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r-'l'btDilJ111eutinei,Ml~y.o., Tuetday,Oc\.12, I971

. Ella May Howell ·
I

.

.,

died in Cantori

iLaunl
11n. E111.J IUy Ho~. e ,
Cll!l, died &amp;mday
IJIMpitalln c.mon.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A J_..,al appeala court has

Charles H. Coleman, Sr., o1

· Milchell and former top Nizm aides JO!In Ehrlichman and H.
R, Haldeman oo charges Qf conspiring to cover up the 1972
lrtalt-ln at Democratic National Headquarters, sources aald
today.
' .
•
The U. S. Clrruit Court Of Appeala here also reversed and
aent bacll for further proceedings the conspiracy coovictioo of
former Aaalatant Attorney General Robert Mardian, who was
convicted iii the same case, the sources aald.

Jet., Ohio died Tuesday, Sepl.
28, 1916 at 4&lt;45 p.m.ln
Allegheny General Hoapltal,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sllrvivlflg are hli widow,
Mrs. Margaret Ferguson
Coleman; two aons, Charles
H. Coleman, Jr, of Orcutt,
Calif. and Larry R. Coleman,
at home; a grandson and a
slsler, Mrs. Fay (Martha)
Bl~ing. . ·
Mr. Coleman . .,... born In
Hartford, W. ·va, April 23,

ELLICOTT CITY,' Md.
(UP!) - An El.IICI)tt City
couple plans to get a aecond
divorcellOOil - not beciiUIIO! ol
diulfectlm, but to p-otest
the "abs\!l'dlty of the tu
laws."
H. David Boyter, 311, and his
wile Angela, 31, got tllelr first
divorce last December,
remarried Jan. 9 and now aay
they wtll go lilrl&gt;ul!h the 8ame

. affirmed the conviction• of former Attorney General John N. !36 Montgomery ,Lane, Mingo

!

jm~~~a~ at T1mkeo

On .the late·; late wire

Charles Coleman
died Sept. 28th

-Tax laws flouted with 2nd divorce ·

)lercy

1 lin. Howell WU born July
~. . .1. lilt dlllllier of the

!late Lnil and Elsie ·Light.

!foot

McCumber. She wu
,prtCeded In dlllh allo by a
!brother, daughter a~d a
llfllldloll. S1M wu a member
(of till B~tbany · United
Melhodllt Church.
Sumvlne an.her buabind,
IVeroon; a aon, Roy,
IPomero)'; two dausbtera,
· lK•Ibl- Poallon, Canton,
Jllld Opll Carrulbers, Beach
CIIJ. Oblo, 10 grandcblJdren,
21 l!l'latocranddllidreD and
sreai1P'U~chlld.
·" - ! · Mrrices will be
held at I p.m. Tbunday at the
~ FIIJiel'al Home with
the Rev. Floyd Sbook of·
flclatlnl. 8111'1111 will be in
BHch · Gr~ve Cemetery.
Frlendl may caD at the
fwleral home at any time.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov . James A. Rhodes loday'slt!ned
leglalatioo cha,.ing a p-ovialon ol the public employes'
retirement law whlcb otherwile would have cost local school
dlltricta Up to fl~ million a year. .
.
The blll, effeetlvelmmedlately, eliminates a provlBion in a
pubUcemployes' retirement law requiring that achool diatricts
hoi~ in eacrow enwgh mooey to pay employes• aalaries during
IUIIllller. months instead pf spreading payments' over a 1~ sister, Mrs. Iva Napor, and
month period to coolorm with income.
three brothers, William,

!

Federal tu laws require a
IIIIIITied couple to pay higher
lncune lues than two single
llllmllTied ldultallvinS loge!her.
To avoid the tu lite, the
Boyiera lri1l ~ flying olf to
the Dominican Republic in
November for a vacatlm and
a $350 divorce in Santo
" Domingo: ·They will be
married for the third Ume in
January.
Even with the elpe!ISe of
the divorce and the vacation,

JUDIO
, r M,ISs .

!:·E~~tGi~the~:a~c~

Mrs. Rixey to throw first ball

P'""f'&amp; this year.

.

..

Endorsement Qf Ford
dead1ine is vacation,"
"We take the trip for a
Mra. Boyter said.
db
·
:w~ ~~~~~r::a~~ October 20 ~~~o :t w~v:e ~~: criticize
y pastors
the Union
Cemetery, ,
to do - swim and get a
aaying, "I'm r..him."

auntan on the beaches. Only
DALLAS (UP!) - The
CINCINNATI (UPI) ·~ DoShe is the first woman to do
we are alao getting a divorce . president and three past
"We members and officers
Wedneaday, Oct. ~ Ia the and upect to pay atleast that presidents of the Dallas of the DPA view with
rothy Rlxey, the widow of the honors.
entry deadline for the much less income ta&lt; as Pastors Aasociatlon have amazement and incredulity·
anclnnati Reds Hall of Fame
Reds' Vice President Dick
Southeut
Ohio Junior Miaa single adlllta."
hurler Eppa Rixey, was to Wagner invited Mrs. Rlxley
~ a statement criticizing the actloo last Sunday of the:
Scholarship
Program, ac·
pitch the first ball today to to throw out the pitch after
The
Boyters
_
both
W
.A. Criswell f..- "blatant pas(or of the Flrlll Baptl8t
open the third game of the finding oul recently she was Veter&amp;DI Memorlll Hoopltal cording to cbalrperson Tonya Department of Defense violatloo of the p-inciple of Church In throwing the
Admitted - . Pauline Keebaugh Davia.
National League playoffs be· stulllving.
separation of church and weight of · his ·peraon and
Derenberger,
Pomeroy ;
The finala of the program
tween the Reda and the
A local newspaper ran an
Philadelphia Phlllles:
.. article recently about the 71&gt;- George Rlttenhouse, . Racine; will be Nov. 21 at ~elgs .,:,::::::::&lt;:l::;::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::: =~·:oren:r~it~: =~=nd'l:l:.t::.'' ~;;:; .
High
School
. year-old widow vacationing Anna Hartenhach, Miners- Junior
President Ford.
pastors aaid.
EXTENDED Otm.OOK
ville:
Carolyn
Reynolds,
auditorium
in
Middleport
at
Ford
attended
Sunday
serThe statement was signed
in Michigan. Wagner saw it
Thraday through
· •
vices at Criswell's First by pastors of Methodist,
and -called her son, Eppa Pomeroy; Eugene · Fisher, 3:15p.m.
Pomeroy; Elate White, J.ong • The Junior Miaa Program Saturday, fair lhrouJh tile Baptist Church, largest Christian and Presbyterian
Bottom; Robert Harman, Ia open to all high school period with blghlla the 801
~-~-----'""1 Rlxeylll.
Protestant congregatioo in churches and • by a Jewish
Rutland; Ellis Scarberry, aenlor girla of soutllem Ohio, aud lo•• In the 4Gt.
Hettler
the natloo. Criswell enoorsed rabbi.
Racine,
who do not have a Junior Miaa
Ford on the church stepa
Dr. James Landes, top ·
Discharged - Margaret Program in their area. Eacb :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;;:::::::;:::::: before a crowd of thousand&amp;, executive of the 2.3 mllllon·
· Staff.Sgt. James L. Gans, Thelms Imboden, contestant is judged on
member Baptist General
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Winebrenner, scholastic achievement
Conventioo of Texu, said,
James Johnson Jr., 913 Maxine Brumley, Irene judges conference, youth
"Baptists are completely and
Locwll St., Middleport, has .Cunningham, Raleigh Sayre. fitness, poise and appearance .
fiercely iildependent in their
graduated from the Air Force
and creative and performing
thinking. Any Baptist
Evelyn Lowther Ward of oo Sunday.
Systems Command Non, arta . .
minister can take, under God,
Many
residents
of
the
commissioned . Officer.
Senior girls wishing to Athens was an overnight community were at Lake any position he feels . l!ke
Academy at Kirtland AFB,
enter tjle progtam can do so guest of Lucy Thomas and Snowden 11ear Albany on taking so long as he is
REVIV
ALNOTED
N. M. The sergeant is a
by attending the first praCtice they attended· church at Saturday and Sunday to speaking for himself. Once he
C
.
I
IESTER
~ A four night
medical services technician
.session at the Pomeroy Temple on Sund.ay night participate in and view the stepa outside the pulpit, he
"'
revival
Will
start
Thursday
at
at EdwardS AFB, CaW. A
village hall meeting (ground when the Angelaire Gospel sights at the Appalachian can endorse anyone of his
the
Church
of
God
1n
Chester
. 11165 graduate ol Middleport
Door) SundAy, Oct. 17 at 1 Singers from the Lancaster Fall Fann Festival, spon· choice."
with.
tile
Rev.
Donald
Sheets
High School, he attended
p.m. or by writing the Junior area had services.
ol
Wellaton
speaking
for
the
Mr. and Mrs . William ;~~ by the Albany Uons J~well
Marshall University.
first three rilghts and the Miss Scholarship Committee, Culwe~ vlBited with relatives
Mr. and Mrs. Walter - .....
church pastor apeaking - on P. 0. BoxiOI, Pomeroy, Ohio, in ljle Flatwooda, Ky., area
45169.
the final eventng. Special
lrom Sunday until Tuesday. Jordan were in Loudonville
singing will he (iatured each
Mrs. Ida Denison was an on business one day last
evening at the services which
overnight guest of her
'
will start $t 7:30 p.m. The
nephew and wife, Mr. and w;!ruce McKnight, Mr. and
ON
FLORIDA
BASE
Mrs. Ed Seasor and Clu'lsty
public is invited.
Chief M.Sgt. Darrell D. Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
of
Columbus visited Mrs. .. Jewell Curtis, retired
'
Drenner, son .of Mr. and Mrs. . Zelia Perry has been McKnight's brother · and machinist, spoke Friday to
Lee Drenner of Pomeroy, has released from O'Bleness. slster·in~law, Mr. and Mrs. .the students in Mrs. Mary
MEETING CHANGED
Memorial Hospital, Athens,
The baton classes of Mrs. arrived for duty at and hu been spending a few Harold Gillogly and family, Hysell 's· fifth grade at
Judy Riggs scheduled to meet Homestead AFB, Fla. An air days with her son·in·law and ·her mother, Mrs. Gillogly and Pomeroy Elementary School.
Wednesday evening at Royal traffic control superintendent daughter, Mr. and Mrs. other relatives.
His topic was "Electricity,
_ Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holland, the Unseell Force.''
Oak Park will meet Instead with ·a unit of the Air Force Kenneth Eilla. ·
He relayed practical Inon Thursday evening. The Communications Service, he
Columbia Grange mem· Jr. and children, Phoenix,
schedule will run the same on previously served at Rhein· . bers who participated in Arizona, called on relatives in fonnation to the ciaas based
Thursday with the beginners Main AB, Gennany. He is a Degree Day and was at the area ·including his uncie upon his eiperlence as
fJII you - 1 110119 lhruugh the ups and downs of family
clall starting at 6 p.m. The 1950 graduate of Pomeroy Harrisonville included Earl and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Victor macblnist and electrician.
living, you need o bank bat11nd you !hot wilt undtrstond
change in schedule Is for this High School.
'There were many questions
Starkey, Bertha Crippen, Mr. Perry.
'10"'- end bo I'Hdy, willing and obla to moe!, thim .
week only;
·V i n a R u t b e r I o r d , from the class,. for eurn]ile, ·
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Crablree
That'&amp; us- we otter everything you always wanttd from
and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Columbus, was an overnight "How do you.wire a bouse(,"
FESTIVITIES SET
your bank . .. but ~r011frold to oak. Como osk usl You'll.
~est of her aunt, Ida Den- "Why do tile men working op
A chill supper and carnival Jordan.
lli1d wo liovt oil the •••-• you lftk.
ruson,
who returned home the electric line use s'uch long
will· he held at the Cheshire., Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
with
he(and
spent tha past poles?," et.c., which Mr. /
We Offer TheK .S~rvices.
Kyger Elementary School visited with their son·in·law
week:.
.
· ' Curtis answered~ This
Saturday beginning at 5:3o and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
a.nk By Moil ·
Mr.
·and
Mrs.
Mendal
discussion came at the end of
Trlvtltn' Checks
~LACE
p.m. Th~ ,carnival will get Donald Jon~~ In Nelaonville
. Chocking Account
Sovloigs AcCOllnts
Jordan
were
guests
of
·
the
study of electricity In the
underway at 7 p.m. The event
Salt Deposit Boxts
Buslntss Loons
Hemlock
Grange
recently
to
science
area of the fifth grade ,
Is being sponsored by the
H~e Loans
Automobile !Mns
see
the
many
improvements
cu•riculum.
Mr. Curtis'
.
'
PTA. Public is invited.
&lt;that have been made by the participation was made
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
Mrs. Harley Johnson, Mrs. members at the grange hall. pqssible by R.S.V.P.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
J, R. Morphy and Mrs. John
PARTY PLANNED
· FRI. EVENINGSS To 7 P.M.
Hemlock Grove Grange Downs and Adam were
will hold a products party at •Thursday visitors of Berdie
the hall Thursday at 1 p.m. Wyatt.
Proceeds will go to the ' Ida Murphy visited with
"THE
building fund. Public is in· Thelma,Glles Tbursday.
Adam Downs SW~t Friday
vited. Members are as.ked to
!light
with his grandmother,
FRIENDL .Y BANK"
bring cookies.
Mr~; 'J. R. Murphy, .
Chris Murphy spent
Saturday with grandmother,
Mrs . .r. R. Murphy.
DANCE SET
Mrs. Harley Johnson
The Belles and Beaus will
sponsor a square dance at visited · Friday with Mrs.
IIDyal Oak Purk Wednesday Charley Smith, Jo Worley
· Visit Our Salad Bar
lrom 8 to 11 p.m. NaUonal and Stacy.
Mary Hamm gave a blr·
Western Style · Steak
caller will be Frankie Lane.
All members are uked to thday party ·Oct. 2 for her
Chill Beans
~
daughter, Kimberly, on her
bring cookies.
Hot Rolls
7th birthday. Refreshments
· Coffee, Tea or Milk
Plus lax
w~re served and games
played.
DINNER GUEST
'
'
Mrs. . Daniel Worley and
RUTLAND - Miaa Terri
· M1111ber Federal Deposit lnsuran~ Colpolatior
Stacy
returned home Sunday .
Vining, RuUarid, waa dinner
'
after
spending
a lew days
992-3629
guest of Charles Smith and
DEPOSITS INSURE!) TO ..0,000
with
her
parents,
Mr. and
======Pomeroy, o.
fami]y, Middleport, Sunday
Mrs.
Charley
D.
Smith
and
afternoon.
relatives.

You're
With A

Off

(~.

Carpenter Personals

Curtis

tells pupils
Of electricity

WEU
BALANCED .

MEIGS TltEATRE

BANK

. CLOSED FOR

VAfATJON
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

THE INN
Wednesday Night
Special

Wolfpen · ·· ·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
Be sure to save all of your cash
register slip$ and white payment

•

on account receipts. They are

valuable to you for premiums.

of the Sales People

any

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

about Elberfelds Premiums.

'

THE MEIGS INN

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ICE KING

ANn-FREEZE •••••••••••••••• ,.,~~W!~. •3.49
FINAL TOUCH

64 OZ.

FABRIC SOnENER •• , ••••••••••••••• '1.59

I

KLEENiX ••••••.••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~•. 4:9'
. . 32 OZ. 99c
·lvoRY Ll0 UIDe •••••••••••••••••••••• .-•.

c

JOLLY GOOD

'I

I

'

.., GREEN BEANS •••••••••••• ~~~.~~~.S/'1.00

I

''' .

NESCAFE

.·

INSTANT COFFEE. •••• ~ •••••••• }~.~~ •3..19
. - -.....-

1

•--. fiG BARS •• .-•••••••• .: ••• ~ •••••••••• !.~!~. 99'
!.B. 19e HUNrS
. .. .
Ol
,
46
TOMATO JQICE ..........................59
32 OZ. BTw.
.
4 PAK
3LB. 69e COCA-COLA
•••••••• ~ ............ ........'1.09
BOTTLES
B PAK ,
3 LB. Sloo. 16RCOZ.COLA
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 1.09
FIRESIDE

Plt0 DIJC'I•---"!

'

,
'

·.;••\

.,

WE FEATURE USDA CHOICE MEATS

BEEF .
LIVE.R
SLICED
LB.

'

GROUND
BEEF
.
•

i

'·

.

29~

FRESH SIDE

LB.

NECK BONES
49~

Volley

WIENERS ·
..

CHOCOLATE MILK

.

46,364 to 4,39ti BTU's per

Aworkshop oo how to conserve energy around the house
which would result in saving on fuel costs withwt sacrificing
cmlfort or convenience was held Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.'
Sponlllred by the Cooperative Ertension service, the
w..-kshop featured ways of reducing household heating bills,
how to Insulate a heme, and household energy management
tips. .
.
. Acolodllm ~ntltled "When the Circuit Breaks; America's
Energy Crisis" stressed the fact .that a crisis·does indeed exist
and that cooservatioo is a necessity now while new sources are
being developed .
Roger A. Miller, E'xtenslon
The facts and figures as
Agricultural Engineer from presented by- the speaker
Ohio State University, talked • came up with the result that a
on household heating billa well·inlulated bouse can be
using examples of what it heated for about one-third of
costs to heat a non-insulated ·the cost of an uninsulated
, FJRST BOW KILL - IIDger ~bard ; Syracuse, was
one story house and how house.
, the flrlll person in Melga County to la'nd a deer with a bow
much that cost can be
ACI!tlrding to Miller, the
. and arrow thla aeaaon according to Andy Lyle, Meigs
reduced by insulating. Using greatest loss of heat in a one
: County G""" Warden Hubbart bagged a siJ: point buck
Illustrations, he broke the story non·inaulated bouse is
" that weighed IIIIi pounds ·Monday oo Snowball Hill in
house into component araas through the cUing.
'Syracuse. Hubbard brought the deer down with a
and then estimated . the
He $aid that by adding .six
, COIDPDI!f!d bow that he jllsl purchaaed. With Hubbarq
possible fuel $avlngs by in· inches of insulation · of 3.3
when he got the deer wBB Dive Hubbard. · ·
sulating each component resistance per .Inch, the heat
loss can be decreased from
·:~:=-;:~!:'-:::::::::::::~::::::::;~:::;:;~:;:;:~:i!i}8i:i:::::i8:::::».::8::!8:::::::::::::::~=~:::::::::~::;-;:~::.~i areas.

!News. . . in B~ief~
ByUDitedPresalDteruaUooal ·
.
, DETROIT - THE 170,000 FORD M01'0R Co. workers
narrowly approved a $1 billlon.plus three-year contract in the
.21th day of their natioowide strike and began returning to their
·w,... toda y.
'
. The app-oval, announced late Tuelday, came on just a ~
vote marl!ln by skilled tradesmen, who held a veto power over
the agreement despite the fact that they account for just one of
every seven Ford jobs.
. They had complained an extra.20-to-25-cenls-an..bour pay
hike for them was not E!!IOugh and complained they were often
•not rep-esented because of their small numbers. In the end,
.they almost won their point by nearly scuttling the agreement
and forcing it back into negotiations.

hour: by putting in the walls
31; inches of insulatioo at 3.3
R per inch the decrease of
heat loss would be from l$,164
to 4,651 ; that by putting on
storm windows the dtll'rease
would he from '1 2,00 to 5;967;
storm doors the decrease ol
heat .,.,.ould be from927 to 6811;
. and bi~~ement insulation of 2
inches to walls and by adding
stonn windows, the dtll'rease
would be fi'OI1116,380 to 9,653.
Mill$r said that fuel in an
average heating season for
the medium onHtory hoiiBe,
fully insulated, would ahow
decreases of from 1,885 to~
gallons of oll, lrom 2,868 to 921
gallon~! L. P. gas; fi'OI11
263,810 to 64,885 cubic feet of
natural gas, and Irom 51,991
to ·18,614 .kllowatts of elec·
trlcity.
At current prices, natural
gas is the cheapest to heat
with, according to the

•

VOL XXVII. NO. 125

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. REP. AND MRS. RtlN ·JAMES and daughter, Brea greet two .of the "Peanut Brigade"
staff as they leave the chartered bus they are traveling in on behalf of the Carter-Mondale
ticket. First is Wanda Davis of AUanta, Ga., who is on the Carter-Mondale stafi and waa on
the staff when Carter was Georgia Governor, 1911).14, and behind her is Lynne Gutshall,
originally of Atlanta, who met Carter in Lan~ter , Pa., where she did a portrait of him 10
months ago and was invited.to join his staff.
.
·

DA'YTON, OHIO'- THE SPECfER THAT the U. S. auto

President sitting on
his .J.latting average ·
By LEWIS LORD

UDI~ Press Iatern_aUo~l

Pr:es1dent Ford IS USU\g
baseball Ierma to suggest
that Jimmy Carter isn 'I
ta~ble of serving in the
White House.
Ford staunchly defended
lis two years iii the White
House In an ·appearance
Tu.esda~ before a group of
editors m New York, and he
makes storage faclllty loans criticized Carter for his
to farmers · at 11'.! percent campaign s~tements on govinterest. Repayment plan Is emment reorganization and
in four installments over a spellljiilg. .
"!think I hav~ , had a good
live ~ear period. .
. !f ilitetelted in the above batting average, Ford aa1d.
progtama, deialla can be "He is a minor leaguer. ~is
secured frooi the ASC office, scorecard would not put hlln
located In the Fanners Bank in the big l"!lgues." , ,
Tuesday rught, in .a speech
Bldg., Pomeroy.
to
a $1,000 a plate fund·
Programs are available
r~g dinner, .Ford said he
without regard to race, color,
religion, sex, or nkllonal hasn t been hiding out ~
"I've been playing hide and
origiri. ·
seek.
I'm trying to find the
1
• candidate who used to say

. WASHINGToN- PRESIDENT FORD SIGNED Into la.w
Tuesday legislation extending the Public Works and Economic
Development Act and authorizing $4.1bllllon to he spent over a
COntinued on page 14
·

Com
lo~ .rate is set
•
•

•

• The com loan rate In Meigs
· :County Ia $1.35 per buahel on
-1978 corn.
It Ia avallable to farmers
whO wish to bold their com
for awhile, apply for a loan,
·and sell their corn later
.hoping the price may rise or
· :theY can pay off tbe loan and
feed their com. The purpoae
of the loan Ia to give farmers
aome money at barveat lime
and keep oom olf the market
during harvest season.
",, Tbe Melga ASC Office also

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1976

With the Nov. 2 election sUI!
more than two :weeks away,
220 persons have caat absentee or disabled ball!)ls, the
Meigs · county Board of
Elections reported Tuesday.
Deadline for sucli voting is
at noon on Oct 20. The board
of elections office, located in
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, Ia open fi'OI11 9 a.m.
to noon and I p.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday through Saturday,
for such Voting.
Melga County voters have
races lor county polit's
to decide at the Nov; 2
election, and one countyWide
.IIi measure.
Two of the three races are

three

(

Its cars ban'! meet plean air standard&amp; was raised again
Tuesda)' by a top General Motors executive.
Rlcllanl L. Terrell, the vice cbainnan of the giant auto
cunpany, said the government is forcing the lndus\ry into the
possibility of canceling Ita I978 model ptoducUon. This will
OCCID' if the next Coogress·does not revise the vehicle ex!laual .
standards aet til take effect next fall, he said·. "These
requirements are so close to zero e,miaaiOIIII that our present
catalytic converters syslelllll can't meet them," Terrell told
the Engm-&amp; Club of Dayton's Founders' night dinner.

I

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Absentee voting
.'to end Oct. 20th

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Industry may be forced to shut Its auto planiB in 1971 because

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WASHINGTON - .BASED ON STATISTICS, the Supreme
Court Ia unlikely to Bl'anl the appeals of formef Attorney
General John N. Mitchell and former,Nixon White House aides
tl. R. Haldeman ando.John Erhlichman.
The convictlnns of all three, for obstructing justice and
lying to a grand jury, while covering up White Hoi!Se
Involvement in the 1972 Walergate break-in, were affirmed
Jueeday on·a ,s.t vote by the u. S. Circuit Court of .Appeals,
,which cited an "0\'erwbelming evidence of g~ilt.'' Each man
faces a 21'.!-to-11-year prison sentence. All three currently are
free, but Slrlca can soon order· them to' repori to federal
inarsh8ls io begin serving their sentences unlesti. blocked 1q
)1igher courts.
.
,. Mitchell, II jailed, would be the first former Cabinet officer
~~to prison aince lormer Interior Secretary Alber{ B. Fall
was cooflned lor a.year in conneCtion with the Teapot Dome
scandal In the 19208.
, COLUMBUS ~ OIUO WILL CONTINUE its swine Ou
lnoci!Ialioo program because there Is no evidence three deaths
In Pitteburgh were caused by nu immuni2ation1·shots, a
.~!lnJnan lor the Ohio Health Department said Tues!lay.
·.; •!We've ooen in 'con1ic't'wi\h &gt;teaeral bealui Oiflctals in
Atlanta and ·we l)ave no reaaon to call off or '"odlfy our
inununlzatioo program," said Jon Christensen. Health
Ill!lelaIs In Stark County said, however, that swine liu shots in ·
,that county Will be suspefid!'d one week until more information
is available. in the Pittsbui'gh deaths.
.
.
Health ilfficiala in a number of states have suspended
awlne flu inoculation programs becaruse of the deathS of three
elderly persons In Pittsburgh who were immunized against the
virus.

engmeer, and electricity is
the moat eipenolve. He alao
noted that plastic window
covering is almost as ef.
fectlve as glass.
. The afternoon program
included a discuaslon on
tnsulatlng a home 'with
Thermtron representatives
Thomas Thieme and Chuck
Munro, the Alhens dealer,
present to demonstrate and
explain tllelr product.
A1oo apeakinl! was Mrs.
Rita Oberhol&amp;er, Colwnbla
Gas of Ohio ljople omnomlst.
She too dl.!cuaaed the advantages of inaulation and ·
called for "conservatioo" to
he a houaehold word to aave
money, energy, and jobs
which could be lost by an
energy -"ortage.
TO DEMONSTRATE HEAT RESiSTANCE of
Ualng a model house, she
insulation, Thomas Thieme, a sales l'tlpres~ntative of
moved through the rooms and
Thermtron, laid a copper piece on a handful of ln!!ulnUon
talked about waY&amp; of con: · - chefi\lcaliy treated recycled newsprint ~ and pui the
.servlnM energy in each. She
the torch to II. The copper melted but the insulation clldn't
Continued on page 14
bum.
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a1 y

e

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that h~ would never lie tO being lost each year through
you."
.
fraud, Carter said, and ·"still
"I say parenthetically, he the administration has made
·seems to have disappeared " no response at all."
Ford added.
' . Carter said he would
While Ford campaigned in restructure the Medicaid
New York City, Carter was system to eliminate fraud
resting at home in Plains, Ga. and waste as part of a
The Dem6crat iaaued a state· gradual phasing in of a
men! accusing F..-d of doing national, comprehensive
nothing to combat fraud in health care system.
the Medicaid program while
Ford toured Jewish, Irish!
proposing
that
more and Iialiaq neighborhoods in
Medicare ,patients pay a New York, each time
bigger share of their hospital touching off loud cheers when
bill.
he said he was President of a
Carter noled the Social nation at peace.
Security Administration
"There is not a single
recently. announced that young Americaa flghUng or
patients in the program will dying on foreign sOil," Ford
now have to pay the first 1124 said repeatedly. , .
of hospltallzation costs - ·a 19
Before leaving for New
per cent increase over the York, Ford told ethnic
previous $104.
leaders in Washington that he
It has been a month since a waa mistaken in last weelt,'s
senate committee revealed debate with Carter when he
that betwee.n $3 billion and·$5 said Eastern Europe wasn't
hllllon in Medicaid ·funds is ·

for two county commissioner
posts. James E. Roush, D., is
opposing Ralph Warden
·Ours, R., incumbent, for the
commissioners term
beginning Jan. 2, 1977, and
Richard E. Jones, R., Is
opposing James Bailey, D.,
for the term beginning Jan . 3,
1977.
The third race Is for the
sheriff's post with James J.
Proffitt, D., opposing in·
cumbent Robert G. Harten·
bacb, R.
1
ohly . countywide tax
meaaure .is a .4 of one mill
. renewal levy to .carry out the
tqberculoa!s program. The
levy five years ago was .116 of

the

•

mie miil but bas now been
'
reduced to .4.
Unopposed co unty can·
didatcs for the Novt 2 clec·
tlon,and as a result, assured
of election are: Fred W.
Crow, lll , R. , for prosecuting
attorney ; Larry E. Spencer,
R., incumbent, for clerk of
courts; John C. B»con, ll.,
incumbent, for common-pleas
judge; Eleanor Robson, R.,
Incumbent, for recorder:
George M. Coutns, R.. In·
cum bent, for treasurer;
Wesley A. · Bu~hl, R., In·
cumbent,
for
county
engineer, and Ran~in Ray
Pickens, R., Incumbent, for
county coroner. ~

Another hurdle topped
Henry Wells, president of • building would hoiiBe the
Melga County Commiaajon, senior citizens, health
said Tuelday a federal grant department, Community
in 'the amo'lmt of $1,000,069 Mental Health and other
has been approved by the• agencies. The building would
State Advisory Councu of ltle be 16,000 square !eet and cost
Department of Mental Health approximately $49 a square
and Retarcbltion lor a multi· foot. The grant would ba ll!ed
purpose building In Meigs to complete the cOnstruction
County. Final approval of and equip the buDding with no
federal and state agencies is cost to the county.
•
pending.
_ The only part the com·
It was reported at a misaloners play In the project
meeting of the • com· . is the donating of ground lor
mlaaioners on Oct. 5, that the the buDding which will be
located near Veterans
Mernorlll Hoapital. An ac., ceu road will be built to tile
facility, but this allo will be
done through a Federal
.VelefBDI Memorlll Hoopllll grant . •The building, If built,
Admluions Lloyd
Williams, Clifton; Misty
Tackett, Pomeroy; Denzel
Boggeaa, Racine; Richard
Norman, Pomeroy: Edward · Osby A. Martin, 2 Coal St.,
Willet, New Haven; Laura Pomeroy, today laaued a
Scott, Middleport; Mary statement denying that he
Jones, Syracuse; Marjorie has been offered a poaitlon
Smith, Vinton.
with the co1lllly lherlfl if
Discharges
Cora candidate James Proffitt Ia
Woodard, Demaria Ash, elected to the polll on Nov . 2.
Brian Thompson, Callie
Martin said:
Metheny, Jeinetta IIDuah,
"I have been confrooted by
Perry Shirley, Hattie several citizens of our
Barringer, Opal Barr.
county about rumors tlley
have heard stating that I .am

will be county owned.·
It was alllo announced at
the Oct. S, meeting that
foliowing approval, and after
bida are hit and approved, the
building could be In operation
by .the first of the year.
At the ~t~eetlng of the .
commissioners Tuesday
momlng Scott Lucas, ad·
mtnlstrator of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, asked
permlasion to apply for a
grant under the Public Works
Program to erecl an
emergency medical building
near the hospital. Permission
waa granted.
·
Attending were .Wells,
Warden Ours and Bernard
Gilkey, commiasioners.

Job payoff is denied
campaigning for James
Proffitt for sheriff because 1
had ~~!len promlaed by Mr.
Proffitt - if elected - a
posltio~ of deputy or chief
deputy.
"I
would
like
to
acknowledge that I haven't
been offered any position by
James Proffitt nor will I be
available for a position If
offered.''

Jligh schoOl IYJof said zn deplorable condition
I

' '

'!be condition of the roof of the Meigs High SChool - iel"'
lb8n .aeven years old - "ii appalllng, aqd a lawsuit could
f!!lll}t," according to one member of the district board ol
edueatlon and the co\lllty proaecuting attorney.
• Thla w11 the !'(Iori Tuesday night when the Meigs Lotal·
Scbool District Board of Education met In rtg1llar session with
WendeD Hoover, president, reporting on the ~Uon of the
roof following an inapectloo.
• ANt. Supt.
Morril said that several emergency
repaln are ~ at once af..r HOOI(er bad called the·
. condition "appelllng." Morril aald tha! he bas been h touch
-;till the f~ mponaible lor the c0111truction and the roof II .
,\he relatively new achool, and a1ao with Prosecutor Berna.t&lt;l
FuJII, who Indicated that a lawsuit can be filed If the bo8i'd
teeII that the roof baa not been aatlafactory. Moirls wu aded
111 l1eep tbe board adviaed oo what he leal'llll from the flhns
;nleh he hu contacted.
·
·
• At1atbat developnent in Jut night's meeting waa . the .
\WW*flll .Ill Dr. Keith Riggs, board member who aald he '
nntld recotdl to lltow that he Ia "~ry dlaaallalled" with the_
~ootid JD:OI"Bnl oo all levela.
.
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nan

QSCAR MYER
. PIECE

Ways to cut down on
fue~ electricl and
other energy costs

•

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LB.
69~
·~·······LB.
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By Charlene Hoeflich

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ANY AMOUNT

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Energy-saving
~ideas revealed

=d:.:r;•~ .

steubenville, Ohio.

..----.....

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emplOyes- wtll be meeting a earUer thla year "not
New
York . couple, recognizing divorces· lite
Christopher and Anita · ours," he aald.
"But untO that flllq. Ia
Murray, who alao are getting
a aecood divorce to avoid
steeper tu paymenta.
According to Boyter, ''They divorces unUI the tu law is
(the Internal Reveque made equitable," he aald.
Despite the divorcea,
service) have not bothered
Boyter
aaid he and hla wife
us, even though we flied as
. aingle adults, paying $1,300 still have&gt; an enduring
less than a married couple relationship.
''Our marriage la . ~und,''
would."
· The IRS issued a ruling he said.

~t =r~.:~;~J~ will

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GALlON '

49

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. He said that ·"something is 'l'rong" and suggested a
meeting between the coaching staff and the board to find out
the problem.
·
Board member Bob Snowden echoed Dr. Riggs'
complaint. He stated t)lat; In his opinion, many athletic
programs of the district are "abouf one-half as good .as they
should be in .,lew of our size." He, too, suggeated a meeting
with all involved iri the foot hall program in an attempt to come
up with the solution for better teams. However, the meeting
adjourned with no concrete plan to follow up on either
complaint .
·
,
Earlier. Snowden com·mended James Crow who was
employed last year as an elementary physical education
Instructor. He said that Crow "is doing a good job" and he
suggested that more . elementary lnsltllctors In physical
education he employed.
Mrs. JennUer Sheela, also a board member, aald she, too,
thought that there should be more physical education in to/
elementary fhOOls, but added that other Lhlngs are a

l!H!IP.&lt;\.

~

.

t'ollowi?g discussjon, it was suggested that Supt. Charles

Dowler prepare a report oo add!Uollal programs which would the Alexander School District In which the Shade School is
lle gOOd In the district. Mrs. Sheela urged the adoption ola long located because ·It would not be fafr to others who had
range plan by the board to add new lnatntctors in llrnlted
special fielda.
Dowler, however, pointed 0\li that the enrollment Ia down,
and luggested that the board,not employ loo many apedal
teachers aince a decreased enrollment might mean lbat liOille
teachers would _have to be laid eft and perhaps, 110111e of these
people could be used in the special fields of endeavor.
The boar.d sold a 1964, 86opaaenser bus to Bill Cozard
whose bid ol $352 was the highest given on the vehicle and
t~ down the request of Blll Colllna lor the attendance of hla
ch~d to the $hide Elementary Scbool. · . •
· . Colllna said the chlldresidea only one-tenth of a mUe from
the Shade School and can reach the achool and be home early
after !l:hool.
'
·
· He objected to her boarding a Meigs Local bus early In the
morning and not rett1111lng h0111e unUI late, even though the
Collinl hitne.is in' the Meigs Local District, the Pratta Fork
area.
· The board said that the child could not be lr: •ferred to

requeated similar transfers.
.
The board allo refuaed to give permission for Collins to
tralllfer II aci'C!!l of property to the Alexander Dlatrlct.
However, Collins aald thM he had checked with other sources
and there are ways that the transfer of property from the
Melga Diltrict to the Alexander Dlstrjct can be made without
the board 'a consent.
He did agree, however, \0 contact John Beaver of the
M!!lgs Local Transportation Department, on the schedule the
child would follow If riding 1 Meigs toea! bus. It .was estimated
that a Meigs Local bua will have \0 travel from three to five
mllesextraeach way toplckupthe child.
•
Arequest was received from Mrs. Grace Drake, Mrs. Rita
Hamm and Mrs. AP,I'il Smith in regard to their clauification
aakiilg that they be named adminlatrative secretaries. Their
letter stated new secretaries are being hired at a higher salary
than they, who hive been employed in the district for aome
years, are now receiving. Principala James Diehl and Robert
Continued on page 14
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Re s retam

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Sport·Parade
:

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sparta Editor

Some interufing questions
Dear Sir :
•
Mr. Wingett's letter in the October 8 edition raisa aome ,
Interesting questions. 11. . ·
.
1a1ao think it Is higil'lllne for the people of MelgJ county to ! .
ask lUIIe queallons ri their leaders.
How C&lt;lllle we ha.. lost so many services to our people!
~e 1a the linemployment office, the children's home, the ,
Carpellter testlann, the bus service, the telegraph offtce and
they are talking of taking the cancer clinic to another county.
Regarding the mental retanled children, our leeders c:oold
not even .cune up with $50,000 to Bend them to GaWa county for ,
the school, yet awlile bacll; we spent t:MO,OOO oil the courthouse
and 11211,000 on the jaU, yet !lrlving by these two bl\lldinfla It :
would be hard to tell that 15(!0 was spent by looking at the •
ouialde.
Most of our county and towrudtlp roads are In such bad ,
shape that you can't carrjl a suitcase overtbem, let alooe drive ,

a car.

HOUSE ENERGY Management '1'1118 at the workshop were given py Rita Oberhol!er,
ColumbiiJ.Gaa of Ohio 11ome economlal, who demon~tec1 how to eonaerve energy using a
mt~t~r~ h~e Xeplica.
. · ·
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·-

ROGER MILLER, Extension Engineer fl'9lll Ohio State Universlty,lefl, compared fuel
consumption In the non4nsulated and insulated house giving facts and figures on the savings
involved at the energy conservation workshop held yesterday at the Meiga Inn. With Miller
is John Rice, Meigs Eltell,'llon Agent, who arranged the workshop.
t;\

DeaD says Ford lied
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Johri
~Dean
today
contr~dlcted
1973
congressional testim&lt;lly by
Gerald Ford that he did not
recall aldlng any attempt by
the Nil&lt;on White Holl!e to
stave off a Watergate
investigation.
Ford, when he was House
Republican leader, Jold vice
presidentjsl confirmation
hearings that "to the best of
my recollection," he did not
!liscuss any attempt to dam
up the Watergate affair with
any Nil&lt;on ·stafferS.
. Dean, the former aide to
President Richard Nixon
whose
memory
and
testim&lt;llY resulted in Nil&lt;on's
' political fall and resignation,
contJ:adicted Ford in a taped
Interview broadcast on the
NBC Today television
program.
Dean said Nixon staff
member Richard Cook had

discussed .the matter • with Nil&lt;on.
Ford more than a half dozen
"Cook was the man who did
times and Ford at one point the leg work and dealt with
indicated he would tell Mr. Ford · and the other
Republican members of the members of the (banking)
Ho~se Banking Corrunittee · committee"
which was
"what they should do on the . considering probing at least
day of the vote" (Dean's one aspect of the Watergate
words) on whether or ·not to in~estigation, said Dean.
look Into the Watergate case.
"I can recall· Dick coming
But in a statement to NBC, backS . and te!Ung, for
Cook
denied
Dean's example, how Jerry was
allegatioru, accusing Dean of going to call a meeting of the
"vicious lies and clever nilnorlty members in Les
.distortions."
Arends' (former Republican
"There is no question in mY C&lt;llgre&amp;911lan from Illinois)
mind that the President told of!lce off the Holl!e floor and
the truih," said Cook, who really tell them what they
now works for an aircraft $ould do on thO day of the
company.
He
denied vote and how they should hold
contacting Ford "despite together and things· of this
John Dean's repeated and n;oture," said Dean.
frantic requests" to get him
Did that mean they should
to do so.
block those hearings from
. Dean said he passed his going forward? Dean was
own conversations with.Cook asked.
about Ford along to top Nixoo · "That's correct, " · he
aide H.R. Haldeman, who, in replied.
turn, discussed them with

.

I thought that when we got One of the biggest coal mining ,
0perailol\s In the world In the western patt of our country that , '
we would be able to show aome·prosress,.but we are getting "

.

w~•!

I notice that we got over a hundred tho11$8nd dollan to ·
hllldaawlrn!nlngpool in Syracuse. Now d!ll't get me wroog.l ; .
am not aga~ swimminll pooia, but I think that If we can get .
federal money fll' pooll we should get some to help the ;
retarded and build IDIIe lllll'ling homes I« our elderly dtizens
(Continued from page I)
they not lrltger are able to take care of themselves, "
Mrs. Stella Booton, 101, a when
recommended a hwnldlfier to heater every IIU)nth as a way
inatead
of sending them out of the county where they bave
add moisture to the air in the of utending the We of the resident of Gallipolis, died. at lived and paid ~es, to die alone and be !«gotten, far from ,
winter to make It "lei!!" heater and ~!Wnll ~urn 5 p.m. Tuesday in the Arcadia wbat friends they have !eft.- Jim Adsms, Rutland, Ohio.
::
warmer and to set the useoffuel.lntheldtchen,she Nursing Home, Coolville.
She wail born Feb. If, 1875,
theniloatat at 67 degrees or suggested low or moderate
in
Gallla County (Green
less and then forget 1\.
beat rather than high beat for
Twp.)
dauebter of the late Defends local hospital
.
II going away for more than cooking OQ top of the stove,
Jasper
and
Emma
Gilbert
"
a day, she suggested lowering and · entire oven meals on Ingels. She was the. widow of
It's beginnilng to get to me, the cootinuous snlptnli on our
the 'thermostat to 55 degrees. occasion.
the late Chauncey Booton.
local radio, cunplalnts of this Ullle petty thing, and that little
Cleaning the registers and
She concluded with the
She \VII a ileacendant of petty thing, about our hoepltal, Veterans Men)orisl Hospital: .
changing the furnace filters, thought that Americans are Alexander Waddell, a (Sometimeo I wooder if these same people have ever spent .,
keeping furniture away beaded lor a change In their Revolutionary War soldier. time in the hospital).
·
from the hot air registers so way of Ule, that the tendency
She married Mr. Booton oil
The primary complaint seema to be that everyone should ··
that the heat can drculate, to waste must be controlled,
... , in Gallipolis. have !natant attention fnlm the c~o¢~r
you uallf
walk in •·
J une 9, !...
.... the minute
.u
were alao listed among the and that conservancy. must . They
had no children. She the emergency door. Thenuraeon... ty Is train... and q .led
~onservation tips.
be pracliced in this energy waa Ufelong member of the and starta certain procedures. She's in touch with what's going ..
8
Mrs. Oberholzer advised crlal8 time.
Preabyteriah Church where oo and where the doct&lt;t Ia. Perhaps, just perhapa, he'l!l taking ~
opening draperies to let the
John Rice, MeigJ County she was active in many care of someooe sicker than you, and as soon as he can, he'll·be ..
morning sun In thereby Extenaion Agent introdueed
organil:ations.
with you.
.
'·
taking a.dvantage of solar the speakers; and John Stitz. church
Mrs. Booton wu a retired
89metimes you ~lly dill 't need t¥t "snap-your..flngea"
heat. She said that a shower lein, area agent, Community de ty in the
ba
dg
!natant care when you admit to the nurae that yw'w had that
takes less water than a bath, Resource Development, had
pu
pto te ju e · pain for several days, II' yesterday, or last week, and you could •
that cold water Is fine for a wrap-up at the con~luslon of office in the GaWa County hav~ acw,lly waited and seen the doctor at hJs office. But.no, '
rinsing clothes and that dlah- . the day.
Co:OOLI!e·d
.
It's lots eaSier to run to the hQapltal and gripe ~our head off at
washers and clothes wsshers
Rice announced that
leces ail nephews reared an overwll'ked niU'se, and demand attention "ou really don't .,
1'
should have full loads when another meeting on energy in the Booton home Include
Mrs.
Roberta
Cornwell
need.
"'
used. According to Mrs. saving tec'hntques will be held O'Brien, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Granted, there ar,e ezceptlons to this. But by and lsrge ,~
Oberholzer, hot water In Oct. :1 from Ito 3:30 at the Charlotte Brown, Clinton, moSt em"IIencies aren't! The atterolant you see in the
energy use comes only below Meigs IM. The pubHc Is in· . Ky.; . Robert Cornwell, emergencf'roan has your weUare at heart and is doing her ,..
heat and lighting.
vlted.
Gallipotla.
best to help you unUI the doctor can get to you, because you're ~
Good maintenance of apSbe wsa preceded in death .not alone in yoiU' l$ery. There are lots more in mlaery too.
•,! .
pliances Is a key, to low
by two sisters and four
Hill-Burton funds helped build this beautiful hospital, and "
energy use, she said, and
brothers.
dedicated people saw to it that it fitted the needs of the ,.
advised draining a bucket of
Several other nieces and C&lt;lllmunity. (Incidentally, som..,e last week said on radio, _:
water from the hot water
•
"We don't have an obatetrlca ~ent any more).'.' My
nephews survive.
educated guess: too many expectant mothers were conned into '"
Funeral services will be
- Four defendants were fined held 11:30 a.m. Thursilay at going out of town for tbeir confinement, it was the thlng to do. '''
and three others forfeited the McCoy _ Wetherholt _ So there became no need ftr that department to be kept up. '"
'honda in Mi....'"'"'
. rt Mayor Moore Funeral Home with Consequently it \1111 dooe away with. And, if the complaints ::
~""
· against the. hospital and doctors continue, you'll stand a ..
He alSO would change com· Fred Hoffman's court Rev. Frank Hayes of- chBIIceof losing dedicated people, and then where will we be! ~
pletely the IIUIMer in which Tuesday night.
flctatlng. Burial will be In
How can 1say thls?rll tell you how. l'vespent 104 days-in ,,,
Medicare and Medicaid pro·
Fined were Roy Franklin Mound Hill Cemetery.
Veierans Memorial Hospital this year. From AprilS to July 20
grams pay hosj,itaia, lind Boggs, 42, Mlddlepott, 140
Friends may call at the I've had care·that ooly dedicated people can give, care that
provide an incentive to cut and coats dlsordarly maMer; funeral home from 7 unW I meant having not only doctors and nurses caring for me 24 "
costs, he said.
Bruce E. Beach, 19, thla evening at the funeral hotll'!l a day, but the rest of the staff interested in my well
Carter explained he would Langsville, $50 and ~. home.
being; Interested in my life.
set reimbursement disorderly rilamer; Elaine
. When I started getting better ,I could see tbat this care was ~
guidelines, forecast and fixed Currence, 21, Middleport, $10
eitended to other patienta as well, not only to me. I saw and •
in advance, and htJII)itals ~ costa, expired drivers
received my share and more of care by these dedicated people,
which could find ways to save license; Robert M. Newell,
FOUR BONDS TAKEN
bit alao "T.L.C.'' (that's tender,lovin' care).
and spend less would be 31, Middleport, 1150 and
One deleoclant was lined
For example: two nurse noor supervisors worried about '
permitted to keep a portion of costs, three days con- . and four others forfeited me to the extent that when depressloo hit me (and it dld·at ·''
that as ·a boous.
linemen!, ·driving while in· bonds In Pomeroy MAyor Urnes), they called In a hair dresser to come to fix my ha,lr. :
Hospitals . whieh 01ceeded toldcated.
Clarence Andrew's eourt And ... they paid fll' It out of their own pocketbook. What a Ull
the estimaies would not be
Forfeiting honda were ~Ike Tu~y night. Fined was It gave me! Now, if that'snot TLC, 1doo't recognize It when I '"
fully reimbursed.
Lee Sigler, no address Diana Neece, Pomeroy, $25 see it.
.
recorded, $50 bond, dlsor- and coats, apeedlng. ForOne more thl!lg, a' w&lt;rd o! advice· .to the snipers and ,:
derly manner; Mason R. felting honda were Theodore gripers: Nothing Is perfect bit if you have a legitimate gripe, ;:
Wood, 21, Rutland, 125, Fisher, Pomeroy, $25, ·· don'tsoW!d off oo radio ... take itto the proper people, face-to- ··•·
ASK TOWED
dlaorderly manner; CUHord speeding; Joe Anthony, lace, and they'll settle itfor you. Griping Is not going to ciU'e
A marriage license was Murray, 41, Pomeroy, $300, Middleport, $30, !allure to the evils you think prevail, unless you gripe at .the proper 7'
issued . to Ronnie Gene driving while intoxicated.
yield; Earl Mossman, people.
'"
Johnson, 20, Racine, and
Pomeroy, 125, speeding;
rm Janet Kom of Pomeroy who Is clam glad and proud to ' 1
Sherry Sue Swanson, 17, Rt.
David Priddy, Rutland, 130, !mow and love everyooe of the staff who beloog to Veterans ~"
I, Middleport.
opeedlng.
Memorial Hospital. I LOVE YOU ALL. -JANET KORN.
•w

Energy ·saving

Stella BOOton,
101, claimed

Court iules

agamst seven,

Carter says Ford ignoring Medicaid
scrutiny.
By STEVE GERSTEL
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) Carter returns to active
Jimmy Carter, resting up for campaigning Thursday with
a new campaign swing, today a threeo(!ity tour of New York
I!.CCLI!ed President Ford~ln a state and then will tour
prepared statement ~of Michigan, Missouri and Ohio
refusing to take any action to . before taking another
stop the spiraling cost of break.
In a statement Tuesday,
hospital care.
•
The
Democratic• Carter said "the only way In
presidential candidate stem the health care costs
returned to his native Plains spiral is to make the hard
Tuesday after what he called political and management
O!)e of his best weeks in the decision necessary to
long struggle to beat introduce efficiency and
President Ford and return his eliminate fraud from our
party to the White House.
shamefully disorganized
With the exception of an system for delivering health
early inorning visit to check services.
on the family peanut
"This the Ford admlnistrabusiness, Carter remained . lion has steadfastly refused
out of sight Tuesday. even to do," Carter said.
skipping the late afternoon
Carter said that under the
softball game. He alao was Ford administration the
expected to spend most of Social Security
today away from public Administration annoWJCed

recently that Medicare
patients have been hit with an
"unprecedented" 19 per cent
increase in costs, which followed a 13 P.r cent increase
imposed less than a year ago.
He also charged the
administration with falling to
respond, in lilly way, to
revelations by a Senate
investigating subconunittee
that as much as $3 billion to $S
billion in Medicaid funds Is
lost each year through fraud.
Carter said if he were
elected he would restructure
the system of Medicare and
Medicaid payments "to
eliminate fraud and waste,
and added "lhls will lie
among the first steps my
administration would take as
we move toward the gradual
phasing in of a national and
comprehensive health care
system."

DR. LAMB

LADYBIRD TESTS

r1~~\cHE~~~d J!~; widow of President Lyndoo

What happens during convulsion?
By Lawreu~e E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB ~ l'U
get directly to the point. I
went to the hospital not too
lOng ago for two coovulalons
which I had several months
apart: The docton gave me
an EEG (brain wave) and
dlacovered I had epilepsy.
That put me on a medication
called Dllantin.
What t would really like to
know Ia what Ia happening
during a convulsion. Is that
medicine like ~ tranquilizer~
I know epUepty Ia a chronic
nervous disorder. Does the
medicine eventually cure the
disorder!
My ~ told me that I
waan t allowed alcoholic
beverages while on this
medication. Does this mean
I'm not even allowed one
drink, uy at a wedding toast,
. or II he referring to excessive
drinking?
DEAR READER

~

The

~II caused by some
cella in )/oar brain literally

reltlling more electric
dlarge than they do nor·
II
t
-&gt;

mslly. This sets of a chain from various causes and not
reaction and the brain epilepsy, becall!e they have a
literally has an · electrical.· definite cause. A brain injury
storm. The surface (cortex) thatleavesascarlnthebrain
of the brain Ia. usually in- can set off the electrical
volved and It affecl.l the cells .discharges and the problem
that control movement and Is quite different. In many of
muaculsr contractions. As a these cases medicines are
result the anns, legs and · still needed to prevent con·
varinus parts of the· body . vuialons. A convulsion from
und.ergo contractions and low blood sugar Is not
relaxations causing the epilepsy but a medical
convulsion .. Under special !)'lllptom of low blood sugar,
cir~llllill8nces even normal which could even be a tumor .
brain cells can do this. That Ia of the pancreas.
why every convulllon Ia not
Now about' Dilantin. It Is
· an epileptic seizure.
what we call an an·
The person usuaUy does not Uconvulsant. It Ia not a
remember the ' actual con· tranquilizer. It does act on
vuiaion but 'll"Y remember the surface of the brsin in the
changes that precede ·the areas that control movement.
actual alta~
II decreases the tendency of
There are
different these cells to fire off large
classifications of epUepay. electrical charges. It doesn't
The common type is called make you sleepy. In fact,
idiopathic, meaning that no tranquilizers have not proved
underlying reason . for the to be very useful in epilepay
convulsions is detected. This and may even make matters
ia frue In about 70 per cen' of · worse.
adult cases.
The anliconvulsants do not
I prefer to call the cure P.pilepsy. They control
remaining group coovuiaions the electrical diacluil:~es to
~~
I

..

prevent coovulslons. Rarely,
after thrt!e to five yean with
no convulsions a person may
be withdrawn from the
medicine and may not need It
any more but most people
will continue-to need treatment.
Alcohol will decrease the
amount of Dllantin In the '
blondstream and could make
you suaceptible. to a convulalon. 'That Ia why your
doctor doesn't want .JGU to
drlnl: any. And you should
never stop yoar medicine ·
abruptly aa that could cause a
severe convuialon.
Those who want In·
formatloo on the elfecl.l of
alcoholcansend50centsfor
The Health Letter number 14, Alcohol, Whiskey, Gin,
Vodka, Rum, Wine, Beer.
Send a long, stamped, aelf·
addreued envelope for
mailing. Addreaa your letter
to Dr. Lamb In care. of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box I~t,
~adlo ... City Station, New.
York, NY 10!119.

vaCCffi8tlODS m• 10
e

e

'

'

.

Johnson bas entered the

'

·

'

~~=:~:~;: states ·are suspended

lady arrived Sunday and
. •
began a thre&amp;oday series of
BJSCO'ITMaeLEOD
tests Monday.
Ullhed Prtullltenuotioaal
President Joonson w• a
Deapjte assurances . by
member of the Mayo Cllnlc· federal .health officials that
board of governcn and bad the nationwide awlne flu
'visited the cllidc alnce JIM!. Immunization program Is
safe, vaccinatlona b\ aU or
partaofatleast !Ostatesbaw
been suspended hecan... of·
i'--.:...------~,. the deatha of several elder!)'
,. •••, """""
, persona,
·
"'"'"" "',.
Federal reaearchers today
...,,~..::.....
were eramlnlng residue left
_,L • • - •
lr! vtalsofawine flu vaccine to
_;;,-:,::,....,
determine 11 there was a
....,...,..
pouible CGIIIIOction betweeli
;.."':':.:'"r'::r.:-.,., the of the vaccine and the
m ._, "" ~. 01o1o .,,.:: ' deatha of three elderly Pitt,..
OH'" ,._ "'·""· burgh residents on Mooday '
. .,,._,
. .,,........,.,,
..,_ ..,. ~
"Any
time
you're
--.,......
·.
inoculatinglargenumberaot
;.!:~:::"'=-~."::: people there are going to be
''"'"' ..... ,..,... •••· m '"'"' some coincidental things
•:.:;,::-·~·~...... ~ baJIPtning," said Dr. David
'"""' ...., ro - ,... Sencer, director of the
- · t r - _,-.""'"' Federal 'Center I« Diaeaae:;;.~:,:~:"'.:.:".;,.'::~.~ Control in AUanta.
·
•-· on.-."'-'"""'"''" · At least .even penona, aU
;;:".:!:;,,::·::;.::."..!..::.:.:.~~ elcjerly, in lour stallll have
'"""'"''"" ..~ .,..., dled!ollowlngswlneftusltots,
1..............
olflctsia reported. The dead

use

·
Ufered !rGm heart dlseaae
and were lisled as' members
of a "high risk;' group.
In addition, Michigan
health olficlaia, saying they
would take .no ~hanees,
Started invealigltlng today
tilt deathl of two elderly
pel'lllllll who died of heart
attacltl Within M hburs of
receiving swine Du shots.
In Shiawaaaee County
Health Direcl&lt;r John
said be ordered an autopsy In
the death late 1'ileeday of
Paul Akina, 75. AkiDI died of
a heart attack a day after
receiving a Du shot. Asimilar
death
of a M-voar-old
Port
'
~...
HIU'on man waa reported in
St. Clair Co111ty, bit the
victim lim not ldeptlfied
jJendlng an au\opiJ there. ·
The White Hooae aaid
Prealdent Ford bad been
lnfonl!eci of the situation but
.\here was ..0 further ~ord
even
though
tbe
adminlstrltlon-baelled swine
flllprogramappearedtohaw
suffered a aetback bacatlie of
the deaths and ·llllpended

r.von8

.•

~

st~te
immunization .
programs.
•'
There were n~ reports. of ·;~
panic from around the ••
country because of ·the ~~
deatha.
"We thought we would geta ,·.., ·
rash of calls. There's l!een ·•·
nothing at all. There's no .
panic," IBid .Mrs. Helen'''
·Gomez, a nUI'!Ie at the Platte '' "
COunty Health Department •;;
Cllnlc north of Kanlaa City. -~
She uid penm11 coinlng.in .1:
for 11rine flu 11\ota were _
aware of the deatba.
'"
'"lbey've been telling me ""
about it,'' abe aaid. "II ,;:.
doesn't
them" seem to bother •··1
.
.. Deaths lollowlng •""
vacclnatlona were repcrled In •''
Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, :·'
T~ and Florida. . "~ ·
· which temporai1ly •"•
llhelnthaccjnaioo pllns in- ""
eluded Alaska, llllnola, ;:o
Loulaiana, Maine, Tez11, '
Vermont, Wlleonain, New '"'
Mexico and In part• of '"~
VIrginia and Pennsylvania. ~·:.~,.

'

.. ...,
~

til

.

.•
Foster into a 1-2 count
. Mter erasing a :Hl deficit advantage, Reed. disastrously
with a four.,.un rally in the · hung a slider, which wound
seventh, Anderson called on up in the left field !.eat. and,
his league~eading '1ireman" in similar. lashi~, Bench .
Rawly East wick to preserve followed by teeing another 1·2
the lead in the eighth . But pitch into th e lelt..:enter
East wick allowed a ground- stands.
rule double to ·Jay Johnstone
"There's no way you can
(who had seven hila in nine blarpe anybody on. this ball
at-bats In the three games), a club for that loss but me;''
wiilk In Bob Boone and an said the dejected, misty-eyed
RBI double by Larry Bowa, Reed afterward. "It was
which eluded left fielder plain and simple as that. !let
Foster.' An intentional walk to . Foster get to me because I
ex-Red Bobby To!~ loaded hung the pitc)\ and an eight·
the bases beltre Dave Cash year veteran just doesn't do
lofted a sscrifice 'fly' to give that. Bench just hit .a high
the Phillies a 6-4 lead.
fastball." ·
·
An
RBI
triple
by
Johnstone
It
was
at
that
point
that
overcome
their
own
mistakes; and (2) may not in thO ninth, which got by
baseman
Jpe r-------~--""":'-,
lose another game this year. se~ond
"I'll tell you ooe t.hingt'' . Morgan's out..tretcbed glove
.said ebullient Reds Manager and alao center fielder Cesar
..,. 1
Sparky Anderson after the Geronimo, gave the Phillies 1
_1• " h · 1
incredible comeback victory what, against probably any 1C
.
by his ball club, "either other team, would have been 1. ~t::mnmgs 1
a
decisive·
insurance
run.
Kan~s City or the X./lnkees
i· ! .ll/0' :
could beat us, butl,(li\f\i';ljq111· QU\, as they proved in the
NHLt 61!1rt~inii&gt;J .1U• ';
they Will ache oo lh'Gt'll ... niriiJl'liinmg, the Reds are riot ·. "' "tj~~{.~~~t~~W/,~~AIW
they won't ever feei'reillxed." just any other team.
Patrick Oivhilon
Mter getting leadoff batter
Anderson had a right to
w . l.t. ph .gf ga

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sporta Writer
CINCINNATI (UP!)
There was most surely a
message I« the American
League in the way the
. relentless· Cincinnati Reds
wrapped · up tbeir second
straight natioiUil league pennant .·
.
The eventual American
.League . champion must
realize about Tuesdsy's 7~
victory by Cincinnati, which
compleied a three-game
sweep of the Phillies In tm
Nl. playoffs, is that t!le Reds
are a team who (I) are
playing oo well now they can

'; NEW' YORK !UPI) - The Yankees are so close, they can
taste it.
Only ooe miJ'e mountain to cross, one more ball game to win,
and they'll be the new American League champions. All they
have to do Is beat the·Kansas City, Royals today and it's all
over. II they don '1, they still have another chance Thursday
night.
'
Someone was trying to get Billy Martin to look past the
Royals after the Yankees heal them, 5-3, Tuesday night and
talk about the Reds, who had made it inti&gt; the World Series only
a few llours before by sweeping their third straight from the
Phillles. Marlin wouldn't go for lt'at all.
"One bridge at a time," he said,
The guy asking the q11e8tions woutdn 't take no for an answer.
He wanted In know Martin's evaluation of the Reds, but he
newr got it.
"I'll talk to you afler tomorrow," the Yankee manager told
him, and by the eurt way he said it the ·guy got the Idea and
ba.cked off.
.
.
The W«ld Series isn't anything new to Billy Martin. He has
never been in one as a manager bit has taken part in five as a
player with the Yankees. Catfish Hunter, who'll try to wrap it
up against the Royals today, bas been in three with !he
Oakland A's. He Is Win World Serles"ptaf, and the prospect of
being in .another one pleaseS'' hilli"ellor,mously, without
generating the inordinate excltl!menf ''t\ '1does among the
younger members of the Yankees.
.
Some. made it a point to watch Tuesday's Reda-Phillies'
wrapup on the tulle because that game ended before the
Yankees started theirs with the Royals. Catfish Hunter didn't
bother, though.
"I never like ,to look at the game on TV," he said after Martin
announced he would pitch the third playoff game.
Hunter said his arm feela fine now. The tendonitis which was
discovered behind his right shoulder early in August seems to
be an gone.
'
.
"Were you worried .about it? " he was asked.
"It worried me enough to go to the dQctoi and get a shot.
They gave me cortisone with a needle that long," said Hunter, BY JOE CARNICELLI
hQldingbothhandsmorethansixinchesapart. "Tears carne to UPI Executive Sports Editor
myeyesllkeababywhentheystuckthatneedleinme ."
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ To
Hunter wasn't the biggest winner on the Yankees' staff this put it simply, the Kansas City
season - Ed Figueroa was ~ but the Yanks invariably are Royals are in trouble. Not
moreconfldentwhenhepitches. They always fee) he's going to only are !hey a loss away
win and, after the masterful way he pitched against the Royals from elimination in the
in Saturday'splayoff opener when he downed them, 4-1, all the ,American League playoffs
Yankees figure .he'll beat them again today.
but they go Into today's game
~ Kansas City Manager Whitey Herzog is aware the Royals faced with beating New York
mayheprettyclosetotheendoftheline. Itwashardforhitnto Yankee ace Catfish Hunter, ·
be overly optimistic after the Royals gol a three-riln jump in one of the best pressure
the first inning Tuesday night and then lost the baU game.
pitchers in baseball.
"We've gotta win two games," he said.
On Tuesday night, the
He frowned and added:
Royals burst to a :kJ lead in
"I'll betcha OIU' ball club' has done it 15 times this year, the first inning, then were
scored three runs in the first inning and then didn 't get another blanked by Dock Ellis and
run."
Sparky Lyle the rest of the
Freddie Patek, the Royals' 'little shortstop, was talking way. And while Ellis and Lyle
about how he thought he was safe when he led off the fifth , muffled the Kansas City bats;
inning with a single and was cut ·down stealing on Thurman Chris Chambliss and Elliott
. Munson's thro.w to Fred Stanley. ,
Maddox sparked a three-run,
"Art )'ranti (the umpire) said he (Stanley) tagged me on the sixth-inning . rally, wnich·
neck as I was sliding into the bag," said Patek. "That's when I . brought the Yankees a 5.J
got upset.I said,'!! he tagged me on the neck, my feet were on victory and a 2.1 lead in
the bag. ~ow Ctlll I be out•• i\ g~ came .i"ln th~ clu~h,olllje here games in the .best-&lt;&gt;1-live
a lew ·mmutes ago a~d saul the· replay' showed 11!' ( Sllmley J senes, ..
tagged 1me with the wrong hand, the one.m which he didn't
"! haven't been told about
have the tiall."
it officially," said Hunter, in
· When Frantz called him out, Patek was·so angry he threw an unusually subdued Yankee
his helmet in the dirt. Billy Martin inunedlsteiy came out of locker room, as he peeled off
the dugout and told first base umpire Bill Haller that a couple layer upon layer of insulated
of his players had been thrown out of ball garnes \his year for underwear, " ... But• Billy
throwing their helmets, how come Patek was being allowed to Martin is the boss and if be
stay? Haller told Martin to go see Franbl down at second base says I go, I go. I just hope it's
becall!e he was the one who had made the call, but Martin warmer tomorrow than il
didn't do it.
,
was tonight."
Why not, someone asked.him.
Royals' Manager Whitey
"BecauSe I didn't want to," the Yankee manager came right Herwg has designated left·
back. .
·
bander Larry Gura, who lost

crow.

BOSTON (UP!)~ Forward he arrived for an afternoon
Sidney Wicks has wanted to press .conference.
play with a winner since
"I'm looking forward to
leaving UCLA in 1971.
playing with the caliber of
The 6-foot.-9 IOI'Ward got his ball players they have ·on the·
wish . .Tuesday, the . NBA team," Wicks said Tuesday.
champion Boston Celtics "I'm almost positive I'll ll!
hough! Wicks in a. straight able to fit in with their ~lyle."
cash deal frorn the Portland
In making the NBA All..Star
Trail Blazen.
team five straight years,
· Wicltl, 'll, a free agent, had . Wicks .averaged 22.3 points
refused to .sign a contract and 10.3 rebounds a game.
after being sold this summer
Wicks was oo three NCAA
to New Orleans. He was title teams at UCLA but
expected, however, to sign never reached the playoffs in
with the Celtics today when five seasons with Portland.
...........
-- ~ ·-

New fa.C ftl in "
Herd linte.ftP

Boston President Red
Auerbach ·stressed the Wicks
purchase was "completely
separate from the Silas deal"
and added that Boston made
no commitment other than
cash to Portland .
:· •~~, , ~tra\!!ht cash deal

ani! 'there .~re no strings
attached,
confirmed
Portland . t:ie!l"ral Manager
Harry Glickman. · ., ·•
' •
"We saw ' a golden
opportunity to get a super
player and we grab)led it,"
said Auerbach. "I place
Sidney Wicks in the
company with Elgin Baylor,
Tommy Heinsohn, Paul 'Silas
and Bob Pettit."

Quebec
Birm ingham
Cin ci nnati
Indianapolis
Minnesota
NeW England

bit.. .. "

"When you get down to It,
they just outplayed us," said
Herwg whowasparticularly
lrntr~ with the defensive
play of third baseman
Nettles.
"I neV.er realized ·until this
year ivhat · a great third
baseman he was. He made
some great plays tonight. He
made. plays that oiU' third
baseman didn't."
But then, that 's how
pennants are won.

·· ~,

·same

Phillies Manager Danny
Ozark removed Re.ed in favor
of first Gene Garber, and
then lefthander Tommy
Uooerwood, a rookie.
After Garber gave up a
single In Dave Concepcion,
Underwood walked Geronimo
to set up the eventual winning

Playoff notes. .•

"

1

1

ggg

l,lnderwood

w . LI . p1sgl oa
3 o o 6 15 9

Noian

2 1 0 4 13 8

1 1 1 J 20 11
1 1· 0 2 5 7

5

Sarmiento

1-3
2·3

1 0 0 2 0
6

1 t 2 1

1 2 2 2 1 0

Bo•don
1·3 o o o o o
Easiwick IWI
.
233221
Kaat pitched to 2 batters In
?th; Reed pitched to 2 batters
In 9tH ; Garber pilched to one
batter In 9th.
WP ~ Eastwlck. T - 2:43.
A - 55.047.

l 2 0 2 9 1~
, 0 2 0 0 2' 7
West
w . l. t . ph'gf gil
2 0 0 4 9 3

Winn 1peg
Edmonton
I 0 0 2
Phoenix
1 .l 0 2
· HOU!.IOn
I I 0 2
Si!n Diego
0 I I .I
Calgary
0 J 0 0
Tue!idav 's ~t'svlts
Birmingham 6.Calgarv 2
Quebec 6 San Diego 4 .
(Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Gsmes
Calgary at Houston·
(Only game schecjuled)
Thursday's Games
Cincinnati at' Birmingham
Minnesota at Phoenix
!Only games scheduled )

i ,. ._

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. year's 01perience at the post.
(UP!) - Mar$all wiU have
In anothe~ persormel move,
some new faces on.defense at Steve. Williams, a tight end,
Homecoming Saturday has , i been switched to
againat Dayton's Flyers.
quarterback and is fl!garded
Paul Kuzio, who was the as Nelson's .backup.
. quarte~back . in Marshall's
Williams, a 11-foot-3; !93.opener, will open at safety. pound junior and son of
Ray Crabll:ee Is slated to former Concord College
start at outside linebacker, football coach Don Williams, .
enabling Point Pleasant . might show up a\ tight end or
freshman Dennis Bellamy to quarterback Saturday, or at
be returned to the opposite both positions, Ellwood
oulslde lineha'cking position. . revealed. .
•· .
"We seem to play better ' "The reasoning is we feel
defensively with Crabtree steve WiWams can give Bud
and Bellamy in the lineup," Nelson some competition at
Marshall coach Frank quarterback, and keep
Ellwood asserted. ·
Nelson sharp," Ellwood said.
. Kuzio, who finished last
Junior Bub Wilt is "making
season as the Herd safety, improvement," Ellwood said,
was switched to his old Oak "but )Ve still don't · feel he
Glen
High
School would be able to go Into t~
quarterback position last ball game and move us
spring and became the No. I consistently."
quarterback gOing into the · Wllt started some as a
season.
,
freshman,comphiting 27of63
Bul, came that 31-14loss to passes for 34~ yards, and
Moreheadintheopener,ls~r played oome at tight end
forfeited to ,Marshall, Kuzio ·before
revorting
to
was replaced at quarterback quarterback.
• ' by Bud Nelson, who had a

...

The addition of Wicks
comes at a time wh~ the
Celtics are negotlatut with
ve.teran forward Paul Silas,
who is on .the option year of
his contract. Silas, 33,
repocledly Is seeking a threeyear, l900.000 contract. With
the Celtics' opener eight dsys
away, he has yet to r~rt.

Pro

1t

Royals are
in trouble ·

Wicks,purchased by Boston Celtics

L .title

which defensive replacement- would've beaten the throw
Bobby Tolan made a valiant even if 1had come up wit)l the
try.
ba 11."
"It was a do-or-die
And so the Reds, who wni
situation," said Tolan, who riow seek 1n beCOI}le the first
charged Ute bail , but was National League club sinCe
unable In make a play as the 1921-22 New Vork Giant.
Cmcepcim sped home with 1n win bac~~o-back W«ld
the winning run. "I tried to Series titles, had staged
make the play, but everyone nnother• of their patented
run.
11
111ere was no excuse for lold me later that Concepcion come-from-behind triumphs. ·
not throwing strikes," the 22year old Underwood said. "!
just dldn 1 do the job."
A sacrifice bunt by Ea
Foster ssld he hit a pitch
By JOHN T . KADY
Armbrister and a subsequent
that
came in over " the
CINCINNATI
(UPI)
Ns·
intentional walk to Pete Rose
middle
of the plate.
filled the bases heftre Grlffey tiona! League playoff note~:
"Mosily
I was trying to
Cincinnati
Reds
manager
hit a slow roller to first , on
Sparky Anderson said he told make contact and get on base
Ken Grlf!ey lo ·" just be son1 ~ way," Foster said . " As
NL champs!
patient" when he went to bat it was I (\ldn 't g~ on base I
with the bases loaded in the just went around the bases."
PHILADELPHIA
bottom of the ninth inning in
Pt•~er
Ab R H Bi
Bench was asked If he felt
Cas 2b
4 0 1 1 the third game of the
Maddoxct
5 1 I t National Leagu e playoffs the Reds won because they
schmldt3b
5 1 3 t with Philadelphia and the'-.. were a better disciplined club
Luzlnsklll
4 o 1 1
score tied !Hi.
than the PhiUles.
Reedp ·
o o o o
"I told Kenny just he
"I think our own way of
Garberp 0 0 0 0 patient," said Anderson. doing it is the right way,"
~it~~r1~ood P
~
"Just get the ball you want to said Bench.· "I don't know
Martin lf
1 1 0 0 hit."
whlit it Is Hke in Philly. They
Johnstonerf
5 1 3 1
Griffey
did
just
that
and
hit
have their own life style and
•NY Islanders
J o o 6 17 1 Boone c
3 0 o 0
NY Rangers
3 I 0 6 22 l&lt;i Harmon pr'
o 1 0 0 a single to first base to drive do their own thing. But they
A'ltanta
2 2 0 4 13 18 Oates.c
1 0 o 0 in Dave Concepcion with the won 101 ball games and are
Philadelphia
1 2 0 2 4 7 Bowa 55
3 1 1 t winning run to give the Reds only a year tl' lwo away from
Smythe Division
w. l.t. pts.gt ta Ka atp •
2 0 1 0
' Chic;ago
2 .1 o 4 12 1 Tolan lb
0 0 0 0 a 7~ victory over the PhilHes being n real good hallclub.
Sl . Louis
1 1 0 2 6 7 Totals
34 6 11 6 and the National League They're goad now ..
Colorado
1 7 0 2 8 ll
CINCINNATI
pennant.
'' But we are disciplined and
Mii1 neso1a
I J o 7 1S 23 Player
)J r h Bi
"I
was
a
little
excited
up
we
discipline ourselves ,
vancouver
0 J 0 0 6 17 Rose Jb
4 0 1 0
Wales Conf(lrence
there,"
admitted
Griffey.
Sparky
demands it," added
· Griffey rf
S 1 2 I
Norris Divisio n
Bench
.
"We don't have
w.. L t, ph . gl ga Morgan 2b
J 1 0 0
Molitreal
l I o· ~ 18 6 Perez lb
4 l '1 I
Phillles First baseman dissension on our. ball dub .
D(ltroll
1 1 1 l 9 7 Fosterlt
J 1 1 2 !lobby Tolan threw to horne We talk things out. We come
Washington
I I 1 .3 12 14 Bench c
J 2 1 1
Los Angeles
I 2 1 J 11 1I Concepcin 55
4 1 1 o plate after bubbling Griffey 's In play ."
Pittsburgh
1 2 0" 2 14 21 Geronimo cf.
3 0 1 2 ground ball in an attempt In
Adams Division
get Concepcion hut Anderson
Philadelphia Ron Reed who
w . l . t. ptstfta Nolanp ·
0 0 0 0
, Boston · '
2 1 b 4151 2 Sarmientop
1 0 0 0 said "he had no chance to get gave up the home , runs In
Cleveland
1 I 1 3119 Borbonp
0 0 0 0
Foster and Bench said he
Toronto
1 1 0 2 9 9 Lum ph
1 0 0 0 Davey ."
"hung" a sllder&lt;ltl Foster and
Buffalo
1 1· o 2 3 5 Eastwlck p
0 0 0 0
' Tuesday ' s Results
A b t h
0 0 0 0
tried
to run a fast ball down
George
Foster
says
he
was
NY Islanders 1 At lanta o
rm rs r P
Montreal 4 Detroit 2
Totals
ll 7 9 7 not thinking home rw&gt; when and away from Bench bit It
NY Rangers 10 Minnesota 4
One out Whim winning run he went to bat in the bottom of was wo high.
!Only games sch(lduled l
scored
"The only pitch Bench has
Wednesd.,y 's !fames
Phila
000 100 221- 6 the ninth .
Boston at NV Rangers
Cin
000 000 403-7
"I was up there thinking been hitting all year was a
NY Islanders at Buffalo
E . - Rose, Perez . OP 1\igh fast bill and that's what
Ph 1'la de 1Phi a 1• Ci nc 1nna tl I. 'get on base','' said Foster.
Atlanta at Cleveland
Pitt sburgh at Chic ago
"My run wasn't really he hit.'' said Reed.
Los Ange les at Toronto
LOB .- Phi ladelphia 10 ,
st. Lou is at Color;,do
Cincinnati 6. 2B - Maddox, important. The guy on deek
· PhlUles Manager Danny
Washington at Vancouver
., Schmidt 2, Luzlnskl, John . was the tying run."
I Only ga mes schedUled)
stone, BOwa . 38 - Johnstone,
Foster hit the home run and Ozark said "when you face a
Thursday's Games
Geronimo. HR Foster,·
Montreal at Philadelphia
Be,.ch . S Kaat, Arm . the guy on deck-Johnny guy like · Bench and make a.
Bench , - followed with mistake he hits It out of the
IDnJv game scheduled I
brister. SF - Cash. Foster .
·
· - · iphrerbb so another homer that tied the ballpark."
Kaaf
622
22
1
game
!Hi.
WHA standings
Reed
2 5 4 4 t 1
By United Press International
Garberlll 0 I 1 I 0 0
East

.

the opener In Hunter, as his
pitcher.
Temperatures Tuesday
night dipped to about 50
degrees bit even the weatber
seems to be on .the Yankees'
side. the Weather Bureau
forecast a high of around 70
degrees for tnday's fourth
game as the Yankees seek
their first pennant since 1964.
The Royals broke out early
Tuesday night. Jim Wohlford
walked leading off the game
and Ken Brett's double, John
Mayberry's single, a
saerifice fly by Hal McRae
and Tom Poquette's double
put Kansas City ahead, 3-0.
At this Point Ellis was
struggting.
"In the first inning, I was
having a lot of trouble
spotting the ball, " he
explained. "I had . no
rhythm .. :. 1 wasn't fooling
anybody ·SO I &lt;ljlcided to ~~
them hit the ball and hope our
fielders did a job." And they
did.
.
"Actually, I never settled
down. I was very fortunate
they were hitting the ball
right at our guys."
The Yankees got back into
the game in the fourth ·when
with two out, Lou Piniella
slashed a ground rule double
past third baseman Brett and
Chllmbliss followed with a
400-foot homer into the right
field bleacbers.
,
The Yanks put TUesday's
game away in the sixth. Roy
White walked, ., Thurman
Munson doubled, pinch-hitter
Carlos May was .walked
intentionally, Chambliss
brought in the tying run with
a forceout, Graig Nettles
singled in a run and Maddox
doubled in another.
Herzog used a playoff
· record five pitchen in the
sixth in an attempt to halt the
rally.
"We just let upt said:
Royals shortstop Fred Patek.
"I hate to say that. We got
three runs and could have
burled them but we didn't.
We turned from offense to
. defense and laid back a

.

2 0
1111
1 7
1113

5 15

FALES·

The Sunshine Girls
Standings

Week of 10+76
No , .5 - 12 tor
12.
The
Three Stooges 11 tor IJ : Stu's
Timber Wo lves 11 for 13 ;
Brl'ldy 's Buick , Olds 'and
Cent . 10 for 14 ; No . 4 10 for 14 ;
Gibson Motor City 1 tor n .
· High team J games (high
'• '
ind . J g11mes1 · - Brady's
. Pomeroy
Bu ic k 1,587 ; Hazel 442; Stu's
Bowling Lanes
Timber Wolves 1.476. Nan cy
Tuesday Triplicate
,, 425, No. 5 1,.435, Rhea 399
High team game .High
Oct. 5, 1976."'·
Team
Pts, md . game - Brady's Bui ck
572 ; Hazel 180; No . 5 520 ,
Royal Crown Bottling Co. 32 Na
Shirts Ltd .
JO 146.ncy 161 ; No . 4 506, Rhea

Shamrock Motel
28
New York Clothing H.
24
Royal Qak Park
20
No.3
10
High individual game, Pat
Carson, 118 , second high
individual game. Pat Carson,
176.
· High series, Pat Carson,
505, second high series. Pat
Smith, 444. .
Team high · game, Royal
Qak Park, 497, team high
serieo - Royal Qak Park
1,397.

,
,
"
SEATTLE (UPI) ~ The
Seattle Mariners · announced
•
.
ruesday the appolnirnen\ of
Stock as pitching coach
for the American League
expansion team, which will '
begin I
P BY. next season .
Stock, who served on the
Oakland A's coaching staff
from 1973 through this .
season, pitched I« nine years
in the major leagues, mostly
in relief. He appeared in 321
games with a 27-13record and
R
.
30 -3.60 E A.
'26

CLEAN.IJP. FIX.IJP SALE .

LEAF
RAKE
Reg. 52.49

Fall

Special

$}76

·wes

1~"
X

24"

Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
Oct. s. i976
No.4 Gilmore
No. 3Gil litaQ
~
'l
Sears
• €'11: ~)"11 ~ ,7j ,
Karr &amp; Van Za111'PI. II. r:r,' ~i '
No. 6 Roach
12
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) _
No. 2Tackefte
0 The
Indiana
Pacers
High tndlvlduat game ~
Thelma Osborne, t70, secona a0 nou!'ced Tuesday the
high individual game - signing of free agent AI
,Vicky Gittlian, 164.
F1erning,
High series - Atma.Pooter. · Fleming
a 6·foot·8
444, second high series - 1 ward
.
'1
-Vicky Gillilan 43ll ·
or
• wa ved last week by
. Team high game - No:·3 · the Phoenil Suns, fills oultbe
Gillilan, 7.4'1. team high series finaiiiPOI on the Pacers' 12.
~ Sea(s, 2,135.
player roster.

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FALL SPECIAL

Two plaatic storm windoM In packl~

Foreman~Dennis
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (UPI)
- Former heavyweight
champion George Foreman
says he is a changed man and
a changed fighter, one who
want. to get into the ring as
often as possible. ·
Whether Foreman is really
changed is hard to tell, but he
certainly ·,isn't acting the

same.
Instead of displaying the
silent, sullen glare that
marked
his
public
appearances when he was
champion, Foreman is
playing tbe part of a clown
.who uays he is enjoying

.
pe.ople these days.
He appeared Tuesday at a ·
news cooference to· promote
· his fight Friday night with
ninthranked Dino Dennis, a
rangy, undefeated stylist
from AlUehoro, Mass.
·
Dennis also was there along
with lightweight cbampioo
Roberto Duran of Panama
and challenger Alvaro Rojas
of Costa Rica, who will meet
,In a Iii-round title bOut before
the heavyweight contest .
Both fights will be ·nationally
televised (CBSJ.
Ti)e scheduled 12-&lt;'ound&lt;·r

bout F~iday

Model PC620

60 Yard

'

will &lt;Illy be ~· oreman's fourth
fight since he lost his UUe to
Muhammad All in Zaire
nearly two years ago, but he
says that's going to change.
''I want to fight as often as I
can," he said. "Botting Is my
life, I love it.'' .
Foreman woUld not say he
would be disappointed if All
reaUy retired, bit he did
admit: "1 would like to get
some revenge- ! want the .
only man who ever defeated
me."
Later, Dennis said he,
thought he could outthink and
outlast his heavier ~ponent,

bit Foreman grinned and
said his opponent and
Ed
Imondi
manager
reminded him of the . flrst
time he walked through a
graveyard at night. ·
"I was just awhiaUin' 'and
pretendin' I wasn't scared,"
Foreman ··said
after
lllustratlrig his · point by
Uptoeing across the platform
and whistling tunelessly.
"I really don't tl!ink It'll go
more than three rounds, so
somel!ody better look out,"
he adllod, throwiJ\g a mock
glare •• at the 24-year-old
Dennis.
,,

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'

Re s retam

.

Sport·Parade
:

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sparta Editor

Some interufing questions
Dear Sir :
•
Mr. Wingett's letter in the October 8 edition raisa aome ,
Interesting questions. 11. . ·
.
1a1ao think it Is higil'lllne for the people of MelgJ county to ! .
ask lUIIe queallons ri their leaders.
How C&lt;lllle we ha.. lost so many services to our people!
~e 1a the linemployment office, the children's home, the ,
Carpellter testlann, the bus service, the telegraph offtce and
they are talking of taking the cancer clinic to another county.
Regarding the mental retanled children, our leeders c:oold
not even .cune up with $50,000 to Bend them to GaWa county for ,
the school, yet awlile bacll; we spent t:MO,OOO oil the courthouse
and 11211,000 on the jaU, yet !lrlving by these two bl\lldinfla It :
would be hard to tell that 15(!0 was spent by looking at the •
ouialde.
Most of our county and towrudtlp roads are In such bad ,
shape that you can't carrjl a suitcase overtbem, let alooe drive ,

a car.

HOUSE ENERGY Management '1'1118 at the workshop were given py Rita Oberhol!er,
ColumbiiJ.Gaa of Ohio 11ome economlal, who demon~tec1 how to eonaerve energy using a
mt~t~r~ h~e Xeplica.
. · ·
.
·

·-

ROGER MILLER, Extension Engineer fl'9lll Ohio State Universlty,lefl, compared fuel
consumption In the non4nsulated and insulated house giving facts and figures on the savings
involved at the energy conservation workshop held yesterday at the Meiga Inn. With Miller
is John Rice, Meigs Eltell,'llon Agent, who arranged the workshop.
t;\

DeaD says Ford lied
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Johri
~Dean
today
contr~dlcted
1973
congressional testim&lt;lly by
Gerald Ford that he did not
recall aldlng any attempt by
the Nil&lt;on White Holl!e to
stave off a Watergate
investigation.
Ford, when he was House
Republican leader, Jold vice
presidentjsl confirmation
hearings that "to the best of
my recollection," he did not
!liscuss any attempt to dam
up the Watergate affair with
any Nil&lt;on ·stafferS.
. Dean, the former aide to
President Richard Nixon
whose
memory
and
testim&lt;llY resulted in Nil&lt;on's
' political fall and resignation,
contJ:adicted Ford in a taped
Interview broadcast on the
NBC Today television
program.
Dean said Nixon staff
member Richard Cook had

discussed .the matter • with Nil&lt;on.
Ford more than a half dozen
"Cook was the man who did
times and Ford at one point the leg work and dealt with
indicated he would tell Mr. Ford · and the other
Republican members of the members of the (banking)
Ho~se Banking Corrunittee · committee"
which was
"what they should do on the . considering probing at least
day of the vote" (Dean's one aspect of the Watergate
words) on whether or ·not to in~estigation, said Dean.
look Into the Watergate case.
"I can recall· Dick coming
But in a statement to NBC, backS . and te!Ung, for
Cook
denied
Dean's example, how Jerry was
allegatioru, accusing Dean of going to call a meeting of the
"vicious lies and clever nilnorlty members in Les
.distortions."
Arends' (former Republican
"There is no question in mY C&lt;llgre&amp;911lan from Illinois)
mind that the President told of!lce off the Holl!e floor and
the truih," said Cook, who really tell them what they
now works for an aircraft $ould do on thO day of the
company.
He
denied vote and how they should hold
contacting Ford "despite together and things· of this
John Dean's repeated and n;oture," said Dean.
frantic requests" to get him
Did that mean they should
to do so.
block those hearings from
. Dean said he passed his going forward? Dean was
own conversations with.Cook asked.
about Ford along to top Nixoo · "That's correct, " · he
aide H.R. Haldeman, who, in replied.
turn, discussed them with

.

I thought that when we got One of the biggest coal mining ,
0perailol\s In the world In the western patt of our country that , '
we would be able to show aome·prosress,.but we are getting "

.

w~•!

I notice that we got over a hundred tho11$8nd dollan to ·
hllldaawlrn!nlngpool in Syracuse. Now d!ll't get me wroog.l ; .
am not aga~ swimminll pooia, but I think that If we can get .
federal money fll' pooll we should get some to help the ;
retarded and build IDIIe lllll'ling homes I« our elderly dtizens
(Continued from page I)
they not lrltger are able to take care of themselves, "
Mrs. Stella Booton, 101, a when
recommended a hwnldlfier to heater every IIU)nth as a way
inatead
of sending them out of the county where they bave
add moisture to the air in the of utending the We of the resident of Gallipolis, died. at lived and paid ~es, to die alone and be !«gotten, far from ,
winter to make It "lei!!" heater and ~!Wnll ~urn 5 p.m. Tuesday in the Arcadia wbat friends they have !eft.- Jim Adsms, Rutland, Ohio.
::
warmer and to set the useoffuel.lntheldtchen,she Nursing Home, Coolville.
She wail born Feb. If, 1875,
theniloatat at 67 degrees or suggested low or moderate
in
Gallla County (Green
less and then forget 1\.
beat rather than high beat for
Twp.)
dauebter of the late Defends local hospital
.
II going away for more than cooking OQ top of the stove,
Jasper
and
Emma
Gilbert
"
a day, she suggested lowering and · entire oven meals on Ingels. She was the. widow of
It's beginnilng to get to me, the cootinuous snlptnli on our
the 'thermostat to 55 degrees. occasion.
the late Chauncey Booton.
local radio, cunplalnts of this Ullle petty thing, and that little
Cleaning the registers and
She concluded with the
She \VII a ileacendant of petty thing, about our hoepltal, Veterans Men)orisl Hospital: .
changing the furnace filters, thought that Americans are Alexander Waddell, a (Sometimeo I wooder if these same people have ever spent .,
keeping furniture away beaded lor a change In their Revolutionary War soldier. time in the hospital).
·
from the hot air registers so way of Ule, that the tendency
She married Mr. Booton oil
The primary complaint seema to be that everyone should ··
that the heat can drculate, to waste must be controlled,
... , in Gallipolis. have !natant attention fnlm the c~o¢~r
you uallf
walk in •·
J une 9, !...
.... the minute
.u
were alao listed among the and that conservancy. must . They
had no children. She the emergency door. Thenuraeon... ty Is train... and q .led
~onservation tips.
be pracliced in this energy waa Ufelong member of the and starta certain procedures. She's in touch with what's going ..
8
Mrs. Oberholzer advised crlal8 time.
Preabyteriah Church where oo and where the doct&lt;t Ia. Perhaps, just perhapa, he'l!l taking ~
opening draperies to let the
John Rice, MeigJ County she was active in many care of someooe sicker than you, and as soon as he can, he'll·be ..
morning sun In thereby Extenaion Agent introdueed
organil:ations.
with you.
.
'·
taking a.dvantage of solar the speakers; and John Stitz. church
Mrs. Booton wu a retired
89metimes you ~lly dill 't need t¥t "snap-your..flngea"
heat. She said that a shower lein, area agent, Community de ty in the
ba
dg
!natant care when you admit to the nurae that yw'w had that
takes less water than a bath, Resource Development, had
pu
pto te ju e · pain for several days, II' yesterday, or last week, and you could •
that cold water Is fine for a wrap-up at the con~luslon of office in the GaWa County hav~ acw,lly waited and seen the doctor at hJs office. But.no, '
rinsing clothes and that dlah- . the day.
Co:OOLI!e·d
.
It's lots eaSier to run to the hQapltal and gripe ~our head off at
washers and clothes wsshers
Rice announced that
leces ail nephews reared an overwll'ked niU'se, and demand attention "ou really don't .,
1'
should have full loads when another meeting on energy in the Booton home Include
Mrs.
Roberta
Cornwell
need.
"'
used. According to Mrs. saving tec'hntques will be held O'Brien, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Granted, there ar,e ezceptlons to this. But by and lsrge ,~
Oberholzer, hot water In Oct. :1 from Ito 3:30 at the Charlotte Brown, Clinton, moSt em"IIencies aren't! The atterolant you see in the
energy use comes only below Meigs IM. The pubHc Is in· . Ky.; . Robert Cornwell, emergencf'roan has your weUare at heart and is doing her ,..
heat and lighting.
vlted.
Gallipotla.
best to help you unUI the doctor can get to you, because you're ~
Good maintenance of apSbe wsa preceded in death .not alone in yoiU' l$ery. There are lots more in mlaery too.
•,! .
pliances Is a key, to low
by two sisters and four
Hill-Burton funds helped build this beautiful hospital, and "
energy use, she said, and
brothers.
dedicated people saw to it that it fitted the needs of the ,.
advised draining a bucket of
Several other nieces and C&lt;lllmunity. (Incidentally, som..,e last week said on radio, _:
water from the hot water
•
"We don't have an obatetrlca ~ent any more).'.' My
nephews survive.
educated guess: too many expectant mothers were conned into '"
Funeral services will be
- Four defendants were fined held 11:30 a.m. Thursilay at going out of town for tbeir confinement, it was the thlng to do. '''
and three others forfeited the McCoy _ Wetherholt _ So there became no need ftr that department to be kept up. '"
'honda in Mi....'"'"'
. rt Mayor Moore Funeral Home with Consequently it \1111 dooe away with. And, if the complaints ::
~""
· against the. hospital and doctors continue, you'll stand a ..
He alSO would change com· Fred Hoffman's court Rev. Frank Hayes of- chBIIceof losing dedicated people, and then where will we be! ~
pletely the IIUIMer in which Tuesday night.
flctatlng. Burial will be In
How can 1say thls?rll tell you how. l'vespent 104 days-in ,,,
Medicare and Medicaid pro·
Fined were Roy Franklin Mound Hill Cemetery.
Veierans Memorial Hospital this year. From AprilS to July 20
grams pay hosj,itaia, lind Boggs, 42, Mlddlepott, 140
Friends may call at the I've had care·that ooly dedicated people can give, care that
provide an incentive to cut and coats dlsordarly maMer; funeral home from 7 unW I meant having not only doctors and nurses caring for me 24 "
costs, he said.
Bruce E. Beach, 19, thla evening at the funeral hotll'!l a day, but the rest of the staff interested in my well
Carter explained he would Langsville, $50 and ~. home.
being; Interested in my life.
set reimbursement disorderly rilamer; Elaine
. When I started getting better ,I could see tbat this care was ~
guidelines, forecast and fixed Currence, 21, Middleport, $10
eitended to other patienta as well, not only to me. I saw and •
in advance, and htJII)itals ~ costa, expired drivers
received my share and more of care by these dedicated people,
which could find ways to save license; Robert M. Newell,
FOUR BONDS TAKEN
bit alao "T.L.C.'' (that's tender,lovin' care).
and spend less would be 31, Middleport, 1150 and
One deleoclant was lined
For example: two nurse noor supervisors worried about '
permitted to keep a portion of costs, three days con- . and four others forfeited me to the extent that when depressloo hit me (and it dld·at ·''
that as ·a boous.
linemen!, ·driving while in· bonds In Pomeroy MAyor Urnes), they called In a hair dresser to come to fix my ha,lr. :
Hospitals . whieh 01ceeded toldcated.
Clarence Andrew's eourt And ... they paid fll' It out of their own pocketbook. What a Ull
the estimaies would not be
Forfeiting honda were ~Ike Tu~y night. Fined was It gave me! Now, if that'snot TLC, 1doo't recognize It when I '"
fully reimbursed.
Lee Sigler, no address Diana Neece, Pomeroy, $25 see it.
.
recorded, $50 bond, dlsor- and coats, apeedlng. ForOne more thl!lg, a' w&lt;rd o! advice· .to the snipers and ,:
derly manner; Mason R. felting honda were Theodore gripers: Nothing Is perfect bit if you have a legitimate gripe, ;:
Wood, 21, Rutland, 125, Fisher, Pomeroy, $25, ·· don'tsoW!d off oo radio ... take itto the proper people, face-to- ··•·
ASK TOWED
dlaorderly manner; CUHord speeding; Joe Anthony, lace, and they'll settle itfor you. Griping Is not going to ciU'e
A marriage license was Murray, 41, Pomeroy, $300, Middleport, $30, !allure to the evils you think prevail, unless you gripe at .the proper 7'
issued . to Ronnie Gene driving while intoxicated.
yield; Earl Mossman, people.
'"
Johnson, 20, Racine, and
Pomeroy, 125, speeding;
rm Janet Kom of Pomeroy who Is clam glad and proud to ' 1
Sherry Sue Swanson, 17, Rt.
David Priddy, Rutland, 130, !mow and love everyooe of the staff who beloog to Veterans ~"
I, Middleport.
opeedlng.
Memorial Hospital. I LOVE YOU ALL. -JANET KORN.
•w

Energy ·saving

Stella BOOton,
101, claimed

Court iules

agamst seven,

Carter says Ford ignoring Medicaid
scrutiny.
By STEVE GERSTEL
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) Carter returns to active
Jimmy Carter, resting up for campaigning Thursday with
a new campaign swing, today a threeo(!ity tour of New York
I!.CCLI!ed President Ford~ln a state and then will tour
prepared statement ~of Michigan, Missouri and Ohio
refusing to take any action to . before taking another
stop the spiraling cost of break.
In a statement Tuesday,
hospital care.
•
The
Democratic• Carter said "the only way In
presidential candidate stem the health care costs
returned to his native Plains spiral is to make the hard
Tuesday after what he called political and management
O!)e of his best weeks in the decision necessary to
long struggle to beat introduce efficiency and
President Ford and return his eliminate fraud from our
party to the White House.
shamefully disorganized
With the exception of an system for delivering health
early inorning visit to check services.
on the family peanut
"This the Ford admlnistrabusiness, Carter remained . lion has steadfastly refused
out of sight Tuesday. even to do," Carter said.
skipping the late afternoon
Carter said that under the
softball game. He alao was Ford administration the
expected to spend most of Social Security
today away from public Administration annoWJCed

recently that Medicare
patients have been hit with an
"unprecedented" 19 per cent
increase in costs, which followed a 13 P.r cent increase
imposed less than a year ago.
He also charged the
administration with falling to
respond, in lilly way, to
revelations by a Senate
investigating subconunittee
that as much as $3 billion to $S
billion in Medicaid funds Is
lost each year through fraud.
Carter said if he were
elected he would restructure
the system of Medicare and
Medicaid payments "to
eliminate fraud and waste,
and added "lhls will lie
among the first steps my
administration would take as
we move toward the gradual
phasing in of a national and
comprehensive health care
system."

DR. LAMB

LADYBIRD TESTS

r1~~\cHE~~~d J!~; widow of President Lyndoo

What happens during convulsion?
By Lawreu~e E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB ~ l'U
get directly to the point. I
went to the hospital not too
lOng ago for two coovulalons
which I had several months
apart: The docton gave me
an EEG (brain wave) and
dlacovered I had epilepsy.
That put me on a medication
called Dllantin.
What t would really like to
know Ia what Ia happening
during a convulsion. Is that
medicine like ~ tranquilizer~
I know epUepty Ia a chronic
nervous disorder. Does the
medicine eventually cure the
disorder!
My ~ told me that I
waan t allowed alcoholic
beverages while on this
medication. Does this mean
I'm not even allowed one
drink, uy at a wedding toast,
. or II he referring to excessive
drinking?
DEAR READER

~

The

~II caused by some
cella in )/oar brain literally

reltlling more electric
dlarge than they do nor·
II
t
-&gt;

mslly. This sets of a chain from various causes and not
reaction and the brain epilepsy, becall!e they have a
literally has an · electrical.· definite cause. A brain injury
storm. The surface (cortex) thatleavesascarlnthebrain
of the brain Ia. usually in- can set off the electrical
volved and It affecl.l the cells .discharges and the problem
that control movement and Is quite different. In many of
muaculsr contractions. As a these cases medicines are
result the anns, legs and · still needed to prevent con·
varinus parts of the· body . vuialons. A convulsion from
und.ergo contractions and low blood sugar Is not
relaxations causing the epilepsy but a medical
convulsion .. Under special !)'lllptom of low blood sugar,
cir~llllill8nces even normal which could even be a tumor .
brain cells can do this. That Ia of the pancreas.
why every convulllon Ia not
Now about' Dilantin. It Is
· an epileptic seizure.
what we call an an·
The person usuaUy does not Uconvulsant. It Ia not a
remember the ' actual con· tranquilizer. It does act on
vuiaion but 'll"Y remember the surface of the brsin in the
changes that precede ·the areas that control movement.
actual alta~
II decreases the tendency of
There are
different these cells to fire off large
classifications of epUepay. electrical charges. It doesn't
The common type is called make you sleepy. In fact,
idiopathic, meaning that no tranquilizers have not proved
underlying reason . for the to be very useful in epilepay
convulsions is detected. This and may even make matters
ia frue In about 70 per cen' of · worse.
adult cases.
The anliconvulsants do not
I prefer to call the cure P.pilepsy. They control
remaining group coovuiaions the electrical diacluil:~es to
~~
I

..

prevent coovulslons. Rarely,
after thrt!e to five yean with
no convulsions a person may
be withdrawn from the
medicine and may not need It
any more but most people
will continue-to need treatment.
Alcohol will decrease the
amount of Dllantin In the '
blondstream and could make
you suaceptible. to a convulalon. 'That Ia why your
doctor doesn't want .JGU to
drlnl: any. And you should
never stop yoar medicine ·
abruptly aa that could cause a
severe convuialon.
Those who want In·
formatloo on the elfecl.l of
alcoholcansend50centsfor
The Health Letter number 14, Alcohol, Whiskey, Gin,
Vodka, Rum, Wine, Beer.
Send a long, stamped, aelf·
addreued envelope for
mailing. Addreaa your letter
to Dr. Lamb In care. of this
newspaper, P. 0. Box I~t,
~adlo ... City Station, New.
York, NY 10!119.

vaCCffi8tlODS m• 10
e

e

'

'

.

Johnson bas entered the

'

·

'

~~=:~:~;: states ·are suspended

lady arrived Sunday and
. •
began a thre&amp;oday series of
BJSCO'ITMaeLEOD
tests Monday.
Ullhed Prtullltenuotioaal
President Joonson w• a
Deapjte assurances . by
member of the Mayo Cllnlc· federal .health officials that
board of governcn and bad the nationwide awlne flu
'visited the cllidc alnce JIM!. Immunization program Is
safe, vaccinatlona b\ aU or
partaofatleast !Ostatesbaw
been suspended hecan... of·
i'--.:...------~,. the deatha of several elder!)'
,. •••, """""
, persona,
·
"'"'"" "',.
Federal reaearchers today
...,,~..::.....
were eramlnlng residue left
_,L • • - •
lr! vtalsofawine flu vaccine to
_;;,-:,::,....,
determine 11 there was a
....,...,..
pouible CGIIIIOction betweeli
;.."':':.:'"r'::r.:-.,., the of the vaccine and the
m ._, "" ~. 01o1o .,,.:: ' deatha of three elderly Pitt,..
OH'" ,._ "'·""· burgh residents on Mooday '
. .,,._,
. .,,........,.,,
..,_ ..,. ~
"Any
time
you're
--.,......
·.
inoculatinglargenumberaot
;.!:~:::"'=-~."::: people there are going to be
''"'"' ..... ,..,... •••· m '"'"' some coincidental things
•:.:;,::-·~·~...... ~ baJIPtning," said Dr. David
'"""' ...., ro - ,... Sencer, director of the
- · t r - _,-.""'"' Federal 'Center I« Diaeaae:;;.~:,:~:"'.:.:".;,.'::~.~ Control in AUanta.
·
•-· on.-."'-'"""'"''" · At least .even penona, aU
;;:".:!:;,,::·::;.::."..!..::.:.:.~~ elcjerly, in lour stallll have
'"""'"''"" ..~ .,..., dled!ollowlngswlneftusltots,
1..............
olflctsia reported. The dead

use

·
Ufered !rGm heart dlseaae
and were lisled as' members
of a "high risk;' group.
In addition, Michigan
health olficlaia, saying they
would take .no ~hanees,
Started invealigltlng today
tilt deathl of two elderly
pel'lllllll who died of heart
attacltl Within M hburs of
receiving swine Du shots.
In Shiawaaaee County
Health Direcl&lt;r John
said be ordered an autopsy In
the death late 1'ileeday of
Paul Akina, 75. AkiDI died of
a heart attack a day after
receiving a Du shot. Asimilar
death
of a M-voar-old
Port
'
~...
HIU'on man waa reported in
St. Clair Co111ty, bit the
victim lim not ldeptlfied
jJendlng an au\opiJ there. ·
The White Hooae aaid
Prealdent Ford bad been
lnfonl!eci of the situation but
.\here was ..0 further ~ord
even
though
tbe
adminlstrltlon-baelled swine
flllprogramappearedtohaw
suffered a aetback bacatlie of
the deaths and ·llllpended

r.von8

.•

~

st~te
immunization .
programs.
•'
There were n~ reports. of ·;~
panic from around the ••
country because of ·the ~~
deatha.
"We thought we would geta ,·.., ·
rash of calls. There's l!een ·•·
nothing at all. There's no .
panic," IBid .Mrs. Helen'''
·Gomez, a nUI'!Ie at the Platte '' "
COunty Health Department •;;
Cllnlc north of Kanlaa City. -~
She uid penm11 coinlng.in .1:
for 11rine flu 11\ota were _
aware of the deatba.
'"
'"lbey've been telling me ""
about it,'' abe aaid. "II ,;:.
doesn't
them" seem to bother •··1
.
.. Deaths lollowlng •""
vacclnatlona were repcrled In •''
Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, :·'
T~ and Florida. . "~ ·
· which temporai1ly •"•
llhelnthaccjnaioo pllns in- ""
eluded Alaska, llllnola, ;:o
Loulaiana, Maine, Tez11, '
Vermont, Wlleonain, New '"'
Mexico and In part• of '"~
VIrginia and Pennsylvania. ~·:.~,.

'

.. ...,
~

til

.

.•
Foster into a 1-2 count
. Mter erasing a :Hl deficit advantage, Reed. disastrously
with a four.,.un rally in the · hung a slider, which wound
seventh, Anderson called on up in the left field !.eat. and,
his league~eading '1ireman" in similar. lashi~, Bench .
Rawly East wick to preserve followed by teeing another 1·2
the lead in the eighth . But pitch into th e lelt..:enter
East wick allowed a ground- stands.
rule double to ·Jay Johnstone
"There's no way you can
(who had seven hila in nine blarpe anybody on. this ball
at-bats In the three games), a club for that loss but me;''
wiilk In Bob Boone and an said the dejected, misty-eyed
RBI double by Larry Bowa, Reed afterward. "It was
which eluded left fielder plain and simple as that. !let
Foster.' An intentional walk to . Foster get to me because I
ex-Red Bobby To!~ loaded hung the pitc)\ and an eight·
the bases beltre Dave Cash year veteran just doesn't do
lofted a sscrifice 'fly' to give that. Bench just hit .a high
the Phillies a 6-4 lead.
fastball." ·
·
An
RBI
triple
by
Johnstone
It
was
at
that
point
that
overcome
their
own
mistakes; and (2) may not in thO ninth, which got by
baseman
Jpe r-------~--""":'-,
lose another game this year. se~ond
"I'll tell you ooe t.hingt'' . Morgan's out..tretcbed glove
.said ebullient Reds Manager and alao center fielder Cesar
..,. 1
Sparky Anderson after the Geronimo, gave the Phillies 1
_1• " h · 1
incredible comeback victory what, against probably any 1C
.
by his ball club, "either other team, would have been 1. ~t::mnmgs 1
a
decisive·
insurance
run.
Kan~s City or the X./lnkees
i· ! .ll/0' :
could beat us, butl,(li\f\i';ljq111· QU\, as they proved in the
NHLt 61!1rt~inii&gt;J .1U• ';
they Will ache oo lh'Gt'll ... niriiJl'liinmg, the Reds are riot ·. "' "tj~~{.~~~t~~W/,~~AIW
they won't ever feei'reillxed." just any other team.
Patrick Oivhilon
Mter getting leadoff batter
Anderson had a right to
w . l.t. ph .gf ga

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sporta Writer
CINCINNATI (UP!)
There was most surely a
message I« the American
League in the way the
. relentless· Cincinnati Reds
wrapped · up tbeir second
straight natioiUil league pennant .·
.
The eventual American
.League . champion must
realize about Tuesdsy's 7~
victory by Cincinnati, which
compleied a three-game
sweep of the Phillies In tm
Nl. playoffs, is that t!le Reds
are a team who (I) are
playing oo well now they can

'; NEW' YORK !UPI) - The Yankees are so close, they can
taste it.
Only ooe miJ'e mountain to cross, one more ball game to win,
and they'll be the new American League champions. All they
have to do Is beat the·Kansas City, Royals today and it's all
over. II they don '1, they still have another chance Thursday
night.
'
Someone was trying to get Billy Martin to look past the
Royals after the Yankees heal them, 5-3, Tuesday night and
talk about the Reds, who had made it inti&gt; the World Series only
a few llours before by sweeping their third straight from the
Phillles. Marlin wouldn't go for lt'at all.
"One bridge at a time," he said,
The guy asking the q11e8tions woutdn 't take no for an answer.
He wanted In know Martin's evaluation of the Reds, but he
newr got it.
"I'll talk to you afler tomorrow," the Yankee manager told
him, and by the eurt way he said it the ·guy got the Idea and
ba.cked off.
.
.
The W«ld Series isn't anything new to Billy Martin. He has
never been in one as a manager bit has taken part in five as a
player with the Yankees. Catfish Hunter, who'll try to wrap it
up against the Royals today, bas been in three with !he
Oakland A's. He Is Win World Serles"ptaf, and the prospect of
being in .another one pleaseS'' hilli"ellor,mously, without
generating the inordinate excltl!menf ''t\ '1does among the
younger members of the Yankees.
.
Some. made it a point to watch Tuesday's Reda-Phillies'
wrapup on the tulle because that game ended before the
Yankees started theirs with the Royals. Catfish Hunter didn't
bother, though.
"I never like ,to look at the game on TV," he said after Martin
announced he would pitch the third playoff game.
Hunter said his arm feela fine now. The tendonitis which was
discovered behind his right shoulder early in August seems to
be an gone.
'
.
"Were you worried .about it? " he was asked.
"It worried me enough to go to the dQctoi and get a shot.
They gave me cortisone with a needle that long," said Hunter, BY JOE CARNICELLI
hQldingbothhandsmorethansixinchesapart. "Tears carne to UPI Executive Sports Editor
myeyesllkeababywhentheystuckthatneedleinme ."
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ To
Hunter wasn't the biggest winner on the Yankees' staff this put it simply, the Kansas City
season - Ed Figueroa was ~ but the Yanks invariably are Royals are in trouble. Not
moreconfldentwhenhepitches. They always fee) he's going to only are !hey a loss away
win and, after the masterful way he pitched against the Royals from elimination in the
in Saturday'splayoff opener when he downed them, 4-1, all the ,American League playoffs
Yankees figure .he'll beat them again today.
but they go Into today's game
~ Kansas City Manager Whitey Herzog is aware the Royals faced with beating New York
mayheprettyclosetotheendoftheline. Itwashardforhitnto Yankee ace Catfish Hunter, ·
be overly optimistic after the Royals gol a three-riln jump in one of the best pressure
the first inning Tuesday night and then lost the baU game.
pitchers in baseball.
"We've gotta win two games," he said.
On Tuesday night, the
He frowned and added:
Royals burst to a :kJ lead in
"I'll betcha OIU' ball club' has done it 15 times this year, the first inning, then were
scored three runs in the first inning and then didn 't get another blanked by Dock Ellis and
run."
Sparky Lyle the rest of the
Freddie Patek, the Royals' 'little shortstop, was talking way. And while Ellis and Lyle
about how he thought he was safe when he led off the fifth , muffled the Kansas City bats;
inning with a single and was cut ·down stealing on Thurman Chris Chambliss and Elliott
. Munson's thro.w to Fred Stanley. ,
Maddox sparked a three-run,
"Art )'ranti (the umpire) said he (Stanley) tagged me on the sixth-inning . rally, wnich·
neck as I was sliding into the bag," said Patek. "That's when I . brought the Yankees a 5.J
got upset.I said,'!! he tagged me on the neck, my feet were on victory and a 2.1 lead in
the bag. ~ow Ctlll I be out•• i\ g~ came .i"ln th~ clu~h,olllje here games in the .best-&lt;&gt;1-live
a lew ·mmutes ago a~d saul the· replay' showed 11!' ( Sllmley J senes, ..
tagged 1me with the wrong hand, the one.m which he didn't
"! haven't been told about
have the tiall."
it officially," said Hunter, in
· When Frantz called him out, Patek was·so angry he threw an unusually subdued Yankee
his helmet in the dirt. Billy Martin inunedlsteiy came out of locker room, as he peeled off
the dugout and told first base umpire Bill Haller that a couple layer upon layer of insulated
of his players had been thrown out of ball garnes \his year for underwear, " ... But• Billy
throwing their helmets, how come Patek was being allowed to Martin is the boss and if be
stay? Haller told Martin to go see Franbl down at second base says I go, I go. I just hope it's
becall!e he was the one who had made the call, but Martin warmer tomorrow than il
didn't do it.
,
was tonight."
Why not, someone asked.him.
Royals' Manager Whitey
"BecauSe I didn't want to," the Yankee manager came right Herwg has designated left·
back. .
·
bander Larry Gura, who lost

crow.

BOSTON (UP!)~ Forward he arrived for an afternoon
Sidney Wicks has wanted to press .conference.
play with a winner since
"I'm looking forward to
leaving UCLA in 1971.
playing with the caliber of
The 6-foot.-9 IOI'Ward got his ball players they have ·on the·
wish . .Tuesday, the . NBA team," Wicks said Tuesday.
champion Boston Celtics "I'm almost positive I'll ll!
hough! Wicks in a. straight able to fit in with their ~lyle."
cash deal frorn the Portland
In making the NBA All..Star
Trail Blazen.
team five straight years,
· Wicltl, 'll, a free agent, had . Wicks .averaged 22.3 points
refused to .sign a contract and 10.3 rebounds a game.
after being sold this summer
Wicks was oo three NCAA
to New Orleans. He was title teams at UCLA but
expected, however, to sign never reached the playoffs in
with the Celtics today when five seasons with Portland.
...........
-- ~ ·-

New fa.C ftl in "
Herd linte.ftP

Boston President Red
Auerbach ·stressed the Wicks
purchase was "completely
separate from the Silas deal"
and added that Boston made
no commitment other than
cash to Portland .
:· •~~, , ~tra\!!ht cash deal

ani! 'there .~re no strings
attached,
confirmed
Portland . t:ie!l"ral Manager
Harry Glickman. · ., ·•
' •
"We saw ' a golden
opportunity to get a super
player and we grab)led it,"
said Auerbach. "I place
Sidney Wicks in the
company with Elgin Baylor,
Tommy Heinsohn, Paul 'Silas
and Bob Pettit."

Quebec
Birm ingham
Cin ci nnati
Indianapolis
Minnesota
NeW England

bit.. .. "

"When you get down to It,
they just outplayed us," said
Herwg whowasparticularly
lrntr~ with the defensive
play of third baseman
Nettles.
"I neV.er realized ·until this
year ivhat · a great third
baseman he was. He made
some great plays tonight. He
made. plays that oiU' third
baseman didn't."
But then, that 's how
pennants are won.

·· ~,

·same

Phillies Manager Danny
Ozark removed Re.ed in favor
of first Gene Garber, and
then lefthander Tommy
Uooerwood, a rookie.
After Garber gave up a
single In Dave Concepcion,
Underwood walked Geronimo
to set up the eventual winning

Playoff notes. .•

"

1

1

ggg

l,lnderwood

w . LI . p1sgl oa
3 o o 6 15 9

Noian

2 1 0 4 13 8

1 1 1 J 20 11
1 1· 0 2 5 7

5

Sarmiento

1-3
2·3

1 0 0 2 0
6

1 t 2 1

1 2 2 2 1 0

Bo•don
1·3 o o o o o
Easiwick IWI
.
233221
Kaat pitched to 2 batters In
?th; Reed pitched to 2 batters
In 9tH ; Garber pilched to one
batter In 9th.
WP ~ Eastwlck. T - 2:43.
A - 55.047.

l 2 0 2 9 1~
, 0 2 0 0 2' 7
West
w . l. t . ph'gf gil
2 0 0 4 9 3

Winn 1peg
Edmonton
I 0 0 2
Phoenix
1 .l 0 2
· HOU!.IOn
I I 0 2
Si!n Diego
0 I I .I
Calgary
0 J 0 0
Tue!idav 's ~t'svlts
Birmingham 6.Calgarv 2
Quebec 6 San Diego 4 .
(Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Gsmes
Calgary at Houston·
(Only game schecjuled)
Thursday's Games
Cincinnati at' Birmingham
Minnesota at Phoenix
!Only games scheduled )

i ,. ._

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. year's 01perience at the post.
(UP!) - Mar$all wiU have
In anothe~ persormel move,
some new faces on.defense at Steve. Williams, a tight end,
Homecoming Saturday has , i been switched to
againat Dayton's Flyers.
quarterback and is fl!garded
Paul Kuzio, who was the as Nelson's .backup.
. quarte~back . in Marshall's
Williams, a 11-foot-3; !93.opener, will open at safety. pound junior and son of
Ray Crabll:ee Is slated to former Concord College
start at outside linebacker, football coach Don Williams, .
enabling Point Pleasant . might show up a\ tight end or
freshman Dennis Bellamy to quarterback Saturday, or at
be returned to the opposite both positions, Ellwood
oulslde lineha'cking position. . revealed. .
•· .
"We seem to play better ' "The reasoning is we feel
defensively with Crabtree steve WiWams can give Bud
and Bellamy in the lineup," Nelson some competition at
Marshall coach Frank quarterback, and keep
Ellwood asserted. ·
Nelson sharp," Ellwood said.
. Kuzio, who finished last
Junior Bub Wilt is "making
season as the Herd safety, improvement," Ellwood said,
was switched to his old Oak "but )Ve still don't · feel he
Glen
High
School would be able to go Into t~
quarterback position last ball game and move us
spring and became the No. I consistently."
quarterback gOing into the · Wllt started some as a
season.
,
freshman,comphiting 27of63
Bul, came that 31-14loss to passes for 34~ yards, and
Moreheadintheopener,ls~r played oome at tight end
forfeited to ,Marshall, Kuzio ·before
revorting
to
was replaced at quarterback quarterback.
• ' by Bud Nelson, who had a

...

The addition of Wicks
comes at a time wh~ the
Celtics are negotlatut with
ve.teran forward Paul Silas,
who is on .the option year of
his contract. Silas, 33,
repocledly Is seeking a threeyear, l900.000 contract. With
the Celtics' opener eight dsys
away, he has yet to r~rt.

Pro

1t

Royals are
in trouble ·

Wicks,purchased by Boston Celtics

L .title

which defensive replacement- would've beaten the throw
Bobby Tolan made a valiant even if 1had come up wit)l the
try.
ba 11."
"It was a do-or-die
And so the Reds, who wni
situation," said Tolan, who riow seek 1n beCOI}le the first
charged Ute bail , but was National League club sinCe
unable In make a play as the 1921-22 New Vork Giant.
Cmcepcim sped home with 1n win bac~~o-back W«ld
the winning run. "I tried to Series titles, had staged
make the play, but everyone nnother• of their patented
run.
11
111ere was no excuse for lold me later that Concepcion come-from-behind triumphs. ·
not throwing strikes," the 22year old Underwood said. "!
just dldn 1 do the job."
A sacrifice bunt by Ea
Foster ssld he hit a pitch
By JOHN T . KADY
Armbrister and a subsequent
that
came in over " the
CINCINNATI
(UPI)
Ns·
intentional walk to Pete Rose
middle
of the plate.
filled the bases heftre Grlffey tiona! League playoff note~:
"Mosily
I was trying to
Cincinnati
Reds
manager
hit a slow roller to first , on
Sparky Anderson said he told make contact and get on base
Ken Grlf!ey lo ·" just be son1 ~ way," Foster said . " As
NL champs!
patient" when he went to bat it was I (\ldn 't g~ on base I
with the bases loaded in the just went around the bases."
PHILADELPHIA
bottom of the ninth inning in
Pt•~er
Ab R H Bi
Bench was asked If he felt
Cas 2b
4 0 1 1 the third game of the
Maddoxct
5 1 I t National Leagu e playoffs the Reds won because they
schmldt3b
5 1 3 t with Philadelphia and the'-.. were a better disciplined club
Luzlnsklll
4 o 1 1
score tied !Hi.
than the PhiUles.
Reedp ·
o o o o
"I told Kenny just he
"I think our own way of
Garberp 0 0 0 0 patient," said Anderson. doing it is the right way,"
~it~~r1~ood P
~
"Just get the ball you want to said Bench.· "I don't know
Martin lf
1 1 0 0 hit."
whlit it Is Hke in Philly. They
Johnstonerf
5 1 3 1
Griffey
did
just
that
and
hit
have their own life style and
•NY Islanders
J o o 6 17 1 Boone c
3 0 o 0
NY Rangers
3 I 0 6 22 l&lt;i Harmon pr'
o 1 0 0 a single to first base to drive do their own thing. But they
A'ltanta
2 2 0 4 13 18 Oates.c
1 0 o 0 in Dave Concepcion with the won 101 ball games and are
Philadelphia
1 2 0 2 4 7 Bowa 55
3 1 1 t winning run to give the Reds only a year tl' lwo away from
Smythe Division
w. l.t. pts.gt ta Ka atp •
2 0 1 0
' Chic;ago
2 .1 o 4 12 1 Tolan lb
0 0 0 0 a 7~ victory over the PhilHes being n real good hallclub.
Sl . Louis
1 1 0 2 6 7 Totals
34 6 11 6 and the National League They're goad now ..
Colorado
1 7 0 2 8 ll
CINCINNATI
pennant.
'' But we are disciplined and
Mii1 neso1a
I J o 7 1S 23 Player
)J r h Bi
"I
was
a
little
excited
up
we
discipline ourselves ,
vancouver
0 J 0 0 6 17 Rose Jb
4 0 1 0
Wales Conf(lrence
there,"
admitted
Griffey.
Sparky
demands it," added
· Griffey rf
S 1 2 I
Norris Divisio n
Bench
.
"We don't have
w.. L t, ph . gl ga Morgan 2b
J 1 0 0
Molitreal
l I o· ~ 18 6 Perez lb
4 l '1 I
Phillles First baseman dissension on our. ball dub .
D(ltroll
1 1 1 l 9 7 Fosterlt
J 1 1 2 !lobby Tolan threw to horne We talk things out. We come
Washington
I I 1 .3 12 14 Bench c
J 2 1 1
Los Angeles
I 2 1 J 11 1I Concepcin 55
4 1 1 o plate after bubbling Griffey 's In play ."
Pittsburgh
1 2 0" 2 14 21 Geronimo cf.
3 0 1 2 ground ball in an attempt In
Adams Division
get Concepcion hut Anderson
Philadelphia Ron Reed who
w . l . t. ptstfta Nolanp ·
0 0 0 0
, Boston · '
2 1 b 4151 2 Sarmientop
1 0 0 0 said "he had no chance to get gave up the home , runs In
Cleveland
1 I 1 3119 Borbonp
0 0 0 0
Foster and Bench said he
Toronto
1 1 0 2 9 9 Lum ph
1 0 0 0 Davey ."
"hung" a sllder&lt;ltl Foster and
Buffalo
1 1· o 2 3 5 Eastwlck p
0 0 0 0
' Tuesday ' s Results
A b t h
0 0 0 0
tried
to run a fast ball down
George
Foster
says
he
was
NY Islanders 1 At lanta o
rm rs r P
Montreal 4 Detroit 2
Totals
ll 7 9 7 not thinking home rw&gt; when and away from Bench bit It
NY Rangers 10 Minnesota 4
One out Whim winning run he went to bat in the bottom of was wo high.
!Only games sch(lduled l
scored
"The only pitch Bench has
Wednesd.,y 's !fames
Phila
000 100 221- 6 the ninth .
Boston at NV Rangers
Cin
000 000 403-7
"I was up there thinking been hitting all year was a
NY Islanders at Buffalo
E . - Rose, Perez . OP 1\igh fast bill and that's what
Ph 1'la de 1Phi a 1• Ci nc 1nna tl I. 'get on base','' said Foster.
Atlanta at Cleveland
Pitt sburgh at Chic ago
"My run wasn't really he hit.'' said Reed.
Los Ange les at Toronto
LOB .- Phi ladelphia 10 ,
st. Lou is at Color;,do
Cincinnati 6. 2B - Maddox, important. The guy on deek
· PhlUles Manager Danny
Washington at Vancouver
., Schmidt 2, Luzlnskl, John . was the tying run."
I Only ga mes schedUled)
stone, BOwa . 38 - Johnstone,
Foster hit the home run and Ozark said "when you face a
Thursday's Games
Geronimo. HR Foster,·
Montreal at Philadelphia
Be,.ch . S Kaat, Arm . the guy on deck-Johnny guy like · Bench and make a.
Bench , - followed with mistake he hits It out of the
IDnJv game scheduled I
brister. SF - Cash. Foster .
·
· - · iphrerbb so another homer that tied the ballpark."
Kaaf
622
22
1
game
!Hi.
WHA standings
Reed
2 5 4 4 t 1
By United Press International
Garberlll 0 I 1 I 0 0
East

.

the opener In Hunter, as his
pitcher.
Temperatures Tuesday
night dipped to about 50
degrees bit even the weatber
seems to be on .the Yankees'
side. the Weather Bureau
forecast a high of around 70
degrees for tnday's fourth
game as the Yankees seek
their first pennant since 1964.
The Royals broke out early
Tuesday night. Jim Wohlford
walked leading off the game
and Ken Brett's double, John
Mayberry's single, a
saerifice fly by Hal McRae
and Tom Poquette's double
put Kansas City ahead, 3-0.
At this Point Ellis was
struggting.
"In the first inning, I was
having a lot of trouble
spotting the ball, " he
explained. "I had . no
rhythm .. :. 1 wasn't fooling
anybody ·SO I &lt;ljlcided to ~~
them hit the ball and hope our
fielders did a job." And they
did.
.
"Actually, I never settled
down. I was very fortunate
they were hitting the ball
right at our guys."
The Yankees got back into
the game in the fourth ·when
with two out, Lou Piniella
slashed a ground rule double
past third baseman Brett and
Chllmbliss followed with a
400-foot homer into the right
field bleacbers.
,
The Yanks put TUesday's
game away in the sixth. Roy
White walked, ., Thurman
Munson doubled, pinch-hitter
Carlos May was .walked
intentionally, Chambliss
brought in the tying run with
a forceout, Graig Nettles
singled in a run and Maddox
doubled in another.
Herzog used a playoff
· record five pitchen in the
sixth in an attempt to halt the
rally.
"We just let upt said:
Royals shortstop Fred Patek.
"I hate to say that. We got
three runs and could have
burled them but we didn't.
We turned from offense to
. defense and laid back a

.

2 0
1111
1 7
1113

5 15

FALES·

The Sunshine Girls
Standings

Week of 10+76
No , .5 - 12 tor
12.
The
Three Stooges 11 tor IJ : Stu's
Timber Wo lves 11 for 13 ;
Brl'ldy 's Buick , Olds 'and
Cent . 10 for 14 ; No . 4 10 for 14 ;
Gibson Motor City 1 tor n .
· High team J games (high
'• '
ind . J g11mes1 · - Brady's
. Pomeroy
Bu ic k 1,587 ; Hazel 442; Stu's
Bowling Lanes
Timber Wolves 1.476. Nan cy
Tuesday Triplicate
,, 425, No. 5 1,.435, Rhea 399
High team game .High
Oct. 5, 1976."'·
Team
Pts, md . game - Brady's Bui ck
572 ; Hazel 180; No . 5 520 ,
Royal Crown Bottling Co. 32 Na
Shirts Ltd .
JO 146.ncy 161 ; No . 4 506, Rhea

Shamrock Motel
28
New York Clothing H.
24
Royal Qak Park
20
No.3
10
High individual game, Pat
Carson, 118 , second high
individual game. Pat Carson,
176.
· High series, Pat Carson,
505, second high series. Pat
Smith, 444. .
Team high · game, Royal
Qak Park, 497, team high
serieo - Royal Qak Park
1,397.

,
,
"
SEATTLE (UPI) ~ The
Seattle Mariners · announced
•
.
ruesday the appolnirnen\ of
Stock as pitching coach
for the American League
expansion team, which will '
begin I
P BY. next season .
Stock, who served on the
Oakland A's coaching staff
from 1973 through this .
season, pitched I« nine years
in the major leagues, mostly
in relief. He appeared in 321
games with a 27-13record and
R
.
30 -3.60 E A.
'26

CLEAN.IJP. FIX.IJP SALE .

LEAF
RAKE
Reg. 52.49

Fall

Special

$}76

·wes

1~"
X

24"

Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
Oct. s. i976
No.4 Gilmore
No. 3Gil litaQ
~
'l
Sears
• €'11: ~)"11 ~ ,7j ,
Karr &amp; Van Za111'PI. II. r:r,' ~i '
No. 6 Roach
12
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) _
No. 2Tackefte
0 The
Indiana
Pacers
High tndlvlduat game ~
Thelma Osborne, t70, secona a0 nou!'ced Tuesday the
high individual game - signing of free agent AI
,Vicky Gittlian, 164.
F1erning,
High series - Atma.Pooter. · Fleming
a 6·foot·8
444, second high series - 1 ward
.
'1
-Vicky Gillilan 43ll ·
or
• wa ved last week by
. Team high game - No:·3 · the Phoenil Suns, fills oultbe
Gillilan, 7.4'1. team high series finaiiiPOI on the Pacers' 12.
~ Sea(s, 2,135.
player roster.

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•
FALL SPECIAL

Two plaatic storm windoM In packl~

Foreman~Dennis
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (UPI)
- Former heavyweight
champion George Foreman
says he is a changed man and
a changed fighter, one who
want. to get into the ring as
often as possible. ·
Whether Foreman is really
changed is hard to tell, but he
certainly ·,isn't acting the

same.
Instead of displaying the
silent, sullen glare that
marked
his
public
appearances when he was
champion, Foreman is
playing tbe part of a clown
.who uays he is enjoying

.
pe.ople these days.
He appeared Tuesday at a ·
news cooference to· promote
· his fight Friday night with
ninthranked Dino Dennis, a
rangy, undefeated stylist
from AlUehoro, Mass.
·
Dennis also was there along
with lightweight cbampioo
Roberto Duran of Panama
and challenger Alvaro Rojas
of Costa Rica, who will meet
,In a Iii-round title bOut before
the heavyweight contest .
Both fights will be ·nationally
televised (CBSJ.
Ti)e scheduled 12-&lt;'ound&lt;·r

bout F~iday

Model PC620

60 Yard

'

will &lt;Illy be ~· oreman's fourth
fight since he lost his UUe to
Muhammad All in Zaire
nearly two years ago, but he
says that's going to change.
''I want to fight as often as I
can," he said. "Botting Is my
life, I love it.'' .
Foreman woUld not say he
would be disappointed if All
reaUy retired, bit he did
admit: "1 would like to get
some revenge- ! want the .
only man who ever defeated
me."
Later, Dennis said he,
thought he could outthink and
outlast his heavier ~ponent,

bit Foreman grinned and
said his opponent and
Ed
Imondi
manager
reminded him of the . flrst
time he walked through a
graveyard at night. ·
"I was just awhiaUin' 'and
pretendin' I wasn't scared,"
Foreman ··said
after
lllustratlrig his · point by
Uptoeing across the platform
and whistling tunelessly.
"I really don't tl!ink It'll go
more than three rounds, so
somel!ody better look out,"
he adllod, throwiJ\g a mock
glare •• at the 24-year-old
Dennis.
,,

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�•

4- The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Oct. 13_. 1976
CLIFTON PERSON i\LS
DAUGHTER ILL
Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin
LONG BOTIOM - Ni~le
Jame s,
two-year-old Barker and daughter,
daughter of Mark .and Ann Melanie of Manne!, W. Va.·
James, Long Bottom, is a visited their grandmother,
medical patient at St. Jpseph Mrs. Helen Barker at her
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. home in CUlton on Sunday
Va., children's ward. Nicole ·and look ber out to dinner.
pvt.
Randy
Lewis,
is a granddaughter of Mr. and
J
.
stationed
in
the
Anny
In
Mrs. Frank Wilson of MidCavaliers. The famed
Rutgers 2!, Lehigh 14
By Major Am01 B. Hoople
Georgia
visited
his
parents,
dleport.
Cavaliers have come on evil
. Maryland 40, Wake Forest 20
Fearleu Forecaster
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith
Memphis St. 17, Miss St. II
Egad, friends, there's big days, football-wise, in recent
and
his grandmother, Mrs.
M!Jwesota '24, Mich. St. !I
doings in the Big Eight years, and will be no match
BACK HOME
Laurene
Lewis and other
Missouri 22, Iowa St. 18
Conference this week with all for the Tech troops, falling 35Dr : and Mrs. Gerald relatives recently.
Wm. &amp; Mary 19, Navy II
members meeting lea gue 7.
Lozier, Princeton, N. J . ·have
Mrs. George 8'!"1-' and
In the game that will have
Nebrasks 3?,'Kalisas St. 7
foes. Wouldyou believe that,
returned
to tbeir home after Mrs . Lloyd Williams ol
the
whole
state
of
Utah
No. Carolina 25, No. Carolina visiting here · with· Mrs.
including .this Saturday's
Clifton, loured the old homes
' St.lO
engagements, the four games talking, utah will go up
Lozier's parents: Mi. and in Pomeroy, Middleport and
agillflst
Utah
State
for
the
Michigan u, Nonhwestern 11 Mrs. Aarpn Kelton, Pomeroy.
featuring these eight teams
·Syracuse on Sunday. '
Noire Dame 28, Oregon 15
have been contested a total of 75th time on the latter's home
The
Loziers
have
just
Mrs. Kenneth Ault of
Ohio U. 31, Mtamt (0. ) 21
223times1 Jove, that'sa lot ol grounds in Logan. Neither the
returned
from
a
convention
.in
Columbus
visited her sister
Utah Utes nor the Aggies is
Colorado 28, Okla. St. 11
football years.
Puerto
Rico,
·
sponsored
by
and
brother-In-law,
Mr. and
California 38, Oregoa St. 6
For the record, here is how having .a particularly good
David
·Garnoff
Research.
Mrs.
Lester
Johnson
on
Penn St. 26, Syracuse 12
they line up: Nebraska vs. season, but victory ·on
Sunday.
Plt~bu rgb 32, Mtaml (Fla.) ·
Kansas Slate (61st renewal ); Saturday would make the
Oklahoma vs. Kansas (their year for either club. From
24
•
WEEKEND GUESTS
Dllnols 18, Purdue IS
74th joust' Missouri vs. Iowa our vantage point it's the Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Knight
Tel88 Tech 33, Rice 16
State (for the 69th time ), and kaf-kaff - Year of the Utes.
Chester Knight,
of
Bellaire
were weekenp Mrs.
San Diego St. 35, Paellle 7 . guests of his parent.!, Mr. and Pomeroy .
the baby of the series, Yas, we confidenily predict a
San Jose St. 30, Long Beach
OklalY·n•a State vs. Colorado Utah win, 21-17.
Now go on with my
St. 14
rtheir 19th meeting).
Mississippi IS, So. CaroUna 13
. Reading from the top, here foreclljlt :
Houston 24, SMl.J 12
I! how the Hoople System CQtOI'!IdO81. 11, Air Force '10
· . Alabama 28, Tenn 21
sizes ·em up : Nebraska 37, Georgia Tech 14, Auburn t2 .
Arizona St. 22, l)TEP 8
llaMas State 7, in a cake Ball Slate 28, Akron 6
Teras A&amp;M 30, Baylor 21
"alk; Oklahoma 31, Kansas Boston College 23, West Va.
Brown 7, Cornell 0
Tulane 22,, Army 20
28, in a real bam-burner; II
UCLA 311, Wash. St. to·
Missouri 22, Iowa State 18, in BowUug Green 32, Kent State Harvard 20, Dartmouth 14
Florida 26, Florida St. 12 ,
Utah 21, Utah St. 17
another thriller-chiller, and 21 .
Va. Tecb 35, Virginia 7
Colorado' 28, Oklahoma State Brigham Young 24, So. Miss Georgia 28, Vanderbilt 18
Iowa 35, Indiana 22
17, In a good, tough football 15
E. Carolina 2?, VMI 21
Tulsa 30, Cincinnati 20
Wichita St. 18, Drake 11
Oklahoma 31, Kansas 28
game.
Ohio State 24, Wlscvusln 22
LSU 21, Kentucky 20
• About hall a dozen times a Richmond t8, Citadel 12
Penn 15~Laf ayette 7
New Mexico 16, Wyoming 14
ter, your faithful correspond- Duke 35, Clemson 21
... Yale 31, Columbia 10&gt;
~~ wishes he were twins so
Washington 19, Stanford 14
be could witness two games
(he same day. This Saturday
J'OUh! that we could be
quadruplets so we could take
m four grea t intra-state
engagements which are
:ilwuys fiercely contested. At
Tallahassee, The Florida
State Seminoles will' ho.i the
Florida Gators with 40,500
shrill spectators on hand.
Alas,
your
Fea rless
Forecnster has bad news for
the ~ &lt;•inole adherents as

Big week s~en in·Big Eight;
OU.p icked over Mianii, 31-21

..

::: :::::::;:;:::~;:~:-:;.·::.;:;:;:;:; .:·:·:;;.;. ; ': ·:···· ············::::~

~~~~N.Dfoo~~~b

Introducing
the new glass
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· Energy Savings!

Major ·

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Hoople•s

Radar picks·off 14 for speeding

Monday, fait Friday and ·
RUTLI,ND - Eleven were Brian D. Knapp, Parkersburg, W. Va., and •
Saturday. and a cbanee .of
showers Suaday. Highs
defendants have been fined · Pomeroy; . William Stanley, Robert Sargent, Rutland.
Friday aad again Sunday
and three others forfeited
.. -· '
bonds recently in lha court of
will i!J! In the 60s. A llHle
Rutland Mayor Eugene
warmer Saturday. with
LEGAL NOTICE
hi&amp;bs Ia the upper IGs to the Thompson, all on speeding
charges.
·
mid 70.. Lowo mosdy will
The Public t.:Jtili1 ies CommisSion of Ohio has
Mayor Thompson sald' that
be In the~ .
set
for public hearing Case No . 76·535-EL-FAC
radar has been put btto use by
the village and speed Ia ws
to review the fuel procurement practices and
are being strictly enforced.
policies of the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Fined $15 and costs each for
Electric Company , the oper1tio~ of its fue!
speeding were Paul Mitchell,
ad j ustm~nt · clause, and r!llated matters. This
Cloudy .and cooler tonight La ngsville; Gerald Henhearing
is scheduled 10 begin at 10 :00 a,i]1 .,
and .Thursday; Lows tonight dricks, Minersville; James
E.D.T. on October t8 , 1976, a1 the offices of
in the lower 4.0s · and highs Van Meter, Clifton, w; Va.; '
Thursday in the mid to upper Iris C. Johnson, Middleport;
the. Comm ission , 180 East Broad Street. CO ium·
60s. Probability of rain 10 per Terry Kenney, South Point;
bus, Ohio . All intereste:d part ies will be given
cent today, 20 per cent George Rager, Middleport;
an opportunity to be heard . Further informa··
tonight, 10 per cent Thursday. Ruth Martin, Vinton ; Fred
t ion may be obtained by contacting the Com ·
mi
ssion .
Priddy, Ro~te.1, Middlei&gt;ort ;
NOWYOU KNOW
James Harman, Rutland;
A 23-foot iron pillar, which Don Siders. GaUlpolis Ferry,
THE PUB.LIC UTILITIES COMMISSION 'OF DH IO
has been standing in Delhi for W. Va., and James B.
Grimm, Pomeroy.
1,500 years, has not r1111ted By Randall G. App legate , Secretary
and no one has been able to
Forfeiting $30 bonds each,
figure out .why.
posted on speeding ~ha rg~s,

j

Weather

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. ,• •5

All finishes, all'
·
sizes same price. Get
your Harthglass
Fireplace Screen Now&lt;
•

PICKENSMason,
AARDWARE
CO.
W. Va.
Sat. 8-5:30, Fri . 8-8

Football

.t

I

Forecast

VOlLEYBALL COURT - Meigs High School girls in
light uniforms and Southern girls In dark played a best of
three volleyball match· Monday evening at Meigs High
School. Meigs won in two straight, 15-10 and 15-9.
Identifiable In the play are Fumlko Iwasaki of ·Japan,
about to whack the heck out of tbe ball (3), Pam Vaughan
(10) and Kelly Burdette (24 ).

Police made
39 arrests
last month

Wolves lead

our

rr~·,J r1S:

Thirty-nine a.rrests were
made by the Middleport
Police in September .ac·
cording to the monthly report
of 'Police Chi ef J . · J.

Balances
in funds
reported

in .3 categories

indicate a Gator

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW - FOR THE

Cremeans.

01 the 39 arrests, 10 were on
speeding charges and live
were on charg~s of running a
stop sign and five on disor·
derly manner charges. Other.
charges for which there were
either one or two arrests
included driving while intoxicated, wrong way on a
one way street ; assured clear

trium1·•· ~H 2.
Also dow" south, the North
Carolina State Wolfpack will
Invade Chapel Hill to engage
the North Carolina Tar Heels.
The latter has dominated this
series - 43-1~ - and this
week should rack up vid ory
No. 44. North Carolina's prize
M)Jlller Mike Voight, who
averages bet ter than 100
yards rushlilg per contest,
will give the Tar Heels the

FINAL WEEK OF SALE . ·

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distance ; expired operator 's

FUMIKO SERVES Fumlko Iwosald of Ja)Nin,
Rotary e1change student
attending Meigs High,
sel"ieS lhe ball against
Southern In a match
Moaday nigbt. Volleyball is
a popular team game Ia
Japaa, especially for girls.
.Pictures by Katie Crow•

~ge, ~10.

• And still in the south, in an
Old Dominion confrontation,
d&gt;e Virginia Tech Gobblers
f ill·joumey to ChHrlottesville
t.o nieet the Virginia

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,
Potato Chips, 5 pak reg. 39'••••• ~ •••• 3/'1.00
1~-~--~-.;..;;.• ..;• •.;.~~.;.;.~~~~;.;;;..;.;;.1

l $· !11!11
·

tk

listed as questionable for the

PILLOW~

Good Gift!

SEWING
KIT.

HOSPITALIZED
Re1 O'Brien of Stewart,
formerly of Meigs County, Is
confined to the Holzer
Med ical tenter. He undel')l'en, surgery there six
weeks ago and was readmitted Sunday.

Cor D size

Entire Stock

WOMEN'S
PANTYHOSE

RAY.{).VAC

BATTERIES

BETTER
EARRINGS

Lon~ Life
Regu ar 6~ c

Vahies to $4.00

Travel CaseMini Size

Fall Shade s

Q1e Si ze

2

:~ · Packer game.

Plenty of 13", 14'' (yes, we

PACK

NOTEBOOK PAPER
300 SHEETS
Regular
1
1.29

•

Wide choice

1h

39~

PRICE

HALLOWEEN IS NEAR
· DON'T WAIT TOO LATE
WE HAVE MASKS,
MAKE UP KITS,
PACKAGED CANDY
PRICED AT SAVINGS! I

MEN'~ SHIRT~

WOMEN'S
SWEATERS

Save money on his·long sleeve shirts

now. ChooSe from Western style or
prints. Evervdav stock on sale. Slle
small to X Large.

Entire Stock

· Values to $10.00

Reduced

have

20%

the!ll), and 15" mud &amp; snow
recaps available

'12

SALE ANNOUNCED
Auction and consignment

sale Saturday, Oct. 16 at
Twin City' Shrine Park in
Racine. The event is being
sponsored by· Twin City
Shrine Clu b. The auction
sl.arts at 10:30 a.m. There
will be refrestunents.
-INGLEWOOD, Calif. tUPI)
"'' Mike Dabney, the No. 2
man picked in lhe 1976 college
draft by the Los Angeles
La kers, was placed on
waivers Monday.
He appeared in two
preseason games for the
takers
points. and scored · eight
·

MULTI-STRIPE - · SIZE 19x33
1
1.29 VALUES

Seamless

his car."

WE 'RE
The 94th Congress has per barrel increase in lhe We mU.t have single House
ended, and quite uneventfully price of foreign crude oil In and Senate committees to
as far as energy legislation Is the very near future. Of deal with energy matters.
JUST RIGHT
concerned. Congress again Cjlurse, Arnerifan consumers The Congress cannot tolerate
failed to develop a long will be forced to shoulder energy legislation . bein g
FOR YOW
overdue comprehensive these Increases dictated by shuttled through 20 or more
national energy policy· It lhe Arabs.
committees before it can be
again ducked all lhe hard
Natural gas as well as oil
t d
A th
d
BAKER
decisions that must be made · and coal a.re critical to ac e upon. · pa Y an
conlusl•n must be eliminated·
now if economic cilamity in America'~ energy needs. U.S. · if we, as a nation, are to
FURNITURE
the years ahead Is to be production of natural gas il respond to our energy
avoided. In. the energy field, falling at a time when shortages in a responsible
·Middleport, 0. .•
since the 1973 oil embargo, . demand lor it is increasing.
every action the Congress has The possibility of a ·cold and adequate m~nner.
. taken has been cosmetic. winter could cause cold
Congress treats the symp- homes and factory ·shut
toms ol the energy crtsls downs. The Federal Power ·
There was' a rubber strike, ·
while ignoring the causes.
Conunlsslon reports ·that in
Like a cancerous. growth, Ohio natural gas supply will
the energy crisis has spread fall 26 per cent short of
but there's no tire:.&lt; shortage
whUe the Congress has lid- demand.
.
died away precious time. The
In my judgment, we must
energy crisis has grown shift our emphasis from o~
at Meigs Tire Center
because of our increasing and gas to coal. We have an .
reliance upon foreiglt oil, abundant supply of coal. In
because the · world's fossil Ibis regard, I strongly ·.supfuels are being rapidly port legislation which would
depleated, and because of encourage the development ·
government interference and of synthetic fuels from Ohio
meddling tn the market and other coal. But, 'unforces of supply and demand. fortunately, Congress refused
The
last , but importlmt ·to act on this Important
component of our energy legislation and the Synthetic
problem is the wasteful Fuels bill died with adhabits we have developed joumment.
95 Per tire plus 1.80
over the years in our use of , As a me.mber of a
ONLY
.
.
energy. The followil)g energy Congressional Task Force on
Additional
charge
ofSl
.lO
il
facts
unders.core
the · Energy, I have-been meeting
1
predicament that we face in with oilr energy policy · ca r.ca s!l t not recappable
the near . future : Gasoline makers at tbe federal
usage Is way up; We use executive level Including
about 7.2 million barrela of Frank Zarb, Fetleral Energy
guollne per day. Since our · Administrator;
William
o~~ry~ oil reserve~~ can not meet Simon, Secretary of . the
rrlore expensive !oreign oil. Treasury and former Federal
Foreign nations now supply Energy Administrator: and
40 per cent of our oil needs, Secretary of the Interior Tom
this making the United States Kleppe, We agree that
mbre dependent on imports America must formulate and
than before lhe 1973 oil em- implement a coherent and
bargo. Our vubterability to 'work•ble energy policy .
overnlgbt price hikes by lhe Congress must take the first
JOHN FULTZ, MGR.
OPEC cartel Is more step by streamlining Its
992·2101
threatening. Experts. advise committee system and
Pomeroy
us to brace for at least a $1.50 procedures in the energy are.

BRAII&gt;EI&gt; RUGS

QUILTED COVER
FULL SIZE
. REGULAR 12.99 .

~-----

Suoe1rior

VELVEETA
CHEESE ·

Miller

BEl&gt;

One case was dismissed

and two were traMferred to
county court, The depart·
ment investigated eight.
accidents and the poll ee
cruiser was driven 5,163
;:.yJ, •
during the month. Parking
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - meter collections for . the
Veteran Quarterback Roman month totaled $957.
Gabriel signed a oneBATI'LE AT ' NET - Lois Bailey (14) of Southern
year contract with the PhilaHigh has returned tbe ~ll over the net, probably beyond
delphia Eagles Tuesday and
POLE BROKE]'! OFF
the reech of Kim. Grueser (52), who would have loved to
is expected to pla y in
Pomeroy
poli~e are inspike (kill) it beyond anyone's reach oc ability to handle.
Sunday's game against the vestigating an accident that
This was a sequence Monday evening in a girls' volleyball
Green Bay Packers.
occurred at 5:30 a.m. today
match between Meigs and Southern High School girls.
The Eagles plan to cut a on East Main St. Robert
player today to make room Ritchie, Syracuse, traveling
:::;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::=:•:=:=:=:•:::::::~:~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~::::=:.:c: .=«:~"::;:m:=~~,~~iil
.. t for
. the . 36-year-old
west .on East Main, struck
!''
~
~
!''
quarterback.
and broke off a power pole on
Quarterback Mike Boryla lhe right side of lhe highway.
w
was injured in the Eagles 33- Rltc)lie was not Injured.
14 loss to the St. Louis There was heavy damage to
~:
By Clarence t~.- ~ Cardinals
last week and is

'

DAIRY
1 lb. ~raft

license; no auto license ;
obstructing traffic; running a
red light; ~inning tireS;
reckless operation; assauh ;
failure to transfer a car
license ; possession of
marijuana.

1503 EASTERN AVENUE, GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
2325 JOSON AVENUE, PT. Pl£ASANT,' W. VA.
~

F.E.T.

All
Fall

Types

MEN'S

Hanging

FREE

JUBE

Mounting!

SOCKS

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Stock up now - for teen
bon

or

girls.

Imperfects .

2

Pair

f

FLORAL
'PLANTERS
Arfificia.l flower ing or
foliag e
ha nging
planters. Big seletfion .
4 day sale!

$100

Men's

Women 's

KNEE-HI

DRESS
SHIRTS

NYLMS
Perfect 1 qu a lity . Fits
site 9 to 11 . 3 Fall colors.

Permanent pren. Slve
Sl . ll on_tach one. Good

gills.

·3QC7t.
Re~~ar
f(, Fnce
•

�•

4- The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Oct. 13_. 1976
CLIFTON PERSON i\LS
DAUGHTER ILL
Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin
LONG BOTIOM - Ni~le
Jame s,
two-year-old Barker and daughter,
daughter of Mark .and Ann Melanie of Manne!, W. Va.·
James, Long Bottom, is a visited their grandmother,
medical patient at St. Jpseph Mrs. Helen Barker at her
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. home in CUlton on Sunday
Va., children's ward. Nicole ·and look ber out to dinner.
pvt.
Randy
Lewis,
is a granddaughter of Mr. and
J
.
stationed
in
the
Anny
In
Mrs. Frank Wilson of MidCavaliers. The famed
Rutgers 2!, Lehigh 14
By Major Am01 B. Hoople
Georgia
visited
his
parents,
dleport.
Cavaliers have come on evil
. Maryland 40, Wake Forest 20
Fearleu Forecaster
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith
Memphis St. 17, Miss St. II
Egad, friends, there's big days, football-wise, in recent
and
his grandmother, Mrs.
M!Jwesota '24, Mich. St. !I
doings in the Big Eight years, and will be no match
BACK HOME
Laurene
Lewis and other
Missouri 22, Iowa St. 18
Conference this week with all for the Tech troops, falling 35Dr : and Mrs. Gerald relatives recently.
Wm. &amp; Mary 19, Navy II
members meeting lea gue 7.
Lozier, Princeton, N. J . ·have
Mrs. George 8'!"1-' and
In the game that will have
Nebrasks 3?,'Kalisas St. 7
foes. Wouldyou believe that,
returned
to tbeir home after Mrs . Lloyd Williams ol
the
whole
state
of
Utah
No. Carolina 25, No. Carolina visiting here · with· Mrs.
including .this Saturday's
Clifton, loured the old homes
' St.lO
engagements, the four games talking, utah will go up
Lozier's parents: Mi. and in Pomeroy, Middleport and
agillflst
Utah
State
for
the
Michigan u, Nonhwestern 11 Mrs. Aarpn Kelton, Pomeroy.
featuring these eight teams
·Syracuse on Sunday. '
Noire Dame 28, Oregon 15
have been contested a total of 75th time on the latter's home
The
Loziers
have
just
Mrs. Kenneth Ault of
Ohio U. 31, Mtamt (0. ) 21
223times1 Jove, that'sa lot ol grounds in Logan. Neither the
returned
from
a
convention
.in
Columbus
visited her sister
Utah Utes nor the Aggies is
Colorado 28, Okla. St. 11
football years.
Puerto
Rico,
·
sponsored
by
and
brother-In-law,
Mr. and
California 38, Oregoa St. 6
For the record, here is how having .a particularly good
David
·Garnoff
Research.
Mrs.
Lester
Johnson
on
Penn St. 26, Syracuse 12
they line up: Nebraska vs. season, but victory ·on
Sunday.
Plt~bu rgb 32, Mtaml (Fla.) ·
Kansas Slate (61st renewal ); Saturday would make the
Oklahoma vs. Kansas (their year for either club. From
24
•
WEEKEND GUESTS
Dllnols 18, Purdue IS
74th joust' Missouri vs. Iowa our vantage point it's the Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Knight
Tel88 Tech 33, Rice 16
State (for the 69th time ), and kaf-kaff - Year of the Utes.
Chester Knight,
of
Bellaire
were weekenp Mrs.
San Diego St. 35, Paellle 7 . guests of his parent.!, Mr. and Pomeroy .
the baby of the series, Yas, we confidenily predict a
San Jose St. 30, Long Beach
OklalY·n•a State vs. Colorado Utah win, 21-17.
Now go on with my
St. 14
rtheir 19th meeting).
Mississippi IS, So. CaroUna 13
. Reading from the top, here foreclljlt :
Houston 24, SMl.J 12
I! how the Hoople System CQtOI'!IdO81. 11, Air Force '10
· . Alabama 28, Tenn 21
sizes ·em up : Nebraska 37, Georgia Tech 14, Auburn t2 .
Arizona St. 22, l)TEP 8
llaMas State 7, in a cake Ball Slate 28, Akron 6
Teras A&amp;M 30, Baylor 21
"alk; Oklahoma 31, Kansas Boston College 23, West Va.
Brown 7, Cornell 0
Tulane 22,, Army 20
28, in a real bam-burner; II
UCLA 311, Wash. St. to·
Missouri 22, Iowa State 18, in BowUug Green 32, Kent State Harvard 20, Dartmouth 14
Florida 26, Florida St. 12 ,
Utah 21, Utah St. 17
another thriller-chiller, and 21 .
Va. Tecb 35, Virginia 7
Colorado' 28, Oklahoma State Brigham Young 24, So. Miss Georgia 28, Vanderbilt 18
Iowa 35, Indiana 22
17, In a good, tough football 15
E. Carolina 2?, VMI 21
Tulsa 30, Cincinnati 20
Wichita St. 18, Drake 11
Oklahoma 31, Kansas 28
game.
Ohio State 24, Wlscvusln 22
LSU 21, Kentucky 20
• About hall a dozen times a Richmond t8, Citadel 12
Penn 15~Laf ayette 7
New Mexico 16, Wyoming 14
ter, your faithful correspond- Duke 35, Clemson 21
... Yale 31, Columbia 10&gt;
~~ wishes he were twins so
Washington 19, Stanford 14
be could witness two games
(he same day. This Saturday
J'OUh! that we could be
quadruplets so we could take
m four grea t intra-state
engagements which are
:ilwuys fiercely contested. At
Tallahassee, The Florida
State Seminoles will' ho.i the
Florida Gators with 40,500
shrill spectators on hand.
Alas,
your
Fea rless
Forecnster has bad news for
the ~ &lt;•inole adherents as

Big week s~en in·Big Eight;
OU.p icked over Mianii, 31-21

..

::: :::::::;:;:::~;:~:-:;.·::.;:;:;:;:; .:·:·:;;.;. ; ': ·:···· ············::::~

~~~~N.Dfoo~~~b

Introducing
the new glass
fireplace screen!
· Energy Savings!

Major ·

Tempered glass radiates
· .. .,mo'"' heat than
screen .

Hoople•s

Radar picks·off 14 for speeding

Monday, fait Friday and ·
RUTLI,ND - Eleven were Brian D. Knapp, Parkersburg, W. Va., and •
Saturday. and a cbanee .of
showers Suaday. Highs
defendants have been fined · Pomeroy; . William Stanley, Robert Sargent, Rutland.
Friday aad again Sunday
and three others forfeited
.. -· '
bonds recently in lha court of
will i!J! In the 60s. A llHle
Rutland Mayor Eugene
warmer Saturday. with
LEGAL NOTICE
hi&amp;bs Ia the upper IGs to the Thompson, all on speeding
charges.
·
mid 70.. Lowo mosdy will
The Public t.:Jtili1 ies CommisSion of Ohio has
Mayor Thompson sald' that
be In the~ .
set
for public hearing Case No . 76·535-EL-FAC
radar has been put btto use by
the village and speed Ia ws
to review the fuel procurement practices and
are being strictly enforced.
policies of the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Fined $15 and costs each for
Electric Company , the oper1tio~ of its fue!
speeding were Paul Mitchell,
ad j ustm~nt · clause, and r!llated matters. This
Cloudy .and cooler tonight La ngsville; Gerald Henhearing
is scheduled 10 begin at 10 :00 a,i]1 .,
and .Thursday; Lows tonight dricks, Minersville; James
E.D.T. on October t8 , 1976, a1 the offices of
in the lower 4.0s · and highs Van Meter, Clifton, w; Va.; '
Thursday in the mid to upper Iris C. Johnson, Middleport;
the. Comm ission , 180 East Broad Street. CO ium·
60s. Probability of rain 10 per Terry Kenney, South Point;
bus, Ohio . All intereste:d part ies will be given
cent today, 20 per cent George Rager, Middleport;
an opportunity to be heard . Further informa··
tonight, 10 per cent Thursday. Ruth Martin, Vinton ; Fred
t ion may be obtained by contacting the Com ·
mi
ssion .
Priddy, Ro~te.1, Middlei&gt;ort ;
NOWYOU KNOW
James Harman, Rutland;
A 23-foot iron pillar, which Don Siders. GaUlpolis Ferry,
THE PUB.LIC UTILITIES COMMISSION 'OF DH IO
has been standing in Delhi for W. Va., and James B.
Grimm, Pomeroy.
1,500 years, has not r1111ted By Randall G. App legate , Secretary
and no one has been able to
Forfeiting $30 bonds each,
figure out .why.
posted on speeding ~ha rg~s,

j

Weather

ISpeciab:cre,en mesh

. ,• •5

All finishes, all'
·
sizes same price. Get
your Harthglass
Fireplace Screen Now&lt;
•

PICKENSMason,
AARDWARE
CO.
W. Va.
Sat. 8-5:30, Fri . 8-8

Football

.t

I

Forecast

VOlLEYBALL COURT - Meigs High School girls in
light uniforms and Southern girls In dark played a best of
three volleyball match· Monday evening at Meigs High
School. Meigs won in two straight, 15-10 and 15-9.
Identifiable In the play are Fumlko Iwasaki of ·Japan,
about to whack the heck out of tbe ball (3), Pam Vaughan
(10) and Kelly Burdette (24 ).

Police made
39 arrests
last month

Wolves lead

our

rr~·,J r1S:

Thirty-nine a.rrests were
made by the Middleport
Police in September .ac·
cording to the monthly report
of 'Police Chi ef J . · J.

Balances
in funds
reported

in .3 categories

indicate a Gator

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW - FOR THE

Cremeans.

01 the 39 arrests, 10 were on
speeding charges and live
were on charg~s of running a
stop sign and five on disor·
derly manner charges. Other.
charges for which there were
either one or two arrests
included driving while intoxicated, wrong way on a
one way street ; assured clear

trium1·•· ~H 2.
Also dow" south, the North
Carolina State Wolfpack will
Invade Chapel Hill to engage
the North Carolina Tar Heels.
The latter has dominated this
series - 43-1~ - and this
week should rack up vid ory
No. 44. North Carolina's prize
M)Jlller Mike Voight, who
averages bet ter than 100
yards rushlilg per contest,
will give the Tar Heels the

FINAL WEEK OF SALE . ·

AT POINT PLEASANT OR MASON STORES
COTTON TERRY CLOnf

WOMEN'~ APRON~

WHITE COlTON

M.EN'S HANDKERCHIEFS·
Pe r fect Ouallty- Stockup

Solid colors or prints
~

Regul ar 26 c

Regula r $1.99

distance ; expired operator 's

FUMIKO SERVES Fumlko Iwosald of Ja)Nin,
Rotary e1change student
attending Meigs High,
sel"ieS lhe ball against
Southern In a match
Moaday nigbt. Volleyball is
a popular team game Ia
Japaa, especially for girls.
.Pictures by Katie Crow•

~ge, ~10.

• And still in the south, in an
Old Dominion confrontation,
d&gt;e Virginia Tech Gobblers
f ill·joumey to ChHrlottesville
t.o nieet the Virginia

-•

'

.

, ,j

• gt. on
{'_: wash m

· llj(: R
. .ep0rt

· .N · ·
Piece 49' lb.
'JOWL BACO ...............•.....s nced s9· lb.
Homemade
HAMCasing~"l.lli&gt;
.....................
~ ... ~ ...~~.!J!J4
·
Piece ' 1.09 lb.
NA •• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• sliced '1.19 lb.
French City

:·:·

PRODUCE
.3 lb. Jonathan

APPLES.
'........... ~.~~- 69'
.
Sweet

box99e

Potato

YAMS ..................~-~·..19'
FROZEN

1 lb. Booth

PERCH FILLE.YS .................. ~~ ..!.l

39

10 oz. lnst. Nescafe CoHee '2.69(Limlt one)
29 oz. Llbbys Pumpkin ••••••••••••••••••• 2/89' ·
24 oz. Armour J~eef Stew••••••••••••••••••• 83'
18 oz. Thank You Can Pudding••••••••• 2/89$
. 4 Rolls White Charmln Tissue,

7c oH! •••• 79'

3 Pak Prlngles, 13% oz. •••••••••••••••••• '1.09
3 oz. Armour Potted Meat ••••••••••••• 3/59'
17.oz. Green
Giant Peas ••••••••• •••••••
2/69c
.
.
46 oz. Welch A id Grape Drink .......·•••• 59'
,,

Mr. B•e Lunch Pak
,
Potato Chips, 5 pak reg. 39'••••• ~ •••• 3/'1.00
1~-~--~-.;..;;.• ..;• •.;.~~.;.;.~~~~;.;;;..;.;;.1

l $· !11!11
·

tk

listed as questionable for the

PILLOW~

Good Gift!

SEWING
KIT.

HOSPITALIZED
Re1 O'Brien of Stewart,
formerly of Meigs County, Is
confined to the Holzer
Med ical tenter. He undel')l'en, surgery there six
weeks ago and was readmitted Sunday.

Cor D size

Entire Stock

WOMEN'S
PANTYHOSE

RAY.{).VAC

BATTERIES

BETTER
EARRINGS

Lon~ Life
Regu ar 6~ c

Vahies to $4.00

Travel CaseMini Size

Fall Shade s

Q1e Si ze

2

:~ · Packer game.

Plenty of 13", 14'' (yes, we

PACK

NOTEBOOK PAPER
300 SHEETS
Regular
1
1.29

•

Wide choice

1h

39~

PRICE

HALLOWEEN IS NEAR
· DON'T WAIT TOO LATE
WE HAVE MASKS,
MAKE UP KITS,
PACKAGED CANDY
PRICED AT SAVINGS! I

MEN'~ SHIRT~

WOMEN'S
SWEATERS

Save money on his·long sleeve shirts

now. ChooSe from Western style or
prints. Evervdav stock on sale. Slle
small to X Large.

Entire Stock

· Values to $10.00

Reduced

have

20%

the!ll), and 15" mud &amp; snow
recaps available

'12

SALE ANNOUNCED
Auction and consignment

sale Saturday, Oct. 16 at
Twin City' Shrine Park in
Racine. The event is being
sponsored by· Twin City
Shrine Clu b. The auction
sl.arts at 10:30 a.m. There
will be refrestunents.
-INGLEWOOD, Calif. tUPI)
"'' Mike Dabney, the No. 2
man picked in lhe 1976 college
draft by the Los Angeles
La kers, was placed on
waivers Monday.
He appeared in two
preseason games for the
takers
points. and scored · eight
·

MULTI-STRIPE - · SIZE 19x33
1
1.29 VALUES

Seamless

his car."

WE 'RE
The 94th Congress has per barrel increase in lhe We mU.t have single House
ended, and quite uneventfully price of foreign crude oil In and Senate committees to
as far as energy legislation Is the very near future. Of deal with energy matters.
JUST RIGHT
concerned. Congress again Cjlurse, Arnerifan consumers The Congress cannot tolerate
failed to develop a long will be forced to shoulder energy legislation . bein g
FOR YOW
overdue comprehensive these Increases dictated by shuttled through 20 or more
national energy policy· It lhe Arabs.
committees before it can be
again ducked all lhe hard
Natural gas as well as oil
t d
A th
d
BAKER
decisions that must be made · and coal a.re critical to ac e upon. · pa Y an
conlusl•n must be eliminated·
now if economic cilamity in America'~ energy needs. U.S. · if we, as a nation, are to
FURNITURE
the years ahead Is to be production of natural gas il respond to our energy
avoided. In. the energy field, falling at a time when shortages in a responsible
·Middleport, 0. .•
since the 1973 oil embargo, . demand lor it is increasing.
every action the Congress has The possibility of a ·cold and adequate m~nner.
. taken has been cosmetic. winter could cause cold
Congress treats the symp- homes and factory ·shut
toms ol the energy crtsls downs. The Federal Power ·
There was' a rubber strike, ·
while ignoring the causes.
Conunlsslon reports ·that in
Like a cancerous. growth, Ohio natural gas supply will
the energy crisis has spread fall 26 per cent short of
but there's no tire:.&lt; shortage
whUe the Congress has lid- demand.
.
died away precious time. The
In my judgment, we must
energy crisis has grown shift our emphasis from o~
at Meigs Tire Center
because of our increasing and gas to coal. We have an .
reliance upon foreiglt oil, abundant supply of coal. In
because the · world's fossil Ibis regard, I strongly ·.supfuels are being rapidly port legislation which would
depleated, and because of encourage the development ·
government interference and of synthetic fuels from Ohio
meddling tn the market and other coal. But, 'unforces of supply and demand. fortunately, Congress refused
The
last , but importlmt ·to act on this Important
component of our energy legislation and the Synthetic
problem is the wasteful Fuels bill died with adhabits we have developed joumment.
95 Per tire plus 1.80
over the years in our use of , As a me.mber of a
ONLY
.
.
energy. The followil)g energy Congressional Task Force on
Additional
charge
ofSl
.lO
il
facts
unders.core
the · Energy, I have-been meeting
1
predicament that we face in with oilr energy policy · ca r.ca s!l t not recappable
the near . future : Gasoline makers at tbe federal
usage Is way up; We use executive level Including
about 7.2 million barrela of Frank Zarb, Fetleral Energy
guollne per day. Since our · Administrator;
William
o~~ry~ oil reserve~~ can not meet Simon, Secretary of . the
rrlore expensive !oreign oil. Treasury and former Federal
Foreign nations now supply Energy Administrator: and
40 per cent of our oil needs, Secretary of the Interior Tom
this making the United States Kleppe, We agree that
mbre dependent on imports America must formulate and
than before lhe 1973 oil em- implement a coherent and
bargo. Our vubterability to 'work•ble energy policy .
overnlgbt price hikes by lhe Congress must take the first
JOHN FULTZ, MGR.
OPEC cartel Is more step by streamlining Its
992·2101
threatening. Experts. advise committee system and
Pomeroy
us to brace for at least a $1.50 procedures in the energy are.

BRAII&gt;EI&gt; RUGS

QUILTED COVER
FULL SIZE
. REGULAR 12.99 .

~-----

Suoe1rior

VELVEETA
CHEESE ·

Miller

BEl&gt;

One case was dismissed

and two were traMferred to
county court, The depart·
ment investigated eight.
accidents and the poll ee
cruiser was driven 5,163
;:.yJ, •
during the month. Parking
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - meter collections for . the
Veteran Quarterback Roman month totaled $957.
Gabriel signed a oneBATI'LE AT ' NET - Lois Bailey (14) of Southern
year contract with the PhilaHigh has returned tbe ~ll over the net, probably beyond
delphia Eagles Tuesday and
POLE BROKE]'! OFF
the reech of Kim. Grueser (52), who would have loved to
is expected to pla y in
Pomeroy
poli~e are inspike (kill) it beyond anyone's reach oc ability to handle.
Sunday's game against the vestigating an accident that
This was a sequence Monday evening in a girls' volleyball
Green Bay Packers.
occurred at 5:30 a.m. today
match between Meigs and Southern High School girls.
The Eagles plan to cut a on East Main St. Robert
player today to make room Ritchie, Syracuse, traveling
:::;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::=:•:=:=:=:•:::::::~:~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~::::=:.:c: .=«:~"::;:m:=~~,~~iil
.. t for
. the . 36-year-old
west .on East Main, struck
!''
~
~
!''
quarterback.
and broke off a power pole on
Quarterback Mike Boryla lhe right side of lhe highway.
w
was injured in the Eagles 33- Rltc)lie was not Injured.
14 loss to the St. Louis There was heavy damage to
~:
By Clarence t~.- ~ Cardinals
last week and is

'

DAIRY
1 lb. ~raft

license; no auto license ;
obstructing traffic; running a
red light; ~inning tireS;
reckless operation; assauh ;
failure to transfer a car
license ; possession of
marijuana.

1503 EASTERN AVENUE, GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
2325 JOSON AVENUE, PT. Pl£ASANT,' W. VA.
~

F.E.T.

All
Fall

Types

MEN'S

Hanging

FREE

JUBE

Mounting!

SOCKS

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Stock up now - for teen
bon

or

girls.

Imperfects .

2

Pair

f

FLORAL
'PLANTERS
Arfificia.l flower ing or
foliag e
ha nging
planters. Big seletfion .
4 day sale!

$100

Men's

Women 's

KNEE-HI

DRESS
SHIRTS

NYLMS
Perfect 1 qu a lity . Fits
site 9 to 11 . 3 Fall colors.

Permanent pren. Slve
Sl . ll on_tach one. Good

gills.

·3QC7t.
Re~~ar
f(, Fnce
•

�··--

-

&amp;.- .The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Ocl. l3,1976

Sqti4re dance slated

Annual Sessions of Baptfst Convention
take up· October 20 in·Columbus church
More than 1,000 delegates
and viailors are e.:pected to
attend the !31st Annual
Seaal0118 of The Ohio Baptist
Convention to be held Wednesday, Thursday, and
Friday, October 20, 21, 22 at
the Flrot Baptist Church In
Columbus.
This convention will mark
the close of the Sesquicentennial Celebration of the
Baptist Convenllon. During
the past year, at lhe
IWOCiational meetings and In
the local churches, much
consideration was given 1o
this celebration centered
around ·the theme, "Heritage
Today
Horizons
Tomorrow." One _of the
hlghlightsof the year. was the
great BIJ:thday Celebration
held In Zanesville at the site
where 'l'he Ohio Baptist
Convention was organized In
1826. Several thousand people
were In attendance.
The theme of this year's
convention is .11 Freedom to
Become. 11
The Bible Study Leader will
be Dr. Wllliam Bowser,
former president of The Ohio
Baptist Convention and
Pastor of the Karl Road
Baptist Church In Columbus.
Dr. · Willlam Jones of the
Bethany Baptist Church In
Brooklyn, N. Y., will speak on
"Freedom to Sha're in the

Household of Faith." . Dr. recommendationsoltheLong Baptist Conventioo. Bilhop
Harm Weber, President of Term Planning Committee as Malone will also llpe8k 1o the
Judson College in El&amp;~n, Jll,, to the thrust of the convention Ministers Wednesday afwill speak on "Freedom to Be for the next 10 years.
ternoon on "The State of the
In Christ" and Dr. Robert
Special music Is being. Ministry in the Catholic
•
Campbell, General Secretary PJ'OVided by Alderson- Church."
of the American Baptis_t Broaddus College of Phiuppt,
The Dhlo Bapllst Youth
Churches li1 the:urutedstates w. Va:; the mate chorus of Fellowship will be in charge
will speak on "Freedom 1o the Mt. OUvet BapUJI Church 'of the Thursday night
Become Free.",
in Columbus ; the Hillcreat program. They will center
Other speakers will be Belles of the Hillcrest Baptist their presentallon on the
former Congressman Brooks Church In Columbus, and .theme,
" Freedom
to
Hays, who is also a former there will be dramatic Become."
president of the Southern presentations
by
the
The closing banquet on
Bapllst Convention; Dr. !,rnerican Bapllst Women of Friday night in the Masonic
Ralph Rott , Director of the Cleveland Association, Temple will Include a
Mi&amp;!ionary Promotion of the · under the leadership of Mrs. farewell to Dr. Joseph Irvine
American Bapllst Churches- Robert Eades.
· Chapman, executive minister
USA from Valley Forge, Pa.;
The opening service on of th~ Ohio Baptist ConRev.
James
Peters, Wednesday, Oct. 20 will in- vention for the past 16 years.
Executive Minister · of the elude a series of brld He leaves January 1 to
American Baptist Churches greetings from the Christian become nallonal director of
of the South; . Dr. Robert · Community of Ohio upon the the Minister-at-Large
Slaughter, Pastor of the. occasion of Ohio Baptists Program of the American
Roselawn Community Sesquicentennial and Baptist Churches of the USA
Baptist Church In Cincinnati ; speaking for the enUre and will be headquartered In
Dr. Wllltam Montgomery, Christian Community wlll be Denver. He will be the
Pastor of the First Baptist Bishop James Malone of the featured speaker at the
Church in Columbus; Mrs. Roman Catholic Diocese of banquet on the theme,
Albert Under, President of Youngstown, a former "Facing the Future With ·
the Convention from Youngs- President of the Ohio Councll Confidence."
The Ohio Baptist Contown, and Dr. l-eon Pacala, of Churches.
President
of
Colgate
This wtu mark the first vention is 'Composed of more
Rochester
Crozer time that a Roman Catholic than 340 American Baptist
Theological Seminary In leader ~ddresses The Ohio Churches In Ohio with a total
Rochester, N. Y.
A report will be given by :~::~!:!:::~===~:!!::::::~::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::·: ~::::::::::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::~:~::::;:::-~:::;:::::;:;:~o:o:o:~
the Rev . . Donald Shuler,
Pastor of the First ·Baptist
Church of Marietta bringing
to the Convention the

!'I

j!'

Polly's Pointers

Helen Help

US, , ,

·

By Helen Bottel

'

'
By Polly Cramer
{

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have
about thirty good washcloths
I cannot use, as they have
become stiff after a period of
lime. I have laundered and
laundered and bleached them
and so on, but to no avail. I
hope som~ne can help me.MRS. J.D.
DEAR MRS. J . .D - Are
you rinsing lheae waahclollul
lhorougbly? Have you tried
uslag ' Iabrie solleaer?
Perhaps you have been over
drylDg tbem. You mtgbt try
removing these cloths from
tbe dryer when there Ia alill a
blut of dampne" ill tbem.
Huw about lhil, readers?
Have aay of you oolved such a
problem? -POLLY.
:

.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve concerns ihe way some
people have their trees
' topped without any conslderation of their true shape.
; I wish every co~munity
1 could have. a t~ained person
, ln. charge of trimmJJjg trees
: so they would stay beautiful.
• If need be theycould be cut to
: the ground, not letting a
: muWated bole (trunk) stand
up for us lo gr1eve over. M.A.E.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
seamstreSs. It seems when I
cut out any garment there are
alwa_ys so many bias stripa
left. I cut and Iron these to
make bias tape to sew for
bindings. This Utile bit of
effort. has saved me qu1te a
bit of money.
My plastic watchband
had soured so terribly thst I
felt it was offensive to wear
it. I made a paste of baking
soda and water and applied

1

this to the band. In an hour all
trace of the odor was gone.
My mother Is an ingenious
soul who has a fast way to
"load" pillowcases. Hold the
pillow under your chin. With
the fresh case WRONG side
out hold the raw seam to the
pillow's edge and with a deft
pull on each side of the case
the job Is soon be~ind you.
This may sound vague but try
it and you will soon get the
hang of it. - SHARON.
DEAR POLLY - To save
on our water blll, I water our
potted plants and the lawn at
the same time. I place the
plants In a circle on the
ground around the sprinkler
and then tum the water on.MARIANA.
DEAR POLLY - Save all
those five compartment foil
frozen dinne[ trays. They
make great receptacles for
money and change at
buaars, picnics, garage
sales, bake sales and
, anywhere money has to be
changed. It Is easy to transfer
the money into a cash box
when need~-- MRS. M. K.
DEAR POLLY - We were
discussing recycling at the
office and particularly as it
pertsins to'scrap paper. The
tip I offered was one my
grandson has been using for
some time. The gummed
flaps on envelopes that come
in the mail are often stuck
only superficially In one spot.
, He cuts this gummed part in
little strips and makes hinges
for pasting stamps In his
stamp album. - ALOLA.
DEAR POLLY - If you do
not have a cake rack to use
for cooling cake place it on
top of a mullin tin. - E. N.

memberlihip of more than .
m,O®. Headquarters is in
Granville, Ohio.

"Our Relationship-to God"
was the program topic at a
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of ·the
Enterprise United Methodist
· Church held recently at the
church. Mrs. Sara Dill was
the hostess,
Mrs. Cord~lla Bentz gave
scripture from RomaiiS 13,
there was group singing of "
Draw Me Nearer " and
prayer by Mrs. Blazewict.
The members then went into ,
three discussion groups on
the topics, "How Does God
Address Us?"; ''How Do We
Talk lo God," and "How Does
Our Relationship to God
Affect our Relationship to
Others?"
·
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Frankie Runnel
who had the closing prayer,
Mrs. ~ennle Wrath and Amy,
Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Kay
Logan and Bobby, Mrs.
Karyn Davis and Mrs. Unda
Pullins.

I

Satterfield wins

Dear Helen:
While walking along a street in a ~emi..:ommerclal semiresidential area, I glanced up at a fourth floor window. A
woman was leaning out, looking at the shoppers below. On the
outside of the windowsill were five flowerpots. No guard rail or
hamer prevented them from crashing 1o the street if
accidentally pnshed.
·
'·
I know plants like sun, but apartment dwellers should keep
them away from open windows or ledges. A direct hit could be
lethaL
Yes, I did something about this: I alerted the manager of
the store on the first floor so that he could inform the
apartment occupant, or, if need be, the owner of the building.
-ELEANOR
Dear Eleanor :
Thanks for the alert, and congratulallons on doing
something positive about a situation which needs changing.
Too many people groan inwardly bot never act. -H.

+++

Dear Helen:
. When this woman entertains, everything · Is ahsoiuteiy
perfect. She se~ves. food I've only read about in gourmet
art1cl~s. Her china " so fragile and expensive I'm afraid to
touch Jt.,She even serves water tn crystal goblets.
Naturally, we're all afraid to invite her to oui- houses
·Imagine what she'd think of lasagna on heavy stoneware and
supermarket wine!
.
'
I know she feels left out, as she's had us over several times
already with no return dinners from us. She and her husband
are really fine people but, frankly,l'm not in her league as a
hostess, nor are my friends.
· · ...
Do we just invite this couple to a fancy restaurant even
though the bill would ,break us ? - OVERPOWERED '

••

I

UMW has
meeting

I

PlummeUng Pols P1Mt Problem

Poor rinsing
leaves washcloths stiff

'··~

promotion
Jack Satterfield, Jr.,
Rutland Road, was the
winner fo the $11000 money
tree in the Grand Central
Mall's
anniversary
promotion. .
He was notified about 10
p.m. Mont~ay night that he
waS the winner and Tuesday,

joined by hls wile, Carolyn,
went to Parkersburg to claim
the 1,000 one-dollar bills
which had been taken from
the 3()-foot tree on display in
the mall. His name had heen
placed on the large billboard
at the mall's entrance.

REV. ARMSTRONG

Missio1Ulries
to visit church
SYRACUSE - The Rev.
and Mrs. Jack Armstrong
wbo recently arrived in the
States on .furlough from
Uruguay, will be guests at the
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 10 :45 a.m. and
7:30p.m. Sunday.
This Is the fifth furlough lor
the Rev. and Mrs. Armstrong
since being assigned to L~e
mission field In 1950. Thc.r
first assignment wsa Bolivia
where he serv~d as director
of the Bible Institute, as
missinnary in charge, and as
treasurer. Since 1956, . in
Uruguay, he has served as
pastor, 8s district superin,
tendent for a time, as teacher
in the Bible Institute and as
mission treasurer. He also
has ·responsibilities in
building construction.
Sunday, there will be a
presentation showing the
work in which Rev. Armstrong has been involved and
results of \he mission work.
Slides will be shown to emphasize aspects of the work.
Rev. Armstrong received his
B.A. and his Th. B.-degrees at
Olivet Nazarene College and
earned his B.D. degree at the
Nazarene . - 'Theological
Seminary, Kansas City, Mo.
The Armstrongs have two
daughters, Linda Kay Gonzalez and ' Beverly Jo. The
family will make their home
In Philadelphia during the
furlough.
FAMILY VISITS
Mr. and Mrs. Dale ·~.
Roush and daughter, Kathy
of. Apple Creek spent the
weekend in Middleport
visiting Mrs. Roush's
parents, Mr. ar\d Mrs. Ben
Tumer. They were joined
here on Saturday by Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Roush of Beltsville, Md. Other relatives
were visited over the
weekend.

GRANDSON VISITS
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan
were in Charleston, W. Va.
Thursday to return their
grandson, Bobby Logan, to
his home there after he had
spent the week here with his
grandparents. Later this
week, Mrs. Logan will go
back lo Charleston lor both
Shawn and Bobby Logan, who
Dear Overpowered :
will come to Pomeroy for a
No!
·
visit with their father, Dwight
Invite this couple to "lasagna on stoneware" at your home (Skip) Logan, Jr. Aparty will
and don't apologize. Chances are they'll enjoy It mightily.
' be held for the first birthday
Each hostess has her own way of entertstn~ and she of Bobby and the second
shouldn't feel intimidated by "perfect" people (who, if the birthday of Shawn on
truth were known, probably wonder why they aren't as Saturday at the home of their
casually accepted as others in their crowd).- H.
grandparents.

-

II'ARRISONVlu.E - At a
recent meeting of t11_e
Harrlsonvllle Elementary
P.T.O. plant were made for a
square dance to be held
Saturday night at the achool
gymnasium. It !rill begin at
7:3(t The public is invited
with the charge to be 50 cents
each with children under 12
admitted free.
Oct. 28 from 6:30 1o 8:30
p.m. was set for the annual
Halloween party. Cost wries
will he judged by tbe Senior
Citizens . of Harrisonville.
There will be games and
refreshments. It
was
reported that the date does
not interfere with · the comm'!nlty's annual trick or treat
night.
Endorsement of the
tuberculosis levy renewal
was given by the P.T.O.
Prlncl~al . Gre~
McCall

thank~d

the
Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department
for wlltance in conductinC 1
drill at the -ICbool Jut
Tuesday.
Additional pla)'tround
equipment wu dlsc1llllll!d and
it wu decided to 11tart a
collection of Pol!t boxtopl for
playground equipment. In
each classroom there will be
a deposit box. Two sets of
monkey bars, one for the
primary children and the
other lor the intennedlate
grades, will be purchued by
the P.T.O. at a later date.
· Needed lor the project are
one, two or three IDch pipes.
lndlvlduala or organizatloM
willing lo donate material for
the project are asked 1o
~ontact the Harrisonville
Elementary School at 7423000.
7269

Surprise honors father
Ice cream and cake were
served lo those attending and
trays of · the ·refreshments
were delivered lo those
unable to attend. Served were
Reba and Kathy Glbba, Mae
Gale, Marty and Norma
Patterson, Floyd, Brenda,
Allen, Charlie and Floyd
Dwaine Warth, Garland, Dot,
FESTIVITIES SET
Wanda, Wendy and"' Jimmy
MASON, W. VA.-Tbe Gibbs, Butch and Connie
Mason PTA Halloween Gibbs, Charles Gibba, Tom,
parade aad carnival will be Delores, Beverly, Kimberly,
beld Saturday, Oct. 23. The Melody, Regilia, Tonuriy and
parade will illllrt at I p.m . . Marlene Gibbs, Roy, Donna
from the school. with Buster and Garry Dale
children In costume.
Neece, Hubert, Cathy,
After ·tbe parade, the Timmy and Tanya Gibbs,
carnival will lljke place at Freda Warth, H,ubert Patthe school. Tbe erecutive terson, Garry Gibbs, Kenny,
committee composed of Helen and Raymond Kimes,
Mrs. Charles Bond, Esther Goble, Florence,
president; Janice Busklrk, Patty, Dee Dee and LeliUe
vice president; Barbara Warth, Cissy Roush, Tammy
Zuspan, secretary; WUUs Warth, and Robert Warth.
Bentley, treasurer; Ann
VanMeter, public
relations; Breoda Jividen,
publicity · chairperson;
.Earleae Bumgardner,
membership; Lorraine
McCulley, home room
mothers and Mrs. John
Mrs. LouiBe Bartels, Rock
Sisson, program chair- · Springs Road, hosted a
person will be In charge ol
meeting of the Nifty Stichers
.the aptlvltles. ·
Sewing Club
Monday
evening.
Plans were made lor the
TO HOLD PARTY
annual Chr.istmas dinner.
This year Instead of trick or Dorothy Long and Corrine
treat in the Bashan, Eagle Hager were guests. Mrs.
Ridge and Keno Road area, Hager is here after a 40 year
the Auxiliary of the Bashan absence to assist her · sister
Volunteer Fire Department is Mrs. Martha Husted in caring
having a Halloween party on for her husband, Claude
Friday, Oct. 29 from 7 to 9 Husted who has been ill for
p.m. at the Bashan Fire some time.
House. There will be games
RefreshmentS were served
and judging of costumes. The to Mrs. Mabel Moore, Mrs.
Auxiliary is asking for Marlene Wilson,' Mrs. Jean
donations of candy or money. Blazewicz, Mrs. Agnes Dixon
Contacts can be made with and Mrs. Kay Logan, and the
either Mrs. Jean Trussell, guests. The November
949-2660, or Mrs. Mary K. meeting will be announced
Holter, 949-2898.
later.

A surprise party was held
recently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Gibbs,
Hartford, W. Va. honoring
Mr. Gibbs'-father, Charles R.
Gibbs, and his brother,
Garland Gibbs on their birthdays.

Mrs: Bartels
hosts meeting

7

BOWnP

PROTECTOR

. .· $1.06

Dear Astounded:
Duly said.
,
Shoppers: inspect the eggs, thump the meilons, even
sqUeeze the Charmln, but don't sniff the salad dressings,
That's even worse than grabbing a free handful of grapes 1o
munch as you wheel around the store.- H.

SPRING
CHEST PULL

Stow

~~:-· r-

11111

'34.99

'iports Dept

5ports Dept. .

ASSORTED
SCREWDRIVERS

I·

$1 o· aa.·
'

HECK'S REG.
46•EA.

HOUSE
PAINT

$899

....

~

·' !if()li

.,.oo

·Proteet Your
Litense Plate!

ROUND B.....
LB.

79~

PORK SHOULDER STEAK
LB.

79~

POLISH SAUSAGE ·
LB.

79~

BROUGHTON'S

·2% MILK

'1 29 GAUON

ROYAL PRINCE

YAMS
17:()Z. .CAN

39 ~

BORDEN'S CREMORA

99~

oz.

JIWILRr om

YELLOW ONIONS
3-LB. BAG

39~

TOMATO JUICE
460Z. CAN

49~

HERSHEY'S 16

oz.

ANDY CAPP

BEEF WEINER$.
12 Ol PKG. 59~

STY LAC

SNACK PACKS

'

HAIR LACQUER

_.s
•

39~

Reg.

'"'

HARDWARE DEPT.
•

SHAVE CREAM
-DISPENSER

I DIGIT

CALCULATOR
1

'

'

$599

~~1" "

ROSE M·ILK
8 oz.

9f

HICK'SIIG.

..,..,
$1 ~99

.. .1.

10COUNT

CONTAC CAPSli.ES

99c~~~
HICIC'SUG.
$1.19

Heck's Reg. 15•

Counetlc Dept.
FRENCH CITY BRAND .

HECK'S REG. '1.58

•

CHOCOLATE'SYRUP
.,

'100

HECK'S REG. '21.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

'

GOLDEN ISLE

G.E.

' IICIAOI

COFFEE CREAMER
16

STICK

.,

HECK'S R~G.
$2.98
AUTOMOTWE

IIICX'IIIt!

n.M

..

WHITE ONLY

YARD

oz.

DEPT.

~~liceoWeolcit·--1~01· ...,;...~

HECK'S REG. '3.99
G GOODS

'4.99

$1''

$13.96
IIWBIY wr.

$266

· HICK'S RIO.

VINYL fiNISH
PROTECTOR

HECK'S REG.

FAN
RAKE

$299

'

ALL

59''

Reg.

DOUGLAS

TOILEt
SEAT

ARMOR

C.B. LOCK MOUNT

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

Pa id by Candidate

'7"

'9.49 Sporting Goods

.

Hardware Dept

James
Roush
County CQmmissioner

Heck's Reg,

8

'10.97

TIME CHANGED
Members of baton classes
of Mrs. Judy Riggs who
normally report to Royal Oak
Park on Wednesday evening
will not report until Thursday
evening for this week only
due to a schedule change.
Thursday evening the time
schedule will run as usual
with beginners starting at 6
p.m.

17.29

-

HICK'S 110.

Meat Buys

50 lB.

.,,.

Heck's Reg,

25%DFF

NOW

HARDWARE DEPT,

.

30lB.

ALL FISHING
.
REELS

CHOICE I

~·s

._"'Or$.MIIr.

SHill iiii'T.

ca1eman
99

.

HICK'S Ill G.
$2.99

HICK'S !tiG.
$1.99

PMT$/JIPT.

Trust. ••

s1"

SJ19

Hlcii'SREG,

$29
HGs

cau'1

SILENCES lOW I TiliNG$

66(

~mer

TEtiiSBAllf-

sun·

KNOCKING
POINT

kkiC''S'RIO';
$1.20
:SI'UTS 0.1.

MATCH POINT

liAR AJtCinn

•' .,_· . ,, IBR0$H
llJW ~·u
0N
""·"'"' .

BEAR ARCHERY

+++
Dear Helen:
Please say something about women shoppers (I even saw
a man do it) who unscrew salad dressing jar Uds 1o smell the
product, then return the jars 1o the shelves. Think of the genns
they . spread. Also mayo spoils once it's opened. _
ASTOUNDED

'

WIUII

Heck's Rea. '1.49

Cos.,etlc Dept.

Counetlc Dept.

,.,

a..nc,

�··--

-

&amp;.- .The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Ocl. l3,1976

Sqti4re dance slated

Annual Sessions of Baptfst Convention
take up· October 20 in·Columbus church
More than 1,000 delegates
and viailors are e.:pected to
attend the !31st Annual
Seaal0118 of The Ohio Baptist
Convention to be held Wednesday, Thursday, and
Friday, October 20, 21, 22 at
the Flrot Baptist Church In
Columbus.
This convention will mark
the close of the Sesquicentennial Celebration of the
Baptist Convenllon. During
the past year, at lhe
IWOCiational meetings and In
the local churches, much
consideration was given 1o
this celebration centered
around ·the theme, "Heritage
Today
Horizons
Tomorrow." One _of the
hlghlightsof the year. was the
great BIJ:thday Celebration
held In Zanesville at the site
where 'l'he Ohio Baptist
Convention was organized In
1826. Several thousand people
were In attendance.
The theme of this year's
convention is .11 Freedom to
Become. 11
The Bible Study Leader will
be Dr. Wllliam Bowser,
former president of The Ohio
Baptist Convention and
Pastor of the Karl Road
Baptist Church In Columbus.
Dr. · Willlam Jones of the
Bethany Baptist Church In
Brooklyn, N. Y., will speak on
"Freedom to Sha're in the

Household of Faith." . Dr. recommendationsoltheLong Baptist Conventioo. Bilhop
Harm Weber, President of Term Planning Committee as Malone will also llpe8k 1o the
Judson College in El&amp;~n, Jll,, to the thrust of the convention Ministers Wednesday afwill speak on "Freedom to Be for the next 10 years.
ternoon on "The State of the
In Christ" and Dr. Robert
Special music Is being. Ministry in the Catholic
•
Campbell, General Secretary PJ'OVided by Alderson- Church."
of the American Baptis_t Broaddus College of Phiuppt,
The Dhlo Bapllst Youth
Churches li1 the:urutedstates w. Va:; the mate chorus of Fellowship will be in charge
will speak on "Freedom 1o the Mt. OUvet BapUJI Church 'of the Thursday night
Become Free.",
in Columbus ; the Hillcreat program. They will center
Other speakers will be Belles of the Hillcrest Baptist their presentallon on the
former Congressman Brooks Church In Columbus, and .theme,
" Freedom
to
Hays, who is also a former there will be dramatic Become."
president of the Southern presentations
by
the
The closing banquet on
Bapllst Convention; Dr. !,rnerican Bapllst Women of Friday night in the Masonic
Ralph Rott , Director of the Cleveland Association, Temple will Include a
Mi&amp;!ionary Promotion of the · under the leadership of Mrs. farewell to Dr. Joseph Irvine
American Bapllst Churches- Robert Eades.
· Chapman, executive minister
USA from Valley Forge, Pa.;
The opening service on of th~ Ohio Baptist ConRev.
James
Peters, Wednesday, Oct. 20 will in- vention for the past 16 years.
Executive Minister · of the elude a series of brld He leaves January 1 to
American Baptist Churches greetings from the Christian become nallonal director of
of the South; . Dr. Robert · Community of Ohio upon the the Minister-at-Large
Slaughter, Pastor of the. occasion of Ohio Baptists Program of the American
Roselawn Community Sesquicentennial and Baptist Churches of the USA
Baptist Church In Cincinnati ; speaking for the enUre and will be headquartered In
Dr. Wllltam Montgomery, Christian Community wlll be Denver. He will be the
Pastor of the First Baptist Bishop James Malone of the featured speaker at the
Church in Columbus; Mrs. Roman Catholic Diocese of banquet on the theme,
Albert Under, President of Youngstown, a former "Facing the Future With ·
the Convention from Youngs- President of the Ohio Councll Confidence."
The Ohio Baptist Contown, and Dr. l-eon Pacala, of Churches.
President
of
Colgate
This wtu mark the first vention is 'Composed of more
Rochester
Crozer time that a Roman Catholic than 340 American Baptist
Theological Seminary In leader ~ddresses The Ohio Churches In Ohio with a total
Rochester, N. Y.
A report will be given by :~::~!:!:::~===~:!!::::::~::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::·: ~::::::::::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::~:~::::;:::-~:::;:::::;:;:~o:o:o:~
the Rev . . Donald Shuler,
Pastor of the First ·Baptist
Church of Marietta bringing
to the Convention the

!'I

j!'

Polly's Pointers

Helen Help

US, , ,

·

By Helen Bottel

'

'
By Polly Cramer
{

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have
about thirty good washcloths
I cannot use, as they have
become stiff after a period of
lime. I have laundered and
laundered and bleached them
and so on, but to no avail. I
hope som~ne can help me.MRS. J.D.
DEAR MRS. J . .D - Are
you rinsing lheae waahclollul
lhorougbly? Have you tried
uslag ' Iabrie solleaer?
Perhaps you have been over
drylDg tbem. You mtgbt try
removing these cloths from
tbe dryer when there Ia alill a
blut of dampne" ill tbem.
Huw about lhil, readers?
Have aay of you oolved such a
problem? -POLLY.
:

.

DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve concerns ihe way some
people have their trees
' topped without any conslderation of their true shape.
; I wish every co~munity
1 could have. a t~ained person
, ln. charge of trimmJJjg trees
: so they would stay beautiful.
• If need be theycould be cut to
: the ground, not letting a
: muWated bole (trunk) stand
up for us lo gr1eve over. M.A.E.
DEAR POLLY - I am a
seamstreSs. It seems when I
cut out any garment there are
alwa_ys so many bias stripa
left. I cut and Iron these to
make bias tape to sew for
bindings. This Utile bit of
effort. has saved me qu1te a
bit of money.
My plastic watchband
had soured so terribly thst I
felt it was offensive to wear
it. I made a paste of baking
soda and water and applied

1

this to the band. In an hour all
trace of the odor was gone.
My mother Is an ingenious
soul who has a fast way to
"load" pillowcases. Hold the
pillow under your chin. With
the fresh case WRONG side
out hold the raw seam to the
pillow's edge and with a deft
pull on each side of the case
the job Is soon be~ind you.
This may sound vague but try
it and you will soon get the
hang of it. - SHARON.
DEAR POLLY - To save
on our water blll, I water our
potted plants and the lawn at
the same time. I place the
plants In a circle on the
ground around the sprinkler
and then tum the water on.MARIANA.
DEAR POLLY - Save all
those five compartment foil
frozen dinne[ trays. They
make great receptacles for
money and change at
buaars, picnics, garage
sales, bake sales and
, anywhere money has to be
changed. It Is easy to transfer
the money into a cash box
when need~-- MRS. M. K.
DEAR POLLY - We were
discussing recycling at the
office and particularly as it
pertsins to'scrap paper. The
tip I offered was one my
grandson has been using for
some time. The gummed
flaps on envelopes that come
in the mail are often stuck
only superficially In one spot.
, He cuts this gummed part in
little strips and makes hinges
for pasting stamps In his
stamp album. - ALOLA.
DEAR POLLY - If you do
not have a cake rack to use
for cooling cake place it on
top of a mullin tin. - E. N.

memberlihip of more than .
m,O®. Headquarters is in
Granville, Ohio.

"Our Relationship-to God"
was the program topic at a
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of ·the
Enterprise United Methodist
· Church held recently at the
church. Mrs. Sara Dill was
the hostess,
Mrs. Cord~lla Bentz gave
scripture from RomaiiS 13,
there was group singing of "
Draw Me Nearer " and
prayer by Mrs. Blazewict.
The members then went into ,
three discussion groups on
the topics, "How Does God
Address Us?"; ''How Do We
Talk lo God," and "How Does
Our Relationship to God
Affect our Relationship to
Others?"
·
Attending besides those
named were Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Frankie Runnel
who had the closing prayer,
Mrs. ~ennle Wrath and Amy,
Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs. Kay
Logan and Bobby, Mrs.
Karyn Davis and Mrs. Unda
Pullins.

I

Satterfield wins

Dear Helen:
While walking along a street in a ~emi..:ommerclal semiresidential area, I glanced up at a fourth floor window. A
woman was leaning out, looking at the shoppers below. On the
outside of the windowsill were five flowerpots. No guard rail or
hamer prevented them from crashing 1o the street if
accidentally pnshed.
·
'·
I know plants like sun, but apartment dwellers should keep
them away from open windows or ledges. A direct hit could be
lethaL
Yes, I did something about this: I alerted the manager of
the store on the first floor so that he could inform the
apartment occupant, or, if need be, the owner of the building.
-ELEANOR
Dear Eleanor :
Thanks for the alert, and congratulallons on doing
something positive about a situation which needs changing.
Too many people groan inwardly bot never act. -H.

+++

Dear Helen:
. When this woman entertains, everything · Is ahsoiuteiy
perfect. She se~ves. food I've only read about in gourmet
art1cl~s. Her china " so fragile and expensive I'm afraid to
touch Jt.,She even serves water tn crystal goblets.
Naturally, we're all afraid to invite her to oui- houses
·Imagine what she'd think of lasagna on heavy stoneware and
supermarket wine!
.
'
I know she feels left out, as she's had us over several times
already with no return dinners from us. She and her husband
are really fine people but, frankly,l'm not in her league as a
hostess, nor are my friends.
· · ...
Do we just invite this couple to a fancy restaurant even
though the bill would ,break us ? - OVERPOWERED '

••

I

UMW has
meeting

I

PlummeUng Pols P1Mt Problem

Poor rinsing
leaves washcloths stiff

'··~

promotion
Jack Satterfield, Jr.,
Rutland Road, was the
winner fo the $11000 money
tree in the Grand Central
Mall's
anniversary
promotion. .
He was notified about 10
p.m. Mont~ay night that he
waS the winner and Tuesday,

joined by hls wile, Carolyn,
went to Parkersburg to claim
the 1,000 one-dollar bills
which had been taken from
the 3()-foot tree on display in
the mall. His name had heen
placed on the large billboard
at the mall's entrance.

REV. ARMSTRONG

Missio1Ulries
to visit church
SYRACUSE - The Rev.
and Mrs. Jack Armstrong
wbo recently arrived in the
States on .furlough from
Uruguay, will be guests at the
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 10 :45 a.m. and
7:30p.m. Sunday.
This Is the fifth furlough lor
the Rev. and Mrs. Armstrong
since being assigned to L~e
mission field In 1950. Thc.r
first assignment wsa Bolivia
where he serv~d as director
of the Bible Institute, as
missinnary in charge, and as
treasurer. Since 1956, . in
Uruguay, he has served as
pastor, 8s district superin,
tendent for a time, as teacher
in the Bible Institute and as
mission treasurer. He also
has ·responsibilities in
building construction.
Sunday, there will be a
presentation showing the
work in which Rev. Armstrong has been involved and
results of \he mission work.
Slides will be shown to emphasize aspects of the work.
Rev. Armstrong received his
B.A. and his Th. B.-degrees at
Olivet Nazarene College and
earned his B.D. degree at the
Nazarene . - 'Theological
Seminary, Kansas City, Mo.
The Armstrongs have two
daughters, Linda Kay Gonzalez and ' Beverly Jo. The
family will make their home
In Philadelphia during the
furlough.
FAMILY VISITS
Mr. and Mrs. Dale ·~.
Roush and daughter, Kathy
of. Apple Creek spent the
weekend in Middleport
visiting Mrs. Roush's
parents, Mr. ar\d Mrs. Ben
Tumer. They were joined
here on Saturday by Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Roush of Beltsville, Md. Other relatives
were visited over the
weekend.

GRANDSON VISITS
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan
were in Charleston, W. Va.
Thursday to return their
grandson, Bobby Logan, to
his home there after he had
spent the week here with his
grandparents. Later this
week, Mrs. Logan will go
back lo Charleston lor both
Shawn and Bobby Logan, who
Dear Overpowered :
will come to Pomeroy for a
No!
·
visit with their father, Dwight
Invite this couple to "lasagna on stoneware" at your home (Skip) Logan, Jr. Aparty will
and don't apologize. Chances are they'll enjoy It mightily.
' be held for the first birthday
Each hostess has her own way of entertstn~ and she of Bobby and the second
shouldn't feel intimidated by "perfect" people (who, if the birthday of Shawn on
truth were known, probably wonder why they aren't as Saturday at the home of their
casually accepted as others in their crowd).- H.
grandparents.

-

II'ARRISONVlu.E - At a
recent meeting of t11_e
Harrlsonvllle Elementary
P.T.O. plant were made for a
square dance to be held
Saturday night at the achool
gymnasium. It !rill begin at
7:3(t The public is invited
with the charge to be 50 cents
each with children under 12
admitted free.
Oct. 28 from 6:30 1o 8:30
p.m. was set for the annual
Halloween party. Cost wries
will he judged by tbe Senior
Citizens . of Harrisonville.
There will be games and
refreshments. It
was
reported that the date does
not interfere with · the comm'!nlty's annual trick or treat
night.
Endorsement of the
tuberculosis levy renewal
was given by the P.T.O.
Prlncl~al . Gre~
McCall

thank~d

the
Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department
for wlltance in conductinC 1
drill at the -ICbool Jut
Tuesday.
Additional pla)'tround
equipment wu dlsc1llllll!d and
it wu decided to 11tart a
collection of Pol!t boxtopl for
playground equipment. In
each classroom there will be
a deposit box. Two sets of
monkey bars, one for the
primary children and the
other lor the intennedlate
grades, will be purchued by
the P.T.O. at a later date.
· Needed lor the project are
one, two or three IDch pipes.
lndlvlduala or organizatloM
willing lo donate material for
the project are asked 1o
~ontact the Harrisonville
Elementary School at 7423000.
7269

Surprise honors father
Ice cream and cake were
served lo those attending and
trays of · the ·refreshments
were delivered lo those
unable to attend. Served were
Reba and Kathy Glbba, Mae
Gale, Marty and Norma
Patterson, Floyd, Brenda,
Allen, Charlie and Floyd
Dwaine Warth, Garland, Dot,
FESTIVITIES SET
Wanda, Wendy and"' Jimmy
MASON, W. VA.-Tbe Gibbs, Butch and Connie
Mason PTA Halloween Gibbs, Charles Gibba, Tom,
parade aad carnival will be Delores, Beverly, Kimberly,
beld Saturday, Oct. 23. The Melody, Regilia, Tonuriy and
parade will illllrt at I p.m . . Marlene Gibbs, Roy, Donna
from the school. with Buster and Garry Dale
children In costume.
Neece, Hubert, Cathy,
After ·tbe parade, the Timmy and Tanya Gibbs,
carnival will lljke place at Freda Warth, H,ubert Patthe school. Tbe erecutive terson, Garry Gibbs, Kenny,
committee composed of Helen and Raymond Kimes,
Mrs. Charles Bond, Esther Goble, Florence,
president; Janice Busklrk, Patty, Dee Dee and LeliUe
vice president; Barbara Warth, Cissy Roush, Tammy
Zuspan, secretary; WUUs Warth, and Robert Warth.
Bentley, treasurer; Ann
VanMeter, public
relations; Breoda Jividen,
publicity · chairperson;
.Earleae Bumgardner,
membership; Lorraine
McCulley, home room
mothers and Mrs. John
Mrs. LouiBe Bartels, Rock
Sisson, program chair- · Springs Road, hosted a
person will be In charge ol
meeting of the Nifty Stichers
.the aptlvltles. ·
Sewing Club
Monday
evening.
Plans were made lor the
TO HOLD PARTY
annual Chr.istmas dinner.
This year Instead of trick or Dorothy Long and Corrine
treat in the Bashan, Eagle Hager were guests. Mrs.
Ridge and Keno Road area, Hager is here after a 40 year
the Auxiliary of the Bashan absence to assist her · sister
Volunteer Fire Department is Mrs. Martha Husted in caring
having a Halloween party on for her husband, Claude
Friday, Oct. 29 from 7 to 9 Husted who has been ill for
p.m. at the Bashan Fire some time.
House. There will be games
RefreshmentS were served
and judging of costumes. The to Mrs. Mabel Moore, Mrs.
Auxiliary is asking for Marlene Wilson,' Mrs. Jean
donations of candy or money. Blazewicz, Mrs. Agnes Dixon
Contacts can be made with and Mrs. Kay Logan, and the
either Mrs. Jean Trussell, guests. The November
949-2660, or Mrs. Mary K. meeting will be announced
Holter, 949-2898.
later.

A surprise party was held
recently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Gibbs,
Hartford, W. Va. honoring
Mr. Gibbs'-father, Charles R.
Gibbs, and his brother,
Garland Gibbs on their birthdays.

Mrs: Bartels
hosts meeting

7

BOWnP

PROTECTOR

. .· $1.06

Dear Astounded:
Duly said.
,
Shoppers: inspect the eggs, thump the meilons, even
sqUeeze the Charmln, but don't sniff the salad dressings,
That's even worse than grabbing a free handful of grapes 1o
munch as you wheel around the store.- H.

SPRING
CHEST PULL

Stow

~~:-· r-

11111

'34.99

'iports Dept

5ports Dept. .

ASSORTED
SCREWDRIVERS

I·

$1 o· aa.·
'

HECK'S REG.
46•EA.

HOUSE
PAINT

$899

....

~

·' !if()li

.,.oo

·Proteet Your
Litense Plate!

ROUND B.....
LB.

79~

PORK SHOULDER STEAK
LB.

79~

POLISH SAUSAGE ·
LB.

79~

BROUGHTON'S

·2% MILK

'1 29 GAUON

ROYAL PRINCE

YAMS
17:()Z. .CAN

39 ~

BORDEN'S CREMORA

99~

oz.

JIWILRr om

YELLOW ONIONS
3-LB. BAG

39~

TOMATO JUICE
460Z. CAN

49~

HERSHEY'S 16

oz.

ANDY CAPP

BEEF WEINER$.
12 Ol PKG. 59~

STY LAC

SNACK PACKS

'

HAIR LACQUER

_.s
•

39~

Reg.

'"'

HARDWARE DEPT.
•

SHAVE CREAM
-DISPENSER

I DIGIT

CALCULATOR
1

'

'

$599

~~1" "

ROSE M·ILK
8 oz.

9f

HICK'SIIG.

..,..,
$1 ~99

.. .1.

10COUNT

CONTAC CAPSli.ES

99c~~~
HICIC'SUG.
$1.19

Heck's Reg. 15•

Counetlc Dept.
FRENCH CITY BRAND .

HECK'S REG. '1.58

•

CHOCOLATE'SYRUP
.,

'100

HECK'S REG. '21.96
JEWELRY DEPT.

'

GOLDEN ISLE

G.E.

' IICIAOI

COFFEE CREAMER
16

STICK

.,

HECK'S R~G.
$2.98
AUTOMOTWE

IIICX'IIIt!

n.M

..

WHITE ONLY

YARD

oz.

DEPT.

~~liceoWeolcit·--1~01· ...,;...~

HECK'S REG. '3.99
G GOODS

'4.99

$1''

$13.96
IIWBIY wr.

$266

· HICK'S RIO.

VINYL fiNISH
PROTECTOR

HECK'S REG.

FAN
RAKE

$299

'

ALL

59''

Reg.

DOUGLAS

TOILEt
SEAT

ARMOR

C.B. LOCK MOUNT

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

Pa id by Candidate

'7"

'9.49 Sporting Goods

.

Hardware Dept

James
Roush
County CQmmissioner

Heck's Reg,

8

'10.97

TIME CHANGED
Members of baton classes
of Mrs. Judy Riggs who
normally report to Royal Oak
Park on Wednesday evening
will not report until Thursday
evening for this week only
due to a schedule change.
Thursday evening the time
schedule will run as usual
with beginners starting at 6
p.m.

17.29

-

HICK'S 110.

Meat Buys

50 lB.

.,,.

Heck's Reg,

25%DFF

NOW

HARDWARE DEPT,

.

30lB.

ALL FISHING
.
REELS

CHOICE I

~·s

._"'Or$.MIIr.

SHill iiii'T.

ca1eman
99

.

HICK'S Ill G.
$2.99

HICK'S !tiG.
$1.99

PMT$/JIPT.

Trust. ••

s1"

SJ19

Hlcii'SREG,

$29
HGs

cau'1

SILENCES lOW I TiliNG$

66(

~mer

TEtiiSBAllf-

sun·

KNOCKING
POINT

kkiC''S'RIO';
$1.20
:SI'UTS 0.1.

MATCH POINT

liAR AJtCinn

•' .,_· . ,, IBR0$H
llJW ~·u
0N
""·"'"' .

BEAR ARCHERY

+++
Dear Helen:
Please say something about women shoppers (I even saw
a man do it) who unscrew salad dressing jar Uds 1o smell the
product, then return the jars 1o the shelves. Think of the genns
they . spread. Also mayo spoils once it's opened. _
ASTOUNDED

'

WIUII

Heck's Rea. '1.49

Cos.,etlc Dept.

Counetlc Dept.

,.,

a..nc,

�..

.

I

•

• -:- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.P~. 0., Wecineldaz..Oct. ~. 1m

Social
Calendar

Kmt

Miracle Whip

t~.?~:noo;'~~~he~~~:;

.-,-

Wlih Coupon

,.._&amp;$7.50 or Mon."' •hn
Vold Afttr Sot., Oct. 16, lP16

u•t 1 WHto c..

-:.

' h

1"· to 17-lb.
Whole

Avg.~~~~;£

1

..,;

298 Second St
P.OMEROY, OHIO
I

Semi-Boneless·
Smoked Halt

Pkr.
.
Lholt 2 With

NO SALES TO DEALERS ·

_;)

·lb.

Void After Sat., Oct. 16, 1S?'6
Subl•ct to Appllcoble Stcrte &amp; Local Tax••

,,
-

QUANTITY' RIGHTS . RESERV:=.o·

CHAPLAIN Robert W. Kuhn, rlQht, has been
appointed ClienlRights Advocate at the qalllpolis State
Institute. Chaplain Kuhn is pictured. above with Or ..
Bernard Niehm, superintendent.

With Coupon
·
c..,..
&amp; $7.1d or Moro Puroho10

Prices Effective

Thru Oct. 16, 1976

'?&lt;Ill"

::.Chaplain Kuhn

-

101

Fab Detergent
Silcod

Kwlck Krlsp
Bactn ••• • • • •

,••z.
BDI

loguior or Chub Pok Any Siu Pkg.

100% Pun
Ground ·Beef ••. ·~­

69

Coupon

cl

Dr. Bernard F. Niehno, College, Delia nee, Ohio, in
" Superintendent, announced 1950. He graduated from
today that Chaplain Robert Northern Baptist Seminary,
W. Kuhn · of the Gallipolis Chicago, 111., in 1953 with a
State Institute, was appointed Master of tJivinity Degree.
the Client Rights Advocate J.le served as pastor at
lor the institute on July 11. Muncie, and El Paso, ntinois;
_ Advocacy for Client Rights St . Paris, Bellville, and
- -is set forth in accordance Pomeroy prior to becoming
,: ; 'with the specifics of Senate Chaplain at Gallipolis State
"'!.'Bill No. 336, which was en Institute. He is presently
• enactment of the General holding office ih the Masonic'
Assembly of the Slate of Ohio • Orders.
;., relative . to the
in·
Chaplain and Mrs. Kutua
' st1tutlonalizat10n of mentally the fomoer Beatrice Miller &lt;l
,'. retarded persons.
Massillon are member of the
,' "" Cha~ain Kuhn brings to his Cheshire Ba ptist Church,
" additional role, a broad base . They hnve four married
• · of experience as Chaplain at children and two grand,
;:"'Gallipolis State Institute for daughters. Their son·, David&gt;
: ; the past SIX years and an is stationed with the U. S. Air
j:;:' ~clive American Baptist Force in England; daughter,
- · pastor for the past 23 years. Ka rla Ingels, Gallipolis ;
::::.. t:haplain Kuhn, born 10 daughter, J ane lle Kaylor ,
.Toledo, graduated , from Letart,' w. va;; ·daughter,
- " Massillon Washington ·High Hobin Wolfe; Rutla nd.
" School in 1945. He served In Chaplain and MIJ-· Kuhn
• the U. S. Anny for 18 months. reside at 131 Portsmouth Rd.',
Graduated from Deflanoe=. ·Gallipolis.
/

.·

Limit 1 With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or More Puroha10
.

Void After Sat., Oct. 16; 1976

Subject to Appli cable Stat• &amp; local Taxts

OF

U.S. Govt. Graded C:halce
Ptoplt's Cholet lano-ln Full Cut

·Round
Steak

.

.,._ "It 's our estimate !bat this
.- would add 10 million new.
:- jobs, and that would begin to
- ·Hive jobs for those who are
, :t'C'nnanenUy unemployed."
;:.:• In an intervieW with ihe
r:.,r ublic Bro.adcast Service,
- Hall, 66, satd the November

._,.""

$

l-Ib.
21f2-ol.

1-lb.
1-ol• .

Bo.xes

CUBE STEAK •••••••••~~ •••
ARMOUR SLICED .

I

BOLOGNA •••••••••••·••~·••
~

TASTEE

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••
BULK .

.LB.

•

USDA CHOICE

.
$}39
RUM P ROAST••••••••• ~ ••
USDACHOICE . ., .
. $. 9
ROUND TIP STEAK •• ~. ~
USDA CHOICE
$·129
BEEF STEW ••••••••••••~;. · ·

14

INTERESt

On Cettificates
Of Depasil
'1,000 Miimum

1 Yr. Term

·._..election was "a fixed horse

.~ac e for the two parties of big
~ l&gt;,us iness ~ "

Cans

$
149

.

j'"{

~,;. without overtime.

·Avondale
Sweet Peas

Duncan Hines
Cake Mix

-

HALL' SOLUTION
• WASHINGTON (UPJ)
Perennial presidential candidate Gus Hall , of th e
·" · American Conununist .Party,
· ~ proposes a six-hour workday
· n1 wilhout a Cut in pay and

Talty
layer

BUCKET

•

named to post .

c

3·1b.

FilM FORECAST

,

,ANAHEIM , Calif. (UPI) Jack Valenti, president of the
Motion Picture Association,
• forecasis boom times ahead
lor lloe film industry.
::,. "'The 12-month period
::beginning October 1976 will
- be lloe best box-&lt;Jffice year in

Meigs Co•.Bnlnch.

- l:he history of the movies, n

Ut Second St .
'omHov, Ohio

~
~

Whi-

Maglc

Bleach

.........
~.68c
a ··89c
'

Wt,lo IIMMI Vac Pack

Kroger
Corn • • • • •

.'!.._....

ea.. of 24 $6.99

Krater

·

c... '
.. .. • • • • a:!~:*l

Fruit
Cocktail

~

Cast of 24 $719

Kroft

_@

WHITE NO. 1

POTATOES........ ~~~-~

The Athen1 Coun1y
51Yii'I9S &amp; LOin CO.

Valenti, former aide to
!'resident Lyndon Johnson ,
.;. ;\Old theater owners Monday.
"'''"He said he based the
• Prediction on his knowledge
oflilms awaiting release and
of those planned for release
next year.

Parkay
Margarine •• • • • •

"APPLES ••••••••••• ~
·square
240 lb

lartleH
Pears • • • • • • • • •

......
Carolina
Ya•s

•••••••

a·. .~l

...5k~l

llpo

If your house
ntfcll
reroofing · ...
now'$ the tinle
1o bur our

.s . . ~J ·
.......a..~~
•

&amp;ol..n
Bananas

••••• • • • •

laney Calllonolo

Br•ssels
·Sprouts

0

0

I

.

shingles.
Available

seve,. I

qua lity .
. I

••

...

"

... DOMINO
5

SUGAR.~ •••••••• ~ ••• .~~~G.
~· MAXWELL HOUSE_··

7
$ 69
•

.
1

INSTANT COFFEE. :.o;::R~ ..

HOGG&amp;
'

. .

in

dllfertnt
colors. All first

'

Kroger We._l~omes
.... ·Yaur Federal
FOOt! Stamps
•

1

DELICIOUS

Florida
Tangerines

btno '-It Washington

19

RED OR GOLDEN

First of Season ·

erafta,

"

.

Jiffy Entrees

is.honored

1

-.

Except Grwry &amp; Sllctd MHI

1Jv1vt'S

w.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sundav 10 am-10 pm

••

l'; ;]_ dtnner
•
s/a ted

Mr.·".

j

Store Hours:

·'

I Vble!:t to Appllcob .. Stot• &amp;·Local TOdf

Fort's .stOf1J
still
intria
.
ues
J
.
. 6

POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
·
ROyal Arch Masons, . stated · 'fhe story of Fort Meigs, .second siege on the fort, only mosphere.
.
convocation, 7.:30 Wednesday orie of the most Important to be defeated, once again, by
Blockhouse 8, the first
night at the Pomeroy campaigns ofthe War of 1812, the fort's well-trained militia. · bulldln.l ~ the entrance
Masonic Temple. At8:30 p.m. has been told and retold, yet, The success of General gates, ~Ins the tour of Fort
stated assembly of the the Intrigue for that declalve Harrison at Fort Meigs Meigs. Here, vlaltors can
Bosworth Council 46, royal moment In history, when a provided major land victories refresh their memories as
and select masters.
detachment of courageous for ,Ohio and, subeequently, mapa, relics, old prints and
MIDDLEPORT
LIT· Americans met the British ·· the western frontier.
panels of written history
ERARY Club, 2 p.m. and Indians In battle, never . ·Today, held snuggly In the describe the War of 1812.
'Wednesday at the home of seems lo .dlmlnish.
rolllngcurvesoftheMaumee Through graphic displays of
Mrs. Sibley Slack. The book,
This suiruner, families and River, off SR 65, Fort Meigs naval actions , politicians,
"The Indian Affair" will be . vacationers were able to encompasses nearly 10 acres The War In the Northeast,.
reviewed by Mrs. Dwight relive the spell of that ex- within Its log palisade walls. India~ problems and the
Wallace. Roll call will he an citing periOd with a trip to Carefully reconstructed . Impressment of sailors,
lndl~n cuatom.
.
Perrysburg in northwestern through researcl! of ar- visitors learn the causes
. Ohio.
chaeological digs, old diaries, which led to wartare with the ·
. THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Originally bullt In 1813 by letters and original mapa, the British and Indians In 1812.
Society, 7:30p.m., Thursday General William Henry fort presently contains seven
Next on the clockwise tour
at Middleport Village llau Harristm and named for Ohio block6ouses, a Quar- of the fort iii Blockhouse 7.
with the Athens · Humane Governor Return Jonathon termaster's hOuse, five Inside, exhibits trace the
society Agent as guest Meigs, the fort initially cannan batteries, several, construction of Fort Meigs,
speaker. AD members are served as a supply depot and magazines,
earthe rn from an early, snow and mud ·
askedtoattendandthepublic fortified winter camp. Then, traverses and an Impressive encampment,
to . its
is Invited.
later that year, Fort Meigs monument dedicated to the dismantlement, In favor of a
HEMLOCK GROVE became actively Involved In victories of this famous smaller, more easily
GrangeprOductspartyathaU the war when an army of stockade.
maintained . stockade .
Thursday, 7' p.m. Proceeds British troops led by Colonel
To see the fort as the troops ,Featured among the exhibits
for building fund . Bring Proctor, and a confederation did, a walking tour is ~utllned are old tools, excavated from
cookies. Public Invited.
of Indians, led by the In the brochure obtajrted from the grounds of the fort,
OHIO VALLEY Grange Shawnee chief Tecumseh, the gatehouse Information diagrams and old maps,
2612 Letart Falls at hall laid seige· to the fort. Within center. Costumed In· which served as the
Thursday .7:30 p.m. Potluck nine days, HarriSon's army, terpreters give brief talks at "blueprints" for tlie original
refreshments.
·
with the lild of the Kentucky the major points of Interest, · builders of Fort Meigs .
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, militia, soundly defeated the and uniformed soldiers, who .Children are particularly
7:30 Thursday night at the enemies. ,
occasionally stroll the enchanted with the mlntature
hall .. Slides to be shown by
Only three months later, grounds and blockhouses of diorama in the center of. the
Frede and Bertha Leiving. Colonel Proctor attempted a · the fort, add to the at· room, depleting the var1ous ·
FIRST BAPTIST Church of
auues of th~ soldiers, from
Pomeroy Missionary Society,
· hauling supplies into the fort
Thursday at 6 p.m. Potluck
U
on sledges to assembling in
supperwlthprogramby Mrs. rlO UMJ1J .
the cemetery to attend a
J . Edward Foster on the
'J
comrade's funeral. Hand
topic, "To Vote, A Right or a
painted and ca:rved to scale,
Responsibility ?" LAUREL
MASON, W. VA .
VIrginia J . Casto, Mrs. the mOdels provide a unique
, CLIFF Better Health Club Members of the Mason City James Agee, Mrs. Frank A. look at the type of activities
, Thursday night, 7:30home of . Historical Society agreed to Thomas, Mrs. Richard Cruze. . and ~onstructlon techniques
, Mrs. Bertha Parker. loth have.a holiday turkey dinner
Mrs. Thomas . Coyle, used .durlng the period.
. &amp;Miversary ·of club to be when they met Oct. 7 at the Evelyn Proffitt, Lllah Zerkle,
Blockhouses 1, 2 and 3 are
celebrated.
Lewis home with Mrs. Laura J'ohnson, Laurene reminiscent of how Fort
. SOUP SUPPER, Thursday Landon Smith, presiding.Lewis, Joy Foreman, Margie Meigs actually appeared in
' at the Dorcas M. E. Church
After the business meeting Grueser, Lester Foreman, 1813. Empty, except for some
social room. Vegetable and In the morning the group Rev. Robert Maring, Agnes weapons and wood boxes
. bean also sandwiches and enjoyed lunch at noon. Abrief Roush, Katharine Johnson, • fllled with supplies the
' pie. Serving starts at 5 p.m. workshop to make Christmas Lorlne Harless, Mr. and Mrs. blockhouses illustrate' that
; Must provide containers for ·ornaments was. held with Nolan Swackhamer, Coral during the war, these
' carry out. Supper sponsort!ll participants sharing patterns A1eX a n_d e r .
De I mar structures
served
as
.. by the Dorcas Women's In the afternoon.
Alexander.
defensive positions and areas
· Fellowship.
AI the opening of the
Ruth Walker, Lois S. for supplies."
• FOUR NIGHT revival meeting Mrs. Fred Taylor Hennosy, Anna Louise
A fasclnallng collection of
: starting ThurSday evening at presented devotionals of Sherman, Esther McKnight, "War of1812" Americana can
: Chester Church of God· with ·Scripture and · readings, Addle Brown, Edith Fox, be found irt Blockliouse 4. In
' Rev.
Donald
Sheets closing with prayer.
Alma Marshall, Fred addition to . dbplaying an
. : Wellston, speaking thre~
Mrs. Earl Ingels reported a Spencer, Sarah Spencer, Dr. impressive array of artifacts
, nights and th~ pastor blood pressure cllnlc will be Edward M. Spencer, June and weapons of the war,
. : speaking 00 Sunday, final held at the Lewis home on Roush and Matilda Noble.
(Including a handsome MOdel.
Oct.
21.
The
meeting
that
day
1806
H
F
· t 1 th
7
i
. even Ing; serv ces at :30 will be the last this month. A
.
arpers erry piS o ' e
standard sidearm lor the
: each evening with special
. singi
bll In 'ted
workshop to continue making
Dr
) th
U
ng; pu c vi ·
Christmas decorations will be
agoons • ere are equa Y
·
' PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
interesting exhibits on
: Chapter, . Beta Sigma Phi held Oct. 25 ·
uniforms, cooking utensils
: Sorority, 7:30p.m. Thursdey
The constitution and byand trading equipment of the
· at home of Ulllan Moore with laws were read by Mrs. Ray
periOd. In a corner of the
: Ruby B8er, MOdred Karr and Proffitt.
room, lifelike ·maMequins
: Nellie Brown, hostesses:
Mrs. Christine Guthrie
, are posed In a scene
. ME I G S
C 0 U N T y Invited the society to attend
recreallng an actual tragic
: Children's Home Committee, the Charleston Symphony on
event that occured at Fort
: 11 :30 a.m. Thursday at the Oct. 10 In 1'1. Pleasant. .
Meigs, as recorded in the
: Pomeroy United Methodist·
Visitors were Mr. and Mrs;
peersonal diary of· Captall)
, Church. Organizations asked Delmar (Louise Wallace)
Daniel Cushing,
"
~ to send representatives. Bryant of Fresno, Csllf.
Then, the tour leads to the
' Everyone welcome. Plans
There are over 40 paid
Grand Battery lor a good
: will be made for the inemhershlpa In the Maaon
view of the ·wooded COUJI·
, Children's Home Christmas County Historical Society for
tryside•nrroundJilt! the fort.
. party.
1976. They are Rev. Evelyn
EDrrH DAVIS
Only by standing high on
: REVIVAL THURSDAY Maring , Bessie Ingles,
these bluffa, overlooking the
throughSundayattheChurch Catherine . Smith, Doria
Maumee River, can the ·
' of Christ In Christian Union. Roberts , Zelma Hunter,
J
u
vlaltor fully appreciate the
: Rev. Roscoe Thorne will be Virginia Wilson, Elizabeth
1813 battle ·from the defen· ·
: the speaker. Services begin Mcintosh, Ruth Mcintosh,
·
ders' vantage point and the
: at 7:30p.m.
Delores Taylor, Chris(lne J.
sheer Impregnability of Fort
Guthrie, Robert C. Guthrie,
Meigs. ·
,
FRIDAY
'
The green grass· and shady
' SOUP SUPPER at the
Many relatives of Mrs. trees that cover the grounds
· ~ Senior Citizens Center,
Edi!h Davis, visited her at today, belie ' the muddy
• Serving to be from .4\o 7 p.m.
the ijome ·of her nieces, Mrs.. conditions and sparse land·
~ preceding the football game. ,
~IDA Y
Mane Leifheit and Mrs. scape that exiSted at tbat
: Menu will Include vegetable
RUMMAGE SALE Friday ·~o!~~hln °~bse~:~~ time. Wandering through the
• and bean soup, chill, hot dogs, beginning at 9 a.m. at the
fh
premises, scene$ will lm·
! sloppy joes and desserts.
Enterprlae United Methodist 0 er 90th birthday.
mediately begin forming in
•,' REVIV.AL MEETING at Church. Everything; 10 cents. and
.Shegifts.
received
many cards
Appreciation
was the visitor 's mind. The
, the Rutland Community
SATURDAY
expressed by the honoree.
earthern traverses, behind
' Church Friday, Saturday and
BAKE SALE, Saturd~y
Calling at the Leifheit which the soldiers huddled,
~ Sunday·, 7:30 ilightly. Rev. hegiMing at &amp;:30 a.m: by the home where Mrs. Davis dOdgi(lg the enemies' bullets.
: !lalph Spirea, speaker and Cub Scout Pack 242, resides included a sister, The tombetones of brave
1Mr. and Mrs. Charles Syracuse, at Larry's Grocery Mrs. Helen Fell; nieces, Mrs. soldiers who died In battle,
• Rinehart,. singers. Pastor In Syracuse.
Wilbur Young, Rutland ; Mrs. and the magazines, where the
: Amoa TUiis Invites the public.
Pete Waters, Zanesville; powder and weapons were
1
..
CHILl · SUPPER and Mrs. Ben Fox, Duncan Falls stored. In the silence, ooe can
1 ORGANIZATIONAL meet· carnival Saturday at ptiio; M~. John Marshall: .almost hear the roar of ex' 1ng ofa junior gr~nge by Ohio Cheshirt•Kyger School. New Haven,
Va. ; a . P!oding caMons, the firing of
' ValleyGranceatLetartFaUs Supperat5:30andcarnlvalat Del\llhew and .family, Mr. nfles, the clank of cooking
i Community Building, 7:30 1 p.m. Sponsored by PTA. and Mrs. James Hazelton kettles and the cries of
; p.m. Friday for YOWII! peqple Public invited.
and Jane, Rt. 3, Pomeroy· wounded men.
' five through 14. Monthly
AUCTION AND con: great ni eces, Shal·ili
Nearby, archaeology
: meetings with contests slgnment sale Saturday at Smallwood, Sue Sprankle, ~tudents from Defiance
!
m~c. games. Young Twin City Shrine Park, and Barbara Emler, all of College are excavating on the
1 people from Letart Falls, Racine, sponsored by Twin Zanesville. Also visitin~ were grounds. Their activities
! Antiquity, Apple Grove and City Shrine Club. Begins at John Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. make a fascinating exhibit in
: Eut Letart invited.
10:30 a.m. Refreshments.
Henry Eblin.
iContlnued,on page 14)

c

Qt.
jar

WEDNESDAY ··
PAST COUNCILORS' Club,
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Wednesday at the hall. Mrs. ·
·Mary Hayes and Mrs.,
Doroll!y Myers, hostesses.
SQUAiiE- DAN CE ' Wed·
nesday at Royal Oak Park
Wednesday, 8 to 11 p.m.
National caller Frankie
Lane. Sponsored by Belles
and Beaus. All members
bring cookies.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the .·
CANNON FIRING demlllllratl01111 by costumed "soldlen" at Fort Meigs,are pr,esented
American Legion hdl,
most
weekends at the restor1tlon.
.
Middleport.
POMEROY
MID·

ZUSPAN
MATERIALS C:O.
773·5534

I

Mason, W.Va •

·'

�..

.

I

•

• -:- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport.P~. 0., Wecineldaz..Oct. ~. 1m

Social
Calendar

Kmt

Miracle Whip

t~.?~:noo;'~~~he~~~:;

.-,-

Wlih Coupon

,.._&amp;$7.50 or Mon."' •hn
Vold Afttr Sot., Oct. 16, lP16

u•t 1 WHto c..

-:.

' h

1"· to 17-lb.
Whole

Avg.~~~~;£

1

..,;

298 Second St
P.OMEROY, OHIO
I

Semi-Boneless·
Smoked Halt

Pkr.
.
Lholt 2 With

NO SALES TO DEALERS ·

_;)

·lb.

Void After Sat., Oct. 16, 1S?'6
Subl•ct to Appllcoble Stcrte &amp; Local Tax••

,,
-

QUANTITY' RIGHTS . RESERV:=.o·

CHAPLAIN Robert W. Kuhn, rlQht, has been
appointed ClienlRights Advocate at the qalllpolis State
Institute. Chaplain Kuhn is pictured. above with Or ..
Bernard Niehm, superintendent.

With Coupon
·
c..,..
&amp; $7.1d or Moro Puroho10

Prices Effective

Thru Oct. 16, 1976

'?&lt;Ill"

::.Chaplain Kuhn

-

101

Fab Detergent
Silcod

Kwlck Krlsp
Bactn ••• • • • •

,••z.
BDI

loguior or Chub Pok Any Siu Pkg.

100% Pun
Ground ·Beef ••. ·~­

69

Coupon

cl

Dr. Bernard F. Niehno, College, Delia nee, Ohio, in
" Superintendent, announced 1950. He graduated from
today that Chaplain Robert Northern Baptist Seminary,
W. Kuhn · of the Gallipolis Chicago, 111., in 1953 with a
State Institute, was appointed Master of tJivinity Degree.
the Client Rights Advocate J.le served as pastor at
lor the institute on July 11. Muncie, and El Paso, ntinois;
_ Advocacy for Client Rights St . Paris, Bellville, and
- -is set forth in accordance Pomeroy prior to becoming
,: ; 'with the specifics of Senate Chaplain at Gallipolis State
"'!.'Bill No. 336, which was en Institute. He is presently
• enactment of the General holding office ih the Masonic'
Assembly of the Slate of Ohio • Orders.
;., relative . to the
in·
Chaplain and Mrs. Kutua
' st1tutlonalizat10n of mentally the fomoer Beatrice Miller &lt;l
,'. retarded persons.
Massillon are member of the
,' "" Cha~ain Kuhn brings to his Cheshire Ba ptist Church,
" additional role, a broad base . They hnve four married
• · of experience as Chaplain at children and two grand,
;:"'Gallipolis State Institute for daughters. Their son·, David&gt;
: ; the past SIX years and an is stationed with the U. S. Air
j:;:' ~clive American Baptist Force in England; daughter,
- · pastor for the past 23 years. Ka rla Ingels, Gallipolis ;
::::.. t:haplain Kuhn, born 10 daughter, J ane lle Kaylor ,
.Toledo, graduated , from Letart,' w. va;; ·daughter,
- " Massillon Washington ·High Hobin Wolfe; Rutla nd.
" School in 1945. He served In Chaplain and MIJ-· Kuhn
• the U. S. Anny for 18 months. reside at 131 Portsmouth Rd.',
Graduated from Deflanoe=. ·Gallipolis.
/

.·

Limit 1 With Coupon &amp; $7.50 or More Puroha10
.

Void After Sat., Oct. 16; 1976

Subject to Appli cable Stat• &amp; local Taxts

OF

U.S. Govt. Graded C:halce
Ptoplt's Cholet lano-ln Full Cut

·Round
Steak

.

.,._ "It 's our estimate !bat this
.- would add 10 million new.
:- jobs, and that would begin to
- ·Hive jobs for those who are
, :t'C'nnanenUy unemployed."
;:.:• In an intervieW with ihe
r:.,r ublic Bro.adcast Service,
- Hall, 66, satd the November

._,.""

$

l-Ib.
21f2-ol.

1-lb.
1-ol• .

Bo.xes

CUBE STEAK •••••••••~~ •••
ARMOUR SLICED .

I

BOLOGNA •••••••••••·••~·••
~

TASTEE

BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••
BULK .

.LB.

•

USDA CHOICE

.
$}39
RUM P ROAST••••••••• ~ ••
USDACHOICE . ., .
. $. 9
ROUND TIP STEAK •• ~. ~
USDA CHOICE
$·129
BEEF STEW ••••••••••••~;. · ·

14

INTERESt

On Cettificates
Of Depasil
'1,000 Miimum

1 Yr. Term

·._..election was "a fixed horse

.~ac e for the two parties of big
~ l&gt;,us iness ~ "

Cans

$
149

.

j'"{

~,;. without overtime.

·Avondale
Sweet Peas

Duncan Hines
Cake Mix

-

HALL' SOLUTION
• WASHINGTON (UPJ)
Perennial presidential candidate Gus Hall , of th e
·" · American Conununist .Party,
· ~ proposes a six-hour workday
· n1 wilhout a Cut in pay and

Talty
layer

BUCKET

•

named to post .

c

3·1b.

FilM FORECAST

,

,ANAHEIM , Calif. (UPI) Jack Valenti, president of the
Motion Picture Association,
• forecasis boom times ahead
lor lloe film industry.
::,. "'The 12-month period
::beginning October 1976 will
- be lloe best box-&lt;Jffice year in

Meigs Co•.Bnlnch.

- l:he history of the movies, n

Ut Second St .
'omHov, Ohio

~
~

Whi-

Maglc

Bleach

.........
~.68c
a ··89c
'

Wt,lo IIMMI Vac Pack

Kroger
Corn • • • • •

.'!.._....

ea.. of 24 $6.99

Krater

·

c... '
.. .. • • • • a:!~:*l

Fruit
Cocktail

~

Cast of 24 $719

Kroft

_@

WHITE NO. 1

POTATOES........ ~~~-~

The Athen1 Coun1y
51Yii'I9S &amp; LOin CO.

Valenti, former aide to
!'resident Lyndon Johnson ,
.;. ;\Old theater owners Monday.
"'''"He said he based the
• Prediction on his knowledge
oflilms awaiting release and
of those planned for release
next year.

Parkay
Margarine •• • • • •

"APPLES ••••••••••• ~
·square
240 lb

lartleH
Pears • • • • • • • • •

......
Carolina
Ya•s

•••••••

a·. .~l

...5k~l

llpo

If your house
ntfcll
reroofing · ...
now'$ the tinle
1o bur our

.s . . ~J ·
.......a..~~
•

&amp;ol..n
Bananas

••••• • • • •

laney Calllonolo

Br•ssels
·Sprouts

0

0

I

.

shingles.
Available

seve,. I

qua lity .
. I

••

...

"

... DOMINO
5

SUGAR.~ •••••••• ~ ••• .~~~G.
~· MAXWELL HOUSE_··

7
$ 69
•

.
1

INSTANT COFFEE. :.o;::R~ ..

HOGG&amp;
'

. .

in

dllfertnt
colors. All first

'

Kroger We._l~omes
.... ·Yaur Federal
FOOt! Stamps
•

1

DELICIOUS

Florida
Tangerines

btno '-It Washington

19

RED OR GOLDEN

First of Season ·

erafta,

"

.

Jiffy Entrees

is.honored

1

-.

Except Grwry &amp; Sllctd MHI

1Jv1vt'S

w.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sundav 10 am-10 pm

••

l'; ;]_ dtnner
•
s/a ted

Mr.·".

j

Store Hours:

·'

I Vble!:t to Appllcob .. Stot• &amp;·Local TOdf

Fort's .stOf1J
still
intria
.
ues
J
.
. 6

POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
·
ROyal Arch Masons, . stated · 'fhe story of Fort Meigs, .second siege on the fort, only mosphere.
.
convocation, 7.:30 Wednesday orie of the most Important to be defeated, once again, by
Blockhouse 8, the first
night at the Pomeroy campaigns ofthe War of 1812, the fort's well-trained militia. · bulldln.l ~ the entrance
Masonic Temple. At8:30 p.m. has been told and retold, yet, The success of General gates, ~Ins the tour of Fort
stated assembly of the the Intrigue for that declalve Harrison at Fort Meigs Meigs. Here, vlaltors can
Bosworth Council 46, royal moment In history, when a provided major land victories refresh their memories as
and select masters.
detachment of courageous for ,Ohio and, subeequently, mapa, relics, old prints and
MIDDLEPORT
LIT· Americans met the British ·· the western frontier.
panels of written history
ERARY Club, 2 p.m. and Indians In battle, never . ·Today, held snuggly In the describe the War of 1812.
'Wednesday at the home of seems lo .dlmlnish.
rolllngcurvesoftheMaumee Through graphic displays of
Mrs. Sibley Slack. The book,
This suiruner, families and River, off SR 65, Fort Meigs naval actions , politicians,
"The Indian Affair" will be . vacationers were able to encompasses nearly 10 acres The War In the Northeast,.
reviewed by Mrs. Dwight relive the spell of that ex- within Its log palisade walls. India~ problems and the
Wallace. Roll call will he an citing periOd with a trip to Carefully reconstructed . Impressment of sailors,
lndl~n cuatom.
.
Perrysburg in northwestern through researcl! of ar- visitors learn the causes
. Ohio.
chaeological digs, old diaries, which led to wartare with the ·
. THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Originally bullt In 1813 by letters and original mapa, the British and Indians In 1812.
Society, 7:30p.m., Thursday General William Henry fort presently contains seven
Next on the clockwise tour
at Middleport Village llau Harristm and named for Ohio block6ouses, a Quar- of the fort iii Blockhouse 7.
with the Athens · Humane Governor Return Jonathon termaster's hOuse, five Inside, exhibits trace the
society Agent as guest Meigs, the fort initially cannan batteries, several, construction of Fort Meigs,
speaker. AD members are served as a supply depot and magazines,
earthe rn from an early, snow and mud ·
askedtoattendandthepublic fortified winter camp. Then, traverses and an Impressive encampment,
to . its
is Invited.
later that year, Fort Meigs monument dedicated to the dismantlement, In favor of a
HEMLOCK GROVE became actively Involved In victories of this famous smaller, more easily
GrangeprOductspartyathaU the war when an army of stockade.
maintained . stockade .
Thursday, 7' p.m. Proceeds British troops led by Colonel
To see the fort as the troops ,Featured among the exhibits
for building fund . Bring Proctor, and a confederation did, a walking tour is ~utllned are old tools, excavated from
cookies. Public Invited.
of Indians, led by the In the brochure obtajrted from the grounds of the fort,
OHIO VALLEY Grange Shawnee chief Tecumseh, the gatehouse Information diagrams and old maps,
2612 Letart Falls at hall laid seige· to the fort. Within center. Costumed In· which served as the
Thursday .7:30 p.m. Potluck nine days, HarriSon's army, terpreters give brief talks at "blueprints" for tlie original
refreshments.
·
with the lild of the Kentucky the major points of Interest, · builders of Fort Meigs .
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, militia, soundly defeated the and uniformed soldiers, who .Children are particularly
7:30 Thursday night at the enemies. ,
occasionally stroll the enchanted with the mlntature
hall .. Slides to be shown by
Only three months later, grounds and blockhouses of diorama in the center of. the
Frede and Bertha Leiving. Colonel Proctor attempted a · the fort, add to the at· room, depleting the var1ous ·
FIRST BAPTIST Church of
auues of th~ soldiers, from
Pomeroy Missionary Society,
· hauling supplies into the fort
Thursday at 6 p.m. Potluck
U
on sledges to assembling in
supperwlthprogramby Mrs. rlO UMJ1J .
the cemetery to attend a
J . Edward Foster on the
'J
comrade's funeral. Hand
topic, "To Vote, A Right or a
painted and ca:rved to scale,
Responsibility ?" LAUREL
MASON, W. VA .
VIrginia J . Casto, Mrs. the mOdels provide a unique
, CLIFF Better Health Club Members of the Mason City James Agee, Mrs. Frank A. look at the type of activities
, Thursday night, 7:30home of . Historical Society agreed to Thomas, Mrs. Richard Cruze. . and ~onstructlon techniques
, Mrs. Bertha Parker. loth have.a holiday turkey dinner
Mrs. Thomas . Coyle, used .durlng the period.
. &amp;Miversary ·of club to be when they met Oct. 7 at the Evelyn Proffitt, Lllah Zerkle,
Blockhouses 1, 2 and 3 are
celebrated.
Lewis home with Mrs. Laura J'ohnson, Laurene reminiscent of how Fort
. SOUP SUPPER, Thursday Landon Smith, presiding.Lewis, Joy Foreman, Margie Meigs actually appeared in
' at the Dorcas M. E. Church
After the business meeting Grueser, Lester Foreman, 1813. Empty, except for some
social room. Vegetable and In the morning the group Rev. Robert Maring, Agnes weapons and wood boxes
. bean also sandwiches and enjoyed lunch at noon. Abrief Roush, Katharine Johnson, • fllled with supplies the
' pie. Serving starts at 5 p.m. workshop to make Christmas Lorlne Harless, Mr. and Mrs. blockhouses illustrate' that
; Must provide containers for ·ornaments was. held with Nolan Swackhamer, Coral during the war, these
' carry out. Supper sponsort!ll participants sharing patterns A1eX a n_d e r .
De I mar structures
served
as
.. by the Dorcas Women's In the afternoon.
Alexander.
defensive positions and areas
· Fellowship.
AI the opening of the
Ruth Walker, Lois S. for supplies."
• FOUR NIGHT revival meeting Mrs. Fred Taylor Hennosy, Anna Louise
A fasclnallng collection of
: starting ThurSday evening at presented devotionals of Sherman, Esther McKnight, "War of1812" Americana can
: Chester Church of God· with ·Scripture and · readings, Addle Brown, Edith Fox, be found irt Blockliouse 4. In
' Rev.
Donald
Sheets closing with prayer.
Alma Marshall, Fred addition to . dbplaying an
. : Wellston, speaking thre~
Mrs. Earl Ingels reported a Spencer, Sarah Spencer, Dr. impressive array of artifacts
, nights and th~ pastor blood pressure cllnlc will be Edward M. Spencer, June and weapons of the war,
. : speaking 00 Sunday, final held at the Lewis home on Roush and Matilda Noble.
(Including a handsome MOdel.
Oct.
21.
The
meeting
that
day
1806
H
F
· t 1 th
7
i
. even Ing; serv ces at :30 will be the last this month. A
.
arpers erry piS o ' e
standard sidearm lor the
: each evening with special
. singi
bll In 'ted
workshop to continue making
Dr
) th
U
ng; pu c vi ·
Christmas decorations will be
agoons • ere are equa Y
·
' PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
interesting exhibits on
: Chapter, . Beta Sigma Phi held Oct. 25 ·
uniforms, cooking utensils
: Sorority, 7:30p.m. Thursdey
The constitution and byand trading equipment of the
· at home of Ulllan Moore with laws were read by Mrs. Ray
periOd. In a corner of the
: Ruby B8er, MOdred Karr and Proffitt.
room, lifelike ·maMequins
: Nellie Brown, hostesses:
Mrs. Christine Guthrie
, are posed In a scene
. ME I G S
C 0 U N T y Invited the society to attend
recreallng an actual tragic
: Children's Home Committee, the Charleston Symphony on
event that occured at Fort
: 11 :30 a.m. Thursday at the Oct. 10 In 1'1. Pleasant. .
Meigs, as recorded in the
: Pomeroy United Methodist·
Visitors were Mr. and Mrs;
peersonal diary of· Captall)
, Church. Organizations asked Delmar (Louise Wallace)
Daniel Cushing,
"
~ to send representatives. Bryant of Fresno, Csllf.
Then, the tour leads to the
' Everyone welcome. Plans
There are over 40 paid
Grand Battery lor a good
: will be made for the inemhershlpa In the Maaon
view of the ·wooded COUJI·
, Children's Home Christmas County Historical Society for
tryside•nrroundJilt! the fort.
. party.
1976. They are Rev. Evelyn
EDrrH DAVIS
Only by standing high on
: REVIVAL THURSDAY Maring , Bessie Ingles,
these bluffa, overlooking the
throughSundayattheChurch Catherine . Smith, Doria
Maumee River, can the ·
' of Christ In Christian Union. Roberts , Zelma Hunter,
J
u
vlaltor fully appreciate the
: Rev. Roscoe Thorne will be Virginia Wilson, Elizabeth
1813 battle ·from the defen· ·
: the speaker. Services begin Mcintosh, Ruth Mcintosh,
·
ders' vantage point and the
: at 7:30p.m.
Delores Taylor, Chris(lne J.
sheer Impregnability of Fort
Guthrie, Robert C. Guthrie,
Meigs. ·
,
FRIDAY
'
The green grass· and shady
' SOUP SUPPER at the
Many relatives of Mrs. trees that cover the grounds
· ~ Senior Citizens Center,
Edi!h Davis, visited her at today, belie ' the muddy
• Serving to be from .4\o 7 p.m.
the ijome ·of her nieces, Mrs.. conditions and sparse land·
~ preceding the football game. ,
~IDA Y
Mane Leifheit and Mrs. scape that exiSted at tbat
: Menu will Include vegetable
RUMMAGE SALE Friday ·~o!~~hln °~bse~:~~ time. Wandering through the
• and bean soup, chill, hot dogs, beginning at 9 a.m. at the
fh
premises, scene$ will lm·
! sloppy joes and desserts.
Enterprlae United Methodist 0 er 90th birthday.
mediately begin forming in
•,' REVIV.AL MEETING at Church. Everything; 10 cents. and
.Shegifts.
received
many cards
Appreciation
was the visitor 's mind. The
, the Rutland Community
SATURDAY
expressed by the honoree.
earthern traverses, behind
' Church Friday, Saturday and
BAKE SALE, Saturd~y
Calling at the Leifheit which the soldiers huddled,
~ Sunday·, 7:30 ilightly. Rev. hegiMing at &amp;:30 a.m: by the home where Mrs. Davis dOdgi(lg the enemies' bullets.
: !lalph Spirea, speaker and Cub Scout Pack 242, resides included a sister, The tombetones of brave
1Mr. and Mrs. Charles Syracuse, at Larry's Grocery Mrs. Helen Fell; nieces, Mrs. soldiers who died In battle,
• Rinehart,. singers. Pastor In Syracuse.
Wilbur Young, Rutland ; Mrs. and the magazines, where the
: Amoa TUiis Invites the public.
Pete Waters, Zanesville; powder and weapons were
1
..
CHILl · SUPPER and Mrs. Ben Fox, Duncan Falls stored. In the silence, ooe can
1 ORGANIZATIONAL meet· carnival Saturday at ptiio; M~. John Marshall: .almost hear the roar of ex' 1ng ofa junior gr~nge by Ohio Cheshirt•Kyger School. New Haven,
Va. ; a . P!oding caMons, the firing of
' ValleyGranceatLetartFaUs Supperat5:30andcarnlvalat Del\llhew and .family, Mr. nfles, the clank of cooking
i Community Building, 7:30 1 p.m. Sponsored by PTA. and Mrs. James Hazelton kettles and the cries of
; p.m. Friday for YOWII! peqple Public invited.
and Jane, Rt. 3, Pomeroy· wounded men.
' five through 14. Monthly
AUCTION AND con: great ni eces, Shal·ili
Nearby, archaeology
: meetings with contests slgnment sale Saturday at Smallwood, Sue Sprankle, ~tudents from Defiance
!
m~c. games. Young Twin City Shrine Park, and Barbara Emler, all of College are excavating on the
1 people from Letart Falls, Racine, sponsored by Twin Zanesville. Also visitin~ were grounds. Their activities
! Antiquity, Apple Grove and City Shrine Club. Begins at John Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. make a fascinating exhibit in
: Eut Letart invited.
10:30 a.m. Refreshments.
Henry Eblin.
iContlnued,on page 14)

c

Qt.
jar

WEDNESDAY ··
PAST COUNCILORS' Club,
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, 7:30
Wednesday at the hall. Mrs. ·
·Mary Hayes and Mrs.,
Doroll!y Myers, hostesses.
SQUAiiE- DAN CE ' Wed·
nesday at Royal Oak Park
Wednesday, 8 to 11 p.m.
National caller Frankie
Lane. Sponsored by Belles
and Beaus. All members
bring cookies.
WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the .·
CANNON FIRING demlllllratl01111 by costumed "soldlen" at Fort Meigs,are pr,esented
American Legion hdl,
most
weekends at the restor1tlon.
.
Middleport.
POMEROY
MID·

ZUSPAN
MATERIALS C:O.
773·5534

I

Mason, W.Va •

·'

�'

to Columbia Twp. in 1804

SEATTLE (UPI)- LaRue
Marlin, a Moot-11 center
picked first in the 19'12 college·
draft, was I'll m waivers
Tuesday by the Seattle

10 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct.13. 1976

First settler came
By

H, E. Throckmorton

The first settler ln
Columbia Township . is
recorded as "Alvin" Ogden In
the spring of t801. Larkin In
_ his histqry of Meigs County
Sfl"lled the name, "A·L-L-E·
N.'' The !820 census, Evans tn
the first history . of Meigs
County, and Ervin ln the third
history of Meigs County ,
· spelled the name "A·L-Y·l·
N." Larkin states that Allen
.(likely it was Alvin) was born
in Maryland on April 13, 1775.
He came to Marietta ln 1788
ut the age ol 13 and to
southern Columbia Township
in April of 11104 at the age of
2\l,

A deed for his land · pur·
chase is recorded in the
Recorder's
Offlce
In
Pomeroy. He built a log cabin
near the line between Section
No. 19 and No. 13 along the
road known in 1972 as Meigs
County No. 1. Hazel and
Cmford Wooten owned Ibis
land in 1972.
Ten children were born to
this family. A daughter,
Mary Ogden, marrie? Joshua

He was looking lor a place to Wtre oak trees and game. University Library. Twenty·
. live.
'
The large bollow Sycamore two heada of. fall)ilies are
Basic needs lor survival tree has been challenged in listed as follows : Alvin
were food , drink and shelter. conversation With others. The pgdin, George Wood, Joshua
Water was the first ""!'ntlal a~thor can remember a few Wood, Hezeklah Caster, John
so a good spring was the first bollow Sycamore trees lar~e Wood, WllliBm McKinster,
need. One did not have to dig enough to steep ln. lt would James Davis, Thomas Sharp,
or drill a well or build a appear that all of these large George
Davis, David
cistern. The spring provided trees are gone.
Graham, Wllltam Graham,
free water while any other
The late Ney Carpenter at Thomas Brooks (joint),
source cost time and money. the age of 92 in 1970 related Henry Rosa, Abraham ztiin,
One had a choice of springs.-· this story about his grand· Solomon Philips, James
· Next in order of importance · father. as he slept ln the Townsend, Solomon Town·
· was a cave or ·hollow tree to bollow Sycamore tree : He . send, Henry Mace; Jonatha.n
provide shelter. Next, in was awakened· one night by Brooks (jona than Brooks
order, was the abundance of the dog barking. Grandfather (joint), Thomas Brooks and
oak trees to provide logs for Amos looked out to see balls David Shidler.
the new house and last, but of fire glo.wing In the eyes of
There was a total
not least, was a supply of wild wolves 'as they surrounded population of 128 ~ 'Pie in
game. One could travel some the hollow Sycamore tree. 1820. It should be no, ' that
distance in search of game Firebrands from the camp- Thomas Brooks and Jm. 'han
for food, but a spring, a cave fire just outside the entrance Brooks are listed separ ...ely
or hollow !tee, and oak trees were uaed to drive the wolves and then agaifl, jointly. No
for constructing bulldogs bad away. .
explanation of this repetition
to be nearby.
There are a number of was found, The name of
Ney said his grandfather histories of the Carpenter carpenter does not appear in
Amos !ound this cpmbination family . Ney said he was of the thee d 820 census. Whether
less than a mile up Five-mile 19th generation.
Amos carpenter was miSsed
Creek and It was . there he
The 1810 census has not in the 1820 census, or reported
built his log cabin. A good been found. It Is possible this in some other place is not
.P'ring was near the creek. A record was destroyed ln the known. Few if any of the 1820
giant hollow Sycamore tree War of 1812. A copy of ·deeds family nanles are found In
provided shelter and there prior to 1820 has been made Columbia Township in 1976. It
from the Washington County would appear that almost all
recorda and can be found in descendants. of the residents
the Meigs County Recorder's of 1820 moved elsewhere for a
Office . The date the deed is better opporturtity to earn a
recorded does not mean that · Uvlng. - · H. E. Thrpck·
a house was built im· morton.
mediately.
~nother early settler was
Solomon
and
Rachel
Townsend who came from
Elk Creek, Va. (probably
Harrison County, W. Va. ) to
the "Stag Place" April lo,
1819. They bought 320 acres
for $400 near the Temple
Church (as of 1972). The land
was probably owned by
William Culwell in Section 24
CINCINNATI (UP!) as of 1972.
Three men were injured and
Time does not permit several · persons were
research of the setUement of arrested Tuesday night as a
Columbia Township section crowd of about 14,000
by section. A copy of the ·
celebrated the Cincinnati
fourth census of 1820 iB on Reds' winning of.the National
micro-film In the State Office
Building in Columbus · and League championship, police
another copy is in the Ohio said.
singers and interpreters to perform at Tririity Church,
Two teen;~ged boys were
shot. and wounded and
another young man suffered
a stab WO\illd during the
celebration in downtown
Fountain Square after the
Reds
downed
the
Philadelphia Phillies, 7.1;, to
win the NL pennant.
Authorities said some of the
crowd, made up of mostly
"shape-note" tunes, sych as
Mrs. Hunkins ls known
young persons, became
"Am B! 1n g Grace , " widely as a composer· of
Elsie Mae Crouser to rowdy about 9:30 p.m. and
• • He a v • n 1y Dove , ' ' American folk opera. Born In Richard Lee Fetty, Glenna broke windows, tore down a
"Chester,:' "Wicked Polly," · Troy, she studied piano and M. Fetty, 3 A and 107 R, "Reds Ar~ Hot '' banner and
"Old Sister Phoebe" and theory in Dayton until she Rutland.
toOk two · WJiforrns from an
"Saint's Delight!' Script lor received a fellowship .from
Bubby B. Herdman, Icyle American Airlines office.
the presentation was written the Julliard Foundation to do P. Herdman to
Roger
Police arrested about 70
by Emily Hammond. Both graduate work In New York. Adams" Meige.
persons on various charges
Mrs. · Hunkins and Mrs. She has worked under Darius
Bubby B. Herdman. lcyle before the crowd broke up .
Hammond are residents of Milhaud, Ernest Hutcheson, P. Herdman to Roger Adams, about midrtight.
Athens. The choral ensemble Ernst Von Dohnanyi, and RuUand.
John. Woods, 18, and James
is made up of about 20 men Helen Van Woert, and has
Guy Thurman Carleton aka Lee, 19, both of Cincinnati,
and women, all of the Athens studied composition at Aspen dec.; G. T. Carleton to Emma were shot in what auUtorities
area.
and Tanglewood in this Carleton, aff. trans., Chester. called an unprovoked
• Accompanime·nt· for the county and in Salzburg,
Jerry R. Hayman to incident .
program is provided by flute, Austria.
Woods · suffered
Clarence E. Hayman, 6.99 A.,
an
dulcimer and reed organ.
While
studying
at Chester. ·
Performed In several Chautauqua, N. Y. in 1931,
Phillip N. Boyles, Sharon
states, "Happy Land" was she met Maurel Hunkins, M. Boyles, to Phllip A. Null, Home Adm., Lot 23 River·
prsenied ih March as part of then assistant conductor of Irene G. Null, 6.27 A., Olive. view Acres, Middleport.
the American Revolution the Chautauqua Symphony
John P. Williams to
Ralph C. Durst, Naomi J.
B ice n ten hi a 1 Ad· and Opera. Since their . Durst to Orville E. Hudnall, Gregory Me~ley, Ruth .
ministration's salute to Ohio, marriage Mr . and Mrs. Arizona H~dnall , Parcel, Medley, Parcel, Sutton.
at Kennedy Center In Hunkins have lived in Athens. Salisbury.
Gerald E. Reuter, Artie L.
Washington, D. C.
Reuter
to George S. HobCelesta C. Bush to Farnners
stetter, Zelda M. Hobstetter,
Part of Lot 88, Pomeroy.
'
Jessie E. Reeves to Harold
A. Reeves, Carolyn J .
Reeves, Parcels, Salisbury.

Wood. This was the first
'marriage in Columbia
Township. Alvin Ogden and
HaMah (Keller ) Ogden were
the parents of the first child
(Hugh Ogden ) born in
Columbia Township:
Larkin writes that Amos
Carpenter came from
Virgirtia to Rutland ToWII·
ship. About 1818 Amos sold
his land ln Rutland Township
and bought land In Columbia
Township. The maiden name
of Mrs. Carpenter was
McLaughlin. An)os bought
land on Five-mile creek north
of Carpenter in Section No. 4.
His log cabin site was near
the junction of Meigs County
Road No. 10 and Slate Route
No. 143. The land iB owned by
the State of Ohlo and was
known as the Southeastern
Test Farm in 1912.
Ney Carpenter, who was a
grandson of Amos Carpenter,
told the author that his
grandfather, Amos, came up
Leading Creek from Rolland
with an ax, gun, dog and
some cookii)g utensils, then
turned up Five-mile Creek.

-

Meigs
Property

Happy Land presentation . .
coming to Pomeroy Oturch Transf~rs
"Happy Land," a !iS-minute
presentation of life In early
America employing prose,
poetry and music fro.m the
early 1700s through the late
11800s, will be presented at
'trinitY, Church; Pomeroy, on
Sunday, Oct. 24 .
There will be no admisaion
. charge. The program is being
brought here under • spon·
sorship of the Meigs County
Historical Society with
financial asaistance from the ·
Ohio Arts Council. Donations
are being · solicited by cocj)airmen Mrs. Frances
&lt;loeglein and Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit to raise ap·proximately $125 as the local
cost of bringing "Happy
Land'' here.
Music for "Happy Land,"
arranged by Mrs. Eusebia
Hunkins, includes . many

-'

..."'

••

of sugar from sugar cane. amino ~cid composition and
The remaining material Is is comparable to mUk ~nd
then incubated, dehydrated surpasses that of soybeans.
and reconstituted for use in
The department said
manufaCturing tobacco . removal of the compounds
products.
reduces · ;ome of tlie
Orlglnatly devised---as a undesirable cons,.ituen~ in
means of saving labor and inhacco smoke.
improving tobacco quality,, . _ Or. Tso estimated about 20
the HLC method made.· 'to 40 pounds of ·prott;i]l per
possible the removal of acre could be obtained as
fractlort-1-Protein and other byproducts of tobacco
useful compounds.
production at current yield
Dr. Tso was assisted in his levels, and with a worldwide
studies by colleagues at the yield projected at 20 billion
USDA Tobacco l!esearch pounda by 2000, said it could
Station In Oxford, N.C., the provide 1.2 billion pounds of
Agricultural Experiment · protein tlren, enougn to feed
Station in Lexinginn, Ky., and 33 to 63 rplllion people
.the l!nivernity of Maryland at depending on various
Baltimore.
standards of daily protein
The l!SDA said the protein • conswnptlon.
is pure, tasteless, odorless,
"!le~ite these potenllally
and colorless.
high yielda," Tso said, "it
Its nutritional value, the would not be economically
department said. Is based on 'practical 10 raise tobacco as a

main source of protein." ·
He noted a tobacco plant
contains 12 to 17 per cent ol
protein compared with 42 to
44 per cent for soybeans.
"But even hlilf that 12 to 17
per cent, which we can get as
a byproduct of normal
production, can be very
.signifiant,". he said. . ,
"Webope that in the year
2000, when the world will
have six billion .people to
feed, we C!lll make sensible
use of the · protein fractions
and other useful products
from tobacco that will
otherwise literally be going
up in smoke," Tso said.
Pilot studies. to further
simplify the extraction
process for 'proteins are
. currently underway by Dr.
Tso and scientists in North
Carolina, Kentucky and
Maryland.
··

. .

Jiunes·
' rec~rd attacked·by Triplett.
.

, Gladys S. Snowball to
Thomas A. Snowball, 4.35 A.,
Sutton.

BARON BALKS
MIAMI IUP!)
Baron
Vlacti{nir Kurt von·.Pousental.
got a bit of a shock with his
' toast and orange juice
recently - an auto insurance
bill for 15,362.
The 81-year-old Von
·Pousental, who lives in
Miami Beach, complained it
was a bit steep for his twoyear-old chauffeured car and
wbal's more, his chauffeur
had not collected 70 points for
traffic
violations
hi s
insurance
company
claimed .
Oops, replied the insurance
company computer. One zero
too many against the
chauffeur.

· problems of Increases crime"'
is a poor record.
"The legislature's first
priority,,. Triplett said,
"must now be protecting the
victim in light of rising
crime, even In the rural areas
of the state. No matter how
desirable some programs
sound, we must first assure
that ·our citizens are free of
personal harm or threat to
their property.
"The legislature made

some progress, such as
tougher

pe~alties

PELE RETIRING
,MElfiCO CITY (UP! ) Brazillan soccer star Pele, in
his second season for tbe New
York Cosmos, says he once
again is retiring from the
game - next year.
In Mexico for talks about a
film on his _ sporting life ,
which brougnt three World
Cup . championships to his ·
Brazilian national team,
Pele, 35, said he would spend
t~ree years
after his
encourage citizens ' in· retirement, next SP.ptember,
volvement in .,toppin• crime. p1 omoting fo otball for
· commercia) fi.rn:'s .

pushers,' but did not bite the ., legislation to help ·combat
bullet and make a .systematic crime. Some proposals he
effort to effectively fight ' saili which have merit are:
crtme in Ohio," Triple\!
A universal telephone
added.
number to get pollee help.
Abolishing the adult parole
Triplett called his opponent's record "a record of authority and go to fixed
neglect. Ron James Is not for sentences.
criminals, but he also bas not
Adequate funding of
been a strong advocate in the pnsons to assure criminals
legislature of fighting crime. ar&lt; not let off because of
We need hard wor~ on this inadequ~te Iucllities.
problem, not just piecemeal
Proposals whi ch would

patchwork."

1

Triplett promised to work
for drug ,un legislatjon and :f't\oduce.

&amp;.,:..

•

" "'·

,.,

With COBRA
Z-Way CB Radio

""

"'
•fl..'

'

·

Your worthy mtentlons lor persons you feel responsible for

be diluted by your
me,lhocJs . Clue them In on what
intend to do.
s (April 20-Mar 20)
Advice given you today could
be very sound. You 'll have to

pay a"ttentionto usel teffectlve- ·

GEMINI

.. '

.

Cobra19
• Super-Compact
• Built-in Speaker

•
PLAYjNG FIRE FIGHTERS - These third graders
of Hartford Elementary got to see the fire truck and
emergency vehicle belonging to the New Haven Squad
when the vehicles were brought' to the school as part of
Fire Prevention Week. At 'h' top is Jim Gibbs; in the
middle is Melissa Fields, and to her side is Hope Roush.

•

..

. ,,.,

•

abdominal injury and Lee
was superfici!llly wounded in
the face. Woods was listed in
serious condition today
following surgery and Lee
was in fair condition. a
hospital spokesman said.
Police said they chased a
shooting suspect believed to
be about 13 to 14 years old
through the crowd but were
unable to capture him.
An unidentified man
suffered a minor stab wound
during tbe celebration. He
was trJ:ated and released at a
local hospital,
The crowd.. began forming
about 6:30 p.m. shortly after
the.game ended. At first th~
crowd was made up of mostly
middle-a ged pers ons,
described by authorities as
well-dressed and orderly.
Initially, the enthusiastic
group chanted " We're No. 1"
as pages from telephone
books thrown from nearby
office
buildings
and
illuminated by two giant
search lights on the square
floated through the air like
confetti.
Later though,--when the
trouble began, police said tbe
throng was made up of
mostly young persons, many
of them dri nk ing beer ,
Slhoking marijuana and
shooting off firecrackers.
Authorities said the crowd
had thinned to near normal
by shortly after midnight.
The city had announced
before the game there would
~ no official celebration but

Similar. ce lebrations were

staged last year after the
Reds won the playoffs and the
World Series.

"~' .

I· .r U

'"'

today then stew aoout1tlater.
D1 s ~ 1 s s th ose neg at 1 ve

lhoughiS: what you d1d was
llgh&lt; • 1 the ''me.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The way you handle com.,erclal sJtuatiOfiS today ·ts
QU!Ie clever. thOugh yo u coul d
lOse a lew · pmn ts py obligi ng

!hose"Who don·1 deseiVe 11 .
CAPRICOR~ (Qec . 22-Jan . .

,., r

Middleoort

..

"

LAST WEEK
of Si.nger's Big Sale
(Sale ends Saturday, Oct. 16 l

..,.,

$19995·

..

··'- 1 I

NOW
ONLY
.SAVESBOOFF REG.
PRICE AND GET
THESE CONVENIENT
SINGER FEATURES.

"

.'" .,
·~

.I

••

Our Model 534 STYLI ST
MACHINE has a free
arm for sewi ng in.the·
rou nd , flexible stretch .
Sti t ches for knit and
str etc h fabr ic sewing
and
a ,· built -in
buttonholer.
Carrying
case or cabinet extra .

&lt;A

•

n,,'

60"

10% Discount to Home-Ec St.udeniS
" V•

The Fabric · Shop~
--- ·

McCall"s, Kwick-Sew,
Simplicity Patterns
115 W. Second
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2284 Approved Aiiihorized Dealer
~1

...... ,._

'

•..
U flt

'

"'"

....'"
..

*
· toi.fitllis lifestyle

~1FT~

AOUARtUS (Jan. 20-Fob.

••

"

Lay-Away

•

Early For

••
•

Christmas!

••

o

I

••

,J •

•

" •=

•

••=

ALSO,
COMPLETE SELECTION OF JARMAN BOOTS
'

.

-..,,,.
••

A. Rhodes offering expanding ·
companie~ tax ~re~k., on

personal property and new
equipment investments. TcS·
tirnony was to resume inday
on the governor's bills.
''Til~ state of Ohl6lo; at a
1
·
clisUn ~t ( isadv&lt;J. ntagt! in
attracting and dev elopin g

busin~ sscs

have

(Feb. 20-March 20)
Enjoy yourself today . but don't
teet you have to spend a bun dle. Thmg s that are too costly
won 't be -tun anywaY.

..

~Your

. Pr.escription Drug Store

$19.50

r "-.

oolite

HALLOWEEN

8

ARE YOU IN 1H.E MARKET FOR A
DOUBLE WIDE OR MODULAR HOME?
If you are ready to make the move to
t.he carefree living of manufactured
housing, see us for a double-wide or
modular home.
We can handle your entire housing
needs. If you like, we will do the entire job.
This Includes sile preparation, septic
system,. concrete work, basement and
1
more.
By having all this on one contract; you
have only one obligation to meet.
We feature homes by .Skyline Corp., the
world's largest builder, and Fuqua Corp.,
the only manufacturer who offers a 10-year ,
homeowner protection

SUPER STAR SPORTS

GAME~

FROM
MILES
LABORATORIES

New

ONE.DAY.
' 1/lrAMINI

• RECOMMENDED
BY LEADING APPAREl
MANUFACIURERS
16 oz .

PlUI MINI!IIALI
AeASt t O ~ I' OIJ~ r~.~: ~Y'S
hUIIIII!liW. 11 1~1 111

Nelson's .

J

Reg. $1.69

30 Ct.

UNICAP
.VITAMINS

lYSOL
DEODORIZING.
CLEANER

Johnny Bench Baseball Game
John Havlicek Basketball Game
Archie Griffin Football Game

g~.¢
2~

oz.

Your
Choice

SAFE FIRE RETARDENT

Ne t Dl'
·' R.ey . !

J

FROM

$}99UP

Nelson's Reg. S2.98

$899

Nel so n's

1------------------t----·~$9:.9=5~~

PARSONS
lemon &amp;. Pine
28 oz.

SHOE LACES

19¢

UN ICAP
PLUS IRON

'"-PRESSU.~E COOKER

•BlACK
•BROWN

Nelson's Reg. 25c

i
'

I

BABY
SHAMPOO
16 oz.

I

i

I
-·- •.·---. l

·40 INCH

12
food 3 Ia 10 limes laster,
retains vitamins, minera ls, full natural
flavOrs of meats. vege tabl es. seasonings.
Sturdy lightweight aluminum for eBsy
handling.
'

6 qt. size. cooks

c

ORA FIX SPECIAL
'; \)\',i\,..ix spe~,o:\ ·. ·•;1•

-

·,trkux, s ""t'·

100 Ct.

Nelson's
. Reg , $1.09
t

~

MOUTHWASH
18 oz .

'

,,

Is!!~
...__
so i:t•

.79t

Nelson's
Reg. S2.49

.,,'

SUCRm
•'
' SORE lHROAT

·

SUCHETS
............_ .__,

S oz .'

..._

... - ... ·- - 11 1111•u

Regular or Mint

Regu lar
Children's.
24 ct.

Nelson 's
Reg . .7Bc.

lOZENGES

ss~
Nelson's
Reg. $1.21

CALGON

SECRET

BATH SOAP

ROll ON
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

•

Nelson's
·Reg. 33c

BATH OIL
BEADS

sac
Nelson's

Reg. $1.27.

AIM TOOlHPASTE

.•
II

I",..

I

"QUALITY ALWAYS'
Mon., lues., Thurs., Sat.; 9-7:30

Nelson's Reg: tl.l7

2/'1

00

I
I
I
I
I

'

.'

~P N

TOOTHPASTE

CARESS

SCOP~

tor rl:liiOI ot

For Sinus Headache

Special Holding Power!
Nelson's
Reg. $1.42

"

cr=l

SINE-AID

Nelson's
Reg . $3.09

NEW

Rel•ul

')

L)"H' •'·l i"'J'.Kii'lf"

___,

Nelson's
Reg. 87c

TABLETS

Kaopectat

Reg. $1.27

10 CT.

.

·~A\Jtt'-s~~§~

I Nelson's .
,73c each

'

oz.

Nelson's

GERITOL
TABLETS

*~lt,:m

PHILLIPS~
rJ.q,...,a

'

di;1rrMO

4 HOUR COUGH SUPPRESSANT
· REGULAR &amp; CHilDREN'S

MAGNESIA TABLETS

:;&lt;'

Nelson's
Reg. $19.77

HOLD

PHILLIPS

'. I'

IOOPECTATE

REG. 45'

Nelson's
Reg. $2.73

.'

•WHITE

NElSON'S

ASPIRIN

$}~
'

I

BAYER

90 CT.

Nelson's

'--

Nelson's Reg. $2.53

••

'·

I

GLENCO
'

AMMONIA

~&lt;lS I An t &lt;lC!d

100 Plus
24 FREE

Expires October 17, 1976

Wednesday- Friday I :00-9: oo, Sunday Closed
Pomeroy
192-7034 ·
Ohio
Ptarl Ash 992·33ll, Roger Davis. 192'7671

'

'"

COSTUMES .

COLD WATER WASH

$15.50

~&amp;~
~J~m .

'

PRICES GOOD OCT. 13-14-15-16-17

~il

!
, ..-:

I

PISCES

Plans and sp~cl,fl.catlon may
be ~;»bt~lned from the Ar .
chltects, Eesley, lee , Vargo &amp;
Cassady , 326 .Front Street ,
Marietta, Ohio, 45750, for a
deposit of S25 wh ic h will be
refunded If the documents are
r eturned unmarked and i ~
good condit ion within ten days L"-:
'"~..c,·cc·"'·--""'··· · ·~' . - --·-.after bid due date . Should no
propose 1 be subm itted and the ''Never mind that modern stuff,
drawings not r eturned f ive just dance!! "
davs before the bid d~e date,
the full amolJnt of the deposit
PUBLIC NOTICE
·
Bids wi ll be received ·at .the
w ill be forf ei ted.
Separa t e b i ds w i ll be Mayor 's Office until' 4 :00
r ece1ved on : '
P .M ., October 25 , 1976. 237
I. GENERAL CONTRACT Race Stre et for 8,000 ga llons
II. PLUMBING CONTRAGT ( m or e qr , less ) unleaded
Ill . HEATIN"G &amp; VEN - gasoline and B.OOO ga llons
TILATING CONTRACT
(more or less) leaded gasolin e
IV . ELECTRICAL CO N - for a period of one year
TRACT
,
co mmen c ing November 1,
All proposals must contain 1976.
.
the name of every person
Bidder will be reSponsible
interested therein, be su b- for fu rn i sh ing and ma in m illed on forms furnished by ta lning two ( 2) m etered
the Arch i.te,ts and ,. be a, . pumps and two (2) un 'ompanled by a satisfaCtory derground tanks.
Surety Bond or a Certified
The Vi llag e reserves th e
Check on a bank doi ng right toac ceptorrejectanyor
buslnes~ in the StaJe of Ohio, all bids .
.
·
in the amount of 5 percent of ·
the tota l vatue of the bid In Gene Grate ,
cluding all add alternates . Bid
Clerk -Treasurer
Vi llage of
sec urity will be returned
within ten days after contract
Middleport
f or the work · has · been
executed . F a ilure of anv {10) 6, 13, 2tc
bidder to enter Into and
exe,ute a contract for the
work covered by the proposa·l
he has submitted , within len
HAND ENGRAVED
days fol low ing not ice of award
of such work to hi m , sha ll
cause the bid security to
ber;:om e forfeited by the bidder
to the Owner as liqu idated
damages and• not as a
Penalty because of such
failure on the part of the
bidder.
Each bidder ::.na .. oe
prepared, In the event tie is the
accept"ed bidder, to furnish
performance and payment
bonds, In a form satisfactory
GOLD FILLED
to l he Owner , in the a mount of
100 percent of the COI.llract
OR
price,
guaranteeing . th e
successful completion or the
STERLING
work bid upon and payment of
all
obligations
arising
therefrom .
Proposals may be mailed or
delivered . If ma il ed, send via
registered ma il In time for bid
Bidders
shall
open[ng ,
designate on the envelope that
1 15 D
Ills a sealed bid, Ind ica te the
prolect being bid , the division
upon which he is bidding, the
name and address of bidder
and addressed to :
Sol.lthern Local Board of
Education
•• 17.
Soutt1ern Local H lgh School
Racine, Ohio 45171
The Owner reserves the
right to accep t any bid , to
w~lve anv or all Informalities
N 11 D
In bids o!lnd ·Or reject any or all
bids at his discret ion .
No bid may be withdrawn
for • period of 45 days .
By order ol the 'Southern
Local Bo ll r d of · Edu cat ion,
Racine , Oh io.
Mrs . Jane Wagner ,
Clerk

Hours:

,,

dr1ver"s seat.

"""11'\'

:
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' I

,,

. "',,
~~

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..

'"~~·"·
.,._,\'.

-

''

19)

tfO"fiCE TO BIDDERS
Oct. 14, 1976
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of You r ·ambitions Wi ll be In high
Education of th e Southern gear th1s year. unhamp·ered by
Local School Dist rict at the !he inhibii!Ons of the pas t. You
Southern Local High School cr~n now let ou f alt the stops.
offlc~ at Racine , Ohio , un til
twelve o'c lock I 12 : 00 ) noon ,
prev_ailing
loc al
t ime,
THURSDAY , OCTOBER ~8.,..---------1976, and opened Immediately
thereafter, for .the furnishing
of all mater ials and per forming all" labor for the
er ec t ion of.

(10) 7, 13 , 20, 27, 4ft

·

Minor issues may ve.-. you to- .
d3y, but in si tuations that re'afly ·•.
count you "tf l1nd yourself In the

$15.50

. "'"
'I n',

-

••

c

''

administration ofCov. James

,,

byg£J~

•54" Wool &amp; wool blends

The t\\'O businessmt•n said

they favor proposalS by tbo

day. condJitons could d rift you
ott the mark Second ~ best is
nolhing to be asha med of. ·

LOCKEJS

•60" Suede

situation and, even more
importantly, to all industry
considering expandillg · or
building,'' said McFadden .

as compared with
Michigan ," Mitasik told the
&lt;·ommiuee , adding that
Michigan freezes real eslate
lax es and provides tax.
forgiveness of up to 12 years
on macllinery a1Ki equipment
uf expanding comparties.
Mitasl k
said · such
expansi ons "u ltimate ly
benefit
the
whole
&lt;:Qmmnnity" wiUl jobs, a
gri'llt!l&lt;... cc or•oo•lc base and
more u.iret-eipts. .
He said Utat since MichJgan
~Hi opte:d
its
economio
incentiws for industry, 94

,.

RACINE , OHIO

INGELS
FURNITURE

FLORSHEIM®
~HRIST

trying to convince a West
Gennan company to join in
localing a new auto clutch
manufacturing
facility
in
. ' ·
.
Oluo, bul .can pomt to no
induslrlal incentive~.
McFadden said Ule plant
I
wou d create 11several
. hundred jol:ri and have sales
of $10 million annually by the
second year of operation.
"We need your help in the
passage of tax and other
incentiv~.toenable oursta te ~
1
· very be st 1oot
Jo pace
Its
forward in this particular

..t..

'

advantage tit two yun -10
expand oper1U0111.
"Has there b.-n any·
evidence that ~
has increaaed stsnmcanUy?"
asked Rep . George 1&gt;.
Tablack, D·C•mpbell,
- c&lt;ii\mittee chalmian. ·
" You give me an
opportunity to put In .t.ht ' '
plants and I guar111tee you
there will be ~ jobf&gt; and
more tans being paid,"
replied Mltaslk. " Why? •
Because industry wanta 10
expand to make m!lley. I
think Ohio owes It to ltaelf to .
taken en~ct these lnceritiv.e~."

~Kiustry

19) Althougl'l you'll aim high to-

ADDITIONS TO

''"

Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy,O.
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Night TiiB
Saturday 9 Til 5 ·

SC&lt;?RPIO (Oel. 24 ·N_ov. ~ 2 )

You re prone to act oR Impulse

SOUTHER.N LC)CAL
HICH SCHOOL

Punches through loud and clear .

Hartley's Shoes

tele9rBph yo"ur in t e ntion~ to.
day. Premature publicity cou ld
cau se delays.

quickly display your muscle.

UPI StatehoUse Reporter . sion with 100 new jobs for
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Two eight years.
industrialists have warl}j!d a
Michigan now offers
legislative
panel
they
will
linancialincentives
makingil
k
·
..
·
loo to other states to expand more profitable .to go there,
operations if new lax said Mitasik.
incentives are not enacted by
''We've looked at every
th Ohi
I .
.
.
e o Genera Assembly. p1ece of leg~siatlon on 1he
Charles . F. Mitasik of Ohio books and there's no
Grosse Point Wopds, Mich., incentive, even with Ute help
manager of · the Fruehauf of
the
Development
Corp.'s axle plant in Delphos, Department," he said.
Ohio, ·told the House Ways
J ohn .Y . McFadden,
and ~eans Committee . executive vice .President of
Tu es day . he has been MTD
ptoducts,
1nc.,
·
·
planillng·a $15 million expan- Cleveland, said· his firm Is

LAFF- A- DAY

(9bra.

•Co-ordinales for men's . wear · polyesler surline in plaids or plains

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Don·t

You're slighlly extravagant to-

' Il l.

• Full CB service
• FCC license
application included

992-2635

Try to ove r t oo~ petty affronts
today _ Don't attaqh undue im·
portance to somethJng a' frlEmd
may do without th ink ing .

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0cl. 23) Ac·
quamtances should nol miStake ••noness '" you lor
~eakness &lt;May. 11 Y0 "' P"~c1ptes are cnallengcd you II

~Birthday

• Free demonstration

about 1,100 police were
assigned to. the downtown ·
area In anticipation of tbe
gathering.
'
Several streets around the
square were blocked off w
traffic aod giant traffic jams
formed near the area.

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22)

$9995

Now Only

'

. ....

Noise Limiter
Dynaboost
Adjustable Squelch ·
External Speaker
jack
Maximum Legal
Power
FCC Type-accerted

(Moy 21 -June 20)

Gains should offset losses today, but there co uld be much
more without careless mistakes th at have a way of addmg
up.

&lt;I{.,

and Automatic

-

State.·. Representative
candidate Merrll Triplett
today S.id, "The leglslaiure,
Including state represen·
tative Ron James, has done a
poor job of fighting crime."
Triplett
said
the
' legislature's !allure · to
elirrtinate shock parole 'for
convicted
felons,
the
le~islature's. failure
to
provide a mandatory sen·
ten&lt;e for individualS for first·
time rape convictions, and
the legislature's failure to
"re.yty
exam\ne
the

GrapI"I

AIRES (March 21-April 11)

Tobacco protein may feed masses
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
research scientist for the
Agriculture Department feels
a high-quality protein
byprqduc,t 91 tobacco could
become a'% urce of food for
humans and ·animals enough to feed between 33
and 63 milli~ peopl~ by the
year 2000. ·
Dr. T.C. Tso of Ute USDA's
Agricultural Research
Service at nearby Bellville,
Md., adda that removing the
protein from tobacco also
eliminates undesirable
components ·from tobacco
smoke. .
. The key tO the successl\lt
removal ~eln from leaf
inbacco, according to the
USD/., is a process known as
homogenized leaf curing macerating the leaf ·into a
slurry form, then extracting
and ,purifying the protein
much like the crystalization

Astra~ ~:~~~~~7:~~~~~~"::~~~~~~ Tax incentives for ·industry urg.e_d

~

For Thuf'8de,, Oct 14 1971

Three injured
in celebration

THE "HAPPY · LAND"
Pomeroy, on Oct. 24, 3 p.m.

0

u •.....

!!ornico Bodo 0101

•
•
•

•

, ...: The DaUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,d., Wednesday , Oct.l3,1976

Nelson's
Reg . $1.39,
'

88'··,
1\

.'"

'

�'

to Columbia Twp. in 1804

SEATTLE (UPI)- LaRue
Marlin, a Moot-11 center
picked first in the 19'12 college·
draft, was I'll m waivers
Tuesday by the Seattle

10 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct.13. 1976

First settler came
By

H, E. Throckmorton

The first settler ln
Columbia Township . is
recorded as "Alvin" Ogden In
the spring of t801. Larkin In
_ his histqry of Meigs County
Sfl"lled the name, "A·L-L-E·
N.'' The !820 census, Evans tn
the first history . of Meigs
County, and Ervin ln the third
history of Meigs County ,
· spelled the name "A·L-Y·l·
N." Larkin states that Allen
.(likely it was Alvin) was born
in Maryland on April 13, 1775.
He came to Marietta ln 1788
ut the age ol 13 and to
southern Columbia Township
in April of 11104 at the age of
2\l,

A deed for his land · pur·
chase is recorded in the
Recorder's
Offlce
In
Pomeroy. He built a log cabin
near the line between Section
No. 19 and No. 13 along the
road known in 1972 as Meigs
County No. 1. Hazel and
Cmford Wooten owned Ibis
land in 1972.
Ten children were born to
this family. A daughter,
Mary Ogden, marrie? Joshua

He was looking lor a place to Wtre oak trees and game. University Library. Twenty·
. live.
'
The large bollow Sycamore two heada of. fall)ilies are
Basic needs lor survival tree has been challenged in listed as follows : Alvin
were food , drink and shelter. conversation With others. The pgdin, George Wood, Joshua
Water was the first ""!'ntlal a~thor can remember a few Wood, Hezeklah Caster, John
so a good spring was the first bollow Sycamore trees lar~e Wood, WllliBm McKinster,
need. One did not have to dig enough to steep ln. lt would James Davis, Thomas Sharp,
or drill a well or build a appear that all of these large George
Davis, David
cistern. The spring provided trees are gone.
Graham, Wllltam Graham,
free water while any other
The late Ney Carpenter at Thomas Brooks (joint),
source cost time and money. the age of 92 in 1970 related Henry Rosa, Abraham ztiin,
One had a choice of springs.-· this story about his grand· Solomon Philips, James
· Next in order of importance · father. as he slept ln the Townsend, Solomon Town·
· was a cave or ·hollow tree to bollow Sycamore tree : He . send, Henry Mace; Jonatha.n
provide shelter. Next, in was awakened· one night by Brooks (jona than Brooks
order, was the abundance of the dog barking. Grandfather (joint), Thomas Brooks and
oak trees to provide logs for Amos looked out to see balls David Shidler.
the new house and last, but of fire glo.wing In the eyes of
There was a total
not least, was a supply of wild wolves 'as they surrounded population of 128 ~ 'Pie in
game. One could travel some the hollow Sycamore tree. 1820. It should be no, ' that
distance in search of game Firebrands from the camp- Thomas Brooks and Jm. 'han
for food, but a spring, a cave fire just outside the entrance Brooks are listed separ ...ely
or hollow !tee, and oak trees were uaed to drive the wolves and then agaifl, jointly. No
for constructing bulldogs bad away. .
explanation of this repetition
to be nearby.
There are a number of was found, The name of
Ney said his grandfather histories of the Carpenter carpenter does not appear in
Amos !ound this cpmbination family . Ney said he was of the thee d 820 census. Whether
less than a mile up Five-mile 19th generation.
Amos carpenter was miSsed
Creek and It was . there he
The 1810 census has not in the 1820 census, or reported
built his log cabin. A good been found. It Is possible this in some other place is not
.P'ring was near the creek. A record was destroyed ln the known. Few if any of the 1820
giant hollow Sycamore tree War of 1812. A copy of ·deeds family nanles are found In
provided shelter and there prior to 1820 has been made Columbia Township in 1976. It
from the Washington County would appear that almost all
recorda and can be found in descendants. of the residents
the Meigs County Recorder's of 1820 moved elsewhere for a
Office . The date the deed is better opporturtity to earn a
recorded does not mean that · Uvlng. - · H. E. Thrpck·
a house was built im· morton.
mediately.
~nother early settler was
Solomon
and
Rachel
Townsend who came from
Elk Creek, Va. (probably
Harrison County, W. Va. ) to
the "Stag Place" April lo,
1819. They bought 320 acres
for $400 near the Temple
Church (as of 1972). The land
was probably owned by
William Culwell in Section 24
CINCINNATI (UP!) as of 1972.
Three men were injured and
Time does not permit several · persons were
research of the setUement of arrested Tuesday night as a
Columbia Township section crowd of about 14,000
by section. A copy of the ·
celebrated the Cincinnati
fourth census of 1820 iB on Reds' winning of.the National
micro-film In the State Office
Building in Columbus · and League championship, police
another copy is in the Ohio said.
singers and interpreters to perform at Tririity Church,
Two teen;~ged boys were
shot. and wounded and
another young man suffered
a stab WO\illd during the
celebration in downtown
Fountain Square after the
Reds
downed
the
Philadelphia Phillies, 7.1;, to
win the NL pennant.
Authorities said some of the
crowd, made up of mostly
"shape-note" tunes, sych as
Mrs. Hunkins ls known
young persons, became
"Am B! 1n g Grace , " widely as a composer· of
Elsie Mae Crouser to rowdy about 9:30 p.m. and
• • He a v • n 1y Dove , ' ' American folk opera. Born In Richard Lee Fetty, Glenna broke windows, tore down a
"Chester,:' "Wicked Polly," · Troy, she studied piano and M. Fetty, 3 A and 107 R, "Reds Ar~ Hot '' banner and
"Old Sister Phoebe" and theory in Dayton until she Rutland.
toOk two · WJiforrns from an
"Saint's Delight!' Script lor received a fellowship .from
Bubby B. Herdman, Icyle American Airlines office.
the presentation was written the Julliard Foundation to do P. Herdman to
Roger
Police arrested about 70
by Emily Hammond. Both graduate work In New York. Adams" Meige.
persons on various charges
Mrs. · Hunkins and Mrs. She has worked under Darius
Bubby B. Herdman. lcyle before the crowd broke up .
Hammond are residents of Milhaud, Ernest Hutcheson, P. Herdman to Roger Adams, about midrtight.
Athens. The choral ensemble Ernst Von Dohnanyi, and RuUand.
John. Woods, 18, and James
is made up of about 20 men Helen Van Woert, and has
Guy Thurman Carleton aka Lee, 19, both of Cincinnati,
and women, all of the Athens studied composition at Aspen dec.; G. T. Carleton to Emma were shot in what auUtorities
area.
and Tanglewood in this Carleton, aff. trans., Chester. called an unprovoked
• Accompanime·nt· for the county and in Salzburg,
Jerry R. Hayman to incident .
program is provided by flute, Austria.
Woods · suffered
Clarence E. Hayman, 6.99 A.,
an
dulcimer and reed organ.
While
studying
at Chester. ·
Performed In several Chautauqua, N. Y. in 1931,
Phillip N. Boyles, Sharon
states, "Happy Land" was she met Maurel Hunkins, M. Boyles, to Phllip A. Null, Home Adm., Lot 23 River·
prsenied ih March as part of then assistant conductor of Irene G. Null, 6.27 A., Olive. view Acres, Middleport.
the American Revolution the Chautauqua Symphony
John P. Williams to
Ralph C. Durst, Naomi J.
B ice n ten hi a 1 Ad· and Opera. Since their . Durst to Orville E. Hudnall, Gregory Me~ley, Ruth .
ministration's salute to Ohio, marriage Mr . and Mrs. Arizona H~dnall , Parcel, Medley, Parcel, Sutton.
at Kennedy Center In Hunkins have lived in Athens. Salisbury.
Gerald E. Reuter, Artie L.
Washington, D. C.
Reuter
to George S. HobCelesta C. Bush to Farnners
stetter, Zelda M. Hobstetter,
Part of Lot 88, Pomeroy.
'
Jessie E. Reeves to Harold
A. Reeves, Carolyn J .
Reeves, Parcels, Salisbury.

Wood. This was the first
'marriage in Columbia
Township. Alvin Ogden and
HaMah (Keller ) Ogden were
the parents of the first child
(Hugh Ogden ) born in
Columbia Township:
Larkin writes that Amos
Carpenter came from
Virgirtia to Rutland ToWII·
ship. About 1818 Amos sold
his land ln Rutland Township
and bought land In Columbia
Township. The maiden name
of Mrs. Carpenter was
McLaughlin. An)os bought
land on Five-mile creek north
of Carpenter in Section No. 4.
His log cabin site was near
the junction of Meigs County
Road No. 10 and Slate Route
No. 143. The land iB owned by
the State of Ohlo and was
known as the Southeastern
Test Farm in 1912.
Ney Carpenter, who was a
grandson of Amos Carpenter,
told the author that his
grandfather, Amos, came up
Leading Creek from Rolland
with an ax, gun, dog and
some cookii)g utensils, then
turned up Five-mile Creek.

-

Meigs
Property

Happy Land presentation . .
coming to Pomeroy Oturch Transf~rs
"Happy Land," a !iS-minute
presentation of life In early
America employing prose,
poetry and music fro.m the
early 1700s through the late
11800s, will be presented at
'trinitY, Church; Pomeroy, on
Sunday, Oct. 24 .
There will be no admisaion
. charge. The program is being
brought here under • spon·
sorship of the Meigs County
Historical Society with
financial asaistance from the ·
Ohio Arts Council. Donations
are being · solicited by cocj)airmen Mrs. Frances
&lt;loeglein and Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit to raise ap·proximately $125 as the local
cost of bringing "Happy
Land'' here.
Music for "Happy Land,"
arranged by Mrs. Eusebia
Hunkins, includes . many

-'

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••

of sugar from sugar cane. amino ~cid composition and
The remaining material Is is comparable to mUk ~nd
then incubated, dehydrated surpasses that of soybeans.
and reconstituted for use in
The department said
manufaCturing tobacco . removal of the compounds
products.
reduces · ;ome of tlie
Orlglnatly devised---as a undesirable cons,.ituen~ in
means of saving labor and inhacco smoke.
improving tobacco quality,, . _ Or. Tso estimated about 20
the HLC method made.· 'to 40 pounds of ·prott;i]l per
possible the removal of acre could be obtained as
fractlort-1-Protein and other byproducts of tobacco
useful compounds.
production at current yield
Dr. Tso was assisted in his levels, and with a worldwide
studies by colleagues at the yield projected at 20 billion
USDA Tobacco l!esearch pounda by 2000, said it could
Station In Oxford, N.C., the provide 1.2 billion pounds of
Agricultural Experiment · protein tlren, enougn to feed
Station in Lexinginn, Ky., and 33 to 63 rplllion people
.the l!nivernity of Maryland at depending on various
Baltimore.
standards of daily protein
The l!SDA said the protein • conswnptlon.
is pure, tasteless, odorless,
"!le~ite these potenllally
and colorless.
high yielda," Tso said, "it
Its nutritional value, the would not be economically
department said. Is based on 'practical 10 raise tobacco as a

main source of protein." ·
He noted a tobacco plant
contains 12 to 17 per cent ol
protein compared with 42 to
44 per cent for soybeans.
"But even hlilf that 12 to 17
per cent, which we can get as
a byproduct of normal
production, can be very
.signifiant,". he said. . ,
"Webope that in the year
2000, when the world will
have six billion .people to
feed, we C!lll make sensible
use of the · protein fractions
and other useful products
from tobacco that will
otherwise literally be going
up in smoke," Tso said.
Pilot studies. to further
simplify the extraction
process for 'proteins are
. currently underway by Dr.
Tso and scientists in North
Carolina, Kentucky and
Maryland.
··

. .

Jiunes·
' rec~rd attacked·by Triplett.
.

, Gladys S. Snowball to
Thomas A. Snowball, 4.35 A.,
Sutton.

BARON BALKS
MIAMI IUP!)
Baron
Vlacti{nir Kurt von·.Pousental.
got a bit of a shock with his
' toast and orange juice
recently - an auto insurance
bill for 15,362.
The 81-year-old Von
·Pousental, who lives in
Miami Beach, complained it
was a bit steep for his twoyear-old chauffeured car and
wbal's more, his chauffeur
had not collected 70 points for
traffic
violations
hi s
insurance
company
claimed .
Oops, replied the insurance
company computer. One zero
too many against the
chauffeur.

· problems of Increases crime"'
is a poor record.
"The legislature's first
priority,,. Triplett said,
"must now be protecting the
victim in light of rising
crime, even In the rural areas
of the state. No matter how
desirable some programs
sound, we must first assure
that ·our citizens are free of
personal harm or threat to
their property.
"The legislature made

some progress, such as
tougher

pe~alties

PELE RETIRING
,MElfiCO CITY (UP! ) Brazillan soccer star Pele, in
his second season for tbe New
York Cosmos, says he once
again is retiring from the
game - next year.
In Mexico for talks about a
film on his _ sporting life ,
which brougnt three World
Cup . championships to his ·
Brazilian national team,
Pele, 35, said he would spend
t~ree years
after his
encourage citizens ' in· retirement, next SP.ptember,
volvement in .,toppin• crime. p1 omoting fo otball for
· commercia) fi.rn:'s .

pushers,' but did not bite the ., legislation to help ·combat
bullet and make a .systematic crime. Some proposals he
effort to effectively fight ' saili which have merit are:
crtme in Ohio," Triple\!
A universal telephone
added.
number to get pollee help.
Abolishing the adult parole
Triplett called his opponent's record "a record of authority and go to fixed
neglect. Ron James Is not for sentences.
criminals, but he also bas not
Adequate funding of
been a strong advocate in the pnsons to assure criminals
legislature of fighting crime. ar&lt; not let off because of
We need hard wor~ on this inadequ~te Iucllities.
problem, not just piecemeal
Proposals whi ch would

patchwork."

1

Triplett promised to work
for drug ,un legislatjon and :f't\oduce.

&amp;.,:..

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" "'·

,.,

With COBRA
Z-Way CB Radio

""

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·

Your worthy mtentlons lor persons you feel responsible for

be diluted by your
me,lhocJs . Clue them In on what
intend to do.
s (April 20-Mar 20)
Advice given you today could
be very sound. You 'll have to

pay a"ttentionto usel teffectlve- ·

GEMINI

.. '

.

Cobra19
• Super-Compact
• Built-in Speaker

•
PLAYjNG FIRE FIGHTERS - These third graders
of Hartford Elementary got to see the fire truck and
emergency vehicle belonging to the New Haven Squad
when the vehicles were brought' to the school as part of
Fire Prevention Week. At 'h' top is Jim Gibbs; in the
middle is Melissa Fields, and to her side is Hope Roush.

•

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•

abdominal injury and Lee
was superfici!llly wounded in
the face. Woods was listed in
serious condition today
following surgery and Lee
was in fair condition. a
hospital spokesman said.
Police said they chased a
shooting suspect believed to
be about 13 to 14 years old
through the crowd but were
unable to capture him.
An unidentified man
suffered a minor stab wound
during tbe celebration. He
was trJ:ated and released at a
local hospital,
The crowd.. began forming
about 6:30 p.m. shortly after
the.game ended. At first th~
crowd was made up of mostly
middle-a ged pers ons,
described by authorities as
well-dressed and orderly.
Initially, the enthusiastic
group chanted " We're No. 1"
as pages from telephone
books thrown from nearby
office
buildings
and
illuminated by two giant
search lights on the square
floated through the air like
confetti.
Later though,--when the
trouble began, police said tbe
throng was made up of
mostly young persons, many
of them dri nk ing beer ,
Slhoking marijuana and
shooting off firecrackers.
Authorities said the crowd
had thinned to near normal
by shortly after midnight.
The city had announced
before the game there would
~ no official celebration but

Similar. ce lebrations were

staged last year after the
Reds won the playoffs and the
World Series.

"~' .

I· .r U

'"'

today then stew aoout1tlater.
D1 s ~ 1 s s th ose neg at 1 ve

lhoughiS: what you d1d was
llgh&lt; • 1 the ''me.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The way you handle com.,erclal sJtuatiOfiS today ·ts
QU!Ie clever. thOugh yo u coul d
lOse a lew · pmn ts py obligi ng

!hose"Who don·1 deseiVe 11 .
CAPRICOR~ (Qec . 22-Jan . .

,., r

Middleoort

..

"

LAST WEEK
of Si.nger's Big Sale
(Sale ends Saturday, Oct. 16 l

..,.,

$19995·

..

··'- 1 I

NOW
ONLY
.SAVESBOOFF REG.
PRICE AND GET
THESE CONVENIENT
SINGER FEATURES.

"

.'" .,
·~

.I

••

Our Model 534 STYLI ST
MACHINE has a free
arm for sewi ng in.the·
rou nd , flexible stretch .
Sti t ches for knit and
str etc h fabr ic sewing
and
a ,· built -in
buttonholer.
Carrying
case or cabinet extra .

&lt;A

•

n,,'

60"

10% Discount to Home-Ec St.udeniS
" V•

The Fabric · Shop~
--- ·

McCall"s, Kwick-Sew,
Simplicity Patterns
115 W. Second
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2284 Approved Aiiihorized Dealer
~1

...... ,._

'

•..
U flt

'

"'"

....'"
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*
· toi.fitllis lifestyle

~1FT~

AOUARtUS (Jan. 20-Fob.

••

"

Lay-Away

•

Early For

••
•

Christmas!

••

o

I

••

,J •

•

" •=

•

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ALSO,
COMPLETE SELECTION OF JARMAN BOOTS
'

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••

A. Rhodes offering expanding ·
companie~ tax ~re~k., on

personal property and new
equipment investments. TcS·
tirnony was to resume inday
on the governor's bills.
''Til~ state of Ohl6lo; at a
1
·
clisUn ~t ( isadv&lt;J. ntagt! in
attracting and dev elopin g

busin~ sscs

have

(Feb. 20-March 20)
Enjoy yourself today . but don't
teet you have to spend a bun dle. Thmg s that are too costly
won 't be -tun anywaY.

..

~Your

. Pr.escription Drug Store

$19.50

r "-.

oolite

HALLOWEEN

8

ARE YOU IN 1H.E MARKET FOR A
DOUBLE WIDE OR MODULAR HOME?
If you are ready to make the move to
t.he carefree living of manufactured
housing, see us for a double-wide or
modular home.
We can handle your entire housing
needs. If you like, we will do the entire job.
This Includes sile preparation, septic
system,. concrete work, basement and
1
more.
By having all this on one contract; you
have only one obligation to meet.
We feature homes by .Skyline Corp., the
world's largest builder, and Fuqua Corp.,
the only manufacturer who offers a 10-year ,
homeowner protection

SUPER STAR SPORTS

GAME~

FROM
MILES
LABORATORIES

New

ONE.DAY.
' 1/lrAMINI

• RECOMMENDED
BY LEADING APPAREl
MANUFACIURERS
16 oz .

PlUI MINI!IIALI
AeASt t O ~ I' OIJ~ r~.~: ~Y'S
hUIIIII!liW. 11 1~1 111

Nelson's .

J

Reg. $1.69

30 Ct.

UNICAP
.VITAMINS

lYSOL
DEODORIZING.
CLEANER

Johnny Bench Baseball Game
John Havlicek Basketball Game
Archie Griffin Football Game

g~.¢
2~

oz.

Your
Choice

SAFE FIRE RETARDENT

Ne t Dl'
·' R.ey . !

J

FROM

$}99UP

Nelson's Reg. S2.98

$899

Nel so n's

1------------------t----·~$9:.9=5~~

PARSONS
lemon &amp;. Pine
28 oz.

SHOE LACES

19¢

UN ICAP
PLUS IRON

'"-PRESSU.~E COOKER

•BlACK
•BROWN

Nelson's Reg. 25c

i
'

I

BABY
SHAMPOO
16 oz.

I

i

I
-·- •.·---. l

·40 INCH

12
food 3 Ia 10 limes laster,
retains vitamins, minera ls, full natural
flavOrs of meats. vege tabl es. seasonings.
Sturdy lightweight aluminum for eBsy
handling.
'

6 qt. size. cooks

c

ORA FIX SPECIAL
'; \)\',i\,..ix spe~,o:\ ·. ·•;1•

-

·,trkux, s ""t'·

100 Ct.

Nelson's
. Reg , $1.09
t

~

MOUTHWASH
18 oz .

'

,,

Is!!~
...__
so i:t•

.79t

Nelson's
Reg. S2.49

.,,'

SUCRm
•'
' SORE lHROAT

·

SUCHETS
............_ .__,

S oz .'

..._

... - ... ·- - 11 1111•u

Regular or Mint

Regu lar
Children's.
24 ct.

Nelson 's
Reg . .7Bc.

lOZENGES

ss~
Nelson's
Reg. $1.21

CALGON

SECRET

BATH SOAP

ROll ON
ANTI-PERSPIRANT

•

Nelson's
·Reg. 33c

BATH OIL
BEADS

sac
Nelson's

Reg. $1.27.

AIM TOOlHPASTE

.•
II

I",..

I

"QUALITY ALWAYS'
Mon., lues., Thurs., Sat.; 9-7:30

Nelson's Reg: tl.l7

2/'1

00

I
I
I
I
I

'

.'

~P N

TOOTHPASTE

CARESS

SCOP~

tor rl:liiOI ot

For Sinus Headache

Special Holding Power!
Nelson's
Reg. $1.42

"

cr=l

SINE-AID

Nelson's
Reg . $3.09

NEW

Rel•ul

')

L)"H' •'·l i"'J'.Kii'lf"

___,

Nelson's
Reg. 87c

TABLETS

Kaopectat

Reg. $1.27

10 CT.

.

·~A\Jtt'-s~~§~

I Nelson's .
,73c each

'

oz.

Nelson's

GERITOL
TABLETS

*~lt,:m

PHILLIPS~
rJ.q,...,a

'

di;1rrMO

4 HOUR COUGH SUPPRESSANT
· REGULAR &amp; CHilDREN'S

MAGNESIA TABLETS

:;&lt;'

Nelson's
Reg. $19.77

HOLD

PHILLIPS

'. I'

IOOPECTATE

REG. 45'

Nelson's
Reg. $2.73

.'

•WHITE

NElSON'S

ASPIRIN

$}~
'

I

BAYER

90 CT.

Nelson's

'--

Nelson's Reg. $2.53

••

'·

I

GLENCO
'

AMMONIA

~&lt;lS I An t &lt;lC!d

100 Plus
24 FREE

Expires October 17, 1976

Wednesday- Friday I :00-9: oo, Sunday Closed
Pomeroy
192-7034 ·
Ohio
Ptarl Ash 992·33ll, Roger Davis. 192'7671

'

'"

COSTUMES .

COLD WATER WASH

$15.50

~&amp;~
~J~m .

'

PRICES GOOD OCT. 13-14-15-16-17

~il

!
, ..-:

I

PISCES

Plans and sp~cl,fl.catlon may
be ~;»bt~lned from the Ar .
chltects, Eesley, lee , Vargo &amp;
Cassady , 326 .Front Street ,
Marietta, Ohio, 45750, for a
deposit of S25 wh ic h will be
refunded If the documents are
r eturned unmarked and i ~
good condit ion within ten days L"-:
'"~..c,·cc·"'·--""'··· · ·~' . - --·-.after bid due date . Should no
propose 1 be subm itted and the ''Never mind that modern stuff,
drawings not r eturned f ive just dance!! "
davs before the bid d~e date,
the full amolJnt of the deposit
PUBLIC NOTICE
·
Bids wi ll be received ·at .the
w ill be forf ei ted.
Separa t e b i ds w i ll be Mayor 's Office until' 4 :00
r ece1ved on : '
P .M ., October 25 , 1976. 237
I. GENERAL CONTRACT Race Stre et for 8,000 ga llons
II. PLUMBING CONTRAGT ( m or e qr , less ) unleaded
Ill . HEATIN"G &amp; VEN - gasoline and B.OOO ga llons
TILATING CONTRACT
(more or less) leaded gasolin e
IV . ELECTRICAL CO N - for a period of one year
TRACT
,
co mmen c ing November 1,
All proposals must contain 1976.
.
the name of every person
Bidder will be reSponsible
interested therein, be su b- for fu rn i sh ing and ma in m illed on forms furnished by ta lning two ( 2) m etered
the Arch i.te,ts and ,. be a, . pumps and two (2) un 'ompanled by a satisfaCtory derground tanks.
Surety Bond or a Certified
The Vi llag e reserves th e
Check on a bank doi ng right toac ceptorrejectanyor
buslnes~ in the StaJe of Ohio, all bids .
.
·
in the amount of 5 percent of ·
the tota l vatue of the bid In Gene Grate ,
cluding all add alternates . Bid
Clerk -Treasurer
Vi llage of
sec urity will be returned
within ten days after contract
Middleport
f or the work · has · been
executed . F a ilure of anv {10) 6, 13, 2tc
bidder to enter Into and
exe,ute a contract for the
work covered by the proposa·l
he has submitted , within len
HAND ENGRAVED
days fol low ing not ice of award
of such work to hi m , sha ll
cause the bid security to
ber;:om e forfeited by the bidder
to the Owner as liqu idated
damages and• not as a
Penalty because of such
failure on the part of the
bidder.
Each bidder ::.na .. oe
prepared, In the event tie is the
accept"ed bidder, to furnish
performance and payment
bonds, In a form satisfactory
GOLD FILLED
to l he Owner , in the a mount of
100 percent of the COI.llract
OR
price,
guaranteeing . th e
successful completion or the
STERLING
work bid upon and payment of
all
obligations
arising
therefrom .
Proposals may be mailed or
delivered . If ma il ed, send via
registered ma il In time for bid
Bidders
shall
open[ng ,
designate on the envelope that
1 15 D
Ills a sealed bid, Ind ica te the
prolect being bid , the division
upon which he is bidding, the
name and address of bidder
and addressed to :
Sol.lthern Local Board of
Education
•• 17.
Soutt1ern Local H lgh School
Racine, Ohio 45171
The Owner reserves the
right to accep t any bid , to
w~lve anv or all Informalities
N 11 D
In bids o!lnd ·Or reject any or all
bids at his discret ion .
No bid may be withdrawn
for • period of 45 days .
By order ol the 'Southern
Local Bo ll r d of · Edu cat ion,
Racine , Oh io.
Mrs . Jane Wagner ,
Clerk

Hours:

,,

dr1ver"s seat.

"""11'\'

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19)

tfO"fiCE TO BIDDERS
Oct. 14, 1976
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of You r ·ambitions Wi ll be In high
Education of th e Southern gear th1s year. unhamp·ered by
Local School Dist rict at the !he inhibii!Ons of the pas t. You
Southern Local High School cr~n now let ou f alt the stops.
offlc~ at Racine , Ohio , un til
twelve o'c lock I 12 : 00 ) noon ,
prev_ailing
loc al
t ime,
THURSDAY , OCTOBER ~8.,..---------1976, and opened Immediately
thereafter, for .the furnishing
of all mater ials and per forming all" labor for the
er ec t ion of.

(10) 7, 13 , 20, 27, 4ft

·

Minor issues may ve.-. you to- .
d3y, but in si tuations that re'afly ·•.
count you "tf l1nd yourself In the

$15.50

. "'"
'I n',

-

••

c

''

administration ofCov. James

,,

byg£J~

•54" Wool &amp; wool blends

The t\\'O businessmt•n said

they favor proposalS by tbo

day. condJitons could d rift you
ott the mark Second ~ best is
nolhing to be asha med of. ·

LOCKEJS

•60" Suede

situation and, even more
importantly, to all industry
considering expandillg · or
building,'' said McFadden .

as compared with
Michigan ," Mitasik told the
&lt;·ommiuee , adding that
Michigan freezes real eslate
lax es and provides tax.
forgiveness of up to 12 years
on macllinery a1Ki equipment
uf expanding comparties.
Mitasl k
said · such
expansi ons "u ltimate ly
benefit
the
whole
&lt;:Qmmnnity" wiUl jobs, a
gri'llt!l&lt;... cc or•oo•lc base and
more u.iret-eipts. .
He said Utat since MichJgan
~Hi opte:d
its
economio
incentiws for industry, 94

,.

RACINE , OHIO

INGELS
FURNITURE

FLORSHEIM®
~HRIST

trying to convince a West
Gennan company to join in
localing a new auto clutch
manufacturing
facility
in
. ' ·
.
Oluo, bul .can pomt to no
induslrlal incentive~.
McFadden said Ule plant
I
wou d create 11several
. hundred jol:ri and have sales
of $10 million annually by the
second year of operation.
"We need your help in the
passage of tax and other
incentiv~.toenable oursta te ~
1
· very be st 1oot
Jo pace
Its
forward in this particular

..t..

'

advantage tit two yun -10
expand oper1U0111.
"Has there b.-n any·
evidence that ~
has increaaed stsnmcanUy?"
asked Rep . George 1&gt;.
Tablack, D·C•mpbell,
- c&lt;ii\mittee chalmian. ·
" You give me an
opportunity to put In .t.ht ' '
plants and I guar111tee you
there will be ~ jobf&gt; and
more tans being paid,"
replied Mltaslk. " Why? •
Because industry wanta 10
expand to make m!lley. I
think Ohio owes It to ltaelf to .
taken en~ct these lnceritiv.e~."

~Kiustry

19) Althougl'l you'll aim high to-

ADDITIONS TO

''"

Middle of Upper Block
Pomeroy,O.
Open All Day Thursday
Friday Night TiiB
Saturday 9 Til 5 ·

SC&lt;?RPIO (Oel. 24 ·N_ov. ~ 2 )

You re prone to act oR Impulse

SOUTHER.N LC)CAL
HICH SCHOOL

Punches through loud and clear .

Hartley's Shoes

tele9rBph yo"ur in t e ntion~ to.
day. Premature publicity cou ld
cau se delays.

quickly display your muscle.

UPI StatehoUse Reporter . sion with 100 new jobs for
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Two eight years.
industrialists have warl}j!d a
Michigan now offers
legislative
panel
they
will
linancialincentives
makingil
k
·
..
·
loo to other states to expand more profitable .to go there,
operations if new lax said Mitasik.
incentives are not enacted by
''We've looked at every
th Ohi
I .
.
.
e o Genera Assembly. p1ece of leg~siatlon on 1he
Charles . F. Mitasik of Ohio books and there's no
Grosse Point Wopds, Mich., incentive, even with Ute help
manager of · the Fruehauf of
the
Development
Corp.'s axle plant in Delphos, Department," he said.
Ohio, ·told the House Ways
J ohn .Y . McFadden,
and ~eans Committee . executive vice .President of
Tu es day . he has been MTD
ptoducts,
1nc.,
·
·
planillng·a $15 million expan- Cleveland, said· his firm Is

LAFF- A- DAY

(9bra.

•Co-ordinales for men's . wear · polyesler surline in plaids or plains

LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Don·t

You're slighlly extravagant to-

' Il l.

• Full CB service
• FCC license
application included

992-2635

Try to ove r t oo~ petty affronts
today _ Don't attaqh undue im·
portance to somethJng a' frlEmd
may do without th ink ing .

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0cl. 23) Ac·
quamtances should nol miStake ••noness '" you lor
~eakness &lt;May. 11 Y0 "' P"~c1ptes are cnallengcd you II

~Birthday

• Free demonstration

about 1,100 police were
assigned to. the downtown ·
area In anticipation of tbe
gathering.
'
Several streets around the
square were blocked off w
traffic aod giant traffic jams
formed near the area.

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22)

$9995

Now Only

'

. ....

Noise Limiter
Dynaboost
Adjustable Squelch ·
External Speaker
jack
Maximum Legal
Power
FCC Type-accerted

(Moy 21 -June 20)

Gains should offset losses today, but there co uld be much
more without careless mistakes th at have a way of addmg
up.

&lt;I{.,

and Automatic

-

State.·. Representative
candidate Merrll Triplett
today S.id, "The leglslaiure,
Including state represen·
tative Ron James, has done a
poor job of fighting crime."
Triplett
said
the
' legislature's !allure · to
elirrtinate shock parole 'for
convicted
felons,
the
le~islature's. failure
to
provide a mandatory sen·
ten&lt;e for individualS for first·
time rape convictions, and
the legislature's failure to
"re.yty
exam\ne
the

GrapI"I

AIRES (March 21-April 11)

Tobacco protein may feed masses
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
research scientist for the
Agriculture Department feels
a high-quality protein
byprqduc,t 91 tobacco could
become a'% urce of food for
humans and ·animals enough to feed between 33
and 63 milli~ peopl~ by the
year 2000. ·
Dr. T.C. Tso of Ute USDA's
Agricultural Research
Service at nearby Bellville,
Md., adda that removing the
protein from tobacco also
eliminates undesirable
components ·from tobacco
smoke. .
. The key tO the successl\lt
removal ~eln from leaf
inbacco, according to the
USD/., is a process known as
homogenized leaf curing macerating the leaf ·into a
slurry form, then extracting
and ,purifying the protein
much like the crystalization

Astra~ ~:~~~~~7:~~~~~~"::~~~~~~ Tax incentives for ·industry urg.e_d

~

For Thuf'8de,, Oct 14 1971

Three injured
in celebration

THE "HAPPY · LAND"
Pomeroy, on Oct. 24, 3 p.m.

0

u •.....

!!ornico Bodo 0101

•
•
•

•

, ...: The DaUySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,d., Wednesday , Oct.l3,1976

Nelson's
Reg . $1.39,
'

88'··,
1\

.'"

'

�·r

u-:;;~,A;,~~·Middle::;:eroy,o W~sday,OcjF~r
.•

• DI,ADL NES
P .M . Oav
Befor e
Canctllttlons .
correc

S

hove

mort than one Incorrect
Inse-rt ion .
RATES

For Wlnt Ad -strvlct
5 cents pe r word one
Insert ion Charge II ()0 .
Minimum
1&lt;4 cerits per word th re e
c onsecutive Insertions
26 Cfl)h
word SIK
c onsecuflve nurtlons
'25 P e r •Cenl Discount on
j)ei'd eds end •ds pe ld
within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
U .OO
for
50 word
._minim u m .
' Eecf\ add itio nal word J
cen ts .

r,er

Addlt ~~~~~2~~S Charge

per Adv ertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8. )0 a .m . to 5. 00 p.m .
De il y, 8 : 30 a .m . t.o 12 . 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 99 2 2f56
NOTICES

ATTN.: ! !

ALL HOUSEWI VES
All Yard S a l ~s . Rumma ge,
Porc h and S.llsement Porch
and Basement Sllles, etc
· mus t be paid in advan ce .
Get yours In early by
s topp ing bv our offi ce at
The Da ily Sen ttngl. 111
Cou r t St , tQri1 writing BOK
729, Pom e r o.,. , Oh io 4;7 69
w ith your rem 1llance .

&amp;illl.e Jiijwie,.='t9f ~e
MOBILE· home fo r sole or rent . 3
bed rooms, ol utilities paid.
Pho ne 992-7751
12,;6o mobile home w1th 7 acres
of land nea r Me1gs M 1ne 1
Phone 742-2746

·,

~ ~.fr~""-::;!~~:.;;,.:=.'
.~;;:5:;-;E ;:;o_R_s-Es :~;;";.;.:~.;

gun shoot Soturdoy at
h · ~.. . _ ld '
·
01 1 81 ' ou l 11'9 '"

\' ard Sa,H.

Bosh on

PETE and Gene's Garage IS now Jn

,.:.

,_: wont to bu.,. or sell ~om ethl ng ,

BEGINNE RS ond immediate t oke
decora ting classes. . Fot more
mlo rmotion call Jaone Pe1ly ,
742-2818 or l ots Wa lker 7A2·
2333.
·
NO W accepting piano sludenll ,
begi nners, Intermedia te s, odvancud students. Coli 9922270
·
R~VIVA~ mee ting , Rutland CommunityChurch, Oct , IS. 16, 17 ,
7:30 p.m. nightly . Rev. Rolph
k
M
Spires , We llston , -speo et , '
R
lnvhar
and Mrs . . Charles
p
A t,
We 1lston , smgers. os 1or mos
Tillis invhes the public ._ _

GARAGE Sole, October 13 &amp; l.ath,
nOrth Mom St .. Rutland , Ohio.
Nice g1rl 's clolhing, ronge
hood, homv"mode bread and
olher 1tems.

yet

'

•I •

'

-~

1

rn
... ·,;,...
.,. .

He!P-wifu@J -of. ::o=~!_-;oe'f.

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) Memorial services will be
held today for Gerald Pidge ,
retired sports editor for the
Los Angeles Times who died
Saturday. He was 116.

-

~----

"~

'

'

LOCUST POSTS, round or split .
Phone 949-2774
COAL , lt mestol'\8 , and colc1um
ch loride and calc iu m brine for
dust co ntrol a nd special miKing
salt fo r farme rs . Main Street ,
Pome rov Ohio or phone 992-

3691.
'1971 HONDA CL·•SO

2d32

1975 Ouster , 6 cy li nQ.er outolnoll( ,
p.s vinvl top , 15,000 miles, excellent co ndition . $2500. Two
twi n size rn ottrenes, excellent
condtti on. Portable Fngtdo1re
dishwasher in w of ~ing condi ltOn . $10. Con be seen at HB
H1gh St , Midd leport afte r 5
p.m. __ ----

Anti-Freeze
Gal.

CO.OP .BRAND
Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~

..

1

'''bo•

GRA IN led beef. 35c lb. Phone
985-419B

-------

HOOVER spin dryer washer. EK·
cellent condllion , reasonable .
Phone 949·2523.

-APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE 68'1 PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (6142669·3785. _

FRIGIDAIRE refrigera tor, ex celle nt condition, $60 Phohe
992-2301.
All steel boJC wood stove, $.45.
Contact Verltie Midk iff , Cherry
Ridge Road:~·-.,.,.-- · --·
MODERN stereo , AM -FM rod1o , B
frock tope combination.
Balance $97 ..f0 or terms. Call
992·3965.
'WANTEO i Responsible pO rty to
assu me n&amp;t balance on th is
spine t piano with be nch by
Kim boll. Walnut In perl&amp;et condition, free de livery In your
area . Wrtle: ltqu1dotors, 272 E.
Mo1n St reet, Chillicothe, Ohio
' 45601.

'

• .)amll,..lree, chest of drawers, cedor chest, 3 pc.

·f ·i tlwk~ase bedroom suite, rollaway bed, glider, lawn

.l,

~ren~e Donohue Jame$ Carnahan

9-2033
\·~ v i

•

,,~,,-:300

949-2708

· · · '
slblt lor· accidents or loss_of oroperty
~·

POMEROY MOTOR.CO.

SALt
4tW waa.llurnlng stove.' ·

EftJtlnt' tt2-7»CC
• lt -l mo

'--'--'---'----:-- ~--

Reg1s tered Chi nese Pug NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 bo ths ,
fema le , 7 mon ths old. shots.
all e lec , I acre, M1ddl eport,
wormed , excellent blood line .
close to Rutland . Phone 99274B l .
Phone 9B5 -36::_:9_o6_--c~---;:,--1971 V.W. looks and run! like SMAllla rm lor sole , 10% down ,
new! Good ti res , stereo ,
owne r fina nced. Monroe Coun ·
$1450. Also, 1967 Ford Super
tv , W. Va. Phone {304) 772Von , $400. Phone {614) 69B3102 or (3().4)772-3227

·--

Southeastern Oliio
Truss Rafter Co.

-

....... ,2-2111

t

mattresses, padding. Ideal
for ·campers. Variety of

¥K 9754
tJ S

nylon prints,
herculo"s, vinyl solids. and

'9ia Main Street

'!MIS IS 1\mlAPf'J..J; ... ~~'$
:LIWII&lt;IQ;I..I fa&lt; M5 fCR 1l.lO W!ie~S.

Pt. Pleasant
Ph. 675-34419
9:30-5:00 Doily
TIIII :OOll Frlda.!.ys::_......:.J

,..~_

.

I'V~ t!efJN Willi THI£ awfl+'J{

4 96

, roll- 14 Y~A~! ..

N'E\ttbef.' vulnerable
Wut

_

TO: BIDDERS
SUBJECT : Mater- rats and
Iebar ror installation of
gymnasi um . bleachers
FOR : The
Board
of .
Education of the SoUthern
Loca l School Distr ic t, Racine,
Oh io 45711
Sealed proposa ls will be
rece111ed by the Board of
Education of the Southern
Loc;e l School Distr ict at the
Southern Local High School
office at Racine, O_hlo, until
twelve
(12 : 00)
n oon ,
pr evail ing' loc.!!ll time, Thursday . October 28, 1976, and,
op e ned
i mmediately(
thereafter, for the furn ishing
of all materia ls end per.'
form ing all labor for the ln'stallatton of gymnasiu m
bleachers in the Southern·:
d
Loca l High School.
Sp&amp;cifications may be o ~
talned from · the office of the.
Clerk -Treasurer
of
t~f;
Southern Local Boa r d ~
Education, Box 176, Raclf'! ~

GLEN R. BISSELL
Aft41-2101

No odor. Use the
same day.
All work

Or

9"·2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
\
9-J0-1 mo.

guaranloo~.

BRADFORD, Aucti oneer, Complete Service. Phone 9•9-2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford .

•L1T1'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

L I T T L £;,...;:;..:.;..;.,

A w N I ~ - M 4 c "' ,. R ' I

. of level land In Tuppers .
Plains. Otd 7 room house,
v~ bath, garfge, cellar, for

NEW LISTING bedroom

·

11e

n ·

2 or 3
In

Syracu ;_;nl
kitchen ,
gas' F.A~~~!!; front and
side porches. Nice corner

lot. $15.0110.
2 bedroom

frame home with nice gas

F.A. furnace, modern bath
and kitchen. Paneling and
full basement.

NEW l tS~ IN'tt- ·I yr( 'old
3 • b~room ' :r,me. Nice
bath, large -~J In kitchen,
therm -o -pane , windows,
garage ahd lot 95K 115.

Ask ing m .0110 .

·

WOODS - 29 acres. Good
site for lake, T. P. water, 3
bedroom trailer, l'h baths.
hide -away

for

$21,5110.

NEW LISTING - In
Middleport. 2 bedrooms,
modern bath, dining and
llrepla~e. 2 porches and
level lcit at 116,500.
FREE GAS- 15 acres for
the children. 3 bedroom
renovated home. A·l
Inside, wife kitchen, gas
F ! urnace and gas wtl l.

NEW LISTING- 2 lcits In
subdivision .

Partly wooded with T.P.
water. s.i,OIIO.
NEW LISTING- 2 acres
In the country, new garage
with extra rooni and 112

.

modern

kitchen,

fireplace, N.G. hcit water

u,soo .oo -

A real

ul'tra

heat, 2 corner ,lots close to

shopping. ASKING
$20.000.00.
LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-%259

of Listings.

Call Us Now
104 W. Mlln
992·2298

Pvmeroy

means

CONTACT:
l.elo Powley

lrendiMo....,.

·

·outbuildings, 2 ponds. A nice laying farm priced to go.
Located near Chester ,_call for appt .
'

NEW LISTING -

1

~;r:J~Q-1
··~HC~~Wj~~~~::~fM€8a~~3l~~be~(E~)Ft~~~%9~pe
HONTI-IRILUN6 1fiS
MEB8E '&gt;O'D LII&lt;E:fOC!A~rT lK..f~ot::.
down!

iii.:

1

1b HA.V5' A )ttJNG 1N&gt;N CALL ON Mr::.'!!
Ht;R£;5 otJ5' DRAQJ/-A )7/~AA\E V.CULD )tf Ul&lt;r::. IO TIJRI\J 5Q\o\E
Ti-!ANI&lt;!:i-H TAU6HT It'£-

Sq. Yd.

~~~~~

OR V/0:-Vr::.RSA ?-- .

31

~:~&gt;
Romeo's

~~
Jet

l ;M5DRRYII JU&amp;T
WANTED llJ GE.T
'THOSE POLICE

OFF OUR TAILJ

AXYDLBAAXR

WHAT MAKEf7 YOJIHINK.
ANYONE$ LOOKIN0 FOR:
YOUr YOU SAID NO

Is

One lcller • imply stands for another. II\ ihls sample A l,s

ONE CAI&lt;EI7 WHE'THER

YOU LIVED 0~ 17/ED!

CNRSH

,.
r-· •
.

furnace, cl1y water and well water, a beautiful home

·

sv~

acres of land, fruit trees and shade

CALL JIMMY DEEM949·2388

I. 0 H G F E L L 0 W

used for the three I.'s, X ful' the two O's, etc. Single lc1ters,
apostrophes, the lcnr::th ;mel form ation of the words are aU
hint s. F.nrh d:•)' th e rode lctl crs are dilferen ~.

pyrchased with the 113 acres listed above and
developed Into a beautllul 18 hole goll course, call lor
appt.

Man., Tues., ed. •
8:00ti15: 00

Cee,

•
•
,.

•

'
•... ..,
·• e •

t

4l

•
, ··•
, ;/'··

~·

Close Sat. At 5 p;m.l. •
· et ·

e ••••••• e
RUTLAND fURNITURE

1 742·2211

t

llllilll~u .. ,.,.,_.

...

t&lt;iJ'f"LlND

~-------~------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~
t
I
~

8,10.

11 :55-·Tokt Kerr B; Ms. FIKit 10.
·~
12 : ~N ews 3,6,B, 10; Hot Stat 13; Bob Brtun 41. 50 J
Gnnd Siam 15.
•
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 4,13; Sterch
for Tomorrow 8. \0 .

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-Somerset 3; Ryan' a Hope 6,13 ; Concontrotlon I;
Young 8. the Restleu 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3, 4,15 ; Family Ftud 6,13; At
The World Turns I, 10.
2 : ~$20 ,000 Pyramid 13; Dlnoh 6.
2:3()-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
• 3 : ~Anothor World 3.4.15; All In Tho Ftmlly 1, !Oi
Antiques 20.
3:15-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; ~atc h Game 8, 10; Llll11 Vago &amp;
, You 20.
4 : ~Mistor Cartoon 3; Morcua Welby, M.D. 4;
Howdy Doody 6; Somersot 15; Mlckoy Maull Club
8; Sesame St . 20,33; Movie " Thott- MegnlfiiCIIII
' Men In Their Flying Machines" 101 Dinah 13.
4:3D-'-My Throe Sana 3; Emergency One 6; Ptrlrldte
Family 8; Fllntstones •lS.
s · ~Big Volley 3; Morv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch I;
Mister Rooers 20,33; Star Trok 15.
5:3()-News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc. l;o. 20,33; A!jom.
12 \3 .
6 : ~News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC Nowa 6; ZOom 20;
Consumer EKperl"'co 33.
6:3()-NBC Newa 3,4,15; ABC Newall; Andy Grlfflf416;
CBS News 10; Hodgopodgt Lodgo 20; lTV ·
Utilization 33.
7 : ~Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell tho trulh4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show I; Nowa 10; To Toll IIIII
Truth 13; Family Affair 15; Anyonolor TeMVIOft?
20; Getting On 33.
7·30-Hollywood Squtros 3:,4; Ohio Star. Lottery 61
Price Is Right 8; MacNoii·Lthrtr 20,331 Wlkt
Kingdom 10; Naohvlllt.., tho Road 13; Dolly 15.
B : ~Gomlnl Man 3,4,15; Wtlcomo Bock, Kollwr 6,11;
Waltons 8,10; Et.-nal Fr..,fler 20; Mealtrploce
Theotre 33.
8:3()-Barnoy Miller 6, 13.
9:1l0-Best Sellers 3,4,15; Tony Randell 6,13; Howell
Flve·O 8; Hollywood Televlolon Thutre 331 Movie
"5 Card Stud" 10; Fight to bt remtmbtrtd20.
9:30-Nancy Wolkor 6, 13.
9:55-Polltlcal Pragrom 8.
lO : ~Dick Van Dyke 3,4, 15; Slrtela of Son FroneiiCO
6,13; Barnaby Jonea 8; ·Newa 20.
10:3()-Women 20,33.
10 :55-Pollfltol Prooram 8.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Roport

I

VR N

wu ·z

LOOKV, LOWEEZV-·
MV LEETLE ARI&lt;V
IS A REGULAR

'urTI·(J
'HALEXE1 .

WR
Q IQZ

RV

FGVVSNZSW . - LGO·
OIPJZE

.•

FRIDAY Tl L8

•I

Y R J SW

YU R R 0 Z

•.

Thursday 8til12 noon

e

SR W

AZGSH_

••••

W

I

J)AILY CRYPTOQUOTE 7 Here's how to work It :

FR

=It'

'I

33 Cartoonist
Gardner 35 SJwepokjn_
:rJ Jewish
month , , I':nO+~f--+-f---+~
38 Instinctive
39 Saucy
'--..1....4-....L.-J.......f-

·,

('RVPTOQUOTES

SPECIAL -_: 3 bedroom and attached gaioge, totol '
electric home under construction on y, ocre lot. OWner
wlllflnlsh In JO days for bUyer or will sell "osls". Mi&gt;y
take trode. Located near Chester.
COOLVILLE- Ni ce mod. llt'lck homecontalnl&lt;lg three
bedrooms. dining room, llvlnp room with fireplace, lull
basement with garage, large front porch , nal. gas .

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14,1976
Somtlttr 10.
6:15-Faim Report 1l.
6: 20-Not lor Women Only 13.
6:30-0SU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrltt Somoeltr I;
Urban league \0,
6:.&amp;.S-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Stalt 13.
7:il0-Today 3,j,15; Good Morning, Amorlce 6,13; CIIS
News 8; Chuck While Reporlo 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny L Frlendo 10.
7:3()-Schoollos 10.
8:1l0-Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 1.10; S111m1 St. 33.
B: 3()-81g Valloy 6.
9:1»-A.M. 3; Phil Donohuo•, 13, 15; Lucy Show I ; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:3o.-::&lt;:ross·Wifs J; One Lilt to Llvt6; Good Dl!' 1.
. l O : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Prlcols Right I, 101 Mike
Douglas 13.
10:15-Genorol Hosplfal 6.
10 ;3()-Hollywood Squaru 3,4,15.
11 :~Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8, 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
11:3()-Stumpero 3,4, 15; Happy Daya 6,13; Love of Lilt
! : ~Sunrise

33.

and seeding equipment, needs some mowing and a
little repair · work on golf course . . This could be

with approx.

desUnation

Doltars 6; Pop Goes the Country I; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; Family Afftlr 15; Consumer Survlvel
Kit 20; Marco Sporllllt 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3: 1100,000 Ntmo Thti-.Tuno. 4; Mafcl1
Game PM 6: 125,000 Pyramid I ; MacNoii ·Lihror
20.33; The Judge 10: Brook the Bonk 13: Wllol
Kingdom 15. '
8:00-Wt Think You Should Know 3; Wonclor Wom.,
6,13; The Procllct 4,15; Gunsmokt I ; Novt 10.331
Good Times 10.
.
8:*-Movle " Scott FrH" 3,•, 15; $25,000 Pyr1mld tO.
9 : ~Baretta 6, 13; All trl The Family 8, 10; Thtlttr I~
America 33; One of • Kind : John Prlne20,
9:30-AIIco 8, 10.
lO:oo-cQuest J,j, 15; Chortle' a Angela 6,13; B!uo Knlthl
8, 10; News 20 .
10 :55-Palltlcol Proorom 8,10.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MocNeii-Lthrer Roport ·
33.
11 :3()-Johnny Corson 3,4, 15; Rooklos6,13; Movlt " Tho
Private Novy of Sot. O' Ferrtll" I ; Mary Hertmlll
10; ABC Hews 33.
12 : ~Movlo "The Fllm.Ftam Man " 10; Janekl 33.
12 :4()-Mystory of tho Week 6,13.
! : ~Tomorrow 3,4,
2: 1()-Nows 13.

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Strotlo of s., FrMCI6, 13; kolak 8: Mary Hartman 10; ABC Nowa33.
12 : ~Movle " The Slender Thread" 10; Jtnekl 33.
12:3()-Movle "The Astr.,.ut" 8.
12:4()-Dan August 6, 13.
l :ilO-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:50-News 13.

n1ce mooern club house, outbuilding with all spray 1ng

trees surrounding II. Plenty of garden space, good
fishing area close by, located In Coolville, Ohio. P,rlced
at only $32,0110. Coli now.
SIACRESFREEGAS-Modernl'l•'storyhouse,Jb( .,
dining room . fire place, lull basement, nice porches
and out bulldlngo. L~rge scenic lake with green grass
and pine tre.. around 11. ·watch the large bass owlm
along In the clear water. Pre"y as! picture. Priced to
sell $37,500.00.
.

game

37 GJ letter

course

RUnAND
FURNITURE

Ever dreall) of owning your own

cultured
3AJ Tyke's.

(abbr.)
27 Social
groop
%8 Celtic
deity

Do II yoursolf, w!~~! l
podding, S7.95 sq. yd. Ui
paddlnt lnstollod SI.!IS&lt;I
squoro yanffi
Caii74Z·2211
TAlk TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

golfcourse? Here's your chance for vou or yOur friends
to own a nice rolling gOlf course," 50 1h acres. 9 gree ns•.

480 B.C.

creation

31 Tres

ations

Grten, gold, rad, blut, ru11.!•

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, servke, all mohs . 992·22a.. . The
Fabr ic Shop . Pomeroy .
AuthOrized S1nger Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

"Dinner

money
%7 Backbonea
%9 Struck
30 Oyster's

21 Pre-med

501 NYLON

(614)698-7257 Albony.

113 acres farm , BO acres tillable

for racehorses

Francoise at - 's"
21 Windflower
25 They have ,.....,_,,_.,..,...
combin·

II or 15 Fl.

D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yeor~ experience . In s ured freci
estimates Coli 992·2384 or

.

5 Japanese
1• "The Holy
wild dog
Simer"
6 Eat
author
away at
It "South
7Hlgh (mus.) Pacific"
I Donkey
role
(3 wds.)
Z2 Higtrstrung
t Keyes'
23 Battle of

23 Novelist,

Everyday . m..,oy SIVar
Good choice colors.

NEIGLER Building Supplies for
buildmg houses , (Oblnets ,
plumbing. Phone 949·2608,
Racine, Ohio.
GAS end Oil Heating Soles and
Service, 24 hours , Phone 8.a3·
2165 or 8.43-2341 ,

992-7132

land, nice 2 story farm house, 7 rooms &amp; bath, all
hardwood floors and basement. Barn and other

10,95

1

"reveal"

an

INSTALLED
Rtgulor S14.1S

9'12·5858.

After Houn C. II

cENTRAL REAtn af
HEW LISTING -

Will trim or .cut trees and shrubbery. Phone 9.49-2545 or 7•2·
3167 .
MOBILE Home Repolr , Elec.,
plumbmg and heating . Phone

grasses

11 Uke a hatter
17 Drench
(n;:~:;;;-h;;;;;;-;;:;-- 18 Become
wider
aDDOi;ntrr' ent,? 20 Allegiance
21 Nwnber of
Muses
Z2 Sound; pitch

HI-LO SHAG

Phone (614) 593-B906.

!Do you heve a quest!IJn
for the experrs ? Write ·"A$k
the 'Jacobys " cere or this
newspaper rhe Jacobys will
answer inr;Jrvidual questions
II stamped, se lf-addressed
en11elopes are enclosed The
mosr interesting questions
w11/ be used in this co lumn
and will recewe co pres ot
JACOBY MODERN.)

delight
41 " - a Rose"
5 Beverage
(1925 110ng)
convenience
DOWN
(2 wds.)
I Whirlpool
11 Globule
2 "I 12 Doll named
for You"
Dahl
(1922 song)
13 Disastrous
3 Cutting up
Yesierday'o Au we~
If Write down
(2 wds.)
15 What "da"
I Poetic
10 Slang .term
%5 FU!111Y

CARPETING

STOCK . Buy , sell, trade. 478
Rich land , Athens , Ohio 45701 ,

To Sell

my

-tO Marsh

ACROSS
I Yodeler's

DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTlC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW 110 1 7, 13, 20, 17, &lt;lc
SOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BIU
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.
SAVE
HOCKING RIVER Tradmg Com.
.ON
~any, GUNS-OVER 250 IN

Great Need

A Cali fornia reader wan ts to
know the meaning of an open·
five-spade bid .
t has no meaning In nor mal
bidding . Someone once
suggested It should ask
partner to bid six with the ace
or king of the suit, but the bid
never took hold .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

TEAFORD

We Are In ·

..

~~~

6iHMwJfl'

'o.

small yard. 3 BR, bath,
large living, full basement.
~ . W . floors, carpeted, new
steel siding. SlB,OIIO.OO.
DON'T PAY high rent. Buy
this 2 story frame. Roof,
siding &amp; carport like new.
Small yard. J rooms. N.G.
heat. $7,5110.00.
OLDER 2 story brick
home. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths,

No'rlb Ea11 South
1•
Pass 2t
Pass 34
Pass It
Pass 4 •
Pass 5 t
Pass Pass Pass
Opening y ad - 5 ¥

By Qlwald'&amp; Jameo Jacoby
Today's hand..., rea.ched us
fro!ll an Oregon reader. It
seems that he played five
diamonds and went down one.
This was after the opponents
led a heart to the ace, a heart
back to the king and a ruff of
D E=JiGp;R;;.;;E:..E::....,-..--:--:-, the third heart. .
•
North felt that with only
~:,;&lt;s,;oR eight high-ca rd points , South
"
should have responded one
notrump, not two diamonds.
But after he had responded
two diamonds, he should have
passed the three-spade bid .
Three spades would have
made , since North would lose
. just two hearts and two
spades.
The hand brings up some in·
teresting points in bidding .

____ _

NEW ltSTING -l'h acres

'

J B3 . '
'
t A K 10964 l

PUBLIC NOTI£E

CONTACT

t QB 3
4 J ,8 52

.6

DIRfCT FABRIC SALES

FREE ESTIMATES!

¥ AS

410 743
SOUTH

fancy prints, 11ccessor1es.

7-18-4 mos .

EAST
4 Q 10 4 2 '

4 J8

···~!t!ltst

·w, Deliver

.........

WEST

·For sofl, chair cushions,

BoX21·A
Rutland, Ohio 45n5
Ph. I614)74Z-Z409

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.

u~fm~-

Thus, we would respond two
diamonds with the South hand .
A seven-card suit to the ace·
king Is worth bidding .
However, we would have tried
lhree notrump as o~r second
bid With that South hand . Then
if North passed and he should
do just that, South would wrap
up that .three notrump
We would be lucky. West
would start with a heart and
the third heart lead would
clear the suit , but unfor·
tunately for the defense there
would be no way for West to
get In to score his last two
hearts. With some other lead
the play Is more complicated,
but any player worth, his salt
would still -bring home nine
tricks by careful play .

NORTH IDI
4AK97Sl
• Q 10 2
t 7
•AKQ

7191. -c--'--:-:---:---COUNTRY farm land with sedud ·
197&lt;4 Vega Hatc hback , automat ic,
ed woods, water and good acELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Ohio '5771.
.
4 cyl. , 24 ,000 mi les. Very clean ,
cess in Monroe County, W Vo
Sweapers , toasters, irons, oil
All proposals Sh!ll be act~~
Stiver $1,795 or best olfer.
$1 ,000 down , ca ll (304) 772 3 Bedr oom frame, a lu minum
small applia.n ces. lawn mower, . companied by a satlstactor ~
Phone (6 14}698·7191. ·
ng, 7 roo ms , 2 baths,
3102 or (3~ 772·3227 .
next to State Highway Goroge , Surety Bond or e Certlfht&lt;J,
dern
houSe.
Gos
heal
,
T.P.
1'976 Chevrole t 4 wheel drive TUPPERS Plai ns, new 3 bedro
' ) 9"5 ' Check on ll blink do ingon
. Route 7 Ph one 161" g • business' In the State of Ohio)
1te r, 2 porches, '1, bosement .
truck Pho ne 949-2132
homes, bod t-in kitchen s. 11.
3825.
In th~ amount of 5 percent of
SO, o general store next
bat hs carpeted with ottochl
THE unders1gned wi ll sel ~ ot
uvor, 20x30 w1th basement. REMOOiiliNG, Plumbi ng, heat ing the total value of the bid . Bid
ga
rage
,
1
acre
lot
.
$22
900
public sole for cash the follow·
and dll ty pes of generol rapoir. security w ill be returned '
;,iet o home and business lor
Pho ne (61 4) 667 ·6304
Work guaranteed 20 years ex- with in ten days after contract
mg mo tor veh1cle to be tak en
o)nly $18,500 . Loca ted tn
for the work has been.
from George Jol,nson, Beech 3 Bedroom, I both, utilif'l' room , I
Boshon , Ohio . AlSO, hove two
pe rie nce . Phone992-2409.
executed . Failure of any.
Street Apts ., Middleport , Oh1o
cor
garage.
tota
l
e
lectri
c,
115x·
homes lis ted In the Racine EXCAVATING , dozer . loader and bidder to enter into and•
45760 . 1969 LTD . 4 dr H.T.,
11 5 lot , Hutchison Sub ·
area. looking for o nice full y
backhoe work, du mp trucks execv le a contrect for the
Seo riol No 9W66Y-167-578. The
Division, Ru tland Phone 7.42modern wtt h 1.2 a cres of land
nd lo- boys for hi re; will haul work ~;overed by the proposal
a
so le will be held at The Formers
he has subm ltted, wlthln tenr
2869 .
in the Eas tern area? Being sold
fill
dirt , to .soil limesto ne a nd days following notice of award!
Bonk and Savings Compa ny ,
by owner, CALL OR SEE George
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jet - of such work to him , shall1
21 I Wes t Second Street ,
S. Hobste11er, Jr. Real Es tate
ters, dey phone 992·7089, c:ause the bid securltr, td;1
Pomeroy. Ohio . at 10:00 A.M.
Broke r. Phone 985·4186 alter .f
night phone 992-3525 br 992- become forfeited by the b dder,
on th e 16h day of October ,
p.m. or Hilton Woll e , Sr.,
5232.
to the Owner as liqu idated
1976. The under signed rese rves
Salesman, 9.49-2589, Rodne,
damages and not as! penally::
the right to b td. THE FARMERS
dozer bockho~ because of such failure on th ~
. ~o~h~;·~·----~~---~ EXCAVATING,
BANK AND SAVINGS COMond dilchar. Charles R: . Hot- part of the bidder .
· -t
HOUSE fo r .so le, 5 rooms and
PANY , Pomeroy , Ohio.
lield , Bock Hoe Ser vice,
' Proposals may be mailed Ofl
bath, all e lectric, partially
Rutland , Ohio . Pho neH2-2008. delivered . If mailed , send vi ii
carpeted polio See Irene Cunreglstered .mai l ln time for bi d:
B idders
shal &amp;
diff , Fourth Street, Syracuse , SEPTIC Systems Installed by open ing .
ltcensed installer. Shepard des ignate on the envelope tha t'!
Ohio.
149
Near
Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
It is! see led bid, the name a ncr
LARGE Gara ge Sole, Sa m Arnold
address of b idder and ad {
Chester. Free gas and
residence, Apple ond , Water SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Mode rn dressed to : Southe rn Loca l
Income from well, tim·
Sonitotion, 992-3954 or 992· Board of Education, Jane
Sis ., Sy racuse·, Ohto Thurs.,
ber, stocked pond, fru it
2.f28.
Wagner , Clerk -Treasurer ,
Friday and Saturday, 10:00 a.m.
trees, barn &amp; other
Sox 176, Racine, Oh io .aS771 •
to 4·00 p.m (Rain or shine;
WILL do roofing , construction ,
The Owner reserves th_.,
buildings, nice home has 5
plumbing and heating . No job right to accept any bid , to
bedrooms
,
bath
,
dining
,
Vtrgil B. Sr., R111tor
too Iorge or too 11moll. Phonv waive any or all informantieJ.;
carpeted, paneled, garage.
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .
742-23-48.
In bids end -or reject any or all't
JUST 142,0110.110. •
bids at his di sc retion
1
Phone 992~33'~
CARPENlER, flOoring, ceiling,
No bid may be withdrawn
GRACIOUS 2 story older
paneli ng. Phone 992-2759.
far a period of .as day~ .
..
1~ TOWN Beautiful
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
By ~rder of the Southerr1'
older home near shop.
DOZER work and weldin g. Con- Locel Board of education,
nice kitchen. carpeting,
View of river, 3 bedrooms,
tact James Parso ns , Rt . 1, Rac ine, Ohio.
paneling, 2 car garage, .69
1112 baths, hot water heat
Racine, on Carmel Rood.
acre SlB,OIIO.OO.
,
129,500.
Jane Wagner,
NICE RANCH TYP_E EXCAVATlNG, BACKHOES AND
Clerk

bath. A 3 be&lt;froom air
conditioned mobile home
with 1'1' baths. $24,0110.
WE
HAVE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE. COME IN WHERE ~
YOU CAN DO . YOUR
REAL
EStATE
BUSINESS.

PMienJJ Llndmllk
9. , Jaco .V. UtrMy, Mgr.

POlY-FO---':ft

~-

No muss. No fuss.

t969 Ford LTO any reaso nable HOMESITE$ for sole, 1 acre and
pricvs accepted , Phone 992up. Midd leport , near Rutland
2395.
Call992 ·7481.

I WAS MERELY ~EFI&gt;RRING TO
THo PR08LGM OF EVADIN G
POL.ICI' PURSUIT!

P1IIM fU-2114

Revive
o~!1g~I~:~,~;Ln
of
yourthe
rugs.
I
your own home
by_.Von Schrader
dry-foam method.

1 ustd Homo lilt Choln
1 Ustd Mcciirrouv~ chain
uw
.
175

.

IUIIIINUII
SIDIIIG-SGifiTI

with aluminum or vlny I
siding.

· NowS21US
Now fuol oil stove. Reg·.
$372.37
.
.
Now$222,37
N.w Coo0p water 101!111or·
Reg, Sl4f.f5 , Now 121f.95
S200

IEI'UI:EIIfll

You can ~ve hundrtds
even tho....,nds of dollars

restricted

SIW

-IDOOIS

.....,... ,."'·

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Ph. ltZ.ZI74

-

7:oo-Tr11th nr C:nn~, l: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for

S10IIII

SUift.
lnslt!._
homo

EXPERIENCED

1970 Buick Ri viera ,,"good condi- STARCRAFT FALL SALE on mini
tion, new l1reS, $9(10. Phone ' mo lars., .tro ilers r and fold:
downs . Used tra ile r ond fold742-2796.
~·~-- downs
priced to go We se ll
1975 MONTE CAR L9 . automa tiC ,
service ond quolitv . Camp Conpower steering , power brakes ,
ley Storcroft Soles, Rt. 62 Nora1r cond1ttoning. AM rad io and
th of Po1n t Pleasant.
d ereo , rally wheels, wtll sell
reasonable. Phone 992-7036.
---- -

fillociltl-

,...... ~ ...~ :,.,.\'

OPEN EVE$.' 8:00 P. M.
ROY OH

·!'- ·

Reg. $21U5

Table and .4 chairs, Coleman fuel oil heater, c upboard ,

1

.....

Showing : ~ wlss Co lo ny ;
Maple l,eaf ; P )evmor ;
·c ;rlckel. Sales, renta l,
SJrvlce, supplies. Travel
!railers , tru ck Cflmpers,
c amp ing trailers , t ruck
c ap s . Speci DI Sa1urday
nlgnts . Open evenings or by
appoin t m en 1. ·con t a ct
Rob ert Codner .
(1 0-11 -lmo . pd . I

S:OO-Big ' Valley 3: Merv Griffin 4; Mlstor Rooers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30-News 6; Family Atlalr B; Elec. Co . 20,33; Adam .
12 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10.13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
· Teac~h~ Children 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,151 ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge lodge 20; Lilias Yooa
&amp; You 33.

~~~tlol Senius

....

\

ooly $12,0110.

- --

· : rliwn &lt;cillrlr, corn lobl&gt;er with plate, sausage stuller,
W'l!urte·reoord player, Wooden pulleys, tool bOKeS, hair
~ ~clipper s, f lr~ pla ce pot hanger. Mall Pouch
· ihsrmo/.l'eter, tin co"•• and comb boKes. misc. wood
cor'leitlon, wicker bask~!, scales, shaving mirror,
Centref'taundry Iron !tove, $hl ngle cutter. and other
Items w~ don't know about .
·HOUSEHOLD - MIS'C.

·· Sm!tt'

Phone 991.1111

· ASSORTED lumbe r 2x&lt;4's, 2JCB's,
2x6's. Phone 247-2272.

","-youth rocking and stra'lght chairs, 2 wood beds, 1 with
: ·-~gtl tleattbOard , 2·stands, chairs, 461 n. kraut cutter, 2
t:tij,Ndle sewing macn lnes, Clark spool cabinets, wood
t rbtktrt-, 2 08k dressers, complete socket set, wooden

.

Jack W. Carsey, Mvr.

1976 Chevrole t Cap ric e wagon;
1973 GoiO II" Ie 6 Starcroft
(omper . Queen size stu d1o
couch. Phone (304) 88J -2910. _

ANTIQUEQ~liOLLECTOR'SITEMS
door oak• ~pltoal1d~ dinner bell, stone Iars

diilrl, misc. dishes, linen, small appliances. whlft.not
' .• hell, 121!. extension and i6 ft . ladder, sweeper, 3 H.P.
rilt.o.t~ler , Riotform sca les, W!'Od bo..s and bin, miK
han~ ·!Dol• and saw.
'
~~·~
"' ' ,;
.
Lunch
'
,
__,

12.000

mil es S I!S V bar, crash bars ,
pull bock handl e ba rs , new lire
and seals, Sc ra mbl er s1de
_pi pes~ $650_ C~l~ 949- 248~
POTATOES .and pumpkin s C W.
Proffllt, Portland , Ohto Pho ne '
843-2254 .
COAL tor sole , Open '1 •O'I'S her
yvl:lekondevenings For fu rt er
informa tion co li (614) 367-733B.
1966 Ford Ptckup truck. SSOO. Also
horse tra ile r, $450. Phone {61.4)
698-3290.
SWEET po tatoes, R. W. l ewis , Rt
124, Ro cme, Ohto. Phone 843-

·"::--o-.,--.-

f ~ 1 , 3 apple p~ rs ,~r~ln cl,~dle, 2 corn sh~llers,
. fiC!I\.sii4 ilet, pots and' a ettle, small brass an.d large
. ; • lord kettles, Mateand'Ca aln trunk, oak wood bucket,
I
b(oom l'[l~klnp machine. chest. picture lrames. 21 ln .
1
IJ.oCSd bowl, 2"sewlng rockers, 1900 youth wooden sled,
\
wood"'Wheelbacrow, hall tree, plank bottom choirs,

;
;
'
'

· brakes.

AKC

FUllER Brush Produc ts tor sola .
Phone 992-3410.

t

.,

Local l oWner car, green flo jsh, green vinyl roof, radial

w-w tires, 11lr cond.. V-8, w ith automatic P. steering &amp;

Convenient to sho pping on
Third and Ml!l Streets In Middleport . Brond new high quoiJty apart me nts . See the
manager ot Apt . 16,- or co It

--'----:c--c-

$3995

Gutten &amp;
Oowftno11h
. e ltotflftl : AklmHwm Skfl..
&amp; Seffit.

Rainbow Ridge
Buhan Area •
Long Bottom , Oh io

WEDNESDAY,OCTO B~R13, lf76

-1. . .,_

e ·Atumiluolm

.

.. -..r. ...
~~personal property of the estote of the late Pearl
-diCOehl~o wilt bt sold ot 1.7 mile South of Tuppers
1; jns, OhiO&gt;,I'ft State. ~ute 1.
•.

'

1974CHEVROLETMONTE CARLO

WOULD rhe party who found o
Timbeqack 230D Skidder: John ·
billf old belong ing to Gilbert K.
Deere 440B Skidder: Pe ttJbone
Smith please Ca ll (6 14) 446Super 8 Cory Ltft : Morbark 48
0110
1n . Chip-Poe. Contac t Don
MRS Dean Brinker lost o porGra ves or lyons Equipment
lf1gkni te ol senti men tal ImCo
In c Circlevtlle , Ohio
po rtan ce to her between her
43113. Phone !614) 596-&lt;4769 or
home 011 Raci ne -Boshon Road
(6") "4-6026
ond Raci ne . If found, p l e o~ e
EFFICiENCYo~~eol·f~-;;;;l~le .
phone her Ot 949-2539.
Mulberry Ave. references
Phone 992·2030 or 992-7760.

.~ ·

,I .,

.

5434.

-----------USED FORESTRY EQU IPMENT .

11:00 A.M.

~:

·

19700LDSDELTACPE.
51295
Radle&gt;. automatic, P.S., P, B., good tires. Clean.

3 AND ~ RM . furnished and unfurn ished opts. Phone 992·

m m 1.

Saturday, October 16, 1976

,

13095
locall owner, 6 cyl., automatic, powe" steer ing, clean
Interior, radio, good w-w tires, rally wheels, sport

--

AVA ILABLE ot Rh1ers1de Apartments, 1 b&amp;droom apart ments, $100 per mont h: 2
bedroom apartments , $133 per
THU NDERBIRD hubcap. brown ac mon th. Phone 992-3273
cents , betwee n M1ddl eport
and Heck's on Stole Route 7 2 Bedroom trailer Brown's Trai le r
Pork Phone 992-3324 .
Reward. Phone 992-{354 ,

;;.~aJA TE: A.YCTION

f

ms NOVA HATCHBACk CPE .

: .=-::;-

(6" )446-029.

w~~~~~-=t~ll~::'::::~~

'"io\

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

:.;:~.

SWeEPE R--and Sewtng- Mochmes
Repair , Ports and Suppl tes .
Oovls Va Cuum Cleaner, one
hot! mile up George'$ Cree k
Rood off State Route 7. Phone

rabbit dogs oil ages ,
s toried and tro med Phone
OLD furf11 tu re ice bo xes brass
74 ~~2 !..:__:_.,_ --- .
beds , wa ll tele phOnes an d
AKC Oobermon puppy , femo la, .4
part s, or complee households
months, bred from champlon Wr ite M 0 . Miller, Rt. 4 ,
shtp lmes for protection and
Pome roy, Ohto .!=oll ~~776!!
good temperament . Phone
742-3054.
CASH paid for a ll makes and
· ---~ · ~
mode ls of mobile homes.
Phone oreo code 614-423-9531
TIM BER Pomeroy Fares! Products . Top pri ce for standing
NO TI.C E OF APPOINTMENT
sawtimber .Coli Kent Hanby
Case No . 'll9S6
1-446-8570.
Es tat e of Verda alt\'er
Decea sed.
' $$CA"sH$$ tor junk~aut os
NOI1 cc IS he re by give n that
Pho ne 742-208 t Frye's Truck &amp;
Ne lli e Brown ot Pomeroy, • Auto Po rts Rutlo nei
R D ,. '"Ot}1o, has been duly ~
-~a ppointed Admin istra tri)( of COIN S, 1929 and older currency
th e Es t ate of Verda Oliver,
gold ond sil ve r, sc;ro p. W1ll buy ,
deceased . 'l'e le of M1ddlep ort ,
se ll or trade, for a good ~e l ec ­
Meigs Co unt -y, Ohio .
fton of cotn s. Hov e suppli es lor
Crect jtou; are re q ulfe~ to
l'ne tol
de tec tor s . Roger
fil e thv ir claim s with said
Wamsle~ , on Leadin g Cree k
f1d uciarv wilh in thr ee mo nths.
Dated th is 8th da y of Oc
and Rutl ond Rood . Phone 742Io ber . J976 .
233~ for an off er
11
SOUTHERN
Yell ow Pine Pos t. Pay.
Mannin g D. We bster
ing Premium prices. Pos t to be
Jud ge
Court of Common Plea s,
delivered to our yard ot Bill ~
Proba te DIVIS IOn
in gs, W. Vo. Spec1es : Virginia
( 10 1 13, 20. 27 , Jtc
Pi tch and Shortleol For stzes
and pnc&amp;s inqu1 re at : Th e
Burke ·Parson s- Bowlby Cor pora tion , P.O . BoK 39 .
NOTICE pF APPC?INTMENT
c.ne ..,,.. "'1955
Spence r W. Vo Phone 927Estat e
of
R·He na
B.
1250. Nig ht call. Ted Jackson
Genh e il'j"'er Decea:.ed .
354-7694 or Jim Lohner, 927·
Noli ~.:: is' her eby giv en tha t
...,.... __
• --~
Rache l M SherldB n of 513 _ 1466.
Carol' Str ee t, Wav er ly, Oh to, WANTED: Chipwood. Poles moJC
has b ee n du ty appoint e d
tmu m dtome te r, 10 inches on
Executrix of the Estate ot
largest end. $8.00 per ton .
Rozena
B
Ge nhctmer:.
bundled sla bs , $6 .00 per ton
dec eased . late of RD . Mtners Deliver to Ohio Pollet Comville. Me igs County. Ohio .
pany.
Rt , 2. Pomeroy. Oh1o.
Credtl or s ar e rcqu 1red to
Phone 992-2689.
flte th ei r c1~1ms w1th sa1d
--·'
fiduci ary witt11n th r ee mo nths
Dated th1 S 8t h day of Oc tobe r "1976
'
Manning D. Webs ler
"
Judge
Court of Com mon P leas ,
Pr oba te Oiv1sion
Meigs County , Oh1o
(101 JJ, 20 , 27, 3tc

QUAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

mirrors. white &amp; gr~ fin ish ..

----

BEAG~E

: Of

Call9'n-2l56.

RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.

a lso will buy horses and
ED UCATIONAL sur.v.eyor wonted.
poni es . Phone (614 ) 698-3290,
Plese call be twee n the h o ur~ 4
Ruth Reeves .
&amp; 6 P'·'"·, Monday thtough
AKC Re gtsfered Sa.nt Be rn o r~
Fndoy . 446 4J67 .
Puppies , 2 mole, 1 fe male, 3
months old . Strong ond
healthy . Phone (304 ) 773-5405 .1
or (30&lt;4) 675-2310 Pt Pleasa nt,
WILL DO odd jobs . roofing. pain
W Vo .
tmg , haul ing , tree work, and
AKC Reg . Beegle pups, $40.
mowing Phone 992-7409.
Phone 992-37 17.

'

2 SIGNS

oe looking for work . . . or
whatever . . you 'll
results
foster wlfh o S.,tine Wont ,4,d.

COUNTRY Moblle Home Pork , Rt
33, ten m1 les north ol Pomeroy ,
Lorge lof5·with co ncrete patios
sidewalks, r11nn•rt and off
ATTENTION : .Dear Marie I om
_street park ln.g~~e992-7.f79 .
terrib ly sorry lor whet ha ppened Sunday, Octob.r lOth ONE , bedroom aportments ot
...,.hic h wos all my fault, and I
VIllAGE MANOR in Middlepo rt
hope you con find it in your
for
$10.f monthl y plus elec. or
heart to fo rg iVe me love, Ken $130' includlng electric. LOWER
ne th ,

~-

Business Services.

IF 't'OU have Cl ser... tce to offer ,

operat ion. Mechofiic ond body
work . North Se&lt;:ond Street '"
Mld~ lepor l . Formerly Bran nons Garage . Phone 992-S.SO
or,a llafter5p .m . 992 -7135

The Pubtl sher reserves
th e rlgl'lf 10 tdil or reject
any tcJS , dtt m t d Ob ·
ltc l lona l . The publ is h er
will no t be ruponslble tor

1

0

6:30 p.,., .

1\ons accepted Urs1 aav of

.

Television log for easy viewzng

THE RACINE F1re Department wlll

Publlcttlon .

pwbiiC:~:u LATIONS

Fast Results Use

()

,_ .

__. =--·

) I I MMr=••dll .......
toA
fwallooi
ld'ltJ

~WI II

"[IIIII111
"'

AN' Mil LEETLE TATER
IS A REGULAR

EARTHWORM

WES,MAAM ,

WE'RE f.IErlE
TO SEE n:tE

BOOKWORM

•

APPARENTL1(, THERE~ ~EEN
S&lt;W.E MISIJNDE~STANDIN6 ..,
SEEMS ltl n:IINK I ·
8ELON6 BACK IN SCHOOL

AFTER HE'S FIHISNI!l'
HIS LUNCH!

_,
'

�·r

u-:;;~,A;,~~·Middle::;:eroy,o W~sday,OcjF~r
.•

• DI,ADL NES
P .M . Oav
Befor e
Canctllttlons .
correc

S

hove

mort than one Incorrect
Inse-rt ion .
RATES

For Wlnt Ad -strvlct
5 cents pe r word one
Insert ion Charge II ()0 .
Minimum
1&lt;4 cerits per word th re e
c onsecutive Insertions
26 Cfl)h
word SIK
c onsecuflve nurtlons
'25 P e r •Cenl Discount on
j)ei'd eds end •ds pe ld
within 10 days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
U .OO
for
50 word
._minim u m .
' Eecf\ add itio nal word J
cen ts .

r,er

Addlt ~~~~~2~~S Charge

per Adv ertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8. )0 a .m . to 5. 00 p.m .
De il y, 8 : 30 a .m . t.o 12 . 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 99 2 2f56
NOTICES

ATTN.: ! !

ALL HOUSEWI VES
All Yard S a l ~s . Rumma ge,
Porc h and S.llsement Porch
and Basement Sllles, etc
· mus t be paid in advan ce .
Get yours In early by
s topp ing bv our offi ce at
The Da ily Sen ttngl. 111
Cou r t St , tQri1 writing BOK
729, Pom e r o.,. , Oh io 4;7 69
w ith your rem 1llance .

&amp;illl.e Jiijwie,.='t9f ~e
MOBILE· home fo r sole or rent . 3
bed rooms, ol utilities paid.
Pho ne 992-7751
12,;6o mobile home w1th 7 acres
of land nea r Me1gs M 1ne 1
Phone 742-2746

·,

~ ~.fr~""-::;!~~:.;;,.:=.'
.~;;:5:;-;E ;:;o_R_s-Es :~;;";.;.:~.;

gun shoot Soturdoy at
h · ~.. . _ ld '
·
01 1 81 ' ou l 11'9 '"

\' ard Sa,H.

Bosh on

PETE and Gene's Garage IS now Jn

,.:.

,_: wont to bu.,. or sell ~om ethl ng ,

BEGINNE RS ond immediate t oke
decora ting classes. . Fot more
mlo rmotion call Jaone Pe1ly ,
742-2818 or l ots Wa lker 7A2·
2333.
·
NO W accepting piano sludenll ,
begi nners, Intermedia te s, odvancud students. Coli 9922270
·
R~VIVA~ mee ting , Rutland CommunityChurch, Oct , IS. 16, 17 ,
7:30 p.m. nightly . Rev. Rolph
k
M
Spires , We llston , -speo et , '
R
lnvhar
and Mrs . . Charles
p
A t,
We 1lston , smgers. os 1or mos
Tillis invhes the public ._ _

GARAGE Sole, October 13 &amp; l.ath,
nOrth Mom St .. Rutland , Ohio.
Nice g1rl 's clolhing, ronge
hood, homv"mode bread and
olher 1tems.

yet

'

•I •

'

-~

1

rn
... ·,;,...
.,. .

He!P-wifu@J -of. ::o=~!_-;oe'f.

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) Memorial services will be
held today for Gerald Pidge ,
retired sports editor for the
Los Angeles Times who died
Saturday. He was 116.

-

~----

"~

'

'

LOCUST POSTS, round or split .
Phone 949-2774
COAL , lt mestol'\8 , and colc1um
ch loride and calc iu m brine for
dust co ntrol a nd special miKing
salt fo r farme rs . Main Street ,
Pome rov Ohio or phone 992-

3691.
'1971 HONDA CL·•SO

2d32

1975 Ouster , 6 cy li nQ.er outolnoll( ,
p.s vinvl top , 15,000 miles, excellent co ndition . $2500. Two
twi n size rn ottrenes, excellent
condtti on. Portable Fngtdo1re
dishwasher in w of ~ing condi ltOn . $10. Con be seen at HB
H1gh St , Midd leport afte r 5
p.m. __ ----

Anti-Freeze
Gal.

CO.OP .BRAND
Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. ~

..

1

'''bo•

GRA IN led beef. 35c lb. Phone
985-419B

-------

HOOVER spin dryer washer. EK·
cellent condllion , reasonable .
Phone 949·2523.

-APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE 68'1 PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (6142669·3785. _

FRIGIDAIRE refrigera tor, ex celle nt condition, $60 Phohe
992-2301.
All steel boJC wood stove, $.45.
Contact Verltie Midk iff , Cherry
Ridge Road:~·-.,.,.-- · --·
MODERN stereo , AM -FM rod1o , B
frock tope combination.
Balance $97 ..f0 or terms. Call
992·3965.
'WANTEO i Responsible pO rty to
assu me n&amp;t balance on th is
spine t piano with be nch by
Kim boll. Walnut In perl&amp;et condition, free de livery In your
area . Wrtle: ltqu1dotors, 272 E.
Mo1n St reet, Chillicothe, Ohio
' 45601.

'

• .)amll,..lree, chest of drawers, cedor chest, 3 pc.

·f ·i tlwk~ase bedroom suite, rollaway bed, glider, lawn

.l,

~ren~e Donohue Jame$ Carnahan

9-2033
\·~ v i

•

,,~,,-:300

949-2708

· · · '
slblt lor· accidents or loss_of oroperty
~·

POMEROY MOTOR.CO.

SALt
4tW waa.llurnlng stove.' ·

EftJtlnt' tt2-7»CC
• lt -l mo

'--'--'---'----:-- ~--

Reg1s tered Chi nese Pug NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 bo ths ,
fema le , 7 mon ths old. shots.
all e lec , I acre, M1ddl eport,
wormed , excellent blood line .
close to Rutland . Phone 99274B l .
Phone 9B5 -36::_:9_o6_--c~---;:,--1971 V.W. looks and run! like SMAllla rm lor sole , 10% down ,
new! Good ti res , stereo ,
owne r fina nced. Monroe Coun ·
$1450. Also, 1967 Ford Super
tv , W. Va. Phone {304) 772Von , $400. Phone {614) 69B3102 or (3().4)772-3227

·--

Southeastern Oliio
Truss Rafter Co.

-

....... ,2-2111

t

mattresses, padding. Ideal
for ·campers. Variety of

¥K 9754
tJ S

nylon prints,
herculo"s, vinyl solids. and

'9ia Main Street

'!MIS IS 1\mlAPf'J..J; ... ~~'$
:LIWII&lt;IQ;I..I fa&lt; M5 fCR 1l.lO W!ie~S.

Pt. Pleasant
Ph. 675-34419
9:30-5:00 Doily
TIIII :OOll Frlda.!.ys::_......:.J

,..~_

.

I'V~ t!efJN Willi THI£ awfl+'J{

4 96

, roll- 14 Y~A~! ..

N'E\ttbef.' vulnerable
Wut

_

TO: BIDDERS
SUBJECT : Mater- rats and
Iebar ror installation of
gymnasi um . bleachers
FOR : The
Board
of .
Education of the SoUthern
Loca l School Distr ic t, Racine,
Oh io 45711
Sealed proposa ls will be
rece111ed by the Board of
Education of the Southern
Loc;e l School Distr ict at the
Southern Local High School
office at Racine, O_hlo, until
twelve
(12 : 00)
n oon ,
pr evail ing' loc.!!ll time, Thursday . October 28, 1976, and,
op e ned
i mmediately(
thereafter, for the furn ishing
of all materia ls end per.'
form ing all labor for the ln'stallatton of gymnasiu m
bleachers in the Southern·:
d
Loca l High School.
Sp&amp;cifications may be o ~
talned from · the office of the.
Clerk -Treasurer
of
t~f;
Southern Local Boa r d ~
Education, Box 176, Raclf'! ~

GLEN R. BISSELL
Aft41-2101

No odor. Use the
same day.
All work

Or

9"·2860
PLEASE
NO SUNDAY CALLS
\
9-J0-1 mo.

guaranloo~.

BRADFORD, Aucti oneer, Complete Service. Phone 9•9-2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford .

•L1T1'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

L I T T L £;,...;:;..:.;..;.,

A w N I ~ - M 4 c "' ,. R ' I

. of level land In Tuppers .
Plains. Otd 7 room house,
v~ bath, garfge, cellar, for

NEW LISTING bedroom

·

11e

n ·

2 or 3
In

Syracu ;_;nl
kitchen ,
gas' F.A~~~!!; front and
side porches. Nice corner

lot. $15.0110.
2 bedroom

frame home with nice gas

F.A. furnace, modern bath
and kitchen. Paneling and
full basement.

NEW l tS~ IN'tt- ·I yr( 'old
3 • b~room ' :r,me. Nice
bath, large -~J In kitchen,
therm -o -pane , windows,
garage ahd lot 95K 115.

Ask ing m .0110 .

·

WOODS - 29 acres. Good
site for lake, T. P. water, 3
bedroom trailer, l'h baths.
hide -away

for

$21,5110.

NEW LISTING - In
Middleport. 2 bedrooms,
modern bath, dining and
llrepla~e. 2 porches and
level lcit at 116,500.
FREE GAS- 15 acres for
the children. 3 bedroom
renovated home. A·l
Inside, wife kitchen, gas
F ! urnace and gas wtl l.

NEW LISTING- 2 lcits In
subdivision .

Partly wooded with T.P.
water. s.i,OIIO.
NEW LISTING- 2 acres
In the country, new garage
with extra rooni and 112

.

modern

kitchen,

fireplace, N.G. hcit water

u,soo .oo -

A real

ul'tra

heat, 2 corner ,lots close to

shopping. ASKING
$20.000.00.
LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992-%259

of Listings.

Call Us Now
104 W. Mlln
992·2298

Pvmeroy

means

CONTACT:
l.elo Powley

lrendiMo....,.

·

·outbuildings, 2 ponds. A nice laying farm priced to go.
Located near Chester ,_call for appt .
'

NEW LISTING -

1

~;r:J~Q-1
··~HC~~Wj~~~~::~fM€8a~~3l~~be~(E~)Ft~~~%9~pe
HONTI-IRILUN6 1fiS
MEB8E '&gt;O'D LII&lt;E:fOC!A~rT lK..f~ot::.
down!

iii.:

1

1b HA.V5' A )ttJNG 1N&gt;N CALL ON Mr::.'!!
Ht;R£;5 otJ5' DRAQJ/-A )7/~AA\E V.CULD )tf Ul&lt;r::. IO TIJRI\J 5Q\o\E
Ti-!ANI&lt;!:i-H TAU6HT It'£-

Sq. Yd.

~~~~~

OR V/0:-Vr::.RSA ?-- .

31

~:~&gt;
Romeo's

~~
Jet

l ;M5DRRYII JU&amp;T
WANTED llJ GE.T
'THOSE POLICE

OFF OUR TAILJ

AXYDLBAAXR

WHAT MAKEf7 YOJIHINK.
ANYONE$ LOOKIN0 FOR:
YOUr YOU SAID NO

Is

One lcller • imply stands for another. II\ ihls sample A l,s

ONE CAI&lt;EI7 WHE'THER

YOU LIVED 0~ 17/ED!

CNRSH

,.
r-· •
.

furnace, cl1y water and well water, a beautiful home

·

sv~

acres of land, fruit trees and shade

CALL JIMMY DEEM949·2388

I. 0 H G F E L L 0 W

used for the three I.'s, X ful' the two O's, etc. Single lc1ters,
apostrophes, the lcnr::th ;mel form ation of the words are aU
hint s. F.nrh d:•)' th e rode lctl crs are dilferen ~.

pyrchased with the 113 acres listed above and
developed Into a beautllul 18 hole goll course, call lor
appt.

Man., Tues., ed. •
8:00ti15: 00

Cee,

•
•
,.

•

'
•... ..,
·• e •

t

4l

•
, ··•
, ;/'··

~·

Close Sat. At 5 p;m.l. •
· et ·

e ••••••• e
RUTLAND fURNITURE

1 742·2211

t

llllilll~u .. ,.,.,_.

...

t&lt;iJ'f"LlND

~-------~------~--~~~~~~~~~~~~
t
I
~

8,10.

11 :55-·Tokt Kerr B; Ms. FIKit 10.
·~
12 : ~N ews 3,6,B, 10; Hot Stat 13; Bob Brtun 41. 50 J
Gnnd Siam 15.
•
12 :30-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 4,13; Sterch
for Tomorrow 8. \0 .

12 :55-NBC News 3,15.
1:00-Somerset 3; Ryan' a Hope 6,13 ; Concontrotlon I;
Young 8. the Restleu 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3, 4,15 ; Family Ftud 6,13; At
The World Turns I, 10.
2 : ~$20 ,000 Pyramid 13; Dlnoh 6.
2:3()-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
• 3 : ~Anothor World 3.4.15; All In Tho Ftmlly 1, !Oi
Antiques 20.
3:15-General Hospital 13.
3:30-Bewltched 6; ~atc h Game 8, 10; Llll11 Vago &amp;
, You 20.
4 : ~Mistor Cartoon 3; Morcua Welby, M.D. 4;
Howdy Doody 6; Somersot 15; Mlckoy Maull Club
8; Sesame St . 20,33; Movie " Thott- MegnlfiiCIIII
' Men In Their Flying Machines" 101 Dinah 13.
4:3D-'-My Throe Sana 3; Emergency One 6; Ptrlrldte
Family 8; Fllntstones •lS.
s · ~Big Volley 3; Morv Griffin 4; Brady Bunch I;
Mister Rooers 20,33; Star Trok 15.
5:3()-News 6; Family Affair 8; Eloc. l;o. 20,33; A!jom.
12 \3 .
6 : ~News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC Nowa 6; ZOom 20;
Consumer EKperl"'co 33.
6:3()-NBC Newa 3,4,15; ABC Newall; Andy Grlfflf416;
CBS News 10; Hodgopodgt Lodgo 20; lTV ·
Utilization 33.
7 : ~Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell tho trulh4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show I; Nowa 10; To Toll IIIII
Truth 13; Family Affair 15; Anyonolor TeMVIOft?
20; Getting On 33.
7·30-Hollywood Squtros 3:,4; Ohio Star. Lottery 61
Price Is Right 8; MacNoii·Lthrtr 20,331 Wlkt
Kingdom 10; Naohvlllt.., tho Road 13; Dolly 15.
B : ~Gomlnl Man 3,4,15; Wtlcomo Bock, Kollwr 6,11;
Waltons 8,10; Et.-nal Fr..,fler 20; Mealtrploce
Theotre 33.
8:3()-Barnoy Miller 6, 13.
9:1l0-Best Sellers 3,4,15; Tony Randell 6,13; Howell
Flve·O 8; Hollywood Televlolon Thutre 331 Movie
"5 Card Stud" 10; Fight to bt remtmbtrtd20.
9:30-Nancy Wolkor 6, 13.
9:55-Polltlcal Pragrom 8.
lO : ~Dick Van Dyke 3,4, 15; Slrtela of Son FroneiiCO
6,13; Barnaby Jonea 8; ·Newa 20.
10:3()-Women 20,33.
10 :55-Pollfltol Prooram 8.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Roport

I

VR N

wu ·z

LOOKV, LOWEEZV-·
MV LEETLE ARI&lt;V
IS A REGULAR

'urTI·(J
'HALEXE1 .

WR
Q IQZ

RV

FGVVSNZSW . - LGO·
OIPJZE

.•

FRIDAY Tl L8

•I

Y R J SW

YU R R 0 Z

•.

Thursday 8til12 noon

e

SR W

AZGSH_

••••

W

I

J)AILY CRYPTOQUOTE 7 Here's how to work It :

FR

=It'

'I

33 Cartoonist
Gardner 35 SJwepokjn_
:rJ Jewish
month , , I':nO+~f--+-f---+~
38 Instinctive
39 Saucy
'--..1....4-....L.-J.......f-

·,

('RVPTOQUOTES

SPECIAL -_: 3 bedroom and attached gaioge, totol '
electric home under construction on y, ocre lot. OWner
wlllflnlsh In JO days for bUyer or will sell "osls". Mi&gt;y
take trode. Located near Chester.
COOLVILLE- Ni ce mod. llt'lck homecontalnl&lt;lg three
bedrooms. dining room, llvlnp room with fireplace, lull
basement with garage, large front porch , nal. gas .

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14,1976
Somtlttr 10.
6:15-Faim Report 1l.
6: 20-Not lor Women Only 13.
6:30-0SU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrltt Somoeltr I;
Urban league \0,
6:.&amp;.S-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl Stalt 13.
7:il0-Today 3,j,15; Good Morning, Amorlce 6,13; CIIS
News 8; Chuck While Reporlo 10.
7:05-Bugs Bunny L Frlendo 10.
7:3()-Schoollos 10.
8:1l0-Lassle 6; Copt. Kangaroo 1.10; S111m1 St. 33.
B: 3()-81g Valloy 6.
9:1»-A.M. 3; Phil Donohuo•, 13, 15; Lucy Show I ; Mike
Douglas 10.
9:3o.-::&lt;:ross·Wifs J; One Lilt to Llvt6; Good Dl!' 1.
. l O : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Prlcols Right I, 101 Mike
Douglas 13.
10:15-Genorol Hosplfal 6.
10 ;3()-Hollywood Squaru 3,4,15.
11 :~Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Gambit 8, 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
11:3()-Stumpero 3,4, 15; Happy Daya 6,13; Love of Lilt
! : ~Sunrise

33.

and seeding equipment, needs some mowing and a
little repair · work on golf course . . This could be

with approx.

desUnation

Doltars 6; Pop Goes the Country I; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; Family Afftlr 15; Consumer Survlvel
Kit 20; Marco Sporllllt 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3: 1100,000 Ntmo Thti-.Tuno. 4; Mafcl1
Game PM 6: 125,000 Pyramid I ; MacNoii ·Lihror
20.33; The Judge 10: Brook the Bonk 13: Wllol
Kingdom 15. '
8:00-Wt Think You Should Know 3; Wonclor Wom.,
6,13; The Procllct 4,15; Gunsmokt I ; Novt 10.331
Good Times 10.
.
8:*-Movle " Scott FrH" 3,•, 15; $25,000 Pyr1mld tO.
9 : ~Baretta 6, 13; All trl The Family 8, 10; Thtlttr I~
America 33; One of • Kind : John Prlne20,
9:30-AIIco 8, 10.
lO:oo-cQuest J,j, 15; Chortle' a Angela 6,13; B!uo Knlthl
8, 10; News 20 .
10 :55-Palltlcol Proorom 8,10.
11 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; MocNeii-Lthrer Roport ·
33.
11 :3()-Johnny Corson 3,4, 15; Rooklos6,13; Movlt " Tho
Private Novy of Sot. O' Ferrtll" I ; Mary Hertmlll
10; ABC Hews 33.
12 : ~Movlo "The Fllm.Ftam Man " 10; Janekl 33.
12 :4()-Mystory of tho Week 6,13.
! : ~Tomorrow 3,4,
2: 1()-Nows 13.

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Strotlo of s., FrMCI6, 13; kolak 8: Mary Hartman 10; ABC Nowa33.
12 : ~Movle " The Slender Thread" 10; Jtnekl 33.
12:3()-Movle "The Astr.,.ut" 8.
12:4()-Dan August 6, 13.
l :ilO-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:50-News 13.

n1ce mooern club house, outbuilding with all spray 1ng

trees surrounding II. Plenty of garden space, good
fishing area close by, located In Coolville, Ohio. P,rlced
at only $32,0110. Coli now.
SIACRESFREEGAS-Modernl'l•'storyhouse,Jb( .,
dining room . fire place, lull basement, nice porches
and out bulldlngo. L~rge scenic lake with green grass
and pine tre.. around 11. ·watch the large bass owlm
along In the clear water. Pre"y as! picture. Priced to
sell $37,500.00.
.

game

37 GJ letter

course

RUnAND
FURNITURE

Ever dreall) of owning your own

cultured
3AJ Tyke's.

(abbr.)
27 Social
groop
%8 Celtic
deity

Do II yoursolf, w!~~! l
podding, S7.95 sq. yd. Ui
paddlnt lnstollod SI.!IS&lt;I
squoro yanffi
Caii74Z·2211
TAlk TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

golfcourse? Here's your chance for vou or yOur friends
to own a nice rolling gOlf course," 50 1h acres. 9 gree ns•.

480 B.C.

creation

31 Tres

ations

Grten, gold, rad, blut, ru11.!•

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, servke, all mohs . 992·22a.. . The
Fabr ic Shop . Pomeroy .
AuthOrized S1nger Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

"Dinner

money
%7 Backbonea
%9 Struck
30 Oyster's

21 Pre-med

501 NYLON

(614)698-7257 Albony.

113 acres farm , BO acres tillable

for racehorses

Francoise at - 's"
21 Windflower
25 They have ,.....,_,,_.,..,...
combin·

II or 15 Fl.

D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yeor~ experience . In s ured freci
estimates Coli 992·2384 or

.

5 Japanese
1• "The Holy
wild dog
Simer"
6 Eat
author
away at
It "South
7Hlgh (mus.) Pacific"
I Donkey
role
(3 wds.)
Z2 Higtrstrung
t Keyes'
23 Battle of

23 Novelist,

Everyday . m..,oy SIVar
Good choice colors.

NEIGLER Building Supplies for
buildmg houses , (Oblnets ,
plumbing. Phone 949·2608,
Racine, Ohio.
GAS end Oil Heating Soles and
Service, 24 hours , Phone 8.a3·
2165 or 8.43-2341 ,

992-7132

land, nice 2 story farm house, 7 rooms &amp; bath, all
hardwood floors and basement. Barn and other

10,95

1

"reveal"

an

INSTALLED
Rtgulor S14.1S

9'12·5858.

After Houn C. II

cENTRAL REAtn af
HEW LISTING -

Will trim or .cut trees and shrubbery. Phone 9.49-2545 or 7•2·
3167 .
MOBILE Home Repolr , Elec.,
plumbmg and heating . Phone

grasses

11 Uke a hatter
17 Drench
(n;:~:;;;-h;;;;;;-;;:;-- 18 Become
wider
aDDOi;ntrr' ent,? 20 Allegiance
21 Nwnber of
Muses
Z2 Sound; pitch

HI-LO SHAG

Phone (614) 593-B906.

!Do you heve a quest!IJn
for the experrs ? Write ·"A$k
the 'Jacobys " cere or this
newspaper rhe Jacobys will
answer inr;Jrvidual questions
II stamped, se lf-addressed
en11elopes are enclosed The
mosr interesting questions
w11/ be used in this co lumn
and will recewe co pres ot
JACOBY MODERN.)

delight
41 " - a Rose"
5 Beverage
(1925 110ng)
convenience
DOWN
(2 wds.)
I Whirlpool
11 Globule
2 "I 12 Doll named
for You"
Dahl
(1922 song)
13 Disastrous
3 Cutting up
Yesierday'o Au we~
If Write down
(2 wds.)
15 What "da"
I Poetic
10 Slang .term
%5 FU!111Y

CARPETING

STOCK . Buy , sell, trade. 478
Rich land , Athens , Ohio 45701 ,

To Sell

my

-tO Marsh

ACROSS
I Yodeler's

DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTlC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW 110 1 7, 13, 20, 17, &lt;lc
SOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BIU
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2478 DAY
OR NIGHT.
SAVE
HOCKING RIVER Tradmg Com.
.ON
~any, GUNS-OVER 250 IN

Great Need

A Cali fornia reader wan ts to
know the meaning of an open·
five-spade bid .
t has no meaning In nor mal
bidding . Someone once
suggested It should ask
partner to bid six with the ace
or king of the suit, but the bid
never took hold .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

TEAFORD

We Are In ·

..

~~~

6iHMwJfl'

'o.

small yard. 3 BR, bath,
large living, full basement.
~ . W . floors, carpeted, new
steel siding. SlB,OIIO.OO.
DON'T PAY high rent. Buy
this 2 story frame. Roof,
siding &amp; carport like new.
Small yard. J rooms. N.G.
heat. $7,5110.00.
OLDER 2 story brick
home. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths,

No'rlb Ea11 South
1•
Pass 2t
Pass 34
Pass It
Pass 4 •
Pass 5 t
Pass Pass Pass
Opening y ad - 5 ¥

By Qlwald'&amp; Jameo Jacoby
Today's hand..., rea.ched us
fro!ll an Oregon reader. It
seems that he played five
diamonds and went down one.
This was after the opponents
led a heart to the ace, a heart
back to the king and a ruff of
D E=JiGp;R;;.;;E:..E::....,-..--:--:-, the third heart. .
•
North felt that with only
~:,;&lt;s,;oR eight high-ca rd points , South
"
should have responded one
notrump, not two diamonds.
But after he had responded
two diamonds, he should have
passed the three-spade bid .
Three spades would have
made , since North would lose
. just two hearts and two
spades.
The hand brings up some in·
teresting points in bidding .

____ _

NEW ltSTING -l'h acres

'

J B3 . '
'
t A K 10964 l

PUBLIC NOTI£E

CONTACT

t QB 3
4 J ,8 52

.6

DIRfCT FABRIC SALES

FREE ESTIMATES!

¥ AS

410 743
SOUTH

fancy prints, 11ccessor1es.

7-18-4 mos .

EAST
4 Q 10 4 2 '

4 J8

···~!t!ltst

·w, Deliver

.........

WEST

·For sofl, chair cushions,

BoX21·A
Rutland, Ohio 45n5
Ph. I614)74Z-Z409

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

.

u~fm~-

Thus, we would respond two
diamonds with the South hand .
A seven-card suit to the ace·
king Is worth bidding .
However, we would have tried
lhree notrump as o~r second
bid With that South hand . Then
if North passed and he should
do just that, South would wrap
up that .three notrump
We would be lucky. West
would start with a heart and
the third heart lead would
clear the suit , but unfor·
tunately for the defense there
would be no way for West to
get In to score his last two
hearts. With some other lead
the play Is more complicated,
but any player worth, his salt
would still -bring home nine
tricks by careful play .

NORTH IDI
4AK97Sl
• Q 10 2
t 7
•AKQ

7191. -c--'--:-:---:---COUNTRY farm land with sedud ·
197&lt;4 Vega Hatc hback , automat ic,
ed woods, water and good acELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Ohio '5771.
.
4 cyl. , 24 ,000 mi les. Very clean ,
cess in Monroe County, W Vo
Sweapers , toasters, irons, oil
All proposals Sh!ll be act~~
Stiver $1,795 or best olfer.
$1 ,000 down , ca ll (304) 772 3 Bedr oom frame, a lu minum
small applia.n ces. lawn mower, . companied by a satlstactor ~
Phone (6 14}698·7191. ·
ng, 7 roo ms , 2 baths,
3102 or (3~ 772·3227 .
next to State Highway Goroge , Surety Bond or e Certlfht&lt;J,
dern
houSe.
Gos
heal
,
T.P.
1'976 Chevrole t 4 wheel drive TUPPERS Plai ns, new 3 bedro
' ) 9"5 ' Check on ll blink do ingon
. Route 7 Ph one 161" g • business' In the State of Ohio)
1te r, 2 porches, '1, bosement .
truck Pho ne 949-2132
homes, bod t-in kitchen s. 11.
3825.
In th~ amount of 5 percent of
SO, o general store next
bat hs carpeted with ottochl
THE unders1gned wi ll sel ~ ot
uvor, 20x30 w1th basement. REMOOiiliNG, Plumbi ng, heat ing the total value of the bid . Bid
ga
rage
,
1
acre
lot
.
$22
900
public sole for cash the follow·
and dll ty pes of generol rapoir. security w ill be returned '
;,iet o home and business lor
Pho ne (61 4) 667 ·6304
Work guaranteed 20 years ex- with in ten days after contract
mg mo tor veh1cle to be tak en
o)nly $18,500 . Loca ted tn
for the work has been.
from George Jol,nson, Beech 3 Bedroom, I both, utilif'l' room , I
Boshon , Ohio . AlSO, hove two
pe rie nce . Phone992-2409.
executed . Failure of any.
Street Apts ., Middleport , Oh1o
cor
garage.
tota
l
e
lectri
c,
115x·
homes lis ted In the Racine EXCAVATING , dozer . loader and bidder to enter into and•
45760 . 1969 LTD . 4 dr H.T.,
11 5 lot , Hutchison Sub ·
area. looking for o nice full y
backhoe work, du mp trucks execv le a contrect for the
Seo riol No 9W66Y-167-578. The
Division, Ru tland Phone 7.42modern wtt h 1.2 a cres of land
nd lo- boys for hi re; will haul work ~;overed by the proposal
a
so le will be held at The Formers
he has subm ltted, wlthln tenr
2869 .
in the Eas tern area? Being sold
fill
dirt , to .soil limesto ne a nd days following notice of award!
Bonk and Savings Compa ny ,
by owner, CALL OR SEE George
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jet - of such work to him , shall1
21 I Wes t Second Street ,
S. Hobste11er, Jr. Real Es tate
ters, dey phone 992·7089, c:ause the bid securltr, td;1
Pomeroy. Ohio . at 10:00 A.M.
Broke r. Phone 985·4186 alter .f
night phone 992-3525 br 992- become forfeited by the b dder,
on th e 16h day of October ,
p.m. or Hilton Woll e , Sr.,
5232.
to the Owner as liqu idated
1976. The under signed rese rves
Salesman, 9.49-2589, Rodne,
damages and not as! penally::
the right to b td. THE FARMERS
dozer bockho~ because of such failure on th ~
. ~o~h~;·~·----~~---~ EXCAVATING,
BANK AND SAVINGS COMond dilchar. Charles R: . Hot- part of the bidder .
· -t
HOUSE fo r .so le, 5 rooms and
PANY , Pomeroy , Ohio.
lield , Bock Hoe Ser vice,
' Proposals may be mailed Ofl
bath, all e lectric, partially
Rutland , Ohio . Pho neH2-2008. delivered . If mailed , send vi ii
carpeted polio See Irene Cunreglstered .mai l ln time for bi d:
B idders
shal &amp;
diff , Fourth Street, Syracuse , SEPTIC Systems Installed by open ing .
ltcensed installer. Shepard des ignate on the envelope tha t'!
Ohio.
149
Near
Contractors. Phone 742-2409.
It is! see led bid, the name a ncr
LARGE Gara ge Sole, Sa m Arnold
address of b idder and ad {
Chester. Free gas and
residence, Apple ond , Water SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Mode rn dressed to : Southe rn Loca l
Income from well, tim·
Sonitotion, 992-3954 or 992· Board of Education, Jane
Sis ., Sy racuse·, Ohto Thurs.,
ber, stocked pond, fru it
2.f28.
Wagner , Clerk -Treasurer ,
Friday and Saturday, 10:00 a.m.
trees, barn &amp; other
Sox 176, Racine, Oh io .aS771 •
to 4·00 p.m (Rain or shine;
WILL do roofing , construction ,
The Owner reserves th_.,
buildings, nice home has 5
plumbing and heating . No job right to accept any bid , to
bedrooms
,
bath
,
dining
,
Vtrgil B. Sr., R111tor
too Iorge or too 11moll. Phonv waive any or all informantieJ.;
carpeted, paneled, garage.
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .
742-23-48.
In bids end -or reject any or all't
JUST 142,0110.110. •
bids at his di sc retion
1
Phone 992~33'~
CARPENlER, flOoring, ceiling,
No bid may be withdrawn
GRACIOUS 2 story older
paneli ng. Phone 992-2759.
far a period of .as day~ .
..
1~ TOWN Beautiful
home. 4 bedrooms, bath,
By ~rder of the Southerr1'
older home near shop.
DOZER work and weldin g. Con- Locel Board of education,
nice kitchen. carpeting,
View of river, 3 bedrooms,
tact James Parso ns , Rt . 1, Rac ine, Ohio.
paneling, 2 car garage, .69
1112 baths, hot water heat
Racine, on Carmel Rood.
acre SlB,OIIO.OO.
,
129,500.
Jane Wagner,
NICE RANCH TYP_E EXCAVATlNG, BACKHOES AND
Clerk

bath. A 3 be&lt;froom air
conditioned mobile home
with 1'1' baths. $24,0110.
WE
HAVE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU TO
SEE. COME IN WHERE ~
YOU CAN DO . YOUR
REAL
EStATE
BUSINESS.

PMienJJ Llndmllk
9. , Jaco .V. UtrMy, Mgr.

POlY-FO---':ft

~-

No muss. No fuss.

t969 Ford LTO any reaso nable HOMESITE$ for sole, 1 acre and
pricvs accepted , Phone 992up. Midd leport , near Rutland
2395.
Call992 ·7481.

I WAS MERELY ~EFI&gt;RRING TO
THo PR08LGM OF EVADIN G
POL.ICI' PURSUIT!

P1IIM fU-2114

Revive
o~!1g~I~:~,~;Ln
of
yourthe
rugs.
I
your own home
by_.Von Schrader
dry-foam method.

1 ustd Homo lilt Choln
1 Ustd Mcciirrouv~ chain
uw
.
175

.

IUIIIINUII
SIDIIIG-SGifiTI

with aluminum or vlny I
siding.

· NowS21US
Now fuol oil stove. Reg·.
$372.37
.
.
Now$222,37
N.w Coo0p water 101!111or·
Reg, Sl4f.f5 , Now 121f.95
S200

IEI'UI:EIIfll

You can ~ve hundrtds
even tho....,nds of dollars

restricted

SIW

-IDOOIS

.....,... ,."'·

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Ph. ltZ.ZI74

-

7:oo-Tr11th nr C:nn~, l: To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for

S10IIII

SUift.
lnslt!._
homo

EXPERIENCED

1970 Buick Ri viera ,,"good condi- STARCRAFT FALL SALE on mini
tion, new l1reS, $9(10. Phone ' mo lars., .tro ilers r and fold:
downs . Used tra ile r ond fold742-2796.
~·~-- downs
priced to go We se ll
1975 MONTE CAR L9 . automa tiC ,
service ond quolitv . Camp Conpower steering , power brakes ,
ley Storcroft Soles, Rt. 62 Nora1r cond1ttoning. AM rad io and
th of Po1n t Pleasant.
d ereo , rally wheels, wtll sell
reasonable. Phone 992-7036.
---- -

fillociltl-

,...... ~ ...~ :,.,.\'

OPEN EVE$.' 8:00 P. M.
ROY OH

·!'- ·

Reg. $21U5

Table and .4 chairs, Coleman fuel oil heater, c upboard ,

1

.....

Showing : ~ wlss Co lo ny ;
Maple l,eaf ; P )evmor ;
·c ;rlckel. Sales, renta l,
SJrvlce, supplies. Travel
!railers , tru ck Cflmpers,
c amp ing trailers , t ruck
c ap s . Speci DI Sa1urday
nlgnts . Open evenings or by
appoin t m en 1. ·con t a ct
Rob ert Codner .
(1 0-11 -lmo . pd . I

S:OO-Big ' Valley 3: Merv Griffin 4; Mlstor Rooers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30-News 6; Family Atlalr B; Elec. Co . 20,33; Adam .
12 13.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10.13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
· Teac~h~ Children 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,151 ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge lodge 20; Lilias Yooa
&amp; You 33.

~~~tlol Senius

....

\

ooly $12,0110.

- --

· : rliwn &lt;cillrlr, corn lobl&gt;er with plate, sausage stuller,
W'l!urte·reoord player, Wooden pulleys, tool bOKeS, hair
~ ~clipper s, f lr~ pla ce pot hanger. Mall Pouch
· ihsrmo/.l'eter, tin co"•• and comb boKes. misc. wood
cor'leitlon, wicker bask~!, scales, shaving mirror,
Centref'taundry Iron !tove, $hl ngle cutter. and other
Items w~ don't know about .
·HOUSEHOLD - MIS'C.

·· Sm!tt'

Phone 991.1111

· ASSORTED lumbe r 2x&lt;4's, 2JCB's,
2x6's. Phone 247-2272.

","-youth rocking and stra'lght chairs, 2 wood beds, 1 with
: ·-~gtl tleattbOard , 2·stands, chairs, 461 n. kraut cutter, 2
t:tij,Ndle sewing macn lnes, Clark spool cabinets, wood
t rbtktrt-, 2 08k dressers, complete socket set, wooden

.

Jack W. Carsey, Mvr.

1976 Chevrole t Cap ric e wagon;
1973 GoiO II" Ie 6 Starcroft
(omper . Queen size stu d1o
couch. Phone (304) 88J -2910. _

ANTIQUEQ~liOLLECTOR'SITEMS
door oak• ~pltoal1d~ dinner bell, stone Iars

diilrl, misc. dishes, linen, small appliances. whlft.not
' .• hell, 121!. extension and i6 ft . ladder, sweeper, 3 H.P.
rilt.o.t~ler , Riotform sca les, W!'Od bo..s and bin, miK
han~ ·!Dol• and saw.
'
~~·~
"' ' ,;
.
Lunch
'
,
__,

12.000

mil es S I!S V bar, crash bars ,
pull bock handl e ba rs , new lire
and seals, Sc ra mbl er s1de
_pi pes~ $650_ C~l~ 949- 248~
POTATOES .and pumpkin s C W.
Proffllt, Portland , Ohto Pho ne '
843-2254 .
COAL tor sole , Open '1 •O'I'S her
yvl:lekondevenings For fu rt er
informa tion co li (614) 367-733B.
1966 Ford Ptckup truck. SSOO. Also
horse tra ile r, $450. Phone {61.4)
698-3290.
SWEET po tatoes, R. W. l ewis , Rt
124, Ro cme, Ohto. Phone 843-

·"::--o-.,--.-

f ~ 1 , 3 apple p~ rs ,~r~ln cl,~dle, 2 corn sh~llers,
. fiC!I\.sii4 ilet, pots and' a ettle, small brass an.d large
. ; • lord kettles, Mateand'Ca aln trunk, oak wood bucket,
I
b(oom l'[l~klnp machine. chest. picture lrames. 21 ln .
1
IJ.oCSd bowl, 2"sewlng rockers, 1900 youth wooden sled,
\
wood"'Wheelbacrow, hall tree, plank bottom choirs,

;
;
'
'

· brakes.

AKC

FUllER Brush Produc ts tor sola .
Phone 992-3410.

t

.,

Local l oWner car, green flo jsh, green vinyl roof, radial

w-w tires, 11lr cond.. V-8, w ith automatic P. steering &amp;

Convenient to sho pping on
Third and Ml!l Streets In Middleport . Brond new high quoiJty apart me nts . See the
manager ot Apt . 16,- or co It

--'----:c--c-

$3995

Gutten &amp;
Oowftno11h
. e ltotflftl : AklmHwm Skfl..
&amp; Seffit.

Rainbow Ridge
Buhan Area •
Long Bottom , Oh io

WEDNESDAY,OCTO B~R13, lf76

-1. . .,_

e ·Atumiluolm

.

.. -..r. ...
~~personal property of the estote of the late Pearl
-diCOehl~o wilt bt sold ot 1.7 mile South of Tuppers
1; jns, OhiO&gt;,I'ft State. ~ute 1.
•.

'

1974CHEVROLETMONTE CARLO

WOULD rhe party who found o
Timbeqack 230D Skidder: John ·
billf old belong ing to Gilbert K.
Deere 440B Skidder: Pe ttJbone
Smith please Ca ll (6 14) 446Super 8 Cory Ltft : Morbark 48
0110
1n . Chip-Poe. Contac t Don
MRS Dean Brinker lost o porGra ves or lyons Equipment
lf1gkni te ol senti men tal ImCo
In c Circlevtlle , Ohio
po rtan ce to her between her
43113. Phone !614) 596-&lt;4769 or
home 011 Raci ne -Boshon Road
(6") "4-6026
ond Raci ne . If found, p l e o~ e
EFFICiENCYo~~eol·f~-;;;;l~le .
phone her Ot 949-2539.
Mulberry Ave. references
Phone 992·2030 or 992-7760.

.~ ·

,I .,

.

5434.

-----------USED FORESTRY EQU IPMENT .

11:00 A.M.

~:

·

19700LDSDELTACPE.
51295
Radle&gt;. automatic, P.S., P, B., good tires. Clean.

3 AND ~ RM . furnished and unfurn ished opts. Phone 992·

m m 1.

Saturday, October 16, 1976

,

13095
locall owner, 6 cyl., automatic, powe" steer ing, clean
Interior, radio, good w-w tires, rally wheels, sport

--

AVA ILABLE ot Rh1ers1de Apartments, 1 b&amp;droom apart ments, $100 per mont h: 2
bedroom apartments , $133 per
THU NDERBIRD hubcap. brown ac mon th. Phone 992-3273
cents , betwee n M1ddl eport
and Heck's on Stole Route 7 2 Bedroom trailer Brown's Trai le r
Pork Phone 992-3324 .
Reward. Phone 992-{354 ,

;;.~aJA TE: A.YCTION

f

ms NOVA HATCHBACk CPE .

: .=-::;-

(6" )446-029.

w~~~~~-=t~ll~::'::::~~

'"io\

CODNER'S
CAMPERS

:.;:~.

SWeEPE R--and Sewtng- Mochmes
Repair , Ports and Suppl tes .
Oovls Va Cuum Cleaner, one
hot! mile up George'$ Cree k
Rood off State Route 7. Phone

rabbit dogs oil ages ,
s toried and tro med Phone
OLD furf11 tu re ice bo xes brass
74 ~~2 !..:__:_.,_ --- .
beds , wa ll tele phOnes an d
AKC Oobermon puppy , femo la, .4
part s, or complee households
months, bred from champlon Wr ite M 0 . Miller, Rt. 4 ,
shtp lmes for protection and
Pome roy, Ohto .!=oll ~~776!!
good temperament . Phone
742-3054.
CASH paid for a ll makes and
· ---~ · ~
mode ls of mobile homes.
Phone oreo code 614-423-9531
TIM BER Pomeroy Fares! Products . Top pri ce for standing
NO TI.C E OF APPOINTMENT
sawtimber .Coli Kent Hanby
Case No . 'll9S6
1-446-8570.
Es tat e of Verda alt\'er
Decea sed.
' $$CA"sH$$ tor junk~aut os
NOI1 cc IS he re by give n that
Pho ne 742-208 t Frye's Truck &amp;
Ne lli e Brown ot Pomeroy, • Auto Po rts Rutlo nei
R D ,. '"Ot}1o, has been duly ~
-~a ppointed Admin istra tri)( of COIN S, 1929 and older currency
th e Es t ate of Verda Oliver,
gold ond sil ve r, sc;ro p. W1ll buy ,
deceased . 'l'e le of M1ddlep ort ,
se ll or trade, for a good ~e l ec ­
Meigs Co unt -y, Ohio .
fton of cotn s. Hov e suppli es lor
Crect jtou; are re q ulfe~ to
l'ne tol
de tec tor s . Roger
fil e thv ir claim s with said
Wamsle~ , on Leadin g Cree k
f1d uciarv wilh in thr ee mo nths.
Dated th is 8th da y of Oc
and Rutl ond Rood . Phone 742Io ber . J976 .
233~ for an off er
11
SOUTHERN
Yell ow Pine Pos t. Pay.
Mannin g D. We bster
ing Premium prices. Pos t to be
Jud ge
Court of Common Plea s,
delivered to our yard ot Bill ~
Proba te DIVIS IOn
in gs, W. Vo. Spec1es : Virginia
( 10 1 13, 20. 27 , Jtc
Pi tch and Shortleol For stzes
and pnc&amp;s inqu1 re at : Th e
Burke ·Parson s- Bowlby Cor pora tion , P.O . BoK 39 .
NOTICE pF APPC?INTMENT
c.ne ..,,.. "'1955
Spence r W. Vo Phone 927Estat e
of
R·He na
B.
1250. Nig ht call. Ted Jackson
Genh e il'j"'er Decea:.ed .
354-7694 or Jim Lohner, 927·
Noli ~.:: is' her eby giv en tha t
...,.... __
• --~
Rache l M SherldB n of 513 _ 1466.
Carol' Str ee t, Wav er ly, Oh to, WANTED: Chipwood. Poles moJC
has b ee n du ty appoint e d
tmu m dtome te r, 10 inches on
Executrix of the Estate ot
largest end. $8.00 per ton .
Rozena
B
Ge nhctmer:.
bundled sla bs , $6 .00 per ton
dec eased . late of RD . Mtners Deliver to Ohio Pollet Comville. Me igs County. Ohio .
pany.
Rt , 2. Pomeroy. Oh1o.
Credtl or s ar e rcqu 1red to
Phone 992-2689.
flte th ei r c1~1ms w1th sa1d
--·'
fiduci ary witt11n th r ee mo nths
Dated th1 S 8t h day of Oc tobe r "1976
'
Manning D. Webs ler
"
Judge
Court of Com mon P leas ,
Pr oba te Oiv1sion
Meigs County , Oh1o
(101 JJ, 20 , 27, 3tc

QUAUTY

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

mirrors. white &amp; gr~ fin ish ..

----

BEAG~E

: Of

Call9'n-2l56.

RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.

a lso will buy horses and
ED UCATIONAL sur.v.eyor wonted.
poni es . Phone (614 ) 698-3290,
Plese call be twee n the h o ur~ 4
Ruth Reeves .
&amp; 6 P'·'"·, Monday thtough
AKC Re gtsfered Sa.nt Be rn o r~
Fndoy . 446 4J67 .
Puppies , 2 mole, 1 fe male, 3
months old . Strong ond
healthy . Phone (304 ) 773-5405 .1
or (30&lt;4) 675-2310 Pt Pleasa nt,
WILL DO odd jobs . roofing. pain
W Vo .
tmg , haul ing , tree work, and
AKC Reg . Beegle pups, $40.
mowing Phone 992-7409.
Phone 992-37 17.

'

2 SIGNS

oe looking for work . . . or
whatever . . you 'll
results
foster wlfh o S.,tine Wont ,4,d.

COUNTRY Moblle Home Pork , Rt
33, ten m1 les north ol Pomeroy ,
Lorge lof5·with co ncrete patios
sidewalks, r11nn•rt and off
ATTENTION : .Dear Marie I om
_street park ln.g~~e992-7.f79 .
terrib ly sorry lor whet ha ppened Sunday, Octob.r lOth ONE , bedroom aportments ot
...,.hic h wos all my fault, and I
VIllAGE MANOR in Middlepo rt
hope you con find it in your
for
$10.f monthl y plus elec. or
heart to fo rg iVe me love, Ken $130' includlng electric. LOWER
ne th ,

~-

Business Services.

IF 't'OU have Cl ser... tce to offer ,

operat ion. Mechofiic ond body
work . North Se&lt;:ond Street '"
Mld~ lepor l . Formerly Bran nons Garage . Phone 992-S.SO
or,a llafter5p .m . 992 -7135

The Pubtl sher reserves
th e rlgl'lf 10 tdil or reject
any tcJS , dtt m t d Ob ·
ltc l lona l . The publ is h er
will no t be ruponslble tor

1

0

6:30 p.,., .

1\ons accepted Urs1 aav of

.

Television log for easy viewzng

THE RACINE F1re Department wlll

Publlcttlon .

pwbiiC:~:u LATIONS

Fast Results Use

()

,_ .

__. =--·

) I I MMr=••dll .......
toA
fwallooi
ld'ltJ

~WI II

"[IIIII111
"'

AN' Mil LEETLE TATER
IS A REGULAR

EARTHWORM

WES,MAAM ,

WE'RE f.IErlE
TO SEE n:tE

BOOKWORM

•

APPARENTL1(, THERE~ ~EEN
S&lt;W.E MISIJNDE~STANDIN6 ..,
SEEMS ltl n:IINK I ·
8ELON6 BACK IN SCHOOL

AFTER HE'S FIHISNI!l'
HIS LUNCH!

_,
'

�.

. 14 -1'hl' Datl~ Sentinel, Midrtl.epor\-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Oct. 13, 1976

School repairs refused
I::AST MEIGS - Tw o
requests for building repairs
nt Riverview and Chester
Eleme ntary Schools were
turned down by the Eastern
lloard of Education Tueooay
night due to the iack of funds.
Supt John Riebel pointed
out that the district is 'low on
money, and while ~chool will
be conducted through the rest
Of the calendar year, some
bilL• a\i·cady will -have to go .
unpaid. The board decided to
pill off the requests for
repairs until after the first of
the year whe n more funds
will be rom ing into the
di!itrltl 's treasury.
About · nine parents of
chiJI!rcn ·on one- bus ro ute
appeared before the board,
mtcting in regu lar . session
Tucsd•y night, to disc·uss

'

•

Presi ent .clean,

'.

other districts with the Supt. Riebel, Principal Blllell, Mn. Eille Fobner,
Athell! board serving as the Chester Gooding, . board repreltntins the Chester
fiScal agent The board abo flll'Diben, 0r1a Smith, David .PTA, Pennington, Mri.
entered Into a cooperaUve Smith, Dorothy Calaway , Eloile &amp;o.loo, clerk, and tilt
agreement with the Scioto Dorsel Larkins and DaMy group of parents.
Valley Schools for the basic
adult education program
carried ou! ln the Eaatem
District. The board transferred Identified students to
the Melgs County Boa~d of
Sixty pints ·of blood were 4&amp;gue with Ml's. . Kenn~
M~ntal Retardation.
'
It was agreed to P$Y Mra. donated at the Bloodmobile IJatrla as chatnnan wu In
Joe Lance to transport her Mond~y, 34 plnts in charae of the canteen.
child to the Chester School replacement.l, with a total of Loading and unloading was
because of a s~l trans- 71 persona oHering them· done by Boy Scout Troop Mil,
and volunteer aenlor cltlzena.
portation problerrl Involved. seivea. ·
Doing the clerical work
There
were
live
first
Ume
The board passed a resolution
were
Mary Nease, Jean
donors.
gallon
dooors
were
providing that the· superln·
'tendent and prlnc1P$1s will Rowena Vaughan and Nease, Juanita Sayre, Jean
prepare ·general ptogresa Wllllam R. ~e ; two gallon Sayre, Beulah Strauaa, Lula
reports which will be on fUe ln \l!&gt;nilr was Georae W. Nub Hampton~ Joyce Hoback,
Barton,
Helen
each office and with the clerk and Katheieen Wella was a Macei
Pickens, Emma K. Clat·
for public inspection. Billa five gallon donor;
sevet ~l breakdowns of a bus
Nurses were Mrs. Vern worthy, .MJ!dred Betzlng,
were approved for P$Yment.
being nstd to transpm1 their
Attending the meeting were Story, RV, Lenora Leifheit, Enna Rouah, Mra. Robert
rh•ldrcn . 11•c.board assured
R.N., and Lela Weatherby, Hill, Kathy Cumings, Eleanor
the porents that it \s awa re of
Lawson, Gta.ce Drak.e,
LPN.
the problem and that repair
Doctors asalltlng were L. Vernon!iease, Pat Ingels and
work is being cm·ried out on Former Pomeroy
D. Teile,M.D., E. Vlllanueve, Dorothy
tM bus in a hope to correct ·
Donatlclns 'were ' inade by
M.D., &amp;ger Daniell, M.D.
James Proffitt, DemocratiC candidate for shertfl; James
THE "PEANUT BRIGADE", ,.PROMOTING the
the probl.,n.s.
resident dies
and Raymond Boice, M.D. Quaiit)l • Print ' !!HOp; Meigs
Osc ar Penning ton,
Bailey, Democratic candlate !w COIIIIIIiaBloner and Rep.
eiectloo of the Carter·Mondale ticket arrived in Pomeroy
The Chlld Conservation Local8Ch&lt;IOf;' WMPO''Rlldio:
J•
1~1 ;' '
'
president of the Eastern
Tuesday evening. The "brigade" of some 20 persons
Ron James. In the ba~ II the charter¢ bus In
Rollin Price, 72, formerly
Chapter of the . Ohio
traveling southeastern Ohio this week on behalf of the two
which the brigade is iraveling. Some members ol tlle
of
Pomeroy, died Sunday ln
/IS.'JOci•tlon of School Em·
group.,S\Byed In Pomeroy homes and others at the Meigs
candidates were joined on the upper parking lot by a
ploye,, askerl for a meeting Columbus ending a long 111·
Inn &lt;rVeimght before cootinulng their l&gt;tflp which will
number of toWD!people. At the left of the photo, I to r, are
with the board to discuss ness .
conclude Thursday In Columoos.
James Roush, Democratic candidate for commissioner:
(Continued from page I)
Mr. Price, a 1922 graduate
•lle Ked vlolatinns of the
agrecmt':nt between the group of Pomeroy High School, wsa three-year period to provide loaM and granfa to ebronicaUy
'
uml lhe board •• to hours a retired employee of the depressed areas ..
'
C&amp;O
Railroad
and
was
a
The
measure
re.establ!Ahes
on
a
pennanent
basis
the
Job
Dally
Sentinel;
Atbens Bartrum, Kathellne Oln St'('retal'ies are working. That
.M. Black.
member of the Brotherhood · Opportunities program. It has a new "trigger" which Messenger; Pomeroy nison, Adell L. White, Martha Esther
Svracu:;e - Jane C~ndlff,
~:~pccial M.':: •.wn was set for
I'LAYERS HONORED
Sarah Fowler, Kathy J. Cumings, Everett J.
o.f Railway Clerks.
authorized $81.3 million quar!erly for areas· of hlgh Emergency Squad and JRevaHackett,
Ott. :m.COWMBIJS
(UPI) ~
J.
Bunce.
Judith
Pock
Michael .
Surviving besides his wife, : unemployment whenever tbe national unemployment rate Veterarul Memorial HospitaL
. The board granted a .leave
ington, Sarah A. Bechtle.
Cbaoeea are the Mid·
.
Long
Bottom
-·
Henry
Harrisonville -·, Robert , Bahr,
of absence to · Mrs. Orena are a dsughter, Mrs. Richar~ exceeds 7 per c.ent. The new law ruM from liscai 1977 to 1979
Pomerov ·Eric -A.
American Coafernee
Howar~
Parker,
Clintoo R. Pltier, Ralph H. football ofleaaive aall
Ftwker , cook al Tuppers (Ruth) Hall ; two sons, and covers areas with populaUoos as low as 25,000, C&lt;Jmpared Pearch , Jesse t&lt;odman , Alkire.
Point
Pleasant
Caron
D. Shultz, John P.
Ballard, Oris Smith.
PIJins , for the remainder of Robert of Re)'noldsburg, and to 2fi0,000 in the old law. It establishes a revolving loan fund Roger
Karschnlk, Harlan
H. Jordan.
John,
of
Columbus;
a
stepHemlock Grove - Mark J. del-ive playen of tbe
program
of
Interest
free
federal
loaM
lor
redevelopment
areas
t11e calendar year ·due to
Langsville - Ellis E. Werry,
Wehrung ,
Robert
W.
week will meet each other.
Sharon M. Welker.
tllncss A list of the teachers son, David Sharp, Columbus; and autborlzes a new program for payment of an interest Vaughan,· Rupil · Goradla, Mrers.
Minersville
Carolyn
A.
Satarday.
a step·daughter, Shirley subsidy of up to 4per cent on business loans.
etarl, W. Va. - Steve E. Charles, w ·i lliam H: Jones, · face-to-race
Patty J. Barton, George W.
J:;soL·Jation of the district was
wiD aUempl ·
Keat
Slate
McNeal, Logan; 10 grand·
Nash, Kathellne Wells, Mary Hanlon.
Stacie Arnold. Janel E. Hill.
prest'nted the board and Rck
to
IDtroduce
Iackie aad
Hartford.
W.
Va.
Janet
Mary Fields,
Chester - Albert Marlin.
CHICAGO - A LEGAL GROUP HAS ACCUSED the Starcher,
Van Maire, Mad hu B. children , three great.'
L Gibbs.
MAC
Defeasive
Player .tl
Rowena Vaughn , Leo L.
Reedsville - Ernest H.
Racine - Jay Hill. Martin,
Mal hotn1 and Kathleen grandchildren; a brother. Department of Housing and Urbtin Development of attempting Vaughn, Gera ld Rought,
the
Week
Gie1111
Deadmoa
Macel
S.
Barton,
Charles M., Colwnbus and to "subvert" a cour\-ordered program to curb last William Elliott, Leo Loring Charolotte L. Wamsley,
Haske ll were added to the
Richard
Barton.
.
G
rant
to
qaarterbl!et
8lld of.
two sisters, Lucille Price of foreclosw-es on govermnent.lnsured mortgages.
Vaughn · II, Wallace P. . Loretta K. Hill, Michael J. Sm)th
·
subsr.itute teachers list.
leulve
•tar
Mart
Miller
ef
Brown,
Karen
L
Pyles
,
Hatfield,
Patrick
A.
Hill.
Ma&amp;., W. Va. - Janet L ·
Attorneys for the Legal Assistance Foundation of Chicago Stephen Nease, Sheila J. Charles f. Pyles. Dorothy
The board entered into an Co lumbus and Kathryn
BftliDg
Green
wbea
.the
Conard,
Ervin
L.
Conard.
sent a letter to HUD Secretary ~ria Hills denulndtng she Taylor, Janet M. Ambrose, Jean Alk ire, Dorothy M.
agreement with .the Athens · McMaster , Hudson, Ohlo.
teallll play Satarday.
Cheshire
Charles
Funeral services wlll be rectify the silulltlon within 15 days or lace legal action whlch John W. Ambrose, William R. Sayre.
·
Co unty Board of Education
Searles.
Rutland
Donna
M.
Pyne.
•
Gallipolis- Fred Hartwell.
!or an educa ble mentally held at 10 a.m. Thursday at could place her In contempt of coW').
Middleport -:- Joyte . v. J:)avldson, Mary E. D~vldson,
the
Jerry
Spears
Funeral
•·ctarded classroom super·
BEIRUT, LEBANON- SYRIAN FORCES heavily shelled
visor, shanxi with several Home, 2693 W. Broad St.,
Columbus
with
John Palestlnlan positions along the main Damascus highway
Hydlnger offl~atlng . Burial southeast of Beirut today, . openl~ up a secood !root in their ·
wll\ be in Sull!et Cemetery, current military offensive.
Columbus.
Leftlst and Palestinian communiques said Syrian artillery
FURN_ITURE DEPARTMENT .ON THE THIRD FLOOR
was puWldlng Bhamdobn and Aley ln the central mountains.
The shelling was SO heavy that the booms of the C8MonS could
(Continued from page 8)
be heard 10 miles away in Beirut. In the south, fighting was
themselves.
reported to have slackened off overnight following the Syrian
On weekends, costumed
of two key Palestinian positions.
captlire
''soldiers' '
and
" laun·
ure.sses" sci up camp, pitch ,
(Continued from page I)
teuls, fire muskets and carry dominated by the Soviet
a
on their daily routines in 19th Union.
1 fY
c'Cntu ry fashion . The ten ts,
"! did not express myself
unifo •·ms a nd activities clearly . I admit it," Ford
1
visitors see are modeled as said ." ... the original mistake
(Continued from page 1)
closely as possible upon those. Was mine. "
of tile original period.
Independent candidate Eu· lforris spoke highly of the work of the secretaries and
Ope n l hroOgh October, gene McCarthy, in an suggested It would be well if they were tied to the
from 10 to 6, Wednesday ·interv iew
on
public administration and not remain members d! the Ohio
through Sun day , Fort Meigs television, said. Carter, If Association of Public School Employes.
offers visitors an excellent elected, would "over·
· It was requested also that the salaries of the three he
opportunity to relive one of personalize the oflice and I .adjusted. Supt. Dowler will send the Information tO the legal
the rnost dramatic chapters think that's highly dsngerous · advisor of the board for his recommendation on what aclion
ol Ohio's frontier \tistory.
in every respect."
the board should take.
.~
For a free, 16 page color
"When Corter be&amp;lns to
It was also agreed to table the request of Joy Bentley,
booklet on all of the Ohio talk about the presidency," director of the high school girls' athletic program, until the
Hi s to r ic. a 1 s 0 c i e t y •s McCarthy sald, "! find · him attorney has been contacted for a recommendation. Mrs.
~estetday Getaways, write saying things In tertiUI of Bentley requested equal pay for coaches of girls athletic
2-PC. TWlM SET
the Public Information Of. )anguage that ate very prograDIB and the boys' prograDIB since It has oow been
lice, t he Ohio Histori cal similar to what 'Nls:on aeld, declared by the state that girls can now have their season of
Center, 1·71 and 17th Ave. , the idea that it II a personal· play and the number of c!)ntests be held comparable to the
Columbus, Ohio 4321I.
office, or that Nmm said he boys' sport programs.
was the moral leader of the
Supt. Dowler said that the problem Is now in interpretation
country."
of the TIUe IX provlslons. He said that salaries had only been
1n Maryville, Tenn., GOP recenlly negotiated after a two week strike and they had been
vlce presidential nominee ·accepted.
mallreu and
Robert Dole challenaed
However, Mrs. Bentley said the prov1Blon8oi the Title IX ~~~~
lxl.uprmg
carter to reveal the names of program were nlit !mown at that time. Dr. Riggaand Snowden · t:
corporate contributors to his mentioned the "pressures" on the boys athletic program
•
1970 campaign for governor coaches and the supervlalon provided by head coaches In the
of Georgia.
boys programs lo the coaches of the same sports In the lower
Dole said two acCountants, grades. Both said they would support equal salaries lor the
who worked in the cilmpaign women coaches if they are mandatory but wlll not unless the
wlth carter, claim illere were law says the salaries must be equal.
computer llsts identifying
The board approved the budget of Mts. Bentley for the
such contributors. Dole 'Sald girls' ~thleUc program this sch!XIi year.
carter has said there are no
The board gave parmlsslon for tlle Meigs Chapter of the
such records.
American Cancer Society to uae tlle ,llu:llor blgh field in
Middlep&lt;rl for practice sessions for,lim1 ~16;lilblill'game
on 'I'hanksglvlng and gave permlasldll fil&gt;'d\1! ~ to use the
Pomeroy field for the holiday aanie;1&lt;:olCli'Mrtes Chancey
has approved tlle use of the field and eqiifpment, Asst. Supt.
Morris said.
' ··•·
Added to the subatltute teachers .list
Mad,hu B.
Malhotra, Rick Van Maire, W. H. Perrin arid Wheeler Drake
""d the non-teaching employes ~k leave accumulaUon was
EACH PIECE
lncre&amp;fle&lt;\ to 150 days, the same time as retenUy given to
teachers of the district.
The board agreed to P$Y Charll!s MUllin, chairman of the
impasse panel, a fee of $1,017. 72. The teachers associ8tion will
qu.o on - • ldn8 sl••
have .to pay Mullin the same amount; The resignation of
10ld only In soli .
Delmar Haynes as a junior hlgh basketball coach was
• innerspring mattresses Ore de·
accepted.
.
·
.
signed to gtve the jirm pOature
The board approved the atlelldance ·of staff members to
support you need for proper rest ·
the following meet~:
.
omultl·need\e quilted . with
Cecilia Rinaldo and Jean Shaver. yearbook photograph
heavyweight tiber Insulation
padding
.
seminar In Coi11D1~ oo Sept. 28.
. Undi Yonker . and Mary Powell, Ohio Vocational
•luxurious puff-quilled tops ·offer
additional comfort
.
Association Convention ln Columbus, Oct. B.
John· Wllllam ' Biaettnar, Dbtrlbutlve Education
• durable taped, tailored aeama ·
Coordlnaton meeting In Chllllcothe, Oct. 11. •
• heavy-duty, fully-insulated comnm nesller, general aptitUde test battery woriWlop in
panion-weight boxsprings
Columbus, Oct 7, a, 28 and Nov. 23.
•
gold
1\ora\/crown print covera
From the malrera of the Perfect 81Hper111 maltreu
Three guldince COWllleiora at Meigs High School to an
Vis it Our Salad Bar
'
'
intensive skill training conference In Nelaonville on Nov. 17.
4 oz. Wh ite Fish·
l.eda Mae Kraeuter was given a leave of a~ from her
Home Fr ies
MAIN STORE, HOME FUR.NISHINGS ANNEX .AND MECHANIC STREET
duties as a hooie economiCI Instructor for the res\ of the
·Hot Rolls
semester ~e IIi Illness and Grover's studio was named the
Coffee , Tea or Mi lk.'
WAREHOUSE OPEN THURSDAY
OPEN FRIDAY
high school photographer for the yearbook and othor plctw-es.
Plus tax
Supt. Dowler was authorized to make application for Title IY '·
TO 8 PM: SATURDAY
TO PM ·
funds, for tlle purchaae of equlpmenl.
Roger Holman was employed as a bua mechanic for one
year and the board transferred the students of compulsory
992 -3629
school age who were enrolled In the trainable prtgram last
year oad those who qualify In the future to the Melp County
Boar~ of Meow! Retardation ,

SiXty accepted

wm:·'

•

'

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Special watergate
Prosecutor Chaires Ruff
today said Ida lnve!tlgalion of
Michlpn campaign finances
bad cleared l're81dent Ford
oi1U11 wrmadolng ~
"AI:cc:rdlngiy, ibe inatter
bas now been cloeed and
• counsel for the President has
been advised," Ruff said.
Ruff lroke along alienee to ·
.Issue a prepared statement
dlspeiUng
'!idespread

*"

speculation about the
lnvestigatlon into whether
Ford misused campaign
finances whlle a member of
Congres9.
.
''The evidence developed
during this lnvesUgaUon was
not corroborative of the
allegation on which It was
predicated/' R\111 said, "Nor
did evidence dlaclosed during
the inquiry Into · that
allegaUon give reason to
belleve tha t any other

1

vlolati!IIs of law had ·occur·
Ruff said he agreed to would be P$ssed on to Mr.
red."
investigate and received a Ford fll' his personal use,"
Ruf! referred to a rep&lt;rl by formal assignment dated last Ruff said In a statm&gt;ent
an FBI informant alleging July 16.
issued to reporters .
For. d misused political
"The infonnation furnished
Ford, who was Informed of
contributions from 19114 to to the attorney general by the the decisloo to drop the
early 1974 while he was a FBI concerned a previously investigation Wednesday
House
member
and uru;eporte&lt;\ aUegaUpn that night, had earlier !lfged that
Republican leader.
polltlcal cmtributions from the matter he quickly cleared
FBI Director Clarence M. certain named unions had · up to clean the polltlca) air In
Kelley turned the report over · been transmUted to · the his race against Delilocrat
to Attorney General Edward ~Utica! commltiA!es ln Kent . Jimmy Carter fOI' the Whlte
H. Levl who, in tum, asked County, Mlch ., with the House.
Ruff to assume jurisdl~lon . understanding that they
Ruff, wbo was not present
.. !

e

Pomeroj·Mlddleport, Ohio
Tllanday, October 14, 1978

•

at y

·

Fort's

President

H h sch00I r·00f
--e
- .·
..

Now! serta

sizeI

Famous Ortho-Cushion·
extra firm mattresses
or boxsprings in
tw~n. full, queen .·
or king sizes~
all now at
one low price!

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE'

•

m

Thursday Night·
Special

.

-

9:30 to 5 PM:
9:30 5

THE MEIGS INN'

.

9:30

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

enttne

Flfteen Ceoll
Vol. II, No. J2C

Flu inoculations called off in
three of Ohio's counties

News•• in Briefs

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

when the statement was the years 1967·1972 ," the
The proliOCUlor said his
handed out at tthe Justice statement said.
stall and FBI a1ents
Department, said that the
Ruff also discounted any exiunlned public .--rds ol
White House had complied .pollUcal motivation by the the union contributions and
fully with the investigation. lnf&lt;rinant who sparked the money Ford 's campaign
"Counsel for the President Investigation.
cornmlttees received.
complied with this request
"This allegation was made
- Rull said persons who
and, also at the special to an agent of the FBI by an mlgbt have lnfU'IliBUon were
pr, ose ~ utor's
request , individual who had recently lntervtewed eitlle.r by his
authorized the Internal .become aware Of the Wlderly· · attorneys 01' Fill agents or
Revenue ServiCe to make lng informaUon," Ruff said. both. He ·sald he conlacted
available the 'wOI'k prodlict' "lnv(\Stlgation has revealed Ford's coonttel on Sept. 30 and
of Its 1973 audit of President no apparent motive on the requested iUh to !w-nlsh
Ford's Income tax returns for part of this Individual to "certain infonnatlon" about
fabricate."
Ford's personal finances.

SYRACUSEl'OOLCONSTRUCTION
PROGRESSING - This junior Olympic size pool being
built In Syracuse through federal grants, $112,000 from
HUD and $14,000 from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation.

The bid lor construction - well underway above - was
. awarded to Roger Hornsby Co., CoolviUe on Thursday,
Sept. 16. Robert 'Wingett, council president, headed the
project.

lJULUM11US" (UP!)
his physician Dr. James
Three Ohio counties have Lewis of Riverside Hospital
swine · flu · cautioned that · Hail was
suspended
inOculations despite attempts seriously Ill with severe
by state health officials to diabetes, heart trouble and
c;onvince oflicais that the kidney disease . requiring
shots were not directly dialysis .
.
Involved in two Ohio deaths
Brbeck also had a history
and an increasing national of heart trouble according to
toll.
,
Warren County health
Stark Co\llliY has }XII off its o!flclals investigating his
program until Tuesday, and death.
Marion and Warren counties
Dr. Ralph Young, Warren
have suspended their County coroner, said the
programs
lndellnltely gross lindlngs of an autopsy
p e q d l n g f u r t h e r on Er~eck Wednesday
Investigations.
revealed no sigll! of coronary
Frank Hafl, 34, of thromboais or major heart
Columbus died Tuesday darnBge.
night, one day after r~ivlng · Young said he believed the
a bivalent vaccine to protect death was not related to the
against ·swine "flu and inoculation but he said lt
victorian flu. Dr. Alvin C. would be several weeks
Erbeck, 74, a Ma!lOn dentist , belore virology stady reports
died Wednesday several days came back. They would show
after a bivalent lnooeulatlon , any connection between the
Hall was the . youngest death and the nu shot.
person in the country listed as
Ohio health olflciais
a death soon after a shot, but continue to assure the pUbllc

lu!d to decide what to say to .
people who said it's because
of the shots. the only a1111wer
CBme up with is to be HS
candid as possible and to
Investigate ea~h death," he
said.
:christensen said In none of
the
deaths
reported
nationwide so far has the '
vaccine been implicated .
"The only way the vaccine
would klll someone outright,"
he sald, ''Was if lt were
loaded with a very deadly
poison. Even plague germs
would take longer to act than
these deaths. It couldn't kllla
·person 24 hours after lnjec·
Uon.n·
The
state
health
deP$r!ment has noted no drop
ln partiCipation in the
inoculation cilnlca.
Dr. Stanley
Lucas,
presidenteiect
of
the
Cincinnati Academy of
Mectlclne, sald there was
"good merit" to an araument
by polio vaccine developer
_ Dr. Albert Sabin that
"perhaps the better course
would have been to wall to
see lf the swine flu, was ln
fact, present."
Lucas said, "there was so
much. public clamOI' fo the
program,
so
much
government supliort, we felt
there was no alternative but
to support tbe program."

and 'county health ofllcials
that the inoculations are safe.
"It comes as no surprise to
US that some elderly persons
who ·have received the
vaccln~ have died," State
health department
spokesman Jon Christensen
ssld. "We can 't halt the
deatha of all elderly people
lor the next two mooths.
Remember, we are ta!klng
about old people and high risk
patients. The death rate for
these people Is pretty high."
He pointed out that the
same day Hall died another
Columbus man with diabetes,
kidney and heart trouble
died. He, however, had not received the shot.
Christensen sald that even
before the Ohio ·vaccinations
began, officials aat down and
tried to pian how to deal wlth
the situation of sick and
elderly patients dying .
"We knew there would be a
certain munber of deaths. We

Health
By United Presalntematlonal
WASHINGTON. - RESIG~ATIONS MAY COME s()on
from most of the trustees of the Teamsters' $1.4 billion Central
States Pension Fund as a result of a government Investigation
Into aUeged lllegal dealings by the fund. It was not known
whether Teamsters' President Frank Fitzsimmons, who al8o
serves as a trustee, was among those on the verge of resigning.
One trustee, William Presser of Ohio, already has resigned
under pressure from Labor Department investigators. Tbe
. deP$rlment had asked specifically for the resignations of
Presser and Frank Ranney, both of whom refused to answer
· questl0118 under subpoena. RaMey, however, has sought to
retain his position as a irustee by volunteering to talk openly
with Labor Department officials. He has yet to appear at the
department for questioning.

bill is

signed

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford has signed a
health education biU aimed at
prodUcing more di!ctors for
rural and Inner-city ' areas
and stopping a nationwide
decline
in
general
practicioners.
Ford Wednesday
' CINCINNATI - PIDLADELPHIA COUNCILMAN Jim
TayoWl flew to Cincinnati Wednesday night to h.onor !he first complained about \he $1.~
part of a two;~Brt bet with Helen C. Hinckley, a Queen City biUion cost of the three.year
coon'cllwoman. The two bet on the NaUonal League playoffs in · bill but said it "virtually
which the Cincinnati Reds emerged tbe winners in three assures that no individual
will be denied a medical
stralgbt games over the Philadelphia Phillies.
education
for financial
TayoiDI arrived at Reds' catcher ,Johnny Bench's
reasons·."
restaurant just in time to do the dinner dishes and bus the
The Health Professions
!abies. The second part of the bet, Tayoun said, will take place
Education
Assistance Act
next season when the Reds go to Phlladelphla for a series. He'll
creates a new health
belly dance at his Middle Easi restaurant in Philadelphia.
professions student loan
SANTA CRUZ, BOlJVIA - AVIATION AUTHORITIES guarantee program and a
say as many as 1110 persons may have died In the crash of a loan insw-ance lund through
Miami-based cargo plane that coreened into ~n elementary fiscal year 1978.
It also continues and
school and a soccer field shortly after takeoff Wednesday.
expands
a current .medical
"The plane SI11jlshed through 3110 yards ·of housing and
scholarship
program ·which
craahed Into a school," one witness said. "The fuel tanks
will
provide
individuals
with
exploded, setting of! fires over a wide area and knocking down
financial
assistance
to
attend
telejlhone poles and power lines." The authorities said between
80and 100 persons were killed, including the Boeing 707's three medical school. In return,
U.S. crew members. Bolivian radio put the death toll at 90. · each recipient will be
required to serve in a health
WASHINGTON - BECAUSE OF CONGRESS' election· manpower shortage area for
year freeze on pay raises for top level goverrunent officials, 275 a period of at least two years.
The bill• also requires
federal · executives . now earn less than $20,000 of. their
medical
schools recelvlng
sublrdlnale!!. One official, complaining of the policy, said it
govenunent
grants to provide
. was' ''not smart government ... npt smart economics ... not
annually
an
increasing
smart anyt11ing."
percentage
of
residency
The Civil Service Commission, which confirmed .the
positions
for
tndivlduala
in
figures, says that as a result of the freeze, significant numbers
.of top-flight government tal~nt left government service last primary care specialties such
year for better paying 'jobs In the private sector. For many, a · as internal · medicine,
generous government pension abo has been an incentive 'for pediatrics and family
medicine.
early retirement.
WASIDNGTON - JIM HOGE, EDITOR of the Chicago.
Sun Times, will moderate Friday's nationally televised debate
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
.between vice presidential candidates Robert Dole and Walter
Saturd.a y through
Mondale. ,
·
Monday, a chance of
'lbe League of Women Voters, spomor of the series of four . llhuwera Sallinlay aad •lair
debl!tes between President Ford and"Jlmmy Carter and..thelr Sunday aad Monday. Lows
runn1nli mates, said the !)$Del of questioners would consist of will be in the 30s or the low
Hal Bruno, political correspondant for Newsweek; Marilyn 4h and hlgbs wUI he in the
Berger, White· House. correspondant for NBC News; and mid 50S to the mid IIOa.
Wlilter Mears, special correspondsntfor the Associated Press.
The Doill-Mondale debate will he held in the Alley Theater in
Housll&gt;n beginning al 9;30 p.m. EDT, and will run for 75
SQUAD CALLED
.. minute!- iS shorter than the presidential confrontations.
The Racine Emergency
'SACRAMENTO, CALIF - WINDS , CONTAINING Squad was called at 9 p.m.
radioactive materials from a nuclear device exploded Sept. 26 Wednesday for Debbie
by Oilna apparently are making their second pass over Barnett, 17, RFD, Racine.
They transported Ruby
~lifornla, according to a state health officiaL
Irv1ng Goldberg, a senior health physicist with the Watts, Racine, at 3 a a.m.
Department o! Heallli, Wednesday reported monitoring today. Both were taken to
devices· throughout the state have registered highcr-Lhan - Veterans Memorial Hospltal
as medical patients.
(Continued on page 10)

,

we

Restoration
offer to help
•
project has ·

HEADQUARTERS OPENED - A ribbon cutting
ceremooy Wednesday night marked the official opening of
the,Melgs County Democratic Headquarters at the corner of
E. Main and Sycamore Sts., in Pomeroy. Participatln~ from

30TH, NOT %8TH
The deadline lor ab·
sentee voting in Meiga
County Is 4 p.m. on Ocl 31
and nol Oct. 20 a• reported
earller. The Melga Board of
Electlou located Ia the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple
buDding lA open from t
a.m. o 1% aoon aad 1 to 4
p.m., Moadays through
Satunlaya, for the coavenleace of absentee aad
d!Jabled voten.

Policy reversal made

WASHINGTON (UP!) The Agriculture Department,
reversing indications by its
top offlclais, · is Increasing
govenunent loan rates to
farmers· ralsi~ w~eat, corn
and other feedgralns.
Acting
Agriculture
Secretary John Knebel, in his
first news conference since
assuming that poslUon on the
resignation of Earl Butz,
'''''''':::::&gt;.::::::,:&gt;.::::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;: reje~ted saggestions that the
changes came In response to
u..l~e
pleas · from ·. Democratic
J ~ ...,
presidential nominee Jimmy
Carter, who has criticized the
administration lor not
Common Pleas Judge John coming to the aid of the wheat
c B
i
farmers.
.·
aeon, ant1c1pat ng
He sald the decision,
Inquiries
concerning . effective immediately was
·
•
's Da Oct0he 25 ·
Veteran
'
.
y.
r • based on conth!ued high
sa1d today lawmakers of Ohio production levels for the
designa:OO Nov_emoo It as crops In the the October
Veterans D.ay m Ohio.
production · report · issued
November II h~s been Tuesday.
'
.
declared a legal bobday and
"The announcement is not
the Courthouse wiU be closed In response to Mr. Carter's
November lith, ,not Oct. 25. cry," Knebel said. "But ln
Judge Bacon rearets the response to President Ford's
mixup, by declared the commitment."
matter beyond his control.
R e p u b li c a n vi c e
·
presidential nominee Robert
Dole cplled the decision
SQUAD CALLED
" wekome n¢ws to hard·
-RACINE - The Racine pressed grain producers."
Emergency Squad answered · Dole, In a statement, said
a call to Route I, Racine, at the hike in loan rates had
3: lo p.m. Tuesday lor Dc nzil heen
under
Hactive
Boggess who was IU. He was considerallon for several
taken to Vete. ans Memorial weeks and I have personally
Hospital.
disciii\SI'd it with Presi1enl

declares
·h ]ida
'

Slate 0

y

the left were Mary Christy, ,lames Roush, commissioner
candidate; Chesler Wella, chairman of the Meigs CoWltY
Democratic Central Committee; Rep. Ron James, James
Bailey, conunlssloner candidate, and Evelyn Thomas. ,.

Ford at least three times ."
· Knebel also announced
another 100,000 metric ton
sale to the Soviet Union of
U.S. hard winter wheat. It
brings wheat sales this year
to 26 mUIIon metric tons (!l:i
mlllioo busiiela).
Butz and other department
officials had continually
p)ayed down the possibility of
aioanrateincreasethisyear.
As late as W,ednesday,
folio~ release of the crop
report, .department
. economist Dawson Ahait ~ld
an Increase would not be
economically justified.
The loan rate for the 1977
•

.

Court suspends
·
• aiJ
t
J

sen ence

Meigs County Juvenile
Court Wednesday sentenced
Paul Spencer and Reda
Spencer, both 19, of Rt. 2
Racine to a lfklay jail sen·
tence whlch was suspended
on their plea of qullty lo
charges of contributing to the
delinquency of a minor. They
admitted conceailng a 17 year
old juvenlle who was ·truant
!rom school from the at·
tendance officer, Otis Knopp,
and the juvenl!e.offlcer, Carl
R. Hysell. Charges were filed
by Hysell; Juvenile Officer In
Meigs County Juvenile Court.

wheat crop per ooahel was
raised from $UO to' $2.25, and
from $1.25 to $1.50 fOI' corn.
The soybean rate remained
at $2.50 per ooahel.
Other feedgralns Increased
proportionately, based on
corn : sorghurn,$1.19to$1.43;
barley, $1.02 to $1.22; oais,
10.60to $0.72, and rye, '1.110 to
$1.20.
Knebel said the new rates
also would he Immediately
applicable to the 1976 crop.
Hecalledit"averyhurnan
decision ."
Knebel said banks 1n farm
areas have exiended aU the
credit they can, and the hlke
in the loan rate will allow
farmers flexlblllt to hold
to th 1
· · ytil. r1
on
e r crop Wl p ces
come back up.

Weather
Increasingly cloudy
tonight, lows to upper 401.
Partly cloudy Friday, chance
of showers; highs ln the mld
70s. Probability of rain near
zero today' 20 per cent
· tonight, . 30 per cent Frtdar
·
DANCE PLANNED
• A square dance llpoii!Ored
by
the
Harrlsonvliie
Elementary PTO bas been
~hanged to Friday, Oct. 15,
Instead of Saturday as was
announced .

The Pomeroy Community
Improvement oommlttee
meeting Wedaesday evening
at Pomeroy City HaD heard
Prof. Winebrenner, chairman
of the department of desil!ll of
the college ·of art at Ohio
University,
offer
the
assistance of hlJ aenlor clu.l
to · plan and assist a
r~storatlon
project In
downtown Pomeroy.
Georae Painter, the guell
of Ted Reed, 1poke on the
subject of eatabUshlng tlle
community improv~ment
commlltel. (CIC). The next
meeting will be Wednesday,
Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs .
County Museum Milli
Theater. Dr. Harold Brown
presided.

Volunteer units

busy Wednesday
Three calla were a111wered
Wednesday evening by tlle
Middleport Fire Departmflllt
and the emergency sqWid.
At 5 p.m. tlle squad went to
188 Walnut st; for Elbaheth
Leifheit who was taken . to
Veter8JIB Memorial Hoapl.,.i,
as a medical pallent; at 8:31
p.m. to Ratland for DennLa
McKinney, abo a madlcal
patien•, taken to Veterw
Memorial Hospital, and at
10:10 p.m., firemen went to
the Irene HaD re~ldence, 791
S. Third Ave., where a cbalr
wu reported on fire. the
chair had · been carried
outside when the department
arrived and dalllli8U were
minor.

BEGII'i TO MEET
. :!'he members of Drew
Webster Post 38, of the
American Legion wiD )lonor
World War IVeterans 11 their
annual · oyster dinner
Tueaday, Oct. 18 II 8 p.m.
Members who caooot drtn
are asked to phone Paw Cud
or Leonard Jewell lor
transportation.

'
;,

\..

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