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                  <text>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.

�I

.
2- The DaUy&amp;ntlnel, Mlddleport·P(]IIleroy, 0 .• Wednesday,Sept.15, 1976

Waship.gton
Report By Miller
Clarence

Ford giving. address tonigb.t
By ELIZABETH WHARTON
Uahed l'nll llllenllllioul
President Ford planned to
wweil at least pan of hlB
promised
"Vision
of
·America" program toolght.in
IU first major campaign
llddreu since accepting the
RepubUcan nomination Aug.
lOin Kanau City, Mo.
He was scheduled to fiy to
Ann Arbor, Mich., thiB after·
noon and address a student
audience at the University of
Michigan at7:30 p.m. EDT.
Ford told questlooers lbere
would be "some surprlBes" in
IU speech, and White House
aources said these wOuld
Include a crime.flgbting program as pan of his plan for
lmpromg neighborhoods, fi·
nanclal help to would-be
· homeowners In the tt,OOO to
$14,000 annual Income range,

and possible tax credits for
those whose house payments
represented more tban.20 per
cent of Income.
Democrat Jlnuny Carter
again jabbed at the "inside
the White Houae" campaign,
which Ford has cooducted so
far, and suggested the reason
might be that the President's
policies could not stand the
scrutiny . a"d
crossexamination they would
receive on the campaign
trail.
Carter was in South
Dakota, home state of the
19'12 Democratic n(]lll!nee,
Sen. George McGovern,
Tuesday night, and at a Sioux
Falls' raUy he said he thought
it was "time we had a farmer
In the White Houae,"
He said the first thing he
would do Uelected president

would be to fire Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz. He
would not name a Butz'
replacement but said
"alrnosianybody would be an
improvement."
·
The candidate was to join
hlB running mate, Sen. Walter
Mondale, at the Farm Fest In
Lake Crystal, Minn., today,
and to go later to Minneapolis
and St. Paul, M1nn., he fore
flying to to Dearborn, Mich.,
to address the Michigan AFLCIO.
The Caner campaign flew
2,000. miles Tuesday to cover
four states that have only 17
electoral votes but are
con$tdered vita l to the
Midwestern base of the Ford
campaign.
Moodale, who spent the
night in a University of
Illinois dormitory room,

GOP liked Rotunda speech
By LEE LEONARD
UPI State bouse Reporter

COLUMBUS {UP! ) RepubUcan state legilllators,
Jellllng the makings Of a reelection campaign platform,
have stroogly embraced Gov.
James A. Rhodes' Statehouse
rotunda address on Medicaid,
jobs and inner city

redevelopment.
Democrats said they
regarded the governor's .
menage Tueaday as purely
political. Some confided,
however, that they felt their
leadenhlp made a mistake
by not allowing Rhedes to
llddreu a joint aessloo of the
leglalature · as he had ·
requested.
Denied permlsalon by
ma j · lty Democratic
legialalive leaders to use the
House cha!IIber for his
mell8age, the governor ·
clellvered it In the Statehouse
rotunda befcre an estimated
250 persons.
Mllny ol those preaent
cculd not hear becall8e of
poor 8COUitlc:s. They il1so bad
dlfflcully understanding
Rbodea wben about two dozen

welfare demoostrators made
several brief attempts to
Interrupt him with chanl.s.
The governor kept oo.
Wblle GOP lawmakers
joined Rhodes cabhiet
members and staffers in
applauding from the rotunda
fioor, most Democratic
legislators ignored the
speecll. A few of the mere
curious hovered over ralllpgs
00 seeood.floor staircases In
the Capitol.
"I thought it was a political
speech," said Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, O:Akron who
along with House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., DoNew
Bostoo, said Rhodes could not
use a joint seasioo to make a
political Speech.
Rhodes, speaking from .a
positioo vacated by a picture
of Abraham Lincoln In the
northeast section of . lhe
rotunda,
urged
the
legislature 1o act on his plans
to furnish Medicaid mooey,
create jobs and redevelop
Inner cities.
''Isn't this a great speech?' ~

enthused Sen. Theodore M.
Gray, R-Columbus. "He's
tying Medicaid ani the inner
cities problem together ."
''I'm a little disturbed that
both sides, the governor and
the legislature, · can play
politks while jnnocent people
oo Medicaid suffer," said
Rql. Dale LAlcker, [).Anna,
who watched the speech from
a position high above the
rotunda.
"This is basically the satne
thrust that the govern&lt;Jf has
been using starting out with
the bood issues, which were
rejected by the people of
Ohio," 'd Rep. ~ J .
Camey:d:o:rdman. "We've
already moved inw the areas
that be's tallting abOut.

"I cbt'tsee anything new,''
Carney continued. "It's a
divenion on the part of the
governor on his failure to
persuade the people on the
bond issues and his failure to
come up with an agenda last
January. Because he didn't
have a program. the Republi·
can legislai«S didn't have
any campaign issues."

Ohio F Qrd workers strike
11J .JOHN T. KADY
Ulllled l'nll llllenlatlcul
Onr 33,000 auto workers In
Ohio today jolued a
nationwide United Auto
WCIIbn Ulioa ~trike agairwt
tbe Fml Motor Co., sbuttinc
down 12 plaiD and one parts
depot In the Bacbye State.
· Pleketlng wu reported
peaceful tbrougbout Oblo
with 110 lncldenll nported.,
"'lbere m no probJems at
aU," uld George Willon, a
llrike commitlteman of
Local 1250 at the Ford
"""P'n In the ~land
aabarb of Brook Park. ·
''Everytblnc - t off real
IIIIIIOtb. Each pte had seven
.- el&amp;bt people on il"
'lbe e&lt;inplex at Brook Park
._ two eqlne planta and a
~ ind ..,toys about
10.1110 per-.
"EftryUiing Ia goiDg fine,"
uld Dan Mlrtln, ~trike COlli·
ndU.,_Nn far UAW local GO
It the Clenlml Stamping
plant. "'Ole picketing is
peec:eful and lbere Ia no
troable.
"'111e wwkers were aU
raQJ far It (the ~trike),"

said Martin. '"lbey're aU
wllllngtostayoutasloogasit
takes to get what we Wllflt."
Ohio will be the second
hardest hit ll.ate In tbe natioo
with only Michigan, the home
of the major automakers,
worse off.
An esllmated Sl.l millioo
will be loat in wages In Ohio
each day tbe 8lrlke dral!ll on.
'111is will be offset
aomewbat by strilre benefits
~betweenf40and~a

week wldcb Ia considerably
lesa than tbe J%72.21 weekly
wage UAW members haw
been earning.
Plctet sips were printed
and dlatrlbuted early
Tuelday at the Ford faclUties
In Ohio as last minute
preparatlona were made for
the strike. ·
· The lui UAW strike was.In
tr10 when General Motors
Carp. Wll struck.
The npercuulons of the
strike on the econcmy were
not apec:ted to be felt for
about 30 da)'l when lqects
wereapected to be made oo
the steel Industry and
polllibly the tire industry
which jult went bsck to work

aflel' a l~y strike by the

United Rubber Workers
Union.
Ford plants In Ohio and
their number of workers
include:
-Two engine plants and a
founcl'y at Brook Pan with
10,000 employes.
-An auembly plant at
lAnin with 6,000 employes.
- A truck plant at Avoo
Lake with 2,000 employes.
- A stampq plant at
Cleveland
with
3,600
workers.
' - A parts depot at
Cleveland with ao workers.
- A lransmiasion plant In
the Cincinnati suburb of
Falrfu with 1,300 workers.
-A lransmiasioo plant in
the Cincinnti suburb of
Sharonville with 4,200
employes.
- An engine plant in lima
with 3,300 employes.
- A stamping plant in
.Maumee with 550 ~n.
. - A parts plant in
Sandusky
with
1,900
employes.
- A forge plant in Cantoo
with 1,300 employes.

DR. LAMB

encountered his first crowd
trouble of the campaign
Tuesday night while speaking
At the moment lhe
to about 2,500 students.
prospects for ·estate tn
The senator was heckled reform are unclear; Late last
and shouted at from . the month, the Ho~~St Committee
crowd periodically during his
on Ways and Means reported
speech, but remained an estate and gift tax bW,
Wll'llffled and was warmly H.R. 1~. This legislation
applauded afterward.
c:ontains several excellent
Republican
vice measures as far as providing
presidential candidate long overdue tax relief to the
Robert Dole wa.s in average taxpayer, Ute smaU
California,
where
he businessman, and the farcastigated Carter for mer. However, H.R. 14844
allegedly having several includes some pr'ovisioos that
positions on labor issues and· are unreasonable and
said
the
Democratic unacceptable. The" most
candidate has turned unloo glaring example is Section 6
organizers away from his of the bill which provides for
own peanut processing plant. a carryover basis Instead of
He was flYing b8ck a('J'OSS the present stepped up basis
lbe continent today, to join " in computing capital gains.
Vice President " Nelson The carryover ba!lis would
Rockefeller this afternoon ror have this impact in the
a swing through several cities following example :
in New Yark slate.
In 192J, Farmer A buys a
fann at a price of $i00 per
acre. He dies in 1976 when his
fann is worth $1,000 peracre.
VISITING HERE
Mrs. Mildred Fisher Fanner Ahad willed his farm
Gamblin, Columbus, is the to his son, Farmer B. Farmer
guest this week of Mrs. B is forced to sell the farm to
Bertha Canaday, lincoln Dr., pay debts and estate taxes.
Pomeroy. She is also visiting When Farmer B. Sells the
with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene farm at $1,100 per acre, his
capital gains tax per acre will
Fisher.
be calculated as follows :
$1,100
VISITING PARENTS
• 100 (Carryover basis )
Pam and T. J . Whitacre or
Newark spent the weekend
$1,000 (Capital gain )
here visi.ting her parents, lbe
Farmer B in effect canies
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd ShOok,
Pomer&lt;y.
over Farmer A's tax basis of

All funds are $51,225
Tile balance of all Mid·
dleporf \l.l.ll oge Co..Acil ex·
pendable funds as of Aug. 31,
was ot 551.224.19, according
to the monthly report of
Village Clerk· Treasurer
Ge-ne Grate.
. Receipis, disbursements of
each fund f..- the month and
fhe ' Aug . 31 balance,

Receipts lor the month
totaled SI2,9S3.31 and

disbursements

t-otaled~

S1M79.24.
Countll's obligated funds
remained at SJO,Jn.oe In the
·genet'a I bond retirement fund
wHh no

r~ipts

and

no

not doing any more because
you are probably one of those
people who have a decrease
that is not sufficient to be
important from a health point
· of view. A smaU decrease in
cells doesn't seem to make
any dUference. When the
count Is well below half the
usual value seen the person
may be more prone to infections.
The white cells are used to
f1ght off infecUoo. If your
count is very low then you
wiD need to lake precautions
against developing 1111 In·
fecUon . That wUl include
avoiding crowds, being
careful to not injure yourself
and even greater care of your
skin to avoid pimples and the
Uke. A pimple In a person
with poor defenses against
lnfectioo can be dangerous. r
doubt this Ia your problem.
The cauae of tbe mild cues
Ia unknown. It Is sonletimes a
familial characteristic .
prGCiudJW.
Severe furm! co111 be caused
Ynur dbc_.-s are probably by inadequate ~ marrow

$100 per acre. Under present
law !lowever, with a stepped
up basis, Farmer B would
have a capital gain of only
$100 per acre.
$1,i00
·1,000
· $100 (Capital gain)
Section 6 In the pending
legislation is clearly unac·
ceptabie to the average
taxpayer. I am also not In
complete agreement with the
hill 's estate In ..credit
.. provisions. The credit should
be higher. When H.R. 14144
came to tbe House Floor for
debs te and amendment some
Democrats
and
most
Republicans blocked an
attempt by the Liberal
Majority Leadership to shut
off amendments which would
have deleted Section 6, in'
creased the tax credit, and
otherwise benefited the
average taxpayer. Because
the
Liberal
Majority
Leadership was afraid that
certain pro-taxpayer amend·
ments, Including my own
amendment would pass; !bey
pulled the estate tax refortil
bill off the House agenda and
refused to let the entire House
consider the bill. I strongly
object tp this tactic . . The
average tallpjlyer Deeds tax
relief now. The Senate has
proposed a fairly good estate
tax reform Jl!~Ckage which is
contained within the · Tax
Rerorm Act of 1976. The
estate tax provisions of the
Act have been reported by the
Conference Committee to the
House and Senate. Un·
fortimately, the House
conferees Insisted upon the
· carryover basis treatment
for capital gains that r hive
already oulllned. There will
be a Floor fight to strike the
carryover basis provision
and I will support this fight.
lbluld the fuU House and the
full Senate gel together on the
Tax Reform Act provisions
dealing· with the estate tax;
prospects are brighter that
we will have an acceptable
estate tax reform law before
the Congress adjourns In

disbursements.
· Balance of the Middleport
respectively, tollow~ ·genera1, Board of Publi c Affairs
S5,501.05, S6.899A2, S2J ,98!.S2; obligated funds IS ~f' Aug .. 31
cemetery, $.401 . S652 .B4 totaled $182.755.S4. The
S2 . -43.C.74; f ir e equipment, receipts. disbursements of
5600, S~l3 . 51 ,
S3SS.91 ; each lund for the month and
swimming pool , $1 ,390.93, the balance in each.
51.963.75, 53.515.94; planning res~tively. follow: ·Silnitary
commission , .no receipfs, sewer. U ,013.98, 53,917.33,
$43.55, Sl49.70 i streef '21.. 072.1'2; san itary seWer
malnfenance. S5,n00 .33, escrow. S60, no d isburseS1 ,997 ..u. 510,586.76; f~at me·nts, 5129,690 .09 ; water,
revenue sharing, no recefpts, . $6, 916 .~ 6. $7,285.38, $8,911.4;
$308.73, 511 ,683.35 ; fire house wafer meter trusts., 5125, $75,
construction. no receipts, no 57,062.15. Receipts of ihe
disbursement., 511 .99 . board's obligated tunds for October.
the month totaled $11,115.14
while disbursements totaled
$11 ,277.71.
·n.e Iota I hooded indebted·
Ohio Valley
ness of the town stands at
Livesletk Co.
$1,3'15,893.75 ineluding $6,210
owed on the swimming pool ; .
Gallipolis, Olllo
$56,250 on the fire hou5e;
SepL11,1m
$613,898.75 on the .Silnifary
Stock« CaWe - Steers - sewer system and 5719.535 on
250 to 300 lbs. 23. to 31., 300 to the wafer operation. The
400 lbs. 23. to 32., ~ to 500 in debtedness averages
lbs. 24.50 to 34., 500 tn 600 lbs. ~uo per capita.
By MICliAEL O'R,EGAN
27. to 35., 600 to 700 lbs. 24. to
NEURATH, West Gennany
35., 7001bs and over 27. to 36.
(UP!) - Where the brown
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
furrows run right to the
lbs. 19. to 25., 300 to 400 lbs. 21.
furnace waJia of the 2,100
to 27 .50, 400 to 500 lbs. 21. to
megawatt power statim, tbe
27.75, 500 to 600 lbs. 20. to :lB.,
corn llhoota up higher t.ban
600 to 700 lbs. 20. to 28., 700
Corneluis Conger, deed. to anywhere e1le in the country.
lbs. and over Z2:50 to 31.
Clarence Conger, Harold
Subtropical plants,
Stock Cows and Bulls (By Conger, Olaries Conger, aft.
Including
ao}'beeDI, peanuta,
the head ) - Stock Cows 135. for trans:, Sutton.
eggplant and cotton are
to 230., stock cows and calves
Leland E. Clonch, Reatha
165. to 295., stock bulls 140. to V. Clonch to Michael Iliad llprOUtq in a 17~ field
oorth Of the ,Alpl wbere the
260., baby calves 10. to38.
Jr., Joyce Elaine Iliad, Lot winten are cruel lo 111011
(By the pound ) Canners 12, Rulland.
crops and tbe leaves fall .at
and cutters cows 17. to 23 ..
Harry E. Johnson , Delores the beglmlng of September.
Holstein cows, 21 to 2:i.50, M. Johnson to Michael Iliad
"We willltnolr !bat we have
commercial bulls 23.!&gt;0 to 30. Jr. , Joyce H!ad, l.&lt;lt 5,
IUCceeded
wben the farmers
Pigs 20. w 46.
Fairview Hgts.
ccme becglng us to build a
Veal Calves - Tops 220 lbs
Richard L. Haggerty to power plant In their
to 250 54. to 59.75, medium 200
Renee M. Stone, Lot 413, villages," aald Herbert
lbs. to 300 46.to !'13., culls 42. to Middleport.
Luckow, who beads the $U
down.
15 Ease Leading Creek million "agrotberm"
. Sows 350 lbs. up 34.50 to Cons. Dist.
.
esperlmental project.
38.75.
Archie E. Lee, JWJe P. Lee
Tbe
government
tn Harry E. Johnson, Delores IIIJPI'Oprlated the mooey fur
M. JohnJon, 1.20 A., Chester. the three-year project In
Carl 0. Glbnore to Dale October, 1m.
Ellis, Grace EUia, Parcel,
Toclay, 43 miles of plpi!lg
Rutland.
Eldon Morris, Phyllis
Morris, Margaret Van
Cooney, Mary N. Hysell,
Irene Thomas to Eldon
Morris, Irene 'Olonlaa, 2% A.,
Salisbury.
RuSBell Quillen, Velma
Quillen to Mary Jayce Fin,
production from actions of dley, .34 A., Letart.
drugs, c hemical solvents,
Harry B. Moffatt, deed. to
insecticides and a host 'of Frances E. Moffatt, Harry
By Patrlcill McCormack
factors . One · aspect of Malcolm Moffatt, Larry L.
UPI Heallll Edlter
trea lrnenl in these cases is Moffatt, Karen Bradsbaw,
COlD SPRING HARBOR,
elimination of the offending Dianne Mahaney, aff. for N.Y. (UP!) - Cancer
drug if possible.
trans., Salem.
sclenliltl today reported the
Many drug or chemical ) - - - - - - - . . . . . , .. lint definitive evidence that
1111oking low tar and low
induced episodes are cured
"
:
:
:
•
·nicotinecigarettes lowers
spontaneously when the of·
..,_,r,.
.
deJth
rates
frcm both !Wig
fending agent is removed. I
would think tha l y.ou probably
- -....
cancer and coronary beart
CNfl1"a l IAMIIIIIH&amp;L
don't need anything special
.......
. dt~ae .
The proof, delivered at
except lo be checked
regularly and, If need he, to · ........ . : ; : : ., · cbdng lesllooa of a week·
lake added precautions
,..
- ·-• -"''"" -417· long meetin11 of cancer
111
against infection or to get
· -,.....
· .,...
"· lleutha at Cold ur--v~~~o
"'-'ft• Harbor
hll•'.-.' "
Dtflu
MI·IUI.
,.._ _ ....,.,.
Laboratory, was in an
trealment ai once with any
sign of an Infection.
...... .... .. ana1ylll of deetbl OCC1ftlng
':..~- ,.., ·· " • In a population of more t.ban
Those who would like in·
formation about anemias can
.,... • · ..... 1o1- one million malea and
"""'"....
..., ·
- .....
femalea over · a 12-year
send 50 centa ror The Health
.....
..............
,, m ,...
t
period.
Letter number 4-3, Un·
- ............
- •• _,,.
O.tha for "medium" T·
derstanding the Anemias.
.....
..,.....,
..m.
Send a long, stamped, self-u.u. .. -- ,- - ..., .fromtwwc:ucerwere
•N.- tar-nk:ollne, IIIIODn
.. - ·
.........
lOper
addressed envelope ror
.......
.,
•
•
,
r
,
....
..-tt
CID.,.,.~
'
-·
..,...,
"
"
n~.~ttt
'-than"'"''"""
T~~
maUing. Address your letter
.,,_.,....,,__,
....
IIDOII:en;
for
"low"
T·N
to me In care of this news..........
..._ lllloUn It 11'11 28 ._.
.............r - cent
Piper. P. 0. Box 1561, Radio
leu.
Cilv SIAiinn. New Yl•rk, NY
1

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lit

(• Ill ...... IIh .. ,., ~

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lht edllerl ud . . t lie llplll wllll ........, a6drtn. Na- lillY be wlditoelll .... ..........
a.wever, oa reqafllt, . . - will be died md IAasl
llloald be !a looi tule, ....._.., ..._, tMt pereoulltks.

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:

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1.

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I

Property
Transfers

IUU)~I .

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.,.....

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.....

..........

.,

.

Dear Sir:

a citiJ.en and taxpayer of the Meigs LQcal School

District, I am becoming very disgusted with our Board of
Education. I think it's about time that we who live In this ·
district look Into \he way in which they are running our school~!
and spending our money.
.
According to the article In the Sentinel on Monday,
September 13, our teachers are not being treated as fairly as
the board's high-priced city attorney stated in his letter. Why '
sbould teachers here receive less than teachers elsewhere In
the state if our board C!'n rJford to pay them? If we expect our
schools to prepare our youngsters to compete In loday's
aoclety, we are G''lllg to have to draw and keep good teachers
here by paying them a decent salary. Our kids deserve good
·teachers as much as kids.ln other pans of Ohio.
Board members and admlnislrators doo 'I seem to know the
financial situatioo of the district. I was under the impression
that the new clerk, along with the $400.00 per month comJXlter
and two assistants was to be able to figure this out. Could it be
that thlB gantleman Is ilot as well quallfied as was thOught? It
seems tomethatagreatdealofourmoney (clerk's salary, two
assistants and eomjJuter) is being 3pe11t to no IIVail.
Add to this the fact that $10,000 has been transferred from
somewhere to pay an out-of.town attmley to do the board's
worlt. According to the article o~ Mooday, they aren't even
attending the negotiations meetings: I don't know how others
feel, but I for one am wooderlng wha~ thlB board does.
.Whether or not you have children in school, it Is your tal
money that thiB board is spending. As I said earlier, I think it's
about time that we look Into this situation and help the board to
resolve the problem since they can't seem to do it themselves.
- Mrs. Betty McKinley, Route I, Middleport. ·

Gnmdrenuningen.
The undergroUnd piping,
through wbicb the plant
pumps 10,500 cubic feel of ita
waste water every hour,
heats the ground to
temperatures about 14
degrees above normal.
And the plants love it.
Elperimenters grew 89 per
cent more potatoes In the
warmed ground, harvesting
them four weeki earlier than
normal. Com In the heated
field Ia about three feel IaUer
than a crop In an adjacept,
Wlhealed field.
The agrotherm project
actuaUy senes two purposes
- net only does the excess
heat help crope ·germinate,
but the cooUng water also can

be recycled.
The standard 1,300·
megawatt nuclear power
station will need ·t,618 acres
of field in order to cool all of
its nm-off. Since the waste
water now can be recycled,
nearby rivers no looger serve
as dumping grounds and are
spared the danger of being
overheated, says Hans
Matthoefer, minister of
research and teclmology.
Agrothenn also broadens
the choice of attes for locaUng
pow« plants since they could
be placed In more denaely
populated areas - with the
blessing of farmers, tbe
project director said.
One of the most Intriguing
spinoffs, however, could be a
boon to the ItaUan tou;-it.t ·
Industry.
Italy is considering Using .
agrothenn as a means of
heaUng beaches to entice
more visitors.

easier for hearts, lungs

I

,

September 14,1976

Low tar, nicotine proven .

--0(11

'
•
.

Criticizes board of education

lace a field ~undlng tbe
Neurath coal-driven power
statioo. Other experimental
sites are located at nearby
Auweiler, Riswlck and the
nuclear power plant at

Dr, E. Olyler Hammood

d
1
cent.
aAmnerlacssanoccates ofSo
. ilhte
Americana smoked 60'7,2
ancer
c e Y billion cigarettes In 1m
alao said corresponding according lo the U s'
figurea for coronary heart
·
· · ·
disease were eight per cent . Department of Agrlculture,
leu for ''tnedlum" TN. 14 per
Hammond aald the new
cent 1esa for "low" TN'
· evidence suggests that a
·
''much larger reduction" In
'l1le anal)'llla, presented at the average tar and nicotine
an International conference
t
f
on ''The 0r1g1na of Human con en1 · o
cigarettes
Cancer" did net
consumed by Amerlcanll
'
mean a would be of conalderable
clean bill of health for public health •~--llllokera of low tar, low
H
~............ee.
nlcoUne dprettes.
ammond
Is
Vice
Hammond and uaoclates President, Department of
empbiiiAd that the death Epidemiology and Slaliltlcs,
.__
American Cancer · Sodety.
rates uuu the low tar and
Scientlata defined ''high"
T·N as 2.0 to 2.7 mg. of
rates of IIUbjeclll who never nlcotlneand25.81o35.7mg.of

!:r=·t..are:'J':rh

tar~ T-N was defined 11
lea than I 2 mg of nicotine
Wlllhln&amp;tm, D.C., aald 10·• Hammond. ~ld the~
per. eent of aU dga ties clgarettea delinrtd lea than
IDIOII:ed lut year by 178 ..,., ,_. tar
Amerlca,ns were of tbe low
· ....,. "' · ·
tar low nicotine variety In
Medium T.ft 11'11 dellned II
fllloked replar)J."
The Tobaeco Inadtute In

t97i the ·· - - 1181 3 8 ·
.lr """'~
· per

· Two league engagements
and three non-league affllrs
are on tap this weekend In the

. Collf.-ence.

Dear Sir:
·
Something troubles me about our school system.
·The children are out of schoOl, losing time, and being
counted absent, for no reaaoo of their own whatsoever.
we as retirees, paying higher taxes than we can afford,
and saying UtUe about it, yet the school board can rille a
cl«k'ssalary five thousand dollars In a year, which i.s more
than we make to live on and pay tales.
The teachers who are doing the work of teaching our
children are getting all the blame.
We want to know why the school board can spend our tu
money so carei~?
·
For a multitude or retired taxpayers - Mrs. A. Eblen,
Pomeroy RD.

As

Two SVAC games, three
non ·loop tilts slated
Southern Valley Athletic

Something toubles her

Com grows taller in
steam heated .fields

Body short in white cells
The granulocytes are
manufac!ured in the bone
marrow, then released into
your bloodstream. You may
be surprised to learn that the
ave~age whi~ cell doesn 't
stay In your bloodstream
very long . In a short time it
migrates out of the cir·
culatlon into your body
Ussues. There are 20 limes as
many granulocytes In your
tisaues u there are In your
clrculatiOI).
You also have a reservoir
Of white cells in your booe
marrow. You have 15 to 20
lima u many mature white
cells in your bone marrow
wallllll! to be re1eued If your
ll«1Y needs them. U a peTIOli
develops acute aj)pendicitis
theae cella are relealed
IUddenly to combat Infection
and the white count goea up
riPid!J. Meuurlng the white
Cilia .In )'Oir bloodalream Is
only an lndel of how many
neulropbilayourbodymaybe

---------------------------.
''IIIIa are • ' •••
...W
I ":

1

. S-Tbe Dally 8¥f.inei,Mlddleport..Pcmeroy, 0., Wednelday,Sepl. 15, 11178

Intermediate between blgh
and low.

Lilt week, the league fared
well against outilde op·
position. Kyger Creek, North'
Galiia, So11thweatern and
~ulhern posted victories.
Eutern defeated Hannan
Trace In the only league
contest. Symmes Vall~y took
It on. the chin, losing SZ.O at
Oleaapeake.
This Friday nlght'e
schedule finds Southern
lravellng to Hannan Trace
and Eastern going to Sym·
mes VaUey In SV AC gamei,
whU~ on the non-league slate,
North GaUia goes to Zane
Trace of Ross County and
Southwestern hosts Hannan,
W. Va. Saturday allet'noon,
Kyger Creek visits Hun·
tlngton of Ross County.
Coach Joe Mitchem's
eastern Eagles will go after
win number two against
Coach Greg Bailie's Symmes
VaUey VIkings.
Eastern used a ·stingy
defense an an explosive of·
fense In dumping Hannan ·
Trace, 32-8 last Friday.
Junior running back Joe
Kuhn scored a pair of lnucll·
downs while Pave Mllls,
senior fuUback, had another.
.Kuhn was also a defensive
star picking off three of four
Hannan Trace passes.
The biggest Eagles orfenslve weapons, however,
was quarterback BOb McClure who had 102 yards In 10
carries and eotnpleted five of
12 paSBeS for 121 yards In·
eluding a big ~yard bomb to
KUhn.

Coach Larry Cremeens' Va,
Last
Saturday,
the
Wildcats
led offenaively
Hlghlandef,S
foUowed
In
the
by senior fullback Jim
footsteps
of
other
SVAC
Waugh. He had 113 yardllln 22
carries, while ICOI'ing the schoola, with an impresalve
victory over Southeastern of
ooly HT touchdown.
Southern 'a opening victory Ross County. The win, SWHS'
. over Federal-Hocking fourtllln its laat five football
featured the heavy running of games, waa led by senior taUSteve Boso, an aii·SVAC back Kip Lew!JI, sophqmore
running back. Boao rushed signal caller Gene Layton,
for 188 yards In 38 tries while and junior end8 Don Bush and
acorlng three touchdowns. Larry Carter .
Lewis had 132 yards
Greg Cundiff .and Steve
rushing, Layton threw tnuch·
Hendricks also scored.
Symmes VaUey failed to dowti pasaes to Carter and
muster any offense In last Bush. Bush also grabbed a 24week's loSB to Chesapeake. yard scoring strike thrown by
Coach John Blske's North Barry Jenkins.
On defense, the HighlanGaUla Pirates seek !heir
ders'
Lewis, Steve Rawlins,
second straight victory
Curt
Nolan, Don Jeffers,
against zane Trace.
Last week, North Gallla Larry Ruff and Sherman
showed its firepower by Potter turned in fine per·
rouUng Waterford, 41~. Fr~ formances.
Hannan, W. Va. is 1·1
l.&lt;lgan, speedy tailback, had
three touchdowns. Senior having beaten Clear Fork
qllilrterback Mark Theiss had before last week's 27.() loss to
.
an excellent game as did Wahama.
afternoon,
Coach
Saturday
rllnnlng back Mike Casey.
Also getting TO's againat Jim Sprague's Kyger Cfeek
Waterford were Theiss , Bobcats go to Huntington of
Casey and Marty Hash, Ross Couinty for a 1:30 p.m.
contest. ·KC defeated Miller,
defensive tackle.
North Guilla's offense 43-20 In Its !Ieason opener.
The Bobcats showed an
rolled up 300 nrda against
awesome
offensive roUing up
the Wildcats .
456
total.
yards.
The Pirates' opponent this
week, Za~ Trace opened its
season oo the short end of a
40-0 loss to Clear Creek.
The Pioneers of Coach Jim
Glll Uke to use the airways as
quarterback Don Clever has
a rtne throwing arm.
The
Southwestern ·
·
Highlanders of Coach Bob
Ashley will also seek Uleir
seconp straight victory
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Friday night against a non- Tommy John couldn't of
league opponent, Hannan, W. .answered any quicker if

were

Leading tne I!Obcals were
junior liilback Marcus
Geiger, who rushed for 191
yards and scored three touch·
downs; senior running back
Todd Taylor, whO had 121
yards on ·the grounds fn,
eluding two TO's, and fuU.
back Ralph lillylor, 190 pound
senior, who ran over Falcon
defenders for two touchdowns
and 60 yards rushing. Senior
quarterback Steve Baird
P!lssed for 121 yards, but.saw
three of. his passes In·
tercepled.
·
Defensively, Brian Lucas,
scrappy senior back and
Taylor, a cornerback, were
praised for their efforts.
Huntington of Ross County
lost last Weekend to Vinton
County, 22-0.
'
SVAC ST ANDING S
A~~ GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Ga!lia

southwestern

Easfern
Southern

,

Kyger Creek

Hannan Trace

Symmes Val.

TEAM

Eastern

1 0 32
1 0 31

o

o

a
8

1 0

Ali

2·0

0 1

0

52

o

32

o 1

8 '32

SVACONLY .
W L P OP

Kyger Creek
North Gallia
SouthWestern
Southern

Symmes Val.

Hannan Trace

Totals

1 0 41

1 o , 32

1

0 0
0 0
0 0

0
0
0

0 0 (j
0
0 .1 8
1 I 40

0 0

a

0
0
0

0
0

32

40

John 'arrives'
d
b
k
on roa
ac

you'd ask him the date of his
birthday.
"It was Sept. 25, 1974, at
seven in the morning when
they put me on the opera ling
table," said Jobn Tuesday
night alter he pitched the Los
Angeles Dodgers to . a 9-0
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds in the opener of a threegame series.
Major League Standln~s
Maddox;
Phil
136
497
71
166
.334
Slennell
121.
A tendon was taken from
United Preu tnternatlonal
Griffey, Cln 135 513 102 171 .333
National Leagueooo 200 OOir- 2 5 1 John's rigbt arm and transOliver, Pit 112 41S 59 138 .330 Moo !real
Eat!
Cin 126 432 106 141 .326 Phlldelphl 000 030 oox- 3 4 1 planted In his left elbow to
W.. L. · Pet. GB Morgan,
Rose, Cin
146 59'1 120 193 .322 Fryman, Kerrigan 171 and replace a torn ligament. · '
Philadelphia 88 55 .615
PIIISburgh
82 61 .573 "6'" Gernimo, Cin 134 '448 57 141 .315 ~.!:t" ' 1~fn~':,'d9 ' i~::.l•rw~!.:
John doesn 't know the
Fosler. Cin 131 51S 80 162 .313
. New Vor.k
76 67 .531 12
M9n1nez, Atl w 588 62 183 .3 11 Lon borg 116.91..1 V - Fryman medical ierm for the surgery.
66 79 ASS 23
·ChiCago
Garvey, LA 144 570 75 177 .311 112.11). HR - Monlreal , Wil ·
St. louis
63 78 .441 24
"Just call it a miracle
AMERICAN LEAGUE
IIams (14).
MOnlreal
8 93 .340 39
G. AB R. H. Pet.
operationt'' said the smiling
West
W,. L,. Pel. GB McRae, KC 134 471 72160 .340 Chicago
330 ooo QOO-- 6 12 1 John. Thai's because it's a
Brell, KC
143 583 87 197 .338
Clnclnnall · 93 53 .637 Louis 010 ooo 002-3 9 2 rrur
· acle he's pl' lching today.
Carew. Min W S4S S9 182 .332 s.l.
· R. Reus chel (1J.10) al1d
Los Angeles 82 62 .569 · 10
Bostock, Min 116 428 66 142 .332 Millerwald ; McGiolhen, Solo.
"I never had any doubts
Houston·
72 75 .&lt;490 21lh
128 496 73 157 .317 mon
(21, Waterbury · (3), bo 1 kin
ful
San Diego
, 67 80 ... 56 261!2 Lynn, Bos
LeFlore, D,el 135 544 93 172 .316 LaGrow 161, Capllla 181 and a U ma g a success
san Francisco 67 81 .453 27
Rivers, NY 131578 93 181 .313 Simmons. LP- McGiolhen 112- . ew~eback ,"saidJohn , now g.
Allonla
63 83 .432 30
Carty, Cle 137 499 64 153 .307 w .
TueS:dly's Results
10 after his victory.
Garr , Chi
123 477 59 146 .306
HOuston • Atlanta J , 1st
Munson, NV 139 564 74 172 .305 Los Angeles 100 001 520-- 9 15 o
But only two other persons
Atlanta 4 Houston ·3, 2nd
HOME RUNS
Cinclnnall 000 000 QOO-- 0 10 o shared his faith.
Los Angeles 9 Cincinnati o
N AT I 0 NA L LEAGUE : John (9- 10) and Pasley ;
''On
wU
11
New York 4 Pittsburgh 3
Schmidt, Phil 35 ; Kingman, NY Nolan, Borbon lS I and Bench.
e was my
e Sa Y
Chicago 6 St. LOUIS 3
J.t; Monday, Chi 30; Foster, Cin LP- Nolan 112·91. HRs-Los and the Olher was Ben Wade,
Philadelphia 3 Monlreol 2
29; Morgen, Cln 27.
San Fran 7 San Diego 6
Angeles, Garvey 1131. Goodson our scouting directnr," said
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Nell· 131 .
Today's Probable Pitchers
les, NY 26; Ja ckson and L.May,
John.
.I All Times EPTl
Jo.hn, sid.elined the entire
St ! Louis (Oenny 9-7 ,and ·salt and. Hendrick;, Clev 25 ; San .Frnclsco 300 020 OOh- 1 11 1
S•o Diego 000 006 QOO-- 6 13 3
F·alcone 12-13) ·at Nfw York Bando, Oak 24.
RUNS BATTED IN·
Knepper. Dressier 161 , Cald · 1975 season, began his spring
l~ollth 8·12 and Espinosa 3-31.
NATIONAL LEAGUE: Fos. well 16) , Heaverlo 161 , Williams training In the backyard of
2, 5:35p.m.
Morgan , Cln 107 ; 171. Molfill lS I and Alexander; hlB lAs Angeles home last
Plltsburgh !Candelaria 14-61 ter , Cln 114;
Phfl 95 : Watson , Hou Strom, Johnson (6} , Freisleben
at Philadelphia (Kaal 11·121 . Schmidt,
92 ; LuzlnskL Phil and Murcer, 171. Melzger 181. Tomlin 191 January.
7:35p.m.
and Kendall. wP- Molfllt 16"51.
"I tllrew at a pmn' !er's
Chlcaoo · (Burris 12·13) at SF 85.
AMERICAN . ~EAGUE : . L. LP- Met zger (11 .21. HR: S-S!n
Montreal (Rogers 6-15), 8:05
May, Belt 101 ; Munson. NY 96 ; Francisco, Murcer 2 1201.
tarpaulin over the chainlink
. p.m.
Los Angeles (Downing 1-1) at Chambliss, NY 93; Mayberry,
fence
surrounding my y~rd, "
Yastrzemst&lt;.l , Bos 90 .
Cincinnati !Zachry 12-Si , 8:05 KC 92 ; STOLEN
BASES.
American League
said
Jobn.
"I JXlt dots the
p.m.
NATIONA~
LEAGUE:
MOr·
g:!~~~:rel
I100
020-~
width
or
home
plate on the
San Francisco (Ricello 0-0) at
200
91
San Diego (Jones 21 .121, 10 gan, Cln SS ; Taveras, Pitt 53; Minnesota 010 000 001 _ 2 8 2 tarp about waist high."
Blu e OS-Ul and Newman .
Lopes. LA and Brock, St .L 52 ;
p.m .
Hou 51.
Then, the Dodger lefty got
Houston (Andu(ar 8-9) at Cedeno,
AM
E
R
1
cAN
~EAGUE : Luebber, Campbell (91 and
A'llanta IDol Conlon 3·5i, 7:35 North , Oak 69 ; LeF lore, Det 58 ; Borgmann . LP- Luebber (4·5l. himself a bucket losded with
p.m.
campanerls, O~;tk 53; Patek , KC HRs-Qakland, Tenace (20); 30 baseballs.
T~ursday's Game~
and Baylor, Oak 4 7 ~
_ Minnesota , Ford (17J. .
Chicago at Montreal
"I'd throw 30 baUs at the
PITCHING
St. LouiS at New York, night
dotted
llne," recalled John
Most
Victories
(lnd game)
Pittsburgh at Phlla, night
NATIONAL
LEAGUE:
Jonos,
Oakland
000
101
11103
11
0
Tuesday
night. And then he
Houston at Atlanta , night
so 21 ·12J Koosman. NY 11.8, M;nnesola 100 200 001- 4 9 1
Los Angeles at Cine!, night
would
collect
the basebaUs
suuon, LA 19.9; carlton , Ph il
Bosman, Lindblad !&lt;~), Todd
(Only games 5cheduledl
17 -6; Richard, Hou 17-1.4.
(9) and Newman, Tenace !7l. off the ground and throw
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Pal · Haney ; Gollz (1 3.131 and them again ... and again.
Amer1c1n Lelgue
mer, Bait 21 -12 ; Figueroa, NY
neoar . LP- Lind!Jiad (6-Sl.
East
18 -8; Tlant, 805 18 . 11 ; Garland. HRs- Oakland , washington (.4) ;
"Each day [would throw at
·w.. L .. Pet. 08 Balt 11-6; Fidrych, Det and Minnesota , Cubbage !l&gt;.
least
130 pitches," he said.
New York
~l :;:~ 9•h ~-~nard, KC f6.S; Tanana, Cal Kansas Cl ly 100 100 OOir- 2 10 1 It was like to trying to
Baltimore
Cleveland
73 71 .507 15'12
EARNED 9UN AVERAGE . Chicago
001 000 OOir- 1 53 topple the 10 pins at an
Boston
68 76 .472 20•12 1baled on 144 Innings pitchedJ
Hassler (5-10) ance Stinson,
Detroit
67 71 .465 21112
NATIONAL LEAGUE 5
Wathen (4 ); Monroe, Fors ter amusement park. John,
63 so .441 25 ver, NY 2.~ 0 ; Rau. LA: 2.56;
ea · -Ill.Forster
Carrollll·l2l
(91 .and. Esslan. LP though, was trying to win a
Milwaukee
West•
Jones, so 2.66 ; Norman, Cln
W.. L.. Pel. GB 2.67 ; Denny. St.L 2.69.
Ol4 100 OOir- 7 15 2
Kansas Clly S3 62 .572
AMERICAN . LEAGUE : . Fl· Delroll
Oakland
78 66 .542 -41h .drych, ·oet 2.24: Blue, Oak .2.4S; Bal1 1more' 005 000 "ox- 9 111
Lemanczyk (31, Hil ler
Mlnnesolo
7~ 73 .503 10
Travers, Mil 2.50; Palmer. Ball {7.),Ru.hle,
Laxton (8) and Freehan;
California
67 79 .459 16112 · 2,55; Torrez, Oak 2.58.
Grimsley,
Pagan
[3).
0.
Texos .
6~ 80 . ~ 4 18'h
STRIKEOUT
Chicago
63 .83 .432 20'12
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Sea. ~~!ir~f~e~4 1 ~r.~ °e"l.'io'"Y,; ;;1't, , uNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
1
·
Tueldly's Results
11er, NY 221; Richard, Hou 179;
De· (UP!) - Penn State coach
Oakland 4 Mlnnesot• 2, 1st
Koosman, NY 161 ; Monttfusco, 111 ·81 , HR - Balllmore,
Minnesota~ Oliklond 3, 2nd
SF 160 ; Corllon. Phil 15~ .
Clnces 191.
·
Joe Paterno says his Uons
Kansas Clly 2 Chicago 1
AMERICAN LEAGUE:. Ryan, New York 203 300 ooo- 8 13 o will have to play a lot better
Milw 3 Boston 2, 10 Inns.
Cal 278,· Tanana , Cal 229 ;
000 000 110"- 2 1 o this week if they hope to
California 6 Te)l;as .cl
Blyleven, Te)( 185; Eckersley, Clev&lt;lond
Jackson, TidroW (81 and mak
sh ·
· t to
Ntw York B Clevtland ~
Clev 163 ; Hunter, NY 160.
Munson ; Dobson, Hood (31,
e a OWing agams p
Baltimore 9 Oetrolt 1
Buskey (4), Porker 111 and ranked Ohio State Saturday.
TOdly's Probable Pitchers
Fosse,
Cerone (61. WP"Th' ·
11 k f
(All Tlmts EO.Ti
~ackson 16·11. LP- Dobson 114.
. IS IS a. cruc a wee or
Mljor Le.gue Re5Uits
Kansas City IBird · 1J.7 ol
us because I've always felt
California !Ryan 13.11), 10:30 By United Press 1nternatlon11 121 .
N1tion1l Lngue
p.m.
that
a team improves more
California 001 ooo 302- 6 9 2
Texas ( Blyleven 11 ·151 at (1st game)
between
its first and second
200 010 1()()- .t 6 1 Texas
020 101 ooo- .t 9 2
Ct1 1C ago (Johnson 9-l.t), 9:05 HOU!ton
Allanla
001
010
010"3
9
2
Hartzell
17·4i
and
H
umphrey,
games
than
at any other time
p.m.
l..tmongello, .Forsch (8) and Etche!:la rren ; Barker, t-targan
Boston (Cleveland 7-9) at
Mllwauket (Colb&lt;&gt;rn a.w , S:30 Herrmann ; Ruthven, Torrealba (7) and Sund~erg . LP-Hargan during the season,' : Paterno
(8) and Correll, Murphy. WP- (6-H . HR - Texu, Grieve (16}. . said.
P.1m.
.
Deorolt !Bare 7-71 al Bal . Lemongello .11-01. LP- Rulhven
"We have to get a lot better
HR- Houston, Cabell (10 IMingt)
llmoro (Garland 11·61, 7:30 113·151.
(2)
.
.
this
week if we are going to be
Boston
000
000
011
0-2
6
0
p.m.
Mllw .
000 1100 200 1-3 10 2 as good as we can he this
New York IAie•ander 11·91 at (2nd gomel
Wise. Willoughby l9i and
Cleveland (Wall! 7·6), 7:30p.m.
100 110 QOO-- 3 s o Fisk ; Slaton. Sadeckl (8), year," he said. "This would
Minnesota (Hughes 8·121 el Houston
Allonta
103 000 OO•- 4 7 0 Frisella (9) and Porter. WP- be a crucial week for us no
Oakland (Norris .t-5), 11 p.m .
McLoughl in, J . Nlekro IS), J. Frisella IS·li . LP-WIIIoughby matter who we were
Thursdoy't oomea
Soaa (7), Sambllo 17i and 12·121 .
. Minn. al Oo~land. night
Johnson; Autry, Leon (6),
playing."
.
Kon City of California. nlghl
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
. Devine (Si and Murphy, WPTexao at Chicago
In
Ohio
State's
second
Aulry IJ .ol'. LP- McLaugh'lln (UP£) - The Oakland
Bailon at Mllwaukoe, nlghf
game last sea·son, the ·
13·41. 11Ra- Houllon. Cedeno
Ntw York at Cleveland, night
1111. Cruz W ; •llanta, Mon . Athletics purchased veteran Buckeyes dumped Penn
(Drily games scheduled I
IIMI t9 ), .
utility man Ron Fairly from
State, 17-9, at Columbus. The
the
St. Louis Cardinals
'MAJOR LIAGUI LEADERS; New York 1100 200 002- ~ 8 0
Uooa had woo their first two
· ly Unltlcl Prill Wtrntllontl Plll!burgh 001 1100 110"- 3 6 0 Tuesday.
IATTING
Swan. LockwOOd '181 and
Fairly, 38, who can play games In 1975 before losing to
I lastd on 4.. 11 bllll
9hlo State.
Stearns ; ROOktr 1 Tekulve (9}
NAT ONAL LI!AGUE
ond Oyer. WP- LockwOOd 11·71. lint base or outfield, joins his
Both teams dpened the
. .
G. AI
H. Pet. LP- Rooker 113·81. HRs- New new team Wednesday in
season on a winning note.
Madlock, Chi 131 ~73 64 162 .342 York, Torre 15i ; Plllsburgh, oakland.

l:

SPEAK TONIGHT
Speaking at the Meigs
Athletlr Booster meeting
tonight at 7, 30 will be
William fl Hess, head foot·
ball coach at Ohio
University; Wllllam D.
Rohr, athletic director;
Dale Baudy, head basketball coach, aud t'rank
Morgan, ol the Sports
lnrormution Depl. The
meeling will be held at
Meigs Higb School. The
public Is welcome.

Ex-Red could be AL's
most valuable player

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Spons Writer '
AnM all tbe guessing over
which Cincinnati Reds player
will win the National
League's most valuable
player award this year,
perhaps It's time to start
speculating which ex-Red
might win the same award In
tbe American League1
There are two who ml&amp;ht be
In cootention-batting leader
Hal McRae, now with the
Western Division-leading
Kansas City Royals and the
Baltimore Orioles' Lee May,
who leads the AL in runs
batted ln.
May drove In his 99th and
IOOth runs of the season In the
Orioles' sixth straight victory
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
Tuesday night, a 9-7 decision
UPI Sports Writer
over the Detroit Tigers, and
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) the mUd-mannered 33-year
- Coach Bo Schembechlenf old firSt baseman seems w
Michigan believes the wave have at last grown weary of
of upsets during the fll'st big being taken ror granted.
weekend of college football
''I've
always
been
may indicate a trend Inward overlooked in my career even
more equal competition.
from the first day I signed a
"Qul!e a few good teams pro contract," said May.
didn't have good days (last) "It's been like that aU the
Sat~rday," Schembechler · time ..."
said Tuesday. "Isn't that
Back.to.!Jack doubles by
something?
Reggie Jackson .and May
"Do you think it could be a triggered a lour-Min seventh
balancing out of the grants- inning, which gave the
inilid? It could be a leveling Orioles the victory over
out, it could refleQt that Detroit. Mark Belanger's
everybody is going to have to sacrifice fly drove in the
be down to 95 grants-in-aid winning run to cap the· rally.
next year.
Meanwhile, McRae played
"It kind of looks like a topsy a key role in Kansas City's 2-1
turvey season."
victory over the Chicago
Schembechler's second- White Sox, which boosted the
ranked Michigan team plays Royals' first-place lead o'ver
Stanford · at Michie an O~klandin the ALWest to4'f.!
Stadium on Saturday. The games. ·
game
was · originally
McRae led off the fourth
scheduled for Stanford but Inning with a double , moved
was switched because the to third on AI Cowens' Infield
Cardinals could make more hit, and Uteri dashed home
money playing ,In Michigan's with what proved to he the
101,701-seat stadium.
winning run wben White Sox .
The two played a 19-19 Ue catcher Jim Esslah threw
la.st season with similar cir· wild Into center field trying w
cumstances surrounding the nail C&lt;iwens stealing second.
game. Stanford lost to Penn
Andy Hassler, proving to be
State a year ago while a most important mid.,.;eason
Michigan was have a acquisition in view or the
i.Oughei·than~xpected time Royals' crippling pitching fn .
trimming ,Wisconsin.
· juries, went the dislljnce and
The Cardinals spent the yielded five hits in gaining his
intervening week at Baldwin· fifth victory.
Wallace near Cleveland a
Elsewhere in the American
year ago but this time Uley League,
New
York
flew back tn Palo Alto, Calif., pummeled Cleveland, S-2;
and wl1l return to Michigan Milwaukee edged BostOI!, :&gt;.2,
on Thursday.
California put away Texas,&amp;.
"It didn't work out too 4, and Minnesota shaded
well,'' a Stanford spokesman Oakland, 4-3, after the A's
said. "The players didn't like won the first game of their
it. It seemed like Baldwin- doubleheader, 4-2.
Wallace only had one training Twins 2-4, Athletics 4-3:
table and one roll or tape."
Dan Ford singled home
· "Yeh. It's hard to spend a Craig Kusick in the ninth
week in Cleveland," Schem- Inning to earn the T\Vins a
bechler said, wishing he splii and spoil !lie A's chances
could retract the statement for gaining on Kansas City.
almost as soon as the Dave Goltz spaced 11 hits in
laughter died down. "I don't going the distance for his 13th
mean to say anything against
"
the city of Cleveland."
SCIOTO
He Indicated he was not
COLUMBUS (UP!)
~isappointed to be rated Come On Up, driven by A.J.
behind Ohio State, either.
Price, paced the mile in 2:02
"What difference 'does it Tuesday night to win the
make after one game?" ninth feature race at Scioto
Schembechler said. "I've Downs by 8'f.o lengths over
said before I don't care. It Keystone Calypso.
·
ought io be Ohio State. Didn't
Come On Up paid $7.80,
they look awesome?
· $4.80 and $4.20. Keystone
"Why do you guys keep Calypso paid $8and $4.60. The
asking? I've said before I show horse, Miss Holly Sue,
don't care. Now,at the end or paid $3.80.
the year I'll gripe."
A crowd of 5,960 wagered
$414,597 during the last night
of racing at Scioto this
season.

Upsets

showing
a trend

spot In lhe Dodgers starting.
rotation, not a stuffed animal. . PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP!)
Sure the Dodger lefty was - Oakland owner Charlie
proud of the shutout he . Finley will meet Wednesday
pitched against the Reds witl1 Jerry Kapstein , adviser
to five of the A's' top players,
Tuesday night,
in
an effort to get them to sign
· "Let's face it th 0ugh," he
contracts
and keep them
said candidly, "I just delayed
rrom
becoming
rree agents at
the inevitable."
the end or season.

'Crucza
. l week '•• .ra
n terno

.

.,

..t

Ohio State crushed Michigan
State 11151 weekend, 49-21, and
Penn Slate, ranked seventh,
limite&lt;( Stanford's potent
passing attack to one
touchdown in defeating the
Indians, 15-12.
"We go from what may
well be the best passing game
In the country to what has to
be one of the best running
attacks in the country,"
Paterno said.
Buckeye tailback JeH
l.&lt;lganifolled up 112 yards and
two touchdowns in only seven
carries as the Buckeyes
amassed 463 yards on the
ground against Michigan
Slate.
Paterno is expected to go
with the same offensive and
defensive lineups against
Ohio State that he used
against Stanford, but he 's
hoping for an improvement In
the performance or his
offensive line.
"Our offensive line didn't
handle lheir stunls very

win. In the opel)er, Vida Blue, Evans, got the win, hl.lfifth In
~ith the help of Gene
seven declsioos .
Tenace'$
three
RBI,
scattered eight hits for hlB
15th victory. Tenace hit hlB
20th homer, while Ford
DOirlOW "R
homer~ for the Twins.
"STTAM'CIUN lOW
CIJ Nil.;. ·
Yukees a, lndlaDII Z:
M FR'aflssiaNAl W.
Roy White, hi\ting at a .500
Rl!nt the fanWtic- new Up A:
clip durtna a current eightOui.Hyc!,ro·r,jiol Mae~lno fo•
superl~r e&amp;tpft cl•n.
game hitting streak, hanged
inp; . .lootetll a"d '
out four hits and scored three · remove.
dirt, pNYiruns as the Yankees reduced
theirmagicnumher in Ule AL
East to 10, Grant Jackson,'
malcjng his first stan since
Sept. 29, 1971, ·went seven
Innings for t11e win . He's now
~ since joining the Yankees
from Baltimore June 3.
Angels 6, Raugen C:
Jerry Remy's two-out,
ninth'-inning ~ingie scored a
pa\r of runs to give the the·
Angels the victory after
rallying from a three-run
deficit to tie the score In the
~ VAII.AILI fOR ''NTAL
seventh. Paul Hartzell, 7-4,
went the route for the victory.
Brewen 3, Red Sox 2:
Robin Yount stroked a two·
out single In the bottom of the
lOth Inning lo score DarreU
Porter and enable the
Brewers to snap a seven·
Mason, W.Va.
game losing streak. Danny
Frisella, who blew a 2-1 lead
Mon .. Thur. &amp; Sat.,8·5:30
In the ninth by yielding a run·
Fri. e.s
scoring si.ngle to Dwight
1

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'3"
well," he said. "We didn't
protect the passer very well
and we · had some other
missed assignments when
our blocking broke down."

MOORE'S
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124 W. Main

992-2848

Pomeroy

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH
UNTIL 6 PM

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CAMDEN PARK
HUNTIN'GTON
I

I

�I

.
2- The DaUy&amp;ntlnel, Mlddleport·P(]IIleroy, 0 .• Wednesday,Sept.15, 1976

Waship.gton
Report By Miller
Clarence

Ford giving. address tonigb.t
By ELIZABETH WHARTON
Uahed l'nll llllenllllioul
President Ford planned to
wweil at least pan of hlB
promised
"Vision
of
·America" program toolght.in
IU first major campaign
llddreu since accepting the
RepubUcan nomination Aug.
lOin Kanau City, Mo.
He was scheduled to fiy to
Ann Arbor, Mich., thiB after·
noon and address a student
audience at the University of
Michigan at7:30 p.m. EDT.
Ford told questlooers lbere
would be "some surprlBes" in
IU speech, and White House
aources said these wOuld
Include a crime.flgbting program as pan of his plan for
lmpromg neighborhoods, fi·
nanclal help to would-be
· homeowners In the tt,OOO to
$14,000 annual Income range,

and possible tax credits for
those whose house payments
represented more tban.20 per
cent of Income.
Democrat Jlnuny Carter
again jabbed at the "inside
the White Houae" campaign,
which Ford has cooducted so
far, and suggested the reason
might be that the President's
policies could not stand the
scrutiny . a"d
crossexamination they would
receive on the campaign
trail.
Carter was in South
Dakota, home state of the
19'12 Democratic n(]lll!nee,
Sen. George McGovern,
Tuesday night, and at a Sioux
Falls' raUy he said he thought
it was "time we had a farmer
In the White Houae,"
He said the first thing he
would do Uelected president

would be to fire Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz. He
would not name a Butz'
replacement but said
"alrnosianybody would be an
improvement."
·
The candidate was to join
hlB running mate, Sen. Walter
Mondale, at the Farm Fest In
Lake Crystal, Minn., today,
and to go later to Minneapolis
and St. Paul, M1nn., he fore
flying to to Dearborn, Mich.,
to address the Michigan AFLCIO.
The Caner campaign flew
2,000. miles Tuesday to cover
four states that have only 17
electoral votes but are
con$tdered vita l to the
Midwestern base of the Ford
campaign.
Moodale, who spent the
night in a University of
Illinois dormitory room,

GOP liked Rotunda speech
By LEE LEONARD
UPI State bouse Reporter

COLUMBUS {UP! ) RepubUcan state legilllators,
Jellllng the makings Of a reelection campaign platform,
have stroogly embraced Gov.
James A. Rhodes' Statehouse
rotunda address on Medicaid,
jobs and inner city

redevelopment.
Democrats said they
regarded the governor's .
menage Tueaday as purely
political. Some confided,
however, that they felt their
leadenhlp made a mistake
by not allowing Rhedes to
llddreu a joint aessloo of the
leglalature · as he had ·
requested.
Denied permlsalon by
ma j · lty Democratic
legialalive leaders to use the
House cha!IIber for his
mell8age, the governor ·
clellvered it In the Statehouse
rotunda befcre an estimated
250 persons.
Mllny ol those preaent
cculd not hear becall8e of
poor 8COUitlc:s. They il1so bad
dlfflcully understanding
Rbodea wben about two dozen

welfare demoostrators made
several brief attempts to
Interrupt him with chanl.s.
The governor kept oo.
Wblle GOP lawmakers
joined Rhodes cabhiet
members and staffers in
applauding from the rotunda
fioor, most Democratic
legislators ignored the
speecll. A few of the mere
curious hovered over ralllpgs
00 seeood.floor staircases In
the Capitol.
"I thought it was a political
speech," said Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, O:Akron who
along with House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., DoNew
Bostoo, said Rhodes could not
use a joint seasioo to make a
political Speech.
Rhodes, speaking from .a
positioo vacated by a picture
of Abraham Lincoln In the
northeast section of . lhe
rotunda,
urged
the
legislature 1o act on his plans
to furnish Medicaid mooey,
create jobs and redevelop
Inner cities.
''Isn't this a great speech?' ~

enthused Sen. Theodore M.
Gray, R-Columbus. "He's
tying Medicaid ani the inner
cities problem together ."
''I'm a little disturbed that
both sides, the governor and
the legislature, · can play
politks while jnnocent people
oo Medicaid suffer," said
Rql. Dale LAlcker, [).Anna,
who watched the speech from
a position high above the
rotunda.
"This is basically the satne
thrust that the govern&lt;Jf has
been using starting out with
the bood issues, which were
rejected by the people of
Ohio," 'd Rep. ~ J .
Camey:d:o:rdman. "We've
already moved inw the areas
that be's tallting abOut.

"I cbt'tsee anything new,''
Carney continued. "It's a
divenion on the part of the
governor on his failure to
persuade the people on the
bond issues and his failure to
come up with an agenda last
January. Because he didn't
have a program. the Republi·
can legislai«S didn't have
any campaign issues."

Ohio F Qrd workers strike
11J .JOHN T. KADY
Ulllled l'nll llllenlatlcul
Onr 33,000 auto workers In
Ohio today jolued a
nationwide United Auto
WCIIbn Ulioa ~trike agairwt
tbe Fml Motor Co., sbuttinc
down 12 plaiD and one parts
depot In the Bacbye State.
· Pleketlng wu reported
peaceful tbrougbout Oblo
with 110 lncldenll nported.,
"'lbere m no probJems at
aU," uld George Willon, a
llrike commitlteman of
Local 1250 at the Ford
"""P'n In the ~land
aabarb of Brook Park. ·
''Everytblnc - t off real
IIIIIIOtb. Each pte had seven
.- el&amp;bt people on il"
'lbe e&lt;inplex at Brook Park
._ two eqlne planta and a
~ ind ..,toys about
10.1110 per-.
"EftryUiing Ia goiDg fine,"
uld Dan Mlrtln, ~trike COlli·
ndU.,_Nn far UAW local GO
It the Clenlml Stamping
plant. "'Ole picketing is
peec:eful and lbere Ia no
troable.
"'111e wwkers were aU
raQJ far It (the ~trike),"

said Martin. '"lbey're aU
wllllngtostayoutasloogasit
takes to get what we Wllflt."
Ohio will be the second
hardest hit ll.ate In tbe natioo
with only Michigan, the home
of the major automakers,
worse off.
An esllmated Sl.l millioo
will be loat in wages In Ohio
each day tbe 8lrlke dral!ll on.
'111is will be offset
aomewbat by strilre benefits
~betweenf40and~a

week wldcb Ia considerably
lesa than tbe J%72.21 weekly
wage UAW members haw
been earning.
Plctet sips were printed
and dlatrlbuted early
Tuelday at the Ford faclUties
In Ohio as last minute
preparatlona were made for
the strike. ·
· The lui UAW strike was.In
tr10 when General Motors
Carp. Wll struck.
The npercuulons of the
strike on the econcmy were
not apec:ted to be felt for
about 30 da)'l when lqects
wereapected to be made oo
the steel Industry and
polllibly the tire industry
which jult went bsck to work

aflel' a l~y strike by the

United Rubber Workers
Union.
Ford plants In Ohio and
their number of workers
include:
-Two engine plants and a
founcl'y at Brook Pan with
10,000 employes.
-An auembly plant at
lAnin with 6,000 employes.
- A truck plant at Avoo
Lake with 2,000 employes.
- A stampq plant at
Cleveland
with
3,600
workers.
' - A parts depot at
Cleveland with ao workers.
- A lransmiasion plant In
the Cincinnati suburb of
Falrfu with 1,300 workers.
-A lransmiasioo plant in
the Cincinnti suburb of
Sharonville with 4,200
employes.
- An engine plant in lima
with 3,300 employes.
- A stamping plant in
.Maumee with 550 ~n.
. - A parts plant in
Sandusky
with
1,900
employes.
- A forge plant in Cantoo
with 1,300 employes.

DR. LAMB

encountered his first crowd
trouble of the campaign
Tuesday night while speaking
At the moment lhe
to about 2,500 students.
prospects for ·estate tn
The senator was heckled reform are unclear; Late last
and shouted at from . the month, the Ho~~St Committee
crowd periodically during his
on Ways and Means reported
speech, but remained an estate and gift tax bW,
Wll'llffled and was warmly H.R. 1~. This legislation
applauded afterward.
c:ontains several excellent
Republican
vice measures as far as providing
presidential candidate long overdue tax relief to the
Robert Dole wa.s in average taxpayer, Ute smaU
California,
where
he businessman, and the farcastigated Carter for mer. However, H.R. 14844
allegedly having several includes some pr'ovisioos that
positions on labor issues and· are unreasonable and
said
the
Democratic unacceptable. The" most
candidate has turned unloo glaring example is Section 6
organizers away from his of the bill which provides for
own peanut processing plant. a carryover basis Instead of
He was flYing b8ck a('J'OSS the present stepped up basis
lbe continent today, to join " in computing capital gains.
Vice President " Nelson The carryover ba!lis would
Rockefeller this afternoon ror have this impact in the
a swing through several cities following example :
in New Yark slate.
In 192J, Farmer A buys a
fann at a price of $i00 per
acre. He dies in 1976 when his
fann is worth $1,000 peracre.
VISITING HERE
Mrs. Mildred Fisher Fanner Ahad willed his farm
Gamblin, Columbus, is the to his son, Farmer B. Farmer
guest this week of Mrs. B is forced to sell the farm to
Bertha Canaday, lincoln Dr., pay debts and estate taxes.
Pomeroy. She is also visiting When Farmer B. Sells the
with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene farm at $1,100 per acre, his
capital gains tax per acre will
Fisher.
be calculated as follows :
$1,100
VISITING PARENTS
• 100 (Carryover basis )
Pam and T. J . Whitacre or
Newark spent the weekend
$1,000 (Capital gain )
here visi.ting her parents, lbe
Farmer B in effect canies
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd ShOok,
Pomer&lt;y.
over Farmer A's tax basis of

All funds are $51,225
Tile balance of all Mid·
dleporf \l.l.ll oge Co..Acil ex·
pendable funds as of Aug. 31,
was ot 551.224.19, according
to the monthly report of
Village Clerk· Treasurer
Ge-ne Grate.
. Receipis, disbursements of
each fund f..- the month and
fhe ' Aug . 31 balance,

Receipts lor the month
totaled SI2,9S3.31 and

disbursements

t-otaled~

S1M79.24.
Countll's obligated funds
remained at SJO,Jn.oe In the
·genet'a I bond retirement fund
wHh no

r~ipts

and

no

not doing any more because
you are probably one of those
people who have a decrease
that is not sufficient to be
important from a health point
· of view. A smaU decrease in
cells doesn't seem to make
any dUference. When the
count Is well below half the
usual value seen the person
may be more prone to infections.
The white cells are used to
f1ght off infecUoo. If your
count is very low then you
wiD need to lake precautions
against developing 1111 In·
fecUon . That wUl include
avoiding crowds, being
careful to not injure yourself
and even greater care of your
skin to avoid pimples and the
Uke. A pimple In a person
with poor defenses against
lnfectioo can be dangerous. r
doubt this Ia your problem.
The cauae of tbe mild cues
Ia unknown. It Is sonletimes a
familial characteristic .
prGCiudJW.
Severe furm! co111 be caused
Ynur dbc_.-s are probably by inadequate ~ marrow

$100 per acre. Under present
law !lowever, with a stepped
up basis, Farmer B would
have a capital gain of only
$100 per acre.
$1,i00
·1,000
· $100 (Capital gain)
Section 6 In the pending
legislation is clearly unac·
ceptabie to the average
taxpayer. I am also not In
complete agreement with the
hill 's estate In ..credit
.. provisions. The credit should
be higher. When H.R. 14144
came to tbe House Floor for
debs te and amendment some
Democrats
and
most
Republicans blocked an
attempt by the Liberal
Majority Leadership to shut
off amendments which would
have deleted Section 6, in'
creased the tax credit, and
otherwise benefited the
average taxpayer. Because
the
Liberal
Majority
Leadership was afraid that
certain pro-taxpayer amend·
ments, Including my own
amendment would pass; !bey
pulled the estate tax refortil
bill off the House agenda and
refused to let the entire House
consider the bill. I strongly
object tp this tactic . . The
average tallpjlyer Deeds tax
relief now. The Senate has
proposed a fairly good estate
tax reform Jl!~Ckage which is
contained within the · Tax
Rerorm Act of 1976. The
estate tax provisions of the
Act have been reported by the
Conference Committee to the
House and Senate. Un·
fortimately, the House
conferees Insisted upon the
· carryover basis treatment
for capital gains that r hive
already oulllned. There will
be a Floor fight to strike the
carryover basis provision
and I will support this fight.
lbluld the fuU House and the
full Senate gel together on the
Tax Reform Act provisions
dealing· with the estate tax;
prospects are brighter that
we will have an acceptable
estate tax reform law before
the Congress adjourns In

disbursements.
· Balance of the Middleport
respectively, tollow~ ·genera1, Board of Publi c Affairs
S5,501.05, S6.899A2, S2J ,98!.S2; obligated funds IS ~f' Aug .. 31
cemetery, $.401 . S652 .B4 totaled $182.755.S4. The
S2 . -43.C.74; f ir e equipment, receipts. disbursements of
5600, S~l3 . 51 ,
S3SS.91 ; each lund for the month and
swimming pool , $1 ,390.93, the balance in each.
51.963.75, 53.515.94; planning res~tively. follow: ·Silnitary
commission , .no receipfs, sewer. U ,013.98, 53,917.33,
$43.55, Sl49.70 i streef '21.. 072.1'2; san itary seWer
malnfenance. S5,n00 .33, escrow. S60, no d isburseS1 ,997 ..u. 510,586.76; f~at me·nts, 5129,690 .09 ; water,
revenue sharing, no recefpts, . $6, 916 .~ 6. $7,285.38, $8,911.4;
$308.73, 511 ,683.35 ; fire house wafer meter trusts., 5125, $75,
construction. no receipts, no 57,062.15. Receipts of ihe
disbursement., 511 .99 . board's obligated tunds for October.
the month totaled $11,115.14
while disbursements totaled
$11 ,277.71.
·n.e Iota I hooded indebted·
Ohio Valley
ness of the town stands at
Livesletk Co.
$1,3'15,893.75 ineluding $6,210
owed on the swimming pool ; .
Gallipolis, Olllo
$56,250 on the fire hou5e;
SepL11,1m
$613,898.75 on the .Silnifary
Stock« CaWe - Steers - sewer system and 5719.535 on
250 to 300 lbs. 23. to 31., 300 to the wafer operation. The
400 lbs. 23. to 32., ~ to 500 in debtedness averages
lbs. 24.50 to 34., 500 tn 600 lbs. ~uo per capita.
By MICliAEL O'R,EGAN
27. to 35., 600 to 700 lbs. 24. to
NEURATH, West Gennany
35., 7001bs and over 27. to 36.
(UP!) - Where the brown
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
furrows run right to the
lbs. 19. to 25., 300 to 400 lbs. 21.
furnace waJia of the 2,100
to 27 .50, 400 to 500 lbs. 21. to
megawatt power statim, tbe
27.75, 500 to 600 lbs. 20. to :lB.,
corn llhoota up higher t.ban
600 to 700 lbs. 20. to 28., 700
Corneluis Conger, deed. to anywhere e1le in the country.
lbs. and over Z2:50 to 31.
Clarence Conger, Harold
Subtropical plants,
Stock Cows and Bulls (By Conger, Olaries Conger, aft.
Including
ao}'beeDI, peanuta,
the head ) - Stock Cows 135. for trans:, Sutton.
eggplant and cotton are
to 230., stock cows and calves
Leland E. Clonch, Reatha
165. to 295., stock bulls 140. to V. Clonch to Michael Iliad llprOUtq in a 17~ field
oorth Of the ,Alpl wbere the
260., baby calves 10. to38.
Jr., Joyce Elaine Iliad, Lot winten are cruel lo 111011
(By the pound ) Canners 12, Rulland.
crops and tbe leaves fall .at
and cutters cows 17. to 23 ..
Harry E. Johnson , Delores the beglmlng of September.
Holstein cows, 21 to 2:i.50, M. Johnson to Michael Iliad
"We willltnolr !bat we have
commercial bulls 23.!&gt;0 to 30. Jr. , Joyce H!ad, l.&lt;lt 5,
IUCceeded
wben the farmers
Pigs 20. w 46.
Fairview Hgts.
ccme becglng us to build a
Veal Calves - Tops 220 lbs
Richard L. Haggerty to power plant In their
to 250 54. to 59.75, medium 200
Renee M. Stone, Lot 413, villages," aald Herbert
lbs. to 300 46.to !'13., culls 42. to Middleport.
Luckow, who beads the $U
down.
15 Ease Leading Creek million "agrotberm"
. Sows 350 lbs. up 34.50 to Cons. Dist.
.
esperlmental project.
38.75.
Archie E. Lee, JWJe P. Lee
Tbe
government
tn Harry E. Johnson, Delores IIIJPI'Oprlated the mooey fur
M. JohnJon, 1.20 A., Chester. the three-year project In
Carl 0. Glbnore to Dale October, 1m.
Ellis, Grace EUia, Parcel,
Toclay, 43 miles of plpi!lg
Rutland.
Eldon Morris, Phyllis
Morris, Margaret Van
Cooney, Mary N. Hysell,
Irene Thomas to Eldon
Morris, Irene 'Olonlaa, 2% A.,
Salisbury.
RuSBell Quillen, Velma
Quillen to Mary Jayce Fin,
production from actions of dley, .34 A., Letart.
drugs, c hemical solvents,
Harry B. Moffatt, deed. to
insecticides and a host 'of Frances E. Moffatt, Harry
By Patrlcill McCormack
factors . One · aspect of Malcolm Moffatt, Larry L.
UPI Heallll Edlter
trea lrnenl in these cases is Moffatt, Karen Bradsbaw,
COlD SPRING HARBOR,
elimination of the offending Dianne Mahaney, aff. for N.Y. (UP!) - Cancer
drug if possible.
trans., Salem.
sclenliltl today reported the
Many drug or chemical ) - - - - - - - . . . . . , .. lint definitive evidence that
1111oking low tar and low
induced episodes are cured
"
:
:
:
•
·nicotinecigarettes lowers
spontaneously when the of·
..,_,r,.
.
deJth
rates
frcm both !Wig
fending agent is removed. I
would think tha l y.ou probably
- -....
cancer and coronary beart
CNfl1"a l IAMIIIIIH&amp;L
don't need anything special
.......
. dt~ae .
The proof, delivered at
except lo be checked
regularly and, If need he, to · ........ . : ; : : ., · cbdng lesllooa of a week·
lake added precautions
,..
- ·-• -"''"" -417· long meetin11 of cancer
111
against infection or to get
· -,.....
· .,...
"· lleutha at Cold ur--v~~~o
"'-'ft• Harbor
hll•'.-.' "
Dtflu
MI·IUI.
,.._ _ ....,.,.
Laboratory, was in an
trealment ai once with any
sign of an Infection.
...... .... .. ana1ylll of deetbl OCC1ftlng
':..~- ,.., ·· " • In a population of more t.ban
Those who would like in·
formation about anemias can
.,... • · ..... 1o1- one million malea and
"""'"....
..., ·
- .....
femalea over · a 12-year
send 50 centa ror The Health
.....
..............
,, m ,...
t
period.
Letter number 4-3, Un·
- ............
- •• _,,.
O.tha for "medium" T·
derstanding the Anemias.
.....
..,.....,
..m.
Send a long, stamped, self-u.u. .. -- ,- - ..., .fromtwwc:ucerwere
•N.- tar-nk:ollne, IIIIODn
.. - ·
.........
lOper
addressed envelope ror
.......
.,
•
•
,
r
,
....
..-tt
CID.,.,.~
'
-·
..,...,
"
"
n~.~ttt
'-than"'"''"""
T~~
maUing. Address your letter
.,,_.,....,,__,
....
IIDOII:en;
for
"low"
T·N
to me In care of this news..........
..._ lllloUn It 11'11 28 ._.
.............r - cent
Piper. P. 0. Box 1561, Radio
leu.
Cilv SIAiinn. New Yl•rk, NY
1

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LeUen

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Tile)'

lit

(• Ill ...... IIh .. ,., ~

I

lht edllerl ud . . t lie llplll wllll ........, a6drtn. Na- lillY be wlditoelll .... ..........
a.wever, oa reqafllt, . . - will be died md IAasl
llloald be !a looi tule, ....._.., ..._, tMt pereoulltks.

I

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1.

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Property
Transfers

IUU)~I .

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.,.....

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.....

..........

.,

.

Dear Sir:

a citiJ.en and taxpayer of the Meigs LQcal School

District, I am becoming very disgusted with our Board of
Education. I think it's about time that we who live In this ·
district look Into \he way in which they are running our school~!
and spending our money.
.
According to the article In the Sentinel on Monday,
September 13, our teachers are not being treated as fairly as
the board's high-priced city attorney stated in his letter. Why '
sbould teachers here receive less than teachers elsewhere In
the state if our board C!'n rJford to pay them? If we expect our
schools to prepare our youngsters to compete In loday's
aoclety, we are G''lllg to have to draw and keep good teachers
here by paying them a decent salary. Our kids deserve good
·teachers as much as kids.ln other pans of Ohio.
Board members and admlnislrators doo 'I seem to know the
financial situatioo of the district. I was under the impression
that the new clerk, along with the $400.00 per month comJXlter
and two assistants was to be able to figure this out. Could it be
that thlB gantleman Is ilot as well quallfied as was thOught? It
seems tomethatagreatdealofourmoney (clerk's salary, two
assistants and eomjJuter) is being 3pe11t to no IIVail.
Add to this the fact that $10,000 has been transferred from
somewhere to pay an out-of.town attmley to do the board's
worlt. According to the article o~ Mooday, they aren't even
attending the negotiations meetings: I don't know how others
feel, but I for one am wooderlng wha~ thlB board does.
.Whether or not you have children in school, it Is your tal
money that thiB board is spending. As I said earlier, I think it's
about time that we look Into this situation and help the board to
resolve the problem since they can't seem to do it themselves.
- Mrs. Betty McKinley, Route I, Middleport. ·

Gnmdrenuningen.
The undergroUnd piping,
through wbicb the plant
pumps 10,500 cubic feel of ita
waste water every hour,
heats the ground to
temperatures about 14
degrees above normal.
And the plants love it.
Elperimenters grew 89 per
cent more potatoes In the
warmed ground, harvesting
them four weeki earlier than
normal. Com In the heated
field Ia about three feel IaUer
than a crop In an adjacept,
Wlhealed field.
The agrotherm project
actuaUy senes two purposes
- net only does the excess
heat help crope ·germinate,
but the cooUng water also can

be recycled.
The standard 1,300·
megawatt nuclear power
station will need ·t,618 acres
of field in order to cool all of
its nm-off. Since the waste
water now can be recycled,
nearby rivers no looger serve
as dumping grounds and are
spared the danger of being
overheated, says Hans
Matthoefer, minister of
research and teclmology.
Agrothenn also broadens
the choice of attes for locaUng
pow« plants since they could
be placed In more denaely
populated areas - with the
blessing of farmers, tbe
project director said.
One of the most Intriguing
spinoffs, however, could be a
boon to the ItaUan tou;-it.t ·
Industry.
Italy is considering Using .
agrothenn as a means of
heaUng beaches to entice
more visitors.

easier for hearts, lungs

I

,

September 14,1976

Low tar, nicotine proven .

--0(11

'
•
.

Criticizes board of education

lace a field ~undlng tbe
Neurath coal-driven power
statioo. Other experimental
sites are located at nearby
Auweiler, Riswlck and the
nuclear power plant at

Dr, E. Olyler Hammood

d
1
cent.
aAmnerlacssanoccates ofSo
. ilhte
Americana smoked 60'7,2
ancer
c e Y billion cigarettes In 1m
alao said corresponding according lo the U s'
figurea for coronary heart
·
· · ·
disease were eight per cent . Department of Agrlculture,
leu for ''tnedlum" TN. 14 per
Hammond aald the new
cent 1esa for "low" TN'
· evidence suggests that a
·
''much larger reduction" In
'l1le anal)'llla, presented at the average tar and nicotine
an International conference
t
f
on ''The 0r1g1na of Human con en1 · o
cigarettes
Cancer" did net
consumed by Amerlcanll
'
mean a would be of conalderable
clean bill of health for public health •~--llllokera of low tar, low
H
~............ee.
nlcoUne dprettes.
ammond
Is
Vice
Hammond and uaoclates President, Department of
empbiiiAd that the death Epidemiology and Slaliltlcs,
.__
American Cancer · Sodety.
rates uuu the low tar and
Scientlata defined ''high"
T·N as 2.0 to 2.7 mg. of
rates of IIUbjeclll who never nlcotlneand25.81o35.7mg.of

!:r=·t..are:'J':rh

tar~ T-N was defined 11
lea than I 2 mg of nicotine
Wlllhln&amp;tm, D.C., aald 10·• Hammond. ~ld the~
per. eent of aU dga ties clgarettea delinrtd lea than
IDIOII:ed lut year by 178 ..,., ,_. tar
Amerlca,ns were of tbe low
· ....,. "' · ·
tar low nicotine variety In
Medium T.ft 11'11 dellned II
fllloked replar)J."
The Tobaeco Inadtute In

t97i the ·· - - 1181 3 8 ·
.lr """'~
· per

· Two league engagements
and three non-league affllrs
are on tap this weekend In the

. Collf.-ence.

Dear Sir:
·
Something troubles me about our school system.
·The children are out of schoOl, losing time, and being
counted absent, for no reaaoo of their own whatsoever.
we as retirees, paying higher taxes than we can afford,
and saying UtUe about it, yet the school board can rille a
cl«k'ssalary five thousand dollars In a year, which i.s more
than we make to live on and pay tales.
The teachers who are doing the work of teaching our
children are getting all the blame.
We want to know why the school board can spend our tu
money so carei~?
·
For a multitude or retired taxpayers - Mrs. A. Eblen,
Pomeroy RD.

As

Two SVAC games, three
non ·loop tilts slated
Southern Valley Athletic

Something toubles her

Com grows taller in
steam heated .fields

Body short in white cells
The granulocytes are
manufac!ured in the bone
marrow, then released into
your bloodstream. You may
be surprised to learn that the
ave~age whi~ cell doesn 't
stay In your bloodstream
very long . In a short time it
migrates out of the cir·
culatlon into your body
Ussues. There are 20 limes as
many granulocytes In your
tisaues u there are In your
clrculatiOI).
You also have a reservoir
Of white cells in your booe
marrow. You have 15 to 20
lima u many mature white
cells in your bone marrow
wallllll! to be re1eued If your
ll«1Y needs them. U a peTIOli
develops acute aj)pendicitis
theae cella are relealed
IUddenly to combat Infection
and the white count goea up
riPid!J. Meuurlng the white
Cilia .In )'Oir bloodalream Is
only an lndel of how many
neulropbilayourbodymaybe

---------------------------.
''IIIIa are • ' •••
...W
I ":

1

. S-Tbe Dally 8¥f.inei,Mlddleport..Pcmeroy, 0., Wednelday,Sepl. 15, 11178

Intermediate between blgh
and low.

Lilt week, the league fared
well against outilde op·
position. Kyger Creek, North'
Galiia, So11thweatern and
~ulhern posted victories.
Eutern defeated Hannan
Trace In the only league
contest. Symmes Vall~y took
It on. the chin, losing SZ.O at
Oleaapeake.
This Friday nlght'e
schedule finds Southern
lravellng to Hannan Trace
and Eastern going to Sym·
mes VaUey In SV AC gamei,
whU~ on the non-league slate,
North GaUia goes to Zane
Trace of Ross County and
Southwestern hosts Hannan,
W. Va. Saturday allet'noon,
Kyger Creek visits Hun·
tlngton of Ross County.
Coach Joe Mitchem's
eastern Eagles will go after
win number two against
Coach Greg Bailie's Symmes
VaUey VIkings.
Eastern used a ·stingy
defense an an explosive of·
fense In dumping Hannan ·
Trace, 32-8 last Friday.
Junior running back Joe
Kuhn scored a pair of lnucll·
downs while Pave Mllls,
senior fuUback, had another.
.Kuhn was also a defensive
star picking off three of four
Hannan Trace passes.
The biggest Eagles orfenslve weapons, however,
was quarterback BOb McClure who had 102 yards In 10
carries and eotnpleted five of
12 paSBeS for 121 yards In·
eluding a big ~yard bomb to
KUhn.

Coach Larry Cremeens' Va,
Last
Saturday,
the
Wildcats
led offenaively
Hlghlandef,S
foUowed
In
the
by senior fullback Jim
footsteps
of
other
SVAC
Waugh. He had 113 yardllln 22
carries, while ICOI'ing the schoola, with an impresalve
victory over Southeastern of
ooly HT touchdown.
Southern 'a opening victory Ross County. The win, SWHS'
. over Federal-Hocking fourtllln its laat five football
featured the heavy running of games, waa led by senior taUSteve Boso, an aii·SVAC back Kip Lew!JI, sophqmore
running back. Boao rushed signal caller Gene Layton,
for 188 yards In 38 tries while and junior end8 Don Bush and
acorlng three touchdowns. Larry Carter .
Lewis had 132 yards
Greg Cundiff .and Steve
rushing, Layton threw tnuch·
Hendricks also scored.
Symmes VaUey failed to dowti pasaes to Carter and
muster any offense In last Bush. Bush also grabbed a 24week's loSB to Chesapeake. yard scoring strike thrown by
Coach John Blske's North Barry Jenkins.
On defense, the HighlanGaUla Pirates seek !heir
ders'
Lewis, Steve Rawlins,
second straight victory
Curt
Nolan, Don Jeffers,
against zane Trace.
Last week, North Gallla Larry Ruff and Sherman
showed its firepower by Potter turned in fine per·
rouUng Waterford, 41~. Fr~ formances.
Hannan, W. Va. is 1·1
l.&lt;lgan, speedy tailback, had
three touchdowns. Senior having beaten Clear Fork
qllilrterback Mark Theiss had before last week's 27.() loss to
.
an excellent game as did Wahama.
afternoon,
Coach
Saturday
rllnnlng back Mike Casey.
Also getting TO's againat Jim Sprague's Kyger Cfeek
Waterford were Theiss , Bobcats go to Huntington of
Casey and Marty Hash, Ross Couinty for a 1:30 p.m.
contest. ·KC defeated Miller,
defensive tackle.
North Guilla's offense 43-20 In Its !Ieason opener.
The Bobcats showed an
rolled up 300 nrda against
awesome
offensive roUing up
the Wildcats .
456
total.
yards.
The Pirates' opponent this
week, Za~ Trace opened its
season oo the short end of a
40-0 loss to Clear Creek.
The Pioneers of Coach Jim
Glll Uke to use the airways as
quarterback Don Clever has
a rtne throwing arm.
The
Southwestern ·
·
Highlanders of Coach Bob
Ashley will also seek Uleir
seconp straight victory
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Friday night against a non- Tommy John couldn't of
league opponent, Hannan, W. .answered any quicker if

were

Leading tne I!Obcals were
junior liilback Marcus
Geiger, who rushed for 191
yards and scored three touch·
downs; senior running back
Todd Taylor, whO had 121
yards on ·the grounds fn,
eluding two TO's, and fuU.
back Ralph lillylor, 190 pound
senior, who ran over Falcon
defenders for two touchdowns
and 60 yards rushing. Senior
quarterback Steve Baird
P!lssed for 121 yards, but.saw
three of. his passes In·
tercepled.
·
Defensively, Brian Lucas,
scrappy senior back and
Taylor, a cornerback, were
praised for their efforts.
Huntington of Ross County
lost last Weekend to Vinton
County, 22-0.
'
SVAC ST ANDING S
A~~ GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Ga!lia

southwestern

Easfern
Southern

,

Kyger Creek

Hannan Trace

Symmes Val.

TEAM

Eastern

1 0 32
1 0 31

o

o

a
8

1 0

Ali

2·0

0 1

0

52

o

32

o 1

8 '32

SVACONLY .
W L P OP

Kyger Creek
North Gallia
SouthWestern
Southern

Symmes Val.

Hannan Trace

Totals

1 0 41

1 o , 32

1

0 0
0 0
0 0

0
0
0

0 0 (j
0
0 .1 8
1 I 40

0 0

a

0
0
0

0
0

32

40

John 'arrives'
d
b
k
on roa
ac

you'd ask him the date of his
birthday.
"It was Sept. 25, 1974, at
seven in the morning when
they put me on the opera ling
table," said Jobn Tuesday
night alter he pitched the Los
Angeles Dodgers to . a 9-0
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds in the opener of a threegame series.
Major League Standln~s
Maddox;
Phil
136
497
71
166
.334
Slennell
121.
A tendon was taken from
United Preu tnternatlonal
Griffey, Cln 135 513 102 171 .333
National Leagueooo 200 OOir- 2 5 1 John's rigbt arm and transOliver, Pit 112 41S 59 138 .330 Moo !real
Eat!
Cin 126 432 106 141 .326 Phlldelphl 000 030 oox- 3 4 1 planted In his left elbow to
W.. L. · Pet. GB Morgan,
Rose, Cin
146 59'1 120 193 .322 Fryman, Kerrigan 171 and replace a torn ligament. · '
Philadelphia 88 55 .615
PIIISburgh
82 61 .573 "6'" Gernimo, Cin 134 '448 57 141 .315 ~.!:t" ' 1~fn~':,'d9 ' i~::.l•rw~!.:
John doesn 't know the
Fosler. Cin 131 51S 80 162 .313
. New Vor.k
76 67 .531 12
M9n1nez, Atl w 588 62 183 .3 11 Lon borg 116.91..1 V - Fryman medical ierm for the surgery.
66 79 ASS 23
·ChiCago
Garvey, LA 144 570 75 177 .311 112.11). HR - Monlreal , Wil ·
St. louis
63 78 .441 24
"Just call it a miracle
AMERICAN LEAGUE
IIams (14).
MOnlreal
8 93 .340 39
G. AB R. H. Pet.
operationt'' said the smiling
West
W,. L,. Pel. GB McRae, KC 134 471 72160 .340 Chicago
330 ooo QOO-- 6 12 1 John. Thai's because it's a
Brell, KC
143 583 87 197 .338
Clnclnnall · 93 53 .637 Louis 010 ooo 002-3 9 2 rrur
· acle he's pl' lching today.
Carew. Min W S4S S9 182 .332 s.l.
· R. Reus chel (1J.10) al1d
Los Angeles 82 62 .569 · 10
Bostock, Min 116 428 66 142 .332 Millerwald ; McGiolhen, Solo.
"I never had any doubts
Houston·
72 75 .&lt;490 21lh
128 496 73 157 .317 mon
(21, Waterbury · (3), bo 1 kin
ful
San Diego
, 67 80 ... 56 261!2 Lynn, Bos
LeFlore, D,el 135 544 93 172 .316 LaGrow 161, Capllla 181 and a U ma g a success
san Francisco 67 81 .453 27
Rivers, NY 131578 93 181 .313 Simmons. LP- McGiolhen 112- . ew~eback ,"saidJohn , now g.
Allonla
63 83 .432 30
Carty, Cle 137 499 64 153 .307 w .
TueS:dly's Results
10 after his victory.
Garr , Chi
123 477 59 146 .306
HOuston • Atlanta J , 1st
Munson, NV 139 564 74 172 .305 Los Angeles 100 001 520-- 9 15 o
But only two other persons
Atlanta 4 Houston ·3, 2nd
HOME RUNS
Cinclnnall 000 000 QOO-- 0 10 o shared his faith.
Los Angeles 9 Cincinnati o
N AT I 0 NA L LEAGUE : John (9- 10) and Pasley ;
''On
wU
11
New York 4 Pittsburgh 3
Schmidt, Phil 35 ; Kingman, NY Nolan, Borbon lS I and Bench.
e was my
e Sa Y
Chicago 6 St. LOUIS 3
J.t; Monday, Chi 30; Foster, Cin LP- Nolan 112·91. HRs-Los and the Olher was Ben Wade,
Philadelphia 3 Monlreol 2
29; Morgen, Cln 27.
San Fran 7 San Diego 6
Angeles, Garvey 1131. Goodson our scouting directnr," said
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Nell· 131 .
Today's Probable Pitchers
les, NY 26; Ja ckson and L.May,
John.
.I All Times EPTl
Jo.hn, sid.elined the entire
St ! Louis (Oenny 9-7 ,and ·salt and. Hendrick;, Clev 25 ; San .Frnclsco 300 020 OOh- 1 11 1
S•o Diego 000 006 QOO-- 6 13 3
F·alcone 12-13) ·at Nfw York Bando, Oak 24.
RUNS BATTED IN·
Knepper. Dressier 161 , Cald · 1975 season, began his spring
l~ollth 8·12 and Espinosa 3-31.
NATIONAL LEAGUE: Fos. well 16) , Heaverlo 161 , Williams training In the backyard of
2, 5:35p.m.
Morgan , Cln 107 ; 171. Molfill lS I and Alexander; hlB lAs Angeles home last
Plltsburgh !Candelaria 14-61 ter , Cln 114;
Phfl 95 : Watson , Hou Strom, Johnson (6} , Freisleben
at Philadelphia (Kaal 11·121 . Schmidt,
92 ; LuzlnskL Phil and Murcer, 171. Melzger 181. Tomlin 191 January.
7:35p.m.
and Kendall. wP- Molfllt 16"51.
"I tllrew at a pmn' !er's
Chlcaoo · (Burris 12·13) at SF 85.
AMERICAN . ~EAGUE : . L. LP- Met zger (11 .21. HR: S-S!n
Montreal (Rogers 6-15), 8:05
May, Belt 101 ; Munson. NY 96 ; Francisco, Murcer 2 1201.
tarpaulin over the chainlink
. p.m.
Los Angeles (Downing 1-1) at Chambliss, NY 93; Mayberry,
fence
surrounding my y~rd, "
Yastrzemst&lt;.l , Bos 90 .
Cincinnati !Zachry 12-Si , 8:05 KC 92 ; STOLEN
BASES.
American League
said
Jobn.
"I JXlt dots the
p.m.
NATIONA~
LEAGUE:
MOr·
g:!~~~:rel
I100
020-~
width
or
home
plate on the
San Francisco (Ricello 0-0) at
200
91
San Diego (Jones 21 .121, 10 gan, Cln SS ; Taveras, Pitt 53; Minnesota 010 000 001 _ 2 8 2 tarp about waist high."
Blu e OS-Ul and Newman .
Lopes. LA and Brock, St .L 52 ;
p.m .
Hou 51.
Then, the Dodger lefty got
Houston (Andu(ar 8-9) at Cedeno,
AM
E
R
1
cAN
~EAGUE : Luebber, Campbell (91 and
A'llanta IDol Conlon 3·5i, 7:35 North , Oak 69 ; LeF lore, Det 58 ; Borgmann . LP- Luebber (4·5l. himself a bucket losded with
p.m.
campanerls, O~;tk 53; Patek , KC HRs-Qakland, Tenace (20); 30 baseballs.
T~ursday's Game~
and Baylor, Oak 4 7 ~
_ Minnesota , Ford (17J. .
Chicago at Montreal
"I'd throw 30 baUs at the
PITCHING
St. LouiS at New York, night
dotted
llne," recalled John
Most
Victories
(lnd game)
Pittsburgh at Phlla, night
NATIONAL
LEAGUE:
Jonos,
Oakland
000
101
11103
11
0
Tuesday
night. And then he
Houston at Atlanta , night
so 21 ·12J Koosman. NY 11.8, M;nnesola 100 200 001- 4 9 1
Los Angeles at Cine!, night
would
collect
the basebaUs
suuon, LA 19.9; carlton , Ph il
Bosman, Lindblad !&lt;~), Todd
(Only games 5cheduledl
17 -6; Richard, Hou 17-1.4.
(9) and Newman, Tenace !7l. off the ground and throw
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Pal · Haney ; Gollz (1 3.131 and them again ... and again.
Amer1c1n Lelgue
mer, Bait 21 -12 ; Figueroa, NY
neoar . LP- Lind!Jiad (6-Sl.
East
18 -8; Tlant, 805 18 . 11 ; Garland. HRs- Oakland , washington (.4) ;
"Each day [would throw at
·w.. L .. Pet. 08 Balt 11-6; Fidrych, Det and Minnesota , Cubbage !l&gt;.
least
130 pitches," he said.
New York
~l :;:~ 9•h ~-~nard, KC f6.S; Tanana, Cal Kansas Cl ly 100 100 OOir- 2 10 1 It was like to trying to
Baltimore
Cleveland
73 71 .507 15'12
EARNED 9UN AVERAGE . Chicago
001 000 OOir- 1 53 topple the 10 pins at an
Boston
68 76 .472 20•12 1baled on 144 Innings pitchedJ
Hassler (5-10) ance Stinson,
Detroit
67 71 .465 21112
NATIONAL LEAGUE 5
Wathen (4 ); Monroe, Fors ter amusement park. John,
63 so .441 25 ver, NY 2.~ 0 ; Rau. LA: 2.56;
ea · -Ill.Forster
Carrollll·l2l
(91 .and. Esslan. LP though, was trying to win a
Milwaukee
West•
Jones, so 2.66 ; Norman, Cln
W.. L.. Pel. GB 2.67 ; Denny. St.L 2.69.
Ol4 100 OOir- 7 15 2
Kansas Clly S3 62 .572
AMERICAN . LEAGUE : . Fl· Delroll
Oakland
78 66 .542 -41h .drych, ·oet 2.24: Blue, Oak .2.4S; Bal1 1more' 005 000 "ox- 9 111
Lemanczyk (31, Hil ler
Mlnnesolo
7~ 73 .503 10
Travers, Mil 2.50; Palmer. Ball {7.),Ru.hle,
Laxton (8) and Freehan;
California
67 79 .459 16112 · 2,55; Torrez, Oak 2.58.
Grimsley,
Pagan
[3).
0.
Texos .
6~ 80 . ~ 4 18'h
STRIKEOUT
Chicago
63 .83 .432 20'12
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Sea. ~~!ir~f~e~4 1 ~r.~ °e"l.'io'"Y,; ;;1't, , uNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
1
·
Tueldly's Results
11er, NY 221; Richard, Hou 179;
De· (UP!) - Penn State coach
Oakland 4 Mlnnesot• 2, 1st
Koosman, NY 161 ; Monttfusco, 111 ·81 , HR - Balllmore,
Minnesota~ Oliklond 3, 2nd
SF 160 ; Corllon. Phil 15~ .
Clnces 191.
·
Joe Paterno says his Uons
Kansas Clly 2 Chicago 1
AMERICAN LEAGUE:. Ryan, New York 203 300 ooo- 8 13 o will have to play a lot better
Milw 3 Boston 2, 10 Inns.
Cal 278,· Tanana , Cal 229 ;
000 000 110"- 2 1 o this week if they hope to
California 6 Te)l;as .cl
Blyleven, Te)( 185; Eckersley, Clev&lt;lond
Jackson, TidroW (81 and mak
sh ·
· t to
Ntw York B Clevtland ~
Clev 163 ; Hunter, NY 160.
Munson ; Dobson, Hood (31,
e a OWing agams p
Baltimore 9 Oetrolt 1
Buskey (4), Porker 111 and ranked Ohio State Saturday.
TOdly's Probable Pitchers
Fosse,
Cerone (61. WP"Th' ·
11 k f
(All Tlmts EO.Ti
~ackson 16·11. LP- Dobson 114.
. IS IS a. cruc a wee or
Mljor Le.gue Re5Uits
Kansas City IBird · 1J.7 ol
us because I've always felt
California !Ryan 13.11), 10:30 By United Press 1nternatlon11 121 .
N1tion1l Lngue
p.m.
that
a team improves more
California 001 ooo 302- 6 9 2
Texas ( Blyleven 11 ·151 at (1st game)
between
its first and second
200 010 1()()- .t 6 1 Texas
020 101 ooo- .t 9 2
Ct1 1C ago (Johnson 9-l.t), 9:05 HOU!ton
Allanla
001
010
010"3
9
2
Hartzell
17·4i
and
H
umphrey,
games
than
at any other time
p.m.
l..tmongello, .Forsch (8) and Etche!:la rren ; Barker, t-targan
Boston (Cleveland 7-9) at
Mllwauket (Colb&lt;&gt;rn a.w , S:30 Herrmann ; Ruthven, Torrealba (7) and Sund~erg . LP-Hargan during the season,' : Paterno
(8) and Correll, Murphy. WP- (6-H . HR - Texu, Grieve (16}. . said.
P.1m.
.
Deorolt !Bare 7-71 al Bal . Lemongello .11-01. LP- Rulhven
"We have to get a lot better
HR- Houston, Cabell (10 IMingt)
llmoro (Garland 11·61, 7:30 113·151.
(2)
.
.
this
week if we are going to be
Boston
000
000
011
0-2
6
0
p.m.
Mllw .
000 1100 200 1-3 10 2 as good as we can he this
New York IAie•ander 11·91 at (2nd gomel
Wise. Willoughby l9i and
Cleveland (Wall! 7·6), 7:30p.m.
100 110 QOO-- 3 s o Fisk ; Slaton. Sadeckl (8), year," he said. "This would
Minnesota (Hughes 8·121 el Houston
Allonta
103 000 OO•- 4 7 0 Frisella (9) and Porter. WP- be a crucial week for us no
Oakland (Norris .t-5), 11 p.m .
McLoughl in, J . Nlekro IS), J. Frisella IS·li . LP-WIIIoughby matter who we were
Thursdoy't oomea
Soaa (7), Sambllo 17i and 12·121 .
. Minn. al Oo~land. night
Johnson; Autry, Leon (6),
playing."
.
Kon City of California. nlghl
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
. Devine (Si and Murphy, WPTexao at Chicago
In
Ohio
State's
second
Aulry IJ .ol'. LP- McLaugh'lln (UP£) - The Oakland
Bailon at Mllwaukoe, nlghf
game last sea·son, the ·
13·41. 11Ra- Houllon. Cedeno
Ntw York at Cleveland, night
1111. Cruz W ; •llanta, Mon . Athletics purchased veteran Buckeyes dumped Penn
(Drily games scheduled I
IIMI t9 ), .
utility man Ron Fairly from
State, 17-9, at Columbus. The
the
St. Louis Cardinals
'MAJOR LIAGUI LEADERS; New York 1100 200 002- ~ 8 0
Uooa had woo their first two
· ly Unltlcl Prill Wtrntllontl Plll!burgh 001 1100 110"- 3 6 0 Tuesday.
IATTING
Swan. LockwOOd '181 and
Fairly, 38, who can play games In 1975 before losing to
I lastd on 4.. 11 bllll
9hlo State.
Stearns ; ROOktr 1 Tekulve (9}
NAT ONAL LI!AGUE
ond Oyer. WP- LockwOOd 11·71. lint base or outfield, joins his
Both teams dpened the
. .
G. AI
H. Pet. LP- Rooker 113·81. HRs- New new team Wednesday in
season on a winning note.
Madlock, Chi 131 ~73 64 162 .342 York, Torre 15i ; Plllsburgh, oakland.

l:

SPEAK TONIGHT
Speaking at the Meigs
Athletlr Booster meeting
tonight at 7, 30 will be
William fl Hess, head foot·
ball coach at Ohio
University; Wllllam D.
Rohr, athletic director;
Dale Baudy, head basketball coach, aud t'rank
Morgan, ol the Sports
lnrormution Depl. The
meeling will be held at
Meigs Higb School. The
public Is welcome.

Ex-Red could be AL's
most valuable player

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Spons Writer '
AnM all tbe guessing over
which Cincinnati Reds player
will win the National
League's most valuable
player award this year,
perhaps It's time to start
speculating which ex-Red
might win the same award In
tbe American League1
There are two who ml&amp;ht be
In cootention-batting leader
Hal McRae, now with the
Western Division-leading
Kansas City Royals and the
Baltimore Orioles' Lee May,
who leads the AL in runs
batted ln.
May drove In his 99th and
IOOth runs of the season In the
Orioles' sixth straight victory
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
Tuesday night, a 9-7 decision
UPI Sports Writer
over the Detroit Tigers, and
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!) the mUd-mannered 33-year
- Coach Bo Schembechlenf old firSt baseman seems w
Michigan believes the wave have at last grown weary of
of upsets during the fll'st big being taken ror granted.
weekend of college football
''I've
always
been
may indicate a trend Inward overlooked in my career even
more equal competition.
from the first day I signed a
"Qul!e a few good teams pro contract," said May.
didn't have good days (last) "It's been like that aU the
Sat~rday," Schembechler · time ..."
said Tuesday. "Isn't that
Back.to.!Jack doubles by
something?
Reggie Jackson .and May
"Do you think it could be a triggered a lour-Min seventh
balancing out of the grants- inning, which gave the
inilid? It could be a leveling Orioles the victory over
out, it could refleQt that Detroit. Mark Belanger's
everybody is going to have to sacrifice fly drove in the
be down to 95 grants-in-aid winning run to cap the· rally.
next year.
Meanwhile, McRae played
"It kind of looks like a topsy a key role in Kansas City's 2-1
turvey season."
victory over the Chicago
Schembechler's second- White Sox, which boosted the
ranked Michigan team plays Royals' first-place lead o'ver
Stanford · at Michie an O~klandin the ALWest to4'f.!
Stadium on Saturday. The games. ·
game
was · originally
McRae led off the fourth
scheduled for Stanford but Inning with a double , moved
was switched because the to third on AI Cowens' Infield
Cardinals could make more hit, and Uteri dashed home
money playing ,In Michigan's with what proved to he the
101,701-seat stadium.
winning run wben White Sox .
The two played a 19-19 Ue catcher Jim Esslah threw
la.st season with similar cir· wild Into center field trying w
cumstances surrounding the nail C&lt;iwens stealing second.
game. Stanford lost to Penn
Andy Hassler, proving to be
State a year ago while a most important mid.,.;eason
Michigan was have a acquisition in view or the
i.Oughei·than~xpected time Royals' crippling pitching fn .
trimming ,Wisconsin.
· juries, went the dislljnce and
The Cardinals spent the yielded five hits in gaining his
intervening week at Baldwin· fifth victory.
Wallace near Cleveland a
Elsewhere in the American
year ago but this time Uley League,
New
York
flew back tn Palo Alto, Calif., pummeled Cleveland, S-2;
and wl1l return to Michigan Milwaukee edged BostOI!, :&gt;.2,
on Thursday.
California put away Texas,&amp;.
"It didn't work out too 4, and Minnesota shaded
well,'' a Stanford spokesman Oakland, 4-3, after the A's
said. "The players didn't like won the first game of their
it. It seemed like Baldwin- doubleheader, 4-2.
Wallace only had one training Twins 2-4, Athletics 4-3:
table and one roll or tape."
Dan Ford singled home
· "Yeh. It's hard to spend a Craig Kusick in the ninth
week in Cleveland," Schem- Inning to earn the T\Vins a
bechler said, wishing he splii and spoil !lie A's chances
could retract the statement for gaining on Kansas City.
almost as soon as the Dave Goltz spaced 11 hits in
laughter died down. "I don't going the distance for his 13th
mean to say anything against
"
the city of Cleveland."
SCIOTO
He Indicated he was not
COLUMBUS (UP!)
~isappointed to be rated Come On Up, driven by A.J.
behind Ohio State, either.
Price, paced the mile in 2:02
"What difference 'does it Tuesday night to win the
make after one game?" ninth feature race at Scioto
Schembechler said. "I've Downs by 8'f.o lengths over
said before I don't care. It Keystone Calypso.
·
ought io be Ohio State. Didn't
Come On Up paid $7.80,
they look awesome?
· $4.80 and $4.20. Keystone
"Why do you guys keep Calypso paid $8and $4.60. The
asking? I've said before I show horse, Miss Holly Sue,
don't care. Now,at the end or paid $3.80.
the year I'll gripe."
A crowd of 5,960 wagered
$414,597 during the last night
of racing at Scioto this
season.

Upsets

showing
a trend

spot In lhe Dodgers starting.
rotation, not a stuffed animal. . PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP!)
Sure the Dodger lefty was - Oakland owner Charlie
proud of the shutout he . Finley will meet Wednesday
pitched against the Reds witl1 Jerry Kapstein , adviser
to five of the A's' top players,
Tuesday night,
in
an effort to get them to sign
· "Let's face it th 0ugh," he
contracts
and keep them
said candidly, "I just delayed
rrom
becoming
rree agents at
the inevitable."
the end or season.

'Crucza
. l week '•• .ra
n terno

.

.,

..t

Ohio State crushed Michigan
State 11151 weekend, 49-21, and
Penn Slate, ranked seventh,
limite&lt;( Stanford's potent
passing attack to one
touchdown in defeating the
Indians, 15-12.
"We go from what may
well be the best passing game
In the country to what has to
be one of the best running
attacks in the country,"
Paterno said.
Buckeye tailback JeH
l.&lt;lganifolled up 112 yards and
two touchdowns in only seven
carries as the Buckeyes
amassed 463 yards on the
ground against Michigan
Slate.
Paterno is expected to go
with the same offensive and
defensive lineups against
Ohio State that he used
against Stanford, but he 's
hoping for an improvement In
the performance or his
offensive line.
"Our offensive line didn't
handle lheir stunls very

win. In the opel)er, Vida Blue, Evans, got the win, hl.lfifth In
~ith the help of Gene
seven declsioos .
Tenace'$
three
RBI,
scattered eight hits for hlB
15th victory. Tenace hit hlB
20th homer, while Ford
DOirlOW "R
homer~ for the Twins.
"STTAM'CIUN lOW
CIJ Nil.;. ·
Yukees a, lndlaDII Z:
M FR'aflssiaNAl W.
Roy White, hi\ting at a .500
Rl!nt the fanWtic- new Up A:
clip durtna a current eightOui.Hyc!,ro·r,jiol Mae~lno fo•
superl~r e&amp;tpft cl•n.
game hitting streak, hanged
inp; . .lootetll a"d '
out four hits and scored three · remove.
dirt, pNYiruns as the Yankees reduced
theirmagicnumher in Ule AL
East to 10, Grant Jackson,'
malcjng his first stan since
Sept. 29, 1971, ·went seven
Innings for t11e win . He's now
~ since joining the Yankees
from Baltimore June 3.
Angels 6, Raugen C:
Jerry Remy's two-out,
ninth'-inning ~ingie scored a
pa\r of runs to give the the·
Angels the victory after
rallying from a three-run
deficit to tie the score In the
~ VAII.AILI fOR ''NTAL
seventh. Paul Hartzell, 7-4,
went the route for the victory.
Brewen 3, Red Sox 2:
Robin Yount stroked a two·
out single In the bottom of the
lOth Inning lo score DarreU
Porter and enable the
Brewers to snap a seven·
Mason, W.Va.
game losing streak. Danny
Frisella, who blew a 2-1 lead
Mon .. Thur. &amp; Sat.,8·5:30
In the ninth by yielding a run·
Fri. e.s
scoring si.ngle to Dwight
1

'PICKEN$

HARIMARE CO.

lhe Yeari

3 Days _only

Thurs,, Fn.,

•••

Sat.l.owat Prices!
Model 00201

Ready-Mixed

I).C()N
Fall
Special

Reg. '2,19
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LEAF RAKE
Reg. 12.49

Fall
Special

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COMBIMATION

PADLOCK
Reg. '2.59
Special

Remin_gton
EXPRESS

SHOTGUN
SHELLS
12-16-20 Ga.

'3"
well," he said. "We didn't
protect the passer very well
and we · had some other
missed assignments when
our blocking broke down."

MOORE'S
AUTO PARTS
124 W. Main

992-2848

Pomeroy

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18TH
UNTIL 6 PM

"FAMILY OUTING"
OF
SEMEl SOLVAY DIVISION
:ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP.
ASHLAND - IRONTON PLA NTS
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY ' 11 A.M. til9 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK
HUNTIN'GTON
I

I

�.

.4- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PlXll&lt;l'oy, 0., Wednesda6n Sept.l5,1976

Pomeroy man

Intersectional games top

~on
...._..,.,. , ~

Sport Parade

card, Bucks, Pitt picked
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Fearless Foreeaster
Egad, friends, there are
some sterling matchups on
this week's card and au of
them guaranteed to give you
goose bumps - heh·heh !
Intersectional clashes
dominate the schedule with
the center of attention
focusing in the East where
Penn Stale will host the Ohio
State Buckeyes. The Nittany
Uons bold a +I edge in this
abbreviated series but this
isn't Joe Paterno's year. We
confidently predict
a
Buckeye triumph, 24-14 !
Elsewhere, featured games
include: Nebraska ·Indiana;
Alabama • SMU; Florida •
Houston; Georgia Tech ·
Pittsburgh; Kansas • Ken·
lucky; Louisiana State .
Oregon ' State; Michigan .
Stanford; Michigan State ·
Wyoming ; Oklahoma .
California; Tennessee . TCU,
and Washington • Colorado.
Jove, it's enough to give a
forecaster a conniption fit)
Leading off these contests
we see Nebraska's Corn·
huskers thrii-Shing Indiana,
35-7, Alabama romping over

SMU, 32-&lt;i, a good

~·lorida

club taking the measure of
Houston, 24-12, and Pitt
outscoring Georgia Tech, 33-

Majol:

21.

The
veteran
w;u
aggregation Is this corner's
choice to edge Oregon State,
21·12, Michigan's Wolverines
get the Hoople nod over an
excellent Stanford Club, 2813.
It'll be Kentucky's Wildcats
26, Kansas 16, in an upset oil
the Jayhawks home grounds;
Michigan State 35, Wyoming
12, in their fll'st meeting ;
California 28, Oklahoma 24, in
a down-to-the-wire thriller at
Norman; Tennessee 18, TCU
12ln a squeaker and Colorado
24, Washington 21, in a
bruising mixup.
A pair of always exciting
intrastate rivalries are on tap
with Miami hosting the
Florida State Seminoles and
Notre Dame entertaining the
Purdue Boilermakers. Miami
has a superior rwming attack
this year and it should be
more than enough to insure a
Hurricane triumph, 36-15.
When Purdue and Notre

Rulgel'l 17, BuelmeU 12
Ttledo 38, Ceat. Mlcb. !0
· Delaware u, Citadel If

Georcll! 2%, Clem- 15

Navy Z1, Co,_.,llcut a

l'rlllceiOD U,

Forty-year-old
Tony .
Taylor, described by many
aperts as the ooly player in
the lilajcn whO works harder
when he's m utility duty than
when he's a regular, made
mly his 18111 appearance at
bat this season Tuesday·
night.

· But he singled hOme the
mkklle run of a three-run
fifth· inning rally, which
brought the Philadelphia
• I'IIIIUes a :1-2 victory over the
f!(mtreal Ezpos and vaulted
the Phlllla Into a slx'i!ame
lead over Pittsburgh in the
National Legue's )\:astern
Division.
The Pirates were shaded by
the New York Mer., 4-3•.
Taylor. wbo has spent lilOIIt
of ibis leUOD m the disabled
lilt, delcribed the thinking
tllat "l u made him one ulthe
IllOit rapected pros in the

Football

Forecast

Dame get lofleth~ anything
can happen and - kaff-kaff
- it usually does. This week's
fray should be a rerun of the
past 47 with Dan Devine's
better balanced Irish team
wiiming, e.H _:_ har-rumph!
Now go on with my
forecast:

I

hiS.eighth gime for the Mets, ·
while Jim Rooker suffered
hiS eighth loss against 13
vlcllries for the Pirates.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
defeated the Onclnnatl Reds,
~. the Atlanta Braves and
Houston Astros spUt 4-3 deci·
sions, the Olicago Cubs beat
the St. Louis Cardinals, 6-3,
and the San Franci8co Giants
downed the San Diego
Padres, 7-6, in other National
League games.

Astros iit the first game with
rookie Mark Lemongello
picklng up the victory. W'lllie
Montane%' tlJreH'Wl horner
the third inniJ1g spalhd the
Braves to their triumph in the
-.1 game.
rn.tl 7, Paclrel • :
Bobby Murcer's second
bomer of the gliDe, a twO-run
driye in the ninth, provided
the Gianr. with their victory
over the Padres. Murcer, whO
bad a twiH'WI homer in the
· fifth to put the Gianr. ahead,
Altroe 4-3, Bra\'ea 3-4:
fHI, tagged Butch Metr(er for
Enos Ca~ll's seventh· his :1001 homer in the ninth.
inning ~omer provided the The loss was Metzger's
winning margin for the second against II vlctDries.

Investment firm opens
offices in Hunt~on

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. "In lllfmlnd hrint to play E. F. Hutton &amp; Ol., Inc., the
eftl'yday," belllid. "I never nation's second largest
tbou81J! of myJeJt 11 being m sec uri Ues finn , iS opening a
the dilllbled list. Every day 1 fiv~son branch at 1223 6th
hll llld nm the ll8llle as I · Ave. Monday, according to
lhrlys do. .You wert the seniQI' vice president James
wbel.ber you play or . D. Dwyer o! Detroit.
tbl't play."
Dwyer, in Huntington to
One I!JIInMI alld Dick superVise the opening, said
Allea niRd to open the fifth the 6th Avenue offices are
Inning and orne Srown t.empi&gt;rary until the firm
lingled lofiD the buM. larry finds a site I&lt;&gt; build.
Bowa forced Imlmkj at the
At least four o! the five
plate,butAllenl!Ciftd as ilob account executives were
Boone bit into a forceout. previously with Smith,
Then Taylor batted fc~ "'• .,y, Harris, Upham &amp;
p1tc:11er Jim Lmborg and Co., a rival investment fll'm.
lingled iMIDe the ty1nc run.
Branch office manager iS
Gm:ry Maddos followed with Robert de G. White of 36
a double that droft in lbe tie- Fairfax Drive, who has been
1Jre111ins run.
in the investment business for
Laobcrg went 8Ye innings 23 years. The four account
tol'lllleblareCord to l&amp;.ewith esecutives will ~ Bryce
11m Sdr:e'er and Ron Reed Smith of Gallipolls, Ohio, who
each pltcbiJig two llhutout has been in the invesbnent
lmlnp In relief. Woodle Fry- business for six years; John
man IU!fered his 11th loss . Marshall Carter Jr. o! Park
agatnst 12 wins for the Ezpos. Hills, In the business about
mngles by Dave Klnjpnan, eight years; Mike Adams,
Jobn Steams and Ed Gallipolis naUve and Dave
Knnepool and an btleld out Perdue, a graduate of Purdue
bylludllarrelae•bledthe University with a M.B.A.
Meta to IICIOI't! two n11111 in the from Harvard University.
nlnlb Inning and beat the
The Huntington branch will
Plnitea. S1dp lockwood WGD be the only Hutton office in

. t. ..b

1.

PUBLIC AUCTION
THURSDAY EVE.. SEPT. 16, 1976
AT 6:00 P.M. CARPENTER, OHIO.
Located aboUt a mile and a lUI If southeast of
Carpenter on Stale Route 143 to the home of
Mrs. Ava Greenlees . .
I have sold my home and. will offer the
following Items for sale at public auction.
New Holland hay bailer, 1966 Olevroiet
Impala, 10ft. oak table, oak drop leaf table,
6 chairs, chest-a-drawers, 2·deep freezers,
Maytag washer, Sunray glis range.
Frigidaire refrigerator, marble top
dressers, coal heater, aladdin lamp, treadle
sewing machine, high head board bed, 2
Vlctrolas, ice box, stone jars, Ford rotatiller (like newJ. garden tractor, Dewalt
table saw, 250 McCullough chain saw,
Owner: Mrs. Ava Gr1111fees
Terms: Cash~ Not reaponslble for
ICclfttlf$ ·

Auctioneer: Lloyd Dillinger, Rt. 1, Shade,
0.
ApfWtlltJc,e AuctionHr: Richard Girdner,

.llc:klollvlllt, o.

l

c.....u II

Pea
tl, »artmoatb to
VIUallova %1, Dayten 19

Phils edge Expos, 3-2
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrller

Saturday, Sept. II
Atr Force H, Iowa State 11
Alahlma 3%, SMU t
Arkallla1 ZG, ~St. I~
AnQy %7, Holy Crou Zl
Baylor 14, Aubura 10
' BowU., Greea za, Eut Mlcb.
ZG
Ollorado St. Z7, Brigham
Voung It
Vale %1, Browa U

West Virginia and will serve
the entire state in additioo to
the Tri.State area. Other
branches in the area are a
26-person branch in Cin·
cinnati and a 25-person ·
branch in Pittsburgh.
Dwyer said he especls the
Huntington office IAl grow.
''We have come I&lt;&gt; Hun·
Ungton to . stay," he said.
"We're not just llirting with
the town:~
George Ban, executive vice
P"esidenl of Huttoo in New
York, N. Y., said the firm is
locating in Huntington
because " tbe area is a
growing one.''
Ball also noted Hutton
wants I&lt;&gt; participate in the
energy f1eld in the Tri-state
area. "Hutton bas a very
large corporate finance and
energy group," be said .
E. F. Hutton, founded in
190t, claims I&lt;&gt; be the only
investment firm to operate
P"ofitably every year since
then. Revenues in 1975 were
about $252 millim, and the
firm oiamed S20 million after
taxes.lt has 170 offices in the
United States and 11 in
Europe.
In 1972, two former While
llouae aides and five ~
men were Indicted oo charges
~ COOIJI!racy in the break-in
of Democratic National
Ommltlee headquarter~ in
'Washingtm (Watergate).
. ~-

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) Natlan.al League PrelideJt
Owies S. Femey bas an1101810ed plaoa to use lhn!e
yoq UllltJirea to WID ane
games clurinc the fl'lllllinder
~ the ~ball-.
He said Tuelllay tbat Jerry
Crawford will joiD Ed
Vargo's ern; Joe Weat will
join Tom Gcnlln's ern;
and Eric Gregg will join Lee
Weyer's crew.
Qoawf«d, 29, IIPI!IX llml'll
weeb Ill the Nallooal League
this when Gcnlln
... llljured, but !pent lllOIIl
of tbe year iD the
Intematiooal Iague. Weat,
only 23, ... in the Southem
League alld Gregg, Zi, .... in
the PCL.

I'IIILADELPIIIA (UP!) -

Guard Mike Dunleavy, a
starter for four ~ at the
Unlvenity Of South Carolina,
basalgned a contt a:t wilb the
Pbiladelpbia 'llera, the club
announced Tuesday.
Terms and lBiglb ul the
oontract were not c!lrJOJ!fd.
The &amp;-2 Dmleavy, a nalive
of Brooklyn, N.Y., the
'llera' llixiiH'ound draft piC!!
last llprlng and played for the
team tbat competed In the
Baker League, a PIM!rl'
·~~~~~" league.

i

.. .

alleviate d!Jcornfort. (4) a
Blr0118 supportive rqle lor the
huabaiMI that not only give
emotional, but physical
support to bla wife also. .
Women have long been
conditioned by BOCiety to
equate cblldbirth with fear
and pain. However, it has
been shown that women can
be de-ronditioned and reeducated, and nperlence a
labor and delivery that lhey
have a positive altitude

toward.

'

Mrs. Moore Is associated
with A.S.P.O. (American
Society
for
Psy·
choprophylasis In Ob·
stelrlca),
a
national
organlzatlm founded In 1860
to promote the deve!O)IIIIellt
and acceptance o! childbirth
preparaUoo. She Is ~
to teach dum In the area oo
a conUnu0111 buts.

'• I

of burnirt-:l
marljUIIIIIed lo the~~
a I'IOIQIIIIoy man. ~~·
evenll!g by u. west v~:
State PI&gt;Uce hire.
,...,
Arrested wu Tlmolby
Tllolnas, 19, charged wlli!i
poaeulm of a con~
substan"ce and arra~1
• ·I
before JUBilee ul the
'
Charles Smith. He .... pia
in Pulliam County Jail. ....
A~ to 'l'rooper M.:S.::i
Smith . and Mason PoiiAill
Patrolman John Rlllltll tbri"'
stopped a car on Ander- M.::t
at approximately l:ts ~
,
Upon appro. aching t
vehicle, they lJDelled
·
they believed to be marllUIIJI:;
bunung.
"""'
Following a search of ~
persons In the car lh!:j
discovered
what
w~
described as a modera~
amount of marijuana.
two other persons were
charged.
:~

*"'

KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (UPI)- The security man whO .
alia outside Mulwmmad All's door all day aiM! all nlgbt
8lllftl'ed the pllme In the hall, listened to what the caUer on
the &lt;Kher end hid to a.y and told him to hOld on a minute until

he could check with aomeone closer to the champion.
Befcre agreeing to come here aiM! train at the Concord, a
lllge resort hOtel in the Catatill Mountains, All hid to be
guaranteed he'd hive bla privacy. He w., being worn out by
· too many autoBraph seeten, he ald. Too 11181\Y aalesmen, too
many coo men, too 11lllly sycopllanls.
"Hangenanlootin'for Jobs, lclon'tneed,"hesald. " AU they
wanna do Is use me. They eat my food, use 1Df toUet, take up
my time. It got 110 bad, I said I'm gOIIllli getaway from all these
peq~te."

AU 1mew he had to find -

place to train for his Sept. 28
heavyweight title defenle against Ken Norton at Yankee
norlda tC, H~ I!
Sladium. He was being bugged so much at his permanent
SaD J ... St. 15, Fullerton SL training c:amp near Chleago, he picked up early one morning
13
· and didn't stop until be reached Show Low, Ariz., a pinhole so
Pitt 33, Georlll Tech·u
smaU,youcanhardlyftndllon the map.
·
Harvard If, Columbia 5
For a wblle ShoW Low was all right. Bit, eventually, AU was
· NebruU S5, Jad!au 7
~vaUed upm to cune here and finish his training, b~t before
lo1" %5, S)TIICIIw !I
saying yes, he wanted to make sure be wouldn't be bothered •.
Keataety ts, Kaaas 11
Ali was given that aSS~rance.
Oldo IJ. 2%, Kee.t Sta~ 14
The leCUI'ity man wbo took the can broughtit to the attention
I.SV Zl, ()n,IOD St. I!
Timmy Kenville, one of Ali's press reprm ntatives, saying lhe
Miami (F1a.} :11, norida SL callerwasadoctorfromSanDiego. KenvillewenttothephOne
15
and esplained Ill calls to Ali --. being screened because he
Mllmt (O., u, Ball State a hid a 1ougb fight ClBllng up.
Mlchlpa Zl, Staaforil lS
The doctor said he understood all that but still wanted to
Mich. Stale S5, W)'llllllllg I! spe¥ with Ali about getting an autographed photograph, It
Mlueoota 11, WasiL St. ll
was imperative. Kenville turned over the request to Irving
Mississippi !7, 1'lllul! II
Rudd, an&lt;Cher Ali represenlative, who called the doctor ba.ck.
Miss. State If, LouisviUe I!
"I hive just ~ted on a litt.le boy with leukemia," the
·.Missouri H, lllllela Zl
doctor said. "HisnameiSDonandhe'sslxyearsold. Under the
Northwestel'llll, N. Carollaa anesthetic, people aometlmes say Ulings that are deep down
7
inside them. While this litUe boy was being prepared for
N. Cai'GIIaa St. 17, E. surgecy, be said how mucb he wished he could have a picture
Carollaa It
Of Muhammad All. That's the reason for this call. I think the
No. DL 18, WesL Midi. 11
picture would mean so mucb to the boy."
Notre Dame za, Pardue 14
RuddobtainedapbotoandAliautograpbedit-"ToDon: Get
~01'11111 za, ~....... ,zf well aoon. From your friencl, Muhammad Ali."
So. Calif. 13, Ortgoa I!
Ali hid an alfertbouchL
Olalo State %4, Pe• Stale If
"Peace and love in IV76," he added.
Utalt 35, Rl"" ·I .
Rudd took the photo to the post oft'ice himself.
Soutb CaroUaa Zl, Duke Ul
The following mcrning, Ali was still thinking about the
Tet~~~e~~see 18, TCU 1%
.youngster.
·reus 38, .No. Texu SL If
"l.et's call him up," he said to Rudd.
·
Nur Mes. S*. %0, Tes·
"You can't," be was told, ' 'the boy iS in intensive care. He
Arlla&amp;tOD 17
still can't talk. Besides, yo1rknow whit time it iS in San Diego?
Neoo Mesko :a, TuBJoEI Five o'clock! "
Puo 1
MUhammadAlibasaso!tsidesomeneverget to see. ·
Teus .U.M !t, Kusas SL ze
While be was in SboiiV Low, a busload of about 60 kids made a
Mempl!la SL 13, 1'lllsa I!
special trip fnm Holtroot, Ariz., to see him. They came
UCLA u, Art.u 11 .
\lll&amp;IJIOUIICed and bung back wbile he worked out. He noticed
r.o..g Beadl St. !1, Utall St. u them, ""ntover and made ita point to say afew words to each
Vuderbllt!! Wake Fores115 me.
viqlala 2%, Wm. l llbry 14 . "You're very pmty," be told one 14-year~ld little Indian
Appalaltiu St. 17, VMI 14 .g ul
SoutbOn Miss. %11 Va. Tech.
Sle was !10 self-aiDSCious, she couldn't even answer.
14
·
"Somebody will find you and l011e his heart to you some
Celorade u 'wasiiiJIIta Zl day," Alitoldthegirl..''W'illyougivemeakissmthecbeek?"
West Tesas St. 17, Widllta SL
The girl started to cry. Ali took the towel around his neck and
If
usedacomera!lttodrybenyes.
Marylal u, West Va. !I
"Yoo lfrajd of me!" he dked her . •,!
~ 35 No. »atoll 1%
9le sboolt her bead no.
.
'
·
As mucb as be saya he wants bis IS'ivacy, Ali is happiest
wllen be's ammg people.

Lamaze method being ta~t

lnstructim in the Lamaze
method of childbirth Is being
given by Mrs. Jeanette Moore
of Route 2, Pomeroy. The
method advocates a team
approach where h111ba1Ml and
wife are prepared and
trained aiM! are active par·
ticipants in the birth of their
child.
Approldmately two months
before a woman's due date,
· the couple begins claues
once a week lor lib: weeks.
During this time they Fe
laugh! the basic points o! the
method: (1) esplanatlon of
the physical changes In
pregnancy, labor and
delivery. (2) body building
and reluatlon esercllea so
, thlt the mother can make
conatrudlve UBe of her body
during her labor and
delivery. (3) breathing
techniques that require
concentratim and '! ~ to

MABOtl, W. Va. - ~··
'"'''

e!l•(ed -

MITCH NEASE
RACINE - Marietta
CoUege l&lt;l(lbemore Mlkb
Nease Ia a fullhlct on lhe
college footbaU team wblcb
opens Its season Sepl 18 at
flrew Concord against
Muskl11gum College. The
team will play Dine opponents, eight Oblo Conference teams. This Is
Mlkb's second year on tbe
team. A 19'15 graduate of
Southern Local High Sebool
where he lettered tn loot·
baU four coosecullve years
aad was chosen Ali State
·Honorable MenUoa, Most
Valuable Bac., S. V.A.C.
All League, first team
back
In
running
soutbeastern Ohio and
nominated Prep. All
American, Mitch Is the son
Of Mr. and Mrs. WUIIam
Nease of Bo• 184, Racine.

=
,1 .111

.......
,,ll,
.......
I'll-

BELTONE
Haifg Nd.

Service Center
Mr. Kenneth Byrd
-will be at
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohio
on
Thurs., Sept. 16
from
9 a.m. to 12 noon
To repair and service
hearing 'aids.
Batteries
and
supplies for all makes
for ule.
Mr. Byrd will be glad
to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest Beltone
Electronic
equipment.

BELTONE
ll••ill .Aid Cel!llr
601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W. Ya.
Pllont 525-7221

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statlls.

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MR.MUSCU

HOME
Superior Casing
By Piece '1.19
BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••• '1.25 fb.

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lids Reg. 11.99
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16 oz. Kraft Twin Pack
American Single

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Spo~

HOUSTON (UPI ) - The
Houston Aeros of the World
Hockey Association begin
training · camp Wednesday
with Gordie Howe, 48, testing
hiS legs for a pOssible 29th pro
season.
Captain Ted Taylor will be
mly Aeros player missing
from training sessions. He
was finishing the harvest m
hiS Oak Lake, Manitoba,
farm and will report in one
week, coach Bill Dineen said.
Howe, tbe former Detroit
Red "Wings great, led the
Aeros in scoring las( season
after being named club
president. He deferred .
!Jiestials about his playing

MARGARINE •••• ~·.4f

2'2 oz.

90L

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69C

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GlASS CWNER

aoz.

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Banquet Frozen
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2 lb. box
Chicken Dinners ...•..........
Folger's cmt.e, electric Dark,
(Umit of one) 3 IL...:.
regu Ia r .or cl r Ip ••••••••••••••••••••·
... 'S.I9
Jeno's
Cheese Pizza,
14% OL ............ 59•
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Peter Piper Sweet
Midget Pickles, 8 oL .••••••~ •••••••••••• ~ •••• 4ft ·
Joan of Arc
Reel Kidney leans, 17 OL••••••••••••••• 2/59'
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Stokely Paacllas
(Slices or halves) •••• ... ••• ·•· ··•····· 29 OL
Delmonte Tribe SIZ. Ketchup, J.:Oz.'._.
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Vletta Hot Dog Ia.,....,; 1 f
Welchade Gta,.e Dtla~
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Heck's Reg. '1.49

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Housewares

ANDY CAPP
SNACK PACKS

Dept.

HICK'SUG • .

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. $2.59
. I/IWSifiAMf1111.

32 oz.
btl.

lry refreshing
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Mouthwash

$ 39

Heck'a .... 15•
Cd1metk Dept. ·

Cosmetic Dept. ,

Mousewarea

.,59

Heck's Reg. •.1.99
Cosmetic Dept.

Heck's Reg. '2.29 to '4A9

33~%0FF

LABEL
MARKER

99'

TABLE
CLOTHS

Heck's leg. •1.89

HAIR LACOUER
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$.1

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s Reg,
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37"x6'

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NOTICE

a..e Barullt Quarters

1'

..Heck's Reg.
..

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

l.eypWdt, wbo jcined the
dub as a free li8"Dt in lJ7l,.
missed three fleld'i!oal
aitanptl in the game, His

The Bills do not haft
anot~r ticker on tbelr
currmt roster.

.. .

- "'&lt;)•I
DETROIT (UP!) - .__.,
Peterson, a 6-foot.ll ceutai::
from Puget Sound, ~ baeil!:
invited to the PlatC
training camp when It b!Jifnr,:
Sept. 24, completing Detroit"'
list of players taken In
.....
draft
~~·· ·

mght.

)'VIII.

.

..,.
"'

ORCHARD PARK. N.Y.
The Bulfalo BiDs
Tuesday waived veteran
kiclter Jlim l.eypoldt after
his disappointing
performance in a 311-Zl loss to
tbe Millin! Dolphins Mmday

blocked and be missed
attempts from 3t and 'll

.

~ ·Ill

.(UP!} -

first stl.empl of 31 yards wliil

MID·WIIK SPECIALS
.

Jewelry Dept.

,COLORFUL W~
.JEWElRY BOXES .

_Heck's Reg,

'4.99

�.

.4- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.PlXll&lt;l'oy, 0., Wednesda6n Sept.l5,1976

Pomeroy man

Intersectional games top

~on
...._..,.,. , ~

Sport Parade

card, Bucks, Pitt picked
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Fearless Foreeaster
Egad, friends, there are
some sterling matchups on
this week's card and au of
them guaranteed to give you
goose bumps - heh·heh !
Intersectional clashes
dominate the schedule with
the center of attention
focusing in the East where
Penn Stale will host the Ohio
State Buckeyes. The Nittany
Uons bold a +I edge in this
abbreviated series but this
isn't Joe Paterno's year. We
confidently predict
a
Buckeye triumph, 24-14 !
Elsewhere, featured games
include: Nebraska ·Indiana;
Alabama • SMU; Florida •
Houston; Georgia Tech ·
Pittsburgh; Kansas • Ken·
lucky; Louisiana State .
Oregon ' State; Michigan .
Stanford; Michigan State ·
Wyoming ; Oklahoma .
California; Tennessee . TCU,
and Washington • Colorado.
Jove, it's enough to give a
forecaster a conniption fit)
Leading off these contests
we see Nebraska's Corn·
huskers thrii-Shing Indiana,
35-7, Alabama romping over

SMU, 32-&lt;i, a good

~·lorida

club taking the measure of
Houston, 24-12, and Pitt
outscoring Georgia Tech, 33-

Majol:

21.

The
veteran
w;u
aggregation Is this corner's
choice to edge Oregon State,
21·12, Michigan's Wolverines
get the Hoople nod over an
excellent Stanford Club, 2813.
It'll be Kentucky's Wildcats
26, Kansas 16, in an upset oil
the Jayhawks home grounds;
Michigan State 35, Wyoming
12, in their fll'st meeting ;
California 28, Oklahoma 24, in
a down-to-the-wire thriller at
Norman; Tennessee 18, TCU
12ln a squeaker and Colorado
24, Washington 21, in a
bruising mixup.
A pair of always exciting
intrastate rivalries are on tap
with Miami hosting the
Florida State Seminoles and
Notre Dame entertaining the
Purdue Boilermakers. Miami
has a superior rwming attack
this year and it should be
more than enough to insure a
Hurricane triumph, 36-15.
When Purdue and Notre

Rulgel'l 17, BuelmeU 12
Ttledo 38, Ceat. Mlcb. !0
· Delaware u, Citadel If

Georcll! 2%, Clem- 15

Navy Z1, Co,_.,llcut a

l'rlllceiOD U,

Forty-year-old
Tony .
Taylor, described by many
aperts as the ooly player in
the lilajcn whO works harder
when he's m utility duty than
when he's a regular, made
mly his 18111 appearance at
bat this season Tuesday·
night.

· But he singled hOme the
mkklle run of a three-run
fifth· inning rally, which
brought the Philadelphia
• I'IIIIUes a :1-2 victory over the
f!(mtreal Ezpos and vaulted
the Phlllla Into a slx'i!ame
lead over Pittsburgh in the
National Legue's )\:astern
Division.
The Pirates were shaded by
the New York Mer., 4-3•.
Taylor. wbo has spent lilOIIt
of ibis leUOD m the disabled
lilt, delcribed the thinking
tllat "l u made him one ulthe
IllOit rapected pros in the

Football

Forecast

Dame get lofleth~ anything
can happen and - kaff-kaff
- it usually does. This week's
fray should be a rerun of the
past 47 with Dan Devine's
better balanced Irish team
wiiming, e.H _:_ har-rumph!
Now go on with my
forecast:

I

hiS.eighth gime for the Mets, ·
while Jim Rooker suffered
hiS eighth loss against 13
vlcllries for the Pirates.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
defeated the Onclnnatl Reds,
~. the Atlanta Braves and
Houston Astros spUt 4-3 deci·
sions, the Olicago Cubs beat
the St. Louis Cardinals, 6-3,
and the San Franci8co Giants
downed the San Diego
Padres, 7-6, in other National
League games.

Astros iit the first game with
rookie Mark Lemongello
picklng up the victory. W'lllie
Montane%' tlJreH'Wl horner
the third inniJ1g spalhd the
Braves to their triumph in the
-.1 game.
rn.tl 7, Paclrel • :
Bobby Murcer's second
bomer of the gliDe, a twO-run
driye in the ninth, provided
the Gianr. with their victory
over the Padres. Murcer, whO
bad a twiH'WI homer in the
· fifth to put the Gianr. ahead,
Altroe 4-3, Bra\'ea 3-4:
fHI, tagged Butch Metr(er for
Enos Ca~ll's seventh· his :1001 homer in the ninth.
inning ~omer provided the The loss was Metzger's
winning margin for the second against II vlctDries.

Investment firm opens
offices in Hunt~on

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. "In lllfmlnd hrint to play E. F. Hutton &amp; Ol., Inc., the
eftl'yday," belllid. "I never nation's second largest
tbou81J! of myJeJt 11 being m sec uri Ues finn , iS opening a
the dilllbled list. Every day 1 fiv~son branch at 1223 6th
hll llld nm the ll8llle as I · Ave. Monday, according to
lhrlys do. .You wert the seniQI' vice president James
wbel.ber you play or . D. Dwyer o! Detroit.
tbl't play."
Dwyer, in Huntington to
One I!JIInMI alld Dick superVise the opening, said
Allea niRd to open the fifth the 6th Avenue offices are
Inning and orne Srown t.empi&gt;rary until the firm
lingled lofiD the buM. larry finds a site I&lt;&gt; build.
Bowa forced Imlmkj at the
At least four o! the five
plate,butAllenl!Ciftd as ilob account executives were
Boone bit into a forceout. previously with Smith,
Then Taylor batted fc~ "'• .,y, Harris, Upham &amp;
p1tc:11er Jim Lmborg and Co., a rival investment fll'm.
lingled iMIDe the ty1nc run.
Branch office manager iS
Gm:ry Maddos followed with Robert de G. White of 36
a double that droft in lbe tie- Fairfax Drive, who has been
1Jre111ins run.
in the investment business for
Laobcrg went 8Ye innings 23 years. The four account
tol'lllleblareCord to l&amp;.ewith esecutives will ~ Bryce
11m Sdr:e'er and Ron Reed Smith of Gallipolls, Ohio, who
each pltcbiJig two llhutout has been in the invesbnent
lmlnp In relief. Woodle Fry- business for six years; John
man IU!fered his 11th loss . Marshall Carter Jr. o! Park
agatnst 12 wins for the Ezpos. Hills, In the business about
mngles by Dave Klnjpnan, eight years; Mike Adams,
Jobn Steams and Ed Gallipolis naUve and Dave
Knnepool and an btleld out Perdue, a graduate of Purdue
bylludllarrelae•bledthe University with a M.B.A.
Meta to IICIOI't! two n11111 in the from Harvard University.
nlnlb Inning and beat the
The Huntington branch will
Plnitea. S1dp lockwood WGD be the only Hutton office in

. t. ..b

1.

PUBLIC AUCTION
THURSDAY EVE.. SEPT. 16, 1976
AT 6:00 P.M. CARPENTER, OHIO.
Located aboUt a mile and a lUI If southeast of
Carpenter on Stale Route 143 to the home of
Mrs. Ava Greenlees . .
I have sold my home and. will offer the
following Items for sale at public auction.
New Holland hay bailer, 1966 Olevroiet
Impala, 10ft. oak table, oak drop leaf table,
6 chairs, chest-a-drawers, 2·deep freezers,
Maytag washer, Sunray glis range.
Frigidaire refrigerator, marble top
dressers, coal heater, aladdin lamp, treadle
sewing machine, high head board bed, 2
Vlctrolas, ice box, stone jars, Ford rotatiller (like newJ. garden tractor, Dewalt
table saw, 250 McCullough chain saw,
Owner: Mrs. Ava Gr1111fees
Terms: Cash~ Not reaponslble for
ICclfttlf$ ·

Auctioneer: Lloyd Dillinger, Rt. 1, Shade,
0.
ApfWtlltJc,e AuctionHr: Richard Girdner,

.llc:klollvlllt, o.

l

c.....u II

Pea
tl, »artmoatb to
VIUallova %1, Dayten 19

Phils edge Expos, 3-2
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Wrller

Saturday, Sept. II
Atr Force H, Iowa State 11
Alahlma 3%, SMU t
Arkallla1 ZG, ~St. I~
AnQy %7, Holy Crou Zl
Baylor 14, Aubura 10
' BowU., Greea za, Eut Mlcb.
ZG
Ollorado St. Z7, Brigham
Voung It
Vale %1, Browa U

West Virginia and will serve
the entire state in additioo to
the Tri.State area. Other
branches in the area are a
26-person branch in Cin·
cinnati and a 25-person ·
branch in Pittsburgh.
Dwyer said he especls the
Huntington office IAl grow.
''We have come I&lt;&gt; Hun·
Ungton to . stay," he said.
"We're not just llirting with
the town:~
George Ban, executive vice
P"esidenl of Huttoo in New
York, N. Y., said the firm is
locating in Huntington
because " tbe area is a
growing one.''
Ball also noted Hutton
wants I&lt;&gt; participate in the
energy f1eld in the Tri-state
area. "Hutton bas a very
large corporate finance and
energy group," be said .
E. F. Hutton, founded in
190t, claims I&lt;&gt; be the only
investment firm to operate
P"ofitably every year since
then. Revenues in 1975 were
about $252 millim, and the
firm oiamed S20 million after
taxes.lt has 170 offices in the
United States and 11 in
Europe.
In 1972, two former While
llouae aides and five ~
men were Indicted oo charges
~ COOIJI!racy in the break-in
of Democratic National
Ommltlee headquarter~ in
'Washingtm (Watergate).
. ~-

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) Natlan.al League PrelideJt
Owies S. Femey bas an1101810ed plaoa to use lhn!e
yoq UllltJirea to WID ane
games clurinc the fl'lllllinder
~ the ~ball-.
He said Tuelllay tbat Jerry
Crawford will joiD Ed
Vargo's ern; Joe Weat will
join Tom Gcnlln's ern;
and Eric Gregg will join Lee
Weyer's crew.
Qoawf«d, 29, IIPI!IX llml'll
weeb Ill the Nallooal League
this when Gcnlln
... llljured, but !pent lllOIIl
of tbe year iD the
Intematiooal Iague. Weat,
only 23, ... in the Southem
League alld Gregg, Zi, .... in
the PCL.

I'IIILADELPIIIA (UP!) -

Guard Mike Dunleavy, a
starter for four ~ at the
Unlvenity Of South Carolina,
basalgned a contt a:t wilb the
Pbiladelpbia 'llera, the club
announced Tuesday.
Terms and lBiglb ul the
oontract were not c!lrJOJ!fd.
The &amp;-2 Dmleavy, a nalive
of Brooklyn, N.Y., the
'llera' llixiiH'ound draft piC!!
last llprlng and played for the
team tbat competed In the
Baker League, a PIM!rl'
·~~~~~" league.

i

.. .

alleviate d!Jcornfort. (4) a
Blr0118 supportive rqle lor the
huabaiMI that not only give
emotional, but physical
support to bla wife also. .
Women have long been
conditioned by BOCiety to
equate cblldbirth with fear
and pain. However, it has
been shown that women can
be de-ronditioned and reeducated, and nperlence a
labor and delivery that lhey
have a positive altitude

toward.

'

Mrs. Moore Is associated
with A.S.P.O. (American
Society
for
Psy·
choprophylasis In Ob·
stelrlca),
a
national
organlzatlm founded In 1860
to promote the deve!O)IIIIellt
and acceptance o! childbirth
preparaUoo. She Is ~
to teach dum In the area oo
a conUnu0111 buts.

'• I

of burnirt-:l
marljUIIIIIed lo the~~
a I'IOIQIIIIoy man. ~~·
evenll!g by u. west v~:
State PI&gt;Uce hire.
,...,
Arrested wu Tlmolby
Tllolnas, 19, charged wlli!i
poaeulm of a con~
substan"ce and arra~1
• ·I
before JUBilee ul the
'
Charles Smith. He .... pia
in Pulliam County Jail. ....
A~ to 'l'rooper M.:S.::i
Smith . and Mason PoiiAill
Patrolman John Rlllltll tbri"'
stopped a car on Ander- M.::t
at approximately l:ts ~
,
Upon appro. aching t
vehicle, they lJDelled
·
they believed to be marllUIIJI:;
bunung.
"""'
Following a search of ~
persons In the car lh!:j
discovered
what
w~
described as a modera~
amount of marijuana.
two other persons were
charged.
:~

*"'

KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (UPI)- The security man whO .
alia outside Mulwmmad All's door all day aiM! all nlgbt
8lllftl'ed the pllme In the hall, listened to what the caUer on
the &lt;Kher end hid to a.y and told him to hOld on a minute until

he could check with aomeone closer to the champion.
Befcre agreeing to come here aiM! train at the Concord, a
lllge resort hOtel in the Catatill Mountains, All hid to be
guaranteed he'd hive bla privacy. He w., being worn out by
· too many autoBraph seeten, he ald. Too 11181\Y aalesmen, too
many coo men, too 11lllly sycopllanls.
"Hangenanlootin'for Jobs, lclon'tneed,"hesald. " AU they
wanna do Is use me. They eat my food, use 1Df toUet, take up
my time. It got 110 bad, I said I'm gOIIllli getaway from all these
peq~te."

AU 1mew he had to find -

place to train for his Sept. 28
heavyweight title defenle against Ken Norton at Yankee
norlda tC, H~ I!
Sladium. He was being bugged so much at his permanent
SaD J ... St. 15, Fullerton SL training c:amp near Chleago, he picked up early one morning
13
· and didn't stop until be reached Show Low, Ariz., a pinhole so
Pitt 33, Georlll Tech·u
smaU,youcanhardlyftndllon the map.
·
Harvard If, Columbia 5
For a wblle ShoW Low was all right. Bit, eventually, AU was
· NebruU S5, Jad!au 7
~vaUed upm to cune here and finish his training, b~t before
lo1" %5, S)TIICIIw !I
saying yes, he wanted to make sure be wouldn't be bothered •.
Keataety ts, Kaaas 11
Ali was given that aSS~rance.
Oldo IJ. 2%, Kee.t Sta~ 14
The leCUI'ity man wbo took the can broughtit to the attention
I.SV Zl, ()n,IOD St. I!
Timmy Kenville, one of Ali's press reprm ntatives, saying lhe
Miami (F1a.} :11, norida SL callerwasadoctorfromSanDiego. KenvillewenttothephOne
15
and esplained Ill calls to Ali --. being screened because he
Mllmt (O., u, Ball State a hid a 1ougb fight ClBllng up.
Mlchlpa Zl, Staaforil lS
The doctor said he understood all that but still wanted to
Mich. Stale S5, W)'llllllllg I! spe¥ with Ali about getting an autographed photograph, It
Mlueoota 11, WasiL St. ll
was imperative. Kenville turned over the request to Irving
Mississippi !7, 1'lllul! II
Rudd, an&lt;Cher Ali represenlative, who called the doctor ba.ck.
Miss. State If, LouisviUe I!
"I hive just ~ted on a litt.le boy with leukemia," the
·.Missouri H, lllllela Zl
doctor said. "HisnameiSDonandhe'sslxyearsold. Under the
Northwestel'llll, N. Carollaa anesthetic, people aometlmes say Ulings that are deep down
7
inside them. While this litUe boy was being prepared for
N. Cai'GIIaa St. 17, E. surgecy, be said how mucb he wished he could have a picture
Carollaa It
Of Muhammad All. That's the reason for this call. I think the
No. DL 18, WesL Midi. 11
picture would mean so mucb to the boy."
Notre Dame za, Pardue 14
RuddobtainedapbotoandAliautograpbedit-"ToDon: Get
~01'11111 za, ~....... ,zf well aoon. From your friencl, Muhammad Ali."
So. Calif. 13, Ortgoa I!
Ali hid an alfertbouchL
Olalo State %4, Pe• Stale If
"Peace and love in IV76," he added.
Utalt 35, Rl"" ·I .
Rudd took the photo to the post oft'ice himself.
Soutb CaroUaa Zl, Duke Ul
The following mcrning, Ali was still thinking about the
Tet~~~e~~see 18, TCU 1%
.youngster.
·reus 38, .No. Texu SL If
"l.et's call him up," he said to Rudd.
·
Nur Mes. S*. %0, Tes·
"You can't," be was told, ' 'the boy iS in intensive care. He
Arlla&amp;tOD 17
still can't talk. Besides, yo1rknow whit time it iS in San Diego?
Neoo Mesko :a, TuBJoEI Five o'clock! "
Puo 1
MUhammadAlibasaso!tsidesomeneverget to see. ·
Teus .U.M !t, Kusas SL ze
While be was in SboiiV Low, a busload of about 60 kids made a
Mempl!la SL 13, 1'lllsa I!
special trip fnm Holtroot, Ariz., to see him. They came
UCLA u, Art.u 11 .
\lll&amp;IJIOUIICed and bung back wbile he worked out. He noticed
r.o..g Beadl St. !1, Utall St. u them, ""ntover and made ita point to say afew words to each
Vuderbllt!! Wake Fores115 me.
viqlala 2%, Wm. l llbry 14 . "You're very pmty," be told one 14-year~ld little Indian
Appalaltiu St. 17, VMI 14 .g ul
SoutbOn Miss. %11 Va. Tech.
Sle was !10 self-aiDSCious, she couldn't even answer.
14
·
"Somebody will find you and l011e his heart to you some
Celorade u 'wasiiiJIIta Zl day," Alitoldthegirl..''W'illyougivemeakissmthecbeek?"
West Tesas St. 17, Widllta SL
The girl started to cry. Ali took the towel around his neck and
If
usedacomera!lttodrybenyes.
Marylal u, West Va. !I
"Yoo lfrajd of me!" he dked her . •,!
~ 35 No. »atoll 1%
9le sboolt her bead no.
.
'
·
As mucb as be saya he wants bis IS'ivacy, Ali is happiest
wllen be's ammg people.

Lamaze method being ta~t

lnstructim in the Lamaze
method of childbirth Is being
given by Mrs. Jeanette Moore
of Route 2, Pomeroy. The
method advocates a team
approach where h111ba1Ml and
wife are prepared and
trained aiM! are active par·
ticipants in the birth of their
child.
Approldmately two months
before a woman's due date,
· the couple begins claues
once a week lor lib: weeks.
During this time they Fe
laugh! the basic points o! the
method: (1) esplanatlon of
the physical changes In
pregnancy, labor and
delivery. (2) body building
and reluatlon esercllea so
, thlt the mother can make
conatrudlve UBe of her body
during her labor and
delivery. (3) breathing
techniques that require
concentratim and '! ~ to

MABOtl, W. Va. - ~··
'"'''

e!l•(ed -

MITCH NEASE
RACINE - Marietta
CoUege l&lt;l(lbemore Mlkb
Nease Ia a fullhlct on lhe
college footbaU team wblcb
opens Its season Sepl 18 at
flrew Concord against
Muskl11gum College. The
team will play Dine opponents, eight Oblo Conference teams. This Is
Mlkb's second year on tbe
team. A 19'15 graduate of
Southern Local High Sebool
where he lettered tn loot·
baU four coosecullve years
aad was chosen Ali State
·Honorable MenUoa, Most
Valuable Bac., S. V.A.C.
All League, first team
back
In
running
soutbeastern Ohio and
nominated Prep. All
American, Mitch Is the son
Of Mr. and Mrs. WUIIam
Nease of Bo• 184, Racine.

=
,1 .111

.......
,,ll,
.......
I'll-

BELTONE
Haifg Nd.

Service Center
Mr. Kenneth Byrd
-will be at
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohio
on
Thurs., Sept. 16
from
9 a.m. to 12 noon
To repair and service
hearing 'aids.
Batteries
and
supplies for all makes
for ule.
Mr. Byrd will be glad
to give you a free
hearing test with the
latest Beltone
Electronic
equipment.

BELTONE
ll••ill .Aid Cel!llr
601 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W. Ya.
Pllont 525-7221

.-

.•,,..

llil::

.

....

COLEMAN

DEWXE 2 BURNER
· .STOVE

)OLI~

CHARCOAL
·. BRIQURS

$2299
ttec:k'• leg• .

'26.H

SPRING
·CHEST PULL

statlls.

30LB.

Hed's~
'7.29 '

50 LB.

Heck's Reg.
'9A9

'5"
'7"

BROOMS

.mLAT£D·
WIRE SEll

18" GAUGE ·BRooM

CUSHION
'1~
'

HECK'S REG, ?.99

MR.MUSCU

HOME
Superior Casing
By Piece '1.19
BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••• '1.25 fb.

IAia ~•

PORK SAUSAGE L1 NKS ~~.~~ •••••••••~:.~1 19 · .
CUT-UP FROZEN FRYERS.~~k;'!••••••••••l;B:. sge
DAIRY

$ 3l

FlORIDA

LEMONS•••• ~ ••••

Golden Delicious or
Reel Delicious
lb

6/
ba
1•

SIJCED atEESE •••••••• 1 APPLES ••••••;•••
3

.

lids Reg. 11.99
~Dept,

Goocla

16 oz. Kraft Twin Pack
American Single

j').

Spo~

HOUSTON (UPI ) - The
Houston Aeros of the World
Hockey Association begin
training · camp Wednesday
with Gordie Howe, 48, testing
hiS legs for a pOssible 29th pro
season.
Captain Ted Taylor will be
mly Aeros player missing
from training sessions. He
was finishing the harvest m
hiS Oak Lake, Manitoba,
farm and will report in one
week, coach Bill Dineen said.
Howe, tbe former Detroit
Red "Wings great, led the
Aeros in scoring las( season
after being named club
president. He deferred .
!Jiestials about his playing

MARGARINE •••• ~·.4f

2'2 oz.

90L

·VAIISH

OVEN

stU

CLEANER

69C

. GREASE
·RELIEF.
HICK'S
IIG,

'1.13

a·3c

WINDEX

ROSE MILK

GlASS CWNER

aoz.

320%.

Banquet Frozen
.
2 lb. box
Chicken Dinners ...•..........
Folger's cmt.e, electric Dark,
(Umit of one) 3 IL...:.
regu Ia r .or cl r Ip ••••••••••••••••••••·
... 'S.I9
Jeno's
Cheese Pizza,
14% OL ............ 59•
.
Peter Piper Sweet
Midget Pickles, 8 oL .••••••~ •••••••••••• ~ •••• 4ft ·
Joan of Arc
Reel Kidney leans, 17 OL••••••••••••••• 2/59'
.. ' ..
Stokely Paacllas
(Slices or halves) •••• ... ••• ·•· ··•····· 29 OL
Delmonte Tribe SIZ. Ketchup, J.:Oz.'._.
'
Vletta Hot Dog Ia.,....,; 1 f
Welchade Gta,.e Dtla~
. t

•

Heck's Reg. '1.49

Heck'• I""· 77•

Housewares

ANDY CAPP
SNACK PACKS

Dept.

HICK'SUG • .

.

. $2.59
. I/IWSifiAMf1111.

32 oz.
btl.

lry refreshing
Qpacol"
Mouthwash

$ 39

Heck'a .... 15•
Cd1metk Dept. ·

Cosmetic Dept. ,

Mousewarea

.,59

Heck's Reg. •.1.99
Cosmetic Dept.

Heck's Reg. '2.29 to '4A9

33~%0FF

LABEL
MARKER

99'

TABLE
CLOTHS

Heck's leg. •1.89

HAIR LACOUER
'

..:99 ' _Automotive

$.1

·DYMO

.

'5"'

WHITI

STY LAC
Heck'
s Reg,
.

tfECK'S RIG• . ·:

·WIIOW

···~·..,.

Heck'• Reg. 89'

.MECHA~Nt·cs
CREEPal .:

37"x6'

FROZEN

T

i~M.

"'·"

•!Io iii

NOTICE

a..e Barullt Quarters

1'

..Heck's Reg.
..

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

l.eypWdt, wbo jcined the
dub as a free li8"Dt in lJ7l,.
missed three fleld'i!oal
aitanptl in the game, His

The Bills do not haft
anot~r ticker on tbelr
currmt roster.

.. .

- "'&lt;)•I
DETROIT (UP!) - .__.,
Peterson, a 6-foot.ll ceutai::
from Puget Sound, ~ baeil!:
invited to the PlatC
training camp when It b!Jifnr,:
Sept. 24, completing Detroit"'
list of players taken In
.....
draft
~~·· ·

mght.

)'VIII.

.

..,.
"'

ORCHARD PARK. N.Y.
The Bulfalo BiDs
Tuesday waived veteran
kiclter Jlim l.eypoldt after
his disappointing
performance in a 311-Zl loss to
tbe Millin! Dolphins Mmday

blocked and be missed
attempts from 3t and 'll

.

~ ·Ill

.(UP!} -

first stl.empl of 31 yards wliil

MID·WIIK SPECIALS
.

Jewelry Dept.

,COLORFUL W~
.JEWElRY BOXES .

_Heck's Reg,

'4.99

�•-'l'ho !lallvRo!niiDeLMlddleiJOI'I..Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,Sept.l5, 1976

1-

~everal concerts open

Water·gas device
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) better mileage aoo producing
Four researchers from the less pollutlm.
The . fo11r 11nvelled · a
University of Arizona say
lhey have developed a device prototype of their "fuel
that would enable auto reformer" at a news
engines wn111 on a mixture of ·conference Monday, and said
ll&amp;Soline and water, getting they are applying to private
and government agencies for
money
to
build
a
commerlcally acceptable
model.
NEW STAFFERS
Is
b
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Two
The prototype
too lg,
appointments have been they said, but predicted they
made to the Ohio campaign could have a device capable
staff
of
Democratic of working on loday's auto
engines within 18 months.
presidential nominee Jimmy
Marvin
D.
Martin
.Carter.
·
. estimated the device would
Chris
Gitlin,
vice Improve mileage by about 50
chairperson of the CUyahoga per cent but cautiooed that
County Democratic party, "until we miniaturize the
has been named deputy system and actually. take It
campaign coordinator for out on the road, we woo't be

· =~~~~~rtJ!~e what the
In tests, the device has
. redQCed emission levels ·w
less than baH of the most
t 1
1 E ·
t 1
s r ngen
, nvlronmen a
Protection Agency proposals,
Washington office.
Martin said - even without
Karl V. Struble, a deputy the
costly
catalytic
campaign manager lor Sen. converters now required on
John Glenn, !).Qhio, in the auto exhaust systems.,
1974 primary, has been
named coordinalor of
Carter's campaign In II
central Ohio counties.
The counties Include
Franklin ,
Delaware,
Fairfield, Fayette, Knox,
Licking, Madison, Marion,
Morrow, Pickaway and
Union. Struble, 25, Columbus,
Is t.akillg a leave of absence
as legislative aide for the
finance committee of the
Columbus City Council.

'

·

~wrlllll

1t'lt-TIII ICrtnr Ct. '"- ..,

..,tll,tiU'I htlriq, le,t. 11, 1111 II

"!ttl "" .....,,
I

Wt rlltm R1 rlatlt II lillit fllltltltl. M.. l Sill II IIIUII.

•..

•

the

'

.

Granulated

former
Berea
councilman, Gitlin, 43,
Cleveland, was coordinator of
Rep. Ronald Mottl's, D.()hlo,
1974 campaign and worked In
his
Cleveland
and

on

Dal!lel Moynihan won 1
flve-wa)' Democratic
burg. tnonal Folk Ballet of ~e~~~tOrlal ........._race In
Yugoslavia ; Jan. 16• Sunday, · NYork"'::::',Ly
3 p.m., Zanesville, Canadian
~"
•...,. •ft•·~•.
.,.."
Bien Ensemble.
leedlng a 1z..late parade of
Feb. 6, Sunday, 3 p.m.• Ylctora that Included Senll.
Zanasvlllt, Vaclav,_Hudtcek,• u ....~ H..- .....ov, ,.....__rd
violinist;
..........
~ ........, ,_,.
w Feb. 12,J .. turday,
,. __
,.._.......,,J·~Bu""''-and
p.m., a-1y, orge muoe 1• """"""" - - ~,
clanlcol gultarlsl; Feb. 15, Gov. Meldrbn Th&lt;imlon.
~ Admlaslm w these con- Tuilday,l p.m., Portamouth,
Moynihan, the former
~~~ Ia by membership only, ':~:~:W~eg~22~~..:;. professor, prealdentlal
aild the concert uaoclation Ill · 8, 1
adviler
and
U.N .
currently conducting Its a. ;anl~n~Phiii~T~.C~'~~ ambauador, defeated liberal
membership campaign . Cost c .: Feb. 24, Thursday, 1:15 CCIIgreuwoman Bella Ablug
~ $10, adult; fG iludenll and p~
. m ., :tok~~~r&amp;ot,':~~}.•n In 1 cloee and titter battle. lt
Sllnlor citizens and UO,
rch 13, Sunday, 3 p.m., was ...
'" oynlhan's first
flmilY · The drive will close Zanesville, Czech Phllhor· IIIICcesaful run for elect«!
!!!~turdaY at ,noon.
monic Orchestra ; March 16, . office.
• For more Information Wednesday,
8
p.m.,
Former Attot'ney General
Galllf.'llls.
'New
York
'
l!raas
ork
I
t
th
I
II
•"n
e asaoc a on Quln et; March 19, Salurday, ...,.,,..
n--··y Clark, N'" ac
"" y
headquarters
at
the 8 p.m., Marlello, . Roger aty councU Preeldent ·Paul
Gallipolis Chamber of Wagner Chorale; March 23, O'Dwyer, and wealthy
Commerce, !6 State St., Wednesday, 8 p.m.. Ports· bualneuman Abe Hlnclield
&lt;lilllpolls or phone 446-2200. mouth, The Four Freshmen . ro.. _..ed out the field.
April 12, Tuesday, 8: 15
"'"'
: This year'sllat of concerts p.m., Parkersburg, Barbaro
Moynihan will face
available to members of the Blegan. pianist ; April 12, Buckley, the Conservativelocal IISIOCiaUon Includes: Tuesday, 8: 15 p.m.. Lan· Republican lnc:umbent In the
•
· caster, Ronnie Brown Trio ; (all election. Buckley easily
• Oct. 9, Saturday, 8 P·!'l·• April 1~, Wednesday, 6 p.m .,
~alllpolls, Theodor Uppmon,
Waverly, Ronnie Brown Trio ; turned back a challenge from
Me!ropolllan baritone; Oct. Nov. 15, Friday. 8 p.m., Rep. Peter peyaer In the GOP
13. Wadnesday, 8: 15 p.m.. Marietta. Susann Mc09nald, race.
l?arkersburg, · Laureate harplsl; April 22, Friday. 8
In the other races:
Woodwind QUin!el; Oc!. 21, p.m .. Gallipolis, Thomas
•
I I.
Minn...,••
Thursday, 8 p.m., por•s·
Sch umac her, plans
____ ,. - Hump~•••1
mouth, T~Kas Boys• Choir;
Concert locations are: had little trouble defeating
Ocl. 29, Friday, 8 p.m.. Gallipolis, Gallla Academy Democratic challenger Rev.
waverly, Texas Boys' Choir. High School, Fourth Ave.: Dick. Bullock. , In the
Nov. 1, Monday, 8: 15 p.m., Lancaster, Lancaster High
Parkersburg, Hal Shane, School, Rl. 37 North, (Arbor Republlcan battle to oppoee
popular entertain. er; Nov. 6, Valley Or .), Marietta, Humphrey, college profeuor
Saturday, 8: 15 p.m., Len· Marietta Sr. High School. Jerry Brekke defeated four
Cilller. Longstreth &amp; Escosa, Davis Ave .; Parkersburg, challengers.
duo harpists ; Nov. 7, Sunday, Parkersburn• Hl~h IsSchool,
..
, ••• ,.,....~.- Kemedy,
3 p.m .. Zanesville, Vlclor
Dudley Ave.; or mou th,
~--cu-•..
Borge, popular pllinlst; Nov.. Portsmouth High School; heavily favored for a ~
8, Mopday, 8 p.m., Marietta, Waverly, Waverly High · term, took the Democratic
George Shearing Quintet.
School, off R1.23 at norlh end
mlnati
Jan. 10. Mond.y, 8:15 r,.m., of Waverly: Zanesville , no
on over 1wo · canLancaster, Andre Ba ogh, Municipal Auditorium on N.. dldates, Iiobert Emmet Dinsviolinist; Jan. 12 . Wed · f;ourth Sl.
more
and
Frederick
Langone. Kennedy will
:Members of the Trl~unly
c;ommunlly Concert
•··""'a lion during the 1976-17
II""""'
seiiiiOO will be entiUed to
attend certain oul·of-lo'l!'n
c!On~rta In addition w ~
t)lree per I ormances
~thedu led f or thl I area. ·

I'

Domino
S.ugar

Ohlo.

CONSl'RUCTION - Tile PbiUp Sporn Power Plant
-New Hnell wblcb the ADPilacltlan Puller Qmpany
has threatened ro close uitfess air pollutjon control
standards are relaxed, Is having this giant precipitator
bulit on Its No. 5 unit. Scheduled for completion in
November, 1977, the Improvement wiD cost a projected
$39 miWm. 'lite precipitator collects fly ash with a 99.7
efficiency rating, equal to the job done by the equipment
Inside the 1,100 foot stack at the Gavin Power Plant In
Oleshlre, Ohio !n GalUa County. Union Boiler Co. using a
crew of 150 Ill on the job. Similar precipitators on units one
through four are scheduled to be completed by 1979.

f
I

'

s
.....

I.

Bag

;lis~;;
Flow ••.••

.&amp;.~~.. 79c Embassy
c-y

Mayonnaise

•• •

~::·68c'
•••

: Mrs: Fern Cooper and Miss Shawn and Kevin.
Mabel McDaniels, Falls
Mrs .
Elva
Dailey,
O.urch, Va., Paul Parsons, Syracl!se, spent T11esday
Sandyville, W.Va., Mrs. Ruth afternoon with her parents,
Blacknell, Charleston, W. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson,
:Va., Mrs. Lucille Southall, Long Bottom . .
Slaat's MiD, W. Va., Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Mrs. Richard Abels and Mrs. Lipps and Toni, Little
Harry Richard, Long BottOm, Hopklng, spent Sunday af.
iN ere callers at the home of · ternoon with her father and
W· and Mrs. Louis DeLuz sister, Clint Birch and Leota.
recently.
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
: Mr. and Mrs. VIctor Durst Crwnblery and sons, · East
and sons, The Plains, Mrs. Liverpool, spent two weeks
Larry Fitch, Belpre, Tom with her mother, Mrs. Esther
Durst, Athens, Bob Rllchie, Dailey, who returned home
ilelpre, Mrs. Don Meadows, with them for an extended
LOng Bottom, Mrs. Mi~e visit.
);;vans, Alicia, Cindy and
Mr. a'nd Mrs. Harold
Ryan, Leota Birch, and Mrs. Roush, Port18nd and Leota
(lene Lemley local, visited Birch, local, attended the
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst Meigs County Fair and also
during the past week.
visited Mr. aoo Mrs. Robert
,; Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra Roiish, IU!cine, and Mr. and
and David, visited her Mrs. Don Hill and family,
mother, Mrs. Myrtle Lewis Letart Falls.
,~ nd family , Red House, W.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst,
Va. over the Labor Day Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra
:Weekend. .
and David, Mrs. Mildred
·: Mrs. Sylvia Allen, Akron, Circle, Duke Dailey, Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Allen Dean Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
aoo Darlene , Ripley, W. Va . . Howard Allen and Darlene,
!jisib!!i wjth Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Sylvia Allen, S; W.
Norman Lehew, Elaine and Durst, Mrs. Elva DaUey, Jim
Larry and' Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Davis, VIctor Durst, Scott
Abels oil Sunday afternoon. and Jason, Iiuda Durst,
:: Mrs. Fannie.Durst spent a Danny
Black,
Harold
lew days in Columbus Grayson, Harry and Robert
~~centiy with her daughter,
Richard, Mr. aoo Mrs. R. G.
:('lr· and Mrs. Tim Wi~kinson , Abels, Louis DeLuz, and
Leota Birch were recen I
-.
visitors of Mrs. Iva Carpenter
•'· '
and daughter.

Cut
Green Beans

interviewed by committee

President
urged to
veto bill
NEW YORK (UP!) - The .
wan Street Journal today
tD'ged Prelldent Ford to veto
the Ia bill recently paaaed by
the Roue Senate conference
corrimlttee, saying the 1,501).
page blllluo compleu team
of ecooomlsts It hired
couldn't figure It out.
Tbe ' Journal, In an
edlkrial, 11ld President Ford
ahould veto the bill, paased by
the tmllllittee last Thuraday,
· ''not because It containS too
many bad provlllons and not
becaaae' It doeln 't CCIItaln
enou&amp;b good proviaiCIIS. n
ahoulil be vetoed because It
contaln.t
too
many
prol'lllllll." The till must
c1e1r both boaaea first.
"Tb~ reason we have
cleli.Jtd In commenting on ·
tbaeGiilpramlle legtalatim ...
-!be ..tn hope that with a
UW. lime we e~~uld maka
aolllt ltllll out of the

ability, personal appearance classes begin on Sunday at
and their overall ability by 12:30 p.m.
Mrs. Donna Pope, a new
The OVHSA is justly proud
resident of Athens from of the queen 's contest which
Washington, D. C., a. com- is in its third year. The
munily relations liaison contestants accrue points by
expert employed by the attending . OVHSA approved
Corporation·· fo,r Health point shows during the 1976 .
Education in Appalachia show year, by pa,rticipating
Ohio; Mrs. '·Webster , also a in horsemanship classes held
newcomer to Athens, an lor the contestants, by atemployee ·of the Corporation tending the interview , and by .
lor Health Education, and a laking a written test on the
former long-lime employe of OVHSA rule book . The
the government, and Mrs. contestant accruing the most
Sandy Meniget, currently points is the winner.
employed by the Ohio Valley Newlaoo pointed out that
For
Health Services Foundation this is the only contest in the
with extensive experience state of Ohio that Is not
lrekldng
with young people through · con lr;olled by a board of
to places
her University employment directors or officers and that
new and old,
in the College of Education of the girls themselves control
get into Footworks
Ohio University.
the points they accru~ by
sports shoes . . . active
The three judges combined their concentration and effort
have
an
extensive throughout the entire .show
shoes to match your
background of experience in year.
adventuresome lifestyle.
working with people through
The .public is invited to
their various professions and attend the OVHSA annual fall
the QUeen Selection Com- round-up on September 18
mittee was very pleased they and 19 and the crowning
were available lor the ceremonies .at noon on
judging. The other five September 19.
contestants were Miss Rand!
Lucas, Hamden; Miss
T~mala Daughtery and Miss
Lori Darst, both of Poinl
Pome~
992·2815
Pleasant; Miss Terri Short,
Gallipolis, and Miss Barbara
Barcus, Crown City.
Your assurance of quality. From
· Norma Newland, chairman inside, out - only the finest
of the Queen 's Selection materials are used.
Committee for the third year,
.said thai the tabulation of
points accrued by the con.testants will be completed for
the crowning ceremony at the
I.PHOLS I ERED FURNITURE
second day' of the Fall RoundThe longer you own it,
Up on Sunday, Sept. 19.
The twooday show wiU be
the more yoU like the name.
held at
the
Bar-30
showgrounds near Tuppers
FIND IT AT. .•
Plains and will begin on
Saturday evening, September
18 and continue on Sunday.
The crowning ceremonies
will be held just before the
992-3307
MIDDLEPORT
afternoon performan ce

. . . XSTEEC

SAVEl

SAVEl
GOODYEAR
Sept..()ct. Wiulshield
Solvent Sale

lllople'l Cholet

lo•less :Loin

Strip Steak •.•
U.S. GoY!. GnMIId Choice

,..,._., Cholet Unch Cut

Beef
lib Steak ...•
A-...1 0.. IWf IIIII Cuts,
0.. llolf Ctnttr Cuts 1ty C.Unt

Fresh
Por• Chops .•••.

U.S. Go¥1. GNded Cholet
hoplo's Choke IMI Chuck, Shoulder Pol Roa1t ,

39C

•••

Molly · - u.s.u. llllpO&lt;Iod
.
L1lll1! 4 ,.... " - ..

.Mixed
Fryer Parts ..... :

loMiess .• ston
·ll
Roll Roast • . • . . • • • , •

Valvollne
.
.
-

Oil Sale

It's time to

...... ..... " fGrced to

. Now

·Mil IF •lllclllpolr.
..AM ... .... IMl'ioUI
~-dtllteenntmill'l

- jLMI
" " -It
··

lll'l'; ..... . . wbillllr

'710

change your oil.

Protect your
en&amp;ine with

$1~...

¥Maline .

49$ I* can

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
'

e. Main, Pomeroy

John Fultz, Mgr.

992·2101

:ppeaker named

$148
-

u.s. Go¥1. IlNdH Cholll
, ..,..., Choke """"''

Eye
Slltlk ·•••...•

Beef ••

Flame Red

Tokay

1

Grapes

$
IIts •

SAVE

For Yeu·Round
Washer
Solvent
Anti-Freeze
Reg. $1.89

private econCIIllst&amp;

•••

U.S. GO¥!. GnMIId Cholet

.rwo GREAT BUYS.

IIIII,......, wlto apent the
...... alolllinl tbrougb
a.. 1,1110 Jlllll, the Wall

=~·Es::

U.S. GoY!. GnMIId Cholet

,..,..., Choke

BAKER FURNITURE

en1l.stlng
the lid of a number of

Ill ~·
1111111'111:.,.

CeliS

CHAPMAN'S
·sHOE STORE

............
"ad Ill.. altar
• r rt

l-Ib.$
......

c••
Beef Steak

flot For Coole!"'

Yellow
Onions •••
'
Shello4 .

.

:;59c~~ ....... ~.99c

·~~~ DaHy
Alterldleel Sn.c1t
.
E..llsh
. Ca...ltd Apples
WaiiMI • , ....... ~.

nelda~ 8: 15 p.m. Parkers

Stiversville·News Notes

Round-up queen candidates
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
. Meigs County girl par· ·
Ucipated In the amual tea
held for Fall Round-up Queen ·
candidates In Pomeroy last
Saturday night, a part of the
year-long contest for the title
of queen of the Ar\nual Fall
Roulll-up sponsored by the
Ohio Valley. Horse Show
ABsoclation.
Six candidates ·for the
. queen's title were intervlewed by a panel of three
judgesln·the banquet room of
the Meigs Inn which boated
the event by providing the
ladUUes lor the interviews
and reffeahments for the
candidates and their parents,
the officers of the OVHSA,
and the selection committee.
Miss Marcia Dillard,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillard of 107 Laurel
Street, represents the Meigs
Riding Club.
Contestants were in·
· tervlewed for poise, per·
·.eonallty, conversational

Moynihan wins in .New York Primarr.,.~!2~~w&gt;w-~~~~-~:,:..~~~=

to association members uilt:::::

doubles mileage

•

.....&amp;-*1
'j

r,m1,,,

lra11r Wilko••• .

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

Y_.fdul

:· MASON, W. Va. - The
•Rev. Larry G. Stevens, a
; newly approved Assemblles
of Pod missionary w Malawi,
, Central Africa, will be guest
speaker Sept. 15 at 7:30p.m.
at the Mason Assembly of
{lod, Dudding Lane, Rev .
Oleater Tennant, pastor, aa1d
Malawi Ill an Interior nation
.with a poulation of 5 million.
The most reliable source says
·;there are 110-100 people per
;square mUe. These people
·are served by 16 Assemblles
:or GOd missionaries. One
:Bible School Is opera ted by
'•the Assemblies of God in
,~alawl.
'
:· Mr. Stevens and his wile
•·Arlene plan to work In
: southern Malawi around
• Zomba. Mr. Stevens was
: ordained by the Indiana
: District of the AssembUes of
· God. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens
; have 8erved for the past nine
: years 11 Associate Paswr at
· Westside Assembly, Marlon,
• Ind., one of the top 30
:.Assembly churches In the
~~a lion.
• During thlil special
: millllionsaervlce, Mr. Stevens
: will !Share his plans for future
· ministry In Malawi. The
: pubUc Ill Invited to attend . .

Athe01 Livestock
Sales inc.
Saturday
Sept.ll, 1978
Feeder steers,(4()().800 lbs.)
22.50 to 36.00, Ieeder helfera
(400-700
lbs.)
20.·30.,
slaughter bulls (over 1000
lbs.) 28.75-31.50, feeder bulla
(40fi.800 lbs.) 20.-35.25.
Utility ·_ 20.-26., CaMel'·
cutter 18.-20., veals (choiceprime J 40.-19.
Hogs (No. I) 41.75-12.20,
sows, 35.-28.50, pigs (by tha
head) 14.-32.

~f]_01!,n~~ ~!~~~~~~lean

~~~~=~~~

In the fall ciJIIPiilpl. HoUle
Democratic Leader Thlmlll
O'Neill a11o wm nodllllltlm
.and wu favored to. take over
81 Ho- Spetker nat )'Ut,
from Clrl Albert who . Ia

the race to aucceed retiring
Gov. James HoiJho~~~er, a

retli'lni·

•- ........ ...-.·-·-~
D-·"-...
._..... "'
torlal
""' .............. ""' 111111
Oilmlnltion woo't be known
unW the .w-tee ballola are
counted. Autodaler Richard
l.Drber led Gov. Ph111p Noel,
but by 311 votes, In the race Ul
IIIICceed retiring Democrat
John
The winner
will faPutore.
a-•bll
J.ohn
ce ..~,... can
Olafee.
bl
New
Hampa re
Thomaon • the two •term
11
R bll
conaerva ve e11u can,
easily defeated a dlallenge
from moderate Repul&gt;Ucan
Gerard Zelller . He wUI
Democr8 tic -'~·
oppoae
..,.,,_ry
winner Harry Spanos, a
vereran state leslalator.
vermont - Doii)OCratlc
"-· - - · s sa'-'- who
""•· .,....,.
""'"'•
predlc\ed an easy victory,
was a narrow winner In the
Democratic senatorial
--'--ti
,.,.,w.. on race. He will bra..
the Incumbent, Ro ert
Stafford, who was an easy
winner In .the GOP primary.
Democra•· also nominated
""
State Treasurer Stella
Hackel, the flrBt woman to
· run for governor on a major
ticket 1n the state · She will ·
Mal 0 rlty
oppose State Hotllle
Leader ~Chard Snelling.
Nevada- Democratic Sen.
Howard
cannon
won
f
fourth
renOnllnat1oo or a
term and former Rep. David
Towell won the GOP
mmlnation to challenge him.
WllcoaJID - Sen. WUIIam
Proxmire won renomlnatioo,
and will face a challen~
,._ ...___ "•

~~c·e

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CHAPTER MEETS

Republican.

SINGER

·

·1$6 TO $a

SAVE AT THE

WyomiDJ - Sen
. Gale
.......,..
f
McGee Wll unop,....... or
renomination, and
Republican State Sen .
Malcolm wallop will oppose
him
·
Colon.lo - Rep. F'farjk
primary.
Evans, a six.term coogreasNortb C.rolbla - In a man, scored an euy win and
runoff, Republican David will lace GOP candidate
Flaherty won the GOP. Melvin Takaki. Evans was
gubernatorial primary, and the only Incumbent member

r-FREE

1
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern FFA Chapter met
recently to inform new
members on
meeting
procedures. There were 26
members and a guest present
at the meeting In the Vo-Ag
room. Following the meeting
softball was played and
refreslunents served.

Stanley
Utab - Sen. Frank MoBS
had no Democrll oppoling
himforanolherlermandwlll
face ,...,... an &lt;ntn Hatch,
who benefited hun 1 Ronald
Reagan endoraeme.nt.
Embllttled Democratic Rep.
Alan Howe will face a 2nd
Dan
Dlalrlct challenge from
Marrlot, winner of the GOP

"-·bile.

1.

'

..

al the Illite OOIIINIIIoDa1

The tMlly Senllnel,Mldcllepari.PIIIneroy, 0 ., Wednelday,Sept. 15, lrl6

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.,

�•-'l'ho !lallvRo!niiDeLMlddleiJOI'I..Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,Sept.l5, 1976

1-

~everal concerts open

Water·gas device
PHOENIX, Ariz. (UP!) better mileage aoo producing
Four researchers from the less pollutlm.
The . fo11r 11nvelled · a
University of Arizona say
lhey have developed a device prototype of their "fuel
that would enable auto reformer" at a news
engines wn111 on a mixture of ·conference Monday, and said
ll&amp;Soline and water, getting they are applying to private
and government agencies for
money
to
build
a
commerlcally acceptable
model.
NEW STAFFERS
Is
b
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Two
The prototype
too lg,
appointments have been they said, but predicted they
made to the Ohio campaign could have a device capable
staff
of
Democratic of working on loday's auto
engines within 18 months.
presidential nominee Jimmy
Marvin
D.
Martin
.Carter.
·
. estimated the device would
Chris
Gitlin,
vice Improve mileage by about 50
chairperson of the CUyahoga per cent but cautiooed that
County Democratic party, "until we miniaturize the
has been named deputy system and actually. take It
campaign coordinator for out on the road, we woo't be

· =~~~~~rtJ!~e what the
In tests, the device has
. redQCed emission levels ·w
less than baH of the most
t 1
1 E ·
t 1
s r ngen
, nvlronmen a
Protection Agency proposals,
Washington office.
Martin said - even without
Karl V. Struble, a deputy the
costly
catalytic
campaign manager lor Sen. converters now required on
John Glenn, !).Qhio, in the auto exhaust systems.,
1974 primary, has been
named coordinalor of
Carter's campaign In II
central Ohio counties.
The counties Include
Franklin ,
Delaware,
Fairfield, Fayette, Knox,
Licking, Madison, Marion,
Morrow, Pickaway and
Union. Struble, 25, Columbus,
Is t.akillg a leave of absence
as legislative aide for the
finance committee of the
Columbus City Council.

'

·

~wrlllll

1t'lt-TIII ICrtnr Ct. '"- ..,

..,tll,tiU'I htlriq, le,t. 11, 1111 II

"!ttl "" .....,,
I

Wt rlltm R1 rlatlt II lillit fllltltltl. M.. l Sill II IIIUII.

•..

•

the

'

.

Granulated

former
Berea
councilman, Gitlin, 43,
Cleveland, was coordinator of
Rep. Ronald Mottl's, D.()hlo,
1974 campaign and worked In
his
Cleveland
and

on

Dal!lel Moynihan won 1
flve-wa)' Democratic
burg. tnonal Folk Ballet of ~e~~~tOrlal ........._race In
Yugoslavia ; Jan. 16• Sunday, · NYork"'::::',Ly
3 p.m., Zanesville, Canadian
~"
•...,. •ft•·~•.
.,.."
Bien Ensemble.
leedlng a 1z..late parade of
Feb. 6, Sunday, 3 p.m.• Ylctora that Included Senll.
Zanasvlllt, Vaclav,_Hudtcek,• u ....~ H..- .....ov, ,.....__rd
violinist;
..........
~ ........, ,_,.
w Feb. 12,J .. turday,
,. __
,.._.......,,J·~Bu""''-and
p.m., a-1y, orge muoe 1• """"""" - - ~,
clanlcol gultarlsl; Feb. 15, Gov. Meldrbn Th&lt;imlon.
~ Admlaslm w these con- Tuilday,l p.m., Portamouth,
Moynihan, the former
~~~ Ia by membership only, ':~:~:W~eg~22~~..:;. professor, prealdentlal
aild the concert uaoclation Ill · 8, 1
adviler
and
U.N .
currently conducting Its a. ;anl~n~Phiii~T~.C~'~~ ambauador, defeated liberal
membership campaign . Cost c .: Feb. 24, Thursday, 1:15 CCIIgreuwoman Bella Ablug
~ $10, adult; fG iludenll and p~
. m ., :tok~~~r&amp;ot,':~~}.•n In 1 cloee and titter battle. lt
Sllnlor citizens and UO,
rch 13, Sunday, 3 p.m., was ...
'" oynlhan's first
flmilY · The drive will close Zanesville, Czech Phllhor· IIIICcesaful run for elect«!
!!!~turdaY at ,noon.
monic Orchestra ; March 16, . office.
• For more Information Wednesday,
8
p.m.,
Former Attot'ney General
Galllf.'llls.
'New
York
'
l!raas
ork
I
t
th
I
II
•"n
e asaoc a on Quln et; March 19, Salurday, ...,.,,..
n--··y Clark, N'" ac
"" y
headquarters
at
the 8 p.m., Marlello, . Roger aty councU Preeldent ·Paul
Gallipolis Chamber of Wagner Chorale; March 23, O'Dwyer, and wealthy
Commerce, !6 State St., Wednesday, 8 p.m.. Ports· bualneuman Abe Hlnclield
&lt;lilllpolls or phone 446-2200. mouth, The Four Freshmen . ro.. _..ed out the field.
April 12, Tuesday, 8: 15
"'"'
: This year'sllat of concerts p.m., Parkersburg, Barbaro
Moynihan will face
available to members of the Blegan. pianist ; April 12, Buckley, the Conservativelocal IISIOCiaUon Includes: Tuesday, 8: 15 p.m.. Lan· Republican lnc:umbent In the
•
· caster, Ronnie Brown Trio ; (all election. Buckley easily
• Oct. 9, Saturday, 8 P·!'l·• April 1~, Wednesday, 6 p.m .,
~alllpolls, Theodor Uppmon,
Waverly, Ronnie Brown Trio ; turned back a challenge from
Me!ropolllan baritone; Oct. Nov. 15, Friday. 8 p.m., Rep. Peter peyaer In the GOP
13. Wadnesday, 8: 15 p.m.. Marietta. Susann Mc09nald, race.
l?arkersburg, · Laureate harplsl; April 22, Friday. 8
In the other races:
Woodwind QUin!el; Oc!. 21, p.m .. Gallipolis, Thomas
•
I I.
Minn...,••
Thursday, 8 p.m., por•s·
Sch umac her, plans
____ ,. - Hump~•••1
mouth, T~Kas Boys• Choir;
Concert locations are: had little trouble defeating
Ocl. 29, Friday, 8 p.m.. Gallipolis, Gallla Academy Democratic challenger Rev.
waverly, Texas Boys' Choir. High School, Fourth Ave.: Dick. Bullock. , In the
Nov. 1, Monday, 8: 15 p.m., Lancaster, Lancaster High
Parkersburg, Hal Shane, School, Rl. 37 North, (Arbor Republlcan battle to oppoee
popular entertain. er; Nov. 6, Valley Or .), Marietta, Humphrey, college profeuor
Saturday, 8: 15 p.m., Len· Marietta Sr. High School. Jerry Brekke defeated four
Cilller. Longstreth &amp; Escosa, Davis Ave .; Parkersburg, challengers.
duo harpists ; Nov. 7, Sunday, Parkersburn• Hl~h IsSchool,
..
, ••• ,.,....~.- Kemedy,
3 p.m .. Zanesville, Vlclor
Dudley Ave.; or mou th,
~--cu-•..
Borge, popular pllinlst; Nov.. Portsmouth High School; heavily favored for a ~
8, Mopday, 8 p.m., Marietta, Waverly, Waverly High · term, took the Democratic
George Shearing Quintet.
School, off R1.23 at norlh end
mlnati
Jan. 10. Mond.y, 8:15 r,.m., of Waverly: Zanesville , no
on over 1wo · canLancaster, Andre Ba ogh, Municipal Auditorium on N.. dldates, Iiobert Emmet Dinsviolinist; Jan. 12 . Wed · f;ourth Sl.
more
and
Frederick
Langone. Kennedy will
:Members of the Trl~unly
c;ommunlly Concert
•··""'a lion during the 1976-17
II""""'
seiiiiOO will be entiUed to
attend certain oul·of-lo'l!'n
c!On~rta In addition w ~
t)lree per I ormances
~thedu led f or thl I area. ·

I'

Domino
S.ugar

Ohlo.

CONSl'RUCTION - Tile PbiUp Sporn Power Plant
-New Hnell wblcb the ADPilacltlan Puller Qmpany
has threatened ro close uitfess air pollutjon control
standards are relaxed, Is having this giant precipitator
bulit on Its No. 5 unit. Scheduled for completion in
November, 1977, the Improvement wiD cost a projected
$39 miWm. 'lite precipitator collects fly ash with a 99.7
efficiency rating, equal to the job done by the equipment
Inside the 1,100 foot stack at the Gavin Power Plant In
Oleshlre, Ohio !n GalUa County. Union Boiler Co. using a
crew of 150 Ill on the job. Similar precipitators on units one
through four are scheduled to be completed by 1979.

f
I

'

s
.....

I.

Bag

;lis~;;
Flow ••.••

.&amp;.~~.. 79c Embassy
c-y

Mayonnaise

•• •

~::·68c'
•••

: Mrs: Fern Cooper and Miss Shawn and Kevin.
Mabel McDaniels, Falls
Mrs .
Elva
Dailey,
O.urch, Va., Paul Parsons, Syracl!se, spent T11esday
Sandyville, W.Va., Mrs. Ruth afternoon with her parents,
Blacknell, Charleston, W. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Autherson,
:Va., Mrs. Lucille Southall, Long Bottom . .
Slaat's MiD, W. Va., Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Mrs. Richard Abels and Mrs. Lipps and Toni, Little
Harry Richard, Long BottOm, Hopklng, spent Sunday af.
iN ere callers at the home of · ternoon with her father and
W· and Mrs. Louis DeLuz sister, Clint Birch and Leota.
recently.
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
: Mr. and Mrs. VIctor Durst Crwnblery and sons, · East
and sons, The Plains, Mrs. Liverpool, spent two weeks
Larry Fitch, Belpre, Tom with her mother, Mrs. Esther
Durst, Athens, Bob Rllchie, Dailey, who returned home
ilelpre, Mrs. Don Meadows, with them for an extended
LOng Bottom, Mrs. Mi~e visit.
);;vans, Alicia, Cindy and
Mr. a'nd Mrs. Harold
Ryan, Leota Birch, and Mrs. Roush, Port18nd and Leota
(lene Lemley local, visited Birch, local, attended the
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst Meigs County Fair and also
during the past week.
visited Mr. aoo Mrs. Robert
,; Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra Roiish, IU!cine, and Mr. and
and David, visited her Mrs. Don Hill and family,
mother, Mrs. Myrtle Lewis Letart Falls.
,~ nd family , Red House, W.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Durst,
Va. over the Labor Day Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Debra
:Weekend. .
and David, Mrs. Mildred
·: Mrs. Sylvia Allen, Akron, Circle, Duke Dailey, Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Allen Dean Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
aoo Darlene , Ripley, W. Va . . Howard Allen and Darlene,
!jisib!!i wjth Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Sylvia Allen, S; W.
Norman Lehew, Elaine and Durst, Mrs. Elva DaUey, Jim
Larry and' Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Davis, VIctor Durst, Scott
Abels oil Sunday afternoon. and Jason, Iiuda Durst,
:: Mrs. Fannie.Durst spent a Danny
Black,
Harold
lew days in Columbus Grayson, Harry and Robert
~~centiy with her daughter,
Richard, Mr. aoo Mrs. R. G.
:('lr· and Mrs. Tim Wi~kinson , Abels, Louis DeLuz, and
Leota Birch were recen I
-.
visitors of Mrs. Iva Carpenter
•'· '
and daughter.

Cut
Green Beans

interviewed by committee

President
urged to
veto bill
NEW YORK (UP!) - The .
wan Street Journal today
tD'ged Prelldent Ford to veto
the Ia bill recently paaaed by
the Roue Senate conference
corrimlttee, saying the 1,501).
page blllluo compleu team
of ecooomlsts It hired
couldn't figure It out.
Tbe ' Journal, In an
edlkrial, 11ld President Ford
ahould veto the bill, paased by
the tmllllittee last Thuraday,
· ''not because It containS too
many bad provlllons and not
becaaae' It doeln 't CCIItaln
enou&amp;b good proviaiCIIS. n
ahoulil be vetoed because It
contaln.t
too
many
prol'lllllll." The till must
c1e1r both boaaea first.
"Tb~ reason we have
cleli.Jtd In commenting on ·
tbaeGiilpramlle legtalatim ...
-!be ..tn hope that with a
UW. lime we e~~uld maka
aolllt ltllll out of the

ability, personal appearance classes begin on Sunday at
and their overall ability by 12:30 p.m.
Mrs. Donna Pope, a new
The OVHSA is justly proud
resident of Athens from of the queen 's contest which
Washington, D. C., a. com- is in its third year. The
munily relations liaison contestants accrue points by
expert employed by the attending . OVHSA approved
Corporation·· fo,r Health point shows during the 1976 .
Education in Appalachia show year, by pa,rticipating
Ohio; Mrs. '·Webster , also a in horsemanship classes held
newcomer to Athens, an lor the contestants, by atemployee ·of the Corporation tending the interview , and by .
lor Health Education, and a laking a written test on the
former long-lime employe of OVHSA rule book . The
the government, and Mrs. contestant accruing the most
Sandy Meniget, currently points is the winner.
employed by the Ohio Valley Newlaoo pointed out that
For
Health Services Foundation this is the only contest in the
with extensive experience state of Ohio that Is not
lrekldng
with young people through · con lr;olled by a board of
to places
her University employment directors or officers and that
new and old,
in the College of Education of the girls themselves control
get into Footworks
Ohio University.
the points they accru~ by
sports shoes . . . active
The three judges combined their concentration and effort
have
an
extensive throughout the entire .show
shoes to match your
background of experience in year.
adventuresome lifestyle.
working with people through
The .public is invited to
their various professions and attend the OVHSA annual fall
the QUeen Selection Com- round-up on September 18
mittee was very pleased they and 19 and the crowning
were available lor the ceremonies .at noon on
judging. The other five September 19.
contestants were Miss Rand!
Lucas, Hamden; Miss
T~mala Daughtery and Miss
Lori Darst, both of Poinl
Pome~
992·2815
Pleasant; Miss Terri Short,
Gallipolis, and Miss Barbara
Barcus, Crown City.
Your assurance of quality. From
· Norma Newland, chairman inside, out - only the finest
of the Queen 's Selection materials are used.
Committee for the third year,
.said thai the tabulation of
points accrued by the con.testants will be completed for
the crowning ceremony at the
I.PHOLS I ERED FURNITURE
second day' of the Fall RoundThe longer you own it,
Up on Sunday, Sept. 19.
The twooday show wiU be
the more yoU like the name.
held at
the
Bar-30
showgrounds near Tuppers
FIND IT AT. .•
Plains and will begin on
Saturday evening, September
18 and continue on Sunday.
The crowning ceremonies
will be held just before the
992-3307
MIDDLEPORT
afternoon performan ce

. . . XSTEEC

SAVEl

SAVEl
GOODYEAR
Sept..()ct. Wiulshield
Solvent Sale

lllople'l Cholet

lo•less :Loin

Strip Steak •.•
U.S. GoY!. GnMIId Choice

,..,._., Cholet Unch Cut

Beef
lib Steak ...•
A-...1 0.. IWf IIIII Cuts,
0.. llolf Ctnttr Cuts 1ty C.Unt

Fresh
Por• Chops .•••.

U.S. Go¥1. GNded Cholet
hoplo's Choke IMI Chuck, Shoulder Pol Roa1t ,

39C

•••

Molly · - u.s.u. llllpO&lt;Iod
.
L1lll1! 4 ,.... " - ..

.Mixed
Fryer Parts ..... :

loMiess .• ston
·ll
Roll Roast • . • . . • • • , •

Valvollne
.
.
-

Oil Sale

It's time to

...... ..... " fGrced to

. Now

·Mil IF •lllclllpolr.
..AM ... .... IMl'ioUI
~-dtllteenntmill'l

- jLMI
" " -It
··

lll'l'; ..... . . wbillllr

'710

change your oil.

Protect your
en&amp;ine with

$1~...

¥Maline .

49$ I* can

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
'

e. Main, Pomeroy

John Fultz, Mgr.

992·2101

:ppeaker named

$148
-

u.s. Go¥1. IlNdH Cholll
, ..,..., Choke """"''

Eye
Slltlk ·•••...•

Beef ••

Flame Red

Tokay

1

Grapes

$
IIts •

SAVE

For Yeu·Round
Washer
Solvent
Anti-Freeze
Reg. $1.89

private econCIIllst&amp;

•••

U.S. GO¥!. GnMIId Cholet

.rwo GREAT BUYS.

IIIII,......, wlto apent the
...... alolllinl tbrougb
a.. 1,1110 Jlllll, the Wall

=~·Es::

U.S. GoY!. GnMIId Cholet

,..,..., Choke

BAKER FURNITURE

en1l.stlng
the lid of a number of

Ill ~·
1111111'111:.,.

CeliS

CHAPMAN'S
·sHOE STORE

............
"ad Ill.. altar
• r rt

l-Ib.$
......

c••
Beef Steak

flot For Coole!"'

Yellow
Onions •••
'
Shello4 .

.

:;59c~~ ....... ~.99c

·~~~ DaHy
Alterldleel Sn.c1t
.
E..llsh
. Ca...ltd Apples
WaiiMI • , ....... ~.

nelda~ 8: 15 p.m. Parkers

Stiversville·News Notes

Round-up queen candidates
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
. Meigs County girl par· ·
Ucipated In the amual tea
held for Fall Round-up Queen ·
candidates In Pomeroy last
Saturday night, a part of the
year-long contest for the title
of queen of the Ar\nual Fall
Roulll-up sponsored by the
Ohio Valley. Horse Show
ABsoclation.
Six candidates ·for the
. queen's title were intervlewed by a panel of three
judgesln·the banquet room of
the Meigs Inn which boated
the event by providing the
ladUUes lor the interviews
and reffeahments for the
candidates and their parents,
the officers of the OVHSA,
and the selection committee.
Miss Marcia Dillard,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dillard of 107 Laurel
Street, represents the Meigs
Riding Club.
Contestants were in·
· tervlewed for poise, per·
·.eonallty, conversational

Moynihan wins in .New York Primarr.,.~!2~~w&gt;w-~~~~-~:,:..~~~=

to association members uilt:::::

doubles mileage

•

.....&amp;-*1
'j

r,m1,,,

lra11r Wilko••• .

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

Y_.fdul

:· MASON, W. Va. - The
•Rev. Larry G. Stevens, a
; newly approved Assemblles
of Pod missionary w Malawi,
, Central Africa, will be guest
speaker Sept. 15 at 7:30p.m.
at the Mason Assembly of
{lod, Dudding Lane, Rev .
Oleater Tennant, pastor, aa1d
Malawi Ill an Interior nation
.with a poulation of 5 million.
The most reliable source says
·;there are 110-100 people per
;square mUe. These people
·are served by 16 Assemblles
:or GOd missionaries. One
:Bible School Is opera ted by
'•the Assemblies of God in
,~alawl.
'
:· Mr. Stevens and his wile
•·Arlene plan to work In
: southern Malawi around
• Zomba. Mr. Stevens was
: ordained by the Indiana
: District of the AssembUes of
· God. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens
; have 8erved for the past nine
: years 11 Associate Paswr at
· Westside Assembly, Marlon,
• Ind., one of the top 30
:.Assembly churches In the
~~a lion.
• During thlil special
: millllionsaervlce, Mr. Stevens
: will !Share his plans for future
· ministry In Malawi. The
: pubUc Ill Invited to attend . .

Athe01 Livestock
Sales inc.
Saturday
Sept.ll, 1978
Feeder steers,(4()().800 lbs.)
22.50 to 36.00, Ieeder helfera
(400-700
lbs.)
20.·30.,
slaughter bulls (over 1000
lbs.) 28.75-31.50, feeder bulla
(40fi.800 lbs.) 20.-35.25.
Utility ·_ 20.-26., CaMel'·
cutter 18.-20., veals (choiceprime J 40.-19.
Hogs (No. I) 41.75-12.20,
sows, 35.-28.50, pigs (by tha
head) 14.-32.

~f]_01!,n~~ ~!~~~~~~lean

~~~~=~~~

In the fall ciJIIPiilpl. HoUle
Democratic Leader Thlmlll
O'Neill a11o wm nodllllltlm
.and wu favored to. take over
81 Ho- Spetker nat )'Ut,
from Clrl Albert who . Ia

the race to aucceed retiring
Gov. James HoiJho~~~er, a

retli'lni·

•- ........ ...-.·-·-~
D-·"-...
._..... "'
torlal
""' .............. ""' 111111
Oilmlnltion woo't be known
unW the .w-tee ballola are
counted. Autodaler Richard
l.Drber led Gov. Ph111p Noel,
but by 311 votes, In the race Ul
IIIICceed retiring Democrat
John
The winner
will faPutore.
a-•bll
J.ohn
ce ..~,... can
Olafee.
bl
New
Hampa re
Thomaon • the two •term
11
R bll
conaerva ve e11u can,
easily defeated a dlallenge
from moderate Repul&gt;Ucan
Gerard Zelller . He wUI
Democr8 tic -'~·
oppoae
..,.,,_ry
winner Harry Spanos, a
vereran state leslalator.
vermont - Doii)OCratlc
"-· - - · s sa'-'- who
""•· .,....,.
""'"'•
predlc\ed an easy victory,
was a narrow winner In the
Democratic senatorial
--'--ti
,.,.,w.. on race. He will bra..
the Incumbent, Ro ert
Stafford, who was an easy
winner In .the GOP primary.
Democra•· also nominated
""
State Treasurer Stella
Hackel, the flrBt woman to
· run for governor on a major
ticket 1n the state · She will ·
Mal 0 rlty
oppose State Hotllle
Leader ~Chard Snelling.
Nevada- Democratic Sen.
Howard
cannon
won
f
fourth
renOnllnat1oo or a
term and former Rep. David
Towell won the GOP
mmlnation to challenge him.
WllcoaJID - Sen. WUIIam
Proxmire won renomlnatioo,
and will face a challen~
,._ ...___ "•

~~c·e

Llgh!welghl

•60" Polfester Suede
•Table of 11.98 60" Knits

Th!c~~~~!~-$e~~op
Simplicity Patterns
JS·W. Second
Pomeroy

. •FUlL SIZE

ggc

•'Z.49 VALUE
•Willi£ lHEY LAST

A COMPLOE NEW ASSORTMENT!
'

Give your _.u, 1 nt w lOOk with
saver11 of theM . C~oo .. trom
flor.llt ,

OlHERS

reliJI IOUI , I Mi ml li Dt'

$ 49

1

17'

TO '319

Starts Thursday 10 A.M.

Setof8

EASY CARE ORI.ON DYUC

RAYON UNED WINDBREAKERS

WOMEN'S SWEATERS

MEN'S JACKETS
.....ro.......

••

'•

Perfect for the cool
mornings and chilly evenings

Turtle neck or modi
l ul't le. The w•nllll 1•11

colorJ, 101111 s!Mve.

$599AND $699

A GOOD SELECTION

STAINLESS
FLATWARE

--

or insert under stone

---

• Fireburst effect
or sunlite effect

.__:-:___::-~---.

Tlt.l•spoont, tervh~ ~ns , butter knlv u,
tlltt servers, lut~ nl , deuert knhttl, eft .
Deconltil hlncl lts.

• Golden signature

I • White gold instead
ol yellow gold

urae
TOTE
BAG

HoldsS Pair

Rich. Thick Solid Colon

SLACK
RACK

VELOUR
BATH TOWELS

M.L

PINK, BWE, M~IZE. BEIGE

PRINTtD
VINn

METM.

'3.50

$}00

$}29

IF
PERFECT

sse

10 OUNCE WET MOP
. BY VINING
LONG WOODEN
HANDLE

$199

Lawn and Leaf

Waven

Pr inted

TRASH

DJSH

PILLOW

BAGS

CLOTHS

CASES

Multi-Color

Prints or Solids

· Holds 4 bushel

Heavy Plastic
Pkg . ol6

Heavy Weight
J9c if perfect

, Full si te

Pe rfect Quality

FITTED
MATTRESS
COVER

$}87

6H. x6ft .

SHOWER

CURTAINS
Vinyl pllftlc

' Full Btd &amp;ir:e

Solid colors
lsi quality

Contour Cornl!r
White vinyl

2x6-14 FT. ONLY
BEVER_AGE~

HOLDERS

PRO-KEDS

Siitded · leather upper,
smoo!h finish lining,
' ~pyalon covered foam
• padded collar and high rise
'bl~k. foam padded longue.

I

!I

SIZE 34 TO 40

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

I

I'R.

mottos.

othen.

I

,,,

WALL PLAQUES

Autwmn '"''"''' ' Wlltll

manr

'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'-'•'•' •'•'•'•'•'•' •'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'o'o'o'o'o....'.",'-'•'•'•~·~•~o~o'././..'o'.-/.i"&lt;f¥"".1'),&lt;:o, o~~nl;«~ "!'FI'".•T/'Tfl?

BED
PILLOWS

pick , hlr.,ut spny .
mumt . rcnH, Zlnnlu.
m1rltold. t.1by bruth ,
1nd

Q

·,•,•,•,·,·,·,•,·,";";•.·,·.·,7,";',"l";',·,·,·,·,·.;,.,·,·.-.-.-.......·.··················:.·;·,:..::.:.:.:.;::...·..:·:O&gt;:..;.,;,.: (~:,;,:,:,.:•;,~;,;,;.o:.

Crushed Fotm Filled

COME IN AND BROWSE!

t.rnt.

INCUDE~ 6 PC.
AT.TACHMENT SI:T

~ ~~3~ELS FUR~~~
~.~~~11LJ

ArtificialFALLFlowers
SELECOON .HAS ARRIVED.

4

..

NOW
ONLY

14,.
__.......
-

SET
OF

.

$7995

• Just-Arr.ived Calcutta Cloth
• 45" Rib Cord
• 60" Suraline
.. . . - - Plain and co·ordinates

'f'CIIII' m1ny TOPS.

I

~
~

welghl
performance.
Fronl drop.ln bobbin,
adjustable electric
sli!ch . Comes with
gllde.on carrying case.

:uvenl.
..,,~u~~~·
••~:
ro set off

Bring in this ad~.nd
order your ring by
November 15
1to get one of these
I custom features,
I
FREE:

'&gt;{ ~

'

• Brllllanl heldllght

tleayy

43 tiiOt l 6 INCH

ON JOHN ROBERTS
CLASS RINGS

ltlt tough inch along IM
baNbolrdl

por1able

machine gives

~~

•· Edge Kletntr cletlll that

THE GIENIE MACHINE

,.

SET

• Top-tilling dilpoaable dull
beg proventa clop, keepa
ouctlon 1lrong.

SSO,OO OFF

•

INCLUDED:
e PC . .
ATTACHMENT

• EXCIUIIVt HIJ 0/ti·A·Nt,.
rug htlghtldl... menl

NOW

PLEATED
SCARFS

VALUE

cor.aNATION UPRIGHT
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER

!Sala Pays,!

Tht " Lenuce" Look

I • Initial in stone

CHAPTER MEETS

Republican.

SINGER

·

·1$6 TO $a

SAVE AT THE

WyomiDJ - Sen
. Gale
.......,..
f
McGee Wll unop,....... or
renomination, and
Republican State Sen .
Malcolm wallop will oppose
him
·
Colon.lo - Rep. F'farjk
primary.
Evans, a six.term coogreasNortb C.rolbla - In a man, scored an euy win and
runoff, Republican David will lace GOP candidate
Flaherty won the GOP. Melvin Takaki. Evans was
gubernatorial primary, and the only Incumbent member

r-FREE

1
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern FFA Chapter met
recently to inform new
members on
meeting
procedures. There were 26
members and a guest present
at the meeting In the Vo-Ag
room. Following the meeting
softball was played and
refreslunents served.

Stanley
Utab - Sen. Frank MoBS
had no Democrll oppoling
himforanolherlermandwlll
face ,...,... an &lt;ntn Hatch,
who benefited hun 1 Ronald
Reagan endoraeme.nt.
Embllttled Democratic Rep.
Alan Howe will face a 2nd
Dan
Dlalrlct challenge from
Marrlot, winner of the GOP

"-·bile.

1.

'

..

al the Illite OOIIINIIIoDa1

The tMlly Senllnel,Mldcllepari.PIIIneroy, 0 ., Wednelday,Sept. 15, lrl6

US£ FOil
CAR-IIOME.P~TIO

•PREVENT SPilLS

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATI!RIALS CO•

773-5534

MASON, W. VA.

REGULAR 17'

2

FOR

oSILVII IRIDOI PLA:Z:A
ePOINT PLEASANT
~~

25~
!'I

'

.

.,

�•

•

8-The DIUv So&gt;nt!uel, Ml~~e~~eroy, 0., Wedne!lday, Se!Jt. l5, 1976

Group works- on planting.

···
Donation
Helen Help
Us ••• By Helen Bottel reported

I

+++

DEAR HELEN :
I've been ~g lately that some of these so-called
phllantroplc o~garuzations spend more on themselves than
they do on charity..How can I know whtch charities deserve my
donationa? -FOR WISE,GIVING
DEARFWG :
Send for a "Wise Giving Guide" to the National
Infonnatlm Bureau, 419 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y.,
101116. This free booklet Usts most nonreligious fund-raising
charities, as graded by NIB stl!ndards. You may also obtain up
to three Nm repoi'ta at a time on individual agencies by
requeattng them In writing. ·
·
'
The national Information Bureau (a nonprofit
orgllllizatim which a1ao asks voluntary cootrlbutiOIIB)
reeearchea agencies carefully and reports on their acUvltles
how the mmey Is spent, aild whether they are meeting theU:
ltated goals.
.
I wu surprised to find some of 001' malt popular
''jlbllaDtlropie" do not meet NIB's standards. You will be too.
~ H. ·

RIVEISJDE MEDICAL

GROUP ·

Adi.C...tfo
Vetwams
~moria I Hospital
R. A. AYERION, M.D.

A. G. SOLA, M.D.

, JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON. I,I.D.

tlilce

Hours; 1.. 12 a.m.
-.-Sat., 2-4 p.m. Man ..
Fri .. 7_. p.m. Moft., ~~ .

frf.

...... .•

PHONE992-33n

BOOJ(MOIIILE ROUTE
Meigs, Jackson, Vinton
counties Bookmobile
schedule for Meigs County
Thursday, September 16:
Racine Ele ., 9:30-noon ;
Portland · Ele., 12:30·2:30
p.m.; Reedsville Store, 3:1:&gt;4:30; Long Bottom, 4:45-li:IS;
Success Road, 5:31).6; Texas
Road, 6:30-6:45; State Rt. 7·
Housing, 7,30-7:45; County
Rd. 26, Five Points, Whipple
Road, 8:15-3:30.

Bank 0'11n;,.ers
""'
·
~ J
a wTIU meet
t. 1

Pomerqy, NaUonal Bank
officers and employees at.
lending the Group Seven
Meeting of the Ohio Bankers
Association, In Marietta
Tuesday night were George
S. Hobstetter, Mnine
GrJffjth, Arthur W. 'Nease,
Jr., MarUYI! Wolle, Richard
Poulin, Emilia Midkiff,
Connie Fields, Dorothy
Seth, Linda Spe~. Bonnie
Welch, Don Nelson, Lera
Jones, Donna Nelson, Joan
Wolfe , Doris Snowden,
Marilyn Robinson , Joan May,
and WUllam J. Hobstetter.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Haggy, Middleport, are
announcing the blrlh of a
daughter, Kimberly Rae,
Friday at the Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed
seven pounds, nine ounces.
Grandparenta are Mrs. Eula
Peggy Odegard, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and ' Mrs. James
Gilmore, Pomeroy R. D.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs,
Laurel Cliff, Waller Gilmore,
Colum~. and Mra. Winnie
Hood, Charleston, W. Va.

NOTICE!

n set

rr'.
.l

Ckl sed Sepl 20

100,000 Mile

thru 251nda

Warranty

nu., MD
J
• J• ~
• ,
..__ _ _ _.;.._ __,

Couple visits
relativ~s here

I .

2 bOdrm. _rr,..n r
oduilo ..,ly, In Mlddltpo&lt;t:
Phono 992·3874.
caust hll

3-ANO 4 RM. furnl1~d~~d -un furnithed · opts . Phone 992·

COLA

&amp; PACKAGED ICE

a. &amp; W"me To Go

SHAMMY'S
992-5786

Pomeroy

b.dr~pa rt;;~nt~--~t

Complelnf II for divorce , ·
division of property and other
proper rtlltf o
You are required to answer
within twenty .elgi'lt days after
the last publication of this
notice , one tach WHk tor IlK
suceesslve wee~s . The last

for $1()4 monthly plus elec . or
$130 Including electric. LOWER

1976, and tht fwenty -tl[ih ·
day• . will commence on that

VILLAGE MANOR In Middleport publlcollon will be on Sept . 29f

your failure to
answer , o.r otherwise respond ,•
II required by the Ohio Rules

Th ird .and Mill $tretth 111 Mid·
dleport. Brand new high qual)·

by default Will bl! r endered
for the relief
demanded In this cta lm .

apartments . See the
manager at Apt. 14, or call
992-7721.

ag,lnJt vou

LARRY E. SPENCER,

AVAilABLE at Rl..,.t rtld·; Ap~rt·
ment1, I bedroom apart-·
ments, $100 per month; 2
bedroom opartm.nts 1 $133 per
month . One pi' ice for all . Phone

.

csJ

Cler~

f;-

TRAILER apoct for rent , one 3
, milts from Pomeroy. one in
Dexter , 5 miles from No . 2
mine. Phone 992-5858.

For Thurlclef, lepl. 11, 1178

Alllll (MIIrCh 21·Aprll11) An

2BedrOom mobile .hom-;~ 0;~-,~~~.
2 Bedroom mobile home i~R acf~e
qreo . Phone992-5858 .

follow Instructions. Look over

TWO TRAILERS for rent ; one 3
bedroom unfum ished, one 2
bedroom furnished . Phone

742·3122.

You're eKtravagant and
to

t~ke

unwarranted rltka.

own good. Keep an open mind

to avoid hurting your cause.
QANCIII (June 21..Jul!' 22) Irs
very diHicull to deal with you
today because of your reluc·
tanc_e to say what you really
th ink . Try to be more frank and

OLD furnitur&amp;, ice boxes, brass

bed5, wall telephones and
parts, or complee hOusehold s.

honest.

L!O (Julr 23...a.... U) Don't

Write M . . D . .Miller, Rf. 1 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call99'2 ·llb0.

-- · - - -

I
and anything tq anyone who~e

TIMBER . Pomeroy
. ducts. Top price

·F;;;;;,; . Pr~· 'VIRQO (Aug. 22-lepl. 22) Try·

lng to bulldoze people Into
agreeing with yOu ,today will
1-446·8570.
• ' ·• avail you' little.' Th.,Y'II realize •
,COINS. 19'29 and olci~7~~~;~-~~V-. · you're a little aelf-nrvlng and
gold and sliver scrap. Will buy Will stiffen their backs.
or trde. t:iave a good selection
of coins to sell or trade. Also, LllftA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) Don't
have supplies and metal assume people are going to
detecors. Roger Wamsley on accept your Ideas today .
Leading creek or:'ld Rutland Sound oth,ers out before
Road . Phone 7..42-2331 for on of · pushing your thBOrles.
•

for standing
saw,timber. Call Kant Hanby ,

fer .
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24·Nor. 22)
SSCASHS$ for junked...~~~o·s. You should not be materialistic
Phone 7..42-2081. Frye 's Truck &amp;
Auto Parts, Rutland .

others who are. Unplusantrles

1969 MERCURY Cougar~~~-;~-;,~.

could result that you 'll later

Coll992·59()2.
·
)'IOULO LIKE to buy jeep lop. Can·
' vos or hardtop. Coll7,42·2038.
~
···-..

regret.
IAQITTAIIIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Normally you're the type
who thinks Individually Todey

.&amp;,E.
...
-tl'... ..
1 tl

. . . 11'•

JO&amp;eph H01pltal In Parkfrt:
burg Iller belniiDJund In an
accident last week In whlcb

; o'

their mother and arand·
mother were killed. Bolb.ll't
reported 1D lood I.'GIIdltiun,
recovering uUIIactorlly.
Raytnond't room numller Ia
411, Debbie's 486.

·'·
'i

J,. J

•

8

·dt
'(

•~

39

CUBE STEAKS
ARMOUR

12 02. PKG,

WIENERS
LB,
GROUND BEEF
3 LB. OR MORE
"&gt;

with friends toc;lay .·Aiso, avoid

~ANTED to b~y used piano.

however, you mayteta.forcerui
reasonably pnced , preferably · person make critical decisions
' an uprlg,ht , Phone 992 -3..427 · for you .
1 after 6 p.m.
t

~AN'fE'"~~;~~-j~;-9~ fu"r~lt· ~;; CAPRICC?RN (Dec. 22-Jan.
and household items for con· 11) If you re too harsh en peo~
: signm9nt for auction sale . pie ~ho work for you today,
t

Anyone who is Interested call

1

' 742·2975.

they II find ways to keep their

·

~

own skirts clean. If a mess

RED DELICIOUS3 LB, IWi
APPLES

results, you may be to blame.

AQUANIUI (Jon. 20-,111, 11)
II you're thinking ol filling any
Inside stralghls today, forgellt.

YOU have a service to offer ,
want to buy o r se ll something,
oe looking for work . . . or
whateyer .. . you.' ll get results
1 foster with a Sen ti nel Wont Ad .

Gambles will turn out very

poorly.

·

PISCES (Feb. 20·""'rch

20)

Any domestic decisions should

' Coli
992·2156.
,_
·-----~--·---~-

··-- be handled diplomatically to·
:VARD SALE. Frldoy, Sepl. 10, 10 day. Concede a little rather
a.m. to .4 p.m . Corner Rt . 7 and than loae everything!
Co . Rd. 26, Five Points, Mt. Her .., man Womens Missi onary

~Your
VBirthday

.
'*:~PORCH
.Assn
- --·---------SALE, antiques , collectors
~

~ item!lo ndmiac . l73Hudso nSt .,
·ft Middleport , Ohi o. Wed:!~
:: through Saturday.
·

: rno-·sALE.
THURSDAY .

Sept. 1e, 1171
You could have a few extra
obstaCles to contend with on

wEoNESDAY ,
FRIDAY . In lhe path ol success this year. II
you don't knuckle under, you
can handle them.

The Almaallc

SALE~ T~~rsd"av'." 25 River ·

Uulted Pnt1s Interutional

¥lew Place, Middlepor!. lot of
baby clo.thes , etc.

Today Is Wednesday, Sept.
.,, and fr iday . Archie · Ellis 15, the 259th day of 1978 with
~ residence , Rt . 2, Chesh ire, 107 to follow.
., Ohio. 9 o.m . prompt, roin or ThemOOIIIsbetween·itsfull
~ .. .'~.~~'--··-· .. . .
and Iaiit quarter phasea.
.
f'SUPER VALUE YARD SALE . "7 The morning stars are
:, Family". Fiohor Stroot, Mid· Saturn and Jupiter.
'" dl eport. Phone 992 - 36~7 ,
;:; Weds ., Thursday. Friday.
The evening stan are Merf. Six FAMiiY ·Yard. Sol~ .. Lo•• ol ""!l:...~enborn•andon ~da·te in
.l&amp;n.al'

lice. Watch for signa, alto ,

w

=

BUCKET

Integrity you have cause to

for

CASM paid
ali.. ;;,~ok ;~- ~~d doubt. Your inst incts are
models o! mobile homes . probably right. You have small
Phone area code 614.-~23·9531 . · chance of recovery.

wu

Vlr&amp;o.

.; Bah Sale. Sept. IS. 16. and

z~! 4 a
llle,

LB.

those who criticize you today.
They may be doing It for your

WiLL 00 odd iobs. roofing, pai11 ·
ling , hauling, tree work , and
mowing. Phone 992·7..409.

: from poll oHico. turn at poll ot. liltory are under the sian of

.. ~ .....

·wHOLE FRYERS

pron8

QIMINI (Mo, 21-June 20)

"-' clothes and misc . Fourth house

.Q,j,.. EQ,.

19

Don't come down too hard on

"1

our dinin&amp;

$

TYSON

his shoulder.
TAUIIU8 (Apoll 211-MI, 20)
Your nest egg could fall out of
the tree today. Be careful

~ YARD . SALE . - witl;.~··T;,~ ;;-d"a~ ,

in

LB,

grlettoday because he failed to .

~-='--

01

•

PORK LOIN

underling could cause you ·

Phone 992-5858.

! YARD

E•'

114

Bemk:e Bede 0101

Miners¥1lle, next to Brown's
•· Trailer Pa rk , large tent. rolo·
~ tiller , children's tors . men and
""" women clothing, sizes 8·20.
~ Misc. items .

Tht total prlct for tht lara drink and ~ i . .
.
collecting your set of tight glasses tociiVI (IE•••tyls on, IV 49c. Stlrt
purchased for 39cl
'
mp I asses may bt

9 to 11 .Chops

Grapt-l

dose to Powell's Super Volu:
Phone 992·3658.

LB.

PORK ROAST

Astro-

2 Bedroom troller. real ni;;,
ad ul~• only . Phone M -3324.
5 room furnished opt ,
,.~·,­

!.

can take home a 16 oz. Coc•.Cola gfclju.

WHOLE ·SHOULDER

of Courts

Meigs County
Com man Pleas Court
25 ; l9l t, a, 1s, 22. 29

9'12·3273.

MARKET

of any large 16 oz. toft drink you ..

PQMEROY, OHIO
Prices Effective
Thru Sept. 18, 1976

or Cjvll Protedure , ludgmenl

t~

oz.

For a limited time, wlih the purcha•

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

·
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS. dote.
In case ot
~on..,.enlen t to shopping on

BEER &amp; WINE CARRY-OUT

ANNUAL HOMECOMING
of the. Alfred United
Methodist Cllurch, Sunday,
with Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship service, 10:46
a.m.; basket dinner at 12:30;
afternoon program,l:30 p.m.
Rev. Bishman and members
. of the Rivers of Life M!nlstry
to be present,
COUNTY PRAYER
. meellng, Sunday, 2 p.m. at
the Rutland Community
Cl!urch with Glen .Bissell,
leader.
HOMECOMING Sunday at
MI. Hermon U. B. Church.
The Rev. Eldon Blake from
the Eden U. B. Church will be
the guest speaker. Bulret
dinner at noon. Afternoon
services at I:35 p.m. Putor.
James _Leach Invites the
public to attend.

Mtlas Counly.Ohlo, Pomeroy,
Ohio A5769. The ab lecl or lhls

. 33 . ten miiM north of Pome~oy:
Large loll wlfh concrete patio•
aldewalk1, runnen and ofi
str"t park ing. Phone 992·7479.

89*

Take Home AGlass Today

298 Seco.nd

been asslaned cue

No . t6, 197, and 11 ptnd lng .In
the common Pleas Court of

5434.
COUNTRY Mobile Homo Pork~R;·

ONE

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·lO pm
Sunday 10 am·lO pm

Lilt Known Addrtn. c-o

Geneva Shaver. R:oute No . 3,
ln11 •aid , GaUJpolls , Ohio.
You ere he reby notlfied that
you
have
bttn named
Defendant In a legel aet lon
entlt~td P•tly J. H•rrlson ,
Plelntlff.
.v t . Fred G . .
Harrison , Otftndlnt ; that this

FU~NISHED .

CHICKEN

FAVORITE
BREAD

WE HAVE CHAMPAGNE, LAMBRUSCO

60SW. Main ·

N~~--

MAXWELL HOUSE

PUILIC NOTICE
G . HA.RRISON

TO FRED

R. C.

e. e e •••• e •• I

llfwdlyfTIII

Social
Calendar

Back to school
party enjoyed

9" Pepperoni Pim ........·.99'
Foot ···••e•••e••••••••55'
Milk Shllles ••• e:
Sir

Frtdly Nlgllt Till

........

to

GROUND
BEEF

••••,( •

Pt, Pleas~t
SHAMMl:'S SPECIAL

Opttl All Day Thui'ICIIy

.

.ICE MILK

' AT

Pomeroy, o.

are

11'1'

Frozen Lobster Tails

Fine Perfonnance Last
Friday Night

·Mlddlt of Upper lllock

,l l ldt.!l_._.UD.o;a~~·
n. In ~- lliiiblla

SMOKED JOWL BM:ON

for its

Mto Ice Cold

PLEASURE HORSES ond ponies
also w ill buy ho.-ses ond
ponl01 . Phone (OIA ) 098 3290;
Ruth Roo..,.••·

Kathryn Sanders

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND

"Air C:.diflll'led" ·

OO&lt;h . Phone (301)075·4625.

o.

to the

Hartley 's Shoes

~-:;

Slllon

r---~---------... up~--- SUNDAY.

Tan
Leather

A'Kc Ir ish Setter pups for sole. $75

frGID _ . .. ttd
wllb 1111 'I '117 bf lljl wile
and I · • t"t Kill.
Atr .- I 'laz wn llllde

tlkt bolld17
·~ ' to
tbe '
Jl'lolrer
fJJ'
n-llbowa wwe ~. arranJPitDII durllll the
\lemben tlhibiUDI wert put lew weHa bale been ;
~
-·
Mra. Janet Bolla , Mn. prorided bJ Mrl. lloiiD for
A trip to the Kentucky Marait Blabop, Mn. M1!11t bet cbtlrdl. Reftwlmlenll
Eltlht and Forty pouvlor wu · Dlvla, Mn. Sharm Barr, were ltl"'''ld.
planned at the Monda~ night Mrs•. SUI)' c.rpenter, Mrs.
meeting of the Melp County Juanlll Lambert and Mn.
Salori 710, Eight and Forty, at &lt;llerlolte W!Ufard. Strvllla
the American Legion Hall. on the ehow COOU!litteea were
Making the trip on Oct. 2 Mn. Marie Birchfield, Mn.
will be Mra. Myrtle Wilker, Margaret Edwards, Mn.
Starting .Sept.• 13th
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, Mrs; Lambert 111!1 Mri. Bllhop.
HOUR
Rhoda Hacllett. Mrs. Pearl . A report wu liven on the .
5
Knapp, Mrs; Catherine Welsh OAGC convention with Mr1. •
f: 00.3:00
and Mrs. Miry MarUn. Two Bolin belna lnttaUed 11 .
Phont ff2·2725
recept!ona were amounced. Uliltant aeeretary and Mrs. ·
•
The one for Mra. Audrey ~nter as the mte news . If-'S D-.a..
Glaub, .state chapeau, will be media cbairman. It waa _IWI '. .lliJIIIIII'I
·
held Nov. 14 at the American noted thai at the fair Howll'll
169 H. 2nd. 5t.
LegiOij HaD In Bealey, whlle Blrdlf1eld gaw a demon·
Mlddlnart,
the one for Mrs. Marie Smith, · atration on carving Oliwln
natlmal chapeau will be held
It t.trobe, Pa. date to be
announced later.
Mrs. Walker presided at
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sanders, Rt. 1,
the
meettns which opened In
Reedsville, announC!! the eng,~~~ement and approaching
rltuallst!c form . The flags
marriage of their daughter, Kathryn, to Robert Lee Fort.
were polled by Mra. Brinker,
ney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Fortney, Rt. 1, ReedsIa concierge, and Mra. Veda
ville. The ..,en cllurchweddingwW be an event of Oct. 2at
Davis, l'aumonler, gave the
7p.m. at the UtUe Hocking Cllurch of Olrist.
·prayer.
Poovlor member Mrs. Lula
Hampton and other delega~
reported on the · sllte con.vention held recently In
Columbus, and Mra. Martin
Rave a report 011 the national
[)r. and Mrs. J. B. Marshall
corivent!on
and particularly
who have been visiting this
the
Central
Division break·
past month with Mrs. Mar·
_ fast and caucus.
shall's. sisters, Mrs. Russ
Mrs. Marie Boyd ouUined
WEDNESDAY
Watson and Mrs. John Scott
W(ll'k
for the children and
PASTCOUNCIWRS' Club,
have returned to their horm
Council
323 .youth program for October,
In Louisville, Ky. Whlle here Chester
November and December. A
Daughters
of
America,
8
p.m:
they spent time with their
convention
fund wu started
Wednesday
at
the
hall.
dal!8hter and son-In-law, Mr. ,
with
Mra.
Walker
to serve as
Thelma
White
and
Mary
Kay
and Mrs. Glenil McDonald
chalnnan,
and
~~tveral fund
Holter
wiD
he
.the
hostesses.
and their new daughter; Anne
raising actlvltiea wm be
Michelle, in Chillicothe. They Each member Is asked to carried
LB.
out for thst.
also visited with Mrs. Olan take a small liifi for games.
Mrs.
Pearl
Kna!IP,
nuraes
PAST PRESIDENTS
Genhelmer who. ill critically
American
Legion Auxiliary' scholarahlp chairman,
ill at the home of Mr. and
'
auctloned.off a prlze, ,and the
Mrs. William Knight, Point Drew W~bster Post 39, 7:30 salon
decided
to
1111ll
cancly
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
home
Pleasant, W. Va;
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring and jewelry ~gain lhll year
Mr. and Mrs. John ~· of
Av~.
as fund raising projeets. Mrs.
Marshall, Mayfield, Ky. have
Martin, hostess, was assilled
GIRL
SCOUT
Service
·unit
also been guests the past
in
serving by Mrs. Hackett.
several days wilh John's meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
DIXIElAND
Mrs.
Hyaell and Mrs.
aunts, Mrs. Scott and Mrs. nesday, Columbus and Pearl Julia
Knapp
will
holt
lbe
Watson. They a1sa vl:lited Southern Ohio Electric Co.
next meeting. Members were
Mrs. Genheimer In Point office.
reminded that dues are
Pleasant and returned · to
ROSE GARDEN Club, 8 payable.
Mayfield by way of p.m. Wednesday· at the home
Chillicothe where they will he of Mra. Carl Barnhill, ~ ....~······· ... --.- ~ ---.-.-....
.•.........:=:;W.{:&gt;:·:-.;:;:-:-:•,•,•.~.«':'«q,·W.o?N
guests of the McDonalds and pers Plains.
their new daughters,
THURSDAY
CONCERT SLATED
.2 LB. CAN
MAGNOUA CLUB, ThursA &amp;Gijlel c.eert wfll lie
day, 7:30p.m. at the home of lleld Fridlly, ,,. p.m. ••
lbe 25111 Ave. Mt. Vei'IIGII
Miss Erna Jesse.
.MIDDLEPORT CHILD Cbarclt Nuareae Ill Pobal
Conservation League, 7:30 PleaADl 'l1le CGDCert II
Thursday at the KingsburY llelq spouored by llle
A back to school party was Mobile Home lot for a tour of senior elllzenl te ralle
held for grades one through Modern Chemical Plant . · Iandi for laad wblcll bu
16
six of the Middleport First Following the tour members · beea parebued for a
Baptist Church Sunday will go to the Columbus and lllllllllg IMaie. Fe~~lllred
School Sunday evening at the Southern Ohio Electric Co. lhllefl · wUJ be tbe:
church.
for a meeting.
CaiVIJlllleD ef Cbarlettotl,
A .fall school theme was
GRACE EPISCOPAL W. Va.; lbe Waymarb of
camedo.utrn the decorations . Cllurchwomen, 12:30· Thurs- Hutbaltea. W. Va., aD4 '
16
and pencil bags were given as day for a sack luncheon at the lbe Hnvnly Hlgbway Trio
fa.vors . Games were played · Parish House .
of Middleport Tile pablle II
With mUlllc being provided by
REPUBUCAN WOMEN'S illvlted.
Jennifer I.eiving. Pizza and Club, picnic at the Rock
pop w~re served. Mrs. Springs Grange Hall, Thurs- ::::&lt;:::~i9W##~7.«¥&lt;i:w.'(«{§;?/'$~
REVIVAL MEETING
Marjone Walburn, Miss day, 6 p.m. Bring covered
There
will be a revival
Jerry Pullins and Kathryn dish and table serviCe.
meeting
at
the Silver Run
Metzger were In charge of the
REPUBUCAN..WOMEN'S
Free
Will
Baptist Church
party. C~lldren attending Club picnic Thursday, 6 p.m.
were Angle, Jim and Kim al Rock Springs Grange Hall. starting Sunday and COil·
Farley' John ·Lyons, Eddie Bring covered dish and tabl tlnulng thrqh Oct. 3 wltb
While
Demoskey • aerYlce.
. Everyone welcomee aervlce11 at 7:30 eacb evening.
. • Ronnie
.
Cindy Parker, Mary Beth
· The Rev. Caudle Aklnll of
Huntington, W. Va., Ia the
Brewer, JennHer and Teresa
FRIDAY
MAIN .
.
Lelvlng, Chuck Pullins,
PAS~
MATRONS, speaker . The Rev. Miles
Becky Ambrose, Pam Reibel Evangeline Cllapter, O.E.S. Trout, pastor, utenda an
and Paula Swisher.
7:30p.m. atthehomeofMrs.
to
llllbllc.
Willis Anthony.
SATURDAY
RECOVERING
CHICKEN BARBECUE at
Raymond and Debbie Bost- New Haven city building by
right, Rt. I Long Bottom are New Haven Volunteer Fire
medical patients at st.
Deparlment beginning at 11

PO~E.ROY

My Office Wil Be

$na'

hoiiM ol Mn. ioanretty lor a
mee~. De'IOIIOIII Clll 1be
tbeme "You Are lbe 8111 of
t1!e Earth" wwe pftll bj
Mn. Fetty. Memberl nn
l't!lliDded tbat ltlte, c:oulnty
and re&amp;ional dUll are
paYJible.
The Mtlgl Colllty Fair

SMOKED HAM ms

_

..
1'""'....;.;..._ _ _ _ _"

He re's get-up-and·
go fashion aboard
rugged lug soles. So
tough they're
guaranteed for
100,000 rniles or th e
life of the upper!
Pick a pair of Big Cats
and get movin'.-

Member• of the Rutland
l1'rlendly Gardenera groomed
lbe Jean ParUr MemoNl
Plantlnll at Fore~t Ami
Park at the Iut meellnl ol
lbe club.
·· . The !If~ .then wen~ to the

htsfGrSale

.

.

'

Adonation was made to the
Richard Holsinger fund when
We four women are in our ii(S, We have a friend age 59 the Young Adult Clliss of the
who pals around with a as-year-old woman. .
'
' Bradford Church of Christ
· H we as~ her to go to a flower show, lunch, lecture, met Monday night at the
whatever, with us, she's an for lt - unW her younger friend church.
John Blake had charge of
'calls•.'l'ben she'll turn us down like hot potl!toes for an outing
the
meeting. It was reported
with HER.
·
that
the sign project Is
It aeems UMBtural to prefer people so much below your
finished
and the class
own age group. Either she has a mother-&lt;ia1!8hler fixation or
thanked
·
Brian
Johnson for ·
she's chasing lost youth. Both seem very silly In a mat~e
his
work.
Mrs.
Nancy
Morris
woman.
1
will
send
"mining
you"
Since we ~em to have less and less in common, should we
cards
to
members
of
the
clasa
drop her? - TilE FOl$
who
have
been
absent.
It
was
DEARFOUR:
.
noted
thstonemember,
Gerrl
H you really doo 't care for the 5~year-old 's company' then
Include her out of your, plans. Perhaps she Is simply ~ore Lightfoot, Is hospitalized.
Also, reported . hospitalized
attuned to the under-40 generation.
But don't label her a silly youth chaser. We all have a right were Mrs. Edna Wayland and
to our own preferences : Why should you compatible four Uoyd WUU.ms,
A youth revjval to be held'
resent ONE drop-out? - H.
.
at the church Nov. 18-2i was
+++
announced. It was reported
DEAR HELEN : ·
I'm 32 and being married for the first time. As a business thst the ne1t meeting will be
wllll8n, I never entertained eztenslvely - mostly I took on Oct. 4 at the church with a
potluck dinner and devotions
friendS out I or lunch.
Sloan, iny fiance, ill a widower, quite soclal-mtnded, and by Phyllis .and Richard
·
his wife was a great hostess. I've got the creeping horrors, Gilkey .
wondering how I'll manage in her shoes.
Sonya Wayland had
Collld you give me some' hinta on how to be a relued and devotions using the topic
successful party plaMer? - FEARF1JLLY ANTICIPATING "Not Slaves, But Free" with
sCripture from Gal. 4, 21-31.
DEAR F.A. :
, · A recently published paperback may be just what you To close the meeting Mrs.
need. It's called "Clleck List for Entertaining", and its author, Betty Will gave a demonBarbara Lee Follett, wrote the popular "Check List for a stration of the braille
Perfect Wedding," which has sold over 500,000 copies.
alphabet and t.hOn wrote out
The book (published by Doubleday-Dolphin) includes each name of those attending
everything a host and hostess need know about both flrtll81 in braille. A pizza party was
and jn!C11118llntertaining ..It reminds you of thingB you might enjoyed by the group. Mrs.
easily forget ; offers easy-to-prepare recipes; demonstrates WiD played her autoharp for
ways to be relaJ:edand efficient at the same time, and even has singing by the group.
a chapter m being a good guest.
Attending besides those
Agreat hostess not only pleases her guests, but manages · named were Sylvia and
to feel like a guest at her own parties. I think "Check List for Chuckle Blake, Carol·Morris
Entertaining" will help yoll reach these goals.
· Bonnie and Vicky Pickens:
Here's to a ha~py new life! -H.
Anna Mae Ellis.
SllePrefen Youager Crowd?
DEAR HELEN :

1- The Dally YlfiiDel, Mldd~~oy, 0., Weclln.l.ay,J

Republican
T-'

,. 17111.

·u-...0

:'; Broadway in Racine, S f. "P..
Shaker, curroin s·ond cloth•. ~

9'

·

··-

...

-·

.. , - , .

""".

&gt;

•

•

•

FLAVORITE
00
8 oz.
COOKIES
ASSORTED VARIETIES

10W40 AU CLIMATE

QT.

William

=YJ;iu)s..\ii: ~;t. 1s:-16:·m.; on' ;;'tb:'u~~'sta': ~=

' IW

·. 9-LIVES
CAT FOOD
VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL \

Sep 1• 1.. '
t. .,, Dfl7 •
On thla day In hlslory·
In I"'" arm! ' ...
td

,.YARD SALE . 3 Ftimily. Sept . 1'6. 11
; and 18th. 9:00 rill,6:00. Thlhklilil
....,
es "' a .
,; about win!.!? C9011 . Boolt ana 0ermaDy bepn the siele d
=:, oth•r dothlng ,~in ..,.Orloutlizet . IJtiUnCnd, RUIIIa.
., Dlohos . oln,all.: ~~pllancoo , · In ~ four Nllp'O girll
,.. book•. •o1i. •lc. c.,nor hou10
wn-..ID the bcm"'- of
Ci Hutchioon,SUIIdlorition, Rulland. were- ..
"' Shirley Wllr&gt;n, W ·2595.
I ~urdl · In BlrmiDgham,
: vililti-·sAte·/ thuroday behind':,Alii. Two~-~egro bo)'l were
: Syracus~ DI.Jvo ln . Glrlo llllot 10. -111 thel day as
oo, clothes. 3 to 6X. baby ilomo, ptywlde rilltlnl bn*e out.
'1'1"·.. - .. •
• . • •lnJ888, Gtmlid 2 aplubed
C'ORCH SALE . Sepl. 15. 16. 17, 3 dow!i iD the Allllllllc Ocean
::: milos noriii~'!!.J~ll.i!Sl!~. '1f' , . .,~ord tbree-dly
!'!' old Rt. 33!~,,... , . , IlliCit flllht.

L

PARKAY

KRAFT

CO nO NELLE

N
•

=.
I

MARGARINE
LB •.

39~W/C

Lint it 1 Per Customer .
Good Only At Powell's

COUPON

COUPON,

COUPON____ ~

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROU PACK

5g~

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer'
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 9· 18-76

MIRACLE WHIP
320Z 69~
W/C
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 9-18-76 ·

DOMINO

SUGAR
5 LB, 59~

BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Pow11l's
Offer
9-18·76 ·

W/C

�•

•

8-The DIUv So&gt;nt!uel, Ml~~e~~eroy, 0., Wedne!lday, Se!Jt. l5, 1976

Group works- on planting.

···
Donation
Helen Help
Us ••• By Helen Bottel reported

I

+++

DEAR HELEN :
I've been ~g lately that some of these so-called
phllantroplc o~garuzations spend more on themselves than
they do on charity..How can I know whtch charities deserve my
donationa? -FOR WISE,GIVING
DEARFWG :
Send for a "Wise Giving Guide" to the National
Infonnatlm Bureau, 419 Park Avenue South, New York, N.Y.,
101116. This free booklet Usts most nonreligious fund-raising
charities, as graded by NIB stl!ndards. You may also obtain up
to three Nm repoi'ta at a time on individual agencies by
requeattng them In writing. ·
·
'
The national Information Bureau (a nonprofit
orgllllizatim which a1ao asks voluntary cootrlbutiOIIB)
reeearchea agencies carefully and reports on their acUvltles
how the mmey Is spent, aild whether they are meeting theU:
ltated goals.
.
I wu surprised to find some of 001' malt popular
''jlbllaDtlropie" do not meet NIB's standards. You will be too.
~ H. ·

RIVEISJDE MEDICAL

GROUP ·

Adi.C...tfo
Vetwams
~moria I Hospital
R. A. AYERION, M.D.

A. G. SOLA, M.D.

, JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
C. W. THOMPSON. I,I.D.

tlilce

Hours; 1.. 12 a.m.
-.-Sat., 2-4 p.m. Man ..
Fri .. 7_. p.m. Moft., ~~ .

frf.

...... .•

PHONE992-33n

BOOJ(MOIIILE ROUTE
Meigs, Jackson, Vinton
counties Bookmobile
schedule for Meigs County
Thursday, September 16:
Racine Ele ., 9:30-noon ;
Portland · Ele., 12:30·2:30
p.m.; Reedsville Store, 3:1:&gt;4:30; Long Bottom, 4:45-li:IS;
Success Road, 5:31).6; Texas
Road, 6:30-6:45; State Rt. 7·
Housing, 7,30-7:45; County
Rd. 26, Five Points, Whipple
Road, 8:15-3:30.

Bank 0'11n;,.ers
""'
·
~ J
a wTIU meet
t. 1

Pomerqy, NaUonal Bank
officers and employees at.
lending the Group Seven
Meeting of the Ohio Bankers
Association, In Marietta
Tuesday night were George
S. Hobstetter, Mnine
GrJffjth, Arthur W. 'Nease,
Jr., MarUYI! Wolle, Richard
Poulin, Emilia Midkiff,
Connie Fields, Dorothy
Seth, Linda Spe~. Bonnie
Welch, Don Nelson, Lera
Jones, Donna Nelson, Joan
Wolfe , Doris Snowden,
Marilyn Robinson , Joan May,
and WUllam J. Hobstetter.

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Haggy, Middleport, are
announcing the blrlh of a
daughter, Kimberly Rae,
Friday at the Holzer Medical
Center. The baby weighed
seven pounds, nine ounces.
Grandparenta are Mrs. Eula
Peggy Odegard, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and ' Mrs. James
Gilmore, Pomeroy R. D.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs,
Laurel Cliff, Waller Gilmore,
Colum~. and Mra. Winnie
Hood, Charleston, W. Va.

NOTICE!

n set

rr'.
.l

Ckl sed Sepl 20

100,000 Mile

thru 251nda

Warranty

nu., MD
J
• J• ~
• ,
..__ _ _ _.;.._ __,

Couple visits
relativ~s here

I .

2 bOdrm. _rr,..n r
oduilo ..,ly, In Mlddltpo&lt;t:
Phono 992·3874.
caust hll

3-ANO 4 RM. furnl1~d~~d -un furnithed · opts . Phone 992·

COLA

&amp; PACKAGED ICE

a. &amp; W"me To Go

SHAMMY'S
992-5786

Pomeroy

b.dr~pa rt;;~nt~--~t

Complelnf II for divorce , ·
division of property and other
proper rtlltf o
You are required to answer
within twenty .elgi'lt days after
the last publication of this
notice , one tach WHk tor IlK
suceesslve wee~s . The last

for $1()4 monthly plus elec . or
$130 Including electric. LOWER

1976, and tht fwenty -tl[ih ·
day• . will commence on that

VILLAGE MANOR In Middleport publlcollon will be on Sept . 29f

your failure to
answer , o.r otherwise respond ,•
II required by the Ohio Rules

Th ird .and Mill $tretth 111 Mid·
dleport. Brand new high qual)·

by default Will bl! r endered
for the relief
demanded In this cta lm .

apartments . See the
manager at Apt. 14, or call
992-7721.

ag,lnJt vou

LARRY E. SPENCER,

AVAilABLE at Rl..,.t rtld·; Ap~rt·
ment1, I bedroom apart-·
ments, $100 per month; 2
bedroom opartm.nts 1 $133 per
month . One pi' ice for all . Phone

.

csJ

Cler~

f;-

TRAILER apoct for rent , one 3
, milts from Pomeroy. one in
Dexter , 5 miles from No . 2
mine. Phone 992-5858.

For Thurlclef, lepl. 11, 1178

Alllll (MIIrCh 21·Aprll11) An

2BedrOom mobile .hom-;~ 0;~-,~~~.
2 Bedroom mobile home i~R acf~e
qreo . Phone992-5858 .

follow Instructions. Look over

TWO TRAILERS for rent ; one 3
bedroom unfum ished, one 2
bedroom furnished . Phone

742·3122.

You're eKtravagant and
to

t~ke

unwarranted rltka.

own good. Keep an open mind

to avoid hurting your cause.
QANCIII (June 21..Jul!' 22) Irs
very diHicull to deal with you
today because of your reluc·
tanc_e to say what you really
th ink . Try to be more frank and

OLD furnitur&amp;, ice boxes, brass

bed5, wall telephones and
parts, or complee hOusehold s.

honest.

L!O (Julr 23...a.... U) Don't

Write M . . D . .Miller, Rf. 1 ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call99'2 ·llb0.

-- · - - -

I
and anything tq anyone who~e

TIMBER . Pomeroy
. ducts. Top price

·F;;;;;,; . Pr~· 'VIRQO (Aug. 22-lepl. 22) Try·

lng to bulldoze people Into
agreeing with yOu ,today will
1-446·8570.
• ' ·• avail you' little.' Th.,Y'II realize •
,COINS. 19'29 and olci~7~~~;~-~~V-. · you're a little aelf-nrvlng and
gold and sliver scrap. Will buy Will stiffen their backs.
or trde. t:iave a good selection
of coins to sell or trade. Also, LllftA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) Don't
have supplies and metal assume people are going to
detecors. Roger Wamsley on accept your Ideas today .
Leading creek or:'ld Rutland Sound oth,ers out before
Road . Phone 7..42-2331 for on of · pushing your thBOrles.
•

for standing
saw,timber. Call Kant Hanby ,

fer .
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24·Nor. 22)
SSCASHS$ for junked...~~~o·s. You should not be materialistic
Phone 7..42-2081. Frye 's Truck &amp;
Auto Parts, Rutland .

others who are. Unplusantrles

1969 MERCURY Cougar~~~-;~-;,~.

could result that you 'll later

Coll992·59()2.
·
)'IOULO LIKE to buy jeep lop. Can·
' vos or hardtop. Coll7,42·2038.
~
···-..

regret.
IAQITTAIIIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Normally you're the type
who thinks Individually Todey

.&amp;,E.
...
-tl'... ..
1 tl

. . . 11'•

JO&amp;eph H01pltal In Parkfrt:
burg Iller belniiDJund In an
accident last week In whlcb

; o'

their mother and arand·
mother were killed. Bolb.ll't
reported 1D lood I.'GIIdltiun,
recovering uUIIactorlly.
Raytnond't room numller Ia
411, Debbie's 486.

·'·
'i

J,. J

•

8

·dt
'(

•~

39

CUBE STEAKS
ARMOUR

12 02. PKG,

WIENERS
LB,
GROUND BEEF
3 LB. OR MORE
"&gt;

with friends toc;lay .·Aiso, avoid

~ANTED to b~y used piano.

however, you mayteta.forcerui
reasonably pnced , preferably · person make critical decisions
' an uprlg,ht , Phone 992 -3..427 · for you .
1 after 6 p.m.
t

~AN'fE'"~~;~~-j~;-9~ fu"r~lt· ~;; CAPRICC?RN (Dec. 22-Jan.
and household items for con· 11) If you re too harsh en peo~
: signm9nt for auction sale . pie ~ho work for you today,
t

Anyone who is Interested call

1

' 742·2975.

they II find ways to keep their

·

~

own skirts clean. If a mess

RED DELICIOUS3 LB, IWi
APPLES

results, you may be to blame.

AQUANIUI (Jon. 20-,111, 11)
II you're thinking ol filling any
Inside stralghls today, forgellt.

YOU have a service to offer ,
want to buy o r se ll something,
oe looking for work . . . or
whateyer .. . you.' ll get results
1 foster with a Sen ti nel Wont Ad .

Gambles will turn out very

poorly.

·

PISCES (Feb. 20·""'rch

20)

Any domestic decisions should

' Coli
992·2156.
,_
·-----~--·---~-

··-- be handled diplomatically to·
:VARD SALE. Frldoy, Sepl. 10, 10 day. Concede a little rather
a.m. to .4 p.m . Corner Rt . 7 and than loae everything!
Co . Rd. 26, Five Points, Mt. Her .., man Womens Missi onary

~Your
VBirthday

.
'*:~PORCH
.Assn
- --·---------SALE, antiques , collectors
~

~ item!lo ndmiac . l73Hudso nSt .,
·ft Middleport , Ohi o. Wed:!~
:: through Saturday.
·

: rno-·sALE.
THURSDAY .

Sept. 1e, 1171
You could have a few extra
obstaCles to contend with on

wEoNESDAY ,
FRIDAY . In lhe path ol success this year. II
you don't knuckle under, you
can handle them.

The Almaallc

SALE~ T~~rsd"av'." 25 River ·

Uulted Pnt1s Interutional

¥lew Place, Middlepor!. lot of
baby clo.thes , etc.

Today Is Wednesday, Sept.
.,, and fr iday . Archie · Ellis 15, the 259th day of 1978 with
~ residence , Rt . 2, Chesh ire, 107 to follow.
., Ohio. 9 o.m . prompt, roin or ThemOOIIIsbetween·itsfull
~ .. .'~.~~'--··-· .. . .
and Iaiit quarter phasea.
.
f'SUPER VALUE YARD SALE . "7 The morning stars are
:, Family". Fiohor Stroot, Mid· Saturn and Jupiter.
'" dl eport. Phone 992 - 36~7 ,
;:; Weds ., Thursday. Friday.
The evening stan are Merf. Six FAMiiY ·Yard. Sol~ .. Lo•• ol ""!l:...~enborn•andon ~da·te in
.l&amp;n.al'

lice. Watch for signa, alto ,

w

=

BUCKET

Integrity you have cause to

for

CASM paid
ali.. ;;,~ok ;~- ~~d doubt. Your inst incts are
models o! mobile homes . probably right. You have small
Phone area code 614.-~23·9531 . · chance of recovery.

wu

Vlr&amp;o.

.; Bah Sale. Sept. IS. 16. and

z~! 4 a
llle,

LB.

those who criticize you today.
They may be doing It for your

WiLL 00 odd iobs. roofing, pai11 ·
ling , hauling, tree work , and
mowing. Phone 992·7..409.

: from poll oHico. turn at poll ot. liltory are under the sian of

.. ~ .....

·wHOLE FRYERS

pron8

QIMINI (Mo, 21-June 20)

"-' clothes and misc . Fourth house

.Q,j,.. EQ,.

19

Don't come down too hard on

"1

our dinin&amp;

$

TYSON

his shoulder.
TAUIIU8 (Apoll 211-MI, 20)
Your nest egg could fall out of
the tree today. Be careful

~ YARD . SALE . - witl;.~··T;,~ ;;-d"a~ ,

in

LB,

grlettoday because he failed to .

~-='--

01

•

PORK LOIN

underling could cause you ·

Phone 992-5858.

! YARD

E•'

114

Bemk:e Bede 0101

Miners¥1lle, next to Brown's
•· Trailer Pa rk , large tent. rolo·
~ tiller , children's tors . men and
""" women clothing, sizes 8·20.
~ Misc. items .

Tht total prlct for tht lara drink and ~ i . .
.
collecting your set of tight glasses tociiVI (IE•••tyls on, IV 49c. Stlrt
purchased for 39cl
'
mp I asses may bt

9 to 11 .Chops

Grapt-l

dose to Powell's Super Volu:
Phone 992·3658.

LB.

PORK ROAST

Astro-

2 Bedroom troller. real ni;;,
ad ul~• only . Phone M -3324.
5 room furnished opt ,
,.~·,­

!.

can take home a 16 oz. Coc•.Cola gfclju.

WHOLE ·SHOULDER

of Courts

Meigs County
Com man Pleas Court
25 ; l9l t, a, 1s, 22. 29

9'12·3273.

MARKET

of any large 16 oz. toft drink you ..

PQMEROY, OHIO
Prices Effective
Thru Sept. 18, 1976

or Cjvll Protedure , ludgmenl

t~

oz.

For a limited time, wlih the purcha•

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

·
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS. dote.
In case ot
~on..,.enlen t to shopping on

BEER &amp; WINE CARRY-OUT

ANNUAL HOMECOMING
of the. Alfred United
Methodist Cllurch, Sunday,
with Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship service, 10:46
a.m.; basket dinner at 12:30;
afternoon program,l:30 p.m.
Rev. Bishman and members
. of the Rivers of Life M!nlstry
to be present,
COUNTY PRAYER
. meellng, Sunday, 2 p.m. at
the Rutland Community
Cl!urch with Glen .Bissell,
leader.
HOMECOMING Sunday at
MI. Hermon U. B. Church.
The Rev. Eldon Blake from
the Eden U. B. Church will be
the guest speaker. Bulret
dinner at noon. Afternoon
services at I:35 p.m. Putor.
James _Leach Invites the
public to attend.

Mtlas Counly.Ohlo, Pomeroy,
Ohio A5769. The ab lecl or lhls

. 33 . ten miiM north of Pome~oy:
Large loll wlfh concrete patio•
aldewalk1, runnen and ofi
str"t park ing. Phone 992·7479.

89*

Take Home AGlass Today

298 Seco.nd

been asslaned cue

No . t6, 197, and 11 ptnd lng .In
the common Pleas Court of

5434.
COUNTRY Mobile Homo Pork~R;·

ONE

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·lO pm
Sunday 10 am·lO pm

Lilt Known Addrtn. c-o

Geneva Shaver. R:oute No . 3,
ln11 •aid , GaUJpolls , Ohio.
You ere he reby notlfied that
you
have
bttn named
Defendant In a legel aet lon
entlt~td P•tly J. H•rrlson ,
Plelntlff.
.v t . Fred G . .
Harrison , Otftndlnt ; that this

FU~NISHED .

CHICKEN

FAVORITE
BREAD

WE HAVE CHAMPAGNE, LAMBRUSCO

60SW. Main ·

N~~--

MAXWELL HOUSE

PUILIC NOTICE
G . HA.RRISON

TO FRED

R. C.

e. e e •••• e •• I

llfwdlyfTIII

Social
Calendar

Back to school
party enjoyed

9" Pepperoni Pim ........·.99'
Foot ···••e•••e••••••••55'
Milk Shllles ••• e:
Sir

Frtdly Nlgllt Till

........

to

GROUND
BEEF

••••,( •

Pt, Pleas~t
SHAMMl:'S SPECIAL

Opttl All Day Thui'ICIIy

.

.ICE MILK

' AT

Pomeroy, o.

are

11'1'

Frozen Lobster Tails

Fine Perfonnance Last
Friday Night

·Mlddlt of Upper lllock

,l l ldt.!l_._.UD.o;a~~·
n. In ~- lliiiblla

SMOKED JOWL BM:ON

for its

Mto Ice Cold

PLEASURE HORSES ond ponies
also w ill buy ho.-ses ond
ponl01 . Phone (OIA ) 098 3290;
Ruth Roo..,.••·

Kathryn Sanders

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL BAND

"Air C:.diflll'led" ·

OO&lt;h . Phone (301)075·4625.

o.

to the

Hartley 's Shoes

~-:;

Slllon

r---~---------... up~--- SUNDAY.

Tan
Leather

A'Kc Ir ish Setter pups for sole. $75

frGID _ . .. ttd
wllb 1111 'I '117 bf lljl wile
and I · • t"t Kill.
Atr .- I 'laz wn llllde

tlkt bolld17
·~ ' to
tbe '
Jl'lolrer
fJJ'
n-llbowa wwe ~. arranJPitDII durllll the
\lemben tlhibiUDI wert put lew weHa bale been ;
~
-·
Mra. Janet Bolla , Mn. prorided bJ Mrl. lloiiD for
A trip to the Kentucky Marait Blabop, Mn. M1!11t bet cbtlrdl. Reftwlmlenll
Eltlht and Forty pouvlor wu · Dlvla, Mn. Sharm Barr, were ltl"'''ld.
planned at the Monda~ night Mrs•. SUI)' c.rpenter, Mrs.
meeting of the Melp County Juanlll Lambert and Mn.
Salori 710, Eight and Forty, at &lt;llerlolte W!Ufard. Strvllla
the American Legion Hall. on the ehow COOU!litteea were
Making the trip on Oct. 2 Mn. Marie Birchfield, Mn.
will be Mra. Myrtle Wilker, Margaret Edwards, Mn.
Starting .Sept.• 13th
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, Mrs; Lambert 111!1 Mri. Bllhop.
HOUR
Rhoda Hacllett. Mrs. Pearl . A report wu liven on the .
5
Knapp, Mrs; Catherine Welsh OAGC convention with Mr1. •
f: 00.3:00
and Mrs. Miry MarUn. Two Bolin belna lnttaUed 11 .
Phont ff2·2725
recept!ona were amounced. Uliltant aeeretary and Mrs. ·
•
The one for Mra. Audrey ~nter as the mte news . If-'S D-.a..
Glaub, .state chapeau, will be media cbairman. It waa _IWI '. .lliJIIIIII'I
·
held Nov. 14 at the American noted thai at the fair Howll'll
169 H. 2nd. 5t.
LegiOij HaD In Bealey, whlle Blrdlf1eld gaw a demon·
Mlddlnart,
the one for Mrs. Marie Smith, · atration on carving Oliwln
natlmal chapeau will be held
It t.trobe, Pa. date to be
announced later.
Mrs. Walker presided at
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Sanders, Rt. 1,
the
meettns which opened In
Reedsville, announC!! the eng,~~~ement and approaching
rltuallst!c form . The flags
marriage of their daughter, Kathryn, to Robert Lee Fort.
were polled by Mra. Brinker,
ney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Fortney, Rt. 1, ReedsIa concierge, and Mra. Veda
ville. The ..,en cllurchweddingwW be an event of Oct. 2at
Davis, l'aumonler, gave the
7p.m. at the UtUe Hocking Cllurch of Olrist.
·prayer.
Poovlor member Mrs. Lula
Hampton and other delega~
reported on the · sllte con.vention held recently In
Columbus, and Mra. Martin
Rave a report 011 the national
[)r. and Mrs. J. B. Marshall
corivent!on
and particularly
who have been visiting this
the
Central
Division break·
past month with Mrs. Mar·
_ fast and caucus.
shall's. sisters, Mrs. Russ
Mrs. Marie Boyd ouUined
WEDNESDAY
Watson and Mrs. John Scott
W(ll'k
for the children and
PASTCOUNCIWRS' Club,
have returned to their horm
Council
323 .youth program for October,
In Louisville, Ky. Whlle here Chester
November and December. A
Daughters
of
America,
8
p.m:
they spent time with their
convention
fund wu started
Wednesday
at
the
hall.
dal!8hter and son-In-law, Mr. ,
with
Mra.
Walker
to serve as
Thelma
White
and
Mary
Kay
and Mrs. Glenil McDonald
chalnnan,
and
~~tveral fund
Holter
wiD
he
.the
hostesses.
and their new daughter; Anne
raising actlvltiea wm be
Michelle, in Chillicothe. They Each member Is asked to carried
LB.
out for thst.
also visited with Mrs. Olan take a small liifi for games.
Mrs.
Pearl
Kna!IP,
nuraes
PAST PRESIDENTS
Genhelmer who. ill critically
American
Legion Auxiliary' scholarahlp chairman,
ill at the home of Mr. and
'
auctloned.off a prlze, ,and the
Mrs. William Knight, Point Drew W~bster Post 39, 7:30 salon
decided
to
1111ll
cancly
p.m.
Wednesday
at
the
home
Pleasant, W. Va;
Mrs. Harry Davis, Spring and jewelry ~gain lhll year
Mr. and Mrs. John ~· of
Av~.
as fund raising projeets. Mrs.
Marshall, Mayfield, Ky. have
Martin, hostess, was assilled
GIRL
SCOUT
Service
·unit
also been guests the past
in
serving by Mrs. Hackett.
several days wilh John's meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
DIXIElAND
Mrs.
Hyaell and Mrs.
aunts, Mrs. Scott and Mrs. nesday, Columbus and Pearl Julia
Knapp
will
holt
lbe
Watson. They a1sa vl:lited Southern Ohio Electric Co.
next meeting. Members were
Mrs. Genheimer In Point office.
reminded that dues are
Pleasant and returned · to
ROSE GARDEN Club, 8 payable.
Mayfield by way of p.m. Wednesday· at the home
Chillicothe where they will he of Mra. Carl Barnhill, ~ ....~······· ... --.- ~ ---.-.-....
.•.........:=:;W.{:&gt;:·:-.;:;:-:-:•,•,•.~.«':'«q,·W.o?N
guests of the McDonalds and pers Plains.
their new daughters,
THURSDAY
CONCERT SLATED
.2 LB. CAN
MAGNOUA CLUB, ThursA &amp;Gijlel c.eert wfll lie
day, 7:30p.m. at the home of lleld Fridlly, ,,. p.m. ••
lbe 25111 Ave. Mt. Vei'IIGII
Miss Erna Jesse.
.MIDDLEPORT CHILD Cbarclt Nuareae Ill Pobal
Conservation League, 7:30 PleaADl 'l1le CGDCert II
Thursday at the KingsburY llelq spouored by llle
A back to school party was Mobile Home lot for a tour of senior elllzenl te ralle
held for grades one through Modern Chemical Plant . · Iandi for laad wblcll bu
16
six of the Middleport First Following the tour members · beea parebued for a
Baptist Church Sunday will go to the Columbus and lllllllllg IMaie. Fe~~lllred
School Sunday evening at the Southern Ohio Electric Co. lhllefl · wUJ be tbe:
church.
for a meeting.
CaiVIJlllleD ef Cbarlettotl,
A .fall school theme was
GRACE EPISCOPAL W. Va.; lbe Waymarb of
camedo.utrn the decorations . Cllurchwomen, 12:30· Thurs- Hutbaltea. W. Va., aD4 '
16
and pencil bags were given as day for a sack luncheon at the lbe Hnvnly Hlgbway Trio
fa.vors . Games were played · Parish House .
of Middleport Tile pablle II
With mUlllc being provided by
REPUBUCAN WOMEN'S illvlted.
Jennifer I.eiving. Pizza and Club, picnic at the Rock
pop w~re served. Mrs. Springs Grange Hall, Thurs- ::::&lt;:::~i9W##~7.«¥&lt;i:w.'(«{§;?/'$~
REVIVAL MEETING
Marjone Walburn, Miss day, 6 p.m. Bring covered
There
will be a revival
Jerry Pullins and Kathryn dish and table serviCe.
meeting
at
the Silver Run
Metzger were In charge of the
REPUBUCAN..WOMEN'S
Free
Will
Baptist Church
party. C~lldren attending Club picnic Thursday, 6 p.m.
were Angle, Jim and Kim al Rock Springs Grange Hall. starting Sunday and COil·
Farley' John ·Lyons, Eddie Bring covered dish and tabl tlnulng thrqh Oct. 3 wltb
While
Demoskey • aerYlce.
. Everyone welcomee aervlce11 at 7:30 eacb evening.
. • Ronnie
.
Cindy Parker, Mary Beth
· The Rev. Caudle Aklnll of
Huntington, W. Va., Ia the
Brewer, JennHer and Teresa
FRIDAY
MAIN .
.
Lelvlng, Chuck Pullins,
PAS~
MATRONS, speaker . The Rev. Miles
Becky Ambrose, Pam Reibel Evangeline Cllapter, O.E.S. Trout, pastor, utenda an
and Paula Swisher.
7:30p.m. atthehomeofMrs.
to
llllbllc.
Willis Anthony.
SATURDAY
RECOVERING
CHICKEN BARBECUE at
Raymond and Debbie Bost- New Haven city building by
right, Rt. I Long Bottom are New Haven Volunteer Fire
medical patients at st.
Deparlment beginning at 11

PO~E.ROY

My Office Wil Be

$na'

hoiiM ol Mn. ioanretty lor a
mee~. De'IOIIOIII Clll 1be
tbeme "You Are lbe 8111 of
t1!e Earth" wwe pftll bj
Mn. Fetty. Memberl nn
l't!lliDded tbat ltlte, c:oulnty
and re&amp;ional dUll are
paYJible.
The Mtlgl Colllty Fair

SMOKED HAM ms

_

..
1'""'....;.;..._ _ _ _ _"

He re's get-up-and·
go fashion aboard
rugged lug soles. So
tough they're
guaranteed for
100,000 rniles or th e
life of the upper!
Pick a pair of Big Cats
and get movin'.-

Member• of the Rutland
l1'rlendly Gardenera groomed
lbe Jean ParUr MemoNl
Plantlnll at Fore~t Ami
Park at the Iut meellnl ol
lbe club.
·· . The !If~ .then wen~ to the

htsfGrSale

.

.

'

Adonation was made to the
Richard Holsinger fund when
We four women are in our ii(S, We have a friend age 59 the Young Adult Clliss of the
who pals around with a as-year-old woman. .
'
' Bradford Church of Christ
· H we as~ her to go to a flower show, lunch, lecture, met Monday night at the
whatever, with us, she's an for lt - unW her younger friend church.
John Blake had charge of
'calls•.'l'ben she'll turn us down like hot potl!toes for an outing
the
meeting. It was reported
with HER.
·
that
the sign project Is
It aeems UMBtural to prefer people so much below your
finished
and the class
own age group. Either she has a mother-&lt;ia1!8hler fixation or
thanked
·
Brian
Johnson for ·
she's chasing lost youth. Both seem very silly In a mat~e
his
work.
Mrs.
Nancy
Morris
woman.
1
will
send
"mining
you"
Since we ~em to have less and less in common, should we
cards
to
members
of
the
clasa
drop her? - TilE FOl$
who
have
been
absent.
It
was
DEARFOUR:
.
noted
thstonemember,
Gerrl
H you really doo 't care for the 5~year-old 's company' then
Include her out of your, plans. Perhaps she Is simply ~ore Lightfoot, Is hospitalized.
Also, reported . hospitalized
attuned to the under-40 generation.
But don't label her a silly youth chaser. We all have a right were Mrs. Edna Wayland and
to our own preferences : Why should you compatible four Uoyd WUU.ms,
A youth revjval to be held'
resent ONE drop-out? - H.
.
at the church Nov. 18-2i was
+++
announced. It was reported
DEAR HELEN : ·
I'm 32 and being married for the first time. As a business thst the ne1t meeting will be
wllll8n, I never entertained eztenslvely - mostly I took on Oct. 4 at the church with a
potluck dinner and devotions
friendS out I or lunch.
Sloan, iny fiance, ill a widower, quite soclal-mtnded, and by Phyllis .and Richard
·
his wife was a great hostess. I've got the creeping horrors, Gilkey .
wondering how I'll manage in her shoes.
Sonya Wayland had
Collld you give me some' hinta on how to be a relued and devotions using the topic
successful party plaMer? - FEARF1JLLY ANTICIPATING "Not Slaves, But Free" with
sCripture from Gal. 4, 21-31.
DEAR F.A. :
, · A recently published paperback may be just what you To close the meeting Mrs.
need. It's called "Clleck List for Entertaining", and its author, Betty Will gave a demonBarbara Lee Follett, wrote the popular "Check List for a stration of the braille
Perfect Wedding," which has sold over 500,000 copies.
alphabet and t.hOn wrote out
The book (published by Doubleday-Dolphin) includes each name of those attending
everything a host and hostess need know about both flrtll81 in braille. A pizza party was
and jn!C11118llntertaining ..It reminds you of thingB you might enjoyed by the group. Mrs.
easily forget ; offers easy-to-prepare recipes; demonstrates WiD played her autoharp for
ways to be relaJ:edand efficient at the same time, and even has singing by the group.
a chapter m being a good guest.
Attending besides those
Agreat hostess not only pleases her guests, but manages · named were Sylvia and
to feel like a guest at her own parties. I think "Check List for Chuckle Blake, Carol·Morris
Entertaining" will help yoll reach these goals.
· Bonnie and Vicky Pickens:
Here's to a ha~py new life! -H.
Anna Mae Ellis.
SllePrefen Youager Crowd?
DEAR HELEN :

1- The Dally YlfiiDel, Mldd~~oy, 0., Weclln.l.ay,J

Republican
T-'

,. 17111.

·u-...0

:'; Broadway in Racine, S f. "P..
Shaker, curroin s·ond cloth•. ~

9'

·

··-

...

-·

.. , - , .

""".

&gt;

•

•

•

FLAVORITE
00
8 oz.
COOKIES
ASSORTED VARIETIES

10W40 AU CLIMATE

QT.

William

=YJ;iu)s..\ii: ~;t. 1s:-16:·m.; on' ;;'tb:'u~~'sta': ~=

' IW

·. 9-LIVES
CAT FOOD
VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL \

Sep 1• 1.. '
t. .,, Dfl7 •
On thla day In hlslory·
In I"'" arm! ' ...
td

,.YARD SALE . 3 Ftimily. Sept . 1'6. 11
; and 18th. 9:00 rill,6:00. Thlhklilil
....,
es "' a .
,; about win!.!? C9011 . Boolt ana 0ermaDy bepn the siele d
=:, oth•r dothlng ,~in ..,.Orloutlizet . IJtiUnCnd, RUIIIa.
., Dlohos . oln,all.: ~~pllancoo , · In ~ four Nllp'O girll
,.. book•. •o1i. •lc. c.,nor hou10
wn-..ID the bcm"'- of
Ci Hutchioon,SUIIdlorition, Rulland. were- ..
"' Shirley Wllr&gt;n, W ·2595.
I ~urdl · In BlrmiDgham,
: vililti-·sAte·/ thuroday behind':,Alii. Two~-~egro bo)'l were
: Syracus~ DI.Jvo ln . Glrlo llllot 10. -111 thel day as
oo, clothes. 3 to 6X. baby ilomo, ptywlde rilltlnl bn*e out.
'1'1"·.. - .. •
• . • •lnJ888, Gtmlid 2 aplubed
C'ORCH SALE . Sepl. 15. 16. 17, 3 dow!i iD the Allllllllc Ocean
::: milos noriii~'!!.J~ll.i!Sl!~. '1f' , . .,~ord tbree-dly
!'!' old Rt. 33!~,,... , . , IlliCit flllht.

L

PARKAY

KRAFT

CO nO NELLE

N
•

=.
I

MARGARINE
LB •.

39~W/C

Lint it 1 Per Customer .
Good Only At Powell's

COUPON

COUPON,

COUPON____ ~

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROU PACK

5g~

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer'
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 9· 18-76

MIRACLE WHIP
320Z 69~
W/C
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 9-18-76 ·

DOMINO

SUGAR
5 LB, 59~

BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Pow11l's
Offer
9-18·76 ·

W/C

�1~:-~ Dlllj Sentlne~ Mlddl...§OI'W'cmeroy, 0., Wedne~y, Seot.l$.11176

.~ub~:f:tjf~\:. .r. ss:d~~~:~~.~~: :~r;~:o; ;~ For Fast 'Results Use The Sentinel IClassifie~~

I

••

Canctllltlons,
corrac .
tt&amp;ns acr:tpttd tlrSt daY of
D'Vbllcttlan .

son or persons who took the
aluminum •idinv off the Alt)ert
Rosebtorry houn on the lo•han

RIEGULATIONS

and Keno Rood. County Road
28 . 1 still owe $18,000 on It . My
address is 483 S. Miller A\le.,
,. 1 b n•
1
._o um US , vnio , P IOit get in
touch with the Meigs County

The Publlll'ltr ruervtt

r•l•ct

the right to tdlt or

any l&lt;fl dttmed Ob ·
ltctlanill. The pUbl iSher
will not_be responsible for
mort thlft one Incorrect
lnstrtlon ·

RATES

5 cents per word one

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

mwrm~m ~·

-

.

Sheriff Office.

50

word

ac -ai:fdltlonal word J

ogain with our usual good

no hunting

·-~·--

Dall~ , 8 ~ 30 a .m . to 12 :00
Noon Saturday.
PhOn@! fOdiY 9U-2f.56.

NOTI,ES
ATTN.: It
HOUSEWtV'ES

ALL

WANTED

c5769.

Experienced
secretary for medica I
secretarial position.

G•t ;ours In eorly by
stopping by our ott!ce at
The Daily Sentine-l, 111
Court St . or writing Box

729, Pomeroy, Ohio •S769
With your remitta,nce .

~--------.....J'

· WE WISH to thank. her neighbors
a nd friendS. for their kindness
during the deottl of Almg Ohlinger. Also, thanks to the- out
of town frie-nds thQt Sef'lf
flowers, Presbyterton Church.
Special thonks to R....- . Dwight
la" ifl ond the R:owlings Coots
Nnerol Home. pallbeore«..
. Paul Smart Harold O'Kise-,
Willis Anthony, leo Searles, £-d.
win Wehrung , Jomes futef'.
Your kindne$$ wos greotly op-

p&lt;e&lt;ioted. l _ , K. K""l ond
Mrs. Hefmon OhliAgef.

WOUlD tike to expren. my
sincere appf'edaJion lo a ll who
sent llowet"s. mrds. ood visittif
during my rec.nt confli n~t
at Verer-ons A.\emoriol HospHo-L
Speciol .no.,k, to
hosp;tol
staff, Or. Pickens-. Dr. leU•.
m:ini5ten. who ... ~ited me on Q
regulor bmis ·ond t'hose ll'itlo
kept me i_n prayers.-. 'Your kindness will never be for90Uen .
Mn .
Sr .

"'*

SHOOllNG

-

~. •-~ed

•·-

·

Good typist . Shorth10d

, 992 ,~9;65 .
~==:..:_-~----

C.1ir Wlnled
, For tbe Syracuse
...... urn utra

lint money and

IP

v•fwabJe prizes. C.ll

'"·•&gt; 992-2156

.• OiiJ Seillillel
POMEROY,O.

Gaii:::
"::.:992
;::::·:..:1A::.:l;;
O:....- - -- ; -

JJ5 ond 110 1go:L S-lonat j an; 101 the
Odds .and Enik $hcp~ 'Pohooe
'992-617.3

c.,.:_:·;,'- - - - - &lt;. :1-. ,RodiOJ; ~.or idle~ ~rene

l.alo,..,.

625owi&lt;th!laad1Kin_;pct...- .mlke
$! 25~;
'23 cltonnet
S &gt;M1t1 woic.ey-:to1key with, MX
StOO.OO~ ~nson ua Mdbfl-'
-C..1I. phone S lOOm; 3 ·mobile
onlf!:f'lfll)i ;

Detnoo 50 wr;rt1
• -~ and • r,..mp

WANDD

CHIPWOOD

"t.

Pola maa. . lll.rmd" lt ladla •
largest eud.

BUNDUD SLABS '6 PEl TON
DeUverT•

OHIO PALLET .COMPANY
Rt.Z Pomerey, Oblo .

~

.....

149 ACRE farm. ltwc ho:uH!S, -ci.itr
water. miner.ol &lt;oight&lt;. good
pos:tur.e iland , 75 ,OC!res illo'ble~
somefir:n'ber, .se:we.rol:butldings,
8mile:s.nO:rth ofp~ otfl.t.
~ . Hem1o&lt;I&lt;Gtoov.o, ""
""io . . ...
tng 'SliS!JOO.. :Phor..e 992~501 4
oher'Sp,m,
• • · - - - - - - - ••
GC&gt;t!INTIY 5JotE .,....i lh or wjt:hout
s.toodM: , 1101-0line tri , llviflg
q~XJ~~'!· 5 · 1'~r..ot~ f·OOmd ,.nioe

1

SJQh··~·,,(j Moe i;Df"l:ver ~~

1 J~:~te

__

.tl'l:d bvt 9.1'tC.Jier1t .operatioo,
120. .M.taJ !in~woJI medk~ne
c.aibH:le-1, 15x21 .ope.ning, .over.o'lt
18x28. with: lwo moldlif\g
..._ '""''· Exc..ll.... condi·
roon. $211 lor '""
8,55·1 s
·6 J- roy9fl liro. ~ . .54.

-

MAIN
POM!:.ROY, o.
WE AilE IN GRE4T
~EO OF LISTINGS WE HAV'E QUALIFIED
.UYIERS FOR ALL
OF PIIOPEIITYSE.LL CALL US NOW.

---..--

COHH ,..,.... "'ed 2 ,..,,,

HENRY E. CLEUN D
$100. Phono7i2·309.2.
• IROKER, APPRAISER;
1'170 TIIWMPI! 6l00topp.o-, N4oW
CONSULTANT
point ..... ,.._ '192·5~2 "'
m.225f or m.2ua
- Dovid ..tldrll, ~&lt;lttic H;lls

..-------

at L~e, Jyrowu~ Oh~.
l&gt;OTATOE$ .ond P&lt;Jmpldns. 1;. W.
Prolflll, Portlootd, Oltio. l'ltor&gt;e
1143-12SI.

Pb.;;~~~

.J~U

Ont 100d VHCI Gibson
I.
)

Applications are now ltelng
a«epted for a •rvlce station
attendant. We nHd a mature
adult, no students. Hours 4 to
9 PM 6 days a WHir,

•

Call, • • 6754240

.. , . - . sldt·ll'f·lida -

Mllca "' an olftr,
Good
Ultd
G. E.
rafrt_.raiOr.
$200
0nt good UHd Homtltle EZ
Ch.ln S.w
· SilO
Ont . . . .... Homelltt
XL Clllln S.w. $200

s..,...

n
ta •··• • ,
li.-e,•-r,:r.,-,

f

R'- till tstiliJ:!J
·sifF
·;jif
- .. .-::. :-;.

"'-·~

AMOCO OIL COMPANY

HOMESITE$ l0&lt; oolo,

t

ocrt ond

up. Mlddl•port, near Rutland.

Coll992·7481 .
·-·· -·--· .... -·-· ·NEW 3 bedr-oom ho"'". 2 baths,
oil oltc., I aero, Mlcfcllopott,
do•• to Rutland. Pt.on. 992-·
7481.

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
1! 0/Mechonic ·Pomeroy, 0 .

Phonem-m\.

ATTENTION I
18 Acres In city limits.
water and sewer available,
IIOOd location for develop.
.ment. I hove map of area If
lnlerested.
CHECk THIS.OUTI
311:! Acres In town on quiet
slreot, can be divided Into
lots or beautiful location
for private homt.
Have several buslneu
properllts . If Interested
call.

... W.MIIn
Pltmlf'oy . ff2·22fl
Alflf' Hours Call
992-7113

MHfl1 1-22·1 mo.

FABRIC

For sof1, ciYir cushions.

maltrenes, .,.ddi"ff. Ideal
tor campers. Variety o1
sires.
Velvets , nylon prints,
horculons, vinyl solids. end
Ieney prints, eccessorin.

S3.500.

SECLU,OEO
\'our
laml ly will enjoy
privacy of 11 acres, A
bedrooms. ll!z baths. 111•
fu rnace,

good

spring

water. .8 acres f.e nced,

$29.000.
CAREFULLY - CGnslder
this 2'1 acres of woods. Has
1 lA x 70 3 bedroom mobl.le
home with dty water and
tuet oil furnooe, $22,500.
PRIVATE Formal
dln lng, modern kitchen,
largo family room wlttl
l!tW ·flr,eplaoe. 3 bedrooms.
Wllh room, iJII Well,
furnoat and 15 acres, only
HEW LISTING - 2'!&lt;o acres
Rutland. c room
bolh, gas heat, 2
2 outbuildings.

,

UH

BORNWSER
Wool

I))H~, tJO,

...co 401.l

(;l)CTO!&lt;

HAIJ~

.BA~TI 11/oG t.:o

''

l,.!w:;:":":."'•:;·~•:::;•·..!.'!,u::;•!,!!"!.'::::
P·I'c:!":."- - - - - - - - - -- '

Open lor Fell &amp; Wlnlor

lull ol f ·lorlde IOIIIIt
plants. Onr 10 Yarletlu In

East followed · with the
deuce of the suit and West,
who was one of those suit·

r:n·n. E ORI','RAN ALiT T L E

0 R PH o\N ANNIE-PRO 0 F

9::10-S:OO O.ily
Till I : 000 FridiYS

I'LL

to s ft. dttp wllllor without
pipe furnlslted. Under roM
bores up to 12" pip&amp; sire. ·

STOCK. Buy, s.eit , trade. 478
Richland, Alhens, Ohio 45701.

Phone (61CJ 5'13·8'106.

IT IS .. CHICKEN

FEED··

LroER"

OUT OF

ALL THIS··I Olt&gt;M'T

~~1'1.\!r";10il'~J!~50NAL
PREPAREDNESS,

H~ SAJp..

the ace.

,

-

11

111. From 4!' to, .. pots &amp; 6" '
to ID" hentlng bii~OII . 7$(
,,
·•• ·16,00 ,

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·1C78
9-12-1 mo. pd .

1!2-5776

1-2·1 mo.

A Canadian reader wants to
know the correct response to
your partner 's one·spade
opening bid with :
•1085 •J 43 tA 1082• K71.
'!'he correct response is a
raile to two spades. Even if
your partner has only four ·
spades and a minimum opener
lwo spades ill likely to be a
better contract that one
notrump. U he has a good
hand you can 1et to notrump If
the bidding proceeds the rl1ht
way .

u:

(Do you have a question
tor ·the e•perts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys wm
answer individual questions
it slamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
will be used In this column
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.}

A FEW ~'fS IN 11-1' WOOPI'ilE,
SUi I 1tXJK CARE OF 'EM I

1\"fiCUII, 0 ,

M&amp;G Tmss RaflM

Stotclellrtng ih tustoin.bultt

Southeastern Ohio

Pllone Coolviile

r.... Ratter eo.

667-3166

or

BoX11-A
Rutland, Ohio 4sns
Ph. U14l 7~2·140t
We Deliver

667-3876
For FrH Estlmete
9· 10.1 mo.

Welcome Back, ·
Rotter 6,13; Waltons8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 33:

Movie

~~-~

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating BRADFORD, · Auctioneer, Com-

SAVE ON
CARPniNO

-

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
N.EW LISTING - 113 ecru form, 80 acres tillable
land, nice 2 story farm house, 7 rooms &amp; botlt. all
hardwood floors end boserrwtl. Barn and other
outbuildings. 2 ponda . A nice laying form priced to go.
Located near Chester, call lor appl .
NEW LISTING - Ever dream of owning your own
golfcourse? Here's .r_ou...r..c~nce for you or your friend• ,
to own 1 nlat rollt"ff golf course, 501ft acres. 9 greens,,
n1ce modern club hOlM, outbuilding with all spraying
and seeding ~ulpment. needs some mowing and a
little repair work on golf cour~ . This colild be
purdlaMd with tho 113 acrH listed above and
developed Into 1 beoutlful18 hole golf course, call for
appt.
PoMEROY - Mulberry Avenue loc~llon . Two
bedroOm, living room, kitchen, ,end dining area. l ilt
baths. Largo back porch. priced to sell S9, 100.

SEPTIC SyJiems Installed by
licensed ina taller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7-42·2~09 .

· SEPTIC f~NKS cleone..,d.' -Mod
=.:..
itr-n
Sanltotlon 1 992 -3954 or 9922~ 28.

WILL do roofing, cont lruction ,
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or foo small. Phone

U2·23•B.
CARPENTeR. flooring , ceiling.
onc.:•:..:il'l
,;.;2
::,·:;
27c_:5,;.;
9·__
_ ponelln!-g.:_P,;.;hc::

I ,_

remodel ing , and
repolrt. Quoll ty work , efficient

Jeu• Rodman , phomt

9'12·5980.
DOZER work and welding. Con·

8:GO-Focus
9:0D-Cable Journal
10 :G0-700 Club
All In color.

·
Everyday money ' sever.
GOod choice colors. ·
12 or .IS Ff.

. 501 NYLON

'Green, gold, red, blue, rust .
It yourself, with
peddlng, 57.95 sq. yq,.
Wltlt Plddt,. lnatalled
11.95 "'tUII'e Ylrd
CALL 742·221·1 - .
TALk TO
~ENDELL ORATE
. C~RPET ~NSULTAJ(T '

po

BUILDING ,
~ervl c,.

7:~onsultatlon

$10.95 sq. Yd.

-

20 .

ChantMtl Five
7:GO-Coach's Comments

Hl-lO SHAG

--

~~2,. e,y,,~~

8:30-Barnev Miller 13 :; City· by lhe River 6.
9·GO-Movle "The Quest" 3,C,15; Streets of San Fan:
· cisco 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0 8: Hollywoo:! Television
Theatre 33; Movie" A Day at the Races 10.
10 · ~Streets of Sen Francisco 6,13.
, ·, oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15,20: Mac Noll· Lehrer
Report 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Kolak I;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-Movle "All the Way Ho~e" 10: Janak! 33.
12 :30--Movle " The Crime Club B.
12 : ~o-Maglclon 6,13 .
1:110-Tomorrow J,c.
1:SG-News 13.

and all type5 of general repair .
plete Service. Phone 949-2_..87 : .
Work guaran teed 20 years elC pr 949·2000. Racine , Ohio , Critt
perlence. Phone 992-2409.
Bradford.
MOBilE home for t ole or rent, 3 0&amp;0 TREE Trimming , 20 reQrs. ex · ELWOOD BOWERS REP-.IR
perience . Insured free
bedrooms, ol utilities poid .
Swe.eper$:, toasters, irons, all ,
Phone '192·7751 .
estimatet. Coli 992-23/M or
small appliances. lawn mower,
(61~) ~98 -7257 Albany.
next tq State Highwov Garage ;
12K.60 with interior designed on
on Route '1. Phone (614) 985· '
two levels, lighted beams in liv· SEWING MAO-liNE Aepoirs, ser·
3825.
..
. • '
ing room , ceiling and other
vice, oil makeSi , 992·228A . The
fea tures, $5000.00 price In ·
Fabr 'c Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
dudes o1r conditio ner, under·
pinning, small porth , piJ fu rService. We sharpen Scissors.
niture, oppliancet , drapes and
EXC~VATlNG, dozer , loader and
~· · Phonem-5169.
ba(k hoe work ; dump trucks
1967 1211.63 Vindole, underp iimed
and la-bays for hire; will houl
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
10w20 Krttened porch, central
air. Ma~ be •een 825 S. 2nd · grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
Ave., Middleport , Phone 992fert , doy phone 992 ·7089
INSTALLED
. night phone 992·3525 or 992:
2822.
~-----;--c:---:----:5232.
Revulerst4:9s
1974 MOBILE Hom e for sole .

.

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - l;lere's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II

I. WAr-tr A
~RiO

- RUTLAND ;._
·FUR"RURI

LOOK AT ·
-mAT ANKI.E
01= 'l'OURt7l

•.••
1

', _

~

742·2211
Rutland
h1ct James Parsons, · Rt, · I , ~------·
' iiiiiliii
Racine, on Carmel Rood .
,.

LOOK1IONLY WANT 10 HELP YOU
euT IN ORDER 'TO DO ']}jAT

YOU'LL HAVE. TOTRU5T
ME:.WELLSAY
YOU'RE MY... MY

1

616'TER1 Ot&lt;AY &lt;'

.. _.....

LON~FELLOW

One teller simply stands for anotller. In lhis sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single .letters,
apostrophes, the length and format!on of the words are all
hiols. Each day the code letters are dtlferenl.
'
CRYPTOQUOTES

JP

wo

--~ =..:=:.::==:...-

PE

CWONKBOK
J VK

MWJV

I ELVAT

I I tD
I!AMVKII I ·I I

QPOJ
Now tll'l'lftll the clreloclltllftlt
to fonn the ....,....., - · M
eugtlttd bJthnboretlltuR.

LPBEKYYWBX

I

COOLV(LLE- Nltt mod. brick hOme containing three
bedrooms, dlnl,. room,llvfng room with fireplace, full
basement wllt1 garage, Iorge front porch, not . gos .
furnace, clfy water aild well water, a beautiful home
wilt! approx. 51!2 acres of land , fruit tr111 aild shtde
treos surrounding II. Pltnty of garden spect. good
flsttl,. area close by, located In Coolville, Ottlo. Priced
·
ot etniY 132,000. C1tl noW.
TUPPERS PLAINS- 101 acres of rolling lend, ell
mineral rights, approx . 10 1crt1 tillable land, some
peature land and limber, good lake alte. Modern 1'12
story house rectnily refinished on Inside, ell carpeted
except kltdlen, containing 3 bedroom, dining room and
baumenl. 2 car goroge. Nice location on Co. Rd. ol6
close to Tuppers Plains. Ohio. Priced for quick salt
532,000 Call tor appoint.

WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY
AND NEED YOUR LISTING
CALL JIMMY DEEM949·.2388

\

a:~Trial ~y Wll~ness 3.~.15;

7·28~

...
._-.~::. ···· =-:~~:~=.-

Phone 992·5282.
EXCAV... TING, doter, backhoe
and ditcher : Charles R. Hal·
197~ 12w60~2 b;droo;;· V~
fie ld , · Bock Hoe Service
trailer, toke over payments.
~utland , Ohio. Phoria 7_.2-2008 .'
Phone (614) 667·38 17.

lI

.

·----

ANY PITCH
· ANY SIZE

reset, pole buildings.

j

Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. ~~
· Somerstl15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8; Mlslet. Rogers 20.33; Movie "Fancy Pants" .10;
Dinah 13.
~ : »-Bewitched 3: Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlftllh 8;
Sesame St. 20,'33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:0D-F Bl 3: Morv Griffin 4; Partridge Family 8;
Mission : Impossible 15.
.
•
5:30-News 6; family Affair 8; E1ec. C&lt;!. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6; Zoom 20; ·
6 - ~News 3,~;8,10,13,15; ABC News
.
Consumer E xperl•nce 33.
6:30-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; .lTV
Utlllzallon 33.
.
7:110-Truitt or Cons. 3; To Tell Itt~ Truth~; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Walk 8; ·News 10; To tell th.e
Truth 13: Family Affair 15; Synthesis 20; Family at
War 33.
7·30-Holllfwood Squa.-s 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
· Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly

.

rafters for 1:ommercial,

·

'

4·~~~ier

HUBBARDS
.· GREENHOUSE

BILL PUWNS

Phone 9'12·572C.
DITCH Digg ing. Phone (JOe ) 773__5839 or {30C) 773-5788.
90ny. GUNS-OVER 250 IN

HERE

WMBUCK!l CLAJtolf'D HE
w~·r MAKIH&lt;; A DIME

Stason, Monday lhru -..
Saturday 10 to s.
...,.
We have one irten tiDuse :

From 6" to 11" wide 1nd up

PROTECT vour sw imming pool!
Winteriting kits , covers, on ·
tifre-ere, service for obove or
in ground pool~. 0 . Bumgardner Soles, Middleport , Ohio.

HOcKING RIVER Trad ing Com·

MA~UFACTURER.·· AH ••

THEOII

NOTIC:E

M»RK

DOZER - LARGE -.No SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12·2478 DAY
OR NIGHJ.

ao

OVE~

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

Rutlond
7C2-232t
All Work Guaranteed
· Fr"" Estimates
SU2mo.

1HE PROfiTS? THERE MII!!T
BE A CUT FOR THE

--------w

R E o\D E R

RfCEIPTS··Cb515-· WI1ERE'.S

1HI\IIK
'!OIJ, 101&gt;1--

The Complete·
Remodeling Service
F9r Your Hom~

Thus, in general, when you

are following suit at lhe first
trickandyourpartnerisloing
to hold the trick , a high card
means come-on; while a low
card asks your partner to shift
to another suit.
We won't go Into the merits
or demerits of West's over·
call, but he did overcall with
on~ spade and decided to open

Alllllltll
SIDIIJI.SOIFIIT

Ph. 675-.3449

Painting and Repair

Opening lead - Ace •

-

•

I.

I• 2¥ Pa,. 4¥
, Pass Pus Pa,.

Mike Lawrence points out
that the suit-preference signAl
is not a cure-all for all defen·
sive problems and that in
~ · . some·bands its abuse can lead
q-1~
tO all sorts of trouble.

',.

THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER U,lf76
6:GO-Summer Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm ~oport 13.
·
'
6:2G-Patterhs for Ltvlnv 13.
6:~Amerlca : It's all the Difference A; Newa 6;
Summer Semester 8: Urban League 10.
6:oi5-Marnlng Report 3. .
6:SG-Good Mornl"ff, West VIrginia 13.
7:GO-Todly 3,4,15: Good Mornl"ff, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05--Bugs Bunny &amp; Frltndl 10.
7:30-Schootles 10.
8:01)-Laule 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame St. 33 .
8:»-Big Valley 6,
.
. Mk
9:GO-A.M. 3: Phil Donohue 4,13,15; Lucy Show 8, I e
Douglas 10.
•
9:»--Cross-Wits 3; One Ll~ to Live 6; TottletoiH I .
10:0D-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :15-General Hospltill 6.
10 :»--Celebrlty Sweepslakea 3.~ . 15 .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Weekdey 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit ·8,10; Morning with D,J . 13.
11 :30..,-Hotlyv;ood Squares 3,~. 15; Happy DaY$ 6,13;.
Love of Life 8, I0•
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:GO-News 3,6,8,10; Hot Seat .13: Bob Braun~. ' Fun
Factorv
12:30-Goilg Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:oo-'-Somerset 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13: Concentration 8;
Younv &amp; tho Restless 10: Ann Mulligan 15.
1:;10--Doys of Our Lives 3.~.15; Family 'Feud 6,13; As
Tho World Turns 8,10.
2:oo-s20.000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2 : ~Doclors 3.~.15: One Life to Live 13; .Guidi"!~
Light 8,10.
3:0D-Anotlter World 3,4,15.: All In The Fo"\IIY 8,10;
Antiques 20. ·
3:15-General Ho5Pitol 13.
3:JO:-Bewltchtd 6: Match Game 8,10; Lilias YDf ~

Soldt

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

SiOIII

-

Not11t Ellll

ADoRe~~

O~~TION \0

Pl. PINsant

Roofing, Gutte15,

~

HIS

F--,AHI'Ua,EIIT

·~

.A3
Nortii.SOuth V1ilnerabl6

IIIon lo1tWIIo. Attia

TRENDiER

• K J 10 3
.109152
1 K7

IIISI!Iatiolt s.nkes

DIRE.q, f!RsL~S

Aluminum Siding,

• A82
..711

YA KQ 1062

~LA~L.'?.

- ·-·-'........'-'!

• J 10 2

..):•

WIIIDOIIS &amp;DtlOIS

EAST

WEST
• At883
yJ7

S001111DI

~

, . itto ......

'

'RT. ~ A greot
family
home or 3
bedrooms, modern, batlt
and ,1'2, shower in full
basement, modem kitchen
wilh bake end cook units,
·Wonderful view.of file Oh io.
River, S29,500.
UN -ORDINARY
2
'bedrooms, livin g and
kitchen paneled, full
F.A. .
basement. gas
tumeoe, only $5,500.
BUILDING- About lO x iiJ
at Oexlet on corner lot wltlt
jjlenly of par.k.tng . Might
$Ill on land contract,

.
••

••
i•

-·

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ..--...
Service

ON

$32,500.

Chorlenolfoolllch, 9'12·5292.

~·

TEAFORD

Clonoh'992J5795.

D. »yre, l'hone 11&amp;3·2191 .

--

!David Pa,_•· Owner_

TROMM OONST

t1ons. ma . e lfOT ·oi1 on gas
w.ells , own water syst,em . on
gOod blacktop rood. •Galt Sill

nebe.c 'for' w,ii:lte-r. Gr(e.en
beam, pk:k ~~our o.wn.. rhomo5
'1975 BUNOY trumpe1# COIJ -949·
m"' ofl&lt;tr 6 P·"''
.__,
WMM MOI!HlHG ""'I heater.
30,000 Wor"' Mor~ing gas
heot..-; 42 tfld'l •.ink; SA ~
ovom.od &lt;Obinot. m.

Squoro Yonl lnstllltll

'

•

I

Wlnshttlcl Raplactm'ltt
FrH EstlmttH
j
'On BodY Work
'
Export Po Inti,.
'
lnsuranc:tWork
'II
Wtltoint
St. Rl.7
I.
Coolville, Oltlo
''
667·3127
•
7-29-1 ma. •

'6.95

PO~HOfsftRf

d

por.k . 1'b~ i wo s1ote highways.
_ _. 985_ 3-306
••
_.......
,.. .•.
- :.:..-- - - APPt!O~i~MIRr 30 oor.. wit~ ~
r&lt;&gt;&lt;om ~.. ond botl&gt;, dog well.
or.&gt;d 2 wtl.,il,j;ngs , lonc.d ortd
"'~274.5.
rinorol rigi&gt;ts. 519.1100. Goll
f'OTATOO. co4&gt;1ileo:s on&lt;l Xon·
741-2766.
-.....1...;1-

L.C. Sntltlt •tondo&lt;d ly.,...nt., .

TON

•

.. _ ~ -·-·
~
SI\10..00:
ponable c dlannel
polioe •oonner, J'IO.OO: pll
pront.,.d. Goll '1!1&lt;!·2635 ,osl&lt;
lor 'l ee "' oil«&lt; 6 p.m. ·992·3078

716').

..

d

•

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPEnNG

8·22· 1 mo.

I,'

~
·-·-·.
Auto Sales•

Racine. Oblo

A

b room lhou&amp;e , 1modern ,kitchen.
t:arpenn,_, in Mtarr.istmViUe , con!KENNSBE'C'.po''atoe&amp; . '50 Ub. S3.'50
~enient tc mines , '$9 .000.
or ~ 00 lb, 56100. Sring con·
Phone V'd· 27~
ita inef'5.. !Ahone 667~!1".17 or FA'RM
- 1-or_&amp;a
_l_e_.bs:_o_cr-.,.
-~~,-oom-,
_fi67=
·:.:.·c:l.::
~..:.~;,·----~
.an d ibat.b, F. A.. ~urnoce , full
SQiitQ.C!)l sewing mach ines ,
.basemen1. 'Gall 992-3630 or
Sinper~ !teoturs lbuf!onholt!',
7.t2~11BO;,
. ----i.....
b lind !hem, sews on 'f.;nits, NEW HOME . tota l electric-. 3
,_ _100 ICOsoh. A'hoo- Singer r oudh
cmdS..w..Mke ,nei"',·S31J00oeaih.
'bedrt~om , hill ~tar,pet . L113
l'h
- 7·' .oores·. teoding !(~ ,wa1er
ne :;;·;:.
•·:.;•;e:..:'·-:--:-:=:
•
..:.:.:~oc.::..~
s.ys1em , near Longsvi 1'~e anc
PIGHor ...le .1Ph.,.. •919-2957..
mineo. Coll742·281~.
IIEEf &lt;ow ond 250 'lb .. oa~ . 200 3 BEDROOM conch. lull bose·
!beat'. ,borrpe"s 1wftb ~ i,ds , pie
,men1 , 9()roge , 3 y.at5 Qld ,in
pumpilin.lf'f:tone ·B G·2353.
·Ru1 1ond.!P,ho,ne7..(2-22S6.

-ecibo"ls· p1eooe ""II '611

CARPET SHOP

992-7320 Evenings

-·

.

94N860

.NE

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

NOR111
.QH
.851!
•QH .
•KQJ

PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8·9-76 1montlt

1:1.1·1""''

preference-happy players,
decided !hat his partner was
asking for a club shift. u:
would be almost impoulble to
figu~ out an Eut hand that
wanted a club lhlft, but We~t
led one. Soulh took his ace,
drew trumps, cashed th.e
spade king, discarded one diamond on dummy'a long club,
another on the queen of spades
and made an overtrick.
A sensible We~t woold have
played his ace of dlamondlat
trick two, East would lpllow
wltb the jack. West would lead
. a second diamond and tbe
defense would have liken the
first lour tricks.

15

OR

tiS.415S

Continuous ant pltct
gutttn. Wt hongjl, or do It
yoursell. Spacttl price~ Ia
bulldtrs.
··

•.

.

;

:· ~

.

•
7:0D-Trvlh orCona. 3; To Ttlt the Truth~; BowlinG for
Dollars 6; Pop Gots the Country 8; Newt 10; fo
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affelr 15: Consumtr
Survival Kit 20; World War t 33.
7:30-Ltll of 1ht Wild 3; Name Thol Tunt ~~ Mlttdl
Game PM 6: 125.000 Pyramid 1: MII&lt;:Noii·Liflrtr
20,33; The Judge 10; · Bruk the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
8:00-Little House on the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Woman
611 i : Berf Convy 8,1 0: Nova 20,33. .
8:30-Franklt Avalon 8; Slngl"ff AngelsSI"ff Arntrlca
10.
9:Loo.-Movle " Kingston : The Powet' Ploy"' 3,4,15;
Barotta 6; Movie "Tho Stotklnv Moon" 1.10: ,
Theater _I n America 33; MoNdo : Monu.....,t to
Fretdom 13; Upstairs, Downstairs 20 .
10 :GO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
10 :30-Aimanac 20; Book But 33.
10 :55-Polltlcel Program 8, 10.
II :GO-News 3,(,6,8,1 0,13,15; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
33.
1f: ~Johnny Corson 3,~.15; Mannht . 6,13; Movlt
" Nightmare" 8; Mary Hortman 10; ABC Newa 33.
12 :0D-Movle "You're a Big Boy Now" 10; Janokl 33.
12 :.0-Maglclan 6, 1lc
1:0D-Tomorrow 3,4 .
1:SG-News 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE
Reading ability bunglel set

AT949-2101

PhotOirlflh't

GUTIER SERVICE

-

fREE' ESTIMATES!
-c"'NTACT ,
GLE.N R. "'
DISS£1J.
. .

Chesttr. Ohio

1~75

t·.

11•-ndl of dallan
wlttl tlumlnum or vinyl :·
tlcHnt.
•'
:
tytn

KEN GROVEl

Abbott

_ 3102·or (30iP72,322
= 7:...._.__
:;o Acre farm ."'S rO.om house . out·
mi~. 5iuy bor. trOlih ,bors.
b ld
t
11~- ~ •- dl L - \)i in;s; , ~u it •t rees . 2 1ooa-

...

J

$279$

L::::::::::::::::::::::;:-:-- ::::::::::::::! •~~~--..:.·~-~
-:.:
191l lf.tONDA 0.-.CSO, ,l 2,000

•=•anante -

992-2181

Anwn

RACINE BAPRST

iiGng, 992-3772.
KOOAX Hetlllll'tut,e tns1a.motk
-.........- __.
Gonwo... LMf 01 ,lroctor ,p;JI:1 o1
d l e p o r t'~
- - •- ,~
_
....,_ ~
·
•· S.........
-.....
~orgr"'"""·· . ~ ...;..,.
L M
~a
~'99'2 ·.78:1).
.
===wori&amp;~ G.M

WIISJat.

same day.

-

~

OIIIW

DOOR

pid..up.

ft:K' dossre......,.,...._
CAat. • • .......,.S,...- in aa'---11

"

·/'4o odor.'

steering and brakes. radio. tires show little weer. gold
finish . Sharp and nice.

·-

lOSf o biw donk ~!ole •llvetidk in
SB.D0f1 c.o.mo.:.. T"-' :luf.laod &lt;treo. Goll lltObet:t
PloiM, Oh;o. Open.., ~~.
S t -.llt.-992-1894 .
1~. Ooues .Moldo) 1 .to 10. lOST-Two WN,te fCIOel!l :s.t.eers
luesda,. 9 fo 12, 7 io lo.i
w«J~ iing b'lcd; tog iin tnetr.Gr~
Tbundo,,. t Ia 4. 7 fo 10. Oft~
OIIIJOifl e
~.now.in.n110
;f!he
count to .sanicrf' dfiMm. Call
'
'311KE ·moiOflq'Ci~ trGHer. S80.00.

"*

NOVA~

Local Jow mileage car, VB engine, automatic power

PLEASE

il\ochd•

(614J 667-3252, l'ouline Oor&gt;•

~~~;;;;;;;;~;:==~~:::::::::::::·:·:::·~;:y:~==~====u==vt==h~u=.;:~~~~E:
COMMERCIAL
PHOTOOI.,HY
-Atrlll - ln-uatrlal
con1tructl•• ,,.,rtll
-C omploltlchool $trv let
Und1r1r1dUift •
llomeoterv
School ~ecklltt "tturtl
sonlors&amp; vurbook
- Wtdflnto-

log for easy vie~ing

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1976
.
5 :~Fiil ·3;· Meo-'vGrlffln '1:-Parirldiie- Famlly 1:
Million : Impossible 15.
5•30--"ews 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam.
12 13.
6 : ~ews 3.~.1. 10,13, 15: BC News 6; Zoom 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:30-NBC News3,~ ,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News I, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
_&amp; You 33_

MICROSCOPE-

t.

Business Se"'ices

lllll'llnttlll.

YOUR AMNTION

{31)t) 6JS.5367.
THE 'ltA.CME Ar-e Oeport~t will 'lOSf "'Mlt!ldleopofft , brown , male
halreo gun .hoot ...e: Satunlcrf
--4 .mos:. ·Old Ge.mcn 'Shep1wd.
. at 6:30 ,p.~. Gf their buHdtng in
lis ~ '5:t&amp; •anc!l ""~r dodw's
llathon.
Qlr!e. IQ found IPiecM •ttdll if92.
S\!lfti'EI'" and :SewiAg
111/l.
R.,oif', por1s ood tupp~Ja. tosr--smc:~JI rcdioam.trol 1plone,-A
Dovt&gt;
. v~-•• Q
..
. ." .-- .·- 11. •wJng n. nold
·,...nd rr..d,· An.,...---. .ho1f mile__,..._..
up Geot:ps
&amp;.elk
.tiqu'itt oreo.
f!M.one
11 -l(U-4882;
Road off -.kate rou.te 7. a~.__ _
'2326.

1614) - -.

191C CHEVY

"===::=::=====::;

- VCI~ Co'

t.

« ,200 miles, good

tires, dark green finish , real economy .

OOOOe

'" ~~
- ·
pu ~ ·· oun t!V1011-. . new tire
~"';:_. ond
...............
and 5ea5 , 'Sc11:1mb"'r side
5
- - ,. _,.,.
every Sun· ~976 Oi£VROtlU-.. •Wheel •cif'ive
•pipm .:Si650.Gdll 9., 9.2480_
dclytt.r.altw.
it4'1udt..Pihone~9-l-~32..
HAll RANSI'I.AHT, 0... l~.ciL - - - - ·- - IN D"SH d23 ,ciftonnel CB , om-tm$lock Pt P&amp;.ason w
:N
'r:npk ·ra io, ! 1tr.oc:;k stel"eo. Call
~

S229S
t~ons.,

MONTE CARLO , automatic, 19'70 Buick Riviera , good condi preferr!d , not requjred.
.power dHrlng, powet bro~es ,
tipn , new 1lres, $900. Phone
_.._1 ·
1
1
. air condiUoning, AM radio and
74 2 ·~796.
"'"''f '"penon I persona
-:J stereQ, rolly whe-ell; , will sell
*Pirtment of the Halrer
1971 Mercury Montego , p.s., p .b..
reasonable. Phone 992-?036..
Medial Ctr. Clinic. m
air , very nice , $1295. Phone
WILt. 00 babysitting ' i~ my 1'1~ \q73
P~lara , ·~ dr. 1hord·
Jockson Pike, Gallipolis,
Glen 8lnell, 9•9·2801 or 9C9·
or your hom@. _W1II olso do .top. ali powef ond n;,ns ·good.
0.
2960 .
~sework and 1roning in t~
Pri~ $1850. Phone 99'1·7797 .
1971 Ford Maverick, p.s., p.b.,
Me1gs County Area . Call Elo1se - ·
Pidcelt or Modolyn'P.ick•tt.
l 970 PONTIAC 2 door hardtop ,
oir , lois of chrC&gt;!""'e , real sharp,
p . s.. ~ :p.b .. 'oir, $600. Phone
low mileoge , $·1 m. . Phone
(OH) 985-12~5 .
Glen Biu•ll 9.l9-280 l or 949·
r
-~
2960.
1968 'GMC truck with compe.r,
~new itires, standard Phone 1975 fOitD F-250 ; wheel drive.
SALES foi'C'e for hire and sou·rces
992~72CI2
'
will .t rade 'f-or 74-75 ·2 wheel
tor ·bu5-iness e~o:pans ion loans . - - - - :...:_ · ,...
~
drM!!
'Pick.up. PhoMe 992-3427
Only those- who con handle ·1m- ~ 968 VW, "ew po"irt'f 1job. goo-d
~~e~p .m . _ ...... _ _ _ _
mediole s;ole:' from 3 to '1 0 tirres, r\lns good . $300. Phone
stotes . CCII Mr , 5.ubrornoniol'l 9.. 9-D-4-ll.
'
1913 'CHEVEUE SS , silver witt'~
3t2 '9~ · 4 1 29 .
bloCk vinyl •int• ril:&gt;r , V8
1967-Q"NE:MA,'l~~~
"';6
'Tilt Rati110 B.lplist Clhurdl ·
automa
fic . PS , •· PB, swivel
cylindt!or standard . good oondlbus wi H be running ,
bucket s ea ts . Rally wheels.
tion
,
·asking
$650.
Coil
ev•n·
5uncloys on 11 route from ·
33,00Cl actual miles.. $2..00.00.
~gs , 7~~ Rec ine through Apple ·
Phon• 9'12-22Bll.
1974 VOI:K'SWAGEN , sun root
·Grove, :lM.-ing .l ticine I t
witt'~ roCho. good •condition , ,J973 roYOTA CoroH~. excellent
t : IS e.m. and rttunling
con·d it.lon. 38 ,000 miles,.
llOCt!IST POSTS, round or sptit.
$2395.1Phone99i-7283.
pes-rs •I , _, H you
51500.00 . Coii30C·882·2343.
Phone 9.t9-2n-4.
;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
are inttftsted ift our bus
.
1973 CHEVY vega, ewc.Ue-nt CDn·
. sen~ itt, pt.ese te.1 free to . COAl, Hme~tone . and. calcium
dition ,. four new tires, $1200 . .
chloride •and colnium b nine for ==~"""""""""""""""""'=="
.cont•d tct.nlt .or !C7-2101.
dust oon'trol and speciol·mbdng SMAUl form ·l or so'le, 10% ·down ,
A~so . 1975 ·Ford Grand 'Torino,
salt for fo rmert. M.oin Stre:e'1,
owner 'financ:ed. Monroe Coun·
p.s ., p_'b.., oir c~itioning , foe.
Pomeroy . Oh 1o or &gt;phone 9921y , W. 'Vo. Phone (304) m .
tory mag wheels, &gt;new steel
38'11
. 2 1_cll_•· ~~_
m.!J2_7!.:...·_ _
be'l1ed !fadiols. V·iny'l ~op, $3200.
Phone 742·2038.
~Nt!UNG tornDtoes and swee-t COl!IN"f.RY .fo,mlond ,w,.th seclud·
peppers ~ Clelond F-orms .
ed woodi , water and good oc,, . . . . . , . .
Geral.dine Glelond . Racine ,
oess in Monroe County, W.Va .
""""""
Ohlo.
51.000 oown. coli (301) mi-

~-CJub.Sto~o· t_,_

,

191~ DATSUN
210 2 door, local car, c speed

'

STARCRA.R . Beat tht'fa11 price.increo5e . All 197'6 models reduc·
ed to boHom. 1977 mini-motor
trail•" a nd told--downs in
stock . We sell s.rvke and
qoolity. We trode, financing orronged, Open Sundays. Camp
Conley Slorcroft Soles. Rt . 62,
N . P~~~sont , v_y . Vo .

AU Ya rd Sales, R !Jm Mage,

Porc.h and euemtnt Porch
and Baument Sales, efc .
must be paid In advance .

--

8o11 729-E, core of Tt'le Daily
Sen !!;'_~l··~ P~!r?~0_!1io ,
HElP WANTED! l«ol tlrm needs
upwdenced plumbing and
h4Kiting man, steady work ,
Write P. 0 . ·Box 466, Pomeroy

~~·~o·•os

OFF ICE HOURS
8:30 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.

-

.,,

• ~ - ... •

nm
.t97t AMC HORNET
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automallc, power stetrlng, deluxe
equipment, wh itewall llrlis, luggage rack, dark green
finish , less titan 9.000 miles. showroom clean.

FU£l TRUCK dri ver. Mu'1 hove
truck driving lhcperlence . Wtite

or

ce nts .

.

SIGNS
OF
Motor Co~
QUALITY

m -m7. Also booking portlos.

tre5pouins at any flme on the
Howard Coldwell farm . Signed ,
HowordColdwel1.

Add lttonal 25(:: Charge
per Advertisement.

.

AVERAGE S..O o" e'olenlng ¢r
afte rnoon s demonstrating
guaranteed toys and gifts . No
cash ln"estmenl, no delivtcy or
col lecting. Computers do your
popetwork . Call 949-1803 or

quality kn itt and low price'l.
HQf.ln Monday thru Frldoy 9.
a.m. to 7 p.m. Cloud Sotur.
davs . Corolino Fabrics on Rt . 1 ,
h lf
one o mil• nortn of Chester ,
Okio . Henry and Mary Hunters,
Owner-s,

•BSOLUTElY

.·· --

AVERAGE $.40 on ewef'ling ot
ofternoon1
demonstra ting
guoronteed toys ond glfh , No
cott') investment , no delivery or
collecting. Computer' do yoU~
paperwork . Coli 9•9·2803 tlr
992-2927. Also booking parties .

for vocation, we ore open

insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl.OO.
lA cents per word three
consecutive lnurttons.
26 cents r,•r word siK
consecutive nserrtJons. .
25 Per Cen t DiscOun t on
paid ads a·n&lt;t aCfs pa id
within lQ days.
tor

Help Waflted

OPEN t'GAIN-of·t.,: being closed

Far Want Ad Strvlu

U.OO

_

Telev~ion

FINALLY

•

I ..( 1 I I I 1 ]"
'Mon., Tutlw Wed. ,

' (CJ 19'16

8:00 tll5:00

· Thursday I til 12 ncion'

•••. .FRI:DAY TIL'a·
' '~e

.

..................
· Close S..t. '.At s p.m.~
.

.

· WUTLAND
ARIIMJt.D'Ibl'E

742·:1211

tOne Feah1re• S)fndicale, Inc.)

•
WHAT DID ELVINEV

SAV ABOUT LUKEV
LOS IN' A~L HER SUTTER
•AI\I'EGG .MONEV INTH '
CARD

. I

GAME?

I'M NOT SURE A601JT
THIS FIRST QUESTION ...

A MATTER Of FACT, I
THINK I CAN ANSWER
OF THESE QUESTIONS

MM6E I COULD JUST
HELP THE CUSTODIAN

SWEEP M HAu..S...

.

.

�1~:-~ Dlllj Sentlne~ Mlddl...§OI'W'cmeroy, 0., Wedne~y, Seot.l$.11176

.~ub~:f:tjf~\:. .r. ss:d~~~:~~.~~: :~r;~:o; ;~ For Fast 'Results Use The Sentinel IClassifie~~

I

••

Canctllltlons,
corrac .
tt&amp;ns acr:tpttd tlrSt daY of
D'Vbllcttlan .

son or persons who took the
aluminum •idinv off the Alt)ert
Rosebtorry houn on the lo•han

RIEGULATIONS

and Keno Rood. County Road
28 . 1 still owe $18,000 on It . My
address is 483 S. Miller A\le.,
,. 1 b n•
1
._o um US , vnio , P IOit get in
touch with the Meigs County

The Publlll'ltr ruervtt

r•l•ct

the right to tdlt or

any l&lt;fl dttmed Ob ·
ltctlanill. The pUbl iSher
will not_be responsible for
mort thlft one Incorrect
lnstrtlon ·

RATES

5 cents per word one

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

mwrm~m ~·

-

.

Sheriff Office.

50

word

ac -ai:fdltlonal word J

ogain with our usual good

no hunting

·-~·--

Dall~ , 8 ~ 30 a .m . to 12 :00
Noon Saturday.
PhOn@! fOdiY 9U-2f.56.

NOTI,ES
ATTN.: It
HOUSEWtV'ES

ALL

WANTED

c5769.

Experienced
secretary for medica I
secretarial position.

G•t ;ours In eorly by
stopping by our ott!ce at
The Daily Sentine-l, 111
Court St . or writing Box

729, Pomeroy, Ohio •S769
With your remitta,nce .

~--------.....J'

· WE WISH to thank. her neighbors
a nd friendS. for their kindness
during the deottl of Almg Ohlinger. Also, thanks to the- out
of town frie-nds thQt Sef'lf
flowers, Presbyterton Church.
Special thonks to R....- . Dwight
la" ifl ond the R:owlings Coots
Nnerol Home. pallbeore«..
. Paul Smart Harold O'Kise-,
Willis Anthony, leo Searles, £-d.
win Wehrung , Jomes futef'.
Your kindne$$ wos greotly op-

p&lt;e&lt;ioted. l _ , K. K""l ond
Mrs. Hefmon OhliAgef.

WOUlD tike to expren. my
sincere appf'edaJion lo a ll who
sent llowet"s. mrds. ood visittif
during my rec.nt confli n~t
at Verer-ons A.\emoriol HospHo-L
Speciol .no.,k, to
hosp;tol
staff, Or. Pickens-. Dr. leU•.
m:ini5ten. who ... ~ited me on Q
regulor bmis ·ond t'hose ll'itlo
kept me i_n prayers.-. 'Your kindness will never be for90Uen .
Mn .
Sr .

"'*

SHOOllNG

-

~. •-~ed

•·-

·

Good typist . Shorth10d

, 992 ,~9;65 .
~==:..:_-~----

C.1ir Wlnled
, For tbe Syracuse
...... urn utra

lint money and

IP

v•fwabJe prizes. C.ll

'"·•&gt; 992-2156

.• OiiJ Seillillel
POMEROY,O.

Gaii:::
"::.:992
;::::·:..:1A::.:l;;
O:....- - -- ; -

JJ5 ond 110 1go:L S-lonat j an; 101 the
Odds .and Enik $hcp~ 'Pohooe
'992-617.3

c.,.:_:·;,'- - - - - &lt;. :1-. ,RodiOJ; ~.or idle~ ~rene

l.alo,..,.

625owi&lt;th!laad1Kin_;pct...- .mlke
$! 25~;
'23 cltonnet
S &gt;M1t1 woic.ey-:to1key with, MX
StOO.OO~ ~nson ua Mdbfl-'
-C..1I. phone S lOOm; 3 ·mobile
onlf!:f'lfll)i ;

Detnoo 50 wr;rt1
• -~ and • r,..mp

WANDD

CHIPWOOD

"t.

Pola maa. . lll.rmd" lt ladla •
largest eud.

BUNDUD SLABS '6 PEl TON
DeUverT•

OHIO PALLET .COMPANY
Rt.Z Pomerey, Oblo .

~

.....

149 ACRE farm. ltwc ho:uH!S, -ci.itr
water. miner.ol &lt;oight&lt;. good
pos:tur.e iland , 75 ,OC!res illo'ble~
somefir:n'ber, .se:we.rol:butldings,
8mile:s.nO:rth ofp~ otfl.t.
~ . Hem1o&lt;I&lt;Gtoov.o, ""
""io . . ...
tng 'SliS!JOO.. :Phor..e 992~501 4
oher'Sp,m,
• • · - - - - - - - ••
GC&gt;t!INTIY 5JotE .,....i lh or wjt:hout
s.toodM: , 1101-0line tri , llviflg
q~XJ~~'!· 5 · 1'~r..ot~ f·OOmd ,.nioe

1

SJQh··~·,,(j Moe i;Df"l:ver ~~

1 J~:~te

__

.tl'l:d bvt 9.1'tC.Jier1t .operatioo,
120. .M.taJ !in~woJI medk~ne
c.aibH:le-1, 15x21 .ope.ning, .over.o'lt
18x28. with: lwo moldlif\g
..._ '""''· Exc..ll.... condi·
roon. $211 lor '""
8,55·1 s
·6 J- roy9fl liro. ~ . .54.

-

MAIN
POM!:.ROY, o.
WE AilE IN GRE4T
~EO OF LISTINGS WE HAV'E QUALIFIED
.UYIERS FOR ALL
OF PIIOPEIITYSE.LL CALL US NOW.

---..--

COHH ,..,.... "'ed 2 ,..,,,

HENRY E. CLEUN D
$100. Phono7i2·309.2.
• IROKER, APPRAISER;
1'170 TIIWMPI! 6l00topp.o-, N4oW
CONSULTANT
point ..... ,.._ '192·5~2 "'
m.225f or m.2ua
- Dovid ..tldrll, ~&lt;lttic H;lls

..-------

at L~e, Jyrowu~ Oh~.
l&gt;OTATOE$ .ond P&lt;Jmpldns. 1;. W.
Prolflll, Portlootd, Oltio. l'ltor&gt;e
1143-12SI.

Pb.;;~~~

.J~U

Ont 100d VHCI Gibson
I.
)

Applications are now ltelng
a«epted for a •rvlce station
attendant. We nHd a mature
adult, no students. Hours 4 to
9 PM 6 days a WHir,

•

Call, • • 6754240

.. , . - . sldt·ll'f·lida -

Mllca "' an olftr,
Good
Ultd
G. E.
rafrt_.raiOr.
$200
0nt good UHd Homtltle EZ
Ch.ln S.w
· SilO
Ont . . . .... Homelltt
XL Clllln S.w. $200

s..,...

n
ta •··• • ,
li.-e,•-r,:r.,-,

f

R'- till tstiliJ:!J
·sifF
·;jif
- .. .-::. :-;.

"'-·~

AMOCO OIL COMPANY

HOMESITE$ l0&lt; oolo,

t

ocrt ond

up. Mlddl•port, near Rutland.

Coll992·7481 .
·-·· -·--· .... -·-· ·NEW 3 bedr-oom ho"'". 2 baths,
oil oltc., I aero, Mlcfcllopott,
do•• to Rutland. Pt.on. 992-·
7481.

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
1! 0/Mechonic ·Pomeroy, 0 .

Phonem-m\.

ATTENTION I
18 Acres In city limits.
water and sewer available,
IIOOd location for develop.
.ment. I hove map of area If
lnlerested.
CHECk THIS.OUTI
311:! Acres In town on quiet
slreot, can be divided Into
lots or beautiful location
for private homt.
Have several buslneu
properllts . If Interested
call.

... W.MIIn
Pltmlf'oy . ff2·22fl
Alflf' Hours Call
992-7113

MHfl1 1-22·1 mo.

FABRIC

For sof1, ciYir cushions.

maltrenes, .,.ddi"ff. Ideal
tor campers. Variety o1
sires.
Velvets , nylon prints,
horculons, vinyl solids. end
Ieney prints, eccessorin.

S3.500.

SECLU,OEO
\'our
laml ly will enjoy
privacy of 11 acres, A
bedrooms. ll!z baths. 111•
fu rnace,

good

spring

water. .8 acres f.e nced,

$29.000.
CAREFULLY - CGnslder
this 2'1 acres of woods. Has
1 lA x 70 3 bedroom mobl.le
home with dty water and
tuet oil furnooe, $22,500.
PRIVATE Formal
dln lng, modern kitchen,
largo family room wlttl
l!tW ·flr,eplaoe. 3 bedrooms.
Wllh room, iJII Well,
furnoat and 15 acres, only
HEW LISTING - 2'!&lt;o acres
Rutland. c room
bolh, gas heat, 2
2 outbuildings.

,

UH

BORNWSER
Wool

I))H~, tJO,

...co 401.l

(;l)CTO!&lt;

HAIJ~

.BA~TI 11/oG t.:o

''

l,.!w:;:":":."'•:;·~•:::;•·..!.'!,u::;•!,!!"!.'::::
P·I'c:!":."- - - - - - - - - -- '

Open lor Fell &amp; Wlnlor

lull ol f ·lorlde IOIIIIt
plants. Onr 10 Yarletlu In

East followed · with the
deuce of the suit and West,
who was one of those suit·

r:n·n. E ORI','RAN ALiT T L E

0 R PH o\N ANNIE-PRO 0 F

9::10-S:OO O.ily
Till I : 000 FridiYS

I'LL

to s ft. dttp wllllor without
pipe furnlslted. Under roM
bores up to 12" pip&amp; sire. ·

STOCK. Buy, s.eit , trade. 478
Richland, Alhens, Ohio 45701.

Phone (61CJ 5'13·8'106.

IT IS .. CHICKEN

FEED··

LroER"

OUT OF

ALL THIS··I Olt&gt;M'T

~~1'1.\!r";10il'~J!~50NAL
PREPAREDNESS,

H~ SAJp..

the ace.

,

-

11

111. From 4!' to, .. pots &amp; 6" '
to ID" hentlng bii~OII . 7$(
,,
·•• ·16,00 ,

Pomeroy, Ohio
992·1C78
9-12-1 mo. pd .

1!2-5776

1-2·1 mo.

A Canadian reader wants to
know the correct response to
your partner 's one·spade
opening bid with :
•1085 •J 43 tA 1082• K71.
'!'he correct response is a
raile to two spades. Even if
your partner has only four ·
spades and a minimum opener
lwo spades ill likely to be a
better contract that one
notrump. U he has a good
hand you can 1et to notrump If
the bidding proceeds the rl1ht
way .

u:

(Do you have a question
tor ·the e•perts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys" care of this
newspaper. The Jacobys wm
answer individual questions
it slamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
will be used In this column
and will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.}

A FEW ~'fS IN 11-1' WOOPI'ilE,
SUi I 1tXJK CARE OF 'EM I

1\"fiCUII, 0 ,

M&amp;G Tmss RaflM

Stotclellrtng ih tustoin.bultt

Southeastern Ohio

Pllone Coolviile

r.... Ratter eo.

667-3166

or

BoX11-A
Rutland, Ohio 4sns
Ph. U14l 7~2·140t
We Deliver

667-3876
For FrH Estlmete
9· 10.1 mo.

Welcome Back, ·
Rotter 6,13; Waltons8, 10; Upstairs, Downstairs 33:

Movie

~~-~

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating BRADFORD, · Auctioneer, Com-

SAVE ON
CARPniNO

-

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
N.EW LISTING - 113 ecru form, 80 acres tillable
land, nice 2 story farm house, 7 rooms &amp; botlt. all
hardwood floors end boserrwtl. Barn and other
outbuildings. 2 ponda . A nice laying form priced to go.
Located near Chester, call lor appl .
NEW LISTING - Ever dream of owning your own
golfcourse? Here's .r_ou...r..c~nce for you or your friend• ,
to own 1 nlat rollt"ff golf course, 501ft acres. 9 greens,,
n1ce modern club hOlM, outbuilding with all spraying
and seeding ~ulpment. needs some mowing and a
little repair work on golf cour~ . This colild be
purdlaMd with tho 113 acrH listed above and
developed Into 1 beoutlful18 hole golf course, call for
appt.
PoMEROY - Mulberry Avenue loc~llon . Two
bedroOm, living room, kitchen, ,end dining area. l ilt
baths. Largo back porch. priced to sell S9, 100.

SEPTIC SyJiems Installed by
licensed ina taller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7-42·2~09 .

· SEPTIC f~NKS cleone..,d.' -Mod
=.:..
itr-n
Sanltotlon 1 992 -3954 or 9922~ 28.

WILL do roofing, cont lruction ,
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or foo small. Phone

U2·23•B.
CARPENTeR. flooring , ceiling.
onc.:•:..:il'l
,;.;2
::,·:;
27c_:5,;.;
9·__
_ ponelln!-g.:_P,;.;hc::

I ,_

remodel ing , and
repolrt. Quoll ty work , efficient

Jeu• Rodman , phomt

9'12·5980.
DOZER work and welding. Con·

8:GO-Focus
9:0D-Cable Journal
10 :G0-700 Club
All In color.

·
Everyday money ' sever.
GOod choice colors. ·
12 or .IS Ff.

. 501 NYLON

'Green, gold, red, blue, rust .
It yourself, with
peddlng, 57.95 sq. yq,.
Wltlt Plddt,. lnatalled
11.95 "'tUII'e Ylrd
CALL 742·221·1 - .
TALk TO
~ENDELL ORATE
. C~RPET ~NSULTAJ(T '

po

BUILDING ,
~ervl c,.

7:~onsultatlon

$10.95 sq. Yd.

-

20 .

ChantMtl Five
7:GO-Coach's Comments

Hl-lO SHAG

--

~~2,. e,y,,~~

8:30-Barnev Miller 13 :; City· by lhe River 6.
9·GO-Movle "The Quest" 3,C,15; Streets of San Fan:
· cisco 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0 8: Hollywoo:! Television
Theatre 33; Movie" A Day at the Races 10.
10 · ~Streets of Sen Francisco 6,13.
, ·, oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15,20: Mac Noll· Lehrer
Report 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Mannix 6,13; Kolak I;
Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :oo-Movle "All the Way Ho~e" 10: Janak! 33.
12 :30--Movle " The Crime Club B.
12 : ~o-Maglclon 6,13 .
1:110-Tomorrow J,c.
1:SG-News 13.

and all type5 of general repair .
plete Service. Phone 949-2_..87 : .
Work guaran teed 20 years elC pr 949·2000. Racine , Ohio , Critt
perlence. Phone 992-2409.
Bradford.
MOBilE home for t ole or rent, 3 0&amp;0 TREE Trimming , 20 reQrs. ex · ELWOOD BOWERS REP-.IR
perience . Insured free
bedrooms, ol utilities poid .
Swe.eper$:, toasters, irons, all ,
Phone '192·7751 .
estimatet. Coli 992-23/M or
small appliances. lawn mower,
(61~) ~98 -7257 Albany.
next tq State Highwov Garage ;
12K.60 with interior designed on
on Route '1. Phone (614) 985· '
two levels, lighted beams in liv· SEWING MAO-liNE Aepoirs, ser·
3825.
..
. • '
ing room , ceiling and other
vice, oil makeSi , 992·228A . The
fea tures, $5000.00 price In ·
Fabr 'c Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
dudes o1r conditio ner, under·
pinning, small porth , piJ fu rService. We sharpen Scissors.
niture, oppliancet , drapes and
EXC~VATlNG, dozer , loader and
~· · Phonem-5169.
ba(k hoe work ; dump trucks
1967 1211.63 Vindole, underp iimed
and la-bays for hire; will houl
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
10w20 Krttened porch, central
air. Ma~ be •een 825 S. 2nd · grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
Ave., Middleport , Phone 992fert , doy phone 992 ·7089
INSTALLED
. night phone 992·3525 or 992:
2822.
~-----;--c:---:----:5232.
Revulerst4:9s
1974 MOBILE Hom e for sole .

.

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - l;lere's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II

I. WAr-tr A
~RiO

- RUTLAND ;._
·FUR"RURI

LOOK AT ·
-mAT ANKI.E
01= 'l'OURt7l

•.••
1

', _

~

742·2211
Rutland
h1ct James Parsons, · Rt, · I , ~------·
' iiiiiliii
Racine, on Carmel Rood .
,.

LOOK1IONLY WANT 10 HELP YOU
euT IN ORDER 'TO DO ']}jAT

YOU'LL HAVE. TOTRU5T
ME:.WELLSAY
YOU'RE MY... MY

1

616'TER1 Ot&lt;AY &lt;'

.. _.....

LON~FELLOW

One teller simply stands for anotller. In lhis sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single .letters,
apostrophes, the length and format!on of the words are all
hiols. Each day the code letters are dtlferenl.
'
CRYPTOQUOTES

JP

wo

--~ =..:=:.::==:...-

PE

CWONKBOK
J VK

MWJV

I ELVAT

I I tD
I!AMVKII I ·I I

QPOJ
Now tll'l'lftll the clreloclltllftlt
to fonn the ....,....., - · M
eugtlttd bJthnboretlltuR.

LPBEKYYWBX

I

COOLV(LLE- Nltt mod. brick hOme containing three
bedrooms, dlnl,. room,llvfng room with fireplace, full
basement wllt1 garage, Iorge front porch, not . gos .
furnace, clfy water aild well water, a beautiful home
wilt! approx. 51!2 acres of land , fruit tr111 aild shtde
treos surrounding II. Pltnty of garden spect. good
flsttl,. area close by, located In Coolville, Ottlo. Priced
·
ot etniY 132,000. C1tl noW.
TUPPERS PLAINS- 101 acres of rolling lend, ell
mineral rights, approx . 10 1crt1 tillable land, some
peature land and limber, good lake alte. Modern 1'12
story house rectnily refinished on Inside, ell carpeted
except kltdlen, containing 3 bedroom, dining room and
baumenl. 2 car goroge. Nice location on Co. Rd. ol6
close to Tuppers Plains. Ohio. Priced for quick salt
532,000 Call tor appoint.

WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY
AND NEED YOUR LISTING
CALL JIMMY DEEM949·.2388

\

a:~Trial ~y Wll~ness 3.~.15;

7·28~

...
._-.~::. ···· =-:~~:~=.-

Phone 992·5282.
EXCAV... TING, doter, backhoe
and ditcher : Charles R. Hal·
197~ 12w60~2 b;droo;;· V~
fie ld , · Bock Hoe Service
trailer, toke over payments.
~utland , Ohio. Phoria 7_.2-2008 .'
Phone (614) 667·38 17.

lI

.

·----

ANY PITCH
· ANY SIZE

reset, pole buildings.

j

Cartoon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. ~~
· Somerstl15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club
8; Mlslet. Rogers 20.33; Movie "Fancy Pants" .10;
Dinah 13.
~ : »-Bewitched 3: Mod Squad 6; Andy Grlftllh 8;
Sesame St. 20,'33; Fllnlstones 15.
5:0D-F Bl 3: Morv Griffin 4; Partridge Family 8;
Mission : Impossible 15.
.
•
5:30-News 6; family Affair 8; E1ec. C&lt;!. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
6; Zoom 20; ·
6 - ~News 3,~;8,10,13,15; ABC News
.
Consumer E xperl•nce 33.
6:30-NBC News 3.~. 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10: Hodgepodge Lodge 20; .lTV
Utlllzallon 33.
.
7:110-Truitt or Cons. 3; To Tell Itt~ Truth~; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Lawrence Walk 8; ·News 10; To tell th.e
Truth 13: Family Affair 15; Synthesis 20; Family at
War 33.
7·30-Holllfwood Squa.-s 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;
· Wild Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly

.

rafters for 1:ommercial,

·

'

4·~~~ier

HUBBARDS
.· GREENHOUSE

BILL PUWNS

Phone 9'12·572C.
DITCH Digg ing. Phone (JOe ) 773__5839 or {30C) 773-5788.
90ny. GUNS-OVER 250 IN

HERE

WMBUCK!l CLAJtolf'D HE
w~·r MAKIH&lt;; A DIME

Stason, Monday lhru -..
Saturday 10 to s.
...,.
We have one irten tiDuse :

From 6" to 11" wide 1nd up

PROTECT vour sw imming pool!
Winteriting kits , covers, on ·
tifre-ere, service for obove or
in ground pool~. 0 . Bumgardner Soles, Middleport , Ohio.

HOcKING RIVER Trad ing Com·

MA~UFACTURER.·· AH ••

THEOII

NOTIC:E

M»RK

DOZER - LARGE -.No SMAll,
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 9'12·2478 DAY
OR NIGHJ.

ao

OVE~

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

Rutlond
7C2-232t
All Work Guaranteed
· Fr"" Estimates
SU2mo.

1HE PROfiTS? THERE MII!!T
BE A CUT FOR THE

--------w

R E o\D E R

RfCEIPTS··Cb515-· WI1ERE'.S

1HI\IIK
'!OIJ, 101&gt;1--

The Complete·
Remodeling Service
F9r Your Hom~

Thus, in general, when you

are following suit at lhe first
trickandyourpartnerisloing
to hold the trick , a high card
means come-on; while a low
card asks your partner to shift
to another suit.
We won't go Into the merits
or demerits of West's over·
call, but he did overcall with
on~ spade and decided to open

Alllllltll
SIDIIJI.SOIFIIT

Ph. 675-.3449

Painting and Repair

Opening lead - Ace •

-

•

I.

I• 2¥ Pa,. 4¥
, Pass Pus Pa,.

Mike Lawrence points out
that the suit-preference signAl
is not a cure-all for all defen·
sive problems and that in
~ · . some·bands its abuse can lead
q-1~
tO all sorts of trouble.

',.

THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER U,lf76
6:GO-Summer Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm ~oport 13.
·
'
6:2G-Patterhs for Ltvlnv 13.
6:~Amerlca : It's all the Difference A; Newa 6;
Summer Semester 8: Urban League 10.
6:oi5-Marnlng Report 3. .
6:SG-Good Mornl"ff, West VIrginia 13.
7:GO-Todly 3,4,15: Good Mornl"ff, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05--Bugs Bunny &amp; Frltndl 10.
7:30-Schootles 10.
8:01)-Laule 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame St. 33 .
8:»-Big Valley 6,
.
. Mk
9:GO-A.M. 3: Phil Donohue 4,13,15; Lucy Show 8, I e
Douglas 10.
•
9:»--Cross-Wits 3; One Ll~ to Live 6; TottletoiH I .
10:0D-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Price Is Right 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10 :15-General Hospltill 6.
10 :»--Celebrlty Sweepslakea 3.~ . 15 .
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Weekdey 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit ·8,10; Morning with D,J . 13.
11 :30..,-Hotlyv;ood Squares 3,~. 15; Happy DaY$ 6,13;.
Love of Life 8, I0•
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:GO-News 3,6,8,10; Hot Seat .13: Bob Braun~. ' Fun
Factorv
12:30-Goilg Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
1:oo-'-Somerset 3: Ryan's Hope 6,13: Concentration 8;
Younv &amp; tho Restless 10: Ann Mulligan 15.
1:;10--Doys of Our Lives 3.~.15; Family 'Feud 6,13; As
Tho World Turns 8,10.
2:oo-s20.000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2 : ~Doclors 3.~.15: One Life to Live 13; .Guidi"!~
Light 8,10.
3:0D-Anotlter World 3,4,15.: All In The Fo"\IIY 8,10;
Antiques 20. ·
3:15-General Ho5Pitol 13.
3:JO:-Bewltchtd 6: Match Game 8,10; Lilias YDf ~

Soldt

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

SiOIII

-

Not11t Ellll

ADoRe~~

O~~TION \0

Pl. PINsant

Roofing, Gutte15,

~

HIS

F--,AHI'Ua,EIIT

·~

.A3
Nortii.SOuth V1ilnerabl6

IIIon lo1tWIIo. Attia

TRENDiER

• K J 10 3
.109152
1 K7

IIISI!Iatiolt s.nkes

DIRE.q, f!RsL~S

Aluminum Siding,

• A82
..711

YA KQ 1062

~LA~L.'?.

- ·-·-'........'-'!

• J 10 2

..):•

WIIIDOIIS &amp;DtlOIS

EAST

WEST
• At883
yJ7

S001111DI

~

, . itto ......

'

'RT. ~ A greot
family
home or 3
bedrooms, modern, batlt
and ,1'2, shower in full
basement, modem kitchen
wilh bake end cook units,
·Wonderful view.of file Oh io.
River, S29,500.
UN -ORDINARY
2
'bedrooms, livin g and
kitchen paneled, full
F.A. .
basement. gas
tumeoe, only $5,500.
BUILDING- About lO x iiJ
at Oexlet on corner lot wltlt
jjlenly of par.k.tng . Might
$Ill on land contract,

.
••

••
i•

-·

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ..--...
Service

ON

$32,500.

Chorlenolfoolllch, 9'12·5292.

~·

TEAFORD

Clonoh'992J5795.

D. »yre, l'hone 11&amp;3·2191 .

--

!David Pa,_•· Owner_

TROMM OONST

t1ons. ma . e lfOT ·oi1 on gas
w.ells , own water syst,em . on
gOod blacktop rood. •Galt Sill

nebe.c 'for' w,ii:lte-r. Gr(e.en
beam, pk:k ~~our o.wn.. rhomo5
'1975 BUNOY trumpe1# COIJ -949·
m"' ofl&lt;tr 6 P·"''
.__,
WMM MOI!HlHG ""'I heater.
30,000 Wor"' Mor~ing gas
heot..-; 42 tfld'l •.ink; SA ~
ovom.od &lt;Obinot. m.

Squoro Yonl lnstllltll

'

•

I

Wlnshttlcl Raplactm'ltt
FrH EstlmttH
j
'On BodY Work
'
Export Po Inti,.
'
lnsuranc:tWork
'II
Wtltoint
St. Rl.7
I.
Coolville, Oltlo
''
667·3127
•
7-29-1 ma. •

'6.95

PO~HOfsftRf

d

por.k . 1'b~ i wo s1ote highways.
_ _. 985_ 3-306
••
_.......
,.. .•.
- :.:..-- - - APPt!O~i~MIRr 30 oor.. wit~ ~
r&lt;&gt;&lt;om ~.. ond botl&gt;, dog well.
or.&gt;d 2 wtl.,il,j;ngs , lonc.d ortd
"'~274.5.
rinorol rigi&gt;ts. 519.1100. Goll
f'OTATOO. co4&gt;1ileo:s on&lt;l Xon·
741-2766.
-.....1...;1-

L.C. Sntltlt •tondo&lt;d ly.,...nt., .

TON

•

.. _ ~ -·-·
~
SI\10..00:
ponable c dlannel
polioe •oonner, J'IO.OO: pll
pront.,.d. Goll '1!1&lt;!·2635 ,osl&lt;
lor 'l ee "' oil«&lt; 6 p.m. ·992·3078

716').

..

d

•

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPEnNG

8·22· 1 mo.

I,'

~
·-·-·.
Auto Sales•

Racine. Oblo

A

b room lhou&amp;e , 1modern ,kitchen.
t:arpenn,_, in Mtarr.istmViUe , con!KENNSBE'C'.po''atoe&amp; . '50 Ub. S3.'50
~enient tc mines , '$9 .000.
or ~ 00 lb, 56100. Sring con·
Phone V'd· 27~
ita inef'5.. !Ahone 667~!1".17 or FA'RM
- 1-or_&amp;a
_l_e_.bs:_o_cr-.,.
-~~,-oom-,
_fi67=
·:.:.·c:l.::
~..:.~;,·----~
.an d ibat.b, F. A.. ~urnoce , full
SQiitQ.C!)l sewing mach ines ,
.basemen1. 'Gall 992-3630 or
Sinper~ !teoturs lbuf!onholt!',
7.t2~11BO;,
. ----i.....
b lind !hem, sews on 'f.;nits, NEW HOME . tota l electric-. 3
,_ _100 ICOsoh. A'hoo- Singer r oudh
cmdS..w..Mke ,nei"',·S31J00oeaih.
'bedrt~om , hill ~tar,pet . L113
l'h
- 7·' .oores·. teoding !(~ ,wa1er
ne :;;·;:.
•·:.;•;e:..:'·-:--:-:=:
•
..:.:.:~oc.::..~
s.ys1em , near Longsvi 1'~e anc
PIGHor ...le .1Ph.,.. •919-2957..
mineo. Coll742·281~.
IIEEf &lt;ow ond 250 'lb .. oa~ . 200 3 BEDROOM conch. lull bose·
!beat'. ,borrpe"s 1wftb ~ i,ds , pie
,men1 , 9()roge , 3 y.at5 Qld ,in
pumpilin.lf'f:tone ·B G·2353.
·Ru1 1ond.!P,ho,ne7..(2-22S6.

-ecibo"ls· p1eooe ""II '611

CARPET SHOP

992-7320 Evenings

-·

.

94N860

.NE

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

NOR111
.QH
.851!
•QH .
•KQJ

PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
8·9-76 1montlt

1:1.1·1""''

preference-happy players,
decided !hat his partner was
asking for a club shift. u:
would be almost impoulble to
figu~ out an Eut hand that
wanted a club lhlft, but We~t
led one. Soulh took his ace,
drew trumps, cashed th.e
spade king, discarded one diamond on dummy'a long club,
another on the queen of spades
and made an overtrick.
A sensible We~t woold have
played his ace of dlamondlat
trick two, East would lpllow
wltb the jack. West would lead
. a second diamond and tbe
defense would have liken the
first lour tricks.

15

OR

tiS.415S

Continuous ant pltct
gutttn. Wt hongjl, or do It
yoursell. Spacttl price~ Ia
bulldtrs.
··

•.

.

;

:· ~

.

•
7:0D-Trvlh orCona. 3; To Ttlt the Truth~; BowlinG for
Dollars 6; Pop Gots the Country 8; Newt 10; fo
Tell the Truth 13; Family Affelr 15: Consumtr
Survival Kit 20; World War t 33.
7:30-Ltll of 1ht Wild 3; Name Thol Tunt ~~ Mlttdl
Game PM 6: 125.000 Pyramid 1: MII&lt;:Noii·Liflrtr
20,33; The Judge 10; · Bruk the Bank 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
8:00-Little House on the Prairie 3.~.15; Bionic Woman
611 i : Berf Convy 8,1 0: Nova 20,33. .
8:30-Franklt Avalon 8; Slngl"ff AngelsSI"ff Arntrlca
10.
9:Loo.-Movle " Kingston : The Powet' Ploy"' 3,4,15;
Barotta 6; Movie "Tho Stotklnv Moon" 1.10: ,
Theater _I n America 33; MoNdo : Monu.....,t to
Fretdom 13; Upstairs, Downstairs 20 .
10 :GO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20.
10 :30-Aimanac 20; Book But 33.
10 :55-Polltlcel Program 8, 10.
II :GO-News 3,(,6,8,1 0,13,15; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
33.
1f: ~Johnny Corson 3,~.15; Mannht . 6,13; Movlt
" Nightmare" 8; Mary Hortman 10; ABC Newa 33.
12 :0D-Movle "You're a Big Boy Now" 10; Janokl 33.
12 :.0-Maglclan 6, 1lc
1:0D-Tomorrow 3,4 .
1:SG-News 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE
Reading ability bunglel set

AT949-2101

PhotOirlflh't

GUTIER SERVICE

-

fREE' ESTIMATES!
-c"'NTACT ,
GLE.N R. "'
DISS£1J.
. .

Chesttr. Ohio

1~75

t·.

11•-ndl of dallan
wlttl tlumlnum or vinyl :·
tlcHnt.
•'
:
tytn

KEN GROVEl

Abbott

_ 3102·or (30iP72,322
= 7:...._.__
:;o Acre farm ."'S rO.om house . out·
mi~. 5iuy bor. trOlih ,bors.
b ld
t
11~- ~ •- dl L - \)i in;s; , ~u it •t rees . 2 1ooa-

...

J

$279$

L::::::::::::::::::::::;:-:-- ::::::::::::::! •~~~--..:.·~-~
-:.:
191l lf.tONDA 0.-.CSO, ,l 2,000

•=•anante -

992-2181

Anwn

RACINE BAPRST

iiGng, 992-3772.
KOOAX Hetlllll'tut,e tns1a.motk
-.........- __.
Gonwo... LMf 01 ,lroctor ,p;JI:1 o1
d l e p o r t'~
- - •- ,~
_
....,_ ~
·
•· S.........
-.....
~orgr"'"""·· . ~ ...;..,.
L M
~a
~'99'2 ·.78:1).
.
===wori&amp;~ G.M

WIISJat.

same day.

-

~

OIIIW

DOOR

pid..up.

ft:K' dossre......,.,...._
CAat. • • .......,.S,...- in aa'---11

"

·/'4o odor.'

steering and brakes. radio. tires show little weer. gold
finish . Sharp and nice.

·-

lOSf o biw donk ~!ole •llvetidk in
SB.D0f1 c.o.mo.:.. T"-' :luf.laod &lt;treo. Goll lltObet:t
PloiM, Oh;o. Open.., ~~.
S t -.llt.-992-1894 .
1~. Ooues .Moldo) 1 .to 10. lOST-Two WN,te fCIOel!l :s.t.eers
luesda,. 9 fo 12, 7 io lo.i
w«J~ iing b'lcd; tog iin tnetr.Gr~
Tbundo,,. t Ia 4. 7 fo 10. Oft~
OIIIJOifl e
~.now.in.n110
;f!he
count to .sanicrf' dfiMm. Call
'
'311KE ·moiOflq'Ci~ trGHer. S80.00.

"*

NOVA~

Local Jow mileage car, VB engine, automatic power

PLEASE

il\ochd•

(614J 667-3252, l'ouline Oor&gt;•

~~~;;;;;;;;~;:==~~:::::::::::::·:·:::·~;:y:~==~====u==vt==h~u=.;:~~~~E:
COMMERCIAL
PHOTOOI.,HY
-Atrlll - ln-uatrlal
con1tructl•• ,,.,rtll
-C omploltlchool $trv let
Und1r1r1dUift •
llomeoterv
School ~ecklltt "tturtl
sonlors&amp; vurbook
- Wtdflnto-

log for easy vie~ing

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1976
.
5 :~Fiil ·3;· Meo-'vGrlffln '1:-Parirldiie- Famlly 1:
Million : Impossible 15.
5•30--"ews 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam.
12 13.
6 : ~ews 3.~.1. 10,13, 15: BC News 6; Zoom 20;
Teaching Children 33.
6:30-NBC News3,~ ,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News I, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
_&amp; You 33_

MICROSCOPE-

t.

Business Se"'ices

lllll'llnttlll.

YOUR AMNTION

{31)t) 6JS.5367.
THE 'ltA.CME Ar-e Oeport~t will 'lOSf "'Mlt!ldleopofft , brown , male
halreo gun .hoot ...e: Satunlcrf
--4 .mos:. ·Old Ge.mcn 'Shep1wd.
. at 6:30 ,p.~. Gf their buHdtng in
lis ~ '5:t&amp; •anc!l ""~r dodw's
llathon.
Qlr!e. IQ found IPiecM •ttdll if92.
S\!lfti'EI'" and :SewiAg
111/l.
R.,oif', por1s ood tupp~Ja. tosr--smc:~JI rcdioam.trol 1plone,-A
Dovt&gt;
. v~-•• Q
..
. ." .-- .·- 11. •wJng n. nold
·,...nd rr..d,· An.,...---. .ho1f mile__,..._..
up Geot:ps
&amp;.elk
.tiqu'itt oreo.
f!M.one
11 -l(U-4882;
Road off -.kate rou.te 7. a~.__ _
'2326.

1614) - -.

191C CHEVY

"===::=::=====::;

- VCI~ Co'

t.

« ,200 miles, good

tires, dark green finish , real economy .

OOOOe

'" ~~
- ·
pu ~ ·· oun t!V1011-. . new tire
~"';:_. ond
...............
and 5ea5 , 'Sc11:1mb"'r side
5
- - ,. _,.,.
every Sun· ~976 Oi£VROtlU-.. •Wheel •cif'ive
•pipm .:Si650.Gdll 9., 9.2480_
dclytt.r.altw.
it4'1udt..Pihone~9-l-~32..
HAll RANSI'I.AHT, 0... l~.ciL - - - - ·- - IN D"SH d23 ,ciftonnel CB , om-tm$lock Pt P&amp;.ason w
:N
'r:npk ·ra io, ! 1tr.oc:;k stel"eo. Call
~

S229S
t~ons.,

MONTE CARLO , automatic, 19'70 Buick Riviera , good condi preferr!d , not requjred.
.power dHrlng, powet bro~es ,
tipn , new 1lres, $900. Phone
_.._1 ·
1
1
. air condiUoning, AM radio and
74 2 ·~796.
"'"''f '"penon I persona
-:J stereQ, rolly whe-ell; , will sell
*Pirtment of the Halrer
1971 Mercury Montego , p.s., p .b..
reasonable. Phone 992-?036..
Medial Ctr. Clinic. m
air , very nice , $1295. Phone
WILt. 00 babysitting ' i~ my 1'1~ \q73
P~lara , ·~ dr. 1hord·
Jockson Pike, Gallipolis,
Glen 8lnell, 9•9·2801 or 9C9·
or your hom@. _W1II olso do .top. ali powef ond n;,ns ·good.
0.
2960 .
~sework and 1roning in t~
Pri~ $1850. Phone 99'1·7797 .
1971 Ford Maverick, p.s., p.b.,
Me1gs County Area . Call Elo1se - ·
Pidcelt or Modolyn'P.ick•tt.
l 970 PONTIAC 2 door hardtop ,
oir , lois of chrC&gt;!""'e , real sharp,
p . s.. ~ :p.b .. 'oir, $600. Phone
low mileoge , $·1 m. . Phone
(OH) 985-12~5 .
Glen Biu•ll 9.l9-280 l or 949·
r
-~
2960.
1968 'GMC truck with compe.r,
~new itires, standard Phone 1975 fOitD F-250 ; wheel drive.
SALES foi'C'e for hire and sou·rces
992~72CI2
'
will .t rade 'f-or 74-75 ·2 wheel
tor ·bu5-iness e~o:pans ion loans . - - - - :...:_ · ,...
~
drM!!
'Pick.up. PhoMe 992-3427
Only those- who con handle ·1m- ~ 968 VW, "ew po"irt'f 1job. goo-d
~~e~p .m . _ ...... _ _ _ _
mediole s;ole:' from 3 to '1 0 tirres, r\lns good . $300. Phone
stotes . CCII Mr , 5.ubrornoniol'l 9.. 9-D-4-ll.
'
1913 'CHEVEUE SS , silver witt'~
3t2 '9~ · 4 1 29 .
bloCk vinyl •int• ril:&gt;r , V8
1967-Q"NE:MA,'l~~~
"';6
'Tilt Rati110 B.lplist Clhurdl ·
automa
fic . PS , •· PB, swivel
cylindt!or standard . good oondlbus wi H be running ,
bucket s ea ts . Rally wheels.
tion
,
·asking
$650.
Coil
ev•n·
5uncloys on 11 route from ·
33,00Cl actual miles.. $2..00.00.
~gs , 7~~ Rec ine through Apple ·
Phon• 9'12-22Bll.
1974 VOI:K'SWAGEN , sun root
·Grove, :lM.-ing .l ticine I t
witt'~ roCho. good •condition , ,J973 roYOTA CoroH~. excellent
t : IS e.m. and rttunling
con·d it.lon. 38 ,000 miles,.
llOCt!IST POSTS, round or sptit.
$2395.1Phone99i-7283.
pes-rs •I , _, H you
51500.00 . Coii30C·882·2343.
Phone 9.t9-2n-4.
;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
are inttftsted ift our bus
.
1973 CHEVY vega, ewc.Ue-nt CDn·
. sen~ itt, pt.ese te.1 free to . COAl, Hme~tone . and. calcium
dition ,. four new tires, $1200 . .
chloride •and colnium b nine for ==~"""""""""""""""""'=="
.cont•d tct.nlt .or !C7-2101.
dust oon'trol and speciol·mbdng SMAUl form ·l or so'le, 10% ·down ,
A~so . 1975 ·Ford Grand 'Torino,
salt for fo rmert. M.oin Stre:e'1,
owner 'financ:ed. Monroe Coun·
p.s ., p_'b.., oir c~itioning , foe.
Pomeroy . Oh 1o or &gt;phone 9921y , W. 'Vo. Phone (304) m .
tory mag wheels, &gt;new steel
38'11
. 2 1_cll_•· ~~_
m.!J2_7!.:...·_ _
be'l1ed !fadiols. V·iny'l ~op, $3200.
Phone 742·2038.
~Nt!UNG tornDtoes and swee-t COl!IN"f.RY .fo,mlond ,w,.th seclud·
peppers ~ Clelond F-orms .
ed woodi , water and good oc,, . . . . . , . .
Geral.dine Glelond . Racine ,
oess in Monroe County, W.Va .
""""""
Ohlo.
51.000 oown. coli (301) mi-

~-CJub.Sto~o· t_,_

,

191~ DATSUN
210 2 door, local car, c speed

'

STARCRA.R . Beat tht'fa11 price.increo5e . All 197'6 models reduc·
ed to boHom. 1977 mini-motor
trail•" a nd told--downs in
stock . We sell s.rvke and
qoolity. We trode, financing orronged, Open Sundays. Camp
Conley Slorcroft Soles. Rt . 62,
N . P~~~sont , v_y . Vo .

AU Ya rd Sales, R !Jm Mage,

Porc.h and euemtnt Porch
and Baument Sales, efc .
must be paid In advance .

--

8o11 729-E, core of Tt'le Daily
Sen !!;'_~l··~ P~!r?~0_!1io ,
HElP WANTED! l«ol tlrm needs
upwdenced plumbing and
h4Kiting man, steady work ,
Write P. 0 . ·Box 466, Pomeroy

~~·~o·•os

OFF ICE HOURS
8:30 o.m. to 5:00 p.m.

-

.,,

• ~ - ... •

nm
.t97t AMC HORNET
Sportabout, 6 cyl., automallc, power stetrlng, deluxe
equipment, wh itewall llrlis, luggage rack, dark green
finish , less titan 9.000 miles. showroom clean.

FU£l TRUCK dri ver. Mu'1 hove
truck driving lhcperlence . Wtite

or

ce nts .

.

SIGNS
OF
Motor Co~
QUALITY

m -m7. Also booking portlos.

tre5pouins at any flme on the
Howard Coldwell farm . Signed ,
HowordColdwel1.

Add lttonal 25(:: Charge
per Advertisement.

.

AVERAGE S..O o" e'olenlng ¢r
afte rnoon s demonstrating
guaranteed toys and gifts . No
cash ln"estmenl, no delivtcy or
col lecting. Computers do your
popetwork . Call 949-1803 or

quality kn itt and low price'l.
HQf.ln Monday thru Frldoy 9.
a.m. to 7 p.m. Cloud Sotur.
davs . Corolino Fabrics on Rt . 1 ,
h lf
one o mil• nortn of Chester ,
Okio . Henry and Mary Hunters,
Owner-s,

•BSOLUTElY

.·· --

AVERAGE $.40 on ewef'ling ot
ofternoon1
demonstra ting
guoronteed toys ond glfh , No
cott') investment , no delivery or
collecting. Computer' do yoU~
paperwork . Coli 9•9·2803 tlr
992-2927. Also booking parties .

for vocation, we ore open

insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl.OO.
lA cents per word three
consecutive lnurttons.
26 cents r,•r word siK
consecutive nserrtJons. .
25 Per Cen t DiscOun t on
paid ads a·n&lt;t aCfs pa id
within lQ days.
tor

Help Waflted

OPEN t'GAIN-of·t.,: being closed

Far Want Ad Strvlu

U.OO

_

Telev~ion

FINALLY

•

I ..( 1 I I I 1 ]"
'Mon., Tutlw Wed. ,

' (CJ 19'16

8:00 tll5:00

· Thursday I til 12 ncion'

•••. .FRI:DAY TIL'a·
' '~e

.

..................
· Close S..t. '.At s p.m.~
.

.

· WUTLAND
ARIIMJt.D'Ibl'E

742·:1211

tOne Feah1re• S)fndicale, Inc.)

•
WHAT DID ELVINEV

SAV ABOUT LUKEV
LOS IN' A~L HER SUTTER
•AI\I'EGG .MONEV INTH '
CARD

. I

GAME?

I'M NOT SURE A601JT
THIS FIRST QUESTION ...

A MATTER Of FACT, I
THINK I CAN ANSWER
OF THESE QUESTIONS

MM6E I COULD JUST
HELP THE CUSTODIAN

SWEEP M HAu..S...

.

.

�12- Tbe DaU)"Sentlnel, Middleport..Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1976
,
board and the two
•
representatives of the
ay
y
(Canllnlltl frGIII .... l)
. VeteraDI Memorial Hospital ftlt.
leacherstagruoup afndththebotwdo
MIDDLEPORT - Hubert of
the
Middleport
Holzer Medical Center
.
Admitted
Lewis
'l11e Immediate Impact ... on the .... an llllmltMI, wbo
~!~= th~e~~ues e$eve~~l William Taylor, 76, Broad· Presbyterian Church and a
(Discharges, Sept.14)
(Cclfttlmled 1rc1m page I)
Urnes during the evening.
way St., Middleport, died retired carpenler by !lade.
Sarah Bechtle, Marjorie Thompson, Pomeroy ; Oil· pve up average paycbecb of $271a nlli:la adllaltlw ttt
Bef
··•
unexpectedly Tuesday night
He Is survived by a Boggs, Lily Browning, Esco ford Hall, Racine; F1oyd to $50 in 111rike beaelltatheywUllhwf.rGm IIIIIIIICII't reed!
Snowden sald he felt the two
ore 11 was agr..,. that at Veterans Memorial daughter, Mrs. Larry Brumfield , Mary Burn- Bush, Letart, W. Va.
mWlon ttrlke fund. 'l11e ft!i1d wllllllrtnt at the rata of fll•
Discharged
Marge
repre$enlatives
of
the
Ohio
negotiations
could
take
place
Ho...,ltal.
H
1
het
'
mer,
Jo~- Caldwell, ..Ita
mlllloo
a week.
.
.,
"
1 Ia 1 · ht'
·
t
.,..
( e en) L. Fox, Marysville ;
'"'
""
Educawon A&amp;ln. should not ~ 5 Whamgl 8 81!58
d 10hn, A·
Mr. Taylor was born in two sons, WiUiamH., Brecks· Casto, Frances Casto, Reuter, Floyd Farra, Erma
"It might lllrt, but we C8ll 111111111 ut11 we aet wblt
be pennltled to speak since
rney
en sat e was Middleport Jan. 22, 1900, a ·11 o
nd
Dorothy Cullison, Brent Yoho, Olarles Yost, .George want," sald Larry Clemclll, wbo Wll ~the hunclrlda af•
they had . not notified the surprised by the appearance
e, hio,; three
a Carol
0., Davies, Donald Deckard , Hupp, Frankie Stafford, cheering worllera who walbd out of FGI'd'a glut Raqtl
Columbus
sisters,
·on son of the late William FesUs VI
Of
two
the
educatl
Mark Parsons, Dana Howell,
board earlier that tbey
wtahed to be included on the 8380Ciation representatives and Rebee ca Jane Tay 1or· He Mrs. Ethel Jones, Peoria, Ill., James El'tas, Lee Eng1and , Coy Starcher, Barbara IIWlufaclllrine complu In lllburbln DearbGm u the ali'lllt•
'tt had was also preceded in death by Mrs. Oneida Ward, Athens, Mrs. David Evans and
began. "A lot ci tbem didn't want to walt out, but we 111ft 1.0'
at the meetl·ng becau~
agenda . Snowden, however, be
~
three s1 s1ers.
and Mrs. Ernest (Clara da ughler , Granv1'II e Far1ey , McQuaid.
move the CGiilpany 110111e way."
.
•;
Ford hu 89 IIWlufacturina ll1d autO .-nbly planta Ill 2t
~~~:!r~k~~~~:~~~ co~~~g=~~~;l~t;i~~~ Mr. Taylor was a member Belle) Hawley, Chester; two Lena Foglesong, Everett
states, most of them concentrated IIIMlchlpn and Ohio.
•
board member Indicated tl)at Whalen indicated that their
brothers, ·James, of Mid· Fowler, Mary Frisby, Arden
The
Ford
llhutdown
bad
no
elfect
on
nto
buildlnl
operatimwt
the two representatives co.uld appearance indicated that
dleport and Joe, of Pleasant Fulks, Huber Fulton, Goldie
LUCIE SHOWING
by another 530,000 worlten at Gelll!i'll Moton, Olrysler 1114
be lleard.
"obviously" there was. some
Corners, Ohio, three grand- · Gillogly , Bobby .Hersman ,
NICE, France (UPI) However, Boa~d President change in the Olilo Education
..t
children, and several ni~ces . Emma Johnson, Mrs. Robert The skeleton of "Lucie," American Motors where procluctlm will oontlnue until I/
pattern agreemen! Ia worked out at Ford. Then each In tum~
Assn. and the Mei•s teachers' OJ
acr.ne
and nephews.
Kuhn and daughter, Naomi
thaI the board feelings.
Hoover stated
.
~
Funeral services will be Morgan , Homer Myers, the world's oldest woman, · will blve to match the basics.
k.
arrived In Nice Tuesday to
Is unifled on Its decisions and
told the two re]iresentaUves
After accepting the
RACINE - William F. held Friday at · 1 p.m. at Jaspar 0 I'tver, Margaret ·be shown at a scientific
that the board would not resignation of John T. (Bill) Harris, 52, RD, Racine Rawlings Coals Funeral Sinclair, Audrey Theobald. uhlbltlon entitled "Three
with
the Fischer as bus mechanic and died Tuesday at University Home with the Rev. Dwight
(Birtb, Sept.ll)
negotiate
·
appointed Alt' ce Globokar as Hospital, Columbus.
Zavitz officiating. Burial will
Mr . and Mts . John MIIUon Yea111: the Human
(Cciftllnuld fl'llll page 1\
Adventure."
representa tl ves smce Supt.
J ks
E · to
Dowler and Attorney Dennis a substitute bus driver, the
ThesonofthelateJackand be in Riverview cemetery. ac on, son, wmg n.
Lucie was found In 1971 , pension lund baa_~pproved 'tts 60 pet • .bare of 1 f8 mlllioa,
Whalen are the· designated board moved Into the Merle Tanthorey Harris, he Friends . may call at the
by a Franc&amp;-Amerh:an
8~ per cenl Improvement loan for Volkswagen'• p~
persons
to
conduct executive session to hear the was an employee of the funeral home Thursday from
group of explorers In tbe
"Rabbit" assembly plant at New Stanton. '111e 16-ysar, .,_.
negotiations.
report of the earlier Imperial Electric Co., clerk • tO to 12 and 4 to 9.
S
Hadar region of Ethiopia million loan okayed Tueaday by the $3.3 bWion State. Public ·
Foley said he agreed with negotiation session of the day of Sutton Twp., a Republican
where she had lain for Scho(,ll Employes Retirement Fund Ia 8lp8Cted to be loll011'14
that, but asked the board to and to be ·· on hand ·as cenllal committeeman of his
three million years before by apJI'oval today of a $2.4 m)Won loan to vw on the ~
stay on band during the negotiations·proceeded.
voting precinct for ·several · l ln -r
being unearthed.
terms by the smaller j)tate Employes Retlrament Fund,
evening so their concerns
During the open portion of years, and secretary- ..t,.acu.J. J
The teacher pension fund's approval came only 24 Sourl
could be heard and they could the meeting, It was reported treasurer·of the Meigs County •
·
.
ahead of Gov. Milton J. Slulpp'sllltiOWICed pllna for a algJdnt
be lnfonned on negotiations that officials of the district Oerk and Trustees Assn.
at 10:30 a.m. today, with VW's chief fiscal offtcer, Slelfrled .
The Middleport Fire
lTALY ROCKED
as the evening moved along. and the teachers have been in
He is survived by his wife,
UPINE, Italy (UPI) - A Holm, of the Commonwealth-Volkswagen muter agreement in
Harry Keiser, 92, of Department answered 52
This was agreeable to the touch with Meigs Prosecutor PhyUls Joseph Harris; three
Shapp's Capitol recepdon room. Volkswagen's succe81ful
Bernard Fultz who has in· daughters, Mary Ann Fowler, Columbus, a native of alarms during August, Fire new series of tremors rocked borrowing of the totalfemlllionlrom the state's ~o big public
dicated his willingneSs to Patricia flrown and Rebecca Minersville, died Monday in Chief C. Robert Fisher has the earthquake • devastated pension funds contrasted sharply witb dlaclOIIUl'e last July 8
Friull region of northeast
play an role needed in the Smith, all of Racine ; a son, Columbus. He was the son of reported .
·
Of
the
total,
48
were
first
Italy before dawn today, that the funds had offered VW a 16-year, tillS million plant
Our Interest Is
negotiations In, order to help Bill, Jr., at home, and \hree the late Mr. and Mrs. Chris
equipment loan at an average 9.per cent Interest.
Greater For You
resolve the strike.
grandchildren, Michelle, IU!iser and was also preceded aid calls and four were for collapsing buildings .in at
&lt;XlLUMBUS - THE OHIO GENERAL ABiembly seared
Christopher and Crage in death by his wife, Alma, fires. Two of the fires were In least seven towns and up for a full calendar of leglalatlon today, Including ''toP
Cheshire Twp., a third was in villages. First reports said
Brown.
and a daughter, Dorothy. ,
Addison
'l'wp., Gallia County. .one man died of a heart at- !rlorlty" statusslven to a partisan Medicaid appropriation biU.
Funeral services wiU be
Surviving
Bre
two
cleared Tuesday by . the House Finance Cqmmlttee. The
.
.
Saturday, 2:30p.m. at Ewing daughters, Mrs. Henry Thle , . Of the emergency calls, 33 · tack In Gorizia and at least 15 Medicaid bill has been the subject of a ~ljolllt leg~tlve '
.
FOUR ARE FINED
Chapel with the Rev. Steve Coluinbils, and Mrs. William were in toWn and 1!i out of persons were injured.
On 90-Day
committee and bas generated healed debate between
Four defendants fined by WllsQn officiating: Burial will Dilla.rd, Luncaster ; a son, town, and three involved
Democrats and Republicans.
Mayor Fred be in Greenwood •Cemetery. Paul, of Columbus, and 17 motor vehicles. Total ·
Certificates Middleport
NOW
YOU
KNOW
Gov. James A. Rhodes; refused permission by· majority ·
Hollman Tuesday night were Friends may call at the grandchildren . Mr. Keiser manhours for first aid were
The
planet
Venus
takes
247
Democrats
to address state lawmakers on the topic, spoke
193.!&gt;, for fire , 61.1 . An
5.75 per cent paid on Sharon L. Knopp, 'll, Racine, funeral home after 2 p.m. was a retired butcher.
earth
days
to
make
one
anyway in the Capitol Rotunda Tuel!day and repeated hll
90 day Certlfl Clites of $5 and costs, assured clear Thursday.
Funeral services will be average of II answered fire revolution on its axis and assertions that the Medicaid deficit could only be answered by·
distance;
George
A.
Blanks,
calls.
First
aid
vehicles
Deposit, st;ooo.oo
held at 9:30 a.m. Friday at
224.7 earth days to orbit the a tax ina-ease next year. Also 111 the leglalatlve calendar were ·
21, Fayetteville, W. Va., $10
the Glenn L. Myers Funeral traveled 902.6 miles. Mileage sun. Thus, a day on Venus is bills revising Ohio's new bingo law, funding the Office of the
Mlnlm um.
Interest and costs, obstructing
Home in Columbus with of all vehicles was 1,351.4.
Payable Quarterly. traffic; Roy F. Boggs, 42,
longer than a year.
Conswner Counsel to ~ct consumer's rights in utWty ra~
graveside rites to be held at 1
cases and
.
·
Middleport, $SO and costs,
A subltant"l penally 1
p.m. Friday at the Miners·
lnvo~od on all &lt;trlllltol
disorderly manner , and
ville Cemetery. Friends may
ecco~t~nts withdrawn prla
Clarence E. Fife, 50,
. to the date of maturlty
call at the Myers Funeral
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
Funeral services for Curtis Home from 7 to 9 Thursday
ruming a stop sign. For- N. Jones, former Chesler evening .
felting bondS were Franklin resident, teacher and com0, Cook, 39, Point Pleasant, munity leader, were held
AUTOS COUIDE
and Paul R. Marx, . 48, today at 2 p.m. at the Thur·
TUPPERS
PLAINS - A
Martins Ferry, $23.70, both ston-Kauber Funeral Home
minor
accident
investigated
for speeding.
in Palaskala.
by
the
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Mr. Jones died Saturday at
Department
Tuesday
at 8:44
TM·A"'""•County
Grant Hospital, Columbus.
kvtntl &amp; Loan Co.
He Is survived by his wife, pm. at the Vista Service
2'6 Second St.
Dorothy; a daur,h'er, Mrs. Station in Tuppers Plains
l'llmlf'Gy,OIIio
'
Anthony
D.
Edward Morrison (Mary) of involved
SEE BALL GAME
LaComb, 18, Tuppers Plains,
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright Blacklick, three grand· parked at the station and a
. of P~roy were in Cin· . chUdren, Bruce.of Blacldick, .car driven by Kathy Lynn
ciMaU over the weekend to apd Brenda and· Becky, Spurlock, 20, Tuppers Plains
Columbus; a slep&lt;laughter,
attend the Bengab game.
two great-grandchildren, two which backed up and struck
brothers and a slste(. He was LaComb's vehicle. There was
Just received another · big
preceded in death by his first slight damage to the Spurlock
car,
moderate
to
the
LaComb
wife, Jesse Eager Jones in
shipment of carpet mill ends. 100
Dec. 1962, and an infant son . vehicle, and no injuries.
per cent nylon, solid colors and

SCh 00IS

•m

..r:

.

William Harris
R

•

dies .

News •• in Briefs

Augusl call

K .
e1ser total 52 times
died on Monday

5.75%
.

•

Curtis Jones

buried today

lberfelds In Pomeroy
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

USE ELBERFELDS SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE

CARPET MILL.EN

THE INN.PLACE
Thunday Nrght

Special
..

.

TWO IN SPACE
MOSCOW (UPI) - The
Soviet
Union launched two
TWO DRAW FINES
men
into
space Wednesday,
Fined by Pomeroy Mayor
the
Tass
news
agency said.
Oarence Andrews Tuesday
Tass
sald
the
Soyuz
22 craft
night were Dana Aldridge,
was
piloted
by
Vlaery
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, on
Bykovsky
and
Vladimir
conviction of passing on the
wrong side of road, and John Akaenov.
Freeman, Pomeroy; reckless
ASK TOWED
operation, $150 and costs ..
Forfeiting bonds were · A marriage license was
Richard Fridley, Middleport, issued to Jay Dee Rowe, 21,
Middleport, and Cynthia
$~0. for squealing tires;
Sammy Little, Middleport, Lynn Demoskey, 19, Mid·
and Alina McComllB, Albany, dleport.
$25 each, for speeding.
Pomeroy Bowtin9 Lanes
Tuesdoy Triplicate

excellent patterns, bound aII
around, come early for best
selection. The savings are great.

·~·

---,'/.······ ... •b•a

ft.' .,_

MEIGS THEATRE

'Visit Our Salad 'ear
Finger Lobsters
French F rles

Hot Rolls
Coffee. tea or milk

Plus tax

THE MEIGS INN .

Standings

Team
Pis.
Shamrock Motel
16
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
No. 2
10
No.6
8
Sepl.15·16
. No.5
6
NOT OPEN
No.1
6
No.3
4
High Individual game Fri., S1l., Sun.
Betty Smith 1S4; second high
5ept.17-11·19
Ind. game - Pal Smith 178.
ONE FLEW OVER
High series - Pal Smith
THE COOKOOS NEST
490; second high series Jac~ Nicholson. Louise
Betty Smith 478 .
Fletcher, Wm. Redfield. R
Team high game
Shamrock 480.
.
Showstartsal7 p.m.
Team high series Shamrock 1406

~

PORK LOIN SLICED
LB. '119
'CTR. CUT

~

•&amp;v

69~

YELLOW ONIONS
3 Ul. bag 49~ .

Color
T.V. Sets

~·

-~,.e

~.

c.\-J.8

\,:

~

Stor·e. Mechanic Street Warehouse and Home Furnishings
Annex . O!)en Mondaythru Thursday9:30to5p.m.- Friday 9:30 to 8
p.m. - Saturday 9:30 to 5 p.m.
I

lberfelds In Pomeroy
SALAD DRESSING
32 oz. jar

99~

CHARM IN

BATHROOt-1 TISSUE
4 ioll pkg.

67 ~

••

NESCAFE

INSTANT

COFFEE
10.0L
Jlr

$ 99

w. oman dies 0 f
.
f
t
.
8kun rae ure
·

•

·~ .

Prill ..,dlavltl&amp;owtnllfthe Melp Local Teacben ~(YLTA) cllarpd today the ldlool board'a refual to meet
- =~o;t:;.-:=~·e~~~~Unuestobea majcdactor In
Aldie lltrille lllllnd Ita eiCIQ day. Bolltn allo ~loned

~·~!::=:!:"'..J:.':.~~ =-~~elp

Bowa said, "Tbe board rajeeted the sr-:utor as a

medlatGr becllue of a fear 11111' they would lie glvq up local
Cllltrol of the 1Cbooi8yllen. Yet It IIIII'_.. they have already
POINT PI..EAB.4NT
Hospital wlth multiple · relinqulllbed lacal e~~~~trol by ~ a highly-paid Akron
An 1&amp;-ytar-old woman 1r act u res,
m uIll p 1e atl«aey to necllllate lor llld.ridllle them."
be9ame Mason County'• laceraUona and contus10111.
ID alditlon, Bo11'811 riPPed the c;lalm of liehool board
·

fourtlllntllc 'at..llty of !be
year u,rly tctdly In a OI1Hid'
accident on Band 1DU Rd.
According to ,Muon County
Sllerlfrt deputy Jerry L.
Ashworth, Stella Marie
Demy Franklin, Rt. 2, Point
Pleasant, was pronounced
dead at the tcelle by ,Muon
County !Joroner or. John
·Grubb. 'l11e victim suffered a
fractured lkuU.
, AIIO injured were R8ndall
Henry, 19, 424 SeCond Ave.,
Kanauga, the driver of the
car, and Will Ialii Junior
Denny, 18, Rt . · 2, Point
Pleasant, a brother of the
vlctllJt,.
Demy Is listed In 181'10111
~Uon at Pleuant Valley

Henry 11 llated In fair condltliJa lllllflrlnl from multiple
'contualona, abrulons and
laceraUona.
Aecordlng to Deputy Alb·
wor~ ll)e trio wu trapped in
the wrecltlge u minutes. 'l11e
· accident Ia still under In· ·
vesU,adon.
It Wll reported they were
in the front aeat at the Ume of
the accident which occurred
!even tenlbe 'of a mile from
Rt. . 82, when Henry lost
control of his car going into a
curve.
Mrs. FrankUn'a body .wu
taken to the Steve111 Funeral
Home where arrangements
are pending.

Jl'._.deN Wendell HGover til¥ a contract aettlement would
rwu1t Ill a ' Jocal tu loa aue. He mted, "A salary figure
hu not been afll'ted to, lbinlore, lhere can be no basil for
Jl'edletiniiiiY tax lncrluel." Jowen added that "even If the
board afll'ted to tbe teac:llera'lUgheat salary request, there Ia
ito poulble way thatlt wquldresult In a local tu hike."
"Meamrhlle, negotlallooa between the tdlool board's

..

NO. 106
VOL XXVIII'
- .

attorney and MLTA teacherofleflotlalora are at a lllandltlll,"
said Bowen.
·
Teachert are making an effort to tell tbelr tliJI')' to tbt
tnpayera, accordq to Bowen. 'l11e l1rst Ill a 11lrlM of fad
llheetl was diJtrlbuted lhrotiCIIWt the area Tueeday nlgbt,
and, Bowen sald, "IIIOiber 4,000 flyers were banded out door·
to-door and on city ttneta 'lburaday m&lt;rnllt«.
Meantime, Ollrlel L. Dowler, dlltrlet superlmndent,
sald today IICbooll are apin ''ofllctally cloeed" for the eeoond
c:oneecutlw day. l&gt;rkr to yesterday schools were "officially
. open".
The board ol education met .in special e:recutlve 1e1s1on
!ell nlghi and heard a report on negotiations held earUer In the
day. Meetinga are continuing between the repl'tlllentatlves ol
the board and the . locsl teacllers 81110Ciatlon today, a
apollielmln sald, delplte Bowen's claim that "face to face"
negotiations are av&lt;tdad by the board.
Dowler said the band llld football team will go to Ripley,
W. ya.,Frldayfor the ecbeduled football game. Fenton Taylor
Is In charge ol the football team and John Mora and Earl
VOUllfl, ad!\JlnlJtraltn, will make the trip with the bend.

e

1200 foot lock
wins approval
. WASHINGTON - The
Senate committee on Public
WC!I'ka Wedilesday approved
legislation authorizing
constructiOn of a new 1,200
loot iock at an e~tlmated cost
of $146 million at Galllpolia
Lock and Dam on the Ohio
River at Eureka, Senator
Jennings Randolph an·
nounced. Construction can
allirt in about four years.
Randolph, cbalrman of the
committee, sald the action In
approving
the · Water
Resources Development Act
· of 1976 Is lndlcalive of the
· committee's concern for an
effective Inland waterwaYJ
transportation system.
"It Is essential to the expediUous movement of cargo
on the Ohio River that construction of t)le Galllpoll,s
project be initialed as quickly
as possible. The authofiz&amp;Uon

pted

&lt;Xl~~US -SECRETed
''"·t~y OFiniSTtia~tedTE Ted W. Brown
Wedne
....y IIIIIOWIC w~ ,our
utWty reform

OOIIItltutiooal amendmenta have qualified for placement on
the Nov. Z ballol.
"
•
·
"AlthoughthejObofvalldatlqprupplementalslsnatures Ia
~ incamplete, reporll fram 74 county boards of electlms
lbow the 111'911P baa more,than ~ stanaturea to warrant
placing the laluel Cit the ballot, Brown sald.
Brown allo said he Ia orderlnll the remaining 14 boards of
,eteclioarr lllltop .valldatlag slpaturlll.
, . '"111ei't's no aeed to
spending money cbecldng the
namea 11011' that the'- have receiVed the needed signatures
for placement 111 the ballot." Brown said.

ceil-

Weather
Sun. 10 to 5
Prices Effective .

01ance of showers tonlsht
and Friday. Lows toniSht in
the low 1111, hlsba Friday in
the lllld '~~~~· Probability of
rain 70 per cent today, 40 per
. cent tonight, 30 per cent
Friday.

TAKEN TO HOLZER
'l11e Pomeroy Emergency
Squad wu called to 243
Mulberry at 1:'7 a. m.
Thuraday for MaJlne Dugan
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

111ursday thru SundaJ

1

,(

•1.1 ·

,, J'tl-.un:uzng
.,:.J
ewer

Kissinger tries again

By JIM ANDERSON
LUSAKA, Zambia (UPI) Secretary .of State Henry
Kissinger, saylllg he bas ''not
given up bope" despite a
sbaky beslnnlllg · of his
African peace miBillon,
arrived in Zambia today and
was . told the . Lusaka
government supported
stepped-up guerrilla warfare
to end white rule In Rbode111a.
Kissinger flew here from
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania,
where President Julius
Nyerere sald .rter talka that
he "was less bopeful, less
encouraged than before''
about the secretary's efforts
to defuse the racial tenSion in
southern Africa.
It was understood that
Kissinger hlmaelf now put his
chances for success at
The Meigs County Museum sllgllUy less iban 50 per cerit.
The ~retary WBII met at
on Butternut Ave.
In
Pomeroy will be open Lusaka's airpiB1 by Zambian
3 p.m. Foreign Minister Slteke
Saturday,Sept.lgll
to Senior
in conjunction with the
Citizens "Yesteryear."
The display at the museum
111 the townships ,of Meigll
Cotlnty contains many pie·
lures and artifacts from their
early development. A slide
sb Is 0f M 1 · C t
ow houses,e gs
oun Y
towns,
!81'1111, the
river and some scenes from
this year's Heritage Sunday
at the museum.
The blstory wall, 8 per·
manent part of the museum,
made possible through a
grant from the Blet!ntennlal
Commlsalon and clonationa
althoill!h not completely
flnlahed baa much to offer to
· everyo~e interesl4d In a
particular
time
or
development of the county,
Donations of 50c fC11' aclulti
and 25c . for chUdren ilre
'
,.8 ted
apprec
·

Museum to
be open on
Saturday,

History might have
recorded "the Shawmut
massaa-e," and generaUons
of cooka might have whipped
uP pota ol "Siullfl!lut baked
beans," but on Sept. 18, 1830,
Massachusetts colonists
changed the name of their
town to Boslon .

contained in the bi.U will .
provide funds for this project
besinnlng with flacal year
1978 and the Army Corps of
Engineers baa indicated that
actual construction can
commence by 1980," Ran·
dolph sald.
•
'l11e princl)ial feature of the
bill was the authorization of
water resource development
projecta for flood control and
navigation purposes .fll the
rivers 8nd harbors of tlie
nation. Projects authorized
~II cost !lpproxlmately
btlllon.
Randolph said they wli1
provide Improvements which
meet the needs of the
citizens of thls COtlltry 1rhi1e
provldlns employment
opportunities In a broad
range of construction
activities.

WHrrriER'S OORNER- Darrel Taylor Ia llhown with some of the Items he buns out
with b11 woocl whlttllpg !iol4'. 'fayl9f 11riU be •mona ~ edllbltara at the ~I ~s
'wlebtatlont.belleldattheM~COIIDty~Cltllei18CenleronSatur)lay. · '
. ! ·~·-

Mwale, who Uke Nyetere
sounded a skepti~l note.
"We have welcomed Or.
Kissinger's initiative and the
best we can do Is wish you the
best of luck In your diflicult
work," Mwale sald.
In bls airport CIIIIIIlentS,
Kissinger emphasized he had
carefully coordinated hiS
peace efforts with African
leaders, particularly the
presidents of Zambia,
Botswana, Tanzania and
Mozambique, all ''frontline"
states bordering white
regimes.
"The Initiatives we haw
taken so far have been taken
m the basis of the closest
coordination with the
fron tline presidents," he
sa)d.
Kissinger was scheduled to
meet with Zambian President
Kenneth Kuanda . this
afternoon and again over a
working dinner tonight. The

two men will have a third
private session Friday
morning
just
before
Klesinger heads for Prelllria,
South Africa.
In Tanzania, apparently
surprised by the gloomy
assessment from Nyerere,
the ·American secretary sald
"it Is too early to tell" what
will happen.
However it is understood
Kissinger feels there Is
sllghUy less than an even
chance he will be able to
establlsh a framework for
negotiations.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday tbrougb
Monday, mostly lair
tbrougb the period with
highs tn.lhe mid 70s to tbe
low 80s and lows In the ses.

Now Y~u Know

COnAGE CHEESE

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~

m•'cr.ease.

uvoNIA, MicH.- AWED SUPERMARKETS INc. 11
closing 50 "!Diprofltable" stores in 13 states at the end of the
week, a mrJVe which COOIPIIIY officials say will help the firm
reduce Its financial loues.
~n of the Great Scott and Wrigley ltores closing
down Saturday night are In Michigan, while 10 are in Ohio,
eight in Indiana, live In North CaroUna and three in VIrginia.
A1ao clol8d will be two stort!s each Ill Illinois, Kentucky and
South Carolina and one each in Georgia, Arkansas,
l&gt;ennaylvanla, Tennessee and Texas. Cincinnati aild Toledo
eacll have four ol the Ohio stores while Hamilton and Lima
have one esch.
• w••UYToJGTON
- MOST FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
,_..,,
employes will set a 5 percent cost of Uving pay ralle Oct. 1
111der tenna of a propoeed congressional cunpromlse. But
Cclftgress decided tq deny the Increase to Itself, fede.-al judges
and loJHevel lmeaucrata.
Approving a compromlae $1 billion legislative
'appropriations WI, members of a House.&amp;!nate conference
oommlttee also agreed to accept a Senate proposal for repeal
of the a\IIII!Uitlc 1 per cent lacreue added to colfl.of-Hvlng
--•"- __.,.....
_ .._. .....
ralsel for mWtary and civil .......,. ,...,.ment...,--. """
10&lt;11Ued I i*'cerit "kicker" enacted by Congriu In 1989 bas
·resulted 1n penslllls being raised over the put seven yem by
11 per cent, whUe the Cclft- Price Index has increased 56
per cent, resulting In a 15 percent overpayment

HAPPY FAN - SoJttie Icenhower, a OQdnnltl Red
fan, is pkt1lred l1erJ with Loulle Gilmore's bueball
WmmY which standi on the lawn ol her Unloa Ave.
Pomeroy, home. To SoJttie, It's Johnnie Bench,IU hero.
· Scottie Is tile grandaon of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Icenbower.

THURSDAY,
SEPTEMBER 16, 1976
,,,,

ews .""':~~:&amp;&amp;:~i~~~·01!&lt;xB~
...-;,-·.:fm~fi-~lfil! !'"' ra~~7:
,.
By Ulilted Pres1 hltemadooal
. DETROIT - UNITED AUTO WORKERS Prelldent
. lAonardWcodcockwon'tpredlcthowlong170,ooOworlterawi!J .,
be olf the job In a blllloMiollar contract dispute with the Ford
, Motor Co., but he's sure It will be more than the two wee!ta
11111e obi&amp; vera lorecl!lt.
· CANTON, Ohio (UPI) 'lbere were no negotiations scheduled today, the secood The
Public
Utilities
full day of the nationwide walkout at 102 p1anta operated by Commission of Ohio has
Ford Ill 22 states. The strike bepn alter the union rejected a granted Ohio Power Co.
fil1al ccmpany ~ Ford clalmed Wll wortb •1 bWion to pel'llli,.ton to raise Ita ra!ef
workers rJVet three yeara. The dllpute Ia tbe tarsest industrial by t$4.1 mlllloo a year for all
strike in the nation since Genetal Moton wu shut for 87 days of Ill llti,OGO CUIIoolera In 5S
In 1970. There were no reporll of any plckeW!ne violence. ·
Ohio counties, the utWty sald
Wednesday .
PITI'SBURGH - THE AUTO WORKERS' STRIKE
Ohio Power sald t4f.38
against the Ford Motor' Co. poaea an addldonal threat of more ml!ljpn of the' rate Increase
l!IYofta in the 111ee1 bidustry. A "JOft" steel market ... already had been ....~!! effect since
resulted in hundreds of ateellndWJtry layofla a&lt;NIIIi the na.tiOO. January 1975when the uWlty
Arecent crop in at~l purcbase orders forced the industry · was
an emergency
to cancel a plarmed 4.1 per cent price increase lor Oct. 1, and rate Increase '!be other $4 71
the continued lag bas JI'OIIlpled at least four companies to million wu ~ roved ~
.furlough workers. '111e lllrlke by the United Auto Workers the company ~
Y'
against Ford could have an additional Impact on the steel
Ohio Power had orlalnally
industry.
requested a boost of $84
million when It filed the
SALT LAKE CITY'"" CONGRESSMAN Allan Howe kicked request over two yean ago
off lils rwlectlon canipalsn with a polygraph test he uys with $24 millllll ol that total
proves h\! Ia Innocent Of sex sollc:ltlng charges, but Utah to be sought from two apedal
.Democratic Party leaders weren't too lmpresaed with his contract customers. That
evidence.
,
,
·,
' No ~ hid ~ i!deaed'' tl\1!' H' cletAiclllr relillts jiorll~co~~,~
by
.
Wednelday thtu\ Uteh DerliocratiC ·National Ccnm!Ueeman
A stipulated agte11,11ent
Daryl McCarty .anno111ced he would 8eek party backing to i'eached last moilth with the
wage a 'flrlte.fll ~ aplnlt the freshman congreuulan. PUCO staff and intervening
Gov. Calvin RarnpiAI1 also sald the polygraph resultl made no cities pared down the
:dllference and Howe bad "no cl11nce at all." II&amp; criticized both ·remaining $81 million to $64.1
the congrea81llan's legal defense ll1d his campalp since his million .
luTeal June 12.
The ulllity sald the averase
residential customer who
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD HAS twice vetoed uses 750 kUowat hours a
a ~r:aJ lllrip mtnllig lill, and after Wednesday's declalon by month will pay about the
the House IW1M C!lllllllttee mt to schedule floor action on a same rates.
third aUempt at enactment, the Idea Is p-obebly dead for the
Due to a restructuring of
year. Tbe declaion was hailed by Carl E. Bagge, president of the rates, a CUBtomer using
·the Nallooal Coal Association. ·
more than that average will
'"!be f!Wes Comml~ wlaely refused to waste the Ume of pay slightly more and a
· the House on a bill already twice vetoed by the Pre3fdent," he eustomer uslnl!·less than the
said. "I hope the next Congress will i'eallze the whole 11U1Uer average will pay less, the
has bec1111e moot, for upgraded state laws now require utility said.
effective reclamatlm of mine land and led~al regulations
protect ptbUe land."
'"'

••

enttne

a1 y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. ..

•

•

. El . .

BROUGHlONS

PORK CHOPS
'1~'··

\ 'J···

MIRACLE WHIP

OHIO POTATOES
10 lb. bag

•• • •• •

~,.e'

NEW

AYSTEE BOLOG
2 lb. pq. Sliced '1 29 .

'

Sale Prices
Now On
R.C.A. &amp; G.E.

,'t.,.
'
·
·
·
·
•
,\,.e '/..,.', ,,!»·;. ••••~,,oe
,,.,.' .,.,.,•..•.....
.
~,_e ..,

~

Sepl. 7,1976

.

·-

SPECIAL

cy attac e

ar

Ford Motors stopped

HOSPITAL NEWS

Hubert T }or died T uesda

"

DEMONSTRATOR- Mrs.- Enna Largent, Syracuse, will be one of two demonstrators
working at the senior citizen bicentennial celebration from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday
showing operation ol this loom. Joining her wiU be Mrs. Reva Beach, Middleport (not
pictured.)
·

e

.

,,

wins approval
Frank W. Porter, Pomeroy
attorney, announced Wed·
nesday that the SyracuseRacine Regional Sewer
District bas been notified by
the United States En·
vironmental Protection
Agency (EPA), that Step Two
grantmoriey in the amount of
$112,725, which Is 75 percent
of the tolal cost, wiU be
avaUable.
The mmey Is to be used to
pay for the cost of the official
plans such as aerial photos,
design for the plant, and
locaUon of the greatrnent
plant and lift stations.

This grant was obtained
through the combined
initiative of Edwin F.
Neutzllng, president elf the
Regional Sewer District,
represenUng .the village of
Syracuse; Al~t D. Hill, Jr.,
member of . the board
representing Racine, and
Freeland S. Norris, member
and secretary, representing
Sutton Township, and Porter.
Step three is the final phase
when the funding will be
granted to buUd the system
which may be in the 1977-78
funding period.

Car demolished
in Rt. 7 wreck
Vient A. Harris, 18,
Gallipolis, was injured in a
traffic accident at 7:25 a.m.
Wednesday on Rt. 7, north of
King's Run Rd . in Gallla
Coun'ty.
The Gallla·Melgs Post
State Highway Patrol sald
Harris, traveling south, lost
control of his car on the wet
pavement. The vehicle ran
off the highway striking a
guardrail then severed a
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric pole. Harris was not
immediately treated. His car
was delliolished .
No one was cited in a
colliSion at 8:50 a.m. Wed·
nesday on Rt. 7 at the junction of 248. The.patrol said a
vehicle driven by Guy Victor
Sargent, 83, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
pulled onto Rt. 7 striking a
car operated by Clyde E;.
Christian, 60, Rt. 3,
Chesapeake. There was
moderate damage. No
charges were filed .
Lexie M. Loftis, 55,
Jackson, a 'passenger In a car
driven by Janice L. LofUs, 26,
Jackson, was Injured in an
accident at 10 : 1~ a.tn. on Rt.
325 at the junction of County
Road 57·B.
. According to the patrol, the
Loftis car turned left into the
path of a vehicle operated by
Robert D. Dewller, 43,
Alexandria, Va. There was

moderate damage. Loftis was
charged with improper left
turn.
·
A other Meigs County
accident occurred at 10:30
a.m. on township road 238,
three tenths of a mile north of
Rt. 681, where cars driven l!y
Bernice E. Meeks, 66, Rt. 3,
Athens, and Jeffery A. Day,
17, Rt. 2, Coolville,
sideswiped on a curve. There
was heavy damage to the
Meeks car and moderate to
the Day vehicle. No one was
injured or cited.
James A. Westfall, 49, PSR,
Gallipolis, was charged with
passing without the assured
clear dilltance following an
accident at 12:15 p.m. on Rt . .
7, one mile south of the
Gallla·Lawrence County line.
The patrol said Westfall
attempted to paBII several car
and bad to cut back in to
avoid a headon colllslon. His
car struck a vehicle operated
by Eugene H. Adkins, 48,
Galllpolis .
JosephA. Burris, Jr. 18, Rt.
2, Vinton, was charged with
unsafe vehicle following an
accident at! p.m. Wednesday
on Rt. 325, three tenths of a
inlle sOuth of Vinton.
Officers said Burris lost
control of his car on the wet
pavemenl: .1'11t _yehlcle rill '
off the ~ , striking an
tmbankment. q ' '
. '

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