowship; With
Otber lladne-Por'tland hit- weightoo the defensive llaek
Slightly Hl!lhtr•
Canton, will be at the Fairview Bible Clluroh this &amp;mday
'lers ....-e .Haning with two oo bii!i!'
RUpps
had
passed
for
three
,evening
mowing slides on the Holy Land and Monday evening
. :si ngles and WallbroWl),
lciuchduwns,
bittilij:
on
U
of
will
be
gue!t
speaker.
Fildl, and Roush with a
15
~brows to give the Browns
·single each.
JEWELRY STORE
1be Ohio Valley Independ- Ule lead, and &amp;pe extentled it
ent 8;1se!Ja11 League will hold Ol'ben be g&lt;t into the game. ROY' DALE It ROSES
Court St., PMtroy
its ·final meeting Tuesday ..:-:~=~~'?,
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
night, .September a, at 7 :~ Gregg said. " We •have cxmfi. - RDy Rogers and Dale
at lbe Syracul!le fire. House. dence in blm., the players are • Evans will ~ . tbe first
All learns ln soutbeakrn coofideot, and he is self. I:IISband and wife team II! act
Ohio who wish to participale cmfident."
as grand marshals for the
next year .sbould attend.
The Browns started slowly annua!, Rose Parade.
Sunday, surrendering 10
Tile ~aa!Queenofthe
points in the lint quar:iA!r · Cowboys, both 63.. 'll'el'e
hetift lhey rould !mre, and named Mondat'_ to be coMon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.--1:30tJI.5:00
Gregg said his team had nw:abals of .the ll8lb annual
THU~SDAY tiL12111100N
SRATI'l,E (UPI) - The opening game jitters; in (lart parade New Year' s Day, ~
Seattle Seahawks Monday because of last year's 3-11 day_ after their 29th wedding
picked up vet«an Mimesota rerord, the wOI"IIl in Browns' anruversary ·
defmsive lineman Bob (;urt... bi!l.ory.
-------"! think there was a lot of them. The first game ill
aema oo waivers.
Lurtaema, a 6-{&lt;JOI,.l;, 25G- Jn151re on them before lbe always tough. but whm you
PQ181dfr, played for SeaWe game by evecytxxly," he get into playing games,
Coach Jack Patera with buth tlllid. "People were saying profesionalis:n lakes over. I
773-5592 Ue11nan Gfite. . Muon, W.Va.
the New York Giants aa1 the 'you're ezpected Ill win big,' don't 1lliniJ: they will be as
and
that
has
a
bi8
effect
em
tight tbis week."
Vikings.

£ace ·wor.

champions

MARKET •.Open

-New Classes of Baton for' 7-10 year olds-

This Is The School Of The

"GLO-E'ITES"
. The .

Award Winning Corps of the area
·as well as

State and National Award Winners
lllo Gil sl.,. IIIYe hundreds of -rds In loatl Cllfnpof- lnd •re 111e 011ly oorpo of
111o _... lllllvt- •wards in Sills lnd Ha~l Cllfnpef-. COID-eltes M¥• thtw
..._ 111C1 lllflonsl n1nh : Nltionsl lltan Twir&amp;ng AsiDCYtion (lht &lt;&gt;ldost 1nd
...... twirling w.-iulianl Ohio Stals CIYmps in Junior Dlnce and Twirl T01m
tm, still tm, Cillo Stott CIYrnps ill Jwenils DIRU Twirl c.rps m4. Ollio St•te
• • De- IIIII Twirl TNm lfTS. Thtv plaCIICI2nd in Dina TWirl Tum 1f76 {1st
pllm•israarwenttugrouptrwn Cinciflfllltil
Gil sttes are lilo plead Jnl in Junior Po ride Corps, llld • 411! in Juwnils PariCie
C.,. at tlleOIIio Stell CIYmpionshlps Ibis ven (top •w•nh in 'Pirlde Corps went to
. . _ .... liortlltfll Ollio ~~ .....,
.
Glt&gt;411H 111ft- sw1rd1 It Ha~ls lwiYing plical 1111 in 1m in Dance and Twirl
TNIII, lnd2nd place Dlnce- Twirl Tum, lnl pllce Dina Twirl Corps in lf74.

Wlllll'

·GOESSlfR'S

GLOmES RECEIVED M1 LOCAL
''BEST BATON GROUP" AWARDS 1976
NewTetnAt-DinceCIIu
New Clsu of 1Jmnnfla lor 7-lt yqr olds.
tr.lll• wclw studleclgvmfllma •t ~~Stile lnd Ollill Uniwersities whit. maj.-ing u.
•no. end received Iflining in floor oxerciw, lllllneo bum, uneven Plrlllel b1rs,
IIICI YMifilltl, IN lief for tymnamcs will toe included in this cllss.

EIPAJIDING GYMNASTICS

PROGRAM ntiS YEAR!!
Oitfl' a -..It .,..lngslsllln the ntw 4~ to 6 •ee group. This is 1 combination dan

FRIDA¥ .UNTIL 8 PM

, ...... Gymn11t1a, ..,._lllltt lnd T1pl
·
.
I list., Int., or Adv.I must luditionfort&gt;lacement.
c.._ loi .....,.,.., •t lhs Orclild Room
Cllass will lit TIISidly oft.,._., lnd evtning. Phone m -7326 before Sept. 21st or
IIIIi I !'OW ftlfiiS. .,., Mdrtss lnd which cllss you are inltrosted In to Gloria Wllllce,
. .. 2, Paon... y' Ollie.
~~~~~er.,......,..,......,.ts

MASON FURNITURE

~--~--------------------------------------JIF
Creamy or

We Accept Federal Food Sta~ps
PHONE 992-3480

HEINZ !

26 01

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

SP ~UETJI SMJCE

,....

STA-PUF

PHEBE'S STORE

1S 01 can ~

·················· ~~

FABRIC "SUI'oft/t~IENER .......... !:~!~~ .. 99'

s..tt..w 14-11"

W......,

Rlttlt'Re• -to Limit Quantities
Acctpt Fed. Feod

"•"'pi
Monday thru Friday
·

LIPTON

D~r
·
10 ct.
ltll ....., ........................ .

orra

9:001o 7:0o
la9

AUSTIN'S

s1.59

~ ~~

5 oz; can

.......•...........

LIBBY's

LB.

39~

79*

~

~~

.

PORK &amp; BEANS ••••••••~~:~~~::. 31'1.00
SMUCKER$

. · E Jr11 'Y
G.RAP

'1 29
TASTEE BOLOGNA
LB:

V2 gallon

CARPET SHAMPOO ••••••••••••••••.11.99

VIAREN~~R ~-~~~..-[

ROUND
STEAK

oz. can S9'
~ ··················~·····
8 pak
16 oz boHies 99'
COKE,~DRift TAD
11

~ ··~·~····················

QIUNK

LB.

,GROUND BEEF(ANY AMOUNT)

6te-

LB.

79' .

-=:~---:7'----___;~:...__........_~---...::..:...:_

FRENCH CITY

WiENER$ .....................

2;.9

1

VALLEY BElt

CHOCOlATE Mlli&lt;

(;,'\t I

•

•

ON~;1.49 ..

~~~

'

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND BEEF

Pro)eeta for the year ·were
discussed at the Thursday
night meeting of the Eleanor
Circle at Heath United
Methodist Church.
The
Rev.
Robert
BUl118arner, paslllr, met with
the circle members to offer
MONEY DUE
suggestions about various
Members of the Melli
projects. New officers
Club
County·
G•rden
presiding were Mrs. Jean
Asaoclallon
are
reminded
Ann Bradbury, president ;
that county duea of 25 cents
per member are due Oct. I.
Senior Nu1rition Program is Payment should he eent to
available through each Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Rt.l,
community Action· Agency. Middleport. .

LB.

69t

12 oz.
PKG.

gge

.

'

"

69t

GROUND
ROUND

SUCE~.

All MEAT

~79$

EVAPORATED • LOWFAT
CAN

MILK

'

RC
COLA
8

~

DEL MONTE
PUDDING &amp;FRUIT

PAK
.
16 OZ. BOTTLES

SNACK
PAKS
SWEETHEART PINK

49·

oz.
DETERGENt ........~.~~...
22

}

F~Uil COCKTAIL

*** ·PEARS
PEACHES
*

8 oz.
CANS

*

* PURE CANE
.DIET RITE t
5 LB.
BAG
COLA * SUGAR
~
*
, 11, *
890
* SIMALAC &amp;ENFAMIL~ ............~~~•••

...

8PAK
16 OZ. BOffiES

READY TO FEED

~

ROLL

BUTTERMILK
BROUGHTON'S

Homo Milk......~.~~~.

32 OZ.

.

e
.COCA-COLA *· SCRAP
HE
io cr. BOX
afiAK i&amp; 0z. BOTTLES
BAGS..........................
.
. _ 'l ig
"'' S. GRADE B LARGE
.
DOZEN
e
· ,,~
EGGS........................................ 79 .

lARGE

YzGAL

MIX OR MATCH

THURSDAY ONLY

HI-DRI

Valley Bell

DEL MONTE

REG. '1.29

4 PACK

'

LIQUID

CARNATION ·

'

DISPOSABLE LIGHTERS ........~89
.

WHOLE

•

.

~~"

HAMS

79t

WIENERS

HOT COCOA MIX...... ~.!.2.!.K:.~~..99~

w•

PICNIC
SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

'

CARNATION

SUPERIORS.

HAMS

'

SALAD ·
DRESSING 99~

'

PICNIC

FRESH &amp; LEAN .

MIRACLE WHIP

SUPERIORS
ALL BE_EF

5ge

WIENERS

GROUND
CHUCK

5LB. OR MORE

LB.

WI EN ERS.. ou~~~~

•••••

DAIRY

99e

·

,·'

YORK BACON
LB.

Mra. Vicki Houdtlnl, ~
prtaldent: Mr•. Maral,
Blake, NCI'lltary; llld Mra.
Donna Byer, treuurer. Mrl.
Byer had devoUillll, llld Mrl.
Bradbury llid Mrl. J Cook served refreabi:J!ei!ta.

Projects set

SUPERIORS

·~

TOWELS

HEINZ KETtiiJP••••••••••••••• ~~!~.59
DUNCAN HINES
I'AIIE MIX Yellow. White or
Box
Sfte
~
Devil's ~Food ••••••••••• ••• • ~ ·

percent level ..:. a goal sought
by the Commission on Aging
for 1976.
New sites will be located in
Ross, Highland, TuScarawas,
Athens, Perry, Guernsey,
Monroe, and Jefferson
counties.
Local Community Action
Agencies will be responsible
for determining the location
of tl)e new meal sites, many
of which will be satellite
facilities to which meals

'&amp;itw..Mill. ·'and Second Sts. we reserve the right to limit guanlities, MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PAPER

DIITII:D Olunky
11 oz. jar 001
Pr••ur
~
~··~··················· ~

9 to

Sun. 10 to 10 ·

season's end

and Adrued LMis

•

·
.
)$. ~ ~

G~T

PRfC€D
UNDER ·
$35

-~SJJPER

··.,

. unnoticed at

Beailner, Intermediate

Gallla County will serve 14
more meals, Meigs County 7.
COAD Senior Nutrlllon
Program Director Marilyn
Grant announced that each
county participating In the·
program wtll receive a
sufficient Increase in funding
w prepare four adell tiona!
meals each day. Twenty
counties will receive more
than this minimum Increase
in order to bOost the number
of elderly served · to the one

program.
The COAD program
currently contracts with
Community Action Agencies
throughout the area to serve
meals to I ,060 senior citizens
at 32 sites. Upon receipt from
the Ohio Commission on
Aging of an additional
$160,830 ln Tille VII of the
Older Americans Act funds
for the 1976 program year,
the number of meals served
~lly will Increase to 1,738.

can be arranged II neceaaary.
A brief phyalcal fltnesa
proaram Is carried out three
days a week and nutrtUon
educatlon
ls
pffered
regularly. Referrals are
made to other sources of
assistance.
All persons 60 or over and
u.iir spouses are eligible to
take par' m the Senior
Nutrition Program . There Is
no set fee [or the meals, but
participants are asked to
con1ribut.e whatever amount
\bey are able to in order to
help defray the cost of tile
pfogram :
More information a(Wut the

prepared at an already
!!l[lsling lite will be irana·
ported •
Factors .lnfluenc.tng the
locallons of new sites will be
the accessib!Uty to senior
citlZena not presently being
served and the suitab!Uty of
facilities which must meet
sialidards set by the Ohio
Department of Health and the
Commission on Aging.
The Senior Nutrition
Program provides older
Americans with a number of
supportive services as well as
the opportunity to take part in
recreational activities .
Escort and transportation
•

•

HUffman feat

1Wo11-Gynmasti's-Dance

~:-.'

One per cent of Ap·
palachlan Olllo's elderly will
have access to well-balanced
meala each weekday noon in
a central setUng as a result of
a funding Increase received
by the Corporation for Ohio
Appalachian Development
( COAD) Senior Nutrition
Prpgr•m.
The increase will perm! t
the Opening of 10 new meal
sites In the 28 Appalachian
count!~! served ·bv the

s•Ipe to

Patsie title clinched by local Warriors
BiJ!

New meal sites ..to be opened

by

of II»

Bud

by Ollef

Inning snapped a 2-2 tie and
led Los Angeles to its victQ"Y
In the set'IJild game. Ricli:
Rhoden raised his record Ill
12-3 for the Dodgers.
Canll 4, Cu .. !:
Vic Harris' lw1H'Un single
In the sixth inning JrOved the
big blow for St. Louis u Bob
Foracb went the distance for
the first time since Sept. l'li,
Demery his fifth loss against 197~. It was the sixth win for
10 wins for the Pirates.
Foracb, who struck out fiVI!
Los Angeles defeated while allowing 11 hils. Bill
Atlanta, 4-3, after a f&gt;-1 loss, Bonham was the loser for the
St. Louis shaded Olic:ago, 4-3, Qlbs.
and San Francisco scored a ~ Giants t l'lldres !:
...,
2 win over San Diego, in 10
Marty f'ere%, Whose two1'\81,
twiHlut
single tied the
Innings, . in the
~r
scheduled NL games.
game .in the eighth, doubled
Bnovea ~. Doclgers H:
hoJnethewimi.ngrunforSan
Rod Gillireath doubled in ~ in the llllh. Tom
two runs and W"lllie Moo lane! Griffin pitched a noM:t.er for
knocked In two mlre, with a oevf!!l inning~~ for San Diego
single, to lead Atlanta's six· but was not involved in the
hit attack, which dealt Burt dedsioo, which went against
Hoot&lt;ll his l~th defeat In the Dave Fn!islebetl.
first game. Manny Mota's

The

1-Titl Dllly&amp;l!'linel,,Mid!Be.JIOft.Pun.-oy,_O., Tullclay,Sept.14, 1111

FTY

.

"INTRODUOORY OFFER"

29

FROZEN

7-UP
OR
PEPSI-COlA

MORTON CHICKEN-BEEF-nJRKEY'

·. .

. $

1
ORANGE JUICE.......,.........4 $1

QUEEN OF SCOT

BANANAS.••••••... 5LB. $1 00
PEARS

.

POT PIES...........................4/

Qll.,

umm

.

GORTON BREADED

. ~· ·

.

.

. $159

B
••••••••·••• •••
$1 FISH PORTIONS ........;;~.........
FOR

�•

•••
•

..

•••
•••
••
•

•

••
•'

l'tiCIII

Phils up lead
.to five games
11J FRED DOWN

Vl'l 8parta Writer
Mike Schmidt speab flr aU

I

••

·
Cour111 atven Included
hlllnray
and auto
. 8choo1. estractlm;
FJ.re
·taught
01i11
Sanflrd
Sharon
Fire Department
held S11DdaYatTownship
Wlrthlngton; fire.
tactlcs, taught
Tcml
•m Jackson· Grile
o1
Baltimore,
Department; fire ex-

4-Tbe n.llySentlnel,Middleport·P&lt;IIleroy, 0 ., Thesday,Sept. 14,1976

the Philadelphia Phillles
When he says the one tiling
IIIey can't a!ord to do Is
''play the JCII'eboard."
He meana the Pbillles' !Ole
eu~cem lboWd be the game
IIIey are playing.
Applrently blasting their
way out of their slump, the
Pbll1ies increued their first.
place lead to llve games
Monday night when they
dtfeeted the Mcmtreal Expos,
7-:, wblle the New Yark Mets
lhut cut the Pirates, r.o.
Srlmidt. drove ln four I'\IIIS
wllb bll341b and 35th homers
In p!lclna Sieve Carlton. to his
17th vfetory against six
~. Srlmld\ bit .his first
bomer tl. the game with \WO
Ill In the lint IDning to glVI!
the Plillles a ~2lead and bis
aeccod in the fifth to giVI!
lbem 1 $.2 margin.
Tile homers vaulted
Sdmldt put Dave Kingman
tl. the Meta into the league
lllld, but IOO'e important to
lim Ia that he 11M kept a
''polltlve feellng" during the
Pbllllts' slump.
''I juat dm't want evl!!l to
look bacli: and try to expain
It," he said. "Maybe it will
llllke us a better team for the
playr.fta, though. II we prove
we can meet 1hla test we
lboald he a lllrfllger team."
Carlklll, a late cbaJ!rrlv.r
(or the Cy YOUDg Award,
allowed m bits in six iii1Up

before his back lightened up
and Gene Garber shut cut the
Eipos 111 cme hit over the last
three innings.
Till! Seaver pitched a fivebitter and l!truck out 12 In
rai!ing his record to 1$-10 and
dealing the Pirates' hopes a
heavy blow. Felix Millan's
twO-run single was the key hit
ol a flve-nm, seventh4nning
outburst, which dealt Larry

.

ground

II»

tw()o&lt;11Jl single in the sixth

lilly

Belid ·. wam.rs
clinched the O.V.A.F.L. tWe
of league PalSies with a ~
loss w the Wood CWnty
Raiders of West \lirgini} the
first expansioo team ' the
league.

A team spokesman said :
"The Warrim' problem is
simply lack ol support fr&lt;m
players alid fans and spoo-

sors.

."Meigs County is always
bard .for any thing to get
. starled, especially sports. It's
time for the COllllly to get.its
head up alid get willl it.
" Forty-6!J: men signed up
to ·play the 1976 season and
ooly 16 came to the first game
which lllmed out -to be a
Iaugher becall!le 16 men 1ried
to play 60 minutes ol hard
contact football both wa~-s .

GLORIA'S STUDIOS
12TH YEAR

Oblo

,

The 1976 Hocking Valley
Regiooal Fire School was
held'SundayatJackson under
the sponsorship of the
Hocking Valley Regional Fire
School, the Trade and Industrlal Educational Services
in cooperation with the
Jackson Fire Department
and the Buckeye-Hocking
Valley Career Center ~~ Rio
Gralide.
Twenty-two Southeastern
Ohio Fire departments were
represented at the school by
147 officers and firemen with
six instructors alid a guest,
Richard Cross of the Slate
fire marshall's &lt;lffice.

tingulshment; taucht by
Capt. Earl Goodin, Atbe/11;
hazardous materials, taught
by Chief Tom Grile of II»
Baltimore, Ohio depar~t;
fire exllnguilment: tauiilit by
Capt. Earl Goodin, Athena;
hazardous materials, taught
by Lloyd Kaezmarck, a
. lieutenant with the Kettertnc
Fire Department; llre scene
investigation, taught by Capt.
Will Hennosy of the Columhua
MIDDLEPORT MUSTANGS - This team was oo-champioos for 1976 in the Middleport
Fire Department, and
Pee Wee League with a recOt'd of 6 and 2, tied with Middleport Qlbs. Front, Ill! r are Scot
pumper relay operational'
Gheen Richard Gilmore, Allen Spaulding, Jell Smith, George Justice, Susie Barker, Toby
taught by Skip Hammond,
Alllt, John Baccm III; second row, Bob Southern, coach; Shawn Balrer, Bobby Southern,
assistant chief of tht
Jemlfer Meadows, Brian Wamsley, Billy Weaver, and Jack B8con, asst. coach. Not present
Pleasantville Fire Deparl.
were Jolene Moodispaugh, Olarles Knapp and Doug Freeman.
men!.
Meigs
County . was
represented at the school by
. O..tro;t
OOOOOl lOQ-JU 1
the fire departments ·of
New York
ooo ooo 1oo- , " 0
Crawford , Hlll• r (I) and
. .
Orange Township, Racine,
Wockentuss: Honzmon, Tid, ow
Middleport, Rutland and
I·Bl •nd Mun$01\ . WP.-&lt;:rawtoro
Pomeroy. The 1971 Hocking
!l ·• l. LP- Holllm a n 039 1
.d.
HRs . - O..troit , Hor1on ( 121 :
Valley
Regional Fire School
1
Staub (l&gt;J.
.
·
will be held in Gallipolis on
Clevela ncl
lOO 370 '{)Oj- 8 13 ·O
the first Sunday after Labor
1be
Faith
Baptist
Olurcb
held
a
picnic
Suliday
at
the
Bo&lt;ton
010 010 1!10- J • 1
•
Day
with Chief James NcirihRacine
Locks
and
Dam
with
approximately
60
pef!IORS
-EckerSley, LaRoche 17 ) ond
Fo$:s.e : Lee , Po1e ( 5) , Murpt'l ~ ·
up
as
host.
attending.
6) and Fis.k . WP- Ec"k.ers;tev
In the ~moon the group participated in various sports
{11. 12). LF'--l.e'&lt; (l .] ) HRSoston , Ev e ns ( t4 ),
which included playing hall, archery and croquet.
By BOB PENICK
~Y scbool attendance &lt;ll Suliday was 59. The school
CLEVELAND ( UPI)
meets each &amp;mday morning at 9:45 at the United Steel
The Oleveland Browns face Workers Union Hall on Railroad Street between Horton and
the reigning Super Bow I Pomeroy Streets.
champ
io n Pit tsburg h
&amp;mday and Wednesday evening services are held at 7:30
Five of the 16 ended up inand by lv~n CardweD of Athens, 0.
.
jured because •of exhaustion. Steelers . Sunday
directing
the
Browns'
att:l!.
e
k
MASON
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Hughes
of
Raceland,
l{y.
· " Tbe Turkey Day game
will
be
ba.
c
k
.up
quarterllaek
visited
011
S)lnday
with
his
sister
and
husband,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
can suit up 40 men on bOth
squalls. So why can't the Brian Sipe, replacing the Sberman Focd, Mlwn.
PERSONAL NOTES
Wamors get so or 40 pla)'ers injured Mike Phil&gt;Jls.
Phipps
suffered
a
By Elsie Roach
for one season·•
separation
of
his
right
Guest
speaker
at
the
Cbristian Brethern Church Sunday
" The O.V.A.F.L. league is
shoulder
in
Sunday's
38-17
~ening
services
was
the Rev. Raljil Mahmey of
ltough and 16 men can't take
win
over
the
New
York
.Jets
Parkersburg.
Rev.
Mabcmey
has been preaching the i.J?ve of .
it. 11 you wish to join the team
contact .Tun Ferguson 992- and, as his teammates God this Saving Grace for over 50 years. Rev. and Mrs.
'!"oolt:ed out Mmday, spent Mah&lt;lley will be back next Sunday and Rev. Maboney will be
7291.
1llDSt
of his time indoors with speaker for the evening service.
Meigs, Mason, Atbens or
an
ice
pack on his passing
Keiih Reynolds, !IOD of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Reyoolds of •
Vmton are welcome to play.
arm.
Mlwn
returned !lome Saturday from Holler Medical Center.
.Tile nut game is @ct. zwith
"There
CWles
a
time
wben
Keith
had
a major operatioo .and will be reruperating at leal!t
Gallia County Disciples.
a q11a11terbaek .has .w run," . me week.
coach Forrest Gregg said
Enjoying a chicli:en Der, dolphin show and rides all day ·
Mcioday at .hiS weekly news Saturday at Camden Park were Mrs. Paul Rlmlolph, Stella
cmfereoce. "You can~ teD and Stacie Krebs, Mrs. J. Robert Roach, and Larry and RDger
bim not to because .that takes Roach.
away one · element in the
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis visited last week with their
game.
daughter and family Mr. and Mrs. Glen W. Jobn8on and
"Even if he fell down the Kimberly of Westerville, Ohio.
same thing oould bappen. 11
Mike Foreman, 9IXl of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrl!!lce Flreman has
oould
happen
Gil
a
sack
and
been
dirllarged from the army, Mike served most of his two
A highligbt not reported in
·you
can't
prevent
all
of
them.
years
in service In Berlin, Germany. Mike is now attending
that recent Independent
Thereccxnes
that
time
wben,
West
Vu-ginia
Tech. at Montgomery, W.Va.
llasehjlll toumament was a
Oloud Hargraves, 9011 of Mr. and Mrs. Olarles Hargraves of
ne&gt;-bitter pi!.dhed by Brady as an athlete, they're going to
Huffman of the Racine- 1tuck it in and run with it and New Havl!!l, will l!!l~ the &lt;lllldrens Hospital in Colmnbus,
l'lcrtland team. '!bat rurty that's what ,happelled,'' he Ohio Thesday. .
Jerry Keyes of New Haven bad surgery last week at
per.ftrmance came in file said.
Phipps,
who
was
booed
by
Holta:
Medical Center on his rigb( knee, · Jerry will be
We're oilerino thi~ watch
•Qpelling roWidU! a iD-4Tout Of
two ways. It's an excellent
the
h&lt;IIletown
fans
at
the
l'fCUperatiqg
at
rome
for
several
weeks.
.
Letart. The next day Radnevalue. Precltlon jeweltd.
start
of
the
,game,
was
.
Mr.
·
a
nd
Mrs.
Ottie
Roach
of
Letart
Rt.
had
Mr.
Roach's
Fortland was knocked out ·of
Classic in style. With·
U!jured
~·
in
l:he
third
sister
Alice
t.l..
Roach
at
their
me
for
dinner
&amp;mday
the tourney by the eventual
textured goldtone caM,
•champ, Point P1easant, and q,uu:ter when tacli:led by Jets' celelrating ber llrtlJ!ay. Miss Alice received many cards,
sweep
second, fuN nume~ ·
tbe toclille.am ended up with defeosive hacli: Sbafer Suggs gifts and t.elepbme calls. One lmg dist,ance call from her
dill and unbreakable ·
after gaining '24 yards on a former pastor, Rev. and Mrs. Stan Crag and son and daughter
.a fourtb place .finish.
maintprlno. Water and
of Greenvi.lle, s. c.
in that Ice tart game, tr:.llt:en .play.
shOCk resistant. Bulova
"R
a late llhdt or
Vtsi.ting Miss Roach over the weekend were David Roach,
guaranteed. And very
-Huffman fanned thil1een and
anything
else
,"
Gnu
said.
Robert,
Elsie,
Larry
and
Roger
Roach,
Richard
and
Diana
modestly
priced. ThhtiiiP
'Walked ooly two as be was
ITiodel,
S29.
95
•
..
He
bit
fbe
grotDid
111
his
.lohnsln,
Mrs.
Harold
John!on,
Ml'.
and
Mrs.
Edward
lh!e
supported by a boomlng
rigbt
sboulder
with
the
Dorma
and
Delra.
'
bome run by ·~ve Snoqgrass.
Expansion Bani
Mrs. Vera Schmitt of the IBraels Messinic Fellowship; With
Otber lladne-Por'tland hit- weightoo the defensive llaek
Slightly Hl!lhtr•
Canton, will be at the Fairview Bible Clluroh this &amp;mday
'lers ....-e .Haning with two oo bii!i!'
RUpps
had
passed
for
three
,evening
mowing slides on the Holy Land and Monday evening
. :si ngles and WallbroWl),
lciuchduwns,
bittilij:
on
U
of
will
be
gue!t
speaker.
Fildl, and Roush with a
15
~brows to give the Browns
·single each.
JEWELRY STORE
1be Ohio Valley Independ- Ule lead, and &amp;pe extentled it
ent 8;1se!Ja11 League will hold Ol'ben be g&lt;t into the game. ROY' DALE It ROSES
Court St., PMtroy
its ·final meeting Tuesday ..:-:~=~~'?,
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
night, .September a, at 7 :~ Gregg said. " We •have cxmfi. - RDy Rogers and Dale
at lbe Syracul!le fire. House. dence in blm., the players are • Evans will ~ . tbe first
All learns ln soutbeakrn coofideot, and he is self. I:IISband and wife team II! act
Ohio who wish to participale cmfident."
as grand marshals for the
next year .sbould attend.
The Browns started slowly annua!, Rose Parade.
Sunday, surrendering 10
Tile ~aa!Queenofthe
points in the lint quar:iA!r · Cowboys, both 63.. 'll'el'e
hetift lhey rould !mre, and named Mondat'_ to be coMon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.--1:30tJI.5:00
Gregg said his team had nw:abals of .the ll8lb annual
THU~SDAY tiL12111100N
SRATI'l,E (UPI) - The opening game jitters; in (lart parade New Year' s Day, ~
Seattle Seahawks Monday because of last year's 3-11 day_ after their 29th wedding
picked up vet«an Mimesota rerord, the wOI"IIl in Browns' anruversary ·
defmsive lineman Bob (;urt... bi!l.ory.
-------"! think there was a lot of them. The first game ill
aema oo waivers.
Lurtaema, a 6-{&lt;JOI,.l;, 25G- Jn151re on them before lbe always tough. but whm you
PQ181dfr, played for SeaWe game by evecytxxly," he get into playing games,
Coach Jack Patera with buth tlllid. "People were saying profesionalis:n lakes over. I
773-5592 Ue11nan Gfite. . Muon, W.Va.
the New York Giants aa1 the 'you're ezpected Ill win big,' don't 1lliniJ: they will be as
and
that
has
a
bi8
effect
em
tight tbis week."
Vikings.

£ace ·wor.

champions

MARKET •.Open

-New Classes of Baton for' 7-10 year olds-

This Is The School Of The

"GLO-E'ITES"
. The .

Award Winning Corps of the area
·as well as

State and National Award Winners
lllo Gil sl.,. IIIYe hundreds of -rds In loatl Cllfnpof- lnd •re 111e 011ly oorpo of
111o _... lllllvt- •wards in Sills lnd Ha~l Cllfnpef-. COID-eltes M¥• thtw
..._ 111C1 lllflonsl n1nh : Nltionsl lltan Twir&amp;ng AsiDCYtion (lht &lt;&gt;ldost 1nd
...... twirling w.-iulianl Ohio Stals CIYmps in Junior Dlnce and Twirl T01m
tm, still tm, Cillo Stott CIYrnps ill Jwenils DIRU Twirl c.rps m4. Ollio St•te
• • De- IIIII Twirl TNm lfTS. Thtv plaCIICI2nd in Dina TWirl Tum 1f76 {1st
pllm•israarwenttugrouptrwn Cinciflfllltil
Gil sttes are lilo plead Jnl in Junior Po ride Corps, llld • 411! in Juwnils PariCie
C.,. at tlleOIIio Stell CIYmpionshlps Ibis ven (top •w•nh in 'Pirlde Corps went to
. . _ .... liortlltfll Ollio ~~ .....,
.
Glt&gt;411H 111ft- sw1rd1 It Ha~ls lwiYing plical 1111 in 1m in Dance and Twirl
TNIII, lnd2nd place Dlnce- Twirl Tum, lnl pllce Dina Twirl Corps in lf74.

Wlllll'

·GOESSlfR'S

GLOmES RECEIVED M1 LOCAL
''BEST BATON GROUP" AWARDS 1976
NewTetnAt-DinceCIIu
New Clsu of 1Jmnnfla lor 7-lt yqr olds.
tr.lll• wclw studleclgvmfllma •t ~~Stile lnd Ollill Uniwersities whit. maj.-ing u.
•no. end received Iflining in floor oxerciw, lllllneo bum, uneven Plrlllel b1rs,
IIICI YMifilltl, IN lief for tymnamcs will toe included in this cllss.

EIPAJIDING GYMNASTICS

PROGRAM ntiS YEAR!!
Oitfl' a -..It .,..lngslsllln the ntw 4~ to 6 •ee group. This is 1 combination dan

FRIDA¥ .UNTIL 8 PM

, ...... Gymn11t1a, ..,._lllltt lnd T1pl
·
.
I list., Int., or Adv.I must luditionfort&gt;lacement.
c.._ loi .....,.,.., •t lhs Orclild Room
Cllass will lit TIISidly oft.,._., lnd evtning. Phone m -7326 before Sept. 21st or
IIIIi I !'OW ftlfiiS. .,., Mdrtss lnd which cllss you are inltrosted In to Gloria Wllllce,
. .. 2, Paon... y' Ollie.
~~~~~er.,......,..,......,.ts

MASON FURNITURE

~--~--------------------------------------JIF
Creamy or

We Accept Federal Food Sta~ps
PHONE 992-3480

HEINZ !

26 01

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

SP ~UETJI SMJCE

,....

STA-PUF

PHEBE'S STORE

1S 01 can ~

·················· ~~

FABRIC "SUI'oft/t~IENER .......... !:~!~~ .. 99'

s..tt..w 14-11"

W......,

Rlttlt'Re• -to Limit Quantities
Acctpt Fed. Feod

"•"'pi
Monday thru Friday
·

LIPTON

D~r
·
10 ct.
ltll ....., ........................ .

orra

9:001o 7:0o
la9

AUSTIN'S

s1.59

~ ~~

5 oz; can

.......•...........

LIBBY's

LB.

39~

79*

~

~~

.

PORK &amp; BEANS ••••••••~~:~~~::. 31'1.00
SMUCKER$

. · E Jr11 'Y
G.RAP

'1 29
TASTEE BOLOGNA
LB:

V2 gallon

CARPET SHAMPOO ••••••••••••••••.11.99

VIAREN~~R ~-~~~..-[

ROUND
STEAK

oz. can S9'
~ ··················~·····
8 pak
16 oz boHies 99'
COKE,~DRift TAD
11

~ ··~·~····················

QIUNK

LB.

,GROUND BEEF(ANY AMOUNT)

6te-

LB.

79' .

-=:~---:7'----___;~:...__........_~---...::..:...:_

FRENCH CITY

WiENER$ .....................

2;.9

1

VALLEY BElt

CHOCOlATE Mlli&lt;

(;,'\t I

•

•

ON~;1.49 ..

~~~

'

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND BEEF

Pro)eeta for the year ·were
discussed at the Thursday
night meeting of the Eleanor
Circle at Heath United
Methodist Church.
The
Rev.
Robert
BUl118arner, paslllr, met with
the circle members to offer
MONEY DUE
suggestions about various
Members of the Melli
projects. New officers
Club
County·
G•rden
presiding were Mrs. Jean
Asaoclallon
are
reminded
Ann Bradbury, president ;
that county duea of 25 cents
per member are due Oct. I.
Senior Nu1rition Program is Payment should he eent to
available through each Mrs. Marie Birchfield, Rt.l,
community Action· Agency. Middleport. .

LB.

69t

12 oz.
PKG.

gge

.

'

"

69t

GROUND
ROUND

SUCE~.

All MEAT

~79$

EVAPORATED • LOWFAT
CAN

MILK

'

RC
COLA
8

~

DEL MONTE
PUDDING &amp;FRUIT

PAK
.
16 OZ. BOTTLES

SNACK
PAKS
SWEETHEART PINK

49·

oz.
DETERGENt ........~.~~...
22

}

F~Uil COCKTAIL

*** ·PEARS
PEACHES
*

8 oz.
CANS

*

* PURE CANE
.DIET RITE t
5 LB.
BAG
COLA * SUGAR
~
*
, 11, *
890
* SIMALAC &amp;ENFAMIL~ ............~~~•••

...

8PAK
16 OZ. BOffiES

READY TO FEED

~

ROLL

BUTTERMILK
BROUGHTON'S

Homo Milk......~.~~~.

32 OZ.

.

e
.COCA-COLA *· SCRAP
HE
io cr. BOX
afiAK i&amp; 0z. BOTTLES
BAGS..........................
.
. _ 'l ig
"'' S. GRADE B LARGE
.
DOZEN
e
· ,,~
EGGS........................................ 79 .

lARGE

YzGAL

MIX OR MATCH

THURSDAY ONLY

HI-DRI

Valley Bell

DEL MONTE

REG. '1.29

4 PACK

'

LIQUID

CARNATION ·

'

DISPOSABLE LIGHTERS ........~89
.

WHOLE

•

.

~~"

HAMS

79t

WIENERS

HOT COCOA MIX...... ~.!.2.!.K:.~~..99~

w•

PICNIC
SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

'

CARNATION

SUPERIORS.

HAMS

'

SALAD ·
DRESSING 99~

'

PICNIC

FRESH &amp; LEAN .

MIRACLE WHIP

SUPERIORS
ALL BE_EF

5ge

WIENERS

GROUND
CHUCK

5LB. OR MORE

LB.

WI EN ERS.. ou~~~~

•••••

DAIRY

99e

·

,·'

YORK BACON
LB.

Mra. Vicki Houdtlnl, ~
prtaldent: Mr•. Maral,
Blake, NCI'lltary; llld Mra.
Donna Byer, treuurer. Mrl.
Byer had devoUillll, llld Mrl.
Bradbury llid Mrl. J Cook served refreabi:J!ei!ta.

Projects set

SUPERIORS

·~

TOWELS

HEINZ KETtiiJP••••••••••••••• ~~!~.59
DUNCAN HINES
I'AIIE MIX Yellow. White or
Box
Sfte
~
Devil's ~Food ••••••••••• ••• • ~ ·

percent level ..:. a goal sought
by the Commission on Aging
for 1976.
New sites will be located in
Ross, Highland, TuScarawas,
Athens, Perry, Guernsey,
Monroe, and Jefferson
counties.
Local Community Action
Agencies will be responsible
for determining the location
of tl)e new meal sites, many
of which will be satellite
facilities to which meals

'&amp;itw..Mill. ·'and Second Sts. we reserve the right to limit guanlities, MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PAPER

DIITII:D Olunky
11 oz. jar 001
Pr••ur
~
~··~··················· ~

9 to

Sun. 10 to 10 ·

season's end

and Adrued LMis

•

·
.
)$. ~ ~

G~T

PRfC€D
UNDER ·
$35

-~SJJPER

··.,

. unnoticed at

Beailner, Intermediate

Gallla County will serve 14
more meals, Meigs County 7.
COAD Senior Nutrlllon
Program Director Marilyn
Grant announced that each
county participating In the·
program wtll receive a
sufficient Increase in funding
w prepare four adell tiona!
meals each day. Twenty
counties will receive more
than this minimum Increase
in order to bOost the number
of elderly served · to the one

program.
The COAD program
currently contracts with
Community Action Agencies
throughout the area to serve
meals to I ,060 senior citizens
at 32 sites. Upon receipt from
the Ohio Commission on
Aging of an additional
$160,830 ln Tille VII of the
Older Americans Act funds
for the 1976 program year,
the number of meals served
~lly will Increase to 1,738.

can be arranged II neceaaary.
A brief phyalcal fltnesa
proaram Is carried out three
days a week and nutrtUon
educatlon
ls
pffered
regularly. Referrals are
made to other sources of
assistance.
All persons 60 or over and
u.iir spouses are eligible to
take par' m the Senior
Nutrition Program . There Is
no set fee [or the meals, but
participants are asked to
con1ribut.e whatever amount
\bey are able to in order to
help defray the cost of tile
pfogram :
More information a(Wut the

prepared at an already
!!l[lsling lite will be irana·
ported •
Factors .lnfluenc.tng the
locallons of new sites will be
the accessib!Uty to senior
citlZena not presently being
served and the suitab!Uty of
facilities which must meet
sialidards set by the Ohio
Department of Health and the
Commission on Aging.
The Senior Nutrition
Program provides older
Americans with a number of
supportive services as well as
the opportunity to take part in
recreational activities .
Escort and transportation
•

•

HUffman feat

1Wo11-Gynmasti's-Dance

~:-.'

One per cent of Ap·
palachlan Olllo's elderly will
have access to well-balanced
meala each weekday noon in
a central setUng as a result of
a funding Increase received
by the Corporation for Ohio
Appalachian Development
( COAD) Senior Nutrition
Prpgr•m.
The increase will perm! t
the Opening of 10 new meal
sites In the 28 Appalachian
count!~! served ·bv the

s•Ipe to

Patsie title clinched by local Warriors
BiJ!

New meal sites ..to be opened

by

of II»

Bud

by Ollef

Inning snapped a 2-2 tie and
led Los Angeles to its victQ"Y
In the set'IJild game. Ricli:
Rhoden raised his record Ill
12-3 for the Dodgers.
Canll 4, Cu .. !:
Vic Harris' lw1H'Un single
In the sixth inning JrOved the
big blow for St. Louis u Bob
Foracb went the distance for
the first time since Sept. l'li,
Demery his fifth loss against 197~. It was the sixth win for
10 wins for the Pirates.
Foracb, who struck out fiVI!
Los Angeles defeated while allowing 11 hils. Bill
Atlanta, 4-3, after a f&gt;-1 loss, Bonham was the loser for the
St. Louis shaded Olic:ago, 4-3, Qlbs.
and San Francisco scored a ~ Giants t l'lldres !:
...,
2 win over San Diego, in 10
Marty f'ere%, Whose two1'\81,
twiHlut
single tied the
Innings, . in the
~r
scheduled NL games.
game .in the eighth, doubled
Bnovea ~. Doclgers H:
hoJnethewimi.ngrunforSan
Rod Gillireath doubled in ~ in the llllh. Tom
two runs and W"lllie Moo lane! Griffin pitched a noM:t.er for
knocked In two mlre, with a oevf!!l inning~~ for San Diego
single, to lead Atlanta's six· but was not involved in the
hit attack, which dealt Burt dedsioo, which went against
Hoot&lt;ll his l~th defeat In the Dave Fn!islebetl.
first game. Manny Mota's

The

1-Titl Dllly&amp;l!'linel,,Mid!Be.JIOft.Pun.-oy,_O., Tullclay,Sept.14, 1111

FTY

.

"INTRODUOORY OFFER"

29

FROZEN

7-UP
OR
PEPSI-COlA

MORTON CHICKEN-BEEF-nJRKEY'

·. .

. $

1
ORANGE JUICE.......,.........4 $1

QUEEN OF SCOT

BANANAS.••••••... 5LB. $1 00
PEARS

.

POT PIES...........................4/

Qll.,

umm

.

GORTON BREADED

. ~· ·

.

.

. $159

B
••••••••·••• •••
$1 FISH PORTIONS ........;;~.........
FOR

�Social
Calendar
·J

I '

MEMBERsHIP DRIVE UNDERWAY -The 111'11-77 membership drive of the Trl•
County Cmununlty Concert Allloclation officially got underway Monday evenin8 with a
buffet dinner at the Rio Grande College cafeteria. Pictured from the left are Carolyn
Htppensteel,membenhlpdrlvechalrinan;FaySauer,amemberoftbeboardwboaccepted
Nancy Reed's award for eelllng the most memberships in Meigs County durin&amp; the 197~76
campaign; Jane Ann Denney with Nelle ~w's award for most memberships sold in
GaDia County: Clan l.Dchary, honorary drive chairman: Rachel Warner, accepting
WlOiam Dum 'a award b most Jackson CoWlty memberships and mlllrt memberships sold
ti
overall, and Betty Miles, .community concert and represent&amp; ve.
•
•
·.

CLARA LOCHARY of
Poineroy was recognked
as honorary drive chairman lor the 1971-77
membership campaign of
the Tri-County Community
Concert Association

Monday evenlag. Mra.
LOchary received • speclll
award at a dinner of the
conrerhssoclaUoaheldat
the .Rio Grande College
cafeteria.

TUESDAY
omo ETA Pm Cllapter of..
........... u
Bela Sigma Phi • _,.,
7: 30 p.m. Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
home ot MtsSusl. AIIMlllce ~ha
110n. Mr~.
e
er"' ve
educational program on
potted plants; program by
Mrs. Nancy Collins on how to
dry plants and flowers .
Arrangement fer the month
will be "Aulumn's Hannony"
Uling fall floWers. .
EASTERN BAND. Boost·
ers, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in band room. All parents of
band members asked to
attend.
PAST MASTER'S night to
be observed when Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363 meet&amp; at
7, 30 p.m. Tuesday; all
Master Masons invited. ·
MEIGS HIGH Band
members practice Tuesday
at 6 p.m. at hlgb school
PTOTuesday,

Grou makes pla-ns pa~~~SE
concert assoczatzon
rp .
~=~!'r:~sc:;~ffi~~Communtt1'
'J
-kicks off membership drive !~':.:!..~~!~!.:.:::!:, ...... i~f~~a
WEDNESDAY

were discussed at the Friday
at a cost of $10, adult; $5 night meeting of the Happy
students and senior citizens Harvesters Class of Triliity
Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. Donald (over 60); $30 family.
Church.
Hippensteel, Ellen Leftwich,
'
Miss Erma Smith opened
Penny Moore, William
Fot inlorination; contact with prayer. Projects
Menshouse, Dorothy Hartley, the me111bershlp
Zelma Northcutt, Dr. and headquarters located at the planned were continuation of
the sale of greeting cards,
Mrs. Evan Roderick, Katie Gallipolis Chamber of and
the sale of vanilla .
Sprow, Mr. and Mrs. Kimball Commerce office, 16 State
Devotions
were given by Mrs.
(Red) Suiter, Gailla; Rachel St., Gallipolis or phone 446:
Carrie Neulzling who talked
Warner, Mary Swalley, 2200.
on the life of the Biblical
Sharon
Jones,
Julina
Luhrman, Jackson ; Sue " Members in the Tri-County women, Ruth and Naomi. She
Brady, Diana Cheng, Jane Community · Concert concluded with prayer and
Coles, Mason; Mra. Harold AssociaUon are also entitled the hymn, "Bringing in the
Sauer, Sibley Slack, Joan w attend concerts in other Sheaves."
Miss Smith reported on the
Wolfe, Meigs.
area community concert reception following the
This year's concert series associations.
offers baritone Theodor
The family of Dr. Merlyn
Uppman, Oct. 9; The New Ross and special guest, Greg
York BrB!ISQuintet, March 16 Bane, presented a program of
and
pianist
Thomas vocal selections for tbe
Schwnacher, April 22. All evening 's entertainment, and
concerts are at the Gallla Rev. Hughes Price gave the
Academy High School invocatioo. Caroiyn Roderick
auditorium in Gallipolis. is president of the local
Memberships are available association.
A surprise birthday party
~&gt;.~~r~·-~:~:f::&gt;l.:~allllllli&amp;'lll!l:e!llle"!81'"6!81ZIIIIWioll.,ll:mll-llllo-oll!ue.~:.:~~
.~~~
was held Thursday by the
~;!
Laurel Cliff Better Health
~:;
Club honoring Mrs . ...Nellie
~
Tracy at her home.
S:
Gifts and cards were
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~
presented to Mrs. Tracy by
:
Mrs. Doria Shook, Mra. Iva
Wlllted: TeeDBill ol Rlghta .
Powell, Mrs. Cannan Evans,
RAP:
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs.
There has been a IQI in the ll'lper!l about mandatcry Georgia Diehl, Mrs. Ruby
retlmnent..age a~ how olclt;r people resent It
Frick, Mrs. ·polly Eichinger,
How about discrimination do!fl the Une where we· Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
teenagers Hve? If you're under 18, most worthwblle jobs ~ Mildred . Bowen, Mrs. Ann
cbed to you. If you're under 16, forget it! All you're. good•for 11 Mash, Mrs. Della Curtis,
baby..tttlngat75centsanhour(lfyou'relucky),neigbborbood Mrs. Katie Parker, Mrs.
yard work, or belnC an unpaid "giHer" er envelope atuffer in a Linda Pullins, Robin Camppolitical catnpalgn.
bell. Sending gilts were Mary
I'm
and strong.. 1 wanted _to get on a summer Braley aild Mr r• and Mri~
Cllllllructioo crew. No dice: the wuoo and the insurance Dick Karr. She was presented
ampany don't allow "juveniles" in dangerous occupaliOIIB. I a decorated cake inscribed
could have put out mere and better wcrk than 110111e of the "Happy Birthday, Nellie."
ICI'IIWRy gnya they hired.
Mrs. Shook led the group in
They throw "clild labor laws" at us, but these were made
prayer and readings at the
for sweat shops wben ~oung childrt!n were forced into loog meeting included "Birthdays
hours umer slave conditiOIIB. That time II past.
Nowdays, by keeping teens from work because of ~ir ~a a Gift From God'' by Mrs.
"Room in the Pew" by
AGE aklrle, they're sayins, "Hey, ldd, you're good for nothing Mash;
Mrs. Eichinger; "The
-get lollt." And if ~uleel worthless, you're liable to end up In Coming ' of the Master" by
trouble.
'
Mrs. Tracy who also gave
Why can't we be hired fer what we can do, not for how
many years we've lived? Why does "Age" have to appear oo
application blanks? -FOR CHANGING THE LAW

Mrs. Clara l.Dchary was more than $100 were Dr. and
recognized as honorary drive Mrs. Donald Thaler, Dorothy
chairman · when the TriCounty Cmununlty Concert
AIIOCia lion held Its annual
membenhlp campaign kick·
off dinner Monday evening at
the Rio Grande College
cafeteria.
Mn. Lochary, a resident of

Hilh St., Pomeroy, has been
an active member of the
community
concert
uaoclalloo board since its
beginning 29 years ago. She
IllS participated in all 29
drives for .members and in
the selectioo ol arlillts.
A nalive of Amesville in
Athens County, Mrs. Lochary
graduated from
Ohio
· University in 1919 in public
school music, She blught her
· first two years in the
PCIIIel'oy sChool, two years in
· .Ameavllle where she
eatabllabed the music
depailuett and then two
. y-. in • county supervisory
JIOIIIIm in NCJble County. She
married Patrick Lochary of
PCIIIel'oy in IIIZiand returned
to Meigs County where abe
la1J8bt millie for several
yem traveUnc from school
to scboolin the county. Since
ber retirement from public
school teaching, she has
ta1J8bt private plano.
She waa · a longtime
member of the Pomeroy
Mualc Club (no longer in
ulllence) served on the
Melaa County Board of
: American Cancer Society
and 11 an active member
the Grace Epllcopal Church
· In Pomeroy where her
positions have included
S nd
h 1 te . h
of ~
Church women and the
Diocesan Board of Chriatian
Educalloo
• She 11 ~active member of
111e Meigs County Hlatorical
and PkiiRer Society and waa
involved In the tabllahment
of the Mel ~ She Ia
oo the~ of Manaiernent

'

Surprise party fetes
Mrs. Nellie Tr4cy

Generation .Rap

oi .

' r:oce:n :.:;

of Senior aUzena, and a
volunteer In the Retired
~er Volunteer Program.
Bile has two children, Charles
of neu. Chlcaso and James,
Glenc Halven, NH.Jl.
t
aro yn
ppens ee 1,
membenhlp drive chairman,
Mrs. Lochary with
1 sped•.
Approsimately ~ persons ·
1llended Monday s buffet
dinner which honored the
· caplabll and workers in the
-•claUon 'a current drive.
Renewal of old memberships
wuconducted laat week, and
new membera are being
IOUBllt tbla week. The
uaodallm lncludel Gallla,
Melp, Mason and Jackson

...-te:taw.ro.

COUI!IIa.
. .
· Nn. Rlppenateel also
~led IPtCial •warda to

·a-

pinona who sold the

: moat memberlhlpa in the
lfn.'lt campatgn. Persons
who aolcl the moat In lileir
coimty Included Nelle Sl)aw,
QaUia County; Lucille·
llnckJ!tmer, Milan; Nancy
llled, Melp, W1lllam Dum,
Jacbon. Dunn waa also
~ fnr aelllnt! the
moat overlll. Olbel'll who sold

Cli.tJB TO MDT
IYRACUIE - 'nle ndrd
w.-sldaJ Homemakers
· Clall t1 llert will meet
W Ill J »• llpt. II, al 10
.&amp; II tilt Municipal
~.,. trlaa poiJtater

...... "t

served . by the class. Mrs. Thelma White and Mary Kay
Marie Hauck and Mrs . Holter will be the hostesses.
Gertrude Bass were guests at Each member is asked to
the meeting.
take a small gift for games.
Mrs. Stella Kloes was
PAST PRESIDENTS,
named to have devotions at American Legion Auxiliary,
the October meeting with Drew Webs.ter Post 39, · 7:30
Mrs. WJlrna Terrell and Mrs. p.m. Wednesday at the home
Neva Seyfried to be the of Mrs. HBJTy Davis, Spring
hostesses.
·· Ave.
Games were played with
GIRL SCOUT Service Unit
prizes going lo Mrs. Ada meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
Holter, Mrs. · Genevieve nesday, Columbus and
Meinhart, Mrs. Rose Ginther Southern Ohio Electric Co.
and Mrs. Ella anlth. Mrs. office.
THURSDAY
Eva.Dessauer and Mrs. Lillie
Hauck served a dessert
MAGNOLIA CLUB, Thurs·
course from a table day, 7:30p.m. at the home of
decorated in the fall motif. Miss Ema Jesse.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, 7:30
Thursday at the KingsburY
Mobile Home lot for a tour of
Modern Chemical Plant.
Following the wur members
will go lo the Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
fuf a meeting.
"SetlilnC the ArgwDent" and
GRACE EPISCOPAL
"His Best Prayer."
Churchwomen, 12:30 ThursThe club aclplowledsed a day for a sack luncheon at the
card and check from Miss Pariah House.
Marion Ebershach on behalf
REPUBUCAN WOMEN'S
of Lydia Eb!!rsbach for use of aub, picnic at the Rock
some hospital equipment. Springs Grange Hall, ThursCards were also read from day, 6 p.m. Brine covered
Mrs. Curtis, Mrs. Eichinger dish and table service.
and Mrs. Powell for
REPL'BUCAN. WOMEN'S
remembrances and assistaub
picnic Thursday' 8 p.m.
ance.
at Rock Springs Grange Hall.
:?.::~::::::::?.~::~§.:?.~?.:;~s?.:-.:::~:~:::-.::~?...:&gt;.:~;t:::&amp;: Bring covered dish and table
REIIEARSAL SET
service. Everyone welcome.
'l1le Voices of Uberty
FRIDAY
Chon•· will have 1
PAST
MATRONS,
rebe&amp;nai Monday at 7:311
at llle Pomeroy United Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.
Metbodlll Church lor the 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Willis Anthony.
cemmtlllity Tha•ki&amp;JVblg
SUNDAY
mn•lcal procnm.
ANNUAL
HOMECOMING
Mn. June Vu Vranken,
of
the
Alfred
United
dlrectDr, report&amp; there are
Methodl.st
Church,
Sunday,
opea!Ag1 Ill tile cbonll allll
penons wutiDg tAl •IDI with Sunday school, 9:30
wllll the group may ceatact a.m.: worllhlp service, 10:45
her lor IDformaUoa. Slle a.m.: basket dinner all2:30;
e:rtended appreciation to afternoon program, I :30 p.m.
the lndlvl -t luah, Rev. Blshman and members
organlzatlou and of the Rivers of Ufe Ministry
huslne11e1 who have to be present
COUNTY PRAYER
contributed tAl the groap.
All eoatribatloaa wDI 10 meeting, SUnday, 2 p.m. at
toward u:pe111e1 of the Rutland Community
providing ma•lc and Church with Glen Blasell,
leader.
lnpplles.

00

':4

-:.:y~ts a1110 want those anilquated clild labor laws

r~·1

changed The ea11ze that smart ambitious young ~le are
being w~..J rln ''kiddie" jobs', and they're knocking m
Cmgresslonal doors f&lt;r updated legtslation.
Mt. and Mri, Archie C. :::::::$:=~$~;:-;-;::::-o;~:::::::-;:.-.:::~:~~~~~z.wh
Why dol)'t you, too, write your Congressman or woman? Rose and Infant son, .Tyson
Eric, are spending the" week ...,....,.....,......,.., .... ...,..wr,..._. • ZIUP
, ,. Anencourageyourfrlendstojoinyou.-HELEN
.
·
+++ ·
with Mrs. ROse's parents, Mr.
.Simple facts everyone. who
NOTE FROM SUE: But apect opposition from those adults and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith,
owns a home, car or business should know
who don't want teens bornin8 In on THEm jobs. With Pomeroy.
unemployment levels still way up there, a lot of people won't
Mrs. Sandy Darst and
be anxious to allow full werk privileges for under-llktr-lS. children of Hilliard spent the
(Or over4 year-olds either for that matter )
weekend here with her . '
t
year-o11111 ·
+++ •
·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
y·
·M
.
A compony•1 roputotlon
DEAR TEAM:
Gilmore. ·
OUf
lor t~r•lco ond clolma
Dl
In ,I Thebestwoytogototruo
payment
II crltlcol.
·
Since granunar achool, we've been told at school !low the
ana Lewis iS ·•-'tin
''"' g
AndllyOUhiYtiCIIIm,
sperm meeta the egg, how the fetus develops, fact. oo Pikeville, Ky. with Mr. and
bergetn on lnturancels to
y,our lndopondont agent 11
lor II. But thoro oro
n. 1 POSition 10
mensttuatioo, venera! dlsea~e, all those duD lhin8l everybody Mrs · Jack Jacobs and Sean · !shop
more then ·tr.rtt thousand
you. To bt on your a 1 In
knows.
Mrs. Jacobs and Sean had
com Pin Its lOlling In ,11tlplng you obtoln 1 lull,
suronce pollclu to
equlllb • tottltmtnt
I believe 'mOll older teens are cmcerned with·such Copies . spent Friday and Saturday
~prot•cl homn, cors end
Promptly.
.
1
as smJal feelings, mastiU'batioo, sex myths and illusions, the ,..,re
th re aUves.
· buslnnus, end 11 Isn't
8tcou11 ht 11 • lllf"joyofBU,"interco-,etc. After Ill, we're nearly adult and
Mr. and Mrs. William
proctlcal for you to check
employed local buslnn•
ooch
end
evorYt
one.
.
·
J
bs
d
ndso
Bobb
have adUlt reactlonl, and many limes, adult relationships. aco an gra
n,
Y
r•ot'l
w•y
t's • gOOd
man, on ln•opon•tnt
u
u
•
"
"
IIi tnt _ knows ~
h 11
'lbese are ~cs not dJJcusaed at bcime.
Archer of Columbus were
Ideo to consult . an In·
rosponslblll~ 11 · to hll
•· 0 f Mr
d
dependent lnturanco
cuttomo- Is 1u~cnl 11
WhY don't Jd&amp;b achool teach the ldnd 11.111!1 education we weeken d gues..,
egont. An Independent
bosod ~~· sorvl~g h·l,
• an
reeDY want to bear? - MAD AT SCHOOL SEX PROGRAMS Mrs, Pearl Jacobs.
ogont .don not work for
cullomers In thUt koy
Sunday guests of the Rev.
on lnturonce compt~y.
ortts:
,
.
DEAR MAD:
.
.
.
Cecil
He works lor you. Wnlch
1. Ht provldn tho bnt
..• And have half-maybe thrte'fourtha- of the community and "mos.
Wile were Mr.
muns ht ctn pltn tho
lnturonco coverage attht
acresnllng for the school admlnlatration's combined scalp?
and Mrs. Phil Wile, Beverly.
covoritgo lhtt protect•
lowest true cost .Ia you.
Mt d Mt Chari Karr
you· best. And then ploco
2. Ht Is tvtlllblo dly
Sell educsllm in junler high and high schools 11queaked by
s.
es
•
It with lht most tulttblt
and night to roapand to
·an
the CSII80I'8 only beCause lw'!-to ~·lnstnicllon" wu not part of Sr:. Were Labor Day Weekend
of tho IIYtrll lnsuronct
your ntodl.
companltl he dttll with.
3. Ht hlndiM ell typn·
tbe package. II mainly teacbet tbe HAZARDS of sex, not the· guests of their daudt.ter and
"8"
Many peoplt make the
of lnsurlnct, end dHII
joy of it. (Parenti keep hoping you~ not ready fer that last 110n-ln-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed - costly
mllttko
of
through strong, reliable
Bauer, Marion.
Illuming lhot lnsuronco
componln.
Item yet.)
.
M
· D
._
pollcltt art all tht ume .
To m1k11urt vou liev•
Walt for eoUege, friend ... or find your lnfonnatlon in
rs.
orothy Hec..er, · Tho truth 11 they ort not.
an Independent Insurance
boob at the public lllrary. -HELEN AND SUE
Gallipolis, spent Sunday
Not only does tho quollty
ottnt on · your sldo, look
·•·•ttn
"'·Enn
of covoroge vary from
.
for thll
•r.mbol
or contult
al•---+++
.
""'nM' .,.. g ......, a
policy lo pall~y. but the
y 1
p gn If ht
RAP:
Smith and Mrs. Genevieve
cost often verltl too.
r.~~t ~.l;w \00~. ' nobOdy
Romtmbtr that prlct 11
ctn.
'lbla Ia to lddl who "t nothq but Oak: "If you're bad, Meinhart •
not tht only bests for
tbenyoll'rtallinbr; If you're good, then you're a bore. If you
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
totect)ng your covoflgo.
llieepJOIU'doulb, you'rellln§.lfyou ilve, folb ask fnr more. Lawrence returned Sunday w
''Till lnsuronct Stwe"
U you're .toua, JOU're stuffy; If you act the clown, you're their home In Akron . alter
dumb. D you reach the top you're lucky: If not, you're justa spending several days here
.Reuter.arogan IMUrance Service
bum. ANwer 'No' and you're a c:otm'll; •Y 'Yea' alld lt'a a with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
ZI4E.Miin ·
IIIII. So juSt tsnore the critics and do your beat to wiD." -A Shuster. Mr, Lawrence and
Mrs.
Shuster
are
cousins
.
JmUfER
WINNER"
•

Tates reunite

·oPEN SUNDAYS -

111e alllll&amp;l Tate family Rev. and Mra. Robert anlth,
l'IWllon wu held Sept. $ at Pomeroy; Mr. and Mra.
Lake Hope, Zaleski with Gerald Tate, daushter,
dinner belne lei'Wd at the
at the reunloo
Mr nd u wert
• a
~ •.
Tate ot New Le~ton, and
Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Tale of
Cllllllcotbe, the oldelt family
membera pre~ent, an4
Jeremy Shain Grimm,
l'umeroy, the yOUJ18eat at..

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 14 THRU SEPT. 18

He~.'\:'~charlel Tale

u.·-·1

and 1011, Michael, Olelldrt;
Mr. and Mrs. HCIIIel' Tale
Mr
and Laura, COiumbul;
•
and ' Mrs. Carroll Tale,
Columbill; Mi'. and Mn.
Donald Smith, Tona, Donnie
and Patrick, Columbul: Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Tate, New
~LeJdn&amp;ton; Mr. and NMrs.
11!
Preaent fer the reunion Wallace
Tate,
were Mr. and Mra. Henry Lellngton; Mr. and · Mrs.
GaUasJier, · Mr. and Mrs.' Harlow Tale, Chillicothe;
'lbomu Galla8her and 1011, Mra. ROberta Meyer, Mid·
Tommy, Mr.and Mrs. Dlvld dletown; Mr. . and Mra:
Tale, sons, Mark and Wallace Felty, Tertllll, Cindy
Oou81u, and Mr. and Mrs. and Michael and Mr . . . .
Donald ate, Cleveland; Mrs. Kenneth Lon&amp;alreth,
BeckY Tate, Mr. and Mra. Lanny, Johnnie and Mellsu,
Raymond Smith, Mr. and · La~vllle, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. James Robert Grlnun, Lewll CaOicoat, Gallipolis,
· son, Jeremy Shain, and the
.

.QUMTmES~ RIGtflS RESERVED
Qpen Eves. Til 9:00.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Annual picnic enjoyed· ·
members of the aOttbaU team
· which look the trophy In the
Meigs County church league.
A cake with an Inscription of
COJ18ratulallona was served
with the picnic supper. ·
The Rev. Floyd Shook had
1.
T.
grace. Entertainment wu
;OC. .J.f!!XJ~ '!..
provided by, the Rev. Mr.
L11Shook and Steve EbUn on
VC~C~. In COJ~ge
gut tars and Betty Will on the .
· Jack Jacoba, son of Mr. and ·autoharp. Diane Smith
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs has . ~n!!uci;!&lt;l_ games for . the
returned to the Pikeville children with prizes goins to
College, Pikeville, Ky. for his Tammy Clark, Anita Smith,
second year In mining Tammy Wright, · Penny
engineering.
Clark, and Seari Braley. Mrs.'
A &amp;raduale of Melga High Mary Braley assisted Miss
School, Jacobe completed his Smith.
first Year at the college with a
Aitencllng were the Rev.
3.85 average and was Mr. and Mrs. Shook, their
awarded a scholarship lor son-In-law and daughter, T. J.
this year . .He • serves as and Pam Whitacre; Mr, and
head resident of men's dorms Mrs. Harry Clark, Terry
at the college, and again this Clark, Mrs. Ricky Clark,
year serves as student Mrs. Evelm Spencer, Mr and
government representative. Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, Mrs.
Jacobs, his wife, Jane and Bertha Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
their four-year-old son, Sean, Steve Eblin and Greg, Diane,
reside at Wlck11an Memorial Laura,JohnandAnitaSmith,
HaD on the campus. The Mr.andMI's.JamesGllmore,
family spent their sununer In Ernie Haggy and daughter,
Meigs County.
Pam, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Curlls, lllr. and Mrs. Larry
FIRST CHILD BORN . . Clark, Tanuny, Penny and
WNG BOTI'OM- Mr. and Wendy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Mrs. Archie C. Rose of Rt 1, RObson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
LDng Bottom, are announcing . Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
the birth of their first chUd, a Wright, Mt. and Mrs. Mike
son, Sept 9 at the Holzer Wriglit and children, Mr. and
Medical Center, Gallipolis. · Mrs. Clifford- Jacobs, Betty
The five pound, two ounce Will, Rick Ash, Diana Lewi!l,
infant has been named Tyson Benny Wright, Tom Soulsby,
Eric Rose. Grandparents are BeUnda Friend, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Rose, Ernest Powell, Mrs. Mary
Rt. 1, Long Botlom, and Mr. Braley, Jackie, Tim, Curtis,
and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith, Jamie and Sean.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Greatgrandparents are Archie
Tuttle, Rt. I, Minersville, and
Mrs. IJllle Smith, Rutland.
The amual picnic of the
Sunday School of the Laurel
Cliff Free Metbodlat' Church
was held Saturday evening at
Ferest Acres Park.
Honored at the picnic were

BORDEN'S

k
b.
-k •

Cheese
12 Ol PKG.

TEEN QUEEN

OLEO
3 1-LB. PKGS.

and
'
Children's
by
Thorn MeAn·
&amp;

~
~--~~---·~----------~----~

PICNIC HAMS
•

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK

Angel .Food Cake

Connie

LB.

PARTRIDGE BRAND

heritage house

WIENERS

Mlddlepiirt, o.

legance.in any roonf ·

LB.

FINE FOR OUTDOOR GRILLING

BETSY ROSS-

LARGE RING

12 OZ. PKG.

RED MALAGA OR THOMPSON WHITE
NEW·FROM HUNT-WESSON

Seedless Grapes

Prima Salsa
Spaghetti
Sauce

'"rt.""

"f"N'T

EVANS SMOKED

$

oney

-~
~

pu11u111d ptoem chtHe looel

Slices

~ Men's, Wamens

BIRm ANNOUNCED
CARPENTER - Ml'. and
Mrs. Bruce (Kim Ellls)
Perry of riear Vales Mill are
announcing the birth of a 80n,
&lt;llrlslopher Alan, on Sept. I
, at O'Bleness Memorial · ·
Ho!lpital In Athens. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ellis, local, and Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Perry,
Union Ridge Road; greatgrandmothers are Zelia
Perry, local, and Allee Ellis,
RD, Albany.

amencan
suigle shces

•

How to Get
the Bes Insurance
· Buy for

w
'
t

9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

FINil UPHQLBTEREil FURN!TllHE

A perfect a(wu to any decor is this
1\oinged Chippendale chair available
with a tailored kick pleat or provincial
wood base. ·Choose from Flexsteel's
vast fabric collection of prints, velvets,
and solids.

BAKER FURNITURE
992-3307

Sweet Potatoes or Yams

·,

FLEXSTEEL FEATURES:
• Solid kiln-dried oak frames.
• Long lasting springs made from the lin·
est blue steeL
• A· collection of over 1,000 carefully selected fabrics. Most are treated for soli
and stain resistance.

NEW, WHITE

TRIAL OFFER
15lh OZ. JAR

FLEXSTEEL

3 LB•

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.

•

( 1\UPrJN

GENERAL MILLS

MAXWELL HOUSE

COCOA PUFFS

COFFEE

NO. 705 .
BOZ. BOX

49e

W/C

NO. 205
2LB. CAN ·
AU GRINDS

$379

j

CClUPIJ~

..

~

GRAVY TRAIN

SCOniES

DOG.FOOD
NO. 505
W/C

25 LB. BAG

$489

W/C

FACIAL TISSUES
No.so5
2CO CT. PKG.

e
2189
.

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Twin City Galeway

Twin City Gateway

Twin City Gateway

TWin City Galeway

W/C

�Social
Calendar
·J

I '

MEMBERsHIP DRIVE UNDERWAY -The 111'11-77 membership drive of the Trl•
County Cmununlty Concert Allloclation officially got underway Monday evenin8 with a
buffet dinner at the Rio Grande College cafeteria. Pictured from the left are Carolyn
Htppensteel,membenhlpdrlvechalrinan;FaySauer,amemberoftbeboardwboaccepted
Nancy Reed's award for eelllng the most memberships in Meigs County durin&amp; the 197~76
campaign; Jane Ann Denney with Nelle ~w's award for most memberships sold in
GaDia County: Clan l.Dchary, honorary drive chairman: Rachel Warner, accepting
WlOiam Dum 'a award b most Jackson CoWlty memberships and mlllrt memberships sold
ti
overall, and Betty Miles, .community concert and represent&amp; ve.
•
•
·.

CLARA LOCHARY of
Poineroy was recognked
as honorary drive chairman lor the 1971-77
membership campaign of
the Tri-County Community
Concert Association

Monday evenlag. Mra.
LOchary received • speclll
award at a dinner of the
conrerhssoclaUoaheldat
the .Rio Grande College
cafeteria.

TUESDAY
omo ETA Pm Cllapter of..
........... u
Bela Sigma Phi • _,.,
7: 30 p.m. Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
home ot MtsSusl. AIIMlllce ~ha
110n. Mr~.
e
er"' ve
educational program on
potted plants; program by
Mrs. Nancy Collins on how to
dry plants and flowers .
Arrangement fer the month
will be "Aulumn's Hannony"
Uling fall floWers. .
EASTERN BAND. Boost·
ers, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in band room. All parents of
band members asked to
attend.
PAST MASTER'S night to
be observed when Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363 meet&amp; at
7, 30 p.m. Tuesday; all
Master Masons invited. ·
MEIGS HIGH Band
members practice Tuesday
at 6 p.m. at hlgb school
PTOTuesday,

Grou makes pla-ns pa~~~SE
concert assoczatzon
rp .
~=~!'r:~sc:;~ffi~~Communtt1'
'J
-kicks off membership drive !~':.:!..~~!~!.:.:::!:, ...... i~f~~a
WEDNESDAY

were discussed at the Friday
at a cost of $10, adult; $5 night meeting of the Happy
students and senior citizens Harvesters Class of Triliity
Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. Donald (over 60); $30 family.
Church.
Hippensteel, Ellen Leftwich,
'
Miss Erma Smith opened
Penny Moore, William
Fot inlorination; contact with prayer. Projects
Menshouse, Dorothy Hartley, the me111bershlp
Zelma Northcutt, Dr. and headquarters located at the planned were continuation of
the sale of greeting cards,
Mrs. Evan Roderick, Katie Gallipolis Chamber of and
the sale of vanilla .
Sprow, Mr. and Mrs. Kimball Commerce office, 16 State
Devotions
were given by Mrs.
(Red) Suiter, Gailla; Rachel St., Gallipolis or phone 446:
Carrie Neulzling who talked
Warner, Mary Swalley, 2200.
on the life of the Biblical
Sharon
Jones,
Julina
Luhrman, Jackson ; Sue " Members in the Tri-County women, Ruth and Naomi. She
Brady, Diana Cheng, Jane Community · Concert concluded with prayer and
Coles, Mason; Mra. Harold AssociaUon are also entitled the hymn, "Bringing in the
Sauer, Sibley Slack, Joan w attend concerts in other Sheaves."
Miss Smith reported on the
Wolfe, Meigs.
area community concert reception following the
This year's concert series associations.
offers baritone Theodor
The family of Dr. Merlyn
Uppman, Oct. 9; The New Ross and special guest, Greg
York BrB!ISQuintet, March 16 Bane, presented a program of
and
pianist
Thomas vocal selections for tbe
Schwnacher, April 22. All evening 's entertainment, and
concerts are at the Gallla Rev. Hughes Price gave the
Academy High School invocatioo. Caroiyn Roderick
auditorium in Gallipolis. is president of the local
Memberships are available association.
A surprise birthday party
~&gt;.~~r~·-~:~:f::&gt;l.:~allllllli&amp;'lll!l:e!llle"!81'"6!81ZIIIIWioll.,ll:mll-llllo-oll!ue.~:.:~~
.~~~
was held Thursday by the
~;!
Laurel Cliff Better Health
~:;
Club honoring Mrs . ...Nellie
~
Tracy at her home.
S:
Gifts and cards were
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~
presented to Mrs. Tracy by
:
Mrs. Doria Shook, Mra. Iva
Wlllted: TeeDBill ol Rlghta .
Powell, Mrs. Cannan Evans,
RAP:
Mrs. Bertha Parker, Mrs.
There has been a IQI in the ll'lper!l about mandatcry Georgia Diehl, Mrs. Ruby
retlmnent..age a~ how olclt;r people resent It
Frick, Mrs. ·polly Eichinger,
How about discrimination do!fl the Une where we· Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs.
teenagers Hve? If you're under 18, most worthwblle jobs ~ Mildred . Bowen, Mrs. Ann
cbed to you. If you're under 16, forget it! All you're. good•for 11 Mash, Mrs. Della Curtis,
baby..tttlngat75centsanhour(lfyou'relucky),neigbborbood Mrs. Katie Parker, Mrs.
yard work, or belnC an unpaid "giHer" er envelope atuffer in a Linda Pullins, Robin Camppolitical catnpalgn.
bell. Sending gilts were Mary
I'm
and strong.. 1 wanted _to get on a summer Braley aild Mr r• and Mri~
Cllllllructioo crew. No dice: the wuoo and the insurance Dick Karr. She was presented
ampany don't allow "juveniles" in dangerous occupaliOIIB. I a decorated cake inscribed
could have put out mere and better wcrk than 110111e of the "Happy Birthday, Nellie."
ICI'IIWRy gnya they hired.
Mrs. Shook led the group in
They throw "clild labor laws" at us, but these were made
prayer and readings at the
for sweat shops wben ~oung childrt!n were forced into loog meeting included "Birthdays
hours umer slave conditiOIIB. That time II past.
Nowdays, by keeping teens from work because of ~ir ~a a Gift From God'' by Mrs.
"Room in the Pew" by
AGE aklrle, they're sayins, "Hey, ldd, you're good for nothing Mash;
Mrs. Eichinger; "The
-get lollt." And if ~uleel worthless, you're liable to end up In Coming ' of the Master" by
trouble.
'
Mrs. Tracy who also gave
Why can't we be hired fer what we can do, not for how
many years we've lived? Why does "Age" have to appear oo
application blanks? -FOR CHANGING THE LAW

Mrs. Clara l.Dchary was more than $100 were Dr. and
recognized as honorary drive Mrs. Donald Thaler, Dorothy
chairman · when the TriCounty Cmununlty Concert
AIIOCia lion held Its annual
membenhlp campaign kick·
off dinner Monday evening at
the Rio Grande College
cafeteria.
Mn. Lochary, a resident of

Hilh St., Pomeroy, has been
an active member of the
community
concert
uaoclalloo board since its
beginning 29 years ago. She
IllS participated in all 29
drives for .members and in
the selectioo ol arlillts.
A nalive of Amesville in
Athens County, Mrs. Lochary
graduated from
Ohio
· University in 1919 in public
school music, She blught her
· first two years in the
PCIIIel'oy sChool, two years in
· .Ameavllle where she
eatabllabed the music
depailuett and then two
. y-. in • county supervisory
JIOIIIIm in NCJble County. She
married Patrick Lochary of
PCIIIel'oy in IIIZiand returned
to Meigs County where abe
la1J8bt millie for several
yem traveUnc from school
to scboolin the county. Since
ber retirement from public
school teaching, she has
ta1J8bt private plano.
She waa · a longtime
member of the Pomeroy
Mualc Club (no longer in
ulllence) served on the
Melaa County Board of
: American Cancer Society
and 11 an active member
the Grace Epllcopal Church
· In Pomeroy where her
positions have included
S nd
h 1 te . h
of ~
Church women and the
Diocesan Board of Chriatian
Educalloo
• She 11 ~active member of
111e Meigs County Hlatorical
and PkiiRer Society and waa
involved In the tabllahment
of the Mel ~ She Ia
oo the~ of Manaiernent

'

Surprise party fetes
Mrs. Nellie Tr4cy

Generation .Rap

oi .

' r:oce:n :.:;

of Senior aUzena, and a
volunteer In the Retired
~er Volunteer Program.
Bile has two children, Charles
of neu. Chlcaso and James,
Glenc Halven, NH.Jl.
t
aro yn
ppens ee 1,
membenhlp drive chairman,
Mrs. Lochary with
1 sped•.
Approsimately ~ persons ·
1llended Monday s buffet
dinner which honored the
· caplabll and workers in the
-•claUon 'a current drive.
Renewal of old memberships
wuconducted laat week, and
new membera are being
IOUBllt tbla week. The
uaodallm lncludel Gallla,
Melp, Mason and Jackson

...-te:taw.ro.

COUI!IIa.
. .
· Nn. Rlppenateel also
~led IPtCial •warda to

·a-

pinona who sold the

: moat memberlhlpa in the
lfn.'lt campatgn. Persons
who aolcl the moat In lileir
coimty Included Nelle Sl)aw,
QaUia County; Lucille·
llnckJ!tmer, Milan; Nancy
llled, Melp, W1lllam Dum,
Jacbon. Dunn waa also
~ fnr aelllnt! the
moat overlll. Olbel'll who sold

Cli.tJB TO MDT
IYRACUIE - 'nle ndrd
w.-sldaJ Homemakers
· Clall t1 llert will meet
W Ill J »• llpt. II, al 10
.&amp; II tilt Municipal
~.,. trlaa poiJtater

...... "t

served . by the class. Mrs. Thelma White and Mary Kay
Marie Hauck and Mrs . Holter will be the hostesses.
Gertrude Bass were guests at Each member is asked to
the meeting.
take a small gift for games.
Mrs. Stella Kloes was
PAST PRESIDENTS,
named to have devotions at American Legion Auxiliary,
the October meeting with Drew Webs.ter Post 39, · 7:30
Mrs. WJlrna Terrell and Mrs. p.m. Wednesday at the home
Neva Seyfried to be the of Mrs. HBJTy Davis, Spring
hostesses.
·· Ave.
Games were played with
GIRL SCOUT Service Unit
prizes going lo Mrs. Ada meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
Holter, Mrs. · Genevieve nesday, Columbus and
Meinhart, Mrs. Rose Ginther Southern Ohio Electric Co.
and Mrs. Ella anlth. Mrs. office.
THURSDAY
Eva.Dessauer and Mrs. Lillie
Hauck served a dessert
MAGNOLIA CLUB, Thurs·
course from a table day, 7:30p.m. at the home of
decorated in the fall motif. Miss Ema Jesse.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation League, 7:30
Thursday at the KingsburY
Mobile Home lot for a tour of
Modern Chemical Plant.
Following the wur members
will go lo the Colwnbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
fuf a meeting.
"SetlilnC the ArgwDent" and
GRACE EPISCOPAL
"His Best Prayer."
Churchwomen, 12:30 ThursThe club aclplowledsed a day for a sack luncheon at the
card and check from Miss Pariah House.
Marion Ebershach on behalf
REPUBUCAN WOMEN'S
of Lydia Eb!!rsbach for use of aub, picnic at the Rock
some hospital equipment. Springs Grange Hall, ThursCards were also read from day, 6 p.m. Brine covered
Mrs. Curtis, Mrs. Eichinger dish and table service.
and Mrs. Powell for
REPL'BUCAN. WOMEN'S
remembrances and assistaub
picnic Thursday' 8 p.m.
ance.
at Rock Springs Grange Hall.
:?.::~::::::::?.~::~§.:?.~?.:;~s?.:-.:::~:~:::-.::~?...:&gt;.:~;t:::&amp;: Bring covered dish and table
REIIEARSAL SET
service. Everyone welcome.
'l1le Voices of Uberty
FRIDAY
Chon•· will have 1
PAST
MATRONS,
rebe&amp;nai Monday at 7:311
at llle Pomeroy United Evangeline Chapter, O.E.S.
Metbodlll Church lor the 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Willis Anthony.
cemmtlllity Tha•ki&amp;JVblg
SUNDAY
mn•lcal procnm.
ANNUAL
HOMECOMING
Mn. June Vu Vranken,
of
the
Alfred
United
dlrectDr, report&amp; there are
Methodl.st
Church,
Sunday,
opea!Ag1 Ill tile cbonll allll
penons wutiDg tAl •IDI with Sunday school, 9:30
wllll the group may ceatact a.m.: worllhlp service, 10:45
her lor IDformaUoa. Slle a.m.: basket dinner all2:30;
e:rtended appreciation to afternoon program, I :30 p.m.
the lndlvl -t luah, Rev. Blshman and members
organlzatlou and of the Rivers of Ufe Ministry
huslne11e1 who have to be present
COUNTY PRAYER
contributed tAl the groap.
All eoatribatloaa wDI 10 meeting, SUnday, 2 p.m. at
toward u:pe111e1 of the Rutland Community
providing ma•lc and Church with Glen Blasell,
leader.
lnpplles.

00

':4

-:.:y~ts a1110 want those anilquated clild labor laws

r~·1

changed The ea11ze that smart ambitious young ~le are
being w~..J rln ''kiddie" jobs', and they're knocking m
Cmgresslonal doors f&lt;r updated legtslation.
Mt. and Mri, Archie C. :::::::$:=~$~;:-;-;::::-o;~:::::::-;:.-.:::~:~~~~~z.wh
Why dol)'t you, too, write your Congressman or woman? Rose and Infant son, .Tyson
Eric, are spending the" week ...,....,.....,......,.., .... ...,..wr,..._. • ZIUP
, ,. Anencourageyourfrlendstojoinyou.-HELEN
.
·
+++ ·
with Mrs. ROse's parents, Mr.
.Simple facts everyone. who
NOTE FROM SUE: But apect opposition from those adults and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith,
owns a home, car or business should know
who don't want teens bornin8 In on THEm jobs. With Pomeroy.
unemployment levels still way up there, a lot of people won't
Mrs. Sandy Darst and
be anxious to allow full werk privileges for under-llktr-lS. children of Hilliard spent the
(Or over4 year-olds either for that matter )
weekend here with her . '
t
year-o11111 ·
+++ •
·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
y·
·M
.
A compony•1 roputotlon
DEAR TEAM:
Gilmore. ·
OUf
lor t~r•lco ond clolma
Dl
In ,I Thebestwoytogototruo
payment
II crltlcol.
·
Since granunar achool, we've been told at school !low the
ana Lewis iS ·•-'tin
''"' g
AndllyOUhiYtiCIIIm,
sperm meeta the egg, how the fetus develops, fact. oo Pikeville, Ky. with Mr. and
bergetn on lnturancels to
y,our lndopondont agent 11
lor II. But thoro oro
n. 1 POSition 10
mensttuatioo, venera! dlsea~e, all those duD lhin8l everybody Mrs · Jack Jacobs and Sean · !shop
more then ·tr.rtt thousand
you. To bt on your a 1 In
knows.
Mrs. Jacobs and Sean had
com Pin Its lOlling In ,11tlplng you obtoln 1 lull,
suronce pollclu to
equlllb • tottltmtnt
I believe 'mOll older teens are cmcerned with·such Copies . spent Friday and Saturday
~prot•cl homn, cors end
Promptly.
.
1
as smJal feelings, mastiU'batioo, sex myths and illusions, the ,..,re
th re aUves.
· buslnnus, end 11 Isn't
8tcou11 ht 11 • lllf"joyofBU,"interco-,etc. After Ill, we're nearly adult and
Mr. and Mrs. William
proctlcal for you to check
employed local buslnn•
ooch
end
evorYt
one.
.
·
J
bs
d
ndso
Bobb
have adUlt reactlonl, and many limes, adult relationships. aco an gra
n,
Y
r•ot'l
w•y
t's • gOOd
man, on ln•opon•tnt
u
u
•
"
"
IIi tnt _ knows ~
h 11
'lbese are ~cs not dJJcusaed at bcime.
Archer of Columbus were
Ideo to consult . an In·
rosponslblll~ 11 · to hll
•· 0 f Mr
d
dependent lnturanco
cuttomo- Is 1u~cnl 11
WhY don't Jd&amp;b achool teach the ldnd 11.111!1 education we weeken d gues..,
egont. An Independent
bosod ~~· sorvl~g h·l,
• an
reeDY want to bear? - MAD AT SCHOOL SEX PROGRAMS Mrs, Pearl Jacobs.
ogont .don not work for
cullomers In thUt koy
Sunday guests of the Rev.
on lnturonce compt~y.
ortts:
,
.
DEAR MAD:
.
.
.
Cecil
He works lor you. Wnlch
1. Ht provldn tho bnt
..• And have half-maybe thrte'fourtha- of the community and "mos.
Wile were Mr.
muns ht ctn pltn tho
lnturonco coverage attht
acresnllng for the school admlnlatration's combined scalp?
and Mrs. Phil Wile, Beverly.
covoritgo lhtt protect•
lowest true cost .Ia you.
Mt d Mt Chari Karr
you· best. And then ploco
2. Ht Is tvtlllblo dly
Sell educsllm in junler high and high schools 11queaked by
s.
es
•
It with lht most tulttblt
and night to roapand to
·an
the CSII80I'8 only beCause lw'!-to ~·lnstnicllon" wu not part of Sr:. Were Labor Day Weekend
of tho IIYtrll lnsuronct
your ntodl.
companltl he dttll with.
3. Ht hlndiM ell typn·
tbe package. II mainly teacbet tbe HAZARDS of sex, not the· guests of their daudt.ter and
"8"
Many peoplt make the
of lnsurlnct, end dHII
joy of it. (Parenti keep hoping you~ not ready fer that last 110n-ln-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed - costly
mllttko
of
through strong, reliable
Bauer, Marion.
Illuming lhot lnsuronco
componln.
Item yet.)
.
M
· D
._
pollcltt art all tht ume .
To m1k11urt vou liev•
Walt for eoUege, friend ... or find your lnfonnatlon in
rs.
orothy Hec..er, · Tho truth 11 they ort not.
an Independent Insurance
boob at the public lllrary. -HELEN AND SUE
Gallipolis, spent Sunday
Not only does tho quollty
ottnt on · your sldo, look
·•·•ttn
"'·Enn
of covoroge vary from
.
for thll
•r.mbol
or contult
al•---+++
.
""'nM' .,.. g ......, a
policy lo pall~y. but the
y 1
p gn If ht
RAP:
Smith and Mrs. Genevieve
cost often verltl too.
r.~~t ~.l;w \00~. ' nobOdy
Romtmbtr that prlct 11
ctn.
'lbla Ia to lddl who "t nothq but Oak: "If you're bad, Meinhart •
not tht only bests for
tbenyoll'rtallinbr; If you're good, then you're a bore. If you
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
totect)ng your covoflgo.
llieepJOIU'doulb, you'rellln§.lfyou ilve, folb ask fnr more. Lawrence returned Sunday w
''Till lnsuronct Stwe"
U you're .toua, JOU're stuffy; If you act the clown, you're their home In Akron . alter
dumb. D you reach the top you're lucky: If not, you're justa spending several days here
.Reuter.arogan IMUrance Service
bum. ANwer 'No' and you're a c:otm'll; •Y 'Yea' alld lt'a a with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
ZI4E.Miin ·
IIIII. So juSt tsnore the critics and do your beat to wiD." -A Shuster. Mr, Lawrence and
Mrs.
Shuster
are
cousins
.
JmUfER
WINNER"
•

Tates reunite

·oPEN SUNDAYS -

111e alllll&amp;l Tate family Rev. and Mra. Robert anlth,
l'IWllon wu held Sept. $ at Pomeroy; Mr. and Mra.
Lake Hope, Zaleski with Gerald Tate, daushter,
dinner belne lei'Wd at the
at the reunloo
Mr nd u wert
• a
~ •.
Tate ot New Le~ton, and
Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Tale of
Cllllllcotbe, the oldelt family
membera pre~ent, an4
Jeremy Shain Grimm,
l'umeroy, the yOUJ18eat at..

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 14 THRU SEPT. 18

He~.'\:'~charlel Tale

u.·-·1

and 1011, Michael, Olelldrt;
Mr. and Mrs. HCIIIel' Tale
Mr
and Laura, COiumbul;
•
and ' Mrs. Carroll Tale,
Columbill; Mi'. and Mn.
Donald Smith, Tona, Donnie
and Patrick, Columbul: Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Tate, New
~LeJdn&amp;ton; Mr. and NMrs.
11!
Preaent fer the reunion Wallace
Tate,
were Mr. and Mra. Henry Lellngton; Mr. and · Mrs.
GaUasJier, · Mr. and Mrs.' Harlow Tale, Chillicothe;
'lbomu Galla8her and 1011, Mra. ROberta Meyer, Mid·
Tommy, Mr.and Mrs. Dlvld dletown; Mr. . and Mra:
Tale, sons, Mark and Wallace Felty, Tertllll, Cindy
Oou81u, and Mr. and Mrs. and Michael and Mr . . . .
Donald ate, Cleveland; Mrs. Kenneth Lon&amp;alreth,
BeckY Tate, Mr. and Mra. Lanny, Johnnie and Mellsu,
Raymond Smith, Mr. and · La~vllle, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. James Robert Grlnun, Lewll CaOicoat, Gallipolis,
· son, Jeremy Shain, and the
.

.QUMTmES~ RIGtflS RESERVED
Qpen Eves. Til 9:00.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

Annual picnic enjoyed· ·
members of the aOttbaU team
· which look the trophy In the
Meigs County church league.
A cake with an Inscription of
COJ18ratulallona was served
with the picnic supper. ·
The Rev. Floyd Shook had
1.
T.
grace. Entertainment wu
;OC. .J.f!!XJ~ '!..
provided by, the Rev. Mr.
L11Shook and Steve EbUn on
VC~C~. In COJ~ge
gut tars and Betty Will on the .
· Jack Jacoba, son of Mr. and ·autoharp. Diane Smith
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs has . ~n!!uci;!&lt;l_ games for . the
returned to the Pikeville children with prizes goins to
College, Pikeville, Ky. for his Tammy Clark, Anita Smith,
second year In mining Tammy Wright, · Penny
engineering.
Clark, and Seari Braley. Mrs.'
A &amp;raduale of Melga High Mary Braley assisted Miss
School, Jacobe completed his Smith.
first Year at the college with a
Aitencllng were the Rev.
3.85 average and was Mr. and Mrs. Shook, their
awarded a scholarship lor son-In-law and daughter, T. J.
this year . .He • serves as and Pam Whitacre; Mr, and
head resident of men's dorms Mrs. Harry Clark, Terry
at the college, and again this Clark, Mrs. Ricky Clark,
year serves as student Mrs. Evelm Spencer, Mr and
government representative. Mrs. Pearl Jacobs, Mrs.
Jacobs, his wife, Jane and Bertha Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
their four-year-old son, Sean, Steve Eblin and Greg, Diane,
reside at Wlck11an Memorial Laura,JohnandAnitaSmith,
HaD on the campus. The Mr.andMI's.JamesGllmore,
family spent their sununer In Ernie Haggy and daughter,
Meigs County.
Pam, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Curlls, lllr. and Mrs. Larry
FIRST CHILD BORN . . Clark, Tanuny, Penny and
WNG BOTI'OM- Mr. and Wendy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Mrs. Archie C. Rose of Rt 1, RObson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
LDng Bottom, are announcing . Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. lloyd
the birth of their first chUd, a Wright, Mt. and Mrs. Mike
son, Sept 9 at the Holzer Wriglit and children, Mr. and
Medical Center, Gallipolis. · Mrs. Clifford- Jacobs, Betty
The five pound, two ounce Will, Rick Ash, Diana Lewi!l,
infant has been named Tyson Benny Wright, Tom Soulsby,
Eric Rose. Grandparents are BeUnda Friend, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Rose, Ernest Powell, Mrs. Mary
Rt. 1, Long Botlom, and Mr. Braley, Jackie, Tim, Curtis,
and Mrs. Raymond J. Smith, Jamie and Sean.
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Greatgrandparents are Archie
Tuttle, Rt. I, Minersville, and
Mrs. IJllle Smith, Rutland.
The amual picnic of the
Sunday School of the Laurel
Cliff Free Metbodlat' Church
was held Saturday evening at
Ferest Acres Park.
Honored at the picnic were

BORDEN'S

k
b.
-k •

Cheese
12 Ol PKG.

TEEN QUEEN

OLEO
3 1-LB. PKGS.

and
'
Children's
by
Thorn MeAn·
&amp;

~
~--~~---·~----------~----~

PICNIC HAMS
•

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK

Angel .Food Cake

Connie

LB.

PARTRIDGE BRAND

heritage house

WIENERS

Mlddlepiirt, o.

legance.in any roonf ·

LB.

FINE FOR OUTDOOR GRILLING

BETSY ROSS-

LARGE RING

12 OZ. PKG.

RED MALAGA OR THOMPSON WHITE
NEW·FROM HUNT-WESSON

Seedless Grapes

Prima Salsa
Spaghetti
Sauce

'"rt.""

"f"N'T

EVANS SMOKED

$

oney

-~
~

pu11u111d ptoem chtHe looel

Slices

~ Men's, Wamens

BIRm ANNOUNCED
CARPENTER - Ml'. and
Mrs. Bruce (Kim Ellls)
Perry of riear Vales Mill are
announcing the birth of a 80n,
&lt;llrlslopher Alan, on Sept. I
, at O'Bleness Memorial · ·
Ho!lpital In Athens. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Ellis, local, and Mr.
and Mrs. Delbert Perry,
Union Ridge Road; greatgrandmothers are Zelia
Perry, local, and Allee Ellis,
RD, Albany.

amencan
suigle shces

•

How to Get
the Bes Insurance
· Buy for

w
'
t

9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

FINil UPHQLBTEREil FURN!TllHE

A perfect a(wu to any decor is this
1\oinged Chippendale chair available
with a tailored kick pleat or provincial
wood base. ·Choose from Flexsteel's
vast fabric collection of prints, velvets,
and solids.

BAKER FURNITURE
992-3307

Sweet Potatoes or Yams

·,

FLEXSTEEL FEATURES:
• Solid kiln-dried oak frames.
• Long lasting springs made from the lin·
est blue steeL
• A· collection of over 1,000 carefully selected fabrics. Most are treated for soli
and stain resistance.

NEW, WHITE

TRIAL OFFER
15lh OZ. JAR

FLEXSTEEL

3 LB•

LB.

.

•

( 1\UPrJN

GENERAL MILLS

MAXWELL HOUSE

COCOA PUFFS

COFFEE

NO. 705 .
BOZ. BOX

49e

W/C

NO. 205
2LB. CAN ·
AU GRINDS

$379

j

CClUPIJ~

..

~

GRAVY TRAIN

SCOniES

DOG.FOOD
NO. 505
W/C

25 LB. BAG

$489

W/C

FACIAL TISSUES
No.so5
2CO CT. PKG.

e
2189
.

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Offer Expires 9-18-76

Twin City Galeway

Twin City Gateway

Twin City Gateway

TWin City Galeway

W/C

�.

Television log for ·easy. viewing

MISSILE' WITH ITS
..ANDS AND c;ROOVE'S
~L.L

NEXT BE iXAAVNED

UNDEr. THE COI'AA'IRISON

MICROSCOPE WITH THE'

DEATH

1976 AMC HORNET
$3995
Sportabout, 6 cyl. , automatic: power steerlog, delu xe
equipment, whllewall tires, luggage rack, dark green
finish, less than 9.000 miles, ·showroom clean .
.

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Truss Rifler Co.

tilt wheel , power window s. nice, n ice.
CONN trumpet us.ed 2 months

SIQO.OO. Phon• 7~2· 3092.
SELDON Rest Ceramlct, Tuppers WOULD LIKE to buy jnp top. ·Con·

vas or hardtop. Coll742·2!)38.
opening, Sept. 13.
Classes Mondav 7 to 10, WANTE'D to buy used piano,
Tutldoy, 9 to 12- 1 to 4- 7 to
reasonably pric.d, preferably
10; Thursday I to J.-i lo-..101
an upright. Phone 9'92·3-421
discount to Stnlor Cltlzens . Coli
after 6p.m.
667-2252 for clan r•st rvatlons .

1974 DATSUN
210 2 door , local ca r, ~ speed trans., 44,200
tires. dark green llnlsh, reel economy.

.." "....

Solltheastem Ohio

1974 CHEY . MONTE CARLO
$4195
Lonclau, local owner, blk., blk. vinyl lop, blk. bucket
swivel seats, radiO &amp; tope, air , P. steering and brak es,
$2295
mll~s. good

All Yard Sales , Rummag e,
Porch and Basem en t Porch
end Basement Sales , etc.
must be pa1d In ~dva11 ce ,

Get vours In early by
stopp ing by our Office at
The

Dall y

Sentln'el,

Ill

Court St. or wrlfino Bo "'

729, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
with your re m ittan ce .

AstroGrapM
Por

Bemice Beet. Osol
hpl.15, 1t7t

w_,,

ARIEl (Mirch 21·Apttl 11)
You won't be satisfied unlaas
you have a lot of Irons In the

hove a gu~ shoot next Saturday

broaden your financial bale 10·
day. There Ia more than one

way lo tauon your bank oc·

742-2796.

$500 REWARD · for Information
·leQdlng to the arrest of the pei son or perl ont wtyo took the
aluminum siding off the Alb.rt

949·2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8-9-76 1 month

~83

S. Miller Ave.,
Columbu~·. Ohio. Plea1e get In
touch with the Meigs County

for vocation •. "(t• ore open
again wlth our, u•ut:d good
quality knlfl ~md low. prices.
Hours Monday thru Fridoy 9
a .m. ro 7 p.m. Clo1ed Satur·
doys. Carolina Fobr)cs on Rt , 7,
one half mile north of Cihnter,
Ohio . Henry and Mary Hunters .

1973 CHEVELLE SS. silver with
block vinyl in ter ior . VB
au tomatic, PS, PI, Swivel
' buck•t seats, Rally ' wheel5,

or

33.000 ·actual miles . $2400.00.
Phon• 992·2280.

Howard Coldwell form. Signed,
Howard Caldw,ll.

GIMINI (MI9 21..J- 20) Thll

COUNTRY lormlcond with soclud·

should be a run day for you, but

· eel woods, wat•r and good DC ·
cess in MQnroe County, W. Va .
$1 ,000 down . coli (300) n2·

_.

lOST In Mld&lt;ll•port, brown, ,.;ole
4 mos. old &lt;;.rmon Shepherd.

3102or (300) m

i1 very sick ond under doctor's
car•· If found pleo1e call 992·

CANNING tomatoe&amp; ond 1weet
' P•Fpers . Cleland Fo rm1 .
Geraldine Cleland. Rocine,
Ohio.
-

c01h lnv.. tment, no delivery or

AKC Springer Spani8ls, liv•r ond
white, one male, one female ,
$85~ .

Phon•992·7897.

sy1tem, neor langn·ille and

blind hem , MWI on knits,
$48.00 cath. Also Singer Touch

owning. Phone 992-2514.

STARCRAFT. hot tho fall price In ·
ond S.w. llk• n-. $31 .00 cosh. COUNTRY STORE with or without
WILL DO Odd jobs, rooting, poln·
1tock. gosoline tank, living
create. All 1976 models reducCAPRICORN (Dtc. lt..J111.
Phone992·7187.
ling, hauling, tr" work. and
quarter1 , recreation room, nice
ed io bottom. 1977 mini-motor
11) Thla could be s .red·letlar
mowing. Phone.992·71119.
garden, dow to river and 1tote
trailers and fold-downs In PIGS for sol•. Phone 949-2857.
diy lor your ceroer. II you
park, by two atote highway,,
stodt. We tell 1ervlce and
suspect opportunity Is knock·
quality. We trade, financing or·
phon• 985·3306.
lng. answer the door. II could
ronatd , Open Sundays . Camp
.S~LE
APPROXIMATELY 30 ocr eo with 6
have a far-reaching etlect.
Conley: Starcralt Salft, Rt . 62,
One good uud Gibson
room house and bath, dug well ,
N.
Pt,
Pleo1ont,
W.
Va.
AQUARIUS (~an. 10-Pab. 11)
coppertono lltle-by-slde and 2 outbuildings, fenced and
Concentrate on lrlvolous sub·
mineral rights, $19,000. Coli
Mike us an olltr.
· jocts todoy. Your mind will not
742·2766.
Good
used
G.e:
be attuned lo heavler'toplcs:
.relrigerotor.
5200
Have run. Don' flghlll.
FUIINISHEO, 2 blllrm. oportmont ,
One good u!ltd Home lito EZ
PIICII (l'ell. 20·MIIrch :10) .
oduiiJ only, In Middleport .
Chain Sow
SIOO
It's up to you to look oul for loY·'
Phon• 992·387•.
Ill ones ioday. You could gain . . .. ··One g~ used Homelllt
. .- . ..
S AND 4 RM. furnl1hed and un lor them whet they cOUldn't . ' .. .
Super XL Choln Sow• . S200
furnished opll. Phone· 992·
roollu them..._.
s.t34 . .
.
OLD furniture, ke boxes, bra••
bills, wall telophonn and COUNTRY Mobile Hom• Pork , At ,
ports, or compiH household1. ·
33, twn mlln north of Pomeroy .
41C11 W,
Mtr.
Wflte M. D. Mlll•r, Rt. 4,
.
large lots with ~oncrete patios,
Pom•roy, Ohio , Call '192-7760.
1ldewalk1, runnen and off
CASH pold for all mokn ond
lt,-.et parking. Phone992·7479. 3·5 and 10
I ton• jar• at the
...,..,., 1171
modelo of mobile hom01, ONE bedroom apartment• at
Oddt
an
End1
Shop. Phone
Build upon lo~ndaUons you've
Phone area·code 614-423-9531 .
VILLAGE
MANOR
In
Mlddl•poit
992·6173.
alrotdY llrmly llllbllahlll this
for $lOA monthly plua alec . or
year. Put your lrull In IIIII
$130 Including olec:trlc. LOWER C. 8. Radios lor sole. Lolor•"•
which "you know to be solid,
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
625 with Rooa King power mih
and prosperity lin ahead.
Convenient to eflopping on
$125.00: Lofayette 23 channel ,
Third and Mill StrHts In Mid·
5 wotl wolkoy·lalkoy wlthACC
LISTED
$100.QO: Johnson 130 Mobile
d loport. Brand new high ,quail·
C.l . phone $lOO.OO: 3 mobile
Middleport, a vary nice
ty aportmenfl . See the
lot
rnonov•r at Apt. 16, or coli
ontennos; Demeo 50 watt
corner
, 8 room frame, s
- n•
mobllo Lenior ond Pr....,p
bedrooms, bath, dlnlnn
~·· .1.
SIQO.IJO·, portable 4 channel
room , some carpeting,•
· AVAILA8LE ol Rlvtrsldo Apori·
pollee ocanner, $~ .00: ol)
Newly painted,
ments, 1 bedroom aportguoi'Onteed. Call '192·2635 osk
to sell. .
''
lor '\N" alt•r 6 p.m. 992·3078
menll, $100 ptor mi&gt;nth; 2
CAU.
utn cuh
blllroom oportm.,to, $133 per
or«6·2745.
LISTED- Pomeroy,
to shop, lots of tile and
On.
lh
I
I
II
Pho
for
mon3273
·
prct or D •
nt LIKE' NEW Gibson GrobL-r
992
- ••-·
pantllng, 3 bedrooms,
·
·
trlc boN guitar, floating Mod,
bath 1
NG
992-2181
• •-~
tt II
I
I
I
•
I
' S or age,
heat,
shDJPiAI spnu
.. _,room
a er, r110 n ce,
new 1tr ngt, n1ce co••· toto
utility
room, . . other
adults 0 nly. Phone 992·3324.
cost new $500.00. Firm selling
features. Priced tor quick

-

.l ;i

'VBirthday

WE NEED
EAR CORN.

US TODAY.

5 room furnlahed apt. for rent,
closo to Pow•ll's Suptor , Volu.

I' - - • - - -.---- - -';.

•

CHIP'WOOD
Poles •+M"' llilmeCer lt laches
,..rae., ....
.

.PIIION
'

.IUNDUD SUIS ,.. PIR TON

011

price $175.00, Phone 1-667·

~~.

Phone 992-3658.
USED PIANO, roosonobly prk•d.
TIWLER opo&lt;o for ronl, one 3
proleroblr on· upright'. Phone
__ In
992-3427after6p .m ,
mi ...
P-roy.
-...
-Dbter, 5 miiH !ram Na . 2 POTATOES; cobblers and Ken.
mlno. Phont 992·5151.
ntboc fqr wlnOer, Grton
boons, pick your own. Thomao
2 lsd ""''' mobile homo, 0.•'-·
D. Soyi'O, Phon• 843•2491 .
Phant992-5151.
;;;;:;-'::::=::::'= = 7 :7.-=:21odroommobllehomtlnRaclno 1915 lUNDY trumpet .' Ccill ~•·
- · P"-992·5158.
:::=237
~9.::0:.::11 "::..::6.!:P·:.:m::.·- - , . . - WARM MORNING CDOI htater,
30,000 Warm Morning goo
hoat•hoadr
: 42 Inch sink; 54 Inch
...r
coblnot. Phone '192·
7ol65.
1975 Harlay Davidson XLH Sport.
o..r. block , 1000 cc, !:ZOO OC· L.C. Smith otondard typtoWri ..r.
tual mlln. Coli K•ith Curtio
old but •.cellent Optoratlori,
'192·231'1 or 9'12-5073.
$20. Mttol ln·woll medicine
15•21 opening, overoll
ua: aow ond 2!0 lb. aill, :ZOO cablnot,
!MS. with two matching
lleall ha_. wllh lldl, plt
..,_liGhts. ilatlont concff.
pu!l!kln. "'-843·2313.
!ton, S.21f for lht HI. e.&amp; II
3 IIICI motarcyclo troller . SIII.QO.
dvnacar
tlra,
aood, S..
_ Ciio
-'-rl.:c.
- rayon
Hoofllch,
..t.sm.
,
Call992·7110.
"'
.
--

'ram

WANIID

.

~.
........,,...,

r'-

~

Stuon,

~-

~~'ew

.

HOMES_ . Choose
your carpet colors and
move ln. Eech have 3
bed
room1 (nice size)
colored, ceramic baths
lth
h
I
w
s ower,
ovely
kitchens, lll'ge garage and
workl!lllce, about 1 acre of
ground. TheM hamll art
built trom the ground up
and are wtll constructed
(the 1111 at this price)
m,900.00
WE ARE IN GREAT
NEED OF LISTINGS - ·
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
T
YPES OF PROPERTYTO SELL CALL US NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
IIIOICilt. A. . . .ISIR,

· l-~~!CO:.!N!!SU:!l~T~A~NTJ
tft-2561

Mondly

;~

II ;~~~~~~'~):
In custom buill
for commercial,

thru

resd., pole bulltlngs,

· "'

.
Phone Coolville
',

plenh. Over 50 v1rltllet In
111 . From 4" to I" pots &amp; 6"
talO" henglnt bltktts . JSc

or

HUBBARDS

667·3876

'

GREENHOUSE

For Frot Estimate
9-10.1

m-5176

9-2-1 mo. ,

BUILDING,

remodeling. ond

BRADFORD, "uctlonHr·, Com· • ,
plete Service , Phone 949·2~ ' \
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio , Crin""
1
Bradford.
''' '!
, 1,
•

repairs. Quality work, efficient
service. Jess• Rodman, phone

Phone (614 )667·3817.

992·5980.

•

'

DOZER work and welding . Cc.n·
tocf James Panons, Rt . 1,
Racine, on Carmel Rood.

Swee,.,-a, tOOiters. Irons, iiiJ,
1mall appllanc•\ lawn mower'
next to State. Highway Goroei:

ty, W. Vo , Phone (300)
3102 or (304) 772·3227.

m-

TEAFORD
.. .
, Virlll B. Sr., Reellor
110 Mtchltnlc Pomeroy,"O.
Phone 992-337S..
ON AT. 33 A great
family
home
ol
3
bedrooms, modern, bath
and 112 , shower In full
basemeht, modern kitchen
with beke and cook units,
wonderful view of the Ohio
River, $29,500.
UN-ORDINARY
2
bedrooms, living and
kltahen paneled, lull
basement, ' gas
F.A.
lurna'ce, only $5,500.
BUILDING- About 3D x 40
at Dexter on corner lot wllh
plenty of parking . Might
sell

on

land

Wlnte~J zlng

contract,

13.500.
SECLUDED
Your
family will enjoy this
privacy of 11 acres, 4
badrooms, lll• baths, gas
furnace, good spring
.water, 8 acres fenced,
$29,000.
CAREFULLY- Consider
this 29 acres of woodl. Has
a 1~ x 70 3 bedroom mobile
home with city walwr ond
loti oil furnace , m.soo.
PRIVATE
Formel
dining , modern kitchen •
large family room with
new fireplace, 3 bedrooms,
wash room , gn well ,
furnace and 15 acres, only
$32,500 ,
NEW LISliNG- 2'\W acres
neor Rutland. 4 room
hoUlll, bath, gas heat, 2
porchll-nd 2 outbuildings.
Alkl 19.500.

klt1, cover1 , an tifreeze, servic• for above or
in ground poolt .. 0 , Bumgqrd·

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMIER 15,1976
6:08-Summer S.mnttr 10.
t8543
.... 82
6: ts-Farm Report 13.
• 917632
.K54
6:20-The Story 13.
SOOTH IDI
6::10-AG.USA ~~ News 6; Summer Semealwr I; .
•KJ109 5 2 ·
Christopher Closeuup 10. ·
1
.JB6
6:.ts-Mornlng Report 3.
tKQ
6:.50-Good Mornl"!!, Wilt VIrginia 13.
• AIO
· 6:!5 Good Mornllng, Trl Stalw 13 .
Easl-li'esl wlnerable
7:08-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CIIS
News I; Chuck White Reports 10.
Wtst Non~ . Eon &amp;Ioiii
7:05-Bugs Bumy &amp; Friends 10.
14
7:30-SchOolles 10.
·
Pass 3• Pass u
. S:OD-Laasle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St ~:
Pus Pau Pass
We have rec:elved numerotn
8:30-Blg Valley 6,
•
Opening lead - 4 •
questions about wbat bappelis
9:08-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue ~.15; Lucy Show I ; Mlka
Douglis 10; Phil Donahue 13.
when a card ill found on the
9:30-&lt;:rOII-WIIs 3; OM Life to Llv. 6; Tattletalll I .
floor during the play of a
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
10:08-Sanford &amp; Son 3,o,15; Price Is Right 10; Mike
band.
Douglas 13.
There is a simple 1111wer to
Mike Lawrence bas a really
10:
15-Genoral
Hospllal 6.
excellent dlscuuioa of the this one. Unless the players
10:30-&lt;:elebrlty
SwotpStakes 3,4,15.
suit-preference signal in are sure that the card was not
11
:
~Whttl
of
Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Edge of
actually
dealt
to
the
player
" Judgment at Bridge." .
Night
6; Gambit 1, 10; Mornl"9 with D.J . 13.
wbo
ill
short
a
card,
It
Is
. . . - . , - - - - His first example is a good
11 :30-Hollywood Squeres 3,4,15; HIPPY Days 6,13;
introduction. West opens his replaced in hls band and play
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
singleton heart against continues except that be is
12 : ~News 3,6,8,10; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun •: Fun
South 's lour-spade contract. responsible for any revokes he
Factory 15.
.;.:;,,., n ~CiUJ,; "{~K East lakes his ace and leads may bave lllade. Jf the players .
12 :30-G&lt;i"!! Show 3,15; All My Chlldrtln 6,13; SOII'ch
HE K~ 11 AU.· back the suilfor West to ruff . are sure it was not deali and
for Tomorrow 8,10.
U West proceeds to lead a·dla- dropped, it is a misdeal .
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
(For a copy of JACOBY
niOnd , E;ast will take his ace
1:DO-Somerset 3; Rvan's Hope 6,)3; NIWI 6; Con·
and lead another heart. West MODERN, send Sl to: "Win
contratlon 8; Younv &amp; lfle Restlesa 10; ·Ann
will ruff.and North and South at Br i dge ," cl o Ill i s
Mulligan 15.
will have justifiable com· newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489,
1:30-0ays of Our Lives 3,o,15; Family Feud 6.13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
·
plaints about bad luck.
Radio City Station, /lew York.
2:08-$20;000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
The suit-preference signal N. Y. 10019}
2:30-Doctors 3,.,15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
.
3:08-Another World 3,.,15; All In The Family 1,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20.
by THOMA$ JOSEPH
3:15-General Hospital 13.
.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8,10); Lilies Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
DOWN
You 20.
1 Cro-Macnon 1 "R.U.R';
4:08-Mister
CartOO!l 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4;
IJ)I11ment
playwright
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Moult Club
5 Poetuter
z Province
1: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Tar11n's Three
u In the CO!IIIer In Ir-.
Challenges" 10; Dl.nah 13.
11 Coaches'
3 Uvely
~ : 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith I;
wuca n
dances
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllntstones .15.
5:1i0-FBI 3; Mtrv Griffin 4;· Partridge Family I ;
1! Sbave off
( 2 wds.)
Mission : Impossible 15.
1S Unlocll:eol
4 Nigerian
5::10-llows
6: Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
u Work unit
dty
12
13.
U Falsify
5 Stocle
6:08-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; BC News 6; Zoom 20;
Urcllln
• Ancer
Teaching Children 33.
·
U Smooth
II " - Venner"
17 V.I.P. ol
7 Fatber
6:-.NBC
News3,o,15;
ABC
News
13;
Andy
Griffith
6;
COIIIOI18Ill zt Director
WW1
and liOII .
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge :ZO; Lilias Y09a
U Burn
Sergio ·u Morsel for . dials
&amp; You 33.
U - Rouge Sl Leonine head
Fldo
(4 wds.)
7:08-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for ·
ZZ McCarthy
ol balr
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To,
Zl Baseball
I "UOII in
or
Weaver
34
Badly
Tell
the Truth 13; Family Affair 15: Consumer
team
Winter"
Z3
Dirt
(pref,)
Survival
Kll :ZO: World War I 33.
Zl Egyptian
queen
7::10-Last
of
the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Match
Z4
Scabbard
35
Japan"' r:=&lt;!Si:C' deity
t Blush
Game PM 6; 125,000 l'yramld 8; MacNeii·LIIIrer
ZS
David's
volcanic
ZZ Movie bouse 11 Watered
20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank· 13; Wild ·
-pon
mwnlain
, (Sp.)
fabric
Kingdom 15.
Z3 Get the
&amp; : ~Little Housaon the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Woman
lead
6,13; Bert Convy 8,10; Nova 20,33.
8:30-Frankle
Avalon 8; Singing Angels Sing America
Rough cut
10.
•
tobacco
9 : L~vle " Kingston: The Power Play" 3,4,15;
In a trice
Beretta 6; Movie "The Stalking Moon" 1,10: ,
Tortoise's
Theater In America 33; Masada : Monument to
foe
Freedom 13; Upatalrt. Downstairs 20.
Window or
10:08-Startky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
door pari 6-+-+10 :36-Aimanac 20; Book Beat 33.
Before
10 :.55-Polltlcal Program 8, 10.
,
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8, 10,13, 15; MacNeil. Lehrer Report
31 Wire
33,
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,o,15; Mannix 6; 13; Movie
Partner of
"Nightmare" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
•euty
12:~Mbvle "You're a Big Boy Now" 10; Jonakl 33.
Mellican
12 :40-Maglclan 6,13.
l:OG-TO:morrow 3,.4.
1:50-News 13.
F1oor

D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ex -~
perlence . lniUred fre e!
e~tlmotH .

~
~

'

Col! 992-2384 or. •,
(614)
698·7257
Albony ,
' 1
nor Solos . Middleport, Ohio.
Phon• 992 -572~.
SEWING MACHINE Ropolro tei.'
vice, oil mak.., 992-2214'. rh.·
I)ITCH Digging. Phone (300) n3·
Fo_brlc Shop, Pbnl t roy
5839 or (300) nJ.S788 .
Authorized Singer Soln onJ
HOCKING RIVER Trading Com·
Service . We tharpen Sclnort . •
pony , GUNS-OVER 250 IN
EXCAV.o.TING,
doo•r. lood•r on~
STOCK. Buy , otll, trodt. 478
bockhoo
work:
• dump trucks
Richland, Athtnl, Ohio 45701.
and lo·boys lor hire; will houl
Phon• 593 · ~·
fill dirt, to soli, ttm.atone and
grov•l. Call lob on logor Joof.
"'". doy phOI10I 992·7019
night phone 992•3525 or 992: ,,
S232.
, ~

..

. I~UL~
- ~~~:r.Ni··~RC~~~~r:~~[):c::~5Q~~~~Vf~~~~MA~~~~nc:J~l~~Mt
MY~ 16 ls:?N£-i
DR'GA/1'1 OFMY ..-1
IM!-·h

IL!n&lt;='

Ifk~~~~~~ KNEE-

8 1/&lt;.

~~
covering
Pelt
Novelist,

Hermann

St Douay
name
lor Hosea

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia

VOU DIDNIT IIAVE 10

PICK ME UP 11-IE:
.
SECOND 11ME: . I
COULD HAVE MADE
ITONMYONNI
1916 CHEVROLET 4 whMI drlv• WILL do roofing, constrv&lt;llan,
truck. Phone 949·2132.
plumbing and htollng. No lob
992-3927.

too large or too 1maU. Phor.~

742·2~ .

•
CARPENTER, 11. rl~g. ceill"!l·
ponollng. Phone 992·1!759. ,,;.

•

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for lhe three L's, X for the two o ·s, etc, Single leiters.
apoolrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lettera are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
TD

ou

YL

NIHDL

RL

TD

SITF D ,

ISV

RL

1968 14 h , trove/ troller for sole or
trode for truck camper , Phone

RL

TD

I

LVHNIO'LV

OU

GTSD ,
AI S. -

suo

DRULD,

AIWL

YHO

'Y L.

YLNIHDL ·· I

N R I SST S E

-·!If"

·····················~····~

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: THERE ARE MORE FOOLS
THAN WISE MEN; AND EVEN IN WISE MEN, MORE FOlLY
THAN WISDOM. - CHAMFORT

~

CC 1916 Kin&amp; Fea,ures Syndk!llt", Inc.}

.
•
••
.•
.

·i
:

i. ·

HEAR NEWS FIRST

4t

WMPO AM-FM

:.

•
•
:
EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCAsTs Al ·;
•
.
.
: ! !-.
The Noon Report, ,

:

•

~.

..

:•

ancl5 P.M.

·························~·''
'

'

h-+-+-

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
on Rout• 7. Phone (614) 9115·
DOZER - LARGE AND SM.o.LL,
3825.
-.. &gt;
Coli '192-74111 .
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
REMODELING
,
Plumbing,
hooting.
'•
IOV AND DUMP TRUCKS. SILL
NEW 3 bedroom houoe, 2 boths,
ond
oil
typos
of
IIO"IrGI
repolr:
:•
PULLINS,
PHONE
992·2478
DAY
all elec ., 1 ocr•. Middleport,
Work guarontMd 20 ~.ars e l(·
OR NIGHT.
clos• to Rutland, Phone 992·
porlenco. Phon• ~·2409.
•
74111.
PROTECT your owlmmlng pix&gt;l I
·~
SMAll form for sale, 10% down,
' owner financed . Monroe Coun·

• AIOU32

b:-+-+--+-

'

ELWOOD lOWERS REPAIR ""-' ·'

HOME SITES for sale, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

.Q

94

•

u

667·3166

. •• suo.

.EAST

•

~tUc.W fHd'·

.......

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2419
.
9-1~-1 mo. pd.

Slturdty 10 Ia 5.
WVt hlvt ont 1r1en houtt
full of Florida tolialt

two levels, lighted beams in liv·
ing room, ceiling and other
features, $5000.00 price in·
eludes air conditioner, underpinning, smoll porch , all fur·
niture. applian ces. drapes and
rugs . Phone992·5169.

, P' llbrlillft

~Your

'

Optn lor Fell &amp; Wlnlor

trailer, take ov.,- paymenf1 .

ofter5p,m.

WAIT AD WAY

:'

·

. \WRK

NOTICE

BEDROOM ranch, tull base·
IN DASH 23 channel CB, om·lm- 3 ment,
garage, 3 yean old in 19671 2K63 Vlndale , underpinned
AICC Irish Setter pup1 for 1ale. $75
mpx rodio, 3 track stereo. Coli
'Rutland. Phone 742·2236. ·
~ . Phono (300) 675·4625 .
11h:20 Kreened porch, central
992-3965.
air , May be seen 825 S. 2nd
Ui'9 ACRE farm , two hou1e1 , city
KENNEBEC potoiOft. 50 lb: $3.50
Ave., Middleport. Phone 992·
water, mineral rights. good
or 100 lb. $6.00. Iring con·
2822.
posture land , 75 ocr&amp;~ tillable,
taintrs. Phone · 667·3737 or
some timbO&lt;, Mverol buildings, 1974 MOBILE Home for sole.
667·3974.
8 mil" north of Pomeroy oft Rt.
Phone 992·521!2.
33, Hemlock Grc.ve, Ohio. Ask·
SCHOOL ••wing mochln•s.
Singer;, featurs · buttonhole,
ing $75,000. Phone 992· 501~ 1913 12•60. 2 bedroom Vindole
CAMPER, Slarcroft Goloxi 8 with

Shops the

•
•

for sal• or rent, 3
bedrooms, ol utillttes paid.

and· both. F.A. furnace , lull
Phone 992-nst .
bos.,.,.,t. Coli 992·3630 or
12K60 with interior de1igned on
742·2180. .

niin... Coif 742-2819.

TRENatER

Rutland
742·2321
All Work Guaranteed
· Free Estimatts
· 6-2}2.m~

~ILE fiome

FARM for sale, 68 ocres 6 rooms

NEW HOME , total eledric , 3
AKC Boeglo pops. phone 992· 1971 HONDA CL~SO. 12,000
bedroom, full carpet, 1.113
milet, sill~ bor, c.rosk bars,
3717.
ocres , leading CrMk water
pull back handle bon, new tire
and - seol1. S&lt;-rombler 1ide
piptiS. $650. Coll9~9·2ole0.

.......

From 6" to 11" wide and
to s n. deep with or
pipe furnllhtd . Under road,
bores up to 12" pipe size.

WEST

.. 73

He leads his highest heart the 10 tpOt. This calls for the
blgher of the two sultl that
Weot can lead. If East wanted ,
a club return he would bave
led his lowest heart - the
deuce. If West didn't care
what wu returned he would
lead some sort of 11\lddle heart
like the five .
This particular example
shows this convention at Its
simplest and beat. East
doesn't want to do anythlnc
except to tell his partner
which suit to lead and there is
no way to confuse his partner.

7:31&gt;--HotlywOod Squarll 3,4; let's 0.1 With It 6;
Wild Klf'IOdom 13; Mttch ~me PM I; MacNeil·
Llllrer Report 20,33; In the Know 10; NMhvllle on
the Roed 15; Home Dlgtlt (color) 5.
1:00 Movln' On 3,15: HIPPY Days 6,13; Ptllptcttve...
School DIHgreptlan 4; M·A·S·H 1,10; 0Ytr li•Y
33; At The foP 20.
8:30 Movlt " Chll'lle's Angela" 6. 13; GE n.t.t' f ,10;
Daytime I color) 5; Shadow~ on the Grill 33. .
9 : ~Pollce Woman 3_.,15; Evening at Popl ~
S.lllna of Abl Llna~ln 1976 20.
.
9::10-T11t1monv Time Icolor) 5.
•
to : ~10o Club !color) ·5; .Sol! Dylan 3.4,15; Family
6,13; CBS Nowt Spetlll 1,10; HOWl 20; Olympiad
33.
10::10-Biack Ptnpectlvt on the Nowt 20.
11 : ~Newa 3_.,4,1,10,13,15; MacNtii· LIIIrtr Report .
33.
11 :»,-JohMy Ctraon 3_.,15; Alan King's Prime Tlmt
Preview 6,13; Kolak I ; Miry Hartman, MirY
Hll'tmtn 10; ABC NIWI 33.
'
12 : ~Movlt "Once You Kiss a Stranger" 10; · JIIIWIIIJ
33. .
12 : ~1t "VIsions.. ." f.
! : ~Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

~~~

I

Al. TROMM CONST : · BILL PUWNS '

lARRtm-foER
n.

IVDIBODY

1
.,

.I

M.f.itl~ 1-22·1 m~: l

· Remodeling Service
For Your Home

tUml 4-10-1 mo.

brlni rou

•

•

Dlvid P1rsons, Owner •:

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair
The Complete·

SIDIIIG-soffm

· guorontH&lt;I toyo ond gilts. No

'

Pl. Pleasont
Ph. 675-3469
9:30-5:00
Tiiii:OOO

$101111

AVERAGE ~ an everiing or
ofternoon1 demon1trating

.,

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
~~ Mlin Street

IIIRIJOIISI 0001$
11£1'\ACEIIIEIIT
MRDOIIS
MIIIIIRUII

Rvtlond or~ . Coli Robert
Sltwart. Phon•992 ·7eq~.

Classified Ads

II

Squere Yerd lnattlltl'

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, ond
fancy prints, accessories.

·FiMocitt A lion 1110- &amp;Attics

LOSt a big dark blue Bluetick in

vance your mutual cause.

••

...•

.

'6e95

for campers.

IIISIIIIticln SetYices

tiqulty oroa. Phone l·300.f182·
2326.

~·

/"

BACK CARPmNG

sizes.

Blown

or992·7667.

.- j

ASSORTED RUBBER •.: ...', .
..... ' .

FREE ESTIMATES

buy lor $8,000. Phone '192-3578,

LOST··small rodlo control plone, "'
ft. wing span, gold and red, An ·

ICOIIPIO (Ool. 14--. 21)
Thoro't no need to bt hesitant
today ibout laaulna.. gentle INFANT care, light hou1e work.
some cooking, linin, suburban
reminder to lhOot who.Cif(e you
Chicago, salary ._liable.
a fagltimatt obllgaUOf .You
Rev, S.inard Pennington, 175
_,., - d llllm.
N. Troller Oak Park, Ill. or
IAGinAIIIUI (Nov. 11-0.C.
phon• 312·383·7052.
11) Teamwork Ia . MHnUII to
your succeaa today. Be willing
. .
..
·to lake a back _, 11 11will Ill· -:: =• .=.· .. -~ . ; .·.-.=

....
....

For

7-29-1 mo.

-3227.

tJI097
•QJ

mattresses,

667-3127

3 bedroom house for sole at 520
Sycamore St., Middleport, good

7269,

poptorw9'1&lt; . Coli 949·2803 or
992·2927 . .O.Ioo booking parlin.

• KQ7

•'

Wlnshield Rep..,c.menl
Frtt Estimotn
On Body Work ·
Eaport Poinli"!!
lnsurenc. Work
Welcome
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio

w ill trade for 7... ·75 2 whHI
drJ ~·· pickup . Phone 992-a.27
ofter6p. m.

tre1poning at any tlnie on the

afternoons demon1tratlng
guaranteed. toys .ond "gifta, .No
ca1h tnve1trnent, no d.llvery or
collecting . Computers do your

1-; :--1
...

992·7320 Evenings

American
Auto Sales

2860.
1914 JEEP Ritnegode. Phone. 992·
3451 11 a .m. to 8 p.m. or 992·
3597.
1915 FORO f ·:ISO 4 wh"l drive,

sh.,.ifl OHice.
OPEN AGAIN-olior being cloHd

coll..:tiflg. Compot..-o do you
poptorwork. Coli 9~9·2803 or
992-2927, Al1o,booklngportles.
AVERAGE $40 on -ing or

.A8ft4

1-22·) mo.•

Glen Bissell 949·2901 or 949·

makes It possible for East to
tell West wbat to lead back.

NORTH

'

low miloog• , · $1395. Phone

count.

lor maximum enjo~ment avoid
lhe company or one who lavors
daallng In Intrigues.
·
CANCER (~unt 21.JuiJ 22)
The Important thing today Ia
not prolll or advancement. To
be happy, let your heart rule
your hotd oven though II coats
you a lew shekela.
LEO (~ufr 21-Aug.I2)You are
welcome averywhera yougotoday l;)ecauoe ol your ploannl
dlspoalllon. You'll have I com•
pllmont lor all.
~&gt; vttlioo (Alii. aa.~ep~. at)
Should you·have mlHen or lm·
portance to.roeolve today, particularly In lht realm or
linen-. handlelhtm at once:
Tomorrow thlnga could llghlon
up 1 bll.
LIIIIA (lel1l 23-0ol. 221 Don'!
wall lor olhera to lake lhe lead
today. Your rortunate aspects
quality you lo be In 1he driver's

·-·. ··

R1cine, Ohio

Phone 949-2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

OR

olr, lots -of chroma , real sharp,

28. I still owe $18,000 on it. My

huntlng

.

2860.
1971 Ford Moverlck , p.s., p.b..

and Keno Rood , County Rooa

no

AT949-2801

1971 M.rcuryM.ont-;o, p.1. , p .b.,
o lr; 'llery nlc• . $1295 . .Phone
Gl• n BiSI•II , '9.49·2801 or 949·

Roseberry house on the Bashon

lire lOday, You're capable of
juggling several undertakings ,
succoaslully.
Owners .
TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20)
Continuo to Investigate ways to ABSOLUTELY

'

'

Conllnuous one pltct
·gutters. W. hlt"!! .lt. or do It
yourHlf. Spoclol prices lo
bulldtn.

GLEN R. BISSEU.

1970 Iuick RlvierQ , good condl·
tlon, new tires, $900. Phone

at 6;30 p.m. at their building In
Bashan.

oddr111 is

.

M£1NE
I '; ·..
CARPET SHOP · ..... . .. . '.

GUTTER SERVICE

CONTACT

THE RACINE Fir• O.po'rtm.nt will

WIN AT BRIDGE
Signal for au" preference

.........:- ..·' .....
.
,,. .···"'

3; Mtrv Griffin 4; Partridge Family I ;
Mission: lmpolllblt 15.
5:30-Ntws 6; Family Affair 8; Electric Company
20,33: Adlm ·1 3.
· 6:08-Newa 3,o,l ,10,13,15; ABC NIWI 6i Zoom .20;
Conaumtr EIIPII'Ienct 33.
6:30-NBC NIWI3,o,15; ABC Nowt 13; Andy Grlflltll6;
CBS News 1,10; Hoclgepodge Lodge 20: lTV
Utlll11tlon 33.
'
7 : ~Truth or Conaquencn 3; To Toll the Truth 4;
Bowll"!! For Dollars 6; Ltt;l Go To The Rac11 I;
News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Family Affair 15;
Romagnolls' Tlblt 20; American 111- Forum;
Blot Ridge Quarlwt (color) 5.

( r ~ :~j

FREE ESTIMATES!

Memorial Hotpltol ..

I'IHOAI !&gt;LOW DOIYN!'-.: THAT 1,\II.ID·
WHAT 00 YOU 1,\I!AN ~EAPIN/3 PRUS,
TH~ OPSRATION W/16 REMEMIS&amp;R l
' PlANN&amp;D' l ... WHAT
OP&amp;RATION 'l

5: ~FBI

•- - - - - - - - -......c·' •

You con sove hundreds
even thousondl of dolll"
with aluminum or vinyl
siding .

POMEROY, OHIO

SOMEONE to live in . Contact Marvin .Darst ',at
Veteran &amp;

'• .·.

(htster, Ohio
'

POM!!~!v~~!'!.~. CO.(®

.i ,..

,I

Pholotraphr
fiS.4155

Plalns, ·Ohl~ ,

NOTICES
ATTN. : tl
ALL HOUSEWIVES

-'...

KEN GROVIR

Boa 21·A
Rutland, Ohio 45771
Ph. (614) 742·2409
We Deliver
7,·21·~ mos.

CAPTAnt EASY

SLUO.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1t76

D.C. STANDS FOR PXTOIL
DOCTOR ~SHINGTON 111&lt;\S AN
OI'MTAAL.4\Il06IST...1115 I:!E5T
FRIEND 11145 NAMED ~ Hill

TIMLEG~

I vb.

Nowllfti!PihtdreWitttera
to

I I I eun-lld
r-lht...,...
-···.
br tht.._certoon.

IMIIlll _ _ _ ,

"0'0-( l I I I)"

�.

Television log for ·easy. viewing

MISSILE' WITH ITS
..ANDS AND c;ROOVE'S
~L.L

NEXT BE iXAAVNED

UNDEr. THE COI'AA'IRISON

MICROSCOPE WITH THE'

DEATH

1976 AMC HORNET
$3995
Sportabout, 6 cyl. , automatic: power steerlog, delu xe
equipment, whllewall tires, luggage rack, dark green
finish, less than 9.000 miles, ·showroom clean .
.

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Truss Rifler Co.

tilt wheel , power window s. nice, n ice.
CONN trumpet us.ed 2 months

SIQO.OO. Phon• 7~2· 3092.
SELDON Rest Ceramlct, Tuppers WOULD LIKE to buy jnp top. ·Con·

vas or hardtop. Coll742·2!)38.
opening, Sept. 13.
Classes Mondav 7 to 10, WANTE'D to buy used piano,
Tutldoy, 9 to 12- 1 to 4- 7 to
reasonably pric.d, preferably
10; Thursday I to J.-i lo-..101
an upright. Phone 9'92·3-421
discount to Stnlor Cltlzens . Coli
after 6p.m.
667-2252 for clan r•st rvatlons .

1974 DATSUN
210 2 door , local ca r, ~ speed trans., 44,200
tires. dark green llnlsh, reel economy.

.." "....

Solltheastem Ohio

1974 CHEY . MONTE CARLO
$4195
Lonclau, local owner, blk., blk. vinyl lop, blk. bucket
swivel seats, radiO &amp; tope, air , P. steering and brak es,
$2295
mll~s. good

All Yard Sales , Rummag e,
Porch and Basem en t Porch
end Basement Sales , etc.
must be pa1d In ~dva11 ce ,

Get vours In early by
stopp ing by our Office at
The

Dall y

Sentln'el,

Ill

Court St. or wrlfino Bo "'

729, Pomeroy , Oh io 45769
with your re m ittan ce .

AstroGrapM
Por

Bemice Beet. Osol
hpl.15, 1t7t

w_,,

ARIEl (Mirch 21·Apttl 11)
You won't be satisfied unlaas
you have a lot of Irons In the

hove a gu~ shoot next Saturday

broaden your financial bale 10·
day. There Ia more than one

way lo tauon your bank oc·

742-2796.

$500 REWARD · for Information
·leQdlng to the arrest of the pei son or perl ont wtyo took the
aluminum siding off the Alb.rt

949·2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8-9-76 1 month

~83

S. Miller Ave.,
Columbu~·. Ohio. Plea1e get In
touch with the Meigs County

for vocation •. "(t• ore open
again wlth our, u•ut:d good
quality knlfl ~md low. prices.
Hours Monday thru Fridoy 9
a .m. ro 7 p.m. Clo1ed Satur·
doys. Carolina Fobr)cs on Rt , 7,
one half mile north of Cihnter,
Ohio . Henry and Mary Hunters .

1973 CHEVELLE SS. silver with
block vinyl in ter ior . VB
au tomatic, PS, PI, Swivel
' buck•t seats, Rally ' wheel5,

or

33.000 ·actual miles . $2400.00.
Phon• 992·2280.

Howard Coldwell form. Signed,
Howard Caldw,ll.

GIMINI (MI9 21..J- 20) Thll

COUNTRY lormlcond with soclud·

should be a run day for you, but

· eel woods, wat•r and good DC ·
cess in MQnroe County, W. Va .
$1 ,000 down . coli (300) n2·

_.

lOST In Mld&lt;ll•port, brown, ,.;ole
4 mos. old &lt;;.rmon Shepherd.

3102or (300) m

i1 very sick ond under doctor's
car•· If found pleo1e call 992·

CANNING tomatoe&amp; ond 1weet
' P•Fpers . Cleland Fo rm1 .
Geraldine Cleland. Rocine,
Ohio.
-

c01h lnv.. tment, no delivery or

AKC Springer Spani8ls, liv•r ond
white, one male, one female ,
$85~ .

Phon•992·7897.

sy1tem, neor langn·ille and

blind hem , MWI on knits,
$48.00 cath. Also Singer Touch

owning. Phone 992-2514.

STARCRAFT. hot tho fall price In ·
ond S.w. llk• n-. $31 .00 cosh. COUNTRY STORE with or without
WILL DO Odd jobs, rooting, poln·
1tock. gosoline tank, living
create. All 1976 models reducCAPRICORN (Dtc. lt..J111.
Phone992·7187.
ling, hauling, tr" work. and
quarter1 , recreation room, nice
ed io bottom. 1977 mini-motor
11) Thla could be s .red·letlar
mowing. Phone.992·71119.
garden, dow to river and 1tote
trailers and fold-downs In PIGS for sol•. Phone 949-2857.
diy lor your ceroer. II you
park, by two atote highway,,
stodt. We tell 1ervlce and
suspect opportunity Is knock·
quality. We trade, financing or·
phon• 985·3306.
lng. answer the door. II could
ronatd , Open Sundays . Camp
.S~LE
APPROXIMATELY 30 ocr eo with 6
have a far-reaching etlect.
Conley: Starcralt Salft, Rt . 62,
One good uud Gibson
room house and bath, dug well ,
N.
Pt,
Pleo1ont,
W.
Va.
AQUARIUS (~an. 10-Pab. 11)
coppertono lltle-by-slde and 2 outbuildings, fenced and
Concentrate on lrlvolous sub·
mineral rights, $19,000. Coli
Mike us an olltr.
· jocts todoy. Your mind will not
742·2766.
Good
used
G.e:
be attuned lo heavler'toplcs:
.relrigerotor.
5200
Have run. Don' flghlll.
FUIINISHEO, 2 blllrm. oportmont ,
One good u!ltd Home lito EZ
PIICII (l'ell. 20·MIIrch :10) .
oduiiJ only, In Middleport .
Chain Sow
SIOO
It's up to you to look oul for loY·'
Phon• 992·387•.
Ill ones ioday. You could gain . . .. ··One g~ used Homelllt
. .- . ..
S AND 4 RM. furnl1hed and un lor them whet they cOUldn't . ' .. .
Super XL Choln Sow• . S200
furnished opll. Phone· 992·
roollu them..._.
s.t34 . .
.
OLD furniture, ke boxes, bra••
bills, wall telophonn and COUNTRY Mobile Hom• Pork , At ,
ports, or compiH household1. ·
33, twn mlln north of Pomeroy .
41C11 W,
Mtr.
Wflte M. D. Mlll•r, Rt. 4,
.
large lots with ~oncrete patios,
Pom•roy, Ohio , Call '192-7760.
1ldewalk1, runnen and off
CASH pold for all mokn ond
lt,-.et parking. Phone992·7479. 3·5 and 10
I ton• jar• at the
...,..,., 1171
modelo of mobile hom01, ONE bedroom apartment• at
Oddt
an
End1
Shop. Phone
Build upon lo~ndaUons you've
Phone area·code 614-423-9531 .
VILLAGE
MANOR
In
Mlddl•poit
992·6173.
alrotdY llrmly llllbllahlll this
for $lOA monthly plua alec . or
year. Put your lrull In IIIII
$130 Including olec:trlc. LOWER C. 8. Radios lor sole. Lolor•"•
which "you know to be solid,
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
625 with Rooa King power mih
and prosperity lin ahead.
Convenient to eflopping on
$125.00: Lofayette 23 channel ,
Third and Mill StrHts In Mid·
5 wotl wolkoy·lalkoy wlthACC
LISTED
$100.QO: Johnson 130 Mobile
d loport. Brand new high ,quail·
C.l . phone $lOO.OO: 3 mobile
Middleport, a vary nice
ty aportmenfl . See the
lot
rnonov•r at Apt. 16, or coli
ontennos; Demeo 50 watt
corner
, 8 room frame, s
- n•
mobllo Lenior ond Pr....,p
bedrooms, bath, dlnlnn
~·· .1.
SIQO.IJO·, portable 4 channel
room , some carpeting,•
· AVAILA8LE ol Rlvtrsldo Apori·
pollee ocanner, $~ .00: ol)
Newly painted,
ments, 1 bedroom aportguoi'Onteed. Call '192·2635 osk
to sell. .
''
lor '\N" alt•r 6 p.m. 992·3078
menll, $100 ptor mi&gt;nth; 2
CAU.
utn cuh
blllroom oportm.,to, $133 per
or«6·2745.
LISTED- Pomeroy,
to shop, lots of tile and
On.
lh
I
I
II
Pho
for
mon3273
·
prct or D •
nt LIKE' NEW Gibson GrobL-r
992
- ••-·
pantllng, 3 bedrooms,
·
·
trlc boN guitar, floating Mod,
bath 1
NG
992-2181
• •-~
tt II
I
I
I
•
I
' S or age,
heat,
shDJPiAI spnu
.. _,room
a er, r110 n ce,
new 1tr ngt, n1ce co••· toto
utility
room, . . other
adults 0 nly. Phone 992·3324.
cost new $500.00. Firm selling
features. Priced tor quick

-

.l ;i

'VBirthday

WE NEED
EAR CORN.

US TODAY.

5 room furnlahed apt. for rent,
closo to Pow•ll's Suptor , Volu.

I' - - • - - -.---- - -';.

•

CHIP'WOOD
Poles •+M"' llilmeCer lt laches
,..rae., ....
.

.PIIION
'

.IUNDUD SUIS ,.. PIR TON

011

price $175.00, Phone 1-667·

~~.

Phone 992-3658.
USED PIANO, roosonobly prk•d.
TIWLER opo&lt;o for ronl, one 3
proleroblr on· upright'. Phone
__ In
992-3427after6p .m ,
mi ...
P-roy.
-...
-Dbter, 5 miiH !ram Na . 2 POTATOES; cobblers and Ken.
mlno. Phont 992·5151.
ntboc fqr wlnOer, Grton
boons, pick your own. Thomao
2 lsd ""''' mobile homo, 0.•'-·
D. Soyi'O, Phon• 843•2491 .
Phant992-5151.
;;;;:;-'::::=::::'= = 7 :7.-=:21odroommobllehomtlnRaclno 1915 lUNDY trumpet .' Ccill ~•·
- · P"-992·5158.
:::=237
~9.::0:.::11 "::..::6.!:P·:.:m::.·- - , . . - WARM MORNING CDOI htater,
30,000 Warm Morning goo
hoat•hoadr
: 42 Inch sink; 54 Inch
...r
coblnot. Phone '192·
7ol65.
1975 Harlay Davidson XLH Sport.
o..r. block , 1000 cc, !:ZOO OC· L.C. Smith otondard typtoWri ..r.
tual mlln. Coli K•ith Curtio
old but •.cellent Optoratlori,
'192·231'1 or 9'12-5073.
$20. Mttol ln·woll medicine
15•21 opening, overoll
ua: aow ond 2!0 lb. aill, :ZOO cablnot,
!MS. with two matching
lleall ha_. wllh lldl, plt
..,_liGhts. ilatlont concff.
pu!l!kln. "'-843·2313.
!ton, S.21f for lht HI. e.&amp; II
3 IIICI motarcyclo troller . SIII.QO.
dvnacar
tlra,
aood, S..
_ Ciio
-'-rl.:c.
- rayon
Hoofllch,
..t.sm.
,
Call992·7110.
"'
.
--

'ram

WANIID

.

~.
........,,...,

r'-

~

Stuon,

~-

~~'ew

.

HOMES_ . Choose
your carpet colors and
move ln. Eech have 3
bed
room1 (nice size)
colored, ceramic baths
lth
h
I
w
s ower,
ovely
kitchens, lll'ge garage and
workl!lllce, about 1 acre of
ground. TheM hamll art
built trom the ground up
and are wtll constructed
(the 1111 at this price)
m,900.00
WE ARE IN GREAT
NEED OF LISTINGS - ·
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
T
YPES OF PROPERTYTO SELL CALL US NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
IIIOICilt. A. . . .ISIR,

· l-~~!CO:.!N!!SU:!l~T~A~NTJ
tft-2561

Mondly

;~

II ;~~~~~~'~):
In custom buill
for commercial,

thru

resd., pole bulltlngs,

· "'

.
Phone Coolville
',

plenh. Over 50 v1rltllet In
111 . From 4" to I" pots &amp; 6"
talO" henglnt bltktts . JSc

or

HUBBARDS

667·3876

'

GREENHOUSE

For Frot Estimate
9-10.1

m-5176

9-2-1 mo. ,

BUILDING,

remodeling. ond

BRADFORD, "uctlonHr·, Com· • ,
plete Service , Phone 949·2~ ' \
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio , Crin""
1
Bradford.
''' '!
, 1,
•

repairs. Quality work, efficient
service. Jess• Rodman, phone

Phone (614 )667·3817.

992·5980.

•

'

DOZER work and welding . Cc.n·
tocf James Panons, Rt . 1,
Racine, on Carmel Rood.

Swee,.,-a, tOOiters. Irons, iiiJ,
1mall appllanc•\ lawn mower'
next to State. Highway Goroei:

ty, W. Vo , Phone (300)
3102 or (304) 772·3227.

m-

TEAFORD
.. .
, Virlll B. Sr., Reellor
110 Mtchltnlc Pomeroy,"O.
Phone 992-337S..
ON AT. 33 A great
family
home
ol
3
bedrooms, modern, bath
and 112 , shower In full
basemeht, modern kitchen
with beke and cook units,
wonderful view of the Ohio
River, $29,500.
UN-ORDINARY
2
bedrooms, living and
kltahen paneled, lull
basement, ' gas
F.A.
lurna'ce, only $5,500.
BUILDING- About 3D x 40
at Dexter on corner lot wllh
plenty of parking . Might
sell

on

land

Wlnte~J zlng

contract,

13.500.
SECLUDED
Your
family will enjoy this
privacy of 11 acres, 4
badrooms, lll• baths, gas
furnace, good spring
.water, 8 acres fenced,
$29,000.
CAREFULLY- Consider
this 29 acres of woodl. Has
a 1~ x 70 3 bedroom mobile
home with city walwr ond
loti oil furnace , m.soo.
PRIVATE
Formel
dining , modern kitchen •
large family room with
new fireplace, 3 bedrooms,
wash room , gn well ,
furnace and 15 acres, only
$32,500 ,
NEW LISliNG- 2'\W acres
neor Rutland. 4 room
hoUlll, bath, gas heat, 2
porchll-nd 2 outbuildings.
Alkl 19.500.

klt1, cover1 , an tifreeze, servic• for above or
in ground poolt .. 0 , Bumgqrd·

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMIER 15,1976
6:08-Summer S.mnttr 10.
t8543
.... 82
6: ts-Farm Report 13.
• 917632
.K54
6:20-The Story 13.
SOOTH IDI
6::10-AG.USA ~~ News 6; Summer Semealwr I; .
•KJ109 5 2 ·
Christopher Closeuup 10. ·
1
.JB6
6:.ts-Mornlng Report 3.
tKQ
6:.50-Good Mornl"!!, Wilt VIrginia 13.
• AIO
· 6:!5 Good Mornllng, Trl Stalw 13 .
Easl-li'esl wlnerable
7:08-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,13; CIIS
News I; Chuck White Reports 10.
Wtst Non~ . Eon &amp;Ioiii
7:05-Bugs Bumy &amp; Friends 10.
14
7:30-SchOolles 10.
·
Pass 3• Pass u
. S:OD-Laasle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St ~:
Pus Pau Pass
We have rec:elved numerotn
8:30-Blg Valley 6,
•
Opening lead - 4 •
questions about wbat bappelis
9:08-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue ~.15; Lucy Show I ; Mlka
Douglis 10; Phil Donahue 13.
when a card ill found on the
9:30-&lt;:rOII-WIIs 3; OM Life to Llv. 6; Tattletalll I .
floor during the play of a
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
10:08-Sanford &amp; Son 3,o,15; Price Is Right 10; Mike
band.
Douglas 13.
There is a simple 1111wer to
Mike Lawrence bas a really
10:
15-Genoral
Hospllal 6.
excellent dlscuuioa of the this one. Unless the players
10:30-&lt;:elebrlty
SwotpStakes 3,4,15.
suit-preference signal in are sure that the card was not
11
:
~Whttl
of
Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Edge of
actually
dealt
to
the
player
" Judgment at Bridge." .
Night
6; Gambit 1, 10; Mornl"9 with D.J . 13.
wbo
ill
short
a
card,
It
Is
. . . - . , - - - - His first example is a good
11 :30-Hollywood Squeres 3,4,15; HIPPY Days 6,13;
introduction. West opens his replaced in hls band and play
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
singleton heart against continues except that be is
12 : ~News 3,6,8,10; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun •: Fun
South 's lour-spade contract. responsible for any revokes he
Factory 15.
.;.:;,,., n ~CiUJ,; "{~K East lakes his ace and leads may bave lllade. Jf the players .
12 :30-G&lt;i"!! Show 3,15; All My Chlldrtln 6,13; SOII'ch
HE K~ 11 AU.· back the suilfor West to ruff . are sure it was not deali and
for Tomorrow 8,10.
U West proceeds to lead a·dla- dropped, it is a misdeal .
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
(For a copy of JACOBY
niOnd , E;ast will take his ace
1:DO-Somerset 3; Rvan's Hope 6,)3; NIWI 6; Con·
and lead another heart. West MODERN, send Sl to: "Win
contratlon 8; Younv &amp; lfle Restlesa 10; ·Ann
will ruff.and North and South at Br i dge ," cl o Ill i s
Mulligan 15.
will have justifiable com· newspaper, P. 0 . Box 489,
1:30-0ays of Our Lives 3,o,15; Family Feud 6.13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
·
plaints about bad luck.
Radio City Station, /lew York.
2:08-$20;000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
The suit-preference signal N. Y. 10019}
2:30-Doctors 3,.,15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
.
3:08-Another World 3,.,15; All In The Family 1,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20.
by THOMA$ JOSEPH
3:15-General Hospital 13.
.
3:30-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8,10); Lilies Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
DOWN
You 20.
1 Cro-Macnon 1 "R.U.R';
4:08-Mister
CartOO!l 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4;
IJ)I11ment
playwright
Somerset 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Moult Club
5 Poetuter
z Province
1: Mister Rogers 20,33; Movie "Tar11n's Three
u In the CO!IIIer In Ir-.
Challenges" 10; Dl.nah 13.
11 Coaches'
3 Uvely
~ : 30-Bewltched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith I;
wuca n
dances
Sesame St. 20,33; Fllntstones .15.
5:1i0-FBI 3; Mtrv Griffin 4;· Partridge Family I ;
1! Sbave off
( 2 wds.)
Mission : Impossible 15.
1S Unlocll:eol
4 Nigerian
5::10-llows
6: Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
u Work unit
dty
12
13.
U Falsify
5 Stocle
6:08-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; BC News 6; Zoom 20;
Urcllln
• Ancer
Teaching Children 33.
·
U Smooth
II " - Venner"
17 V.I.P. ol
7 Fatber
6:-.NBC
News3,o,15;
ABC
News
13;
Andy
Griffith
6;
COIIIOI18Ill zt Director
WW1
and liOII .
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge :ZO; Lilias Y09a
U Burn
Sergio ·u Morsel for . dials
&amp; You 33.
U - Rouge Sl Leonine head
Fldo
(4 wds.)
7:08-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for ·
ZZ McCarthy
ol balr
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To,
Zl Baseball
I "UOII in
or
Weaver
34
Badly
Tell
the Truth 13; Family Affair 15: Consumer
team
Winter"
Z3
Dirt
(pref,)
Survival
Kll :ZO: World War I 33.
Zl Egyptian
queen
7::10-Last
of
the Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Match
Z4
Scabbard
35
Japan"' r:=&lt;!Si:C' deity
t Blush
Game PM 6; 125,000 l'yramld 8; MacNeii·LIIIrer
ZS
David's
volcanic
ZZ Movie bouse 11 Watered
20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank· 13; Wild ·
-pon
mwnlain
, (Sp.)
fabric
Kingdom 15.
Z3 Get the
&amp; : ~Little Housaon the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Woman
lead
6,13; Bert Convy 8,10; Nova 20,33.
8:30-Frankle
Avalon 8; Singing Angels Sing America
Rough cut
10.
•
tobacco
9 : L~vle " Kingston: The Power Play" 3,4,15;
In a trice
Beretta 6; Movie "The Stalking Moon" 1,10: ,
Tortoise's
Theater In America 33; Masada : Monument to
foe
Freedom 13; Upatalrt. Downstairs 20.
Window or
10:08-Startky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
door pari 6-+-+10 :36-Aimanac 20; Book Beat 33.
Before
10 :.55-Polltlcal Program 8, 10.
,
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8, 10,13, 15; MacNeil. Lehrer Report
31 Wire
33,
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,o,15; Mannix 6; 13; Movie
Partner of
"Nightmare" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
•euty
12:~Mbvle "You're a Big Boy Now" 10; Jonakl 33.
Mellican
12 :40-Maglclan 6,13.
l:OG-TO:morrow 3,.4.
1:50-News 13.
F1oor

D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ex -~
perlence . lniUred fre e!
e~tlmotH .

~
~

'

Col! 992-2384 or. •,
(614)
698·7257
Albony ,
' 1
nor Solos . Middleport, Ohio.
Phon• 992 -572~.
SEWING MACHINE Ropolro tei.'
vice, oil mak.., 992-2214'. rh.·
I)ITCH Digging. Phone (300) n3·
Fo_brlc Shop, Pbnl t roy
5839 or (300) nJ.S788 .
Authorized Singer Soln onJ
HOCKING RIVER Trading Com·
Service . We tharpen Sclnort . •
pony , GUNS-OVER 250 IN
EXCAV.o.TING,
doo•r. lood•r on~
STOCK. Buy , otll, trodt. 478
bockhoo
work:
• dump trucks
Richland, Athtnl, Ohio 45701.
and lo·boys lor hire; will houl
Phon• 593 · ~·
fill dirt, to soli, ttm.atone and
grov•l. Call lob on logor Joof.
"'". doy phOI10I 992·7019
night phone 992•3525 or 992: ,,
S232.
, ~

..

. I~UL~
- ~~~:r.Ni··~RC~~~~r:~~[):c::~5Q~~~~Vf~~~~MA~~~~nc:J~l~~Mt
MY~ 16 ls:?N£-i
DR'GA/1'1 OFMY ..-1
IM!-·h

IL!n&lt;='

Ifk~~~~~~ KNEE-

8 1/&lt;.

~~
covering
Pelt
Novelist,

Hermann

St Douay
name
lor Hosea

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia

VOU DIDNIT IIAVE 10

PICK ME UP 11-IE:
.
SECOND 11ME: . I
COULD HAVE MADE
ITONMYONNI
1916 CHEVROLET 4 whMI drlv• WILL do roofing, constrv&lt;llan,
truck. Phone 949·2132.
plumbing and htollng. No lob
992-3927.

too large or too 1maU. Phor.~

742·2~ .

•
CARPENTER, 11. rl~g. ceill"!l·
ponollng. Phone 992·1!759. ,,;.

•

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for lhe three L's, X for the two o ·s, etc, Single leiters.
apoolrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lettera are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
TD

ou

YL

NIHDL

RL

TD

SITF D ,

ISV

RL

1968 14 h , trove/ troller for sole or
trode for truck camper , Phone

RL

TD

I

LVHNIO'LV

OU

GTSD ,
AI S. -

suo

DRULD,

AIWL

YHO

'Y L.

YLNIHDL ·· I

N R I SST S E

-·!If"

·····················~····~

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: THERE ARE MORE FOOLS
THAN WISE MEN; AND EVEN IN WISE MEN, MORE FOlLY
THAN WISDOM. - CHAMFORT

~

CC 1916 Kin&amp; Fea,ures Syndk!llt", Inc.}

.
•
••
.•
.

·i
:

i. ·

HEAR NEWS FIRST

4t

WMPO AM-FM

:.

•
•
:
EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCAsTs Al ·;
•
.
.
: ! !-.
The Noon Report, ,

:

•

~.

..

:•

ancl5 P.M.

·························~·''
'

'

h-+-+-

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
on Rout• 7. Phone (614) 9115·
DOZER - LARGE AND SM.o.LL,
3825.
-.. &gt;
Coli '192-74111 .
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
REMODELING
,
Plumbing,
hooting.
'•
IOV AND DUMP TRUCKS. SILL
NEW 3 bedroom houoe, 2 boths,
ond
oil
typos
of
IIO"IrGI
repolr:
:•
PULLINS,
PHONE
992·2478
DAY
all elec ., 1 ocr•. Middleport,
Work guarontMd 20 ~.ars e l(·
OR NIGHT.
clos• to Rutland, Phone 992·
porlenco. Phon• ~·2409.
•
74111.
PROTECT your owlmmlng pix&gt;l I
·~
SMAll form for sale, 10% down,
' owner financed . Monroe Coun·

• AIOU32

b:-+-+--+-

'

ELWOOD lOWERS REPAIR ""-' ·'

HOME SITES for sale, 1 acre and
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

.Q

94

•

u

667·3166

. •• suo.

.EAST

•

~tUc.W fHd'·

.......

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·2419
.
9-1~-1 mo. pd.

Slturdty 10 Ia 5.
WVt hlvt ont 1r1en houtt
full of Florida tolialt

two levels, lighted beams in liv·
ing room, ceiling and other
features, $5000.00 price in·
eludes air conditioner, underpinning, smoll porch , all fur·
niture. applian ces. drapes and
rugs . Phone992·5169.

, P' llbrlillft

~Your

'

Optn lor Fell &amp; Wlnlor

trailer, take ov.,- paymenf1 .

ofter5p,m.

WAIT AD WAY

:'

·

. \WRK

NOTICE

BEDROOM ranch, tull base·
IN DASH 23 channel CB, om·lm- 3 ment,
garage, 3 yean old in 19671 2K63 Vlndale , underpinned
AICC Irish Setter pup1 for 1ale. $75
mpx rodio, 3 track stereo. Coli
'Rutland. Phone 742·2236. ·
~ . Phono (300) 675·4625 .
11h:20 Kreened porch, central
992-3965.
air , May be seen 825 S. 2nd
Ui'9 ACRE farm , two hou1e1 , city
KENNEBEC potoiOft. 50 lb: $3.50
Ave., Middleport. Phone 992·
water, mineral rights. good
or 100 lb. $6.00. Iring con·
2822.
posture land , 75 ocr&amp;~ tillable,
taintrs. Phone · 667·3737 or
some timbO&lt;, Mverol buildings, 1974 MOBILE Home for sole.
667·3974.
8 mil" north of Pomeroy oft Rt.
Phone 992·521!2.
33, Hemlock Grc.ve, Ohio. Ask·
SCHOOL ••wing mochln•s.
Singer;, featurs · buttonhole,
ing $75,000. Phone 992· 501~ 1913 12•60. 2 bedroom Vindole
CAMPER, Slarcroft Goloxi 8 with

Shops the

•
•

for sal• or rent, 3
bedrooms, ol utillttes paid.

and· both. F.A. furnace , lull
Phone 992-nst .
bos.,.,.,t. Coli 992·3630 or
12K60 with interior de1igned on
742·2180. .

niin... Coif 742-2819.

TRENatER

Rutland
742·2321
All Work Guaranteed
· Free Estimatts
· 6-2}2.m~

~ILE fiome

FARM for sale, 68 ocres 6 rooms

NEW HOME , total eledric , 3
AKC Boeglo pops. phone 992· 1971 HONDA CL~SO. 12,000
bedroom, full carpet, 1.113
milet, sill~ bor, c.rosk bars,
3717.
ocres , leading CrMk water
pull back handle bon, new tire
and - seol1. S&lt;-rombler 1ide
piptiS. $650. Coll9~9·2ole0.

.......

From 6" to 11" wide and
to s n. deep with or
pipe furnllhtd . Under road,
bores up to 12" pipe size.

WEST

.. 73

He leads his highest heart the 10 tpOt. This calls for the
blgher of the two sultl that
Weot can lead. If East wanted ,
a club return he would bave
led his lowest heart - the
deuce. If West didn't care
what wu returned he would
lead some sort of 11\lddle heart
like the five .
This particular example
shows this convention at Its
simplest and beat. East
doesn't want to do anythlnc
except to tell his partner
which suit to lead and there is
no way to confuse his partner.

7:31&gt;--HotlywOod Squarll 3,4; let's 0.1 With It 6;
Wild Klf'IOdom 13; Mttch ~me PM I; MacNeil·
Llllrer Report 20,33; In the Know 10; NMhvllle on
the Roed 15; Home Dlgtlt (color) 5.
1:00 Movln' On 3,15: HIPPY Days 6,13; Ptllptcttve...
School DIHgreptlan 4; M·A·S·H 1,10; 0Ytr li•Y
33; At The foP 20.
8:30 Movlt " Chll'lle's Angela" 6. 13; GE n.t.t' f ,10;
Daytime I color) 5; Shadow~ on the Grill 33. .
9 : ~Pollce Woman 3_.,15; Evening at Popl ~
S.lllna of Abl Llna~ln 1976 20.
.
9::10-T11t1monv Time Icolor) 5.
•
to : ~10o Club !color) ·5; .Sol! Dylan 3.4,15; Family
6,13; CBS Nowt Spetlll 1,10; HOWl 20; Olympiad
33.
10::10-Biack Ptnpectlvt on the Nowt 20.
11 : ~Newa 3_.,4,1,10,13,15; MacNtii· LIIIrtr Report .
33.
11 :»,-JohMy Ctraon 3_.,15; Alan King's Prime Tlmt
Preview 6,13; Kolak I ; Miry Hartman, MirY
Hll'tmtn 10; ABC NIWI 33.
'
12 : ~Movlt "Once You Kiss a Stranger" 10; · JIIIWIIIJ
33. .
12 : ~1t "VIsions.. ." f.
! : ~Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

~~~

I

Al. TROMM CONST : · BILL PUWNS '

lARRtm-foER
n.

IVDIBODY

1
.,

.I

M.f.itl~ 1-22·1 m~: l

· Remodeling Service
For Your Home

tUml 4-10-1 mo.

brlni rou

•

•

Dlvid P1rsons, Owner •:

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair
The Complete·

SIDIIIG-soffm

· guorontH&lt;I toyo ond gilts. No

'

Pl. Pleasont
Ph. 675-3469
9:30-5:00
Tiiii:OOO

$101111

AVERAGE ~ an everiing or
ofternoon1 demon1trating

.,

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES
~~ Mlin Street

IIIRIJOIISI 0001$
11£1'\ACEIIIEIIT
MRDOIIS
MIIIIIRUII

Rvtlond or~ . Coli Robert
Sltwart. Phon•992 ·7eq~.

Classified Ads

II

Squere Yerd lnattlltl'

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, ond
fancy prints, accessories.

·FiMocitt A lion 1110- &amp;Attics

LOSt a big dark blue Bluetick in

vance your mutual cause.

••

...•

.

'6e95

for campers.

IIISIIIIticln SetYices

tiqulty oroa. Phone l·300.f182·
2326.

~·

/"

BACK CARPmNG

sizes.

Blown

or992·7667.

.- j

ASSORTED RUBBER •.: ...', .
..... ' .

FREE ESTIMATES

buy lor $8,000. Phone '192-3578,

LOST··small rodlo control plone, "'
ft. wing span, gold and red, An ·

ICOIIPIO (Ool. 14--. 21)
Thoro't no need to bt hesitant
today ibout laaulna.. gentle INFANT care, light hou1e work.
some cooking, linin, suburban
reminder to lhOot who.Cif(e you
Chicago, salary ._liable.
a fagltimatt obllgaUOf .You
Rev, S.inard Pennington, 175
_,., - d llllm.
N. Troller Oak Park, Ill. or
IAGinAIIIUI (Nov. 11-0.C.
phon• 312·383·7052.
11) Teamwork Ia . MHnUII to
your succeaa today. Be willing
. .
..
·to lake a back _, 11 11will Ill· -:: =• .=.· .. -~ . ; .·.-.=

....
....

For

7-29-1 mo.

-3227.

tJI097
•QJ

mattresses,

667-3127

3 bedroom house for sole at 520
Sycamore St., Middleport, good

7269,

poptorw9'1&lt; . Coli 949·2803 or
992·2927 . .O.Ioo booking parlin.

• KQ7

•'

Wlnshield Rep..,c.menl
Frtt Estimotn
On Body Work ·
Eaport Poinli"!!
lnsurenc. Work
Welcome
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio

w ill trade for 7... ·75 2 whHI
drJ ~·· pickup . Phone 992-a.27
ofter6p. m.

tre1poning at any tlnie on the

afternoons demon1tratlng
guaranteed. toys .ond "gifta, .No
ca1h tnve1trnent, no d.llvery or
collecting . Computers do your

1-; :--1
...

992·7320 Evenings

American
Auto Sales

2860.
1914 JEEP Ritnegode. Phone. 992·
3451 11 a .m. to 8 p.m. or 992·
3597.
1915 FORO f ·:ISO 4 wh"l drive,

sh.,.ifl OHice.
OPEN AGAIN-olior being cloHd

coll..:tiflg. Compot..-o do you
poptorwork. Coli 9~9·2803 or
992-2927, Al1o,booklngportles.
AVERAGE $40 on -ing or

.A8ft4

1-22·) mo.•

Glen Bissell 949·2901 or 949·

makes It possible for East to
tell West wbat to lead back.

NORTH

'

low miloog• , · $1395. Phone

count.

lor maximum enjo~ment avoid
lhe company or one who lavors
daallng In Intrigues.
·
CANCER (~unt 21.JuiJ 22)
The Important thing today Ia
not prolll or advancement. To
be happy, let your heart rule
your hotd oven though II coats
you a lew shekela.
LEO (~ufr 21-Aug.I2)You are
welcome averywhera yougotoday l;)ecauoe ol your ploannl
dlspoalllon. You'll have I com•
pllmont lor all.
~&gt; vttlioo (Alii. aa.~ep~. at)
Should you·have mlHen or lm·
portance to.roeolve today, particularly In lht realm or
linen-. handlelhtm at once:
Tomorrow thlnga could llghlon
up 1 bll.
LIIIIA (lel1l 23-0ol. 221 Don'!
wall lor olhera to lake lhe lead
today. Your rortunate aspects
quality you lo be In 1he driver's

·-·. ··

R1cine, Ohio

Phone 949-2814
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

OR

olr, lots -of chroma , real sharp,

28. I still owe $18,000 on it. My

huntlng

.

2860.
1971 Ford Moverlck , p.s., p.b..

and Keno Rood , County Rooa

no

AT949-2801

1971 M.rcuryM.ont-;o, p.1. , p .b.,
o lr; 'llery nlc• . $1295 . .Phone
Gl• n BiSI•II , '9.49·2801 or 949·

Roseberry house on the Bashon

lire lOday, You're capable of
juggling several undertakings ,
succoaslully.
Owners .
TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20)
Continuo to Investigate ways to ABSOLUTELY

'

'

Conllnuous one pltct
·gutters. W. hlt"!! .lt. or do It
yourHlf. Spoclol prices lo
bulldtn.

GLEN R. BISSEU.

1970 Iuick RlvierQ , good condl·
tlon, new tires, $900. Phone

at 6;30 p.m. at their building In
Bashan.

oddr111 is

.

M£1NE
I '; ·..
CARPET SHOP · ..... . .. . '.

GUTTER SERVICE

CONTACT

THE RACINE Fir• O.po'rtm.nt will

WIN AT BRIDGE
Signal for au" preference

.........:- ..·' .....
.
,,. .···"'

3; Mtrv Griffin 4; Partridge Family I ;
Mission: lmpolllblt 15.
5:30-Ntws 6; Family Affair 8; Electric Company
20,33: Adlm ·1 3.
· 6:08-Newa 3,o,l ,10,13,15; ABC NIWI 6i Zoom .20;
Conaumtr EIIPII'Ienct 33.
6:30-NBC NIWI3,o,15; ABC Nowt 13; Andy Grlflltll6;
CBS News 1,10; Hoclgepodge Lodge 20: lTV
Utlll11tlon 33.
'
7 : ~Truth or Conaquencn 3; To Toll the Truth 4;
Bowll"!! For Dollars 6; Ltt;l Go To The Rac11 I;
News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Family Affair 15;
Romagnolls' Tlblt 20; American 111- Forum;
Blot Ridge Quarlwt (color) 5.

( r ~ :~j

FREE ESTIMATES!

Memorial Hotpltol ..

I'IHOAI !&gt;LOW DOIYN!'-.: THAT 1,\II.ID·
WHAT 00 YOU 1,\I!AN ~EAPIN/3 PRUS,
TH~ OPSRATION W/16 REMEMIS&amp;R l
' PlANN&amp;D' l ... WHAT
OP&amp;RATION 'l

5: ~FBI

•- - - - - - - - -......c·' •

You con sove hundreds
even thousondl of dolll"
with aluminum or vinyl
siding .

POMEROY, OHIO

SOMEONE to live in . Contact Marvin .Darst ',at
Veteran &amp;

'• .·.

(htster, Ohio
'

POM!!~!v~~!'!.~. CO.(®

.i ,..

,I

Pholotraphr
fiS.4155

Plalns, ·Ohl~ ,

NOTICES
ATTN. : tl
ALL HOUSEWIVES

-'...

KEN GROVIR

Boa 21·A
Rutland, Ohio 45771
Ph. (614) 742·2409
We Deliver
7,·21·~ mos.

CAPTAnt EASY

SLUO.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1t76

D.C. STANDS FOR PXTOIL
DOCTOR ~SHINGTON 111&lt;\S AN
OI'MTAAL.4\Il06IST...1115 I:!E5T
FRIEND 11145 NAMED ~ Hill

TIMLEG~

I vb.

Nowllfti!PihtdreWitttera
to

I I I eun-lld
r-lht...,...
-···.
br tht.._certoon.

IMIIlll _ _ _ ,

"0'0-( l I I I)"

�10 - The Dally Sentinel, MlddleJJ:Ort-Pomeroy. 0., 'IUesday, Sept. 14, 1976

'

Rhodes burns Assembly's leadership:
Hardship predicted to

millions of Ohioans in
Capital rotunda speech
""LUMBUS 'UPI a· J
A' Rhod toda
sed
""'
- ov. ames .
es . y ac~
the Democratic coo trolled Legislature of falling to take action
on a Medicaid crl.sls that will br~ hardship to "a miUlon Ohio
.
an d of Ignoring the " eterloration" of the state's
cinner
IIt zens"
cities.
Rhodes, In remarks scheduled for delivery In the Capital
Rotunda, said the state Is facing a severe crisis 1n both the
areas of MedicaJ'd and in the
nom! Ua of th !nne
·
eco
CCO pae
e
r
cities.
Rhodes was Monday denied permi3sloo to address a joint
· 0f th e Obi0 Ge ner al Asaembl y.
seSSion
"For the first time In the
modem history of Ohio, the pa'rtment to cut twelve per
majority leader!ihlp of the cent to save Medicaid" he
General Assembly has denied said.
'
the governm: the opportunity
Rhodes said Ohio's second
to speak on tssues to the full crisis has to do with the
membership
of
the economic condition ' of· Ohio's
legislature," said Rhodes.
inner cities.
"Since themajoclty leaders
"Ohio's ,.;.,.rcltles and .the
"""'
refuse to Jisten to what I citizens who
Inhabit them
have to say without censoring are lnheriUng a legacy of
my speech, I will direct m,y obsolence, deterloratioo and
remarks to the people of Ohio decay," said Rhodes.
!hey are elected to
''The simple fact Is that
represent," Sjlid Rhodes.
people are leaving our cities
Rhodes
said
the because their jobs· ar·e
emocra
c
rna
or
Y
was
leaving" Rhodes said.
j
It
D
II
aware
of
the
crisis
in
Rhod'es said he had
. 'd
•·
b
MedICBI 16 mont... agq ut proposed three b"'·
...., w'hich he
"ha s falled to do any thin g to saidcanstrengthenthec!ties
alleviate the crlslB.
and create more and be
. Iter
"If Medl ld is
full
ca
not
y . jobs.
·
fundedbyNovemberl4,0hio
·
The
first
'two b"'·
wl1l be f ed
"'" --·'d
wuw
odrc to abandon thed create new programs of real
MedlIca l miUlprogram
Ohl c1 1an . and perlimal property •·""'
near y a . on o t zens Incentive for businesses
will face hardship through no creaUngemploymentln Ohio
fa~t of ~~town~ he said. "The third bill would
e sa
M caid pro- provide personal.property
gram Is underfunded by at taxlnvestmentcredlts'orthe
·
•·
Ieast '128m Ullon. '
purchue of new equl.-.-nt
..--" We have
proposed
usedlnorpurchaaedfoc
'd
' the
soIutions to the Medlcat construction of new plants or
crisis ," said Rhodes.
expansion of existing plants"
''One' lnvolvesaserlesof saldRhodes.
'
seIectl ve
cu t s . In
Rhodes aald the people of
appropriations to other Ohio's inner cllles need lw&gt;ln,
tm t
t
b
·:--.:
d
epar en S
O
e
"They are saying It lou(!
reappropriated ·to Medicaid," and clear;, said Rhodes
said Rhodes ·
"And
·
esa of what
"Anothermakesanacross· themaiorltyleadenhlpdoes
the-board cut of two per cent or doesn't do, I Intend to see
to be tr ans ferre d to that help for the cities and
Medicaid," he said. "Thla bill jobs for Ohioans are
has not had a serious f ·~--In
If .•• ~
oru...uu g ...· It ...,.es me
hearing."
the , rest
of · my
"It Is unthinkable and un- administration "
said
believable that the majority . D'--'-.
'
'"IM.RIO
leadership of the legislature
HoUle Speaker ·Vernal G
would force · the Welfare De· ru
· ffe
Jr. and Senate'
President 'Pro Tern OUver
"'"odesinaletter
Ocuektold ""
Mooday that "there would be
no joint &amp;eslion" for Rhodes
Tuesdoy thru Thurldey
Sept; 14-16
to aruress prjor to today's
NOT OPEN
con·-'ftd
..-~""l6 of the General
A8aembly.
Riffe said reluaal to allow
Friday, Soiturday, Sunday
Rhodes to apeak was because
·
Sept.17-18-19
ONE FLEW 011 ER
Rmclea used a June 10 joint
THE CUCKOO'S NEST"
address "as a. political
forum."
.
Jock Nicholson • ,
Louise ·f )etcher
Inthat apeech , Rmclea also
Wm. Redfield
R
accuse d t he Democratic
majority of ''doing nothing"
Show starts al 7 p. m.
to alleviate th
· e Medleald
regard!•

MEIGS THEATRE

SMALL
CAR?

BIG CAR?

'I
•
•

I

•

.'

'AUTO LOANS
, N~WOR lATE MODEL USED CARS
We hav·e·a plan tor any kind of car! Use our
Low Rafe Auto Loans.

..
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To 7 P.M.

"

'

"'fHE

•
FRIENDLY BANK"
,

I

Winfield, Gallipolis locks

Local notices, briefs

IN THE
Reedsville , has flied for
COMMON PLEAS COURT
divorce against Boyd e. OF MElDS cOUNTY, OHIO
Johnson, Reedsville.
PROI,.TE DIVISION
HOMER BAXTER , Ad·
THERE WILL be a mlnlstrator of tho Estato ot
S
Hutl A. Mooro, Docea..d
~r'e~oe~~~ t~~~y·~~u;~~ VSPialntltf,
CHARLESTON, w. Vil. the subcommittee at its Manus, !)..Raleigh, to wrl14!
wllh the Rev. Eldon Blake Tho Unknown Spoutt. Holr~. (UP!)- The river locks at
Sen. Jemlngs Rindolph, 0.
from the Eden U.B. Church De v 1. . . . , L09 • tt u ,
meeUng In Wheeling, barge W. Va., advising him of the · ·
as g·uest speaker. There will Exocuton, Admlnlltrator~, or . Winfield · on ·the · Great trai\Spor\ation was the only
be a basket dinner at nOOI'l. Asstvns of Hoiet A. Mooro, Kanawha and at Eureka In Item up today.
state 's concern with the
Aft
known
u Huol
GaIIia County on the Ohio·
Jottor~,
De&lt;oued,
Et Mooro
AI
Beanfleld described the flll:lures at Winfield and'
· ernoon services will begin.. also
1
1
a:;,~~l"'~.t~~~eeg;.~r;:,ll~~~ ~~~: 3~:~~h J:;~~ 'L~~~t
Deftnaonts. . No. n.n• River are the key bottlenecks 1937·vlntsge Eureka deviee Gallipolis. Randolph Is
Carolyn Sue Johnson, ~t. 1, pastor, invited the public.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION In moving coal by barge on as "the wont lock" because chairman of the Senat;
ON K.NOWN AND UNKNOWN both rivers, an official for It Is· Uny In comparison to PubUc Works Committee.
MARRIAGE LICENSES DEFENDANTS
Amherst Coal Co. said today.
D~£0
have been lssved 10 Steven
To , Dorothy Roberts, whose
R
newer locks for equaling
oy nue es Ra~ Hupp, 18,J Rt.Th2, Racine, last
known addreso WIS R. D.
obert Beanland, manager river flow. While the lock
Pomeroy.
Oh io;lostClarence
an Loura aye elss. 18, 4.
Swauger,
whose
known of transportation, told a carr led 3 milll on tons 0f River excursion
Rt. 3, Racine ; Ephrlam Von address was Albany , Ohio ; legislative subcommittee 'supplies Its first year, !traced
OD
eVeDJD~· and
Herdman, 20, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Marton Moore, Jr., Chorles which Is studying marketing 34 million tons In 1914 •nd 20
Gloria Jean Parllow, 21 , Moore, Donald Moore, John
of W t Vir 1 ·
1
~
.#.
d to f''K
' ht
.,,,
Pomeroy.
Moore . Arthur Moore. Ronzo • uses
es
8 rna coa • million tons of cargo this year Onere
Roy rwe, 77, formerly of
Moore, Garnet Moore, Fred that both locks are OUtdated already.
.
.
0
the Cheshire area, Rou"" I,
~~ ~~- ~:nn~;nnAa~be~.:~~~ and sholild be replaced.
"The delays are staggering
The P. A. DelliiY· a. 130 ft.
Albany, died unexpec""dly
Mary J. sepp. also known as
"A four to eight hour delay now," Beanlancl noted . "All · stern whee I e r from
Monday evening.
Mory ·Jane Moore also known is not unusual
of lhls ' of course
· ' reflects on Charleston, W. Va. will· offer
as Mary Sapp Archer. Bessie 1 • "
h at the 1Winfield
·
h
Mr. Rife Was born Aug. 11,
Cheathem , Jessie McGuire, OC•S,
e to Q the rates."
all excursion from t e
18991n Gallia County, a son of
Holzer Medical Center
Ranzo Moore . .Jr .. Hatt le lawmakers. "And a 16 to 18. Beanland said the u. s. Pomeroy levee froiD 7 to 9
Ebersbach , Mfllarcl Jeffers , h
the late Horton and Susan
(D1sc harges, SepL IS)
whose
addresses
ore our de1ay is no t unheard o.f " Corps of Engineers is this even1ng. The boa t can
Darst Rife. He was also
Walter Barrett, Katherine unknown ; the unknown
While a number of issues studying the possibility of accommodate 250 people, and
preceded In death by 8 Buchanan , Virgil Burris, ~:::,s.".'s . h:~~~utg,e,~lse:~ : were studied last month by construe ling 8 canal to there are two lounges for use
brother, Floyd. Surviving lire Ewing Campbell, Mrs. Gary mlnistrators or ass igns ot
bypass the Gallia structure, In case of inclement weather.
hiS WI'fe, Mar tha Schi ebel Cropper a nd daughte r, Mr S. Moore.
Hazel AJr"
. Moore
, Mar
ion
Charles
Moore,
known up and down the river There wtll be CD lliope music
Rife; a son, Douglas, Ernest Haggy and daughter, Donald Moore, John Moore,
as the "Gallipolis Locks,'' on and light refreshments will
Columbus; a s""pdaugh""r, Mrs . James Kelly and Garnet
Arthur Moore
.
~onzo
Moore,
the Ohio side of the river. He be available. Tickets go on
Moore , Fred Moore, (Continued from 'Pftl!tl 1)
Miss Mary McJntyre, Pitt- daughter , Jerald Keyes, Hannah Relbel, otso known as
Report Approved .
estimated the cost of the sale at 6:30.
sburgh, Pa.,· twosis""rs, Mrs. Edra Proffitt, Bessie Sievers, also
Hannah
Mooreas, Mary
•125 m1'Jlion ' adding
known
MaryJ. Sopp,
Jane
Council approved · the canal at •·
Harry (Flossie) Tate, New Lena. Thompson , Margie Moore olso known os Mary report of Mayor Hoffman the Corps had
· Placed It "on
Deer jumped
Lexington, Ohio, and Mrs. Wallace.
Sapp
Archer ,
Belste
the hack burner.".
Clifton (Hazel ) Stout, Rou"" 1
(Births, SepL 13)
Cheotnem , Jessie McGuire, showing receipts of $1,733.90
He said . coal loaded at .
.
.
Ranzo Moore, Jr ., . Hattie In fil1es and fees and $2114 in
Albany; a' brother, Walter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ebersboch , Millard Jeffers. mercha t po"
II ti
Huntington for shipment of.f hill
. onto auto
1
near Cheshire ·, a sister•ln· Brown, daughter, Gallipolis ·, Swauger
DorothyRobertsond
Clarence
n
uce
co
ec
ons
d
b
'both
:
for a total of $1,937.90 for the own rver ypasses ·
taw, Mrs. Ina Rife, Kenton; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kingery,
You are herebY no!lfled that month of August. Council also locks, but coal loaded for
The Meigs County Sheriff's
two granddaugh""rs and a daugh""r, Gallipolis; Mr. and defendants
you hove in been
a legal named
action approved !he taxation rate upriver shi ppage must pass Department inveatlgaied an
grandlon of Columbus ; two Mrs . Alan Humphrey, entitled Homer Bo•ter. Ad - f I..,.,
ded b through the Galllpolls ·locks. accident Monday at 9:20p.m.
grea~andsons, and several daughter, Ravenswood, W. ministrotor of the Estote of ~ "" as recommen
Y He added that at least 75.per
wben a deer jumped into the
nieces and nephews.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert ~~.·~~~til~." .~..r~·. DJ~:~!~,; ~i~~~t.;.,.!~~~ti~~~; cent of the 10.5 million tons of windshield of a car traveling
Mr. Rife attended the Old Morgan, son, Jackson.
Spouse , Heirs . Devisees,
coal loaded yearly at Hun·
Kyger Freewill Baptist
Legatees , Executors
. Adof- from
natural
gas rates
read t'mg t on came from West on SR 7 driVen by Krista Ann
mlnlstrators
or Assigns
Columbia
Gaswas
of Ohio.
Davies, Gallipolis. The driver
Church and before his Veterans Memorial Hospital Haz et ~• . Moore , • tso known as
·
counc1'l approved I!Je or· Vt' rgt"ma,
WI' th lhe res I was treated at the scene by
retirementwasasteelcutter · ADMITTED
Elza Hazel
Deceosod Moore
, Et AI, Jeffers
Delen -, . dinanee from the Columbus sh'tppe d from Ken t uckY the Middleport ER Squad.
and coal. miner. In lieu of Giimore Jr Jack Bech""l dan ts. Th •s
· actoon
· h05 been and Souithern Ohio· Electric mt'nes ·
•
· flowers, the family suggests
' .,
• assigned Case Number 21 ,71A
Jf the coal is loaded on the The deer was killed.
At 9:50 a.m. 'Monday on
thatfriendscontributetothe Barringer,
Middleport
;
Hattie
.lheCourtof
Middleport·
, Dana ondispendlngin
Common Pleos,
Probate Co.increasingratesasap-u b the Obi Kanawha
River
at Long Hollow Roaa Paul M.
0 ed
heart assn.
Division . Meigs county, prPu.bvli Ur~n Y Y
Charleston, it must pass
Rodman, 32,' Rt. 3,
Funeral services will be Howett, Shade ; Gaynell Pomeroy, Ohio •5769 , The
c tiuties Commission. .
McAbee, West Columbia ·, object of the Compla int ts to The rate would have been put through Winfield in addition Pomeroy, pulled too far to
held at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
sell real eS!ate in which Hazel
·
tD facing a ra~ as third as
Rawlings-Coats Funeral T i m o (h Y Sh lor en k o, A. Moore hod an interest ; to into effect on Sept. :!0 regard· high again as that paid for the right to pass a telephone
her Interest
Home in Middleport with the Pomeroy ; Sandra Griffith, determ
and toinequiet
title therein
to the less
C of any
.1 hcouncil action.
f all freighl on the Ohio River., he truck and went over an
embankment. Rodman
Rey. Chester Lemley of· Reedsville; Don Pooler, following described real
ounct, owever, orm y 881'd
.
!lela,;~.
' be Ill
.
Chesterhill
estate,
to.wit : described real approved
• committee ordered claimed injury but was not
-.,. Burial wtll
Minersville; Hilda
K 11 Frederick,
Th
The following
the 5 land the
· t measure
of the 60 from
Is . The
Cheshire Gravel
Hill
; e Y omp-- estate. to -wit : Situate in Town
pom
cen
House Speaker Lewis Me· immediately treated.
Cemetery. Friends may call son, Long Bottom ; Jack No. 2. Ronge No. 13, and charge per residence applied
Ward, Pomeroy ,· Samuel Section Number 26,otthe Onto for payina on street lighting.
at the funer11,l home anytime
Company's Purchase , and
Th -.,
after 10 a.m. Wednesday.
Wamsley, Middleport.
lying on the ·east side ot
e minimum electric bill
,
DISCHARGED - Edward Thomos Fork Creek, and In the future will be $3.85,
.
(Continued from page 1)
Sarver, Margaret Smith, more
particularly
described
filS follows
: Beginning
at the which includes the 60 cents
has been offered '1 .miUlon to po!le In the nude for Hustler'
EXTENDED OUTLooK
Floyd Bush , Barbara North west corner of which each home pays on Magazine, ·Larry Flynt, editor and publlaher, (~~lid Monday.
Elizabeth
Thursday tbrou.gh Richards., Anthony Hudson. and
59·100Swauger's
ocre lot fourteen
on the street lighting. , BusineSses F1ynt made the offer In a telegram to Miss Benham after she
Saturday, lair Tbunday
center section lin&amp; of slid are now paying $1.50 won IJ_Ie Miss America pageant in Atlantic City Saturday night.
f
section No. 26, thence North a
month
on
that
Hesaldtheofferwasgoodfor30days. ·
·
·
and a chance o showers
on sold line nine Ill chains to
and a lillie warmer Friday
the southwest corner of t!1e charge. However, the cOm·
"This mll1lon dollar offer Ia part of a conUnulng education
and Saturday. u•up
Robert Hysell tract, thence pany will continue only to program I have developed for the semally-uptlght segment of
1.i.s wUI be
East twenty one and 50·100
in the mid to upper 70s
AUTO DA&amp;IAGED
chains olqng the south line ol collect the fees for SU'eet ourBOCiety," Flynt said. "Moses freed the Jews, Uneoln freed
----•·y
a-•
in
tbe
lower
Tw
soid
tract(9) of
land,
the slaves and I want to free all the neurotics.! believe I can do
•nllllKIII uu
o cars received minor thenceHysell
south nine
cha ins
to lighting until June ' 1'1rl ·
80s Friday and Saturday. . damages in an accident on the North east corner of sa id
Meantime, · Middleport this by monetarily encouraging personages such as Miss
Lows will be ID the upper E Seco d St p
Elizabeth Swauger's sold lot . beginning Jan. 1, will receive
.
n
., omeroy, at thence wost twenty one and so- the Income from a three mlll America to prove their acceptance of their natural sexuality
by posing nude," he said.
·
50s.
4:39 p.m. Monday. A car 100 chains to tho place ot
d b R 'd y
beginning containing nineteen levy passed In June. Council
raven y et
oung, ond 25-100 acres be tho some has plaMed 1 &lt;mills of that
Minersville, backed into a car more or less . Said land being
·"
\-Tisls.
driven by Marla Roush, New the some deeded tco Marion levyforstreetlightingand1.5
Medicaid was one of the Ha ven. Bo thyoung and Mrs. Moore,
by horlotte
Wollohan Jr
bn.,February
2S, 1904 mills for street maln""nanee.
main topics on the legl.slatlve Roush were attempting to put and recorded In the Meigs However, after collection
, cal!llldar this week.
mail in a mBI'ibo• but one car 91
County Deed
it will be some time
517 · Records In Vol. begins
•
•
~age
bel
One of the two pending bUla was already parked In the
Excepting oil land lying on
ore the villa ge ac tuallY
on the subject 1s designed to drive-in space. There were 00 the northerly side of Union receives the collection from
Avenue sold to Arthur Moore the county treasurer.
fu nd th e projected $160 injuries and no charges filed. from Marlon Moore, Jr., by
million Medicaid deficit by
warranty deed dated June 10,
Mayor Hoffman said a
190,,
and
recorded
In
Vol
.
93,
Greyloound
will stop
appropriating expected
Page 289, Meigs County Deed 1 1 daU buss1 tb Le is I.e
surplus revenues and
Re&lt;ords.
w ce
Ya e w
e
Excepting .2! acre •old to , taxi stand wltb Lee to work
mandating Department of
Edw•rd French by Marton
~ Tl ,.
1 detalls Ibis
Welfare Administrative
SQUADCAUED
Moore, Jr., by deed doted oa
wee.. caets
changes.
Th
M.
Decembe r v13, 1tp01, and will be sold at tbe stand and
1n ol. 97• age 612, freight will be accepted
e
I d d I e p o r t recorded
Meigs County Deed Records.
. .
•
Em ergency Squad was called
Excepting .96 acre sold to
Counc1l discussed a traffic
TRIAL SLATED
at 8:59 p.m ., the squad was Fronk Sapp and Mary sapp by probleincaused by two school
Marl on Moore. Jr., by deed
. Cr eek Road doted
A $100,000 civil suit as a called toLe admg
December 18, 1923, and buses parked on Ash St. It
result of an auto accident for Sammy Wamsley, 12, who recorded In Vol , 12!. Page 37A, was agreed to enact an or·
County IDeed
Recor.un
ds.- dinance
.
Feb. 13, 19741n Gallipolis was had a hip 1·n1·ury· He was Meigs
excepting
he coal
that no veh'tc1e can
Plus Reg. '19.95
scheduled for trial this taken to Veterans Memorial derlylng said tract of land , be parked so that It obstructs
morning in Gallia C·;unty Hospital where he was ad·· The property i• more
try of traff'IC on to StreeIs ·
'
properly described as follows: en
Common Pleas Court.
milled. At 9:25a.m. Monday, Being situate In Salisbury After a first warning, drivers ·
Set of Floor .
Etta J. and Robert L. Ross ille squad transferred Mrs. Township, Meigs County, will tie cited to court
bounded and described
·
of GaWpoUs are the plaintiffs Margare t Smlth from Ohio,
as follows : to-wit : tn section
Councilman Carl Horky
In the action fUed against Veterans Mel(lorlal Hosiptal 26, Town 2, and Range 13 .. said a represents live of the
· Horne corner
Beginning at the Nortneast
. Co. has
John Thomas Bryant, Rt. 2, to the Kimes NurSll1g
of Ben Eblen's land, Amer 1can Patnt
Bidwell.
In Athens.
thence North 332 feet to tho stated his firm will sand blaat
south side of Union Avtnue; the village hall free of charge
thence south 88 degrees 30'
West 256feet to the North east and Eldon Walburn Is
~~~~~ ~fut~ 19~i~e:~~~ ~::; presenUy preparing a cost
116 feet to the crHk, thonct eatiinate on pointing up the
south 13 degrees 30' w..t m brick af""r the blasUng is
teet along said creek, thence
·
North 3 degreei 30' w..t 139 done. It was reported that
teet to the south side of Union liUeged overcharges for cab
Avenue,
the north
Model
corn
or of and
the 96-100
acre west
lot; servIce ba'd bee n InvesUgated
thence following the south side and It was de""rmlned that
1424
of Union Avenue to the center ·charges had not been
of Thorn n Fork Creek; then"
down said Creek to • point elevalsd. It was agreed that
A POWERFUL VALUE WITH BRILLIANT
which Is lhe southwest torntr traffic Hgllts In town villi be
HEADLIGHT AND S.WAY DIAI.-A·NAPI
of a one -fourth acre tract of
·
• Edge )(teener elelnt up to bueboarda,
land described In Vol. 97, Palit turned off at midnight.
• Wide soft vlnyl lum!ture guard and
612 . Deed Records, .Meigs
Attending the meeting were·
3-Qoaltlon hlndle ad)utlment.
County, Ohio; thence east
H ff
about t1 67 feet to the place of Mayor
o man, Clerk·
beginning, containing 7.3 Treasurer Gene Grate·,
lou. Councllma H k Geor
acres more or
Reference: This description IS
n or
ge
token from Mortgage Deed Meinhart, Marv1n Kelly,
Records, Meigs County, Ohio, William Walters, James
Vol. 122, Page 99.
Bre
nd AI Lee
You ere required to onswer
wer a
len
King.
within ~• days after the last
' publication ol notice, which
will be published once each
week for she successive wee~s.
beginning, 1 Septembtr, 1976.
The last publication will bo
made on 12 October, 1976, and
Vlslt Our Salad Bar
the 21 days for answer will
commence on that date. In
Liver and Onions
ctae of your ftllurt, or
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
othtrwlse, to respond 11
required by the Ohio Rules of
Vegetllble
Main Store, Mechanic Street Warehouse
Civil Procadure, jUdgment by
Hot Rolls
and Home Furnishings Annex. Open
default wilt be rendorod
against you for the relief
Co.{fee, Tea or Milk
Plus tax
Monday thru Thursday t:30 to 5 p. m.
demanded In the clolm.
Friday 9:30 to 8 p.m. Saturday 9:30 to 5 p.
Mannl~g o. Webstor,
m.
Judge
Common l'ltoaCourt
Probe t• Otv lsi on
992·3629
MtlGI County, Ohio
(9) 7, ... 21, 21 1101 5. 1~. 6k
Dogs

running loose In the
community will not be
tolerated, Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews said
tOday. Loose dogs will be
picked up and their owners
~II betpr,osecuted. Fines will
"" no ess than S50, the
mayor '!'arned.
·
DEBRA HALLEY has flied
for
R support under the

R

cause long shipping delays

di

M daY

•

Hospital. News

MiddJepo11

Keno bridge dedicated
here to dedicate the bridge,"
BY KATIE CROW
and added Imitations of the
KENO, Ohio (Special)
late
Franklin D. Roosevelt
An lmpreaaive ceremony \Vas
and
Winston Churchill (he
conducted by appropriate
dignitaries here Tuesday resembles Churchill).
Following Morris, the
afternoon when ihe new Keno
Bridge In Chester Township senltir citizens choir offered
four selec.tlons
under
was dedicated.
direction
of
Mrs.
Carrie
This new bridge, the eighth
"The Star
rebuilt In Meigs County In Neutzllng,
Spangled
Bamer
,""Shall We
modern times by the county
Gather
at
the
River,"
"Down
highway department,
originally was a covered By The Riverside" and
bridge, accordl1111 to Wesley "Down by the Old Mill
Stream."
·
Buehl, ~ounty engineer,
Buehl and others spoke to
Crow said the bridge was
"one of the largest crowds
dedicated
In memory of the
ever seen in the area/' ac·
late
Jacob
Cowdery
who, with
cordllll! to one native of Keno.
The dedication
was the help of his son, built the
arranged by Fred Crow, first bridge at Keno spaMlng
Pomeroy attorney, Prof. Shade River , Crow added.
Robert Morris was master of that another reason was to
ceremonies. Morris sta~. recognize that Meigs County
"There ar_~ beautiful people .has fine highway officials.

Buehl gave a brief history
of the bridge. He said It will
accommocla"" all legal heavy
loads. The invocaUon waa .
given by Betty Kern and the
pledge of allegiance was led
by · the senior cltlwn choir.

Elberfelds In Pomer.c.y·

VOL XXVIII · NO. 105

REG.
$79.95

THE INN PLACE•

Monday Night
Special

'

r•

THE MEIGS INN

.

'

DEEP CLEANS SHAGS AND
ERTYPESOF

·

·

·

1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, _OHIO

Schools of the Meigs Local
School District for the first
time slnee a ""achers' strike
started on Sept. 7 were
declared "officially closed,''
Prior to lhls time, Charles
L. Dowler, superintendent of
the district; has declared \hat
the schools were "officially
open''. However, buses of the
district have not been running for the most part
because of \he picket lines
established at the various
schools by the striking
""achers. The local teachers
association reported that only
about 16 pupils of the
qistrlct's 2900 have been
reporting to the schools, even
though schools have been
"officially open" until today.
Clerk John Triplett,
following an executive
session of the district's board
of education, announced
today schools would be
"officially closed." There
was no explanation forthcoming on the change of the
status of the schools being
open . However, Supt. Dowler,
it was reported this morning,
will be making a statement
la""r today.
Tuesday night was the
regularly scheduled tneeUng
of the district's board of
education and during the
meeting, Guido Girolaml, a
Pomeroy businessman,
appeared before the board to
ask questions about the
strike.
He criUcized the board
because buses of the district
are not running and said that
when the district was formed
it was understood that buses
would pick up t)le, children.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1976

Board President Wendell ·
Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs,
board member, and-- Supt.
riowler told Girolaml that bus
drivers had been contacted
several Uines about running
their bus rou""s since the
strike had begun. The board
representalives said that bus
drivers are in violation of an
agreement between the board
and the drivers In not running'
the rou""s.
Girolaml also criticized the
policy of Dowler in declaring

row 60s; hlghl Thursday in
By United Press biternaUonal
the 70s. Probablllty of rain 5(l
WASHINGTON - AN IMMEDIATE BAN on aerosol per cent today, 40 per cent
•ays containing fiuorocarbons Is being demanded by the tonlght,30percentThursday.
Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group .
The group Tuesday nolsd that the National Academy of ':':':::;:::::::;::::::::;:::::::::g,;:::::::;:~~':::::::::::::::::::;::::
Sciences study committee bad linked the gases to erosion of
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
the earth's ozone shield which recommended an additional two
Friday througb Suaday,
years of study to determine the extent of the damage before fair Friday, a chance of
acting.
•
showers Saturday aad
"The report confirms scientific predictions that clearlag Sunday. Hlgbs will
fluorocarbons used In aerosol sprays .not only destroy he in the 7ts and lows will
stratospheric ozone, thereby causing increased skin caneer, be In the 50s.
but alao will have :worldwide effects on climate," the group :~:::::;:::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
said. "We believe the responsible federal agencies should take
Immediate action to ban ·aerosol sprays containing these
fluorocarbons ... The committee's own findings Indicate that
the consequences of waiting two more years to commence
regulation will be thousands of additional skin cancer cases
each year for decades In the United States, and many more
Numerous trophies and dleport, will provide free aU
worldwide.
crafll""ms plus silver dollars of the soft drinks for .the day
will be awarded winners In and the Rutland American
WASHINGTON -' - DATES AND TIMES now are set for the many events planned for Legion Post will conduct a
all three naUooally televised presidential debates, but all a bicentennial celebration public games party turning
locations have not yet been determined.
Saturday on the grounds of all of the proceeds over to the
The first debate already had been scheduled for Sept. 23ln the Meigs County Senior Meigs County Councll on
Philadelphia. On 'l'llesday the League of Women Voters, which
Center in Pomer.oy. Aging, spoi!Sor of Saturday's
is sponsoring the meetings, announced the second will be held Citizens
The center will also be used observance.
Oct. 6and the third, Oct. 22. Sites for the second and third are for .a part of the displays and
One of the shiny trophies
. yet to be selected. The vice presidential debate will be held for a country store which wUI . will go to the winner of the pie
during the week beginning Oct. 11, but the specific night has be crealsd after a stpre of eating con""st, and pies are
not been chosen.
many years ago with penny being provided by Kroger's,
The league aald all four debates win begin at 9:30 p.m. candy, cr'acker, pickle, and Pomeroy Pastry Shop ,
EDT,and each will last an hour and a half,
cheese barrels, craft Items, a Powell's Super· Valu,
sale of buttons and many Helners' Bakery and Jim·
MORE THAN 33,000 MEMBERS OF THE UNITED AUTO other features.
my 's Bakery. Added today tD
WORKERS at 12 Ford Motor Co. plants and ooe parts depot In
A number of Individuals the judges were the names of
Ohio walked off the job at 11:59 p.m. Tuesday as a nationwide and business houses have Gene Oiler and Max
auto strike got llllderway.
contributed to Saturday's Whitlatch who will help judge
Company ofliclala at all of the plants said the walkout was celebration which will carry the tug·o·war. The team
peaceful. Nooe of the plants reported any workers leaving out a "Yes""ryear" theme. winning the event wtll receive
before the strike deadline. The Immediate effect of the strike Providing silver dQllars are a large trophy piUS small
in Ohio will be a loss to the state's economy of '1.8 million a the Racine-Home National trophies lor each team
day.
Bank, the Citizens National member. Four teams are
PARMA, omo- 'I1IE PARMA SCHOOL BOARD decided Bank, Middleport, the reglstere'd 'for 'the event
'IUesday night In a special emergency session to ask the Farmers Bank and Savings which is scbeduled for 12 noon
Co ., and the Pomeroy and Is for adults only.
slrlklng Parma teachers to return to work In exchange for
National Bank, Pomeroy.
The bicentennial theme
final blndlllll arbltnlion on their contnct demands.
Trophies
to
be
awarded
decorated
bicycle con""st will
BIDding arbltrallon was suggested earlier In the day by u.
winners
of
some
of
the
events
be
the first contest of the day
S. Rep. Roolld M. Mottl, [).Parma, who accused the teachers
ol Bho.U. too Uttle concern for the welfare of the students. have been provided by the atl0:1&amp;a.m. There 'are three
The baud r.ued a statement saying It was prepared "to enter Kiddie Shoppe, Middleport; age categories to be judged
Into flnll offer binding arbltratloo negotiations with the Elberfeld's, Mr. and Mrs. with prizes of $5 and $3 to be
Clllldltlan that teachers return to work immediately Bl a Ferman . Moore, Smith- given the best In the first and
Nelson
Motors
and second places of the six years
aolutloo to the strike.;•
Marguerite's
Shoe
Store,
and under and the up to 16
A neulrlllhlrd party would eaamlne the posltiops of both
Pomeroy,
and
VIllage
years of age. Prizes tor ' the
llkiH and then determine which !lest offer would be moat
Pharmacy, Middleport. over-iS age group which will
equitable. Thedeclsioa wquld be binding by both parties.
Callco animals and sand art include bicycles,
one
will
round
out
t~e
prizes.
The
wheelers
and
three
wheelers
HARRISBURG, PA.- THE P~SYLV ANIA teachers'
R. C. Bottling Co., Mid· Will be a lrophy forl!!rst place
~
(cootlnued on page 12)
'li
·

descendent of Jacob Cowdery; Carrie Neuizllac of
Pomeroy, ·whose grandparents, Henry and Barbara
Bentz, lived their enUre life In the Keno lire&amp;; Robert
Morrl.s, Fred Crow, Merrill Triplett, Mary Lew Johnlon
and Kathryn Philson, sisters and descendents of the ~te
Jacob Cowd~y .

A'l"i'END DEDICATION - Among the dignitaries at
the Keno Bridge - ~catloo Tuesday afternoon were,
froot, 1-r, Wealey Buehl, Larry Cowdery; second row,
Warden Ours, Dale Warner, Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach, Ronnie Cowdery; father of Lal'ry, and a

Schools 'officially' closed

· ~.·;~n;r;7;i
~~~~~:~:~~~
J I
$!

prayer was read by Professor
Morris.
The senior cillzena choir
ended the futlvltles ·by
singing "Shade River Bridge
is Falling Down."

at y

RIBBON CUT - Tradltiooal ribbon cutting ceremooles dedicated the Keno Bridge
Tuesday afternoon. Left to right are Warden Ours, County Commissioner; Wesley Buehl,
county engineer, Larry Cowdery, age 10, and Mary Lew Johnson, both descendents of Jacob
Cowdery, in whose memory the bridge was dedicated.
I

The closing prayer, a child's

•

News •• in Briefs

295

- ....·federal llepolit Insurance Cofporalior,
OIPO•Ifl INSUJIID TO '40.001'

.CHOIR SJNQ8- 'n1e lieNor Olllml Choir aanc·foat
lelecUfl'll at the dedication of Keno Bridge Tuesday

°

$

MIDilEPORT, OHIO

· ·

students absent during the
strike period. He said slnee
buses are not running they
should not be considered
absent . However, Dowler
said the students could not be
considered present since they
are not reporting to the
schools.
·
Girolami offered the board
an opportunity to appear on
radio Friday to air the issues.
He said the board will be
represented by two persons
and the teachers by two

persons to make up a panel to
answer questions directed to
them for an.hour.
Ted Bibler, Ohio Education
Association consultant
present or the meeting, said
the teacher group would be
wtlllng to appear. The board
tnld Girolamllt would advise
him later on the matter, but
according to Clerk Triplett no
decision was made on the
radio appearance las! night.
Glrolaml said that he,
Country Cousins and Paul

Simon were !villlng to ~y for
the radio Uine for airing the
Issues.
·
Appearing with Bibler at
the meeting was Mark Foley,
an attorney from Wellaton, on
behal f of the Ohio EducaUon
A.'ISII. Foley spoke to bOard,
asking to be Included on the
agenda of the meeting and
stressed that It was hopeful
that the strike problems
could be resolv~ last night.
Board me111ber Robert
(Continued on page 12)

Ford Motors .stopped
.
'

.

DETROIT (UP!} -Ford Motor Co. production lines were
shut down today by the third nationwide. strike In the company's history and 170,000 workers were off the job In a billiondollar contract dispute.
The strike by the United Auto Workers was the largest ·
Industrial shutdown since General Motors was closed by its
400,000blue collar employes for 87 days in 1970.
Further negotiations was postponed lllltil at least next
Monday. UAW President Leonard Woodcock, in an Interview
on a national news program (NBC.TV's Today Sbow) said the
strike would have to go at least three weeks beca~ of the
mechani~ o! negotiating a seltlement and getUng ratification.
The strike IS not expected to have severe economic repercussions unless It drags out for more than 30 days.
The strike Officially began at 11:59p.m. EDT'I'IIesday.
The tradltioosl marathon bargaining sessions, a news ·
blackout and the usual down-to-tbOOeadllne drama did not
accompany the strike countdown this year. The final
difference was the highly unusual early announcement of the
strike.
.
"The situation was such on Monday that we both agreed
th~e was no point In going through a meaningless charade and
going through a lot of motioos when it was quite obvious we
weren't getting anywhere," Woodcock told newsmen.
Ford labor Viee President Sidney McKenna said he knew
last Saturday that there would be a strike.
Speaking today on NBC-TV's Today Show, Woodcock said it
would be Impossible to predict how long the strike would laat,

'

but admitted It might last much longer than three weeks. He ·
said that on the crucial demand for reduced work time, Ford
and the UAW "are not even In the same conceptual framework."
In 1967, Ford was closed for 66 days and In 1961 for two
weeks.
·
Both union and company officials refused to speculate oo the
length of the walkout but It was expected to last at least two
weeks because of the lmp888e In bargaining. Further
negotiations were postpooed unW at least next Monday.
Woodcock blamed Ford for the ~rlke, charging the company
"has been unresponsive and unwtlling to engage in serlous
bargaining." McKenna responded that the automaker had
"attempted to rake a construcllve and reasonable.approach."
McKenna estimated the worth of provisions in the last
rejected contract offur at "well over $1 billion" during the next
three years.
.·
Woodcock said the strike, which both sides considered
avoidable when contract talks began In mid-July, was called
because the No. 2automaker persisted in Ignoring basic UAW
demands.
Both sides agreed the key to the strike was'.the union demand
tor more paid days off for workers In addition to the average
301'.! days In holidays and vacations each year. The union said
it was needed to create new jobs and lower unemployment.
The full economic impact was unclear but industry analyst.~
agreed it would have to last two weeks to a month before it was
(Continued on page 12)

'Yesteryear' trophies, prizes listed
and a craft Item for second.
Cash prizes for all events
will be in silver dollars. The
cracker eating contest
winner will receive $2 ; each
member of the three-legged
race $2, the sack race winner
$2, and the wtermelon eating
contest winner a trophy.
Winner of a rolling pin .
throwing ~on""st will get a
craft item and medium sized
trophies will go to the winners
of · the husband an~ wife
calling contests.
A spittoon will go to the
winner of the. tobacco spitting
contest with a second prize
also tD be awarded. Two
medium sized trophies will go
to the winners of a horseshoe
pitching tournament.
Mustacbe cups will go to the
two top winners of a
mustache contest · - the
longest and the 'lhlckest with a "booby" prize to go to
the person who has the
scraggliest mustache .
Winner of a hog calling
TROPHIES DISCHARGED- Mrs. Eleanor Thomas,
contest will get a trophy.
execuUve
director of the Meigs County Councll on Aging,
The blcen""nnlal costume
displays lrophies which wt11 be awarded Saturday to
con""st will be at 6 p.m. and
winners of various events at the council..spoosored
there will be two age groups
bicentennial observance at the senior citizens center in
judged. The three ca""gories
Pomeroy. Several of the craft Items to be awarded as
of judging will include
prizes
are also pictured. In addition, a 00111ber of silver
authentic, prettiest, and !he
dollars
will be presented winners.
best couple. In the adult
.
categories, over 16, the first
prize in all three will be large category to be judged on tile wall be $5 each while second
trophies with second prizes to same basis as the adults firs_t prizes in all three will be craft
be sand art. In the under 16, prizes in tiU three divisions.. i""ms.
;,

Police
make 51
arrests ·
Fifty-one arrests were
made by Middleport Police In
August, according to the
monthly report' of Pollee
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
Of the total, seven persons
were arrested for disorderly ·
manner, 11 for speeding, siJ
·for running a stop sign, five
for driving while Intoxicated,
and four each for squealing
Ures and running a red light.
There were three arrests on
charges of having no
operator's license and two
each on charges of reckless
operation and disturbing the
peace .

· There was one arrest each
on charges of falling to yield
the right of way, wrong way
on a one way street, making a
U-turn on a street. One case
was dismissed, one trans·
!erred to county court and
one individual was released
to West Virginia .
The department In·
vestigated·nine acCidents and
the police cruiser was driven
· 5,144 miles. Parking meter
collections for the month
totaled $1,q80.

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