<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16417" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16417?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-15T16:04:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49554">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2227914e336fbcbbc5a75d2cd36ce8f5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>cf6dba3c6387f2593e22cb350bc5dbe9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52493">
                  <text>14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P(Illeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . JQ, 1976

0?ren~e Massar ·Bus

died 1 uesday

(Continued from page ))
..
Dowler repUed the law does not provide for dae process
Clarence A. Massar, 81, of (hearings) lor noo&lt;ertlfied school personnel. Again LcClaln
149 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, urged the board to hear the individual cases. The board then
died Tuesday night at . moved into the executive .- .,ioo.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Agroup oil~ paren~ Uvlng ou~ide of the boundaries of the
llom March 3, 1 89~ . Mr. Meigs Local District who pay tuilloo for their chlldren to
Massar was a son of the late attend Meigs Local Schools discussed the ina-ease in tuilloo
Ul'Ufge and Barbara Mora fees this year.
Massar. He was also
Charles Hamilton was the primary spokesman for the
prcct'&lt;lcd in death by two group. He said paren~ for the most part are quite active in
b1·others, Albert and Nor- Meigs Local supp«tlve programs such as hand boosters,
lna"n.
athletic boosters, etc. He said the paren(4 want to send their
1'hc deceased was a retired children to the Meigs Local Schools.
employe of the Pomeroy Salt
However, the diactission brought out that tuition this year
Corp . and o! Meigs General is $42.58 a !IIOnth compared to $19.7• last year, an Increase of
Hospital. He was a lifelong . 117 percent.
me mber of th e Trinity
Supt. Dowler said that he IS sympathetic to the paren~ and
Church in Pomeroy, · a welcoilies stud en~ to the district. However, he pointed out that
veteran of WW I , a member the state provides the formula through which tuition rates are
of the Pomeroy American figured. Clerk John Tripl~tt uplalned the method of
Legion Post, and of the computing the tuition. The rate would be the same regardless
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge.
of how many students or how lew came Into the district, he
He is survived by his wife , said.
Rul.h i a son, George D.
One parent complained that it was Oct. 1• before he was
Massar; his daughter-in-law, advised of the additional cost and he felt tuition paying parents
Margaret Massar ; a grand· should have been notified sooner.
son, Ueorge Stephen Massar,
The problem, it appeared, is the fact that plant equipment
and a grandda ughter, used in the formula this year is over $9 million while a figure
Melissa MB.ssar , all in less than $'h million has been used in prior years thereby
Columbus. ·
·
· creating the wide difference in tuition charges.
.
Funeral services will be
Mrs. Sheets said that she could not afford to pay the tUition
from the Ewing Chnpel on rates this year for her·own children but that she fell a low
f' ndaY at 1 p.m. with the Rev . tuition figure would be unfair to the other districts of the
Wilbur Perrin in char~e . county . She slated that Triplett had no alternative other than .
Burial will be in Beech Grove to follow the formula of tM state.
Cemetery. Friends may call
Dr. Keith Riggs, board member, said he Is In favor of
at the fune ral hQmc Thursday reducing the tuition rate if II is legally possible.
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
At
the
suggestion
of
Supt .
Dowler,
it
was
agreed
to
have
Clerk
Trip·
lett contact the area coordinator, Paul Wood,
Athens, and ask him to come to the distriCt to discuss wit.t.
board
members, the clerk and representatives of the parents
Holzer Medlen! Center
group.
Wood wUlbe asked to look over the formula figures and
Discharges - Douglas
see
if
any solution can be worked out towards legally
Adkins, Lenna Baker, Norma
establishing
a lower rate. Parents atrending the meeting said
Illukeman , Ma ry Bledsoe ,
Anna Bumgarner, Fosterio they fe lt that tuition should be on the increase but Indicated
Camel , Mi nni e Clarke: they believe the new rate is 'too much of an increase.
The hoard agreed to pay retirement in the future for nonSand ra Dem psey, J eanne
certified
employes who receive pay for extra curricula work
Edwa rds , Lee England, John
activity
and
Brooks Sayre was named a substitute bua driver
Gaskins, Coleman Johnson,
pending
certification
.
Mrs. Gary Lawson and Son,
The
request
of
the
secretaries of principals in the district
Harold Marcum, Kathl een
to
be
named
administrative
personnel l)'as denied upon the ·
Moddy, Jo Ann Rose, Jeremy
recommendation
of
Supt.
Dowler
who said It was not the time
1\oush, Vernon Shafer , Mary
to
reclassify
them
.
LeClain
said
that
no employe had to belong
Simpkins, Ma rshall Walker,
to
the
Ohio
Association
of
School
Employes
but that if the
William Warner, Carl Woods .
secretaries
were
to
be
reclassified,
then
their
jobs became
Births, Nov. JQ
"new
jobs"
and
were
open
to
any
employe
of
the
district who
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Buck,
wished
to
apply
for
them.
son from Thurman; Mr. and
The problem of equal pay for coaches of girls sports In the
M". Ted Trotter, daughter,
district
was discussed and Mrs. Joy Bentley, girls athletic
Midd leport, Mr. and Mrs.
director,
responding to the suggestion that someone In the
William Ridgewa y', son,
girls'
program
file a grievance, said she would much rather a
J ackson. ·
committee be named to settle it without the matter becoming
magnified .
This was agreed upon, and Mrs. Bentley, Charles
Chauncey,
James Diehl, John Mora, John Redovlan and
MEETING CALLED
Dowler
were
named to a committee to study the question and
The Black Lung association
make
a
recommendation
to the board.
of Pomeroy will meet Sun·
The hoard accepted the resignations oi Cecllia E. Rinaldi
day , Nov. 14 at noon at
Jack 's Club, intersection of as Spanish teacher at the high school and one-year yearbook
SR 7 and 143. There will he advisor and Daniel J. Ruggles, high achool chemistry and
three guest s peakers. · The math teacher. Mrs. Rinaldi Fesigned due to a fantily Illness
pu bli c is welcome to attend. and Ruggles to accept non-teaching employment. Mrs.
Rinaldi's resignation was effective Oct. 22 and Ruggles will he
.effective· on Dec. 23. Jean Shaver was named lull~lme yearbook sponsor. ·
G]fls coaches appointed last Qight were Dellble Ohlinger,
junior high basketball; Joy Bentley, high school girls' basket·
hall and Rita Slaviil, high school girls' softball. A budget of
$1,489 was adopted for the girls' sports program.
A number of non-certified employes attended last night's
meeting and they were called into session by LeClain following
the board m..,ting. Other hoard members present besides
those named earlier were Wend.ell Hoover, president, and
Virgil King, and Dan Morris, assistant superintendent was
present for the session.
'

Frigidaire
Laundry
Pair
Wash one piece or up to
an18-lb load inthis
Frig idai re Heai)' Duly
Washer. Matching Dryer
oilers a 2-position Fabrics
selector, Timed and
No Heat cycles.

THE INN PLACE
Thursday Night

Special

Visit Our Salad Bar
4 oz. Top Butt Steak
Home Fries
' '
Vegetable
'Hot Rolls
Co ffee. Tea·or Milk

· Plus tax

THE MEIGS INN

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED·FOR
VACAnON

Two-defendants were fined
In Pomeroy Mayor Clarence

Andrew's court Tuesday
night. Ellis Clonch, Mid·
dleport, was fined $3110 and
collls for driving while-...inlqxicated, $50 and costs,
reckless operation; $50 and
collls, no operator's license,
and $200 · and costs,
destruction of property.
Clonch was the driver of a
car that struck Crow's Steak
Hpuse over ' ihe weekend.
Nancy Cornell, Portland, was
filled $30 and costs, assured
clear distance.
~·
NOTI(E ON FILING

A day ~ U[de for, CJln· slate contest to be held ID the David Smith, Dorothy
ferences betften ·IMcllers near futnre at Federal' Calawiy, Doug BlaseU and, ,
and parenta of students from Hocking lllgh School. Supt. Dorsel Larkins, Supl. Retbel,
klnclergarten through grade Riebel gave a report from Principal Gooding and Mn. :
six wu approved by the Tom Wllaon, title I official of Boston, clerk, besides those
Ea!ttern Local School District tile state department, on a mentioned earlier.
'?
Board of Education In recent study made Qf the
regular session tuesday program In the Eastern
night.
-- ·
District. The report Is
The board decided against favorable.
'
the conference time for
.The board approved the
giades above six bOcause participation of high school
there are other occasions on principal Chester Gooding .In
which teacllers can confer the North Celltral District
with parents, and due to the evaluation of Meigs High
Pomeroy PoUce~Jed :
fact that previous turnouts of School on Feb. 8 and 9. Job Webster
wo ,.
lnvestl
parenta for higher grade level description ol uncertified accidents Tuesday.
conferences In the past employes were approved
At 1:45 p.m~ Nancy J. ,.
"have not been partlculirly along with, for the first tline, Yoachwn, Rt. 2, . Racine, ·
good."
a junior high achool girls' traveling north on Court •
Supt. John Riebel will set basketball team with Susan Street, had stopped at the ~
up .the date for the kin· Thompson to be In charge. intersection of Court and•
dergarten through grade six
Bob Mills, represe~ting the Second. Due to ttucks on both'
. converences and students district's athletic ·boosters,
of ~nd Street she dldf
will not attend clasaes Oli that was given· pelinlaslon to use sides
nql see a car traveling West
day.
•
· the high schoolaudiiorlum In
Second driven by NIU! .J., ·
Mra. RubaiCaldwell, high . January for professional oo
Bl1)wn,
Pomeroy; She pulled
achool custodian, was given a wrestll ng
matches .
from
Courl
and struck the
leave of absence until July 1, Basketball coach Duane Brown vehicle.
was,'
1977. Applications for her post Wolfe outlined the goals·, moderate damageThere
to
Brown's
·
for that period are now being rules and regulations for the
car,
nonetoth
Yoachwncar.
·
· taken for ronslderation at the team during the upcoming
AI 2 p.m. on Sycamore St,'.
nell board meeting. Anyone season.
Dorothy M. Wells, Rt. 2, Long ;
Interested may contact
The board agreed with a
Riebel. Clerk Eloise Boston group headed by Alan Holter, Bottom, was parked at a.
was authorized to make a vocational agriculture In· meter on the west side when
opened .. the door as an:.
minor fund transfer to structor, that additional she
Elberfeld truck driven by .
balance an account.
Items are needed for the
0.
J.
'Pennington program. Holter was asked to· Gilbert T. Mees paued.:
There was moderate damage;'
representing ttie Eastern compile a list of the Items.
Chapter of the Ohio
A group from the Tuppers to the Wells car and slight to;·
AssoCiation of PubUc School Plains School Boosters met the truck.
Employes, was o.n hand to with the hoard to diaci!SS
meet with the board con- building repairs. It was
corning a time cutblick put reported that some of the
JUNTURA, Ore. (UP!) FIREMEN CALLED
,
"When you ·drive 50 or W Into effect for elementary repairs are now underway
The
Pomeroy
Fire;.
miles miles out here on the schbol secretaries of the . and that others will be done Department was ~alled to .
during the Christmas
highway at night without district.
fight &amp;brush fire Tuesday at .
The board approved at· vacation.
seeing any lights, our street
of
several
Attending the m..,ting were 3:~5 p.m. east of Darwin on;'
lights look pretty good," tendance
SR 681.
·~
Mayor Inez Cooley of Juntura mathematics students to a board members, Oris Smith,
t
said.
'
•
After Jan.! those lig)lts will
he gooe.
Juntura, population 115, Is
turning in its city charter and
going out of business. The
town Is the only one on U. s.
NEW ~HIPMENT JU$1 ARRIVED
Highway 2Q In the 114-mUe
stretch between Vale and
1
Bums and is almost midway
between them.
"ll'ssickening that welll no
longer be a town," Mrs.
Cooley said, "but it's still the
same people. We'll be doing
more or less the same
things."
The street lights took most
of the city's $1,400 aMUal
An excellent selection
budget.
The residents voted, 19-1;
Nov. 2 to di81nc:orporate.
for Bedroom-Living Room
Juntura
had
been
lncorp«ated In 1913.
-Nursery. All sizes
in .drum .
.
The 197~ Legisla lure
passed a law making city
shade~. pieated shades.
of!lclals personally liable in
sulta against the city. The
Arranged for your easy
insurance to cover such
liablllty would have cost
selection.

.· :~~TCH FOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LAMP
SHADES

U,500.

AND APPRAISEMENT
Thi! Slife df , orio, Meigs

'

Furnnure Department-3fd Floor

Elberfelds In
Now is the time to
start your Jewelry
Christmas ~Shopping!

1, LADIES I CARAT

D'AMOND RING

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
ANDAPPRAlSEMENT
Th e State of Ohio, Meigs
CoV'nty , Court of Common
Pleas , Probate Division
To · lhe e,.cutor or Ad
mi n islrator of lhe .estate , to
such of the fol lowing as are
res i d e nt~ of th e State of Ohlo.
vi·z:
I he surviving spouse,
lhC
OCICt
Of
kin ,
lf'lC
benefi c iar ies un.der the will ;
and· 1o tl1e a ttorney or at
torn ey s r epr'esenting any Of
th e afor ementioned persons :
Rozena B . Genheim er , RD .
Min•r sville., Meigs County ,
OhiO , Case No . ·21955 .
Y ou are hereby not I fled that
1
&lt;he
l n.enlorv
and
Ap
pr ais eme nt of the estate of the
af oremenlioned ,
decea:ted ,

Fe•turing 9 brilliant
rqund and square

diamonds In 14K Gold.

2. LADIES '12 CARAT

DIAMOND RING
Eltgonl design
featuring 9 diamonds

In 14K Gold.

J. LADIES 1 CARAT

MODERN DIAMOND
9

hearin g bt&gt;for e this Court on
th e 15th day .of November ,
1976 , aj!U} :IJ9 o'clock A.M .
.(l.ny person des iring to file
cx,cept\oi'1 s th~ret». 1must. -file
l,i•u:a , 1ej f~ 1Jy,~ tlh! ol lbr to
he 'i!B e $er or h€armg .
G iven un'd er my hand and
seal ot sa itt C ~ u_rt , this 1st day
of ,N ovemb('r ~ 976 .

'

·:«

•

at y

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 146

Mary Dudek, their daughter; Dick Dudek ber husband ,
and John Robinson, theson of Mr. and Mrs. RQblnson .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

Over lOOhonor
former mayor
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS E. F. Robinson

enttne

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1976

By Kalle Crow
Over
100 • .pers o1i s
assembled w..tnesdny night
at the Meigs Inn t~ honor K
F' . Robinson,
form er
Pomeroy Mayor and council
member
nnd
r e tl r~d
busines:nnun, ut n dinner
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce .
\ored Crow, president of the
chamber, after opening
remark s, Int rodu ced Ri ch
Jones, ma ster of ceremonies,
.who directed a fa st1&gt;aced
program
mixed
with
anecdotes and humor .
Called back by Jones, Crow
guve u history o! Rubinson 's
service to the community,
Introduced vllhlgc· officials,
·and former muyors or lhe
wives of mayors who ure
deceased .
Crow especially ret'Ognlzed
Albert Woodard, woo served
on the lire department ln 1927
with Robinson and he read a
letter from Pete Shields, who
has been ill, apprupriute to

6th U.S. Circuit Court of. dispute the way the EPA released 11110 the atmosphere.
Appeals has temporarily came
up
with
its
Those standards finally •
halted enforcement in Ohio of requirements.
were establlshed for Ohio this
the federal Environmental
The EPA will then he yearandtheregulatlonswenl
Protection ~gency's new ailowed up to 60days to study into effect Aug. '!1, J&gt;ut there
sulfur dlox1de pollution and respond to the has been no enforcement
regulations.
companies' new complaints because of lawsuits by
The court acted late . before either the old utilities, chemical companies
Wedne~day despite bitter requirements are upbe!d or and steel firms throughout
complamts from the EPA and new regulauons are wr1tten. the state.
"clean air" groups.
But
EPA
officials,
The companies' won their
The appellate judges, at the frustrated by other long delay
Wednesday · by
request · of 35 angry .Ohio delay,s, antictpate even more complaining about the way
companies · and ·utilities, legal battles which could send ·the regulations were set and
delayed enforcement of the Wednesday's temporary halt asking for more tline 'to give
. , regulations at least through far beyond the · next four the EPA its side of the story.
Jan.l4, 1!177, and then tacked months.
"We're not stalling,"
oo another waltllig period
At Issue is the control of Wilson snyder, an attorney
that cvuld last another 60 sulfur dioxide pollution in for the companies, told the
days.
Ohl~, much of which sterns
judges. "This is a very
The delay until Jan. H is to from the Industrial burning of serious case. Millions and
give companies •.nd utiilties, , high-sulf,u.~ coal. Un,~ei millions oJ dollars are at
·!!'!irh face spending millloos .,_!aill'I!BS· Cl~i11UJr,Acl""'"' -~!' .,11 "of dollars' oo air pollution 1970, the government can set
EPA lawyer CbQrles
standards to reduce the

Ohio companies would have
to spend $500 million in clean
a1r "scrubbers" because of
Ute regulations poinbld out
that four public bearings
already had been held more
than In any other sta~.
'"I'ney had a perfect oppor-·
(unity to re~pond, and we feel
their time has run out "
argued Shipley, but Judg~s
Harry Phlllips, George
Edwards and John Peck
didn't agree and ordered the
regulations temporarily
"vacallld."
"It's a setback," a dejected
Shipley said after losing his
fight. ·
"Ohio Is the only state that
doesn 'I have sulfur dioxide
controls," complained
Rob~rt Duprey, ChicagoT~"'...l, ,.,-~t-•tnboo_.
• ol)'Mo~••"'\ .. lh ·lfi-W./~..,,..,... r"'., • .._,
•·,, ,_the QC.Clt'!IQII., , ,
• •
based EPA chief of air
MAYORS RECOGNIZED - Mayors or the wives of former mayors w.ho are deceased
Jones
Introduced
Pomeroy
standards.
.
recognized were, front, 1-r, Mrs. Wllllam Baronick, wife of Bill Baronlck; Mrs. Delmar
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Added EPA official Frank · Canaday, wife of Delmilr Canaday; in back, Malcolm Hartley, Clarence Andrews, Mr.
who In turn presented a large
Corrado, also of the Chicago
Robinson and Charles Legar .
·
wood handmade "key tO the
office, "Ohio industry Is
city.'', to RObinson .
trying to delay it at an cost.
Paul Simon, vice president
·We think it's a tragedy for the
of the chamber, presented
people of Ohio ."
him a large and suitably
Lamented Tom B..,han of •
inscribed trophy on behaU of
the Tri-State Air Committee,
the chamber.
"People's health is being
Walter Grueser, chalnnan
affected by .these delays."
of the dinner, visibly
Attorney Mark Segreli , •·
emotional, and "Robby Is
representing the Tri-State Air
the nicest guy anyone would
Committee, the Northern
want to be with" . He
Ohio Lung Association and
RACINE - Darrell R. Degtee from Ohio State
presented Robinson a
the 'Ohio Lung Association,
Hottle,
judge
of
the
Highland
University
and
his
law
degree
personal gift.
joined the EPA ln arguing
County
Common
Pleas
Couri,
from
Western
Reserve
Crow presented Robby
against the delay.
will be speaker Saturday University . He was admitted
,~ .~~·
with an old golf club .
when Racine , officially to the practice of lliw In 1947.
.w
Jones Introduced the guest
becomes a bicentennial
He has served for 21 years
speaker, Malcolm Hartley,
community.
as common pleas judge In
Pomeroy mayor ( 1938-1~3),
The program will begin at · Highland County, four years
now editorial page editor of
1:30 p.m. in front of Southern as prosecuting attorney of
the Lorain Ohio Journal.
High School with a Rag Highland County and one
,
Hartley recalled when he
raising ceremony by Racine year as solicitor of Hillsboro.
was mayor and Roblnson was
American Legion Post 602. At His assignments by the .Chief
on council "Robby" was his
1
this time, Judge Hottle 1)'111 Justtce of the Supreme Court
right hand man and Ted
•
present the bicentennial flag. of Ohio have ~en to ~
· - - ·
Downie his , campaign
SEALER PLACED - Racine P.T.O. members put oo an asphalt sealer on the
At 2 p.m. a program will he counties outside of Highland
manager·
basketball court at the Racine Elementary School, Wednesday afternoon. The P.T.O. had
held ln the auditorium at and to the first and second
"I was the man who turned
the Qutslde court paved last year and is putting on the scaler to help preserve it. Working on
which Judge Hottle will be DIStrict Courts of Appeal.
off the street' lights ln
the IJ'Oject were, left to right, Ubby Fisher, president; Bill Nease, custodian, and Don
An orientation for workers speaker and will present the
Judge Hottle ls a 33rd
Pomeroy", Hartley recalled.
Beegle and Bob fulter.
&lt;at the Meigs County HeaiUt certificate designating degree Mason and Is a past
He explained : "There was
Department's swine flu Racine as a bicentennial exalted ruler of the HUishoro
a street · light levy on the
·r,,,,;:;,,,..,,,,,,,~,,,,,,~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,;,;,,,,,,,,,,,;,;,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,® .
vaccine clinics to 'Ill held community. There will be Elks Club. He Is a past
ballot and I had threatened to
Wednesday through Saturday musical selections and president of the Hillsboro
turn off the lights If It didn't
next week has been set for 7 ministers and young people of Rotary Club and has been
pass. The levy fallod, so the
p.m. Monday at Veterans the community will be taking active In church work and
next day the lights were
Memorial Hospital.
part In the program.
community endeavors In his
turned off."
All registered nurses,
Judge Hottle was horn and home area. The public Is
Pomeroy clti~ens without
By Ualled Press International
•
DETROIT (UP!) - American Motors Corp., seeking to
licensed practical nurses, reared on 8 Highland County Invited
to Saturday's
street lights two years, nell
emergency me d l cal fann. He was educated at program.
time approved the levy by a
curb a small car slwnp by offering cash rebates on Its models,
In· special session Wed· technicians and other Hillsboro, reeelved his B.A.
has touched off another game of rebate roulette. General
JUDGE HO'I'l'LE
majority of 89 percent.
Hartley showed a large
Motors bas joined the game, offering rebates on its slow- nesday, the Meigs County volunteer workers are asked
Commissioners
contracted
to
attend
the
Monday
night
painting
of Pomeroy as seen
selling small models.
with
the
consulting
finn
of
planning SOBSion.
START AT4:30
from West Virginia that
General Motors announced Wednesday It was offering $200
Mrs. Mary Myers, county
appeared In Ford Magazine .
cash rebates on its minl.chevri&gt;let Chevette and sub-compact Fleming, Page, Stolte, Inc.,
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - show up on the set for filming
The Metgs Local School He has arranged for a copy of
Chevrolet Vega and Pootiac Astre models. The rebates, an Marysville, Ohio for certain public health nurse, points
out that persons will be irn· Ellen Corby, the 63-year-oid Wednesday, producer Andy District Board of Education the painting to be sent 10
Idea spawned by the 1975 sales depression, are In effect until engineering services.
te and assistants went to has granted hearings to the Pomeroy to be placed in the
next Jan. 10. AMC previously said II would offer rebates· of ~ . According to Jim Page, a muhized without charge at actress who plays Grandma
any
of
the
clinics
next
week.
.
on
the
popular
televls'·
-·..-...er
West Hollywood home. seven kindergarten school city hall in honor of Mr.
to $225 to 8orne lo million retired parsons. AMC·alao slashed civil . engineer and principal
The
new
virus,
discovered
series
"The
Walt
,
was
Peering
through a window, bus drivers who have at- Robinson.
of tbe finn, the contracts will
prices of Ita subcompact Gremlin by ~.
atFortDlx,N.J.,wheresome
hospltallz
n
critical
they
sighted
her on astair- templed to resign .' Thein·
Robinson, In his response,
provide the county with a
that
Edison
WINCHESTER, TENN. - AN EPISCOPAL priest, county-wide house num- 500 Gl 's were stt;ri~c~ke~n~an~d!-f::~· today after suf· way landing, consclolts but divldualhearlngs will start at recalled
e ering a stroke . Coin· unable to move. They broke 4:30 p.m. Saturday at Meigs Hobstetter was the first
fealured ln a ·national chore~ magazine discussing bering system and deSign of one died, rese·~
Junior High School. The president of the Pomeroy
"goodllving", faces charges today of financing a home for an access road to the strain · of fiu that cost' 20 cldentally, the attack ocurred In and called paramedics.
million
Uves
worldwide
from
Wednesday,
when
actor
Miss
Corby
won
three
best
hearings are open to the Chamlier of . Commer~. In
waywarq boys throagh sales of homosexual' pornography proposed community center
8.
.
'
_
Richard
Thomas,
who
plays
suppjlrllng
actress
Emmys
pubbllltc. Thhe drtlhve rs 1ndvileLtthhe. regard to the light le ·,' he
on Lincoln Heights.
featuring hl.s wards.
191 1920
The
leading
u.s.
Influenza
John-Boy,
aMounceifhe
will
for-hel'·
perfOrf!illfltesliSt~
"";
PU
c 1o ear e1r-s 1 e·o, e-saral!ai1ley wasliiayor wlienPage
said.
both
projects
are
The Rev. Claudius I. "Bud" Vermilye, Interviewed in the
the village was In debt $7~,000
current luue of "The UvLlg Church," Is accused of engaging 100 per cent funded by the expert, Dr. Edwin Kilbourne retire from the series at the crusty old matriarch of story.
of
Mt.
Sinal
School
of
end
of
this
season.
·
Walton's
Mountain,
In
1973,
::::::::::;::::::·:=::;::::::-:·:::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
and
today the village owes
in homOBeiUal activities will! the children and selling Community Development
Medicine
in
New
·York,
is
When
Miss
Corby
failed
to
197~
and
1976.
r
EXTENDED
OUTLOOK
over
a million dollars. He
Block
Grant
through
the
Pornographic pctures of them to raise money for hla Boys
Housing
and
Urban
Federal
convinced
.that
the
fiu
virus
Mostly
lair
and
cold
concluded
:
Fann Inc.
.
Saturday aad Sunday and a
"f don't deserve all the
Vermilye was Identified by District Attorney General J. Development Authority. The "is spreading quietly"
Wllliam Pope • the central figure in a widening investigation grant was obtained through throughout the country and
thance of snow flurries
(Continued on page 2)
into chargea that some sporilors of the !ann, founded by tbe the efforts of county offlclals may indeed, produce an
Mooday. Highs mosUy will
j;rlesi in 1m, engaged In homoaexual: activities with, and and the Buckeye Hills- ·epidemic this fall or, wlnt~r.
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. outlined by officials midway be 1D the 80s and lows will
received pictures, of, the young boys.
Hocking Valley and Meigs
Dr. Kilbourne, one of the (UP!) - President · Ford through his eight-day golfing be from 15 to 21:
. County Regional Planning prominent health officials probably
wlll · leave vacation here and after the ::::::;:;:;: ;:;:;:::~;:;:;: ;:;:::;:;:::::::::;:; :;:;: ;:;:;:~:=:~:;:;::::: :
Cloudy and cold tonight and
DETROIT -A MAN JUST RELEASED from pliychlatrlc Commissions. The present responsible for recom· Washington as soon as his President, in the first major
CALL ANSWERED
Friday,
chance of snow
care at a bospltalllrode Into the 2nd grade classroom of his federal bill providing for the mending the mass lm - term ends in January and is social event of his stay, took
The Middleport
flurries
.
Lows
tonight to mid
estranged wife Wednesday, pulled a pistol and murdered her granta Is in the second year of munization program, says leaning toward this plush his wife Betty to a party in his Emergency Squad answered
20s
and
highs
Friday
to mid
In !root of 30 terriBed children, pollee said.
a three year program. Page the world Is just about due ita desert spa - as a hase of honor Wednesday night with a call to 913 Broadway St. at
30s.
Probability
of
studenl4 ran acreaming from the room afier teacher explained that more in- 10-year cyclical influenza operations In private life, Bob Hope, Cary Grant and 3:33 p.m. Wednesday for
precipitation
Is
2Q
per
cent
Bettye McCaster, 46, was struck In the head by several bullets. formation wlll be for· mutation and that the danger according to White House other celebrities among the Cloyd Brookover, who was Ill .
The teacher fell baclnrards across her desk, dead .
thcomlng
soon
as to' innumerable human lives sources.
·
more than 100 guests.
He was taken to Veterans today, to per cent tonight and
Friday.
I•
(Continued on page 2)
preliminaries are completed. is real.
•
Ford's tentative plans were
Memorial Hospl!l!l.
~~

Highland judge will speak
for bicentennial services

Flu shot
•
gtvers
to meet

Contracts
Brzefst.~
. d .h
.
.;; SigDe WI1

Ladie$ Synthetic

STAR SAPPHIRE
or STAR RUI!Y
RING or
PENDANT
sUrrounded by

10 lllAMONDS

Grandma walton stricken

Weather

Mann ing 0 . Webster
Judoo

f tl t~.' I 0.1t r

THE FAMILY - Left to right, the family of the
honored guest, Marie, his wife ; Rol!, a grandson ; Robbie,

. LONGTIME FRIENDS AND ASSOCIATES - Walter Grueser, lnsuranco agent, left; -"
Jones, commissioner ..lect, Mr. Robinson, and Atty . Fred Crow, who wus villl1gc
solicitor (and still Is) when Robinson was mayor, got together for this picture by Kl1lie
Crow .
.
.
Ri~h

Desert spa .has appeal to Ford

1

e

striking di•monds in

,an unusual 14K Gold mounting.

la te of sai d County , was filed
in this Court. Said Inventory
and A pprai se ment w ill be tor

Morris ·.

OJ! ,

/

engmeers

( 11 ) 10, 17 , 2tc

.,. ~\ ic · ·~·

'·

rNews
• . •zn
.,..

By Janet E . Morris
Chief Deputy Clerk

bWnl' t

OPENING DATE

'.

,,

Two traffic
accidents are
investigated

'·

OF INVENTORY

1

•

did them in

Two draw fines

l

•

legislature

Another said liberation
movements In South Africa
were
"the
authentic
representatives of the
overwhelming majority of
the South African people, and
that their struggle, by an
possible
means,
is
legitimate."
" s. ·Delegate the Rev.
said the

f

I

That blank

deceit."

HE ARSTMOVED
SAN DIEGO (UPI)
Patri i H s1 ha hee .
ca
ear · IJ
n
· returned to the federal jail
here ~t her own
. request for
I
I
· unexp a ned 11 Sectirity
reasons." With no advance
wor d, fd
e era I mars hi
as
whisked Miss Hearst out of
the C8mpUS·like federal
prison at Pleasanton, ln the
a.m. Tuesday to drive her 400 1
miles to the Metropolitan
Co,rr,ectional Center here.

I

regime. ~'

Ol)e of the strongest measures adopted Tuesdily said
"the racist regime of South
Africa is Illegitimate and has
no right to represent the
people of South Africa." The
vote was 108-ll with 22
absenllons.
The United States voted
against live declarations and
abstained on three . Two
mUder resolutions were
approved by consensus.
Ail 10 resolutions were
approved by better than a
two-thirds majority ,
The General Assembly,
oomerlcally dominated by
black African and Third
World nations, has adopted
many measures against
South Africa in recent years,
but the latest resolutloos
covered virtually ail aspects
of apartheid and marked a
new offensive to push
Pretoria into diplomatic
isolation.
'
·
Orie resolution. condemned
"the
continuing
and
lncrea!lfag collaboration by
Israel with the Soutl! African
racist regime.'' Israeli
Ambassador Chailn Herzog
called it a ''monstrous act of

Teacher..parent conference
day approved at Eastern

resolution amrunted "to a
call for an uprising in South
Africa which would in effect
be a racW bloodhaUt."
A reiOiutloo approved oo a
11~ vote aslled the Security
Council to . make a new
attempt to Impose an arms
embargo against South
Africa. :Britain; France and
the United Stales vetoed the
proposal In the Security
Council last month.
An appeal for a total
economic embargo was ap-:
proved 11~ ' with 24
abstentions
and
the
recommendation for a total
sports ban excluding , all
raclally segregated teama
was passed 126-0 with 12
abstentions.
Hupp said the United States
coQid not go along with the
proposal for economic asnc·
lions,
"Some United . States
corporations have been
among the leading focces for
equal rights and enlightened
employment practices In
South AfJ'ica," he said.

By R.M. SORGE
UNITED NATIONS (UP))
The :U.N. General
Assembly
has
overwhelmingly approved 10
resolutions condfmning
SouUt Africa and calling for
arms, trade and Bpa'ts embargoes· against the "racist

posted on30,speeding
charges
Adkins,
Northup,
$27,
and Rocky L. Hnpp, 211,
Racine, $32, posted on the
same charge.

San Francisco Bay area, at 4

•

'

"We wouldn 'I have bad any
mooey for street lighta and
County, Court · o Common ":I! dido 't see rutv sen~ in
Pleas.- Pr'o blte Division
Grass fire fou~ht by ftre f~hters
the ·Insurance
To the EKecutor or Ad . paying
m ln istrator of the est&amp;te, to Clllllpany for nothing," Mrs.
The
Middleport
At 11:45 a.m., Flora Bailey s ue ~ of .the ,following as are Cooley said. "That damned
r~, sidents of the SHIIte of Ohio,
Emergency Squad answered of LocUst St. was taken tO vrz
: -,· the surviving spouse; legislature. They did us ln."
several calls Tuesday.
Holzer Medical Center and at the next of kin, the
At 8 :.~3 a.m. Rita Stump 2:34p.m. Marie Van Cooney beneficiaries under the ' will :
.to the attorney or at . 't!!i":.'~f,jo&gt;liiot'-'irl4""'""'
was taken from the beauty was taken from her home on and
torneys representing any of I
the
atoremen~ioned
pers,ons :
shop on Race St., to Holzer Page St. to Holzer Medical
Mary A. Park , Middleport.
Medical Center.
·
Center.
Meigs County, Ohio, Case No
71 ,960 .
.
At 9: 12 a.m., to the office of
Yo u are hereby notified that
Dr. J. J. Davis for an !den·
THREE FINED
the . lnYen torv and ap .
tified patient .who was taken
Three defendants' were pra 1sem.en t of the estate of the
'deceased ,
to Holz.er Medical Center.
fined and others forfeited aforementioned,
e Of sa id Countv . was flied
At 10 :16 a.m. the fire bonds ln the court of Mid- lat
in th is Court. Said Inventory
,deparlmenl went to Hobson dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman and_Ap~nt lsemenr will be for
hearing before lhls Court on
to extinguish a brush fire.
Tuesday night. Fined were the 22nd day of November
At II :43 a.m., the squad Helen .M. Rood, 25, Racine, 1976, at 10:00 O'ClOCk A .M . '
Any person desiring to file
went to the Reed mobile $10 and collls, ruMing a stop exceptions
tnei'eto must. file
home on Custer St. for Letha sign; John M. Clary, 25, them atleasttivedayS prior to
Reed, :i, who had fallen. She Crown City, speeding, f15 and the date set for hearing
Given under my hand and
was teken to Veterans costs and Brian W. Klzzee, 19, seal
of said Court , th is 8th day
Memorial Hospital with a foot Middleport, $20 and c:ollls, ot November 1970. •
injury.
excessive speed. Forfeitln•
Mann ing D. Webster
Judge
bonds were Carroll D.

i~;===============liii
I

South
Africa
.
condemned

drivers hearings

....

.

r

"''

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Thursday, Nov. l1, 1976

-:,:···:·:-'·' •.-:;.•.: !·!·'·'·' : ......: •.•.•.• !·!•'•'•!•!•!•'·!·:::.:;:::;:;:~·-:-:....:.·-:-:.:···:·: : ·';!: '•' ··: : :-:-:-: : -:·.:·:·:··; :;·

Rewning of
Automatic weight watcher, fl New Haven
· · built-in, coming on soon ·
is requested
:.:! . wsANGELEs( UPI )- ItllOUndslikeadieter'sdream l::!

Ohio ~epublicans may;l,
. from Saxbe
get help
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) - Wil·
llam Sube, ooe of Ohio's
most successful Republica ns,
will end his tenure as
ambassador to India and
return to his Mechanicsburg
llome next montll to o~n a
law offi ce with his son,
Scrippa-Howard newspapers
reported today
Rep, Charles S01be, R·
Columbus, the ambassador's
son , Wednesday confirmed
Wsshington reports that hiS
fat her IS submitting h1 s
resignation and returning to
the United States on Dec. 2.
Saxbe 's return 18 certain to
raise questions about his
political intentions at a ume
when his party is perhaps at
its lowest ebb 111 recent Ohio
history .
The newspapers S81d one
source close to Sa xbe
believes th at the ambassador
and former U S. senator
could be drafted to carry his
party's banner m the 1978
governor 's ra ce, but the
source doubts that Saxbe
would publicly challenge
Gov James A. IUtodes for the
Republican nommation.
Thus, Rhodes• reurement
at the end of his thtrd term
would be a prerequiSite to
Saxbe 's enter111g the race,
according to the source who
has been a longtime personal
frtend and professional
co lleague
of
the
ambassador's

sources confirmed that Saxbe
Is very much on the minds of
many Republicans .
One even went so far as to
assert, "Saxbe has got to run
in 1978 for the Republican
Party to hold onto the
governor's office.''
SUch talk is stimulated by
the party's defeats last week,
especially in legislative
races. Rhodes campatgned
ttrelessly for Republican
candidates, but his efforts
were for naught as
Democrats Increased thetr
legislative majority.
Rhodes' loss of prestige in
that election and the one last
year
when
voters
overwhelmingly rejected hiS
econ omic ballot program
coupled with his age-be will
be 69 in 1971\--has fueled
that he will

;~~~~lahon

Moreover , fa ced wtth
Democ r ati c vet o-proof
maj onties m the Legislature,
GOP sources expect Rhodes
to ftnd the next two years the
most frustrating .m h1s
politi cal career
The younger Saxbe also
candidly discussed mounting
pressures on h1s father to
aga111 become mvolved in
Oh1o politics.
Saxbe was US attorney
general, elected U S senator
from Ohio in 1968, three times
elected Ohio attorney
general, and served as
speaker
of the tOOth O)lio
He has a strong sense of
General
Assembly
loyalty to the Republica n
However , he cauttoned that
Party and the country ; and , if
the party and Jun IUtodes 1t would be ill-advised to try
went to him, I thnk he would and second guess the
very seriously constder it elder Saxbe who has acqUired
(running )," the newspapers a reputation as somewhat of a
maverick
quoted the source.
"There's no telling what he
'The source also said that
Will
do i I'm as curious as
Saxbe is aware of the Ohio
anybody
else,'' Rocky Saxbe
GOP's current woes
said.
\
.
He Is aware of the situatiOn
Sti!l, hecontmued "Alotof
and that he might be looked
as a possible candidate," the people say he is the only hope
(for the Republican Party in
source sa1d .
Looked to" appears to be 1978) Alot of people are ttred
an understatement, the of seeing the same (GOP)
newspapers sa1d Checks ucket year after year "
And Saxbe satd some Ohio
with a number of party
11

w

11

Republicans already ha ve
been telling hla fathW that he
could be the salvation of the
party
Saxbe
joined
other
Republicans In cautioning
that it would be up to Rhodes
to make the lint move.
"He (Saxbe) is not going to
come back and try to take
over anything,'' he said. "My
old msn is not going to come
back and tell Jim IUtodes he's
had it."
Saxbe said that, while he
and his father will be opening
a
law
office
in
Mechanicsburg with a branch
in Columbus, he does not
know whether his father will
actually pra ctice law.

A

h

News •• in Briefs

3- The o.JiySent!nel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,, Thursday, Nov. l!, 1978

Marauders in

(Continued from page I)
:;
One of the lltudentl, Laura Donomle, said the te~eher :
"reached out !)er hand and tried to push the gun back, but the builets hit her In the front and she fell back against the table."

Sf SIMONS ISLAND, GA. - TWO coob rep«! that
NEW HAVEN, W. Va
Bruce Gilman requested that Jlnuny Carter is an easy man to please at the dlnlni table . •
the town council rezone Fifth Hennan Yurslch and carl C. Oullaw, both longtime cooU at a .,
Street when the New Haven restaurant oo this island, cooked for the PresldenHlect d~ ..
"
•
•n
Coun e1! met
Tuesday his vacation here.
"He's not particular," said Outlaw. "He just likes food and evening. He wants to build a
car wash in the area which we III tt for him." carter ate mostly seafood, including "'
presently is restricted to shrimp, oyster stew and broiled fish, and also was treated to a.,.
special p~nut cake.
..~
residences
The council agreed to set a
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS - ON THE EVE OF THE winter driving ;
meeting with attorneys R.
Michael Shaw and. Ron Stein season, state Jllghway Safety Director Dorlald D. Cook Is,·,
reminding motorists the legs! period for using studded tires In "
to discuss the request.
Mayor Charles Roush Ohio ts Nov. I to April 15.
Cook said Wednesday recent changes in the law have .:
signed a letter to the B.T.
caused
some confusion about the dates. He also advlse4~.
the body ."
•
~::; Engineering Co., agreeing to
Other researchers are working on substances which ;;;; il!' plans for a secondary drivers using studded tires to slow down on slippery roads and
to apply brakes lightly and intermittently.
:.:
block the digestion of fat-making elements, he said. ;::; sewer system.
The substances are still in the develapmental stage, he :;:!
The council discussed
said, and are being tested on humans, but cannot be ·,:; buying a new gas tank from
....
marketed until "very stringent" government regulations :,:; the Ashland Oil Co and
""
are met.
conferred w1th Mike F1elds
: : '•·: '• ·!: : ·: :· '·:·· ..·. ·: ::::, ,.: ::;' ,';!!·':'~ that he accept the job of
-~.
water superintendent.
(Continued from page 1)
Other business was routine.
.
.'
Present were Mayo1 Charles
credit given to me. The credlt •
Roush, Secretary Pat Paugh,
IJOe8 to Pomeroy and Mason :
and council members,
Qty. I owe the area more ;
Bernard L1eving, Harold
tban it owes me." He :
Moxley, Virgil Weaver, and
Introduced his family, hla '
Donald Kay
wife, Marie; daughter, Mary :
Robinson Dudek; hla son-ln· :
law, Dick Dudek; grandson :
Bessie Ferguson
Rob, and his son, John.
;
In
closing
he
vowed,
"This
•
Dr . Lester Gr inspoon,
med1cal education of our
Is the nicest thing that ever
phySICians from the phar- assoc1ate professor of died Wednesday
happened to me" .
:.
maceuhcal houses, our psychiatry at Harvard
WEST COLU,MBIA, W. Va,
The
invocation
and
citizens will be even more Medical Sch,ool, called - Besaie M. Ferguson, 16, of
benediction was given b)'
medicated and undertreated amphetarrunes "a hazard to We~ Columbia, died Wed·
George
Meinhart.
•
than is true today,'' Prout the public health " ·nesday in the Holzer Medical
others
unable
to
attentf
"Although they can cause a Center Born bere Sept 9,
said.
who sent notes of praise td'
Prout sa1d research that three-to four-week euphoric 1900, the daughter of the late
Mr.Robinson were Ted Reed ,,
promo'tes the tndustry IS 'high' that may have as one of John S. and Margaret M.
ROBERT
RHODES
who
ta hospitalized; James
subsidized , wh1ie other its side effects a diminished Yeager Walkup, she was a
Fugate,
because of age, an'il '
research IS downgraded, and food mtake and consequent member of the Salem
John
Terrell.
"'
weight
loss,
after
thts
period
"only physlctans known to be
Community Church. Her
they
are
no
longer
effective
.
compltmentary to the
husband, Clyde W Ferguson,
phannaceutical 111dustr1es unless the user mcreases the died 111 1962.
are accepted on programs of dose, thus 111itiating a pattern
Survivmg are three
continuing
medical of abuse ," he said.
daughters, Mrs. Vtrgll
"And after use ts discon- (Margie ) Lewts, West
education .. "
Sen. Gaylord Nelson , D· tinued, the average person Columbia ; Mrs. Thomas
Wis , subcommitt ee quickly gains back the weight (Betty) Weaver, New Haven ;
DETROIT (UPI) - Uni~
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. chairman, noted that 111 1975, he lost - or more."
Auto Workers President
Mrs.
Eugene
(Dottie
)
Robert
G.
Rhodes,
master
Grinspoon said physicians,
about
55
mtllton
Leonard Woodcock says
who
have over-prescribed Williamson, Mineral Wells, maintenance man at the General Motors "has a loog
amphetamine prescnpttons
W. Va.; .two brothers, Harry Philip Sporn Plant near here
and another 19 9 million amphetamines, "should be Walkup, Columbus, Ohio ; was promoted to matn· way to go" to avert a stl'il!e
prescriptions for wllling to recognize how they William Walkup, West tenance foreman effective by 390,000 workers.
amphetamine-related drugs, may have denied a patient Columbia; a sister, Mrs. November I
Woodcock made the
help for his real problem m
were Issued for. obesity.
statement
Wednesday
Nora Cunnin gham , Simp·
Rhodes, born at Letart
He
c1ted
Prelud1n, the very act of compiymg sonville , S. Ca.; seven Falls,
despite
an
1111t1al
contra~
Meigs County,
lonamme, Tenuate and With his overt request, for a grandchildren, e1ght great· graduated from Racine High proposal GM claims 18 witlW!
pill."
Voranil as examples.
grandchildren, and several School. He served In the U. S. the pattern already set at
· meces and nephews.
Army until 1953, when his Ford and Chrysler.
"There are many missing
Funeral services Will be employment at Sporn Plant
PLANTS CLOSED
PLEASANT VALLEY
condu~ted
from
the began as a laborer. In 1951 he pieces,'' Woodcock sa1d of !Itt
BETHLEHEM, Pa (UPI)
DISCHARGES - Rose Foglesong Funeral Home on moved Into the maintenance proposal made as bargainers
- Some Bethlehem Steel Patterson, Gallipolis Ferry; Friday at 1;30 p.m., w1th the department as a helper, was head toward a 12:01 a.m.
Corp. faclblles at plants in Emth Murrah, Buffalo; Mrs. Rev George Hoschar of· promoted to Jr. maintenance Nov . 19 strike deadline
Sparrows Point, Md. and Charles Nibert, Pomt flc1atmg . Burial will follow In man in !961, maintenance would not speculate on
Lackawanna, N. Y have Pleasant; Mrs Donald the Graham Cemetery. man in 1966, and master whether bargainers will PI'
been shut down mdef1111tely, Combs, daughter, Pomeroy; Friends may call at the ma111tenance man in 1970 able to avert a second • and
forcing 1,150 employes out of Charles- Rice, Gallipolis; funeral home from 6 to 9 th\s where he served until his unprecedented · auto in·
walkout In the same
work The fac1ht1e~ were John Brumfield, Sr., Glen· evening
• recent promotion to main· dustry
.
"
year.
closed earlier th1s week woodi Mrs Ronald Roush,
tenance foreman
Woodcock's comments
because of a slackening Mason; Mrs Holl1e Jordan,
The Rhodes have two
came
during a new co~·
fourth-quarter demand for M1lwood; Maggie Carthus,
children and make their
ference
to announce that the
steel, a company spokesman Middleport; Donald Roush ,
home in Racme.
215-member International
said Wednesday
Hartford; Paul Hudson,
Chrysler Council had neatl~
~o uthside; Jame Wh1te,
unanimously recommended
Henderson ; Jeffery White ,
rank-and-file approval of ·a
Pomt Pleasant, Mrs. Charles
new contract by 118,000 U.S.
N1bert, Point Pleasant;
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and Canadian workers. '
Admitted - Bertha Rife, Walter Donohue , Point
M,iddleport, Brenda Jones, Pleasant; Marion Flowers,
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Early B1rds
Racine; Evelyn Landers, Mt Also; Leon Parker, Point
October U, 1976
Pomeroy; Cloyd Brookover, Pleasant, and Theodore
Ph.
Stevens,
Point
Pleasant.
Ben Tom
38
Middleport, Mark Moore,
•
Royal Cro wn
34
Albany.
Krng Bu ild ers
30
Dtscharged - • Timothy
29
ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. Evelyn 's Gr ocer y
Lighthou se Rest
25
Brewer, Ella Rostofer, Nettle
(UP!) - For five days, Sh1rley
Kay 's
12
BOARD
TO
MEET
Cross, Pauline Labonte.
Jinuny Carter almost lost
lnd H1gh Ser1 eS - F lOSSie
RACINE - The Southern hlmseU in the seclusion of a Max son 5-48 Belfy W h rtlbtc h
Dan Adams, executive vtce
49 7
l&lt;&gt;ca!School District hoahl of Georgia island plantation. 506.lndJanH Jenkins
president
of Ada!!18-MaCJ!n
rg h Game Jan
education will meet in Now he's headirlg home to Jenkm s 206, Betty Wh1 tlatc h Development Corporatl~~.
Athens, and manager of Your
unconstitutional execution, regular session at 7; 30 tackle the problems of l ~l . Floss re M e)( son 1a9
o'clock
this
evenmg
at
the
Father's
Mustache, Athf11s,
transitioo
and
deal
with
a
October 20, 1976
Ms Collard said.
high
school.
Pts.
announced
today a new hair
bitter
integration
dispute
in
Gilmore was convicted last
Ben Tom
42
styling
salon
will locate .!"
month of killing Bennie Bushhis hometown church.
Royal Cr own
38
37
GaUipolis next month.
carter was scheduled to fiy Evelyn 's Grocery
nell, 25, a motel clerk, dur111g
Krng Bu il de rs
1
36
Adams satd a Your
to Plains, Ga., this morning, Lighthouse
a robbery attempt.
Rest
27
LODGE TO MEET
refreshed from hla five-day Shrrley Kay s
12 Father's Mustache will beg\n
The regular monthly vacation and ready to choose
lnd Htgh Seri es - L ouise
operations in the Lsfay~
meeting of Shade River the personslltles of a new Hamson 495 , Ja n Jenkins Mall, 44 Court St.
469 . Betty Whitlatch .t6a
Masonic Lodge 453, will be
lnd H rgh Ga.me - Donna
The hair styling salon for
receive high· McFar
held at 7.30 p.m. this evening administration,
l i!lnd 176, Marl ene
the
entire family will op$1
level CIA briefings, and deal
176, Flo ssie M a xson
at the hall. All Master wtth the question of whether Wrlson
17 4
here "sometime in mi~­
Masons are invited.
December," Adams said.
to allow a black minister
October 27 , 1976
from Albany , Ga., to worship
~
Pts .
l Crown
-i6
In the Plains Baptist Church. Roya
Ben Tom
o44
While the
national K rng Bu dders
42
41
OHIOAN WINS
are
more Evelyn ' s Grocery
problems
se R est
31
stmtlar to skin cancer - 11
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI ) important, Carter ' s Lighthou
Shirley Kay 's
12
grows slowly. The problem is - Mark A SUnhorn, 18, of opposition to the integration
lnd H1gh S.er. es - Mary
that a fairly high percentage Orwell, Ohio, won the po!ictes of his church are voss 500 , J an Jenkin s 466,
Be11y Whitlatch 460
of women With these fairly national public speakmg likely to
be
more
lnd High GAme - Mary
benign cell changes later contest Wednesday night at embarrassing and more Voss 195, Jean Norton 177,
Betty Wh•tl&amp;tch 169
develop charactemtic in· the Future Farmers of disappointing for him.
THANKFUL
November 3, 1976
What
has
the post year meaht
vaslve cancer of the cervix
He
plans
to
attend
a
church
Pts.
Am~r1ca convention.
to
you?
r
Royal
Crown
54
There is no clear cut
business meeting Sunday, Evelyn 's Groce r y
47
Have
you
thought
of
t~e
agreement among
when the subject will be Ben Tom
46
things that are good? ,
K rng Bu ll ders
42
gynecologists on the proper
Have
you been thankful fpr
discussed and a decision L•ghthouse
R est
39
blessings that came
treaiment. And more im·
made on whether to fire Shi rley Kay 's'
12
And given to others as ypu
portantly, no one answer will
111E DALY SENTlNEL
lnd H1gh Ser ie s
Betty
Pastor Bruce Edwards who is
could?
DEVOTED TO THE
Whitlatc h 494 , Mar y Voss
fit ail cases. With sufficient
apposed to continuing racial 453. Jan J enk.ms 4.4 2
l
INTEREST OF
biopsies or removal of a
MEIGS-MASON AREA.
segregation.
lnd H•gh G.!lme Be tt y ., Have you said, "thank yo(l"
CHESTER L. TI.NNEHIU
Whitlatch 182. Myrtle Nor
to those who he Iped
,
conical section the doctor can
Awaiting carter at home man
Exe.&gt; Ed
181 , M u y Vos s 17.4
As you traveled along the
be more certain there are no
ROBERT HOEFLICH
was one of the many new
way'
•
City Editor
hidden areas of invasive
trappings
of hla presidency Have you seen the bell&lt;!fy
, Published d&lt;uly elt&lt;.,!pt &amp;turtlay
cancer.
that God has given
'
a
sophisticated
by The Ohio Valley Publish11111 CamTo help to brighten e&amp;eh day?
Il li)' , 111 Coort St, Pwneruy Ohio
The age of the patient and
communlcatlolls
system
set
45769 Business OHlce Phone 992desire to have additional
'
up by the Signal Corps fOr Bullets 111, New Orleans 103: Old you hear
2156 Elhturll!l Pi1Uue992-2157
the birds
children is also a con·
Second class pos\.al!e paid at
carter to receive dally Intellis1n91ng
gaily
today?
'
Elvin
Hayes
scored
30
Pomeroy, Oluo
slderatlon. If the changes are
gence reports.
re happy each dey :or
points and grabbed 16 They
Nt~tlolllll 11dverhslng repr~ en ­
the year .
minimal and easily removed
tative Wa r~ · Griffith Company, InBefore his departure rebounds and PhU Chenier
Old
you watc~ a SI.Wt!ef :In
c
BoUmelh
1:
1
11d
Gallll~hcr
Div
a young woman may be
carter said he had managed added 26 points to push
beauty so grand
•
757 , Thu-d Ave , New York N y '
justified in not undergoing a
to aceompllah his main goal Wsshington by New Orleans. Or wipe away a child's tOI(r?
10017
Sul»ic:riptlon t'lllcs Deli11ered by
hysterectomy until later but
of reading thousands of pages Dave Bing, benched as a
•
t ill ner where 11\/atiable 75 c:entli per
she must be carefully
of material devoted to fiX'eign starter, ignited a third period Have you made someone f+el
wel!k By Motor Houle where ct~mer
better today
,
supervised An older woman,
ijt/1'\'lce not avaUallle, One month,
and defense policy and his explosloo with 13 polnta and Bysharlngawordora
smile?
$J
2S
By
mall
111 Ohio and W Vt~
particularly If there 1s
transition to the presidency, seven assists. Leonard' If so, then you can be thankful
One Year, S22 00 , Stx months:
evidence of other disease 1n
utcludlng recommendations Robinson had 23 points and 13 And your life will be mor,.
Ill 50, Thrct• murrths $7 00
..: i~t whcr e 126 00 yccu • sJ: lfXIIlth~
worthwhile.
•
the uterus as well, is probably
on
a White HOWle staff. which rebounds fiX' the lluUeta,
113 50 I hrcc IIIUII \hs, $7 50
Written as food for thought
better off to have a complete
he
expecta
to
begin
naming
SLJIJ.';&lt;,'!Ipllun prllc md mM 5 Sumla~
lowhile fhe Jazz was led by 23 - for Thanksglvln!l-1976 'J umf'.&amp;•nluwl
h,ysterectomy.
within a week.
EIIzobeth R JordOl!. -~
points from Pete Maravich.

- food that the body Ignores, meals that mate no fat. • ;.::
Pr.George Bray of Harbor General HospiW is working :;:;
on just such a project and says other scientlsta are too.
~:;
''There are some artificial substances the body cannot :::;
break down through digesilon," he said in an interview ::·;
this week, ''There are other substances the body can't ;:;;
digest, can't absorb and can't store as fat.
!:;;
"We can eat food which looks and tastes !Ike nonnal ;:;:
food but contains these substances so the body can't digest i!:!
them . They pass right through "
:.:;
Bray, an endocrinologist, wd such "nonfood" could :;;
contain some vitamins and minerala and '1he body Would ::::
absorb them and get proper nutrition.
::::
"A doughnut, for example, could be made by ;:;!
substituting one ingredient that wouldn't be absorbed by ;:::

By Grec Bafley
Once again the Meigs
Marauders will go Into a
Frldsy night contest with the
chance to be "spollero" for an
SEOAL leader.
'lbll tlme the Marauders go
to Ironton to battle with coleader Irontoo which is Il-l on
lhe sea110n. The Tlgero' only!oljll was against league foe
Gflllpolis, and Coach Bob
Lutz's boys are tied lor the
crown wllh L&lt;&gt;gan. togan
gfl1!S against WeliBion, so a
!Call by either tbe Tigers or
th,e Chiefs would give the
other the SEOAL crown for
!976.
The Marauders will be
"up" for their Friday battle,
and a win over the Tigers
could ceally make their
season as Meigs • record now

•..

H

..

Over 100

•

mp etammes claimed
dangerous ineffective

By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON IUPI )- A
group of doctors, c!aimlng
such p1lis are not effective,
recommends physicians be
barred from prescr1bm~
amphetaJI1lne-related drugs
to persons who want to lose
we1ght
One of the doctors told a
Sena te subcommittee
Tuesday he felt the
pharmaceutical industry has
too much mfluence over
phys1cians and comprises the
matn part of thetr post·
graduate education.
The hear111gs before the
Senate small business
subcommittee resume today.
Dr Thaddeus E Prout,
associate professor of
med1c111e at Johns Hopkms
University, satd the current
influence of pharmaceutical
companies on phystc1ans 1s
11
8 disgrace ."
" If we do not rescue
postgraduate and continwng

Condemned killer wins
prayer for firing squad
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI )
- Condemned killer Gary
Gibnore, shackled in chainS,
persuaded the Utah Supreme
Court to let him d1e ''with
dignity , like a man" before a
prtson firing squad on
Monday.
The five justices liStened
intently Wednesday as
Gilmore told them he wanted
to accept the death penalty as
punishment for killing a
motel clerk last summer
The court then reversed
itself and canceled a stay of
execution it granted two days
earlier. The justices also
dismissed an appeal that had
been filed on Gilm ore 's
behalf.
"I believe I was given a fair
trial," said the 35-year-old
Oregon parolee, who has
!IJlOnt 18 of tbe past 21 years in
juverule detention faciliUes,
jails, and prisons.
"The sentence is proper

•

and I'm willing to accept it 1960.
w1th digmty,like a man," he
Gilmore also would become
said . "I hope 1t will be earned the first man to die under a
out without any delay "
death penalty law revised to
Utah State Prison \'{arden comply With recent U.S. Su·
Sam Smith sa1d, after the preme Court rulings an
court action , he was capital punishment An
proceeding with selection of a estimated 300 ' persons now
five-man fir111g squad and Hve on Death Rows across the
would ''work out the scenario country, facing posstble
for the execution from execution.
beg!nnmg to end to make 1t
Kathryn Collard, chief of
work out as expeditiously as litigation for the Utah
posstble.n
chapter of the American Civil
U the sentence IS carried Liberties Union, said her
out at 8 a m Monday as organization would try to
ordered , 1t will end the prevent Gilmore's executton.
longest pennd w1tllout an
"We will ask the U.S
execution In American SUpreme Court to grant a
history - mne years
stay on grotmds the Utah law
The death penalty was last is unconstitutional because it
iriiposed In the United States does not provide for
on June 2, 1967, when Luis mandatory review of capital
Jose Monge d1ed tn the cases,'' she said.
Colorado gas chamber for the
The ACL Umay also bring a
bludgeoning death of his wife taxpayers' suit In Utah
and three children. Utah 's courts, challenging the use of
last execution occurred 111 tax money to pay for an

DR. LAMB

Ohioan wins

.•
'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been diagnosed as having
"chronic Ischemic heart
disease with hypertension " I
would appreciate your
definition of the word
"Ischemia" and I would !Ike
to !1ave any suggestions in
regard to the treaimenl and
diet for this disease
I am 75 years old, a retired
lady with a weight of 150
pounds I am sure this is too
much weight for a person ••ho
is 5 feet I.
Presently I am taking
hydrodiurll and Aldomet. Are
these
two
medicines
adequate for. this heart

disease'
DEAR
READER
Ischemia is a word for
inadequate blood flow . The
term IS no\\ used ,~requ ently
to indicate there IS an obstruction in the coronary
arteries to your heart muscle.
The obstruction Is from the
buildup of fatty-rholesterol
.i!poslta in th6o arteries.
This condition leads to

Atherosclerosis. If you will
follow these diet principles
and also cut your calories
down until you can lose your
excess weight you can do a lot
for yourself. others who want
this tnformation can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
1!. Just send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019
DE:.\R DR. LAMB - U a
woman bas non-invasive
carctnoina in situ of the
cervix would this necessitate
the remova,l of the uterus the reports showing the
uterus is clear?
DEAR READER - That's
a sticky question Carcinoma
In situ ts a relatively benign,
superficial cancer of the
surface of the cervix,
sometimes overlapping onto
the adjacent walls of the
vagina and sometimes ex·
tending into the opening of
the cervix.
It is usually clearly
separated ff91 the normal
cells. In some ways it is

'RIO GRANDE - Clarence
11
Bevou Francis, the greatest
~rer coUeg1ate basketball
has ever known, will return to
Ri,o Grande College Saturday
to coach in an alumni game.
Francis, who led Rio
Grande's 1952-53 team to
qqtional prominence , still
holds national scoring
records that may never be
equalled or broken. During
his career at Rio Grande,
Francis on two occasions
scored more than 100 points
lti,a single game, and 10 two
years of play scored 55 or
more points In 20 different

...

games.
The 1952-63 average of 50.1
points by Francis remains a
National Association of In·
teri!'o!legiate Athletics
(NAJA ) record for one
season. Bevo also holds the
National Collegiate Athleltc
Association (f'lCAA) records
of the highest average tn a
single season (46.5) and the
highest average for two
seasons (47.1 ). Among other
NAIA records Bevo owns are
for the most points in a
season w1th 1,95-4, lhe most
• f1eld goals (708 ), and the most
free throws (538).

"'
'

Computerized

grid ratings
~ COLUMBUS

( U PI J rn lhts week •s Oh•o
H ig h
Sc hool
A lhl et •c
'A'u oc letl on com put er t1e d
fROibatl r.!l l mgs , 1n c lu d m g
po int totals
~a d en

m

~

CLASS AA

j

..·

Reg ron 1
,.~ 1 Lak ewood St
Edward ,
1.41 915 , 2 Parma Hetghts
'Va ll ey Forge , 139 35
1,

Region 2
1 Gah enn a Lm co ln , 119 50

i ,'

Columbus

Northland ,

114 00

Region J
.. ' 1 N orth Canton Hoover .
Ak ro n N orth .
.127 50 , 2
127 31.
J
M.i SSti! On
'Wa sh ingt on .
127 00
4
. l'(o ung st own
Cardtna l
.. Moon e y , 12 6 28
5 Stow
'Wl!lls h Je su rt , 11 1 93
6
~ kron
Buch tel, 107 31, 7
Jv' a ns f1e ld Sen 10 r 104 SO 8
Zan esv rlle ,
103 00 .
9
lMassd l on Jackson , 101 50 , 10
Newark, 99 00
Region 4
1
Clncmnati
M oe ll er
171 62 2 Cen t er vi l le, 149 00

Carter

New shop

CLASS AA
Rcgton

s

1 El y r ta catholrc. 102 79 2
Akron St V incent St Marv

to open m

97 37
Reg1on 11

1 Port Clfnton , 105 53

December

2

Colum bus Watterson , 103 50
Region 7
, I New L ex rng t on , 89 50, 2
M rner va , 88 00, 3 Ironton ,
" 77 50 , 4 South Po int, 7-4 23 . 5
.G allipo lis , 7 3 00 . 6 Tor ont o ,
'69 37 , 7 Uniontown Lake,
·.65 00 . 8 Cad Lt. 63 71, 9 Philo,
· 62 50 ,
10 .
Uhri chsvill e
'' Ci aym onL 62 00
... ..
Region
,.., I
Brookv il le . 99 50 . 2
Readi ng 9 1 50

a

CLASS A
Region 9
1 Ash to!lbula St
Jo h n ,
6ot 50 2 Dl!llton , 50 50

Reg1on 10
Fos tor ll! St Wend elrn ,
66 65 2 Marl on CIJihOlr c ,
53 00
Reg•on 11
1
N ewark , 67 00
2
Woodsf1 eld 59 23 . 3 A lbany
A lex and er
52 94 , 4
Cen
terbu r g , 47,87
5 L tckmg
H e rghl s 47 50
6 Mingo
Ju nc t ro n. ~ 3 85, 7 t t1e l In
d ian
V all ey South and
Su ga r cr ee k Garaway , 43 oo ,
9 O a k Hill
39 500 . 10
N ew comerst own . 38 00
Reg1on 12
1 W es t Jefferson . 79 00 2
ver Saill es, 53 50
1

76ers 103, Bulla 88:
George McG!nnla scored 'l1
points and Doug Collins
added 22 to lift PllUade!phia
,over Chicago for the Bulla'
sixth straight loss. Collins,
coming back from an injured
right foot, scored 17 of his
pomts in the first half and
dished out four assists in a
final period that saw the
winners build up as much as a
2fl.point lead. Bob l&lt;&gt;ve led
the Bulla with 22.

I

.

Francis, his wife and
family reside in SalinesvUle,
Ohio. He and Roy Moses, one
of Bevo's teammates in the
1952-53 season, will coach
teams of Rio Grande alumni.
Moses received the Atwood
Achievement Award from

New Lexington .. . . .,. , . . ,.,., .,..,...,. ..
climbs to top
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UP! ) - Two
of the three leaders in last
week's
United
Press
International Oh1o H1gh
School Board of Coaches
football ratings felt the sting
of defeat and the long fall
from the top which usually
goes with it.
Only Cincllll11lU Moeller,
which has been the lopsided
No. I choice In ClaiiS AAA
since the ratings began,
managed to retain Its lofty
spot and the Crusaders were
nearly unanimous.
N'ew Lexington in Class AA
and Arlington In Class A,
taking advantage of losses by
last week's No. I teams, St.
Marys Memorial snd Black
River, joined Moeller this
week, but the two newcomers
will have to hold their breath
unlll the final champion is
decided.
New Lexington, ~. has a
slim 165-159 margin over
runnerup Huron in the
seventh of eight weeks of
balloting, while the Class A
ratings were also turned into
a down-to-the wire affair with
Arlington holding a 144-135
lead
over
runnerup
Woodsfield(~) and Newark
Catholic (il-l) third with 127.
Bluffton, which suffered Its
first loss of the season, fell
from second to fourth, one
ahead of Black River.
West Jefferson, virtually
assured one of the four Class

COLUMBU S I UPI I -

TONIGHT
•

•
at 5'9" and 160 pounds.
changing a few things on
The tackles are senior Gary defe nse . Co-captain Stan
Lowe at 6'1" and 200 lbs. and Starcher w11l be back at his
sophomore Robert Clay at m1ddle guard post11on after
6'2", 180 lbs. Seniors John missinglast week's game due
Whltehad and Paul Unger are to an injury. The other co·
at ends, Whitehead 5'10" and captain, Allen Stewart,
150 and Unger 6'2", 160.
seems to be recovermg quite
The Tigers, however, may well from his injury and he'll
be 8 little weak on defense. once again be seeing a chon at
They list three regu lar end on both untts
defensemen as questionable
Defensively, Dmk Kennedy
for Friday's game - mid· is sttll hurting and he'll be a
dleguard Howle Dlck ess, • questtonable starter If he
cornerba ck Eddie Lawless, can't make 1t, It'll once again
and defensive tackle Jim be Bruce Carma n, a
Coalgrove. All three are sophomore. If Randolph is
seniors and haven't been the quarterback, then Ron
practicing this week due to Coats will be the tailback and
Injuries, but they may see T1m Thomas w1ll go at the
actloo Friday night as It's an Wingback.
all-important game.
At offensiV e ends w1ll be
Besides those off ensiv e Stewart and Dan Granda!,
chan ges, Me1 gs will be wh1le at tackles will aga in be
Ray Willford and Brent
Arnold. The guards are Dave
M1ii cr and p!ace-k1c ker
Duane Weber.
One week ago, four teams
were tied for ftrst place, and
now there are only two.
Fnday mght w11l mark the
fourth t1me tn the last fiv e
weeks Me1gs has had a shot at
one of those fo ur teams, and
th1s tune, maybe ..
Rto Grande College in 1973
.. ... ...... .... . .. •"" .. . ..
and, along w1th Bevo, Is a .......
member of Rio Grande's
SPECIAL NOTE
Athletic Hall of Fame.
The
Big Bend AWarrtors
The Red-White Alumnt
will
play
th eir final game nf
game is scheduled for I p. m
the
season
Sunday at 2 p
in Lyn~ Center on the R1o
m.
at
Waterford.
Grande Campus.
AU team members are to
meet at the Rutland field at
)1 ·30am.

~1•

'

NB A St1ndi ng s
B y United Preu tnterna t lon1 1
Eas tern Con ffi'rence
A tt ~ n ti c Oiv•s l on
W L Pet
GB
But f ~ l o
5 4 556 Ph !l &amp;dclpi'1 Je
S 4 556
Bos ton
5 4 556
N Y Kn lcks
6 5 545
N Y Nets
4 7 36J
'}
Centra l Di vis ion
W l Pet
GB
Cl ev elaf) d
9 1 818
Houston
6 3 667 2
Ne w Orl e&amp;n s
t. 4 600 21 ?
Washington
5 S 500 31 1
AIIMto!l
4
6
J()()
41 1
San Antonio
4 6 400 _. , 7

West er n Conf ere nc e
MidWeSt DI VISIOn
W L Pet

a

Den ver
Kll nsas Ci ty
De tror t
lndl o!lna
Ch rcago
Mdw o!u kee

5
S

P aclli ~

0 I 000
5 500
6

GB

~

4

455

4 ' '}

4

5

444

2
1

7
9

'J'J'J

411
61~

182

71,

DI.., ISio n
W L Pet
7
I aJS

GB

Portt and
Sea ttl e
5 6 455
Los An gel es
4 6 400
Gol den Sta le
3 5 375
Phoen ix
1 5 167
Wedne sdav ' s Res u lts
Bo ston I 11 Los Ang el elj 111
P h ll a \OJ Chlcayo 88
Houston 99 Seattle 97
Was h 116 New Or l ean s 103
Oc tr ol1 123 Clevel and 112
(Only Yi'l mes schedul ed )
Thursdi1y ' s Gam es
Denver a l Butfa lo
Portland a1 Allanra
NY Nel s at San Antomo
lnd1ana a t Phoen hc
Kan sas Crty a t Golden St
(Only ga mes schedul ed )
frida y's Gam es
NY Kn lcks at De tr o ll
N ew Or lel!ln5 at Boston
wash rng ton .!I f Ph ilad elph ra
Hous ton .!I I M ilw au kee
lnd •nna t~l Los An gell'S
Kan sas Cdy a t Sea fi le
IOnl y games sc hedu led)

31

~

A
4

5

NHL Standing s

By United Preu. International
Campbell Confere nce
PBfrrck DIVI SIOn
W l T Pts GF GA
NY l slan dr s 11 1 1 14 61 31
Ph da delphr 7 6 3 17 56 49
A ll anta

6 7 " 16

a

5 1 56

By FRED UEF
UPJ Sports Writer

After a s uccessfu~ road

show In both Atlanta and New
Orleana, there didn 't seem to
be mu~h to come hack home
to for the Detroit Pistons.
"I don't think I've ever
come into Coho Arena at any
point tn my career and felt
the fa ns were genteel, warm
to us," said Bob Lanier,
whose 31i points Wednesday
night in Detroit sparked the
Pistons to a 123-112 victory
over the Cleveland cavaliers
However , Wedn esday
nig ht 's ga me actually
brought cheers from the
crowd of 6,257 as Detrmt ran
up Its th1rd straight win with
its highest point total of the
seaso n against the bes t
defensive team tn the NBA
The cavaliers, atop the
Central Division with a 9-2
record, were led by Can1py
Russell's 22 points and Jin1
Chones' 18. But they yielded
the most points of their
season in a game In which the
Pistons led by 25 points ut
three d1fferenl Urnes and
ln d la napo ls
M rn nesoM

4 6 2 10

J 10 7

11

coaches

IN WHO 'S WHO George F . Stewart, Jr., son

of Mr. and Mrs. George F.
Stewart, Sr., 957 Broadway
St., Middleport, bas been
listed In " Wha 's Who
Among Am erican High.
School Students." A fresh·
man at Ohio University,
Stewart graduated from
Meigs Hlgb School last

f

lifted their record to ~
Moot of :the damage was
done by the whale-li ke
Lanier, who is •hooting 63 per
cent over his past five grunes
and supparUng a 31.3 point
average for that span.
Howard Porter, who hit
five shots in a row in the flrst
quarter, finished with 18 for
the Pistons
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Boston defeated Los Angeles,
117-112, Philadelphia slupped
Chicago, 103-88, Housto n
edged Seattle, 99·97,. and
Washi ngton bent New
Orleans, 11&amp;-103.
Celtlcs 117, !.alu!nl liZ:
Set'Ortd~year forwnrd Tom
Boswell, playing U1e pivot
after Dave Cowens left the
tenm earlier In Uw dny to
se ttle personal problems,
scored 10 pomts In the final
quarter to push Boston pnsl
Los Ange ies, snappll~ the
Celtics' fo ur -game los ing
strenk Jo Jo White led
Boston, now 5-t. with 28
points , while Sidney Wiclui
uddL"&lt;I 21 po1n1s Karcem Abdui-J abbar paced the
l.ukers with 33

311 64
J9 'If

w es t
W L T PI!. GF GA

Everyone 65 or older who is
entitled tu monthly socl11 l
57 4a
or
rn1lroad
56 75 sec urity
13
&lt;~5 ~ 1
retirement pn ymcnt s gets
10 39 57
hospital lns u r u nct• und er
W e dn es d ay · ~ Re !&gt; u lf s
Clnc lnn e tr •I Edrn on1011 7
med ica re without puyln g
l nd1 anap oi 1S J PMocn l11 J o
monthlv orcmlums.
(Onl y ge m cs schedul ed )

Wfn nrpeg
10 5 0
Houston
H 6 '1
San Diego , 7 5 7
Phocn l)(
7 J I
Cal gar y
6 6 1
Ed m o11 1on
5 9 0

70

18
16
15

76 •lot
51 &lt;11

Thu rs day 's Ga mes
San Dwgo at Bl rm lnghMll
New Engla nct a1 Mumeso t,,
W1nn1 p eg a 1 C ~Jlgt'l r y
(On tv games sche duled 1
F ri d ay ' s Gam es
San 01cga &lt;'I I Houston
New Engl and at Phocn rll
{On l y ge mes sc he duled )

NY Rangers 6
2 14 66 6J
Sm vtl'1e Di v ision
W L T Pi s GF GA
51 LOUIS
9 7 0 18 51 6:1
Chrc ag o
7 8 ~ 16 58 59
M tnne sot a
5 10 1 11 47 70
V ancouver
51 1 1 11 .S 7 67 ~~--------Co l ori'ldo
41 1 1 9 37 51 · WAi es Conf er ence
Norri s Dlvr i ion
W L T Pts GF GA
Montr eal
13 3 2 28 95 39
Los Angl'les a 5 s 21 62 sJ
Prll sbur gh
4 7 5 13 .49 63
Wa sh rng lon 5 8 2 12 43 62
Oe lr ol t
4 9 2 10 41 53
Adam s DIVISIOn
W L T Pts GF GA
Bosl on
12 3 o 24 66 -4 8
Bu ff alo
I! 5 1 17
44 JJ
Tor on1 o
5' 7 4 14 57 t.O
Cle vela nd
5 7 3 13 .47 48
Wednu day 's Res ults
Wo!lshlnglon 7 N Y R.en gers 5
Phil adelph ia 2 Ch rcago 7
M ontrea l 2 Atla nta 2
M rn neso la 3 P rlt sburg h 2
Bos ton 6 Delr olt 4
Buffalo 5 51 L OUIS 0
Cl eve lan d 2 Co lor ado 1
Toron to 2 l os Ang eles 2
lor good Valu e In lll e Insur ance(Only ga mes sc heduled )
State Farm Let me show yo u
Thursday's Games
NY I sl and er s at Bos ton
why
Va ncouv er at Ph i ladelphia
(Only games sc hedul ed )
Fr1day•s Garn es
Clev eland at Atl o!l nlo!l
1258 Powell Street
Chr cago at Washing ton
Middleport,
(Onl y game s sc hedul ed )

Wise
'
ChDICe

A playoff spots, jumped into
sixth, with Ridgemont,
Fostorl8 St. Wendelin, carey
and newcomer Dalton
rounding out the top ten.
Moeller, a 61~ wtnner over
Cmcmnati Purcell Friday
night, came within foqr
points of be111g a unanimous
No I choice, getting 29 first
place votes and four seconds
from the 33 voting AAA
The Crusaders, who close
out the season Friday mght
against Cincinnati St. Xavier,
take a 98-polilt lead over
second place Youngstown
cardinal Mooney into the
final week of balloting.
Princeton, another Queen
City team, edged into third
place ahead of Gahanna Lin·
coin, while North Canton
Hoover continued its climb by
mov111g 111to fifth . The rest of
the AAA top ten Includes Stow
Walsh Jesuit, unscored on 111
nine games, Centerville,
Elyrl8 and Parma Senior tied
for eighth and Akron North
and Parma Vailey Forge tied
for tenth.
Columbus Watterson (11-1)
moved 111to third in AA, but
the Eagles are well off the
pace of New Lex and Huron
with 123 points. Urbana and
Reading took over fourth and
fifth, followed by St. Marys,
Brookville, · Akron St.
V'tncent..st. Mary, Wyoming
and Elyria Catholic, a
newcomer to the top ten.

~~

Cavs beaten
by 123-112

WORK
'

SHOE

SUEDE LACE-TO-TOE
STYLING

BILL FlETCHER
0.

Ph . 992-7155

av

WHA Standings
United Press lnternahonal

Ea st

STATE FARM

W L T Ph GF GA LI FE IN SURAN CE COMPAN Y
11 3 0 22 74 .48
HomeOihce llloomr"tlon ll~ no r'

Quebe c
Cmc rnn al 1 9 4 2 20
N ew Engln d 5 6 I 11
B1 r m lnghm 5 11 1 11

""" .u ..
..A._

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

80 56 .lh • JOOd ne lr hbor, St•t• F•rm It thert
38 4J
64 78

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
Pomero

o.·-

sprlog where he was o

member of the National
Honor Society, the Span!Bh
Club and waR a library
assistant. His bobbles are ·
swimming, tennis, fishing,
and gnltar playing. He Is
the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Stewart, Route
I, West Columbia, W. Va.

•••

UPI grid ratings

'"

The Poet's
-Carner

I

on defense. Last Frida y
Ironton was busy knocking
Athens out of 'a four-way tie
for first , 1~.
Ranked 8th in the state this
week by the AP, Ironton will
be fielding a healthy of·
fens1ve urut. Their backfield
consists of three leagu e
leaders - quarterback Mike
Brown, a 6'0" senior, in the
passing departmen; fullba ck
Rick Howard, another 6'0",
175 lb. senior, in league
scoring, and junior halfback
Juan 'Thomas, leading In
rushes.
The offensive line will be
headed by junlor center Tom
Wtleman and on each side of
him will be two seniors at
guards - Jack Rowe at 6'0"
and 175 lb. and Sieve Collins

role

Bevo Francis will coach
alumni team at Rio event

,,

Trim weight to help heart
madequate amounts of
oxygen being delivered to the
heart muscle and at the same
time permits the accumulation of carbon diox1de
m the heart cells. It is the
common form of heart
disease these days.
The Hydrodiurtl is to help
you eliminate salt and with it
excess water from the body.
It helps to lower blood
pressure tn many cases. The
Aldomet is a more specific
treatment for elevated blood
pressure.
These medicines help your
heart Indirectly by con·
trolling your blood pressure.
fhe high blood pressure
Increases the deposits of
fatty-rholesterol substances
in the arteries and also works
the heart ~arder. ,
You are absolutely rtght
about your weight. If you can
get rid of ever)' last pound of
extra fat you will decrease
your blood pressure and the
work on your heart.
I a.n sending you The
Health ~er number .1-3,
Diet ,
Preventin g

wrist tnjury and played only

,,

GM far off
promotion
at Sporn plant says Woodcoc'((

facing
Local Bowling
problems

stands at 2-7. The Tigers
won 't be talting ~e Meigs
crew lightly, however, a~ 8
talk with Ironton coaches
revealed that they think
Meigs coach
Charley
Chancey· is perhaps the best
in th e league and his
Marauders are always a
serlollS threat, no matter
what their record .
But the Marauders do have
some Serious problems.
Regular qllarterbll.ck G~rge
Gun is still out with a con·
cusslon, so they'll be going
with back-up quarterback
Kenny Young, or tailback
steve1 Randolph will again
step Into the signal caller's
spot. Randolph did a fine job
as quarterback last week
although Meigs lost a thriller
to Wellston Ul-7. Yolll!ll had a

~poiler's

r-----------,
:I Pro l1
'
I
I _;:,f,nn nmgs I

THE ALL NEW
MEIGS INN

Thi s

we e k ' s Un i ted Pr es s In
ter nat lonal Ohio H 1gh Sc h ool
Board of Coaches football
ratm gs w1th ftrst pla ce v ote s
and won l o s t record s m
par enthe ses
Class AAA
Team
Ph
1 Cinc innat i Moe ller 29 (9 -

01

32 6

2 You ngstown Mooney ( 9

01
3 Pnnceton (8 1)
4 Gahanna L incoln (9 0 )

228
184
178

5 North Can to n Hoover 1 fa
01
140

6 Stow W a lsh J esutt 1 19
0)

PIZZA

114

7 Cenlervllle 2 (9 0)
109
B tre Elypa 17 1 1)
61
B freParmaSenlorl601) 61
10 t1e A.kron Nortl1 (9 0 )
47
10 tie Parma Vall ey For g e

SHACK

16 1)

.•

-We make real Italian style pina
-We use only fresh homemade
dough.
-The proof is in the taste •.•

&lt;7

Sec ond
n rn e .
12
t 1e
Massillon and To l e do St
John 's, 45 e ach . 14 Miami
Trace 32, 15 Lakewood St.
Edward 27. 16
Dayton
Meadowdal e
22.
11·
Columbu s W a lnut Rtc:lg e 1 17 ,
18
Zanesville
16 .
19
Columbu s Nor tl'1 1and 12 20
Fremon t Ross 11

Clan AA
Team
Pts
1 Nevt Lex ington 5 (9 0)
165
2 Huron 5 (9 Ol
159
3 Co lumbus Walle rs on 2 ( 8

EAT IN OR CARRY OUT
Seatlrig lor 48 Persons

1

1I

123

4 Urbana 2( 901

117

5 Reading 3 (9 Ol
113
6 St Marys Memo r lal 2 t a
1l
98
7 Brookv ille 2 (9 Ol ,
79

B Akron St VIncent (7 2)
9 Wyoming {8 1)
10 E l yria Catholi c 1 ( 7 1)

OPEN:
Mon. thru T,hursday
Fri. &amp; S.turday
Sun&amp;y

l -12

l-1
l-11
12s E. Mam St., Pomeroy, Ohio

72
5d
52
Second ten 11 Or r ville 51,
12 Ironton 50, 13 Mil an
Ed 1son 1 33 . 14 Port Clint on
30 ;, 15 Mtnerva 26 ; 16
Hamilton Badin 2 25 ! 17
Trenton Edgewood 18 . 18 t1e
N orwa lk and Toront o . 14
ea ch 20 Wheeler sbur g 9

Class A
Team
Pts
1 Ar trngton 8 ( 9 0 )
1 44 ~.;
2 Woods fre1d 3 (9 0 )
135
3 Newark Cathol rc (8 1 )
127
4 Blu ffton 1 ( 8 I )
llJ
Blac k Rrv er 2 (8 I)
109
6 West Jeff erson (8 1 )
91
7 R1dg emon 12 (8 1l
60
B Fosto r•a Sf We ndelin 3 ( 8
11
59
9 Carey ( 7 2)
55
10 Da lton (9 Ol
47
Second ten
11 Sandusk y
51 Mary 's 1 .44 , 12 Farrpor t
Harbor 1 38 , 13 Centerbur g
28 , 14 t1 e Port smouth Notre
Dam e and Pandora Gi lboa , 16
ea ch , 16 Mar ton Cat h ol ic 1
14 , 17 Ver saille s 13 , 18
Cuyahoga H eigh ts 11. 19 tie
T1ff ln Calvert anel P ik eto n, 10
ea cl'1
•

.s

Rockets 99, SuperSonics 9'!:
Houston's Mlke Newlin's
jump shot, with 45 seconds
remaln!ng, broke a tie game'
t9 give Seattle Its sixth
straight loss on ~ road.
Seattle led 'foltr 'times In the
final quarter before losing the
lead for good on Newlin's .
shot. They then played for the
last shot but Bruce Seals
missed a IS-footer as the
buzzer sounded. The Rockets'
Rudy Tomjanovich led all
scorers with 26 points, while
SeatUe's Slick Watts had 21.

The average cost o.f one
day's hospital care in 197~
was $128.26.
1,

... See the
professionals under
the Black and
Yellow Parts Plus
Auto Parts Stores

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
144 WEST SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

I

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
ROUTE 33
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0,, Thursday, Nov. l1, 1976

-:,:···:·:-'·' •.-:;.•.: !·!·'·'·' : ......: •.•.•.• !·!•'•'•!•!•!•'·!·:::.:;:::;:;:~·-:-:....:.·-:-:.:···:·: : ·';!: '•' ··: : :-:-:-: : -:·.:·:·:··; :;·

Rewning of
Automatic weight watcher, fl New Haven
· · built-in, coming on soon ·
is requested
:.:! . wsANGELEs( UPI )- ItllOUndslikeadieter'sdream l::!

Ohio ~epublicans may;l,
. from Saxbe
get help
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) - Wil·
llam Sube, ooe of Ohio's
most successful Republica ns,
will end his tenure as
ambassador to India and
return to his Mechanicsburg
llome next montll to o~n a
law offi ce with his son,
Scrippa-Howard newspapers
reported today
Rep, Charles S01be, R·
Columbus, the ambassador's
son , Wednesday confirmed
Wsshington reports that hiS
fat her IS submitting h1 s
resignation and returning to
the United States on Dec. 2.
Saxbe 's return 18 certain to
raise questions about his
political intentions at a ume
when his party is perhaps at
its lowest ebb 111 recent Ohio
history .
The newspapers S81d one
source close to Sa xbe
believes th at the ambassador
and former U S. senator
could be drafted to carry his
party's banner m the 1978
governor 's ra ce, but the
source doubts that Saxbe
would publicly challenge
Gov James A. IUtodes for the
Republican nommation.
Thus, Rhodes• reurement
at the end of his thtrd term
would be a prerequiSite to
Saxbe 's enter111g the race,
according to the source who
has been a longtime personal
frtend and professional
co lleague
of
the
ambassador's

sources confirmed that Saxbe
Is very much on the minds of
many Republicans .
One even went so far as to
assert, "Saxbe has got to run
in 1978 for the Republican
Party to hold onto the
governor's office.''
SUch talk is stimulated by
the party's defeats last week,
especially in legislative
races. Rhodes campatgned
ttrelessly for Republican
candidates, but his efforts
were for naught as
Democrats Increased thetr
legislative majority.
Rhodes' loss of prestige in
that election and the one last
year
when
voters
overwhelmingly rejected hiS
econ omic ballot program
coupled with his age-be will
be 69 in 1971\--has fueled
that he will

;~~~~lahon

Moreover , fa ced wtth
Democ r ati c vet o-proof
maj onties m the Legislature,
GOP sources expect Rhodes
to ftnd the next two years the
most frustrating .m h1s
politi cal career
The younger Saxbe also
candidly discussed mounting
pressures on h1s father to
aga111 become mvolved in
Oh1o politics.
Saxbe was US attorney
general, elected U S senator
from Ohio in 1968, three times
elected Ohio attorney
general, and served as
speaker
of the tOOth O)lio
He has a strong sense of
General
Assembly
loyalty to the Republica n
However , he cauttoned that
Party and the country ; and , if
the party and Jun IUtodes 1t would be ill-advised to try
went to him, I thnk he would and second guess the
very seriously constder it elder Saxbe who has acqUired
(running )," the newspapers a reputation as somewhat of a
maverick
quoted the source.
"There's no telling what he
'The source also said that
Will
do i I'm as curious as
Saxbe is aware of the Ohio
anybody
else,'' Rocky Saxbe
GOP's current woes
said.
\
.
He Is aware of the situatiOn
Sti!l, hecontmued "Alotof
and that he might be looked
as a possible candidate," the people say he is the only hope
(for the Republican Party in
source sa1d .
Looked to" appears to be 1978) Alot of people are ttred
an understatement, the of seeing the same (GOP)
newspapers sa1d Checks ucket year after year "
And Saxbe satd some Ohio
with a number of party
11

w

11

Republicans already ha ve
been telling hla fathW that he
could be the salvation of the
party
Saxbe
joined
other
Republicans In cautioning
that it would be up to Rhodes
to make the lint move.
"He (Saxbe) is not going to
come back and try to take
over anything,'' he said. "My
old msn is not going to come
back and tell Jim IUtodes he's
had it."
Saxbe said that, while he
and his father will be opening
a
law
office
in
Mechanicsburg with a branch
in Columbus, he does not
know whether his father will
actually pra ctice law.

A

h

News •• in Briefs

3- The o.JiySent!nel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,, Thursday, Nov. l!, 1978

Marauders in

(Continued from page I)
:;
One of the lltudentl, Laura Donomle, said the te~eher :
"reached out !)er hand and tried to push the gun back, but the builets hit her In the front and she fell back against the table."

Sf SIMONS ISLAND, GA. - TWO coob rep«! that
NEW HAVEN, W. Va
Bruce Gilman requested that Jlnuny Carter is an easy man to please at the dlnlni table . •
the town council rezone Fifth Hennan Yurslch and carl C. Oullaw, both longtime cooU at a .,
Street when the New Haven restaurant oo this island, cooked for the PresldenHlect d~ ..
"
•
•n
Coun e1! met
Tuesday his vacation here.
"He's not particular," said Outlaw. "He just likes food and evening. He wants to build a
car wash in the area which we III tt for him." carter ate mostly seafood, including "'
presently is restricted to shrimp, oyster stew and broiled fish, and also was treated to a.,.
special p~nut cake.
..~
residences
The council agreed to set a
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS - ON THE EVE OF THE winter driving ;
meeting with attorneys R.
Michael Shaw and. Ron Stein season, state Jllghway Safety Director Dorlald D. Cook Is,·,
reminding motorists the legs! period for using studded tires In "
to discuss the request.
Mayor Charles Roush Ohio ts Nov. I to April 15.
Cook said Wednesday recent changes in the law have .:
signed a letter to the B.T.
caused
some confusion about the dates. He also advlse4~.
the body ."
•
~::; Engineering Co., agreeing to
Other researchers are working on substances which ;;;; il!' plans for a secondary drivers using studded tires to slow down on slippery roads and
to apply brakes lightly and intermittently.
:.:
block the digestion of fat-making elements, he said. ;::; sewer system.
The substances are still in the develapmental stage, he :;:!
The council discussed
said, and are being tested on humans, but cannot be ·,:; buying a new gas tank from
....
marketed until "very stringent" government regulations :,:; the Ashland Oil Co and
""
are met.
conferred w1th Mike F1elds
: : '•·: '• ·!: : ·: :· '·:·· ..·. ·: ::::, ,.: ::;' ,';!!·':'~ that he accept the job of
-~.
water superintendent.
(Continued from page 1)
Other business was routine.
.
.'
Present were Mayo1 Charles
credit given to me. The credlt •
Roush, Secretary Pat Paugh,
IJOe8 to Pomeroy and Mason :
and council members,
Qty. I owe the area more ;
Bernard L1eving, Harold
tban it owes me." He :
Moxley, Virgil Weaver, and
Introduced his family, hla '
Donald Kay
wife, Marie; daughter, Mary :
Robinson Dudek; hla son-ln· :
law, Dick Dudek; grandson :
Bessie Ferguson
Rob, and his son, John.
;
In
closing
he
vowed,
"This
•
Dr . Lester Gr inspoon,
med1cal education of our
Is the nicest thing that ever
phySICians from the phar- assoc1ate professor of died Wednesday
happened to me" .
:.
maceuhcal houses, our psychiatry at Harvard
WEST COLU,MBIA, W. Va,
The
invocation
and
citizens will be even more Medical Sch,ool, called - Besaie M. Ferguson, 16, of
benediction was given b)'
medicated and undertreated amphetarrunes "a hazard to We~ Columbia, died Wed·
George
Meinhart.
•
than is true today,'' Prout the public health " ·nesday in the Holzer Medical
others
unable
to
attentf
"Although they can cause a Center Born bere Sept 9,
said.
who sent notes of praise td'
Prout sa1d research that three-to four-week euphoric 1900, the daughter of the late
Mr.Robinson were Ted Reed ,,
promo'tes the tndustry IS 'high' that may have as one of John S. and Margaret M.
ROBERT
RHODES
who
ta hospitalized; James
subsidized , wh1ie other its side effects a diminished Yeager Walkup, she was a
Fugate,
because of age, an'il '
research IS downgraded, and food mtake and consequent member of the Salem
John
Terrell.
"'
weight
loss,
after
thts
period
"only physlctans known to be
Community Church. Her
they
are
no
longer
effective
.
compltmentary to the
husband, Clyde W Ferguson,
phannaceutical 111dustr1es unless the user mcreases the died 111 1962.
are accepted on programs of dose, thus 111itiating a pattern
Survivmg are three
continuing
medical of abuse ," he said.
daughters, Mrs. Vtrgll
"And after use ts discon- (Margie ) Lewts, West
education .. "
Sen. Gaylord Nelson , D· tinued, the average person Columbia ; Mrs. Thomas
Wis , subcommitt ee quickly gains back the weight (Betty) Weaver, New Haven ;
DETROIT (UPI) - Uni~
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. chairman, noted that 111 1975, he lost - or more."
Auto Workers President
Mrs.
Eugene
(Dottie
)
Robert
G.
Rhodes,
master
Grinspoon said physicians,
about
55
mtllton
Leonard Woodcock says
who
have over-prescribed Williamson, Mineral Wells, maintenance man at the General Motors "has a loog
amphetamine prescnpttons
W. Va.; .two brothers, Harry Philip Sporn Plant near here
and another 19 9 million amphetamines, "should be Walkup, Columbus, Ohio ; was promoted to matn· way to go" to avert a stl'il!e
prescriptions for wllling to recognize how they William Walkup, West tenance foreman effective by 390,000 workers.
amphetamine-related drugs, may have denied a patient Columbia; a sister, Mrs. November I
Woodcock made the
help for his real problem m
were Issued for. obesity.
statement
Wednesday
Nora Cunnin gham , Simp·
Rhodes, born at Letart
He
c1ted
Prelud1n, the very act of compiymg sonville , S. Ca.; seven Falls,
despite
an
1111t1al
contra~
Meigs County,
lonamme, Tenuate and With his overt request, for a grandchildren, e1ght great· graduated from Racine High proposal GM claims 18 witlW!
pill."
Voranil as examples.
grandchildren, and several School. He served In the U. S. the pattern already set at
· meces and nephews.
Army until 1953, when his Ford and Chrysler.
"There are many missing
Funeral services Will be employment at Sporn Plant
PLANTS CLOSED
PLEASANT VALLEY
condu~ted
from
the began as a laborer. In 1951 he pieces,'' Woodcock sa1d of !Itt
BETHLEHEM, Pa (UPI)
DISCHARGES - Rose Foglesong Funeral Home on moved Into the maintenance proposal made as bargainers
- Some Bethlehem Steel Patterson, Gallipolis Ferry; Friday at 1;30 p.m., w1th the department as a helper, was head toward a 12:01 a.m.
Corp. faclblles at plants in Emth Murrah, Buffalo; Mrs. Rev George Hoschar of· promoted to Jr. maintenance Nov . 19 strike deadline
Sparrows Point, Md. and Charles Nibert, Pomt flc1atmg . Burial will follow In man in !961, maintenance would not speculate on
Lackawanna, N. Y have Pleasant; Mrs Donald the Graham Cemetery. man in 1966, and master whether bargainers will PI'
been shut down mdef1111tely, Combs, daughter, Pomeroy; Friends may call at the ma111tenance man in 1970 able to avert a second • and
forcing 1,150 employes out of Charles- Rice, Gallipolis; funeral home from 6 to 9 th\s where he served until his unprecedented · auto in·
walkout In the same
work The fac1ht1e~ were John Brumfield, Sr., Glen· evening
• recent promotion to main· dustry
.
"
year.
closed earlier th1s week woodi Mrs Ronald Roush,
tenance foreman
Woodcock's comments
because of a slackening Mason; Mrs Holl1e Jordan,
The Rhodes have two
came
during a new co~·
fourth-quarter demand for M1lwood; Maggie Carthus,
children and make their
ference
to announce that the
steel, a company spokesman Middleport; Donald Roush ,
home in Racme.
215-member International
said Wednesday
Hartford; Paul Hudson,
Chrysler Council had neatl~
~o uthside; Jame Wh1te,
unanimously recommended
Henderson ; Jeffery White ,
rank-and-file approval of ·a
Pomt Pleasant, Mrs. Charles
new contract by 118,000 U.S.
N1bert, Point Pleasant;
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and Canadian workers. '
Admitted - Bertha Rife, Walter Donohue , Point
M,iddleport, Brenda Jones, Pleasant; Marion Flowers,
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday Early B1rds
Racine; Evelyn Landers, Mt Also; Leon Parker, Point
October U, 1976
Pomeroy; Cloyd Brookover, Pleasant, and Theodore
Ph.
Stevens,
Point
Pleasant.
Ben Tom
38
Middleport, Mark Moore,
•
Royal Cro wn
34
Albany.
Krng Bu ild ers
30
Dtscharged - • Timothy
29
ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. Evelyn 's Gr ocer y
Lighthou se Rest
25
Brewer, Ella Rostofer, Nettle
(UP!) - For five days, Sh1rley
Kay 's
12
BOARD
TO
MEET
Cross, Pauline Labonte.
Jinuny Carter almost lost
lnd H1gh Ser1 eS - F lOSSie
RACINE - The Southern hlmseU in the seclusion of a Max son 5-48 Belfy W h rtlbtc h
Dan Adams, executive vtce
49 7
l&lt;&gt;ca!School District hoahl of Georgia island plantation. 506.lndJanH Jenkins
president
of Ada!!18-MaCJ!n
rg h Game Jan
education will meet in Now he's headirlg home to Jenkm s 206, Betty Wh1 tlatc h Development Corporatl~~.
Athens, and manager of Your
unconstitutional execution, regular session at 7; 30 tackle the problems of l ~l . Floss re M e)( son 1a9
o'clock
this
evenmg
at
the
Father's
Mustache, Athf11s,
transitioo
and
deal
with
a
October 20, 1976
Ms Collard said.
high
school.
Pts.
announced
today a new hair
bitter
integration
dispute
in
Gilmore was convicted last
Ben Tom
42
styling
salon
will locate .!"
month of killing Bennie Bushhis hometown church.
Royal Cr own
38
37
GaUipolis next month.
carter was scheduled to fiy Evelyn 's Grocery
nell, 25, a motel clerk, dur111g
Krng Bu il de rs
1
36
Adams satd a Your
to Plains, Ga., this morning, Lighthouse
a robbery attempt.
Rest
27
LODGE TO MEET
refreshed from hla five-day Shrrley Kay s
12 Father's Mustache will beg\n
The regular monthly vacation and ready to choose
lnd Htgh Seri es - L ouise
operations in the Lsfay~
meeting of Shade River the personslltles of a new Hamson 495 , Ja n Jenkins Mall, 44 Court St.
469 . Betty Whitlatch .t6a
Masonic Lodge 453, will be
lnd H rgh Ga.me - Donna
The hair styling salon for
receive high· McFar
held at 7.30 p.m. this evening administration,
l i!lnd 176, Marl ene
the
entire family will op$1
level CIA briefings, and deal
176, Flo ssie M a xson
at the hall. All Master wtth the question of whether Wrlson
17 4
here "sometime in mi~­
Masons are invited.
December," Adams said.
to allow a black minister
October 27 , 1976
from Albany , Ga., to worship
~
Pts .
l Crown
-i6
In the Plains Baptist Church. Roya
Ben Tom
o44
While the
national K rng Bu dders
42
41
OHIOAN WINS
are
more Evelyn ' s Grocery
problems
se R est
31
stmtlar to skin cancer - 11
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI ) important, Carter ' s Lighthou
Shirley Kay 's
12
grows slowly. The problem is - Mark A SUnhorn, 18, of opposition to the integration
lnd H1gh S.er. es - Mary
that a fairly high percentage Orwell, Ohio, won the po!ictes of his church are voss 500 , J an Jenkin s 466,
Be11y Whitlatch 460
of women With these fairly national public speakmg likely to
be
more
lnd High GAme - Mary
benign cell changes later contest Wednesday night at embarrassing and more Voss 195, Jean Norton 177,
Betty Wh•tl&amp;tch 169
develop charactemtic in· the Future Farmers of disappointing for him.
THANKFUL
November 3, 1976
What
has
the post year meaht
vaslve cancer of the cervix
He
plans
to
attend
a
church
Pts.
Am~r1ca convention.
to
you?
r
Royal
Crown
54
There is no clear cut
business meeting Sunday, Evelyn 's Groce r y
47
Have
you
thought
of
t~e
agreement among
when the subject will be Ben Tom
46
things that are good? ,
K rng Bu ll ders
42
gynecologists on the proper
Have
you been thankful fpr
discussed and a decision L•ghthouse
R est
39
blessings that came
treaiment. And more im·
made on whether to fire Shi rley Kay 's'
12
And given to others as ypu
portantly, no one answer will
111E DALY SENTlNEL
lnd H1gh Ser ie s
Betty
Pastor Bruce Edwards who is
could?
DEVOTED TO THE
Whitlatc h 494 , Mar y Voss
fit ail cases. With sufficient
apposed to continuing racial 453. Jan J enk.ms 4.4 2
l
INTEREST OF
biopsies or removal of a
MEIGS-MASON AREA.
segregation.
lnd H•gh G.!lme Be tt y ., Have you said, "thank yo(l"
CHESTER L. TI.NNEHIU
Whitlatch 182. Myrtle Nor
to those who he Iped
,
conical section the doctor can
Awaiting carter at home man
Exe.&gt; Ed
181 , M u y Vos s 17.4
As you traveled along the
be more certain there are no
ROBERT HOEFLICH
was one of the many new
way'
•
City Editor
hidden areas of invasive
trappings
of hla presidency Have you seen the bell&lt;!fy
, Published d&lt;uly elt&lt;.,!pt &amp;turtlay
cancer.
that God has given
'
a
sophisticated
by The Ohio Valley Publish11111 CamTo help to brighten e&amp;eh day?
Il li)' , 111 Coort St, Pwneruy Ohio
The age of the patient and
communlcatlolls
system
set
45769 Business OHlce Phone 992desire to have additional
'
up by the Signal Corps fOr Bullets 111, New Orleans 103: Old you hear
2156 Elhturll!l Pi1Uue992-2157
the birds
children is also a con·
Second class pos\.al!e paid at
carter to receive dally Intellis1n91ng
gaily
today?
'
Elvin
Hayes
scored
30
Pomeroy, Oluo
slderatlon. If the changes are
gence reports.
re happy each dey :or
points and grabbed 16 They
Nt~tlolllll 11dverhslng repr~ en ­
the year .
minimal and easily removed
tative Wa r~ · Griffith Company, InBefore his departure rebounds and PhU Chenier
Old
you watc~ a SI.Wt!ef :In
c
BoUmelh
1:
1
11d
Gallll~hcr
Div
a young woman may be
carter said he had managed added 26 points to push
beauty so grand
•
757 , Thu-d Ave , New York N y '
justified in not undergoing a
to aceompllah his main goal Wsshington by New Orleans. Or wipe away a child's tOI(r?
10017
Sul»ic:riptlon t'lllcs Deli11ered by
hysterectomy until later but
of reading thousands of pages Dave Bing, benched as a
•
t ill ner where 11\/atiable 75 c:entli per
she must be carefully
of material devoted to fiX'eign starter, ignited a third period Have you made someone f+el
wel!k By Motor Houle where ct~mer
better today
,
supervised An older woman,
ijt/1'\'lce not avaUallle, One month,
and defense policy and his explosloo with 13 polnta and Bysharlngawordora
smile?
$J
2S
By
mall
111 Ohio and W Vt~
particularly If there 1s
transition to the presidency, seven assists. Leonard' If so, then you can be thankful
One Year, S22 00 , Stx months:
evidence of other disease 1n
utcludlng recommendations Robinson had 23 points and 13 And your life will be mor,.
Ill 50, Thrct• murrths $7 00
..: i~t whcr e 126 00 yccu • sJ: lfXIIlth~
worthwhile.
•
the uterus as well, is probably
on
a White HOWle staff. which rebounds fiX' the lluUeta,
113 50 I hrcc IIIUII \hs, $7 50
Written as food for thought
better off to have a complete
he
expecta
to
begin
naming
SLJIJ.';&lt;,'!Ipllun prllc md mM 5 Sumla~
lowhile fhe Jazz was led by 23 - for Thanksglvln!l-1976 'J umf'.&amp;•nluwl
h,ysterectomy.
within a week.
EIIzobeth R JordOl!. -~
points from Pete Maravich.

- food that the body Ignores, meals that mate no fat. • ;.::
Pr.George Bray of Harbor General HospiW is working :;:;
on just such a project and says other scientlsta are too.
~:;
''There are some artificial substances the body cannot :::;
break down through digesilon," he said in an interview ::·;
this week, ''There are other substances the body can't ;:;;
digest, can't absorb and can't store as fat.
!:;;
"We can eat food which looks and tastes !Ike nonnal ;:;:
food but contains these substances so the body can't digest i!:!
them . They pass right through "
:.:;
Bray, an endocrinologist, wd such "nonfood" could :;;
contain some vitamins and minerala and '1he body Would ::::
absorb them and get proper nutrition.
::::
"A doughnut, for example, could be made by ;:;!
substituting one ingredient that wouldn't be absorbed by ;:::

By Grec Bafley
Once again the Meigs
Marauders will go Into a
Frldsy night contest with the
chance to be "spollero" for an
SEOAL leader.
'lbll tlme the Marauders go
to Ironton to battle with coleader Irontoo which is Il-l on
lhe sea110n. The Tlgero' only!oljll was against league foe
Gflllpolis, and Coach Bob
Lutz's boys are tied lor the
crown wllh L&lt;&gt;gan. togan
gfl1!S against WeliBion, so a
!Call by either tbe Tigers or
th,e Chiefs would give the
other the SEOAL crown for
!976.
The Marauders will be
"up" for their Friday battle,
and a win over the Tigers
could ceally make their
season as Meigs • record now

•..

H

..

Over 100

•

mp etammes claimed
dangerous ineffective

By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON IUPI )- A
group of doctors, c!aimlng
such p1lis are not effective,
recommends physicians be
barred from prescr1bm~
amphetaJI1lne-related drugs
to persons who want to lose
we1ght
One of the doctors told a
Sena te subcommittee
Tuesday he felt the
pharmaceutical industry has
too much mfluence over
phys1cians and comprises the
matn part of thetr post·
graduate education.
The hear111gs before the
Senate small business
subcommittee resume today.
Dr Thaddeus E Prout,
associate professor of
med1c111e at Johns Hopkms
University, satd the current
influence of pharmaceutical
companies on phystc1ans 1s
11
8 disgrace ."
" If we do not rescue
postgraduate and continwng

Condemned killer wins
prayer for firing squad
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI )
- Condemned killer Gary
Gibnore, shackled in chainS,
persuaded the Utah Supreme
Court to let him d1e ''with
dignity , like a man" before a
prtson firing squad on
Monday.
The five justices liStened
intently Wednesday as
Gilmore told them he wanted
to accept the death penalty as
punishment for killing a
motel clerk last summer
The court then reversed
itself and canceled a stay of
execution it granted two days
earlier. The justices also
dismissed an appeal that had
been filed on Gilm ore 's
behalf.
"I believe I was given a fair
trial," said the 35-year-old
Oregon parolee, who has
!IJlOnt 18 of tbe past 21 years in
juverule detention faciliUes,
jails, and prisons.
"The sentence is proper

•

and I'm willing to accept it 1960.
w1th digmty,like a man," he
Gilmore also would become
said . "I hope 1t will be earned the first man to die under a
out without any delay "
death penalty law revised to
Utah State Prison \'{arden comply With recent U.S. Su·
Sam Smith sa1d, after the preme Court rulings an
court action , he was capital punishment An
proceeding with selection of a estimated 300 ' persons now
five-man fir111g squad and Hve on Death Rows across the
would ''work out the scenario country, facing posstble
for the execution from execution.
beg!nnmg to end to make 1t
Kathryn Collard, chief of
work out as expeditiously as litigation for the Utah
posstble.n
chapter of the American Civil
U the sentence IS carried Liberties Union, said her
out at 8 a m Monday as organization would try to
ordered , 1t will end the prevent Gilmore's executton.
longest pennd w1tllout an
"We will ask the U.S
execution In American SUpreme Court to grant a
history - mne years
stay on grotmds the Utah law
The death penalty was last is unconstitutional because it
iriiposed In the United States does not provide for
on June 2, 1967, when Luis mandatory review of capital
Jose Monge d1ed tn the cases,'' she said.
Colorado gas chamber for the
The ACL Umay also bring a
bludgeoning death of his wife taxpayers' suit In Utah
and three children. Utah 's courts, challenging the use of
last execution occurred 111 tax money to pay for an

DR. LAMB

Ohioan wins

.•
'

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
been diagnosed as having
"chronic Ischemic heart
disease with hypertension " I
would appreciate your
definition of the word
"Ischemia" and I would !Ike
to !1ave any suggestions in
regard to the treaimenl and
diet for this disease
I am 75 years old, a retired
lady with a weight of 150
pounds I am sure this is too
much weight for a person ••ho
is 5 feet I.
Presently I am taking
hydrodiurll and Aldomet. Are
these
two
medicines
adequate for. this heart

disease'
DEAR
READER
Ischemia is a word for
inadequate blood flow . The
term IS no\\ used ,~requ ently
to indicate there IS an obstruction in the coronary
arteries to your heart muscle.
The obstruction Is from the
buildup of fatty-rholesterol
.i!poslta in th6o arteries.
This condition leads to

Atherosclerosis. If you will
follow these diet principles
and also cut your calories
down until you can lose your
excess weight you can do a lot
for yourself. others who want
this tnformation can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
1!. Just send your letter to me
in care of this newspaper, P.
0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019
DE:.\R DR. LAMB - U a
woman bas non-invasive
carctnoina in situ of the
cervix would this necessitate
the remova,l of the uterus the reports showing the
uterus is clear?
DEAR READER - That's
a sticky question Carcinoma
In situ ts a relatively benign,
superficial cancer of the
surface of the cervix,
sometimes overlapping onto
the adjacent walls of the
vagina and sometimes ex·
tending into the opening of
the cervix.
It is usually clearly
separated ff91 the normal
cells. In some ways it is

'RIO GRANDE - Clarence
11
Bevou Francis, the greatest
~rer coUeg1ate basketball
has ever known, will return to
Ri,o Grande College Saturday
to coach in an alumni game.
Francis, who led Rio
Grande's 1952-53 team to
qqtional prominence , still
holds national scoring
records that may never be
equalled or broken. During
his career at Rio Grande,
Francis on two occasions
scored more than 100 points
lti,a single game, and 10 two
years of play scored 55 or
more points In 20 different

...

games.
The 1952-63 average of 50.1
points by Francis remains a
National Association of In·
teri!'o!legiate Athletics
(NAJA ) record for one
season. Bevo also holds the
National Collegiate Athleltc
Association (f'lCAA) records
of the highest average tn a
single season (46.5) and the
highest average for two
seasons (47.1 ). Among other
NAIA records Bevo owns are
for the most points in a
season w1th 1,95-4, lhe most
• f1eld goals (708 ), and the most
free throws (538).

"'
'

Computerized

grid ratings
~ COLUMBUS

( U PI J rn lhts week •s Oh•o
H ig h
Sc hool
A lhl et •c
'A'u oc letl on com put er t1e d
fROibatl r.!l l mgs , 1n c lu d m g
po int totals
~a d en

m

~

CLASS AA

j

..·

Reg ron 1
,.~ 1 Lak ewood St
Edward ,
1.41 915 , 2 Parma Hetghts
'Va ll ey Forge , 139 35
1,

Region 2
1 Gah enn a Lm co ln , 119 50

i ,'

Columbus

Northland ,

114 00

Region J
.. ' 1 N orth Canton Hoover .
Ak ro n N orth .
.127 50 , 2
127 31.
J
M.i SSti! On
'Wa sh ingt on .
127 00
4
. l'(o ung st own
Cardtna l
.. Moon e y , 12 6 28
5 Stow
'Wl!lls h Je su rt , 11 1 93
6
~ kron
Buch tel, 107 31, 7
Jv' a ns f1e ld Sen 10 r 104 SO 8
Zan esv rlle ,
103 00 .
9
lMassd l on Jackson , 101 50 , 10
Newark, 99 00
Region 4
1
Clncmnati
M oe ll er
171 62 2 Cen t er vi l le, 149 00

Carter

New shop

CLASS AA
Rcgton

s

1 El y r ta catholrc. 102 79 2
Akron St V incent St Marv

to open m

97 37
Reg1on 11

1 Port Clfnton , 105 53

December

2

Colum bus Watterson , 103 50
Region 7
, I New L ex rng t on , 89 50, 2
M rner va , 88 00, 3 Ironton ,
" 77 50 , 4 South Po int, 7-4 23 . 5
.G allipo lis , 7 3 00 . 6 Tor ont o ,
'69 37 , 7 Uniontown Lake,
·.65 00 . 8 Cad Lt. 63 71, 9 Philo,
· 62 50 ,
10 .
Uhri chsvill e
'' Ci aym onL 62 00
... ..
Region
,.., I
Brookv il le . 99 50 . 2
Readi ng 9 1 50

a

CLASS A
Region 9
1 Ash to!lbula St
Jo h n ,
6ot 50 2 Dl!llton , 50 50

Reg1on 10
Fos tor ll! St Wend elrn ,
66 65 2 Marl on CIJihOlr c ,
53 00
Reg•on 11
1
N ewark , 67 00
2
Woodsf1 eld 59 23 . 3 A lbany
A lex and er
52 94 , 4
Cen
terbu r g , 47,87
5 L tckmg
H e rghl s 47 50
6 Mingo
Ju nc t ro n. ~ 3 85, 7 t t1e l In
d ian
V all ey South and
Su ga r cr ee k Garaway , 43 oo ,
9 O a k Hill
39 500 . 10
N ew comerst own . 38 00
Reg1on 12
1 W es t Jefferson . 79 00 2
ver Saill es, 53 50
1

76ers 103, Bulla 88:
George McG!nnla scored 'l1
points and Doug Collins
added 22 to lift PllUade!phia
,over Chicago for the Bulla'
sixth straight loss. Collins,
coming back from an injured
right foot, scored 17 of his
pomts in the first half and
dished out four assists in a
final period that saw the
winners build up as much as a
2fl.point lead. Bob l&lt;&gt;ve led
the Bulla with 22.

I

.

Francis, his wife and
family reside in SalinesvUle,
Ohio. He and Roy Moses, one
of Bevo's teammates in the
1952-53 season, will coach
teams of Rio Grande alumni.
Moses received the Atwood
Achievement Award from

New Lexington .. . . .,. , . . ,.,., .,..,...,. ..
climbs to top
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UP! ) - Two
of the three leaders in last
week's
United
Press
International Oh1o H1gh
School Board of Coaches
football ratings felt the sting
of defeat and the long fall
from the top which usually
goes with it.
Only Cincllll11lU Moeller,
which has been the lopsided
No. I choice In ClaiiS AAA
since the ratings began,
managed to retain Its lofty
spot and the Crusaders were
nearly unanimous.
N'ew Lexington in Class AA
and Arlington In Class A,
taking advantage of losses by
last week's No. I teams, St.
Marys Memorial snd Black
River, joined Moeller this
week, but the two newcomers
will have to hold their breath
unlll the final champion is
decided.
New Lexington, ~. has a
slim 165-159 margin over
runnerup Huron in the
seventh of eight weeks of
balloting, while the Class A
ratings were also turned into
a down-to-the wire affair with
Arlington holding a 144-135
lead
over
runnerup
Woodsfield(~) and Newark
Catholic (il-l) third with 127.
Bluffton, which suffered Its
first loss of the season, fell
from second to fourth, one
ahead of Black River.
West Jefferson, virtually
assured one of the four Class

COLUMBU S I UPI I -

TONIGHT
•

•
at 5'9" and 160 pounds.
changing a few things on
The tackles are senior Gary defe nse . Co-captain Stan
Lowe at 6'1" and 200 lbs. and Starcher w11l be back at his
sophomore Robert Clay at m1ddle guard post11on after
6'2", 180 lbs. Seniors John missinglast week's game due
Whltehad and Paul Unger are to an injury. The other co·
at ends, Whitehead 5'10" and captain, Allen Stewart,
150 and Unger 6'2", 160.
seems to be recovermg quite
The Tigers, however, may well from his injury and he'll
be 8 little weak on defense. once again be seeing a chon at
They list three regu lar end on both untts
defensemen as questionable
Defensively, Dmk Kennedy
for Friday's game - mid· is sttll hurting and he'll be a
dleguard Howle Dlck ess, • questtonable starter If he
cornerba ck Eddie Lawless, can't make 1t, It'll once again
and defensive tackle Jim be Bruce Carma n, a
Coalgrove. All three are sophomore. If Randolph is
seniors and haven't been the quarterback, then Ron
practicing this week due to Coats will be the tailback and
Injuries, but they may see T1m Thomas w1ll go at the
actloo Friday night as It's an Wingback.
all-important game.
At offensiV e ends w1ll be
Besides those off ensiv e Stewart and Dan Granda!,
chan ges, Me1 gs will be wh1le at tackles will aga in be
Ray Willford and Brent
Arnold. The guards are Dave
M1ii cr and p!ace-k1c ker
Duane Weber.
One week ago, four teams
were tied for ftrst place, and
now there are only two.
Fnday mght w11l mark the
fourth t1me tn the last fiv e
weeks Me1gs has had a shot at
one of those fo ur teams, and
th1s tune, maybe ..
Rto Grande College in 1973
.. ... ...... .... . .. •"" .. . ..
and, along w1th Bevo, Is a .......
member of Rio Grande's
SPECIAL NOTE
Athletic Hall of Fame.
The
Big Bend AWarrtors
The Red-White Alumnt
will
play
th eir final game nf
game is scheduled for I p. m
the
season
Sunday at 2 p
in Lyn~ Center on the R1o
m.
at
Waterford.
Grande Campus.
AU team members are to
meet at the Rutland field at
)1 ·30am.

~1•

'

NB A St1ndi ng s
B y United Preu tnterna t lon1 1
Eas tern Con ffi'rence
A tt ~ n ti c Oiv•s l on
W L Pet
GB
But f ~ l o
5 4 556 Ph !l &amp;dclpi'1 Je
S 4 556
Bos ton
5 4 556
N Y Kn lcks
6 5 545
N Y Nets
4 7 36J
'}
Centra l Di vis ion
W l Pet
GB
Cl ev elaf) d
9 1 818
Houston
6 3 667 2
Ne w Orl e&amp;n s
t. 4 600 21 ?
Washington
5 S 500 31 1
AIIMto!l
4
6
J()()
41 1
San Antonio
4 6 400 _. , 7

West er n Conf ere nc e
MidWeSt DI VISIOn
W L Pet

a

Den ver
Kll nsas Ci ty
De tror t
lndl o!lna
Ch rcago
Mdw o!u kee

5
S

P aclli ~

0 I 000
5 500
6

GB

~

4

455

4 ' '}

4

5

444

2
1

7
9

'J'J'J

411
61~

182

71,

DI.., ISio n
W L Pet
7
I aJS

GB

Portt and
Sea ttl e
5 6 455
Los An gel es
4 6 400
Gol den Sta le
3 5 375
Phoen ix
1 5 167
Wedne sdav ' s Res u lts
Bo ston I 11 Los Ang el elj 111
P h ll a \OJ Chlcayo 88
Houston 99 Seattle 97
Was h 116 New Or l ean s 103
Oc tr ol1 123 Clevel and 112
(Only Yi'l mes schedul ed )
Thursdi1y ' s Gam es
Denver a l Butfa lo
Portland a1 Allanra
NY Nel s at San Antomo
lnd1ana a t Phoen hc
Kan sas Crty a t Golden St
(Only ga mes schedul ed )
frida y's Gam es
NY Kn lcks at De tr o ll
N ew Or lel!ln5 at Boston
wash rng ton .!I f Ph ilad elph ra
Hous ton .!I I M ilw au kee
lnd •nna t~l Los An gell'S
Kan sas Cdy a t Sea fi le
IOnl y games sc hedu led)

31

~

A
4

5

NHL Standing s

By United Preu. International
Campbell Confere nce
PBfrrck DIVI SIOn
W l T Pts GF GA
NY l slan dr s 11 1 1 14 61 31
Ph da delphr 7 6 3 17 56 49
A ll anta

6 7 " 16

a

5 1 56

By FRED UEF
UPJ Sports Writer

After a s uccessfu~ road

show In both Atlanta and New
Orleana, there didn 't seem to
be mu~h to come hack home
to for the Detroit Pistons.
"I don't think I've ever
come into Coho Arena at any
point tn my career and felt
the fa ns were genteel, warm
to us," said Bob Lanier,
whose 31i points Wednesday
night in Detroit sparked the
Pistons to a 123-112 victory
over the Cleveland cavaliers
However , Wedn esday
nig ht 's ga me actually
brought cheers from the
crowd of 6,257 as Detrmt ran
up Its th1rd straight win with
its highest point total of the
seaso n against the bes t
defensive team tn the NBA
The cavaliers, atop the
Central Division with a 9-2
record, were led by Can1py
Russell's 22 points and Jin1
Chones' 18. But they yielded
the most points of their
season in a game In which the
Pistons led by 25 points ut
three d1fferenl Urnes and
ln d la napo ls
M rn nesoM

4 6 2 10

J 10 7

11

coaches

IN WHO 'S WHO George F . Stewart, Jr., son

of Mr. and Mrs. George F.
Stewart, Sr., 957 Broadway
St., Middleport, bas been
listed In " Wha 's Who
Among Am erican High.
School Students." A fresh·
man at Ohio University,
Stewart graduated from
Meigs Hlgb School last

f

lifted their record to ~
Moot of :the damage was
done by the whale-li ke
Lanier, who is •hooting 63 per
cent over his past five grunes
and supparUng a 31.3 point
average for that span.
Howard Porter, who hit
five shots in a row in the flrst
quarter, finished with 18 for
the Pistons
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Boston defeated Los Angeles,
117-112, Philadelphia slupped
Chicago, 103-88, Housto n
edged Seattle, 99·97,. and
Washi ngton bent New
Orleans, 11&amp;-103.
Celtlcs 117, !.alu!nl liZ:
Set'Ortd~year forwnrd Tom
Boswell, playing U1e pivot
after Dave Cowens left the
tenm earlier In Uw dny to
se ttle personal problems,
scored 10 pomts In the final
quarter to push Boston pnsl
Los Ange ies, snappll~ the
Celtics' fo ur -game los ing
strenk Jo Jo White led
Boston, now 5-t. with 28
points , while Sidney Wiclui
uddL"&lt;I 21 po1n1s Karcem Abdui-J abbar paced the
l.ukers with 33

311 64
J9 'If

w es t
W L T PI!. GF GA

Everyone 65 or older who is
entitled tu monthly socl11 l
57 4a
or
rn1lroad
56 75 sec urity
13
&lt;~5 ~ 1
retirement pn ymcnt s gets
10 39 57
hospital lns u r u nct• und er
W e dn es d ay · ~ Re !&gt; u lf s
Clnc lnn e tr •I Edrn on1011 7
med ica re without puyln g
l nd1 anap oi 1S J PMocn l11 J o
monthlv orcmlums.
(Onl y ge m cs schedul ed )

Wfn nrpeg
10 5 0
Houston
H 6 '1
San Diego , 7 5 7
Phocn l)(
7 J I
Cal gar y
6 6 1
Ed m o11 1on
5 9 0

70

18
16
15

76 •lot
51 &lt;11

Thu rs day 's Ga mes
San Dwgo at Bl rm lnghMll
New Engla nct a1 Mumeso t,,
W1nn1 p eg a 1 C ~Jlgt'l r y
(On tv games sche duled 1
F ri d ay ' s Gam es
San 01cga &lt;'I I Houston
New Engl and at Phocn rll
{On l y ge mes sc he duled )

NY Rangers 6
2 14 66 6J
Sm vtl'1e Di v ision
W L T Pi s GF GA
51 LOUIS
9 7 0 18 51 6:1
Chrc ag o
7 8 ~ 16 58 59
M tnne sot a
5 10 1 11 47 70
V ancouver
51 1 1 11 .S 7 67 ~~--------Co l ori'ldo
41 1 1 9 37 51 · WAi es Conf er ence
Norri s Dlvr i ion
W L T Pts GF GA
Montr eal
13 3 2 28 95 39
Los Angl'les a 5 s 21 62 sJ
Prll sbur gh
4 7 5 13 .49 63
Wa sh rng lon 5 8 2 12 43 62
Oe lr ol t
4 9 2 10 41 53
Adam s DIVISIOn
W L T Pts GF GA
Bosl on
12 3 o 24 66 -4 8
Bu ff alo
I! 5 1 17
44 JJ
Tor on1 o
5' 7 4 14 57 t.O
Cle vela nd
5 7 3 13 .47 48
Wednu day 's Res ults
Wo!lshlnglon 7 N Y R.en gers 5
Phil adelph ia 2 Ch rcago 7
M ontrea l 2 Atla nta 2
M rn neso la 3 P rlt sburg h 2
Bos ton 6 Delr olt 4
Buffalo 5 51 L OUIS 0
Cl eve lan d 2 Co lor ado 1
Toron to 2 l os Ang eles 2
lor good Valu e In lll e Insur ance(Only ga mes sc heduled )
State Farm Let me show yo u
Thursday's Games
NY I sl and er s at Bos ton
why
Va ncouv er at Ph i ladelphia
(Only games sc hedul ed )
Fr1day•s Garn es
Clev eland at Atl o!l nlo!l
1258 Powell Street
Chr cago at Washing ton
Middleport,
(Onl y game s sc hedul ed )

Wise
'
ChDICe

A playoff spots, jumped into
sixth, with Ridgemont,
Fostorl8 St. Wendelin, carey
and newcomer Dalton
rounding out the top ten.
Moeller, a 61~ wtnner over
Cmcmnati Purcell Friday
night, came within foqr
points of be111g a unanimous
No I choice, getting 29 first
place votes and four seconds
from the 33 voting AAA
The Crusaders, who close
out the season Friday mght
against Cincinnati St. Xavier,
take a 98-polilt lead over
second place Youngstown
cardinal Mooney into the
final week of balloting.
Princeton, another Queen
City team, edged into third
place ahead of Gahanna Lin·
coin, while North Canton
Hoover continued its climb by
mov111g 111to fifth . The rest of
the AAA top ten Includes Stow
Walsh Jesuit, unscored on 111
nine games, Centerville,
Elyrl8 and Parma Senior tied
for eighth and Akron North
and Parma Vailey Forge tied
for tenth.
Columbus Watterson (11-1)
moved 111to third in AA, but
the Eagles are well off the
pace of New Lex and Huron
with 123 points. Urbana and
Reading took over fourth and
fifth, followed by St. Marys,
Brookville, · Akron St.
V'tncent..st. Mary, Wyoming
and Elyria Catholic, a
newcomer to the top ten.

~~

Cavs beaten
by 123-112

WORK
'

SHOE

SUEDE LACE-TO-TOE
STYLING

BILL FlETCHER
0.

Ph . 992-7155

av

WHA Standings
United Press lnternahonal

Ea st

STATE FARM

W L T Ph GF GA LI FE IN SURAN CE COMPAN Y
11 3 0 22 74 .48
HomeOihce llloomr"tlon ll~ no r'

Quebe c
Cmc rnn al 1 9 4 2 20
N ew Engln d 5 6 I 11
B1 r m lnghm 5 11 1 11

""" .u ..
..A._

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

80 56 .lh • JOOd ne lr hbor, St•t• F•rm It thert
38 4J
64 78

SIMON'S
PICK-A-PAIR
Pomero

o.·-

sprlog where he was o

member of the National
Honor Society, the Span!Bh
Club and waR a library
assistant. His bobbles are ·
swimming, tennis, fishing,
and gnltar playing. He Is
the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Stewart, Route
I, West Columbia, W. Va.

•••

UPI grid ratings

'"

The Poet's
-Carner

I

on defense. Last Frida y
Ironton was busy knocking
Athens out of 'a four-way tie
for first , 1~.
Ranked 8th in the state this
week by the AP, Ironton will
be fielding a healthy of·
fens1ve urut. Their backfield
consists of three leagu e
leaders - quarterback Mike
Brown, a 6'0" senior, in the
passing departmen; fullba ck
Rick Howard, another 6'0",
175 lb. senior, in league
scoring, and junior halfback
Juan 'Thomas, leading In
rushes.
The offensive line will be
headed by junlor center Tom
Wtleman and on each side of
him will be two seniors at
guards - Jack Rowe at 6'0"
and 175 lb. and Sieve Collins

role

Bevo Francis will coach
alumni team at Rio event

,,

Trim weight to help heart
madequate amounts of
oxygen being delivered to the
heart muscle and at the same
time permits the accumulation of carbon diox1de
m the heart cells. It is the
common form of heart
disease these days.
The Hydrodiurtl is to help
you eliminate salt and with it
excess water from the body.
It helps to lower blood
pressure tn many cases. The
Aldomet is a more specific
treatment for elevated blood
pressure.
These medicines help your
heart Indirectly by con·
trolling your blood pressure.
fhe high blood pressure
Increases the deposits of
fatty-rholesterol substances
in the arteries and also works
the heart ~arder. ,
You are absolutely rtght
about your weight. If you can
get rid of ever)' last pound of
extra fat you will decrease
your blood pressure and the
work on your heart.
I a.n sending you The
Health ~er number .1-3,
Diet ,
Preventin g

wrist tnjury and played only

,,

GM far off
promotion
at Sporn plant says Woodcoc'((

facing
Local Bowling
problems

stands at 2-7. The Tigers
won 't be talting ~e Meigs
crew lightly, however, a~ 8
talk with Ironton coaches
revealed that they think
Meigs coach
Charley
Chancey· is perhaps the best
in th e league and his
Marauders are always a
serlollS threat, no matter
what their record .
But the Marauders do have
some Serious problems.
Regular qllarterbll.ck G~rge
Gun is still out with a con·
cusslon, so they'll be going
with back-up quarterback
Kenny Young, or tailback
steve1 Randolph will again
step Into the signal caller's
spot. Randolph did a fine job
as quarterback last week
although Meigs lost a thriller
to Wellston Ul-7. Yolll!ll had a

~poiler's

r-----------,
:I Pro l1
'
I
I _;:,f,nn nmgs I

THE ALL NEW
MEIGS INN

Thi s

we e k ' s Un i ted Pr es s In
ter nat lonal Ohio H 1gh Sc h ool
Board of Coaches football
ratm gs w1th ftrst pla ce v ote s
and won l o s t record s m
par enthe ses
Class AAA
Team
Ph
1 Cinc innat i Moe ller 29 (9 -

01

32 6

2 You ngstown Mooney ( 9

01
3 Pnnceton (8 1)
4 Gahanna L incoln (9 0 )

228
184
178

5 North Can to n Hoover 1 fa
01
140

6 Stow W a lsh J esutt 1 19
0)

PIZZA

114

7 Cenlervllle 2 (9 0)
109
B tre Elypa 17 1 1)
61
B freParmaSenlorl601) 61
10 t1e A.kron Nortl1 (9 0 )
47
10 tie Parma Vall ey For g e

SHACK

16 1)

.•

-We make real Italian style pina
-We use only fresh homemade
dough.
-The proof is in the taste •.•

&lt;7

Sec ond
n rn e .
12
t 1e
Massillon and To l e do St
John 's, 45 e ach . 14 Miami
Trace 32, 15 Lakewood St.
Edward 27. 16
Dayton
Meadowdal e
22.
11·
Columbu s W a lnut Rtc:lg e 1 17 ,
18
Zanesville
16 .
19
Columbu s Nor tl'1 1and 12 20
Fremon t Ross 11

Clan AA
Team
Pts
1 Nevt Lex ington 5 (9 0)
165
2 Huron 5 (9 Ol
159
3 Co lumbus Walle rs on 2 ( 8

EAT IN OR CARRY OUT
Seatlrig lor 48 Persons

1

1I

123

4 Urbana 2( 901

117

5 Reading 3 (9 Ol
113
6 St Marys Memo r lal 2 t a
1l
98
7 Brookv ille 2 (9 Ol ,
79

B Akron St VIncent (7 2)
9 Wyoming {8 1)
10 E l yria Catholi c 1 ( 7 1)

OPEN:
Mon. thru T,hursday
Fri. &amp; S.turday
Sun&amp;y

l -12

l-1
l-11
12s E. Mam St., Pomeroy, Ohio

72
5d
52
Second ten 11 Or r ville 51,
12 Ironton 50, 13 Mil an
Ed 1son 1 33 . 14 Port Clint on
30 ;, 15 Mtnerva 26 ; 16
Hamilton Badin 2 25 ! 17
Trenton Edgewood 18 . 18 t1e
N orwa lk and Toront o . 14
ea ch 20 Wheeler sbur g 9

Class A
Team
Pts
1 Ar trngton 8 ( 9 0 )
1 44 ~.;
2 Woods fre1d 3 (9 0 )
135
3 Newark Cathol rc (8 1 )
127
4 Blu ffton 1 ( 8 I )
llJ
Blac k Rrv er 2 (8 I)
109
6 West Jeff erson (8 1 )
91
7 R1dg emon 12 (8 1l
60
B Fosto r•a Sf We ndelin 3 ( 8
11
59
9 Carey ( 7 2)
55
10 Da lton (9 Ol
47
Second ten
11 Sandusk y
51 Mary 's 1 .44 , 12 Farrpor t
Harbor 1 38 , 13 Centerbur g
28 , 14 t1 e Port smouth Notre
Dam e and Pandora Gi lboa , 16
ea ch , 16 Mar ton Cat h ol ic 1
14 , 17 Ver saille s 13 , 18
Cuyahoga H eigh ts 11. 19 tie
T1ff ln Calvert anel P ik eto n, 10
ea cl'1
•

.s

Rockets 99, SuperSonics 9'!:
Houston's Mlke Newlin's
jump shot, with 45 seconds
remaln!ng, broke a tie game'
t9 give Seattle Its sixth
straight loss on ~ road.
Seattle led 'foltr 'times In the
final quarter before losing the
lead for good on Newlin's .
shot. They then played for the
last shot but Bruce Seals
missed a IS-footer as the
buzzer sounded. The Rockets'
Rudy Tomjanovich led all
scorers with 26 points, while
SeatUe's Slick Watts had 21.

The average cost o.f one
day's hospital care in 197~
was $128.26.
1,

... See the
professionals under
the Black and
Yellow Parts Plus
Auto Parts Stores

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
144 WEST SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

I

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
ROUTE 33
MASON, WEST VIRGINIA

�..
I•

'
4 • The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,

Notes from

Nov. ljl~---..;----------!"'"--------"""!'"oiolllllllllllllllllllllll~~~~~~~~~========······il

Long overlooked in lineup
'MISSION, J&lt;an . (UP!) Ulree field goals and four
While·Tony Doraett of Pitts- extra points to give him 2«
burgh has been running the career points, breaking the .
nation ragged with his bl!ll· NCAA r.ecord of 231 set by
carrying antics thll sea110n, Dave Lawson of Air Force In
. ~te Canon IJl!li has 1972-75. IJ:ing bas connected
done hb share to keep the · on a remarkable Ul of I~
Panther fOOtball te1111 among extra point attempts and 41 oi
the natiOn's unbeaten footbf,ll 68 field goals.
teams:
He Is one of lour collegiate
Last weekend Loog kicked

engals' ·den .
~INC!NNATI (UP!)
·l~s and quotes from

Steelers pose a bigger threat
the here Nov , 28. ·Pittsburgh
. UJ&gt;tinnati Bengals' den:
began bouncing back from a
The
rousing
20.12 horrible start by pounding the
comeback win over tlle tough Bengals In Pittsburgh last
TA!S Angeles Rams In Monday
month. The .bout with the. 11--1
lght's nationally U.lev!aed Raiders, to he nationally
,brile has the · Bengals televised on MondBy night,
oinking seriously about Dec. 6., from Oakland, also
"' :U&lt;ing the playoffs tor the could be a pl@yoff markero()r' cond year in a .row and breaker.
·
r ,Ufth tlme in the past seven
The Bengals' next opponent
v:.•ars.
I! n08Mlving Ho~ton, the
' ~1ncy, with a 7-2 record, Central Division cellar
enjoys a . comfortable two dweller with a 4-S card. Cincy
game lead over Piltaburgh had' no trouble in caJiping the
!Jfld Cleveland, both f&gt;-4, in the Oilers three weeks ago in
Ame ri can Conference Houston.
. i:Cntral Division.
"We're in the driver's
Sunday's I p:m. .(EST)
::;~at/' boasteq cornerback
!louston game is C'incinnati's
J{, ·n RUey.
third straight home contest "Sure," lliley was asked, which makes the Bengal
"out aren't you still checking defensive unit happy.
':·le rear view mirror?''
In the five games at
"No ," shot back Riley, Riverfro·nt Stadium, the
'-' We're looking straight defense has yielded a grand
~·head. '''
total of just 32 points - an
average of only 6.4 points a
11.1 RUey and the Bengals game.
l,&lt;~k ahead they .see the
· Although Clncy's offensive
' louston Oilers, Kansas City squad grabbed the Los
O&gt;lefs, Plttaburgh Steelers, Angeles game headlines by
Oa kland Raiders and New breaking l)Jrough . for three
York ·Jets as the final five touchdowns in the third
opponents.
quarter, it really was the
Clncy will be heavily defense• that se t up the
f:J vored to handle tlle ~ victory .
Clliefs at Kansas City on Nov.
While a sluggish offense
:•1and a big choice over the 2- played one of the worst first
7 Jets in the regular season halves of football in the nineHna)e in New York Dec. 12, . year history of the franchise,
flowever, the sur ging the defense allowed the Rams
only a tHi halftime lead.
Bengal defenders were
equally tough in the second
half, holding LA scoreless
before finally giving up a
meaningless ID with just
nine seconds remaining.

AND

AT

GENERAL TIRE

Honda encouraged in
hid for free agents

.RIO REDWOMEN- First row, left to right are Jackie Moore, Margare\ Hammond,
Pam Mercer, Marsha Grigsby; middle: Tena Peaslee, Trainer, .Piane Woodall, Suaan
Thomas, Kim Baker, Teresa Schwab, .Shari McFarland, Statistician; t,op: Sarab Coburn,
Manager, Denise Radcliffe, Ellen Owens, Pam Oo9ley, Jan Wilson, Cheryl Smith, Coach
Carmen Pennick.

Rio volleyball team
: ·in Ohio tournament
'

King
· James ·
Version

FROM
BIG .
JIM'S
.RADIO
SHACK

Askea how good the
Bengals are, Rams defensive
·end ·Fred Dryer replied,
"They're about as goo d as we
are. Do I admire th&lt;im? No,
Do I reSpect them ? Yes. Hey,
we should've blown them out
of this park. They only had 54
yards the first half.
"They didn't take it, we
gave it to them," the 6-6, 240Pounder added.
"We
should've beat them. We just
didn't do anything Ill get the
ball in the end zone."

HOLY ·
BIBlE

$21 95

BOYS' JUMPSUITS

Mount

- Cast
Aluminum
Chassis
-F ull -lime
Edge
.Cleaning
~ All - Steel Agitator
'-4 Position Rug ·
Adjustment

• Triple-Action
Cleaning
• Edge Cleaning
Suction
e 'lnsta nt Rug
Adj4stment

Fri. Nile
SPECIAL

$48

OVERALLS
In Si ies 3T, 4T. 4 &amp; 6

~~~l

COBRA CB's
THE BRAND THE TRUCKERS USE

2Q%0FF

Sizes 4-14

REG. 1139.95

NOW ONLY

.

BAKER
FURNITURE

INGELS FURNITURE

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Middleport, 0 .

Middleport, 0 .

..

..

FRIDAY NIGHT

All

mNIGHT'S

I

I

•1

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

SWEATERS

FEATURE
PEPSI
COLA

I

'

'

6

8-pk.
16 oz.
Bottles

99~

BOSTON (UP!) - Dave
Cowens, whose aggressive
style of play a'nd shocking red
hair serve to mask a sensitive
personality, has left . t))e
~
, Boston Celtics indefinitely
under an air of, mystery.
The Boston
center,
apparently troubled since the
start of the season, was
granted ~ leave of absence
Wednesday by General
Manager Red Auerbach .
Auerbach said when Cowens
asked for the leave he cited
personal reasons and would
·not be more specific .
"He told me that he 's got
some problems and that he
can't do his job properly,"
Installs anyWhere·: ca r, tru ck,
said i\tierbach Wednesday
or home. Keep s you 1n toucb
night. "But he said.he would
with safety .
be in touch wttli us.
"You know he does what's
• Mini - ·size- Ma~&lt;Halk p owet
• Dynamike with RF Gain Cnnlroil best - not only what's best
• Pl1-1g-inJack .
for himself but wbat's best
• EJ&lt;ternal Speaker
for everybody else. Will be
• Al1 23 chann els including
ever play again? That's a
Emergenq Channe l 9
• com plete with bracket
tough thing to discuss,
• Weigh s orrly 2,2 lbs
because who knows what
goes on in a man's. mind?"
y
The seven-year pro from
•
'
Florida · State
was
•
·••
unavailable for commept.
M
Cowens, 28, apparently plans
to stay at his Newport, Ky .,
" m fffi'm'm I The 2·Wav!! farm for a while.
·
the rwel&lt;er.4
·
Celties
owner
lrv
Levin
.• '"'-l"r'~~
,.
1111
use!
...
said Coweqs was el1811lined
this week by team physician
Dr. Thomas Silva and got a
dean bill of health.. Levin
•
discounted the posslblltly
that Cowens wanted tlme off
~
to
heal an ailing back tliat
~
bothered
;: .a..___
.;..____. preseason. him in the
Middleport,
~

5 TO 8 P.M. FRIDAY NIGHT

CHECK
THIS

'9995

BUY' NOW AND SAVE BIG!

115 N SECOND AilE / MIOOI.EPQitT. ()H • V60
1
99 2 J3.au

~

•

•I

~ (9bra..
:
INGELS
FURNITURE

'
•
•'

I
\

~

From 5:00 till closing

•
•h
•

~

Plus Tax
&amp; Deposit

20%
BAHR CLOTHIERS

.'

.

'
•

'

•.
•

'

Newest
One Day MethJJd
100% Latex .. plus
Polyurethane ··
Satin Finish
At last! The newest1 fas test and cleanest method of
antiquing an~ wood graining . TRlJ.TfQUE· is 100%'
latex plu~ Polyurethane Protective Satin Finish . No

scraping, no sanding ' .. .. no paint removing. Easy
to

u~ e

.
•

••'

9235 Jrd Ave~

Middleport, 0.

s1 oo

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
o.

30~

0
O

Handbl.own glass from Blincoe &amp;
Pilgrim
'.
.....J P1cks &amp; Heshi Jewelry
· Hurricane Lamps
' ,
Oil Paintings on Canvas
Spanish S: Mexican lmp~rts ·
O~corative Dolls
Lawn Decorations
Titfinay Lamps •
Many unusual
novelty
Somelhing for everyone.

!)
N
~

•••

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•
"••
•

..
"•

••••••I

· We've got it!

.

:;:;:;:::;: ;: ;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:·: ::~:: ::: :·: ::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:

FRIDAY NIGHT

3 PC. WGGAGE SET

'$25

00

}06{

The Authentic

rtttfOlt . .

SOUP SATURDAY
A s~ujl dinner wW be held

Satur!lay, Nov. 13 from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Middleport Fire Station
sponsored by the Mid·
dle)l9rt Ffre Department
The menu Includes soup,
hamburgers, hoi dogs,
french fries. Persons may
eat at ·the ststlon or take
food booie, but conta.lners
for soup must he provided.
Tile ladles auxlllaey alio
will be spo01orlng a bake
sale.
·

"Dave told us that this get alone, do some thinking.
problem baa _been on his mind Maybe he's thinking about his
a while," said Levin. "It was whole We as a human being ."
Cowens, a plaln·ll.vlng
not something _he woke up
with this morning. He's been person, always has been a
doing a lot of thinking lately. loner and a hard person to
"My reading of what has categorize.
been said is tllat he wanta. to

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::'::::::;::

Fairview '
News Notes

'Babich more determined
than ever after '75 mark

·

By Mn. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Edith Manuel spent
Thuriday with her sisters,
Mrs.' Elva Hudson, Mrs. Jean
Roush at Minersville.
·Mr. and Mrs. joe Manuel
spent,Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert BaUey at Long
Bottom.
Mandy Russell of Wolf Pen
spent Saturday night with
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and son Mike spent SundBy
with tl)e Roushes and Mandy
accompanied th()ltl home.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Preston of Mason, W. Va.,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Warner Sunday. Clarence
Ray and son Rex of Racine ·
vislto!d the Warners Saturday
. evening.
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) The
Indiana
Pacers
Wednesday signed secondyear pro Rudy Hackett.
The addition came as
Coach
Bbb' · Leonard
continued to search for a solid
backup performer on the
front line. To make room for
the 6-loot-1 center forward
frmn Syracuse, the Pacers
plsced Darrell Elston on the
injured reserve Ust. Elston
has a pulled hamstring
muscle.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - teammates on the defense
Cleveland Browns middle throttle the Houston Oilers'
linebacker Bob Bilblch offenae in a .21-7 victory.
doesn't wanttogo back to last
Babich says defensive
year's ~II record, but he coo r d I n a tor
DI c k
credits the team's poorest Modzelewski and linebacker
yeai' ever with propelling the COI!ch Walt Corey played a
Browns to a 5-4 mark so far big )l8I't In his comeback this
tllis year.
year.
TheYowgstownnatlvehad
"Mo is such a great
to suffer through some individual," he said. "He
''rough'.' remarks from fans treats you Uke a man and
iast ·year, but said the Walt Corey's been super. It's
treatment "just makes you a pride factor and you don 't
more determined.
want to let them down,"
"It sits in: your stomach the Blibich said.
whole year and It worka on
According to Babich,
you," Babich said. "Then you Cleveland's four victories in
read
the
pre-season · five games proves the team
predictions and .see everyone has come to beUeve in Itself .
saying we'll he laat again.
"There's a n~w enthusiasm.
You start thinking, 'We'll on the team, especially now
show 'em."'
that we have a chance at the
Rookie Dick An\brose took playolls, and It's spreading
Babich's starting job laat around town.
sea110n when Babich came up
"Thb Is such great football
with a bad knee. This year he country and the Browns have
reported for training camp In tllat tradition. You feel Uke
good healtll and won the job you are cheating tl!e fans and
back.
tlle organization when you
"Babich came back this. don't play well."
year determined to get hla job
back," said coach Forrest
Gregg. "I'd say he was
having an excellent season."
'.'! had confidence In my
PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y. "'
ability and knew I could play (UP!)
- With Craig Morton
the football I was capable ot if listed as a questionable
I was healthy,'' Babich said . stsrter SundBy against the
"!wasn't panicking."
Gregg aald Babich played Washington Redskins, the
York Glanta signed
his best game of the year New
veteran Dennis Shaw
Sunday deapite a caat on ~ls
· broken left hand. He picked Wepnesday as a backup
of! one pass and helped his quarterback.

You've seen "T11e Fon z" tn "11llppy DC~y s" on nal&gt;onwlde ,
TV 1 You 've arlmtred I hil l greal loo k&gt;ng 1ackel "The Fonz''
wear s We 11ave ill or you . rnade lor us by lamous .
COOPER SPorl swear In a srnoolh, sleek-lilling le alher·l&gt;ke
polyurelh ane , wtlh smarl epaule ls. Lrp Irani, and an
.
Autl1enli c "Fonz" Signat ur·e qu ill ed lining' Now you can
wear lhe coolesl look in 1own! Gel yburs today! Sizes 38 thru 46 .
Also an excellent selection of in en "s leather jackets. 560 to 5165.
Do your , Christmas shopping lor the man or woman in your life at
Bahr's .
Gill Certificates

Available' ~

Use Our Lav· Away Plan

MIDDLEPORt O.

Wear I hi s to Ihe old stompin ' grounqs if you really wahna
stomp! Very un ·shy number .. . they' ll see ya com in' In
lhi s all rig ht! So step up to BOLD T-strap in carme l·
colored latigo leather uppers : And ho w's that for •an
untradi tiona
l ,weqge
.
. look?

conn1e·

If Bought Separately $32.85

•

••

· PROCTOR Sli.Ex
COFFEE
MAKER on!y.:...~~-~:.~~?:!!..}19'5
WIND SONG SPRAY
,,
MIST COLOGNL.......... on!y t2.75

~
•

•••
•

n

••

•••

ON

10% OFF On All Rim
VRLAGE PHARMACY

271 N. Second
Middleport

992-5759

COLORS:
· ·BLUE
eGREE.N .
ePEANUT

.SENIOR
. CITIZENS!

•

'5

•

SHOES
heritage house
MIOPLEPORT, 0.

••
,,

•
~
M

:
:.• .,.

A GREAT
CHRISTMAS GIFT!

FOR CHRISTMAS

••

• • SENIOR CITIZENS

••••
•••,,

DUnDN'S DRUG STORE

•
••

.

. LAY-AWAY
.

·NOW

••

items .

•

I

••
,;

~

F.RIDA Y NIGHT

Loc ated on Rt. 7 below Middleport.
Open 9-6 Tues. lhru Sat., Sunday 1-6.

HOURS:
7:00 to S: oo Monday thru Friday
7:00to4:00 Saturday

•••

•
•••
w
••
••

. McCLURE'S
DAIRY ISLE

' Hand crafted coo coo clocks from

· ~ Germ ~ nv
Han~ crafted leather items

'"

992 -2709

5 LBS.

The Odds &amp;·Ends Shop

.

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BAN~NAS

FRENCH FRIES

And

FRENCH FRIES
. 89~

GOLDEN RIPE

SHOPPE•

Cowens granted leave by Celts

Reg. $24.95 .

~ii~~~~~~~~

l·

JACKETS &amp;
PANTS TO MATCH

Saint

With ernblems of some
klc.kers Ued for second place
in the NCAA Division I field
· of vour favorite
goals per game statisties,
characters ...
with 14 In nine games. Texas
A&amp;M's Tony Franklin is the
PEANUTS
national leader with 13 in
eight g81lles. Also tied with
LOONUUNES
Long for second are Craig
Jones of VMI, Jbn Breech of
HOUY ~OBBIE
California.and Dave taylor of
Brigham Young.
Also: Coats, snowsuits,
There are two new leaders
Pram suits &amp; qweaters.
in the klck'l'unback statistics
'this week: Ira -Matthews of
AND WEATHER·
Wisconsin bas taken over· the
klckoffret\lrn lead wilil a 33.4
PROOF
yard . average and Will
MITIENS
Mosley
of Northwest
Louisiana Is leadin g the
naUon's puntretlirners with a
15.5 yard average .,
Russell Erxleben of Texas
·
maintained his sea.On-long
lead in punting at 47.8 and
t7) N ~£C()NO •v£ IM&gt;l)().EPOo\ r:&gt;H •lMO
Anthony
Fr~ncls
of Houston l i . • • • • •"ii''iii''lilolii''il'Oii9ti1illlii"
I!
the leader
In· Interception~
with eight in eight games.

allowed under the system."
Garlsndwtia21&gt;-7Witlla2,68
earned run average . last
seaSOI). Baylor hit .247 with 15
home runs, 68 run.s batted in
and stole 52 basea.
All Cleveland's choices
with the ))058ible exception of
Tenace
I(! be willlng · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
to play are
for aald
the Indians.
On the trading front,
general manager PhU Seghi
waa lri Pabn Springs for the
general managers , annual
meeting. He ln4!cated he .
hoped lor two soUd offensive
players to offset the loss of
premier designated hitter
llico Carty in the expansion
. draft.
One report said Clevelsnd
was offering Its leading home
run hitter, outfielder George
Hendrick, to see what was
offered In return .

'

©li3 RADIOS

20%0FF
20% OFF

. 9 mos. thru size 8

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INTERIOR DECORATING KIT FOR
ANTIQU ING AND WOOD GRAINING

men .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BOYS' WEEKEND .

Coll~ge, last year's state
cha!llplon is one of the
schools entered, along with
teams from Wooster College,
Capital University, Wittenberg University and
Ced.arville College. Rio's ~
season included tightly
· sco•ed games with . both
Wittenberg and Cedarville.
Friday's games will match
the teams in six pools of four
teams each. Semi-final and
final games will be played
Joseph Saturday.

•. RIO GRANDE - Even tournament has 24 teams
: though it's only the first year vying for . the top title
: for women's volleyball at Rio beginning Friday, Nov. 12, at
; Grande College • Coirunllllity · Ohio Northern \lniverslty,
; College, the te.am iB heading Ada, Ohio.
• for stale tom:narilent action.
"We've got a good chance
~ The Ohio · small college of getting into the semi·
•
finals," Coach Carmen
Pennick said, "and the other
schools in the tournament
have had teams for several
years." Rio Grande's team is
composed entirely of fresh·

.FRIDAY NIGHT
5 to 8 P.M.

· With the purchase of any breakfast from
6:00a.m .. 11:00 a.m. at Country Cousins.
yougetcollee, hot chocolate or orange juice
free. Wit h th.is coupon.

.

. CLJ;:VELAND (UP! ) Clevetirnd In~ns· president
Alva "Ted" Bonds says he ls
encouraged so flli' in his
team's bidding tor lree agent
talent.
Bond&amp; has n\et with Jerry
, Kapsteln, who represents
pitchersAlexander
Wayne Garland,
Doyle
and Doo
G!lllett, outfielder D.on
Baylor, shortstop Bert
Campanerb and catcher •
first baseman Qell!l Tenace.
The Indians cl1ose all of them
in 'last week's free agent
draft.
Clevelsnd covets Garland
and Baylor above the others,
according to reports. The
Clevelsnd Press speculated
tbat Baylor was offered a
$1,000,000 four-year contract
and Garlsnd was offered an
SBOQ,()Oii four-yeai' pact.
"I'm told that our oilers
are in the ball park and that
we are encouraged that we
can COIJ!pete finlinclally witll
any team," Bonds said
Wedneaday.
"We are in this in a serious
way . and have every
confidence that we will come
up with the two players

Novelty Toboggans

0. .

heritage house
N. 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPOR-T, 0.

.

992-5627.

•

,
"

�..
I•

'
4 • The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,

Notes from

Nov. ljl~---..;----------!"'"--------"""!'"oiolllllllllllllllllllllll~~~~~~~~~========······il

Long overlooked in lineup
'MISSION, J&lt;an . (UP!) Ulree field goals and four
While·Tony Doraett of Pitts- extra points to give him 2«
burgh has been running the career points, breaking the .
nation ragged with his bl!ll· NCAA r.ecord of 231 set by
carrying antics thll sea110n, Dave Lawson of Air Force In
. ~te Canon IJl!li has 1972-75. IJ:ing bas connected
done hb share to keep the · on a remarkable Ul of I~
Panther fOOtball te1111 among extra point attempts and 41 oi
the natiOn's unbeaten footbf,ll 68 field goals.
teams:
He Is one of lour collegiate
Last weekend Loog kicked

engals' ·den .
~INC!NNATI (UP!)
·l~s and quotes from

Steelers pose a bigger threat
the here Nov , 28. ·Pittsburgh
. UJ&gt;tinnati Bengals' den:
began bouncing back from a
The
rousing
20.12 horrible start by pounding the
comeback win over tlle tough Bengals In Pittsburgh last
TA!S Angeles Rams In Monday
month. The .bout with the. 11--1
lght's nationally U.lev!aed Raiders, to he nationally
,brile has the · Bengals televised on MondBy night,
oinking seriously about Dec. 6., from Oakland, also
"' :U&lt;ing the playoffs tor the could be a pl@yoff markero()r' cond year in a .row and breaker.
·
r ,Ufth tlme in the past seven
The Bengals' next opponent
v:.•ars.
I! n08Mlving Ho~ton, the
' ~1ncy, with a 7-2 record, Central Division cellar
enjoys a . comfortable two dweller with a 4-S card. Cincy
game lead over Piltaburgh had' no trouble in caJiping the
!Jfld Cleveland, both f&gt;-4, in the Oilers three weeks ago in
Ame ri can Conference Houston.
. i:Cntral Division.
"We're in the driver's
Sunday's I p:m. .(EST)
::;~at/' boasteq cornerback
!louston game is C'incinnati's
J{, ·n RUey.
third straight home contest "Sure," lliley was asked, which makes the Bengal
"out aren't you still checking defensive unit happy.
':·le rear view mirror?''
In the five games at
"No ," shot back Riley, Riverfro·nt Stadium, the
'-' We're looking straight defense has yielded a grand
~·head. '''
total of just 32 points - an
average of only 6.4 points a
11.1 RUey and the Bengals game.
l,&lt;~k ahead they .see the
· Although Clncy's offensive
' louston Oilers, Kansas City squad grabbed the Los
O&gt;lefs, Plttaburgh Steelers, Angeles game headlines by
Oa kland Raiders and New breaking l)Jrough . for three
York ·Jets as the final five touchdowns in the third
opponents.
quarter, it really was the
Clncy will be heavily defense• that se t up the
f:J vored to handle tlle ~ victory .
Clliefs at Kansas City on Nov.
While a sluggish offense
:•1and a big choice over the 2- played one of the worst first
7 Jets in the regular season halves of football in the nineHna)e in New York Dec. 12, . year history of the franchise,
flowever, the sur ging the defense allowed the Rams
only a tHi halftime lead.
Bengal defenders were
equally tough in the second
half, holding LA scoreless
before finally giving up a
meaningless ID with just
nine seconds remaining.

AND

AT

GENERAL TIRE

Honda encouraged in
hid for free agents

.RIO REDWOMEN- First row, left to right are Jackie Moore, Margare\ Hammond,
Pam Mercer, Marsha Grigsby; middle: Tena Peaslee, Trainer, .Piane Woodall, Suaan
Thomas, Kim Baker, Teresa Schwab, .Shari McFarland, Statistician; t,op: Sarab Coburn,
Manager, Denise Radcliffe, Ellen Owens, Pam Oo9ley, Jan Wilson, Cheryl Smith, Coach
Carmen Pennick.

Rio volleyball team
: ·in Ohio tournament
'

King
· James ·
Version

FROM
BIG .
JIM'S
.RADIO
SHACK

Askea how good the
Bengals are, Rams defensive
·end ·Fred Dryer replied,
"They're about as goo d as we
are. Do I admire th&lt;im? No,
Do I reSpect them ? Yes. Hey,
we should've blown them out
of this park. They only had 54
yards the first half.
"They didn't take it, we
gave it to them," the 6-6, 240Pounder added.
"We
should've beat them. We just
didn't do anything Ill get the
ball in the end zone."

HOLY ·
BIBlE

$21 95

BOYS' JUMPSUITS

Mount

- Cast
Aluminum
Chassis
-F ull -lime
Edge
.Cleaning
~ All - Steel Agitator
'-4 Position Rug ·
Adjustment

• Triple-Action
Cleaning
• Edge Cleaning
Suction
e 'lnsta nt Rug
Adj4stment

Fri. Nile
SPECIAL

$48

OVERALLS
In Si ies 3T, 4T. 4 &amp; 6

~~~l

COBRA CB's
THE BRAND THE TRUCKERS USE

2Q%0FF

Sizes 4-14

REG. 1139.95

NOW ONLY

.

BAKER
FURNITURE

INGELS FURNITURE

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Middleport, 0 .

Middleport, 0 .

..

..

FRIDAY NIGHT

All

mNIGHT'S

I

I

•1

MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

SWEATERS

FEATURE
PEPSI
COLA

I

'

'

6

8-pk.
16 oz.
Bottles

99~

BOSTON (UP!) - Dave
Cowens, whose aggressive
style of play a'nd shocking red
hair serve to mask a sensitive
personality, has left . t))e
~
, Boston Celtics indefinitely
under an air of, mystery.
The Boston
center,
apparently troubled since the
start of the season, was
granted ~ leave of absence
Wednesday by General
Manager Red Auerbach .
Auerbach said when Cowens
asked for the leave he cited
personal reasons and would
·not be more specific .
"He told me that he 's got
some problems and that he
can't do his job properly,"
Installs anyWhere·: ca r, tru ck,
said i\tierbach Wednesday
or home. Keep s you 1n toucb
night. "But he said.he would
with safety .
be in touch wttli us.
"You know he does what's
• Mini - ·size- Ma~&lt;Halk p owet
• Dynamike with RF Gain Cnnlroil best - not only what's best
• Pl1-1g-inJack .
for himself but wbat's best
• EJ&lt;ternal Speaker
for everybody else. Will be
• Al1 23 chann els including
ever play again? That's a
Emergenq Channe l 9
• com plete with bracket
tough thing to discuss,
• Weigh s orrly 2,2 lbs
because who knows what
goes on in a man's. mind?"
y
The seven-year pro from
•
'
Florida · State
was
•
·••
unavailable for commept.
M
Cowens, 28, apparently plans
to stay at his Newport, Ky .,
" m fffi'm'm I The 2·Wav!! farm for a while.
·
the rwel&lt;er.4
·
Celties
owner
lrv
Levin
.• '"'-l"r'~~
,.
1111
use!
...
said Coweqs was el1811lined
this week by team physician
Dr. Thomas Silva and got a
dean bill of health.. Levin
•
discounted the posslblltly
that Cowens wanted tlme off
~
to
heal an ailing back tliat
~
bothered
;: .a..___
.;..____. preseason. him in the
Middleport,
~

5 TO 8 P.M. FRIDAY NIGHT

CHECK
THIS

'9995

BUY' NOW AND SAVE BIG!

115 N SECOND AilE / MIOOI.EPQitT. ()H • V60
1
99 2 J3.au

~

•

•I

~ (9bra..
:
INGELS
FURNITURE

'
•
•'

I
\

~

From 5:00 till closing

•
•h
•

~

Plus Tax
&amp; Deposit

20%
BAHR CLOTHIERS

.'

.

'
•

'

•.
•

'

Newest
One Day MethJJd
100% Latex .. plus
Polyurethane ··
Satin Finish
At last! The newest1 fas test and cleanest method of
antiquing an~ wood graining . TRlJ.TfQUE· is 100%'
latex plu~ Polyurethane Protective Satin Finish . No

scraping, no sanding ' .. .. no paint removing. Easy
to

u~ e

.
•

••'

9235 Jrd Ave~

Middleport, 0.

s1 oo

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
o.

30~

0
O

Handbl.own glass from Blincoe &amp;
Pilgrim
'.
.....J P1cks &amp; Heshi Jewelry
· Hurricane Lamps
' ,
Oil Paintings on Canvas
Spanish S: Mexican lmp~rts ·
O~corative Dolls
Lawn Decorations
Titfinay Lamps •
Many unusual
novelty
Somelhing for everyone.

!)
N
~

•••

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•
"••
•

..
"•

••••••I

· We've got it!

.

:;:;:;:::;: ;: ;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:·: ::~:: ::: :·: ::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:

FRIDAY NIGHT

3 PC. WGGAGE SET

'$25

00

}06{

The Authentic

rtttfOlt . .

SOUP SATURDAY
A s~ujl dinner wW be held

Satur!lay, Nov. 13 from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Middleport Fire Station
sponsored by the Mid·
dle)l9rt Ffre Department
The menu Includes soup,
hamburgers, hoi dogs,
french fries. Persons may
eat at ·the ststlon or take
food booie, but conta.lners
for soup must he provided.
Tile ladles auxlllaey alio
will be spo01orlng a bake
sale.
·

"Dave told us that this get alone, do some thinking.
problem baa _been on his mind Maybe he's thinking about his
a while," said Levin. "It was whole We as a human being ."
Cowens, a plaln·ll.vlng
not something _he woke up
with this morning. He's been person, always has been a
doing a lot of thinking lately. loner and a hard person to
"My reading of what has categorize.
been said is tllat he wanta. to

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::'::::::;::

Fairview '
News Notes

'Babich more determined
than ever after '75 mark

·

By Mn. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Edith Manuel spent
Thuriday with her sisters,
Mrs.' Elva Hudson, Mrs. Jean
Roush at Minersville.
·Mr. and Mrs. joe Manuel
spent,Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert BaUey at Long
Bottom.
Mandy Russell of Wolf Pen
spent Saturday night with
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and son Mike spent SundBy
with tl)e Roushes and Mandy
accompanied th()ltl home.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Preston of Mason, W. Va.,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Warner Sunday. Clarence
Ray and son Rex of Racine ·
vislto!d the Warners Saturday
. evening.
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) The
Indiana
Pacers
Wednesday signed secondyear pro Rudy Hackett.
The addition came as
Coach
Bbb' · Leonard
continued to search for a solid
backup performer on the
front line. To make room for
the 6-loot-1 center forward
frmn Syracuse, the Pacers
plsced Darrell Elston on the
injured reserve Ust. Elston
has a pulled hamstring
muscle.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - teammates on the defense
Cleveland Browns middle throttle the Houston Oilers'
linebacker Bob Bilblch offenae in a .21-7 victory.
doesn't wanttogo back to last
Babich says defensive
year's ~II record, but he coo r d I n a tor
DI c k
credits the team's poorest Modzelewski and linebacker
yeai' ever with propelling the COI!ch Walt Corey played a
Browns to a 5-4 mark so far big )l8I't In his comeback this
tllis year.
year.
TheYowgstownnatlvehad
"Mo is such a great
to suffer through some individual," he said. "He
''rough'.' remarks from fans treats you Uke a man and
iast ·year, but said the Walt Corey's been super. It's
treatment "just makes you a pride factor and you don 't
more determined.
want to let them down,"
"It sits in: your stomach the Blibich said.
whole year and It worka on
According to Babich,
you," Babich said. "Then you Cleveland's four victories in
read
the
pre-season · five games proves the team
predictions and .see everyone has come to beUeve in Itself .
saying we'll he laat again.
"There's a n~w enthusiasm.
You start thinking, 'We'll on the team, especially now
show 'em."'
that we have a chance at the
Rookie Dick An\brose took playolls, and It's spreading
Babich's starting job laat around town.
sea110n when Babich came up
"Thb Is such great football
with a bad knee. This year he country and the Browns have
reported for training camp In tllat tradition. You feel Uke
good healtll and won the job you are cheating tl!e fans and
back.
tlle organization when you
"Babich came back this. don't play well."
year determined to get hla job
back," said coach Forrest
Gregg. "I'd say he was
having an excellent season."
'.'! had confidence In my
PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y. "'
ability and knew I could play (UP!)
- With Craig Morton
the football I was capable ot if listed as a questionable
I was healthy,'' Babich said . stsrter SundBy against the
"!wasn't panicking."
Gregg aald Babich played Washington Redskins, the
York Glanta signed
his best game of the year New
veteran Dennis Shaw
Sunday deapite a caat on ~ls
· broken left hand. He picked Wepnesday as a backup
of! one pass and helped his quarterback.

You've seen "T11e Fon z" tn "11llppy DC~y s" on nal&gt;onwlde ,
TV 1 You 've arlmtred I hil l greal loo k&gt;ng 1ackel "The Fonz''
wear s We 11ave ill or you . rnade lor us by lamous .
COOPER SPorl swear In a srnoolh, sleek-lilling le alher·l&gt;ke
polyurelh ane , wtlh smarl epaule ls. Lrp Irani, and an
.
Autl1enli c "Fonz" Signat ur·e qu ill ed lining' Now you can
wear lhe coolesl look in 1own! Gel yburs today! Sizes 38 thru 46 .
Also an excellent selection of in en "s leather jackets. 560 to 5165.
Do your , Christmas shopping lor the man or woman in your life at
Bahr's .
Gill Certificates

Available' ~

Use Our Lav· Away Plan

MIDDLEPORt O.

Wear I hi s to Ihe old stompin ' grounqs if you really wahna
stomp! Very un ·shy number .. . they' ll see ya com in' In
lhi s all rig ht! So step up to BOLD T-strap in carme l·
colored latigo leather uppers : And ho w's that for •an
untradi tiona
l ,weqge
.
. look?

conn1e·

If Bought Separately $32.85

•

••

· PROCTOR Sli.Ex
COFFEE
MAKER on!y.:...~~-~:.~~?:!!..}19'5
WIND SONG SPRAY
,,
MIST COLOGNL.......... on!y t2.75

~
•

•••
•

n

••

•••

ON

10% OFF On All Rim
VRLAGE PHARMACY

271 N. Second
Middleport

992-5759

COLORS:
· ·BLUE
eGREE.N .
ePEANUT

.SENIOR
. CITIZENS!

•

'5

•

SHOES
heritage house
MIOPLEPORT, 0.

••
,,

•
~
M

:
:.• .,.

A GREAT
CHRISTMAS GIFT!

FOR CHRISTMAS

••

• • SENIOR CITIZENS

••••
•••,,

DUnDN'S DRUG STORE

•
••

.

. LAY-AWAY
.

·NOW

••

items .

•

I

••
,;

~

F.RIDA Y NIGHT

Loc ated on Rt. 7 below Middleport.
Open 9-6 Tues. lhru Sat., Sunday 1-6.

HOURS:
7:00 to S: oo Monday thru Friday
7:00to4:00 Saturday

•••

•
•••
w
••
••

. McCLURE'S
DAIRY ISLE

' Hand crafted coo coo clocks from

· ~ Germ ~ nv
Han~ crafted leather items

'"

992 -2709

5 LBS.

The Odds &amp;·Ends Shop

.

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BAN~NAS

FRENCH FRIES

And

FRENCH FRIES
. 89~

GOLDEN RIPE

SHOPPE•

Cowens granted leave by Celts

Reg. $24.95 .

~ii~~~~~~~~

l·

JACKETS &amp;
PANTS TO MATCH

Saint

With ernblems of some
klc.kers Ued for second place
in the NCAA Division I field
· of vour favorite
goals per game statisties,
characters ...
with 14 In nine games. Texas
A&amp;M's Tony Franklin is the
PEANUTS
national leader with 13 in
eight g81lles. Also tied with
LOONUUNES
Long for second are Craig
Jones of VMI, Jbn Breech of
HOUY ~OBBIE
California.and Dave taylor of
Brigham Young.
Also: Coats, snowsuits,
There are two new leaders
Pram suits &amp; qweaters.
in the klck'l'unback statistics
'this week: Ira -Matthews of
AND WEATHER·
Wisconsin bas taken over· the
klckoffret\lrn lead wilil a 33.4
PROOF
yard . average and Will
MITIENS
Mosley
of Northwest
Louisiana Is leadin g the
naUon's puntretlirners with a
15.5 yard average .,
Russell Erxleben of Texas
·
maintained his sea.On-long
lead in punting at 47.8 and
t7) N ~£C()NO •v£ IM&gt;l)().EPOo\ r:&gt;H •lMO
Anthony
Fr~ncls
of Houston l i . • • • • •"ii''iii''lilolii''il'Oii9ti1illlii"
I!
the leader
In· Interception~
with eight in eight games.

allowed under the system."
Garlsndwtia21&gt;-7Witlla2,68
earned run average . last
seaSOI). Baylor hit .247 with 15
home runs, 68 run.s batted in
and stole 52 basea.
All Cleveland's choices
with the ))058ible exception of
Tenace
I(! be willlng · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
to play are
for aald
the Indians.
On the trading front,
general manager PhU Seghi
waa lri Pabn Springs for the
general managers , annual
meeting. He ln4!cated he .
hoped lor two soUd offensive
players to offset the loss of
premier designated hitter
llico Carty in the expansion
. draft.
One report said Clevelsnd
was offering Its leading home
run hitter, outfielder George
Hendrick, to see what was
offered In return .

'

©li3 RADIOS

20%0FF
20% OFF

. 9 mos. thru size 8

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INTERIOR DECORATING KIT FOR
ANTIQU ING AND WOOD GRAINING

men .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BOYS' WEEKEND .

Coll~ge, last year's state
cha!llplon is one of the
schools entered, along with
teams from Wooster College,
Capital University, Wittenberg University and
Ced.arville College. Rio's ~
season included tightly
· sco•ed games with . both
Wittenberg and Cedarville.
Friday's games will match
the teams in six pools of four
teams each. Semi-final and
final games will be played
Joseph Saturday.

•. RIO GRANDE - Even tournament has 24 teams
: though it's only the first year vying for . the top title
: for women's volleyball at Rio beginning Friday, Nov. 12, at
; Grande College • Coirunllllity · Ohio Northern \lniverslty,
; College, the te.am iB heading Ada, Ohio.
• for stale tom:narilent action.
"We've got a good chance
~ The Ohio · small college of getting into the semi·
•
finals," Coach Carmen
Pennick said, "and the other
schools in the tournament
have had teams for several
years." Rio Grande's team is
composed entirely of fresh·

.FRIDAY NIGHT
5 to 8 P.M.

· With the purchase of any breakfast from
6:00a.m .. 11:00 a.m. at Country Cousins.
yougetcollee, hot chocolate or orange juice
free. Wit h th.is coupon.

.

. CLJ;:VELAND (UP! ) Clevetirnd In~ns· president
Alva "Ted" Bonds says he ls
encouraged so flli' in his
team's bidding tor lree agent
talent.
Bond&amp; has n\et with Jerry
, Kapsteln, who represents
pitchersAlexander
Wayne Garland,
Doyle
and Doo
G!lllett, outfielder D.on
Baylor, shortstop Bert
Campanerb and catcher •
first baseman Qell!l Tenace.
The Indians cl1ose all of them
in 'last week's free agent
draft.
Clevelsnd covets Garland
and Baylor above the others,
according to reports. The
Clevelsnd Press speculated
tbat Baylor was offered a
$1,000,000 four-year contract
and Garlsnd was offered an
SBOQ,()Oii four-yeai' pact.
"I'm told that our oilers
are in the ball park and that
we are encouraged that we
can COIJ!pete finlinclally witll
any team," Bonds said
Wedneaday.
"We are in this in a serious
way . and have every
confidence that we will come
up with the two players

Novelty Toboggans

0. .

heritage house
N. 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPOR-T, 0.

.

992-5627.

•

,
"

�a-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'Thursday, Nov. 11 , 1976

Rare coalition opposing locks, dam

Meadows, Lawrence in
Junior Miss Program
She Is sponsored by the
Meigs Inn of Pomeroy.
Miss Lawrence is a
member of Marching,
Concert and Pep Bond, Band
officer, maj orette, . head
majorette , solo ensemble,
Outstanding Music, Cornpers
Award and Best Campers
Award during her senior
year, drill learn, Ohio Band
Dircclors Conference, officer
of Tri-M, choir, variety show,

Two more high school
senior girls of Meigs County
have entered \he 1977 Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
&amp;holarship finals to be held
NOV. 21 at the Meigs Junior
High School auditorium
beginning at 3:15p.m. ·
The latest entries are Miss
Cathy Meadows, daughter of
· Mr. and Mrs ..Dan Meadows,
Middlep·ort, and Brenda
Lawrence, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Lawrence,
Portland.
Miss Meadows is a senior at
Meigs High School and is
active in the Drama Club,
Pep .Club, Girls Athl eti c
Association, Student Council,
marching, Pep Band and
Concert Band, Class officer,
Junior Class Piny and
assistant director i Prom
Committee, to compete In the
Betty Crocker Fumiiy Leader
of Tomorr ow test in
December, · member of

National Honor So(!iety,

&amp;ience Club, French Club,
Pep Club, class officer,
sophomo re

year;

girls

basketball t~am, volleyball
team, softball team, Echo
staff, Yearbook staff , Candy
Striper , officer of Candy
Striper, youth group of
church, kindergarten Sunday
school teacher and basketball
best rebounder.
Miss Lnwrence, a scnlor Qt
Southern High School, is
sponsored by the Ra cine
1-!ome National Bank.
Tickets for the fi nais of the'
Junior Miss Program are
being sold by all contestants
and will be placed in business
es tablishments duri ng the

Browni e, Girl ScoUt and

Cadettes in Troop 39 Middleport, has had dance
lessons at the Mid-Porn
School of Dance, member of
Judy Riggs Baton Coa·ps for

four years, Meigs Chapter of coming week . Price in

a d~

th e American Cancer vance is adults, $1.50; student
Society, Muscular Distrophy $1; at the door, adult, $2,
A~n. and Caney Stripers.
;tudent $1.50.

Flag, as 'Old Glory',
inspired defenders
... so he quickly put his back
on.

The following article from
The Quan," a publication of
the American Defenders of
Bataan and Corregidor, In c.,
was requested published . by
Edga r
Van Jnwagen,
Pomeroy, a suryiv.or of the
Bataan Death March in 1942.
With the app roach of
Veterans Day, the article is
timely.
11

REMEMBER ME?
Hello - remember me?
I'm your flag . Some folks call
me Old Glory, others ca ll me
the Stars and Stripes, the
Ensign, or just ... the flag.
But whatever they call me, I
am your flag. And, as I
proudly state, The Flag of the
United Sta tes of America.
Somethin g has been
bothering . rne lately. I ·Was
wondering if I might talk it
over with you. It's about you
und me.
I remem ber sometime ago
(!think it was Memorial Day,
or was it the 4th of July) when
people li ned up on both sides
of the street to watch a
' parade. When your luther
sa w me coming alon g,
waving in the brene, he took
his hat off and held it against
~ left shoulder. His hand
was directly over his heart.
Remember ?
And you. I remember you!

Standing there - straight as
a sohlier ..You didn't have a
hat on, but you gave the
correct salute. They taught
you in school to place your
hand over y.our heart.
., Remember your little Sister?
.,·• Not to be outdone, she was
saluting the same as you. I
was proud, very proud, as I
came down that street. Oh,

Now - when I come down

your street, you just stand
there with your hands in your
pocket~. Occasionally, you
give me a small glance and
then look away. When I think
of au the places ,I've been '"
Norma ndy, Guada lcanai;
Iwo Jima ; Battle of the
Bulge1 Korea; and Vletnam;

' vlcemen there, standing at
attention, giving the military
, salute. Ladies as well as men,

'·

.
, civilians
as well as military
, ; plitd me re~pect ... reverence1
Now, if I sound a bit con' celled ... well .. . I have a right
• to. I represent the finest
' . country in the world - The
;; United States of America.
:: More than one aggressive
' . nation has tried to haul me
' down, only to feel the fury of
,, this freedom loving co untry~
Many of you had to go
. overseas to defend me. A lot
• . more blood has been shed
: since those patriotic parades

:: of long ago and I've had a few

,• stars added since you were a
:i boy, but I'm still the same ole
Hag.
Dad t.s gone now ... and the
hometown has a new look.
The last time I came down
your street, I noticed that
some of the oid landmarks
had given way to a number of
new buildings and homes.
.• Yessir, the old town sure has
changed. I guess I have too,
'cause I don 't feel as proud as
• I did back then.
:;
I see youngsters running
•' and shouting through the
' streets, coUege boys and girls
disrupting our campuses,
people selling hot dogs and
,• beer while . our National
' ; Anthem is played .. .' every' • thing from apathy to riots.
: , They don't seem to know- or
; care - who I am. Not too long
ago, I saw a man take hiShat
,, off when I came by ... he
. • looked around, didn't see
•• anY,bodY else with theirs off

By LASZLO K. DOMJAN
ALTON, Ill. (UPI) - An

unusual coalltion of railroads
and envjronmentalists hopes
Congress will refuse to vote
molley to ellmlnate a traffic
botUeneck on the Mlssisaippi
River.
How the dispute will be
sell!~ wUJ affect not only tbe
Midwestern. farmers and
industries dependent on river
transportation but also
consumers and taxpayers far
from the Mlsaisslppi Hiver
Valley.
The Army Corps of
EJ18ineers wants 1390 inlllion
to replace Locks and Dam 26
to ease the traffic congestion
at the present facility ,
completed 36 years ago . The
structures are 10 mUes north
of St. Louis.
'The railroada and environmentalists contend the
facility could be repaired at a
much lower cost and question
why taxpayers should
subsidize private water
transportation .
The Corps, backed by
bargeiine operators and other
interests that rely on river
traffic, argues that repairs
would cost about as much as

replacement. Furthermore,
as one Corps official put it,
"You'd still have 33-year~ld
structures." The barge
operators also reply that
railroads
also
get
government subsidies.
Because of the opposition,
even if Congress approves the
funding request ned year,

the project wiU start more
than three years behind
schedule.
"At 10 per cent yearly
inflation in the construction
industry, that's an extra 140
million a year for the taxpayers," said Ken Long,

spokesman for the St. Louis
District of the Corps of
EJ18ineers.
Barge operators say the
consumer In the long run is
paying more than necessary
for products shipped on ihe
river because of average
watts of eight hours for
barges to negotiate through
the narrow locks. 'The barge
industry estimates each
hour's delay costs $200.
The railroads have no
sympathy for the bargelines.
'They openly admit they fear
additional competition from
river ·transport if the locks
and dam are replaced .
Railr oa d executives
frequently point out that
railroads must maintain their
own tracks while federal
taxes pay for the Corps'
maintenance of riverways.

what's happened' I'm still the same ole
flag.
How ca n I be expected to
fly high and proud from
buildings and homes when
within them, there is no
thought, Jove, or respect for
me? Whatever happened to
patrioll.sm? Your patriotism?
Hnve you forgotten what I
stand for? Have you for gotten
all the battlefields where men
fought and died to keep this
nation free? When you salute
me, you salute them. Take a
·look at the Memorial Honor
Rolls sometime. Look at the
names of those who never
came hack. Some of thelli
were friends or relatives of
yours ... maybe even went to
school with you. That's what
you're saluting - NOT ME! ·
Well, it won't be long before Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr.
I come down your street
Mr . and Mrs . James
again. So, when you see me, Preston· of West Columbia
stand straight, and place visited Mrs. Pearl Norris
your hand over your heart: Sunday.
Do this because l represent
Mr. and Mrs.' Guy Shuler
you. You'll see me wave spent a week with Bill and
buck, my sa lute to you .. .
Sherry Dillion and family at
Hartselle, Alabama.
Mrs. Lois Bell, Mrs. Erma
Wilson visited Monday with
Raymond Bell at Oak Grove.
Chester Van Meter, Morning
Star, were dinner guests of

yes, there were some Ser- ·

I wonder -

replace~ent

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ervin,

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Hepler of Wampum, Pa.,
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Ferne B. Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodges
of Columbus were weekend
guests of Mrs. June Wickersham and Jeff.
Mr. and Mrs. David
Gloeckner have purchased
the farm of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre at Fairview
and plan to move there soon.
Mr. and Mrs. Sayre have
purchased land from Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Hart at Racine
and will be moving there to a
mobile home.
Millie Ripley of Charleston,
Larry Fisher of Racine spent
Saturday night with Mrs.
Mabel Shielda.
, Herbert Shields is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital after
suffering two Ugh! strokes.
Dale Wallace Hill has
returned home after assisting
in the care of his father , Dale
HIU Sr. at Moore Haven,. Fla.
We're glad to report Dale Sr.
l.s able to go back to his
employment after having
open heart surgery.
·Mr. and Mrs. Roger RouSh,
Charles Michael wer.e dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush were recent Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Otl.s Casto at ReedsvUJe.
Mr. and Mrs. Barney
Randolph, sons Barry and
Brian, friend Lowell of Indianapolis, Ind., were
weekend ~uests of Mr. and

Racine, Bashan Rd . Mrs. Bell
also took Mrs. Wilson to visit
her home she was reared ln.

She hadn 'I been there for
several years at Morning
Star, and did enjoy the trip.

•cell. More than 90 towboats

Bolo Toes

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

WEATHER-MASTER 400

+

'

MOORE'

AUTO P

It's 12W longer than a Chevy Caprice.

LIJ

•

Career contest Evening offun
announced by
planned at
t Middleport club Salem Center
The outstanding young
careerlat contest will be
lltaged by the Middleport
Buslneas and · Professional
Women's Club at a meeting
Monday night at the Mid·
dleport ·Columbia Gas Co.
office.
To compete for the honor
. women m\lsl be between .21
and 28 aa 0f ·July and must
have been employed in some
business or profession for at
least one fuU year on a full
time baais. She must be
Uvlng, working or continuing
her education in the area
served bY ihe local club and
must be ·outstanding In
community and-or church
work.
Anyone interested in
competing in the contest or
nominating a contestant
should contact either Mrs.
James Carpenter, 965-3845 or
Mrs. John Werner, 992-7855
Immediately. 'There is no cost
to the young careerist
selected since all expenses of
district compelitlon are paid
by the club.

A fall festival will be held
Saturday night at the Salem
Center Elementary &amp;hool
under sponsorship of the
PTA.
'There will be a variety of
games and an auction, a sale

Plans for the aMual fall
festival to be held Nov. 20 at
the Pomeroy ·Elementary
&amp;hool were made during a
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA
Monday night. .
Mrs. Lindil
Mayer,
· president, asked for volunleers to help with thecamival
and advised that they should
contact Mrs. James Souisby
U they are. willing to help.
Volunteers are still needed
for the ways .and . means
·committee.
To boost attendance Mrs.
Mayer askf\1 each parent to
bring another along next
month. Bob Morris, prin-

of surprise packages, a
country store, and refresh•
ments of hotdogs, sloppy joes,
bean soup, homemade
donuts, popcorn.and candied
apples.
A prince and princess
will be selected from among .
Michael Wright and Angela
Wright of the first grade,
Joey Reynolda and Michelle
Barr of the second grade;
RAVINE _ senior memGamble Grant and Missy bers of the Southern High
Longstreth, third grade; School Band and their
Greg Lathey and Sheryl parents were recognized
Neutzling, fourth grade; Carl during the band's half-time
Davies and Gina Lindaey. show at Friday night's game.
fifth grade, and Rocky . Prior to the introduction
Johnson iln&lt;l Christi lm- the seniors presented a drill
boden, sixth grade.
to "I Write the Songs". InThe public is Invited.
troduced were the following
seniors and their psrenls.

cipal, reported that good used
clothing is needed for some of
the pupils . .Members were
also reminded to continue
saving tbelr Campbell soup
labels and 'Post cereal box
tops.
Mrs. Vera Johnson's
Brownie Troop 1076 opened
the meeting with the pledge
to the Hag. Devotions were
given by the Rev. W. H.
Perrin of Trinity Church.
. P~rents were reminded that
1t IS still not too late to join the
PTA. Room count was won by
the third grade. Second grade
mothers served refres hments.

Pomeroy couj;li
given surprise

BreJ.ldi!l

·given Halloween party
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Manuel, and most original
costume, Jared Hill, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hill.
· in the age group of 8 to 14,
prettiest
masked, Cindy
Prizes were given. in two
Allen,
daughter
of Mr. and
different age groups to the
Mrs
.
Barry
.Allen
; most
youJ18esi dressed was Danny
Joe Milliron; son of Joann
Milliron and the. ugliest
costume was Roberta
Greene; daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Greene; prettiest
costume, Donnlta Manuel,
LETART FALLS - A
Halloween party was held at
the Community Hall here
Friday at 7:30p.m. sponsored
by Ohio Valley Grange 2612.

original costume, Trudy
Jones , daughter of Mrs.
Sandra Pattenon; moat
comical cqatumr, Scott
Wickline, oon of Mr. and Mra.
· William Wickline, and ulliN!
costume, Mike Babel, 10n of
' Mrs. Larry Laudennill.
Each winner was given a
silver dollar . One hundred
thirty childran attended as
did several parents who
assisted In serving cupcakes,
hot dogs, and Kool-Aid. A
treat was al.so given each
child. Parents enjoyed coffee.

hipp;wa·

BOOTS AND SHOES

CHRISTOPHER NITZ
Christopher Jay Nih ,
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Nltz, Pomeroy,
celebrated his third birthday Monday eveniDg at
the home of .hts grandparent! on Martin St. Ice
cream, cake, chips and
Kool-Aid were served to
Cyndra, Doy Ray, and
Bobby Nliz, Rusty, Brian
and Donnie Nit!, Debbie
Campbell, Ann and Nan
Nitz, Nora Nltz and Doy
and Betty Nltz.

Senior members of
band are honored

INSPECTION SET
'The Meigs Chapter, Order
o!DeMolay, will hold its semi
annual

inspection

und

election of officers at 7:30
p.m . Monday at the Mid'
dleporl, Masonic Temple. All
Master Masons are invited.

PIANO
INSTRUCTIONS
For Children
And Aduils.

horn, band member for eight
years.
For the half-time show, .the
band entered the field to
"Space Odyssey 2001" aud
then marched across the field

GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612
to "St. James Infirma ry'~, Letart Falls, will meet at the
leaving th e field play ing hall this evening ot7:30 p.m .
"Sta nd Up and Cheer." . Potluck refreshments.

Phone
June VanVranken

s·'9

at 992·2270

Value

.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

414 Spring Av e.
Pomeroy, Ohio
-

....1

.Lawrence ,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs;
Clarence Lawrence , Por-

tland, an · eight year band
member, plays the drums,
secretary of the band and an
officer of the Tri-M Club.
Chapman, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Lester of Bobbi
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert
Russell, Spring Ave.,

DAUGHTER BORN
RACINE - A daughter,
Michelle Marie, was born to
Airman and · Mrs. Paul
&amp;hultz, Rt. 2, Racine, on Oct.
31 at Holzer Medical Center.
:she weighed 7lba. 210 ounceJ!
and was 1910" long. Grandparents are William R.
Thoma and Mrs. Shirley
'&amp;hultz and Carl &amp;hultz, Jr.,
all of Rt. 2, Racine. Greatgrandparents are Mrs.
Weiser of Austria, and Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Schultz Sr., Rt.
2, Racine. Airman Schultz l.s
stationed at Sheppard AFB in
'l'exas. He will come home
Nov. 18 to see his new
daughter.

Pomeroy , were surpri'sed . Chapman, Syracuse, ~ plays
the flute , is head ma jorette,

Sunday With a visit from their
son-In-law and daughter, Mr ..
and Mrs. Paul (Betty) Ried,
Robert and Brenda Schultz,
Robin Kapp of Westerville,
and Geraldine Greer, Shirley
Sprouse, and Sandra Harris
and daughters, all of New

MEETING CALLED
The Veterans Memorial
Hospital Candystrlpers will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. in the
hospital cafeteria. Those who
· have conipleled 10 hours of
volunteer service will receive
their caps. Members are
· asked to take their mothers
and other frlenda to the
meeting since a jewelry party ·
will be held. Refreshments·
will be served and plans will
be made for Christmas activities.

president of the band of which ·
she has been a member eight
years, and is al.so president of
the Tri-M.
Heidi Ashley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ashley.
Letart Fails, plays trumpet,
in,band
for eight years and is
Haven, W. Va .., who came
serving
as historian of the
With a potluck dinner in- Tri-M Club.
cluding a decorated cake
Denise Roberts, daughter
featuring red roses and the
of
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
inscription "Happy !2nd McKee,
Portland, plays the
Anniversary' '.
bells,
a
member
of the band
Mr. and Mrs. Russell,
for
one
y.ear.
whose wedding anniversary
Anna Frank, daughter of
l.s Tuesday, were presented
Mr.
and Mrs. Hoiward Frank,
fitfts. 'The coUple has a son,
Racine,
plays clarinet and
John Henry, who lives· in
bells,
In
the band for eight
Glenrock, Wy. He was unable
years.
to attend the celebration due
Ailsa Harris, daughter of
to his work. 'They also have
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Barris,
six grandchildren and one
Mlpersvilie,
in the flag corpa,
great-grandaon .
plays trumpet and baritone

Cepacol
MOUTHWASH/GARGLE

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

140Z.
REG. •1.66

By Ameircan Greetings

.
ONLY

Box of 32
Reg. SJ.50

ONLY

33e

AMERICAN GREETING

The new
·FORD LTD
·is longer _

Comfort
for the
professional
wontan

..

'

Letart Falls youngsters

Volunteers needed to help
stage school fall festival

.

Tlll8l'LEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!) - Judge Alot ran the
five furlongs in 1:01
Wednesday to win the
fea tured ninth raee at
'Thistledown.
'The winner, ridden by Mike
Moran, paid $9.20, $5.20 and
$5.00. Miss Ironside was
Second and Leehyeem was
third.
'The I~ tenth race trifecla
of Sbotizon, Bell's Reject and
Live Free paid $$3.90 and the
9-1 dally double pf Majesty's
Ace and Quietus was worth
1242.80.

:'\a1uruli zcr sets

yOliTTl:ct ut case ull

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Helen Handley has
returned from Ironton wbere
she went for the funeral of her
aunt, Genevieve Furlong.

g. ,.

"'"'•nh•

hcctk IIIC you lead . '

Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world·known manufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

::l
t;;:

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS

LAY -AWAY A ""'
WHITE
OR .
ELNA
SEWING
MACHINE

WESTERN - REMINGTON

Z

SHOTGUNS &amp; RIFLES

NOW

I , ELEGANT ANTIQUE
DIAr.!OND RINfl

r •,ln. f•U&lt;&gt;"" •·~~ uiY

SEE THESE

2. APIT IQ\11\PI AMOND

DINNE R AINCl
It lu .
"hit•
ould

FINE MACHINES

] , AN TIQUP: f" ll ,A GI.P.t.
, IJ I"! MIJ NU Jl.I NG

AT•.•

lfll~

Your Ford Dealer goes
to greater lengths•••
•••fory~u.

Marguerite's Shoes
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy.O •
1

14 ~&lt;. ,~11~"' "'
-~·It .,ld .
THitt:E DfA~WrW

'FORD

Foil or Paper

TYLENOL

loNTIQUE IWIG
Thn~

hl o•.inl dhmnndr

lft l ~l t k t . ·

,whl l•

1&lt;&gt;1~ .

SUPf: ll DELICATI

' AN TIQ UF. f}IA~ONU

Eo~"'''"··· ~· '
ru
..ru "'~~n!lfll " '
It

~1 . H~""

'155
'13]91

'225
'115
'200

&amp;uld vn l 1.

GO£SSl£R's .
JEWELRY SlORE

Remington - Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson
Browning Gun Cleaning Kits -Gun
Oil- Recoil Pads- Game Bags·
Shell Vests- Gun Cases- Hunting
Accessories ~ Hunters Jackets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps Ri·fle Sling Straps :- Steel Traps.

ONLY 86~
BAYER

CHILDREN'S
· ASPIRIN'
Reg ; 49c
36 Tablets ·

ONLY

79e

100 tablets

BRUT
LOTION
3/8 oz.
REG. 11.25

24~ ·

ONLY 69~

STATIONERY
By Stuart Hall
18 Sheets - 12 Envelopes

THERA GRAN
High potency vitamin for-mula . with
minerals. 30 free with 100.
·
Reg . $7.89

ONLY '4.69

G.E. HOT SHAVE CREAM
DISPENSER
Reg . $! 9.98
ONLY '12.98

ICY-HOT
ANALGESIC
BALM

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

3%

oz.

REG. 3.00
1

ONLY

POMEROY

We Issue Hunting Ucense

'I
.II ,

•129

VITAMIN CBY REXALL

LICENSED GUN DEAL[j:R

110 W. MAIN

ONLY

4 Rolls
Reg . $2.50

REG. 11.99

15th

on comfort,
and ride

da\' lon L.t in soi'l
c ush ioned co mf ort

HOLIDAY GIFT WRAP

RABBIT
SEASON
OPENS
NOV.

•

WHITE
CHRISTMAS!
.

Justin Bells

$3·297 .

~

1- The DeUySenlinel,Middleport-POOleroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.11,1976

n

Minneapolis group
were backed up for several representing shippers and
days in the highly publicized carriers, said railroad men
traffic jam.
"know the realities of the
Sedan said the Corps knew region's logistical problems
for several months the cell and their opposition to Lock
needed repairs, Instead of 26 1.s based on pure greed
waiting for the cell to through the destruction of
· ·
collapse, he said, It could competition."
have scheduled the work for
The Minnesota Agrithe winter, when traffic . Growth CouncU, which says
half of the grail) in that state
vohune is much lighter.
IN MIDDLEPORT
"Besides, the guldewall l.s shipped on the river, .
9,oo to 5:00 Monday lhru Saturday
cell is not part of the locks or stroqg ly
backs
the
dam/' Bedan said . "To say replace~Ttent
Council
that tbe whole loeb and dam
needs to be replaced because
of a bad guldawall ceil t.. to
say the shoe has to be thrown
away because of a broken
shoe lace."
Long dented the Corps was
negligent in not making repairs.
14
lt's simply not true/'
Long said. "Repairs on the
,entire facility have been
made on a continuing basis as
we are required to do. The
structure is old and it needs
repairs frequently."
'The Corps project would
replace the dam and · two
locks, one 350-feet long and
: !be other 6004eet, with a new
dam and a ioclt 1,200-feet long
two roUes dQwnstream from
the present site.
PLY WINTER
Locks and Dam 26 reached
its capacity of 46 rnUlion tons
a year in 1971. last year it
DEEP POWERFUL T
se,e k congressional carried 55 miillon tons. The
Winter tread ;,ith traction
new facility would increase
approval. ·
·
capacity
to
about
90
million
cleats to grip and go on mud,
'The Sierra Club opposes the
pro ject because it would tons.
ice or deep snow, and designed to
The present facility
increase the volume of river
receive metal traction studs.
becomes a . bottleneck
traffic .
11
because
its
locks
are
too
short
We don't want to turn the
SELF-CLEANING AND QUIET
B7B·t3
Mississippi into any more of to pass a standard 15-harge
Wide,
flat
tread
designed
polyester
cord
an industrial river than it tow In one locking operation. .
so that traction elements
blackwan
already is, " said David Breaking a tow into two parts
automatically
kick
out
snow
or
mud$1. 84._..;;,:~
Sedan of the ozark Chapter and locking each half
individually makes a twohelps keep tread open,
of the Sierra Club .
PRICE
"'this has happened in · hour procedure of what could
F.E ,T.
SIZE
ready for action.
Europe, where
some take 30 minutes.
1
"We would be delighted to
beautiful rivers have been
F7~14
'38.58
2.39
endorse
rebuilding
the
turned inlo nothing more than
present facility with no
1
1
highways for industry."
41.42
2.55
G78-14
expanslon
in
capacity,"
said
Sedan also said there is
"circumstantial evidence the a spokesman for the
Plus $4.00 for Whitewall
Corps has been slow to make Assoc iation of American
repairs at Locks and Dam 26 Railroads.
John W. Lambert of tbe
to make a better case for
Upper Mississippi
replacing it."
·He said the Corps distorted Waterways Association, a
992-2848
124 W. MAIN
the seriousness of the
situation wtlen it closed the
main Jock for a week in April
for repairs to a guidewail

'They argue that river commerce
charges
are
artificially low because of
this indirect government
subsidy.
Railroa~ lobbyists la st
summer succeeded In
attaching . to a Senate
appropriations ·bill for the
project a requirement that
river traffic at the lock and
dam for the first time must
pay a user's fee. Partly
because of the amendment
the measure was shelved 'alld
t.. to be reconsidered when
Congr""' meets in January.
Congressional action · IIIIIY
depend on the findings of a
Government Accounting
Office study expected to lle
released around Dec. 1. The
GAO l.s expected to indicate
, wllether the Co~ps· estimate
\hat repairs would cost about
the same as replacement t..
correct or the railroads 81'e
right in saying repairs could
be made at onetenth the
replacement cost.
'The dispute also set up an
odd alliance of 21 railroads
and the Sierra Club. Together
they challenged in federal l
court 'the procedures used by
the Corps to plan the project.
'The legal action has been
largely responsible for the
delay in . work on the
replacement by forcing tile
Corps to redraw tis plans and

r--------_, N
MAKE HERS
A

out of

"Altoo, m., 11111y aeem a
long way fnm M1nnei1ota, bat
t1 1.1 the
vein of our i
eCCIUIDf," hi .

on Mississippi River

Apple Grove

News Notes

President Russe~ Schwandt
said a switch to another form
·or transportaton "would push
our already high domestic

$}89

TUSSY
CREAM DEODORANT
2 0~
REG. 69'

47~

ONLY
J

I

'

�a-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'Thursday, Nov. 11 , 1976

Rare coalition opposing locks, dam

Meadows, Lawrence in
Junior Miss Program
She Is sponsored by the
Meigs Inn of Pomeroy.
Miss Lawrence is a
member of Marching,
Concert and Pep Bond, Band
officer, maj orette, . head
majorette , solo ensemble,
Outstanding Music, Cornpers
Award and Best Campers
Award during her senior
year, drill learn, Ohio Band
Dircclors Conference, officer
of Tri-M, choir, variety show,

Two more high school
senior girls of Meigs County
have entered \he 1977 Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
&amp;holarship finals to be held
NOV. 21 at the Meigs Junior
High School auditorium
beginning at 3:15p.m. ·
The latest entries are Miss
Cathy Meadows, daughter of
· Mr. and Mrs ..Dan Meadows,
Middlep·ort, and Brenda
Lawrence, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Lawrence,
Portland.
Miss Meadows is a senior at
Meigs High School and is
active in the Drama Club,
Pep .Club, Girls Athl eti c
Association, Student Council,
marching, Pep Band and
Concert Band, Class officer,
Junior Class Piny and
assistant director i Prom
Committee, to compete In the
Betty Crocker Fumiiy Leader
of Tomorr ow test in
December, · member of

National Honor So(!iety,

&amp;ience Club, French Club,
Pep Club, class officer,
sophomo re

year;

girls

basketball t~am, volleyball
team, softball team, Echo
staff, Yearbook staff , Candy
Striper , officer of Candy
Striper, youth group of
church, kindergarten Sunday
school teacher and basketball
best rebounder.
Miss Lnwrence, a scnlor Qt
Southern High School, is
sponsored by the Ra cine
1-!ome National Bank.
Tickets for the fi nais of the'
Junior Miss Program are
being sold by all contestants
and will be placed in business
es tablishments duri ng the

Browni e, Girl ScoUt and

Cadettes in Troop 39 Middleport, has had dance
lessons at the Mid-Porn
School of Dance, member of
Judy Riggs Baton Coa·ps for

four years, Meigs Chapter of coming week . Price in

a d~

th e American Cancer vance is adults, $1.50; student
Society, Muscular Distrophy $1; at the door, adult, $2,
A~n. and Caney Stripers.
;tudent $1.50.

Flag, as 'Old Glory',
inspired defenders
... so he quickly put his back
on.

The following article from
The Quan," a publication of
the American Defenders of
Bataan and Corregidor, In c.,
was requested published . by
Edga r
Van Jnwagen,
Pomeroy, a suryiv.or of the
Bataan Death March in 1942.
With the app roach of
Veterans Day, the article is
timely.
11

REMEMBER ME?
Hello - remember me?
I'm your flag . Some folks call
me Old Glory, others ca ll me
the Stars and Stripes, the
Ensign, or just ... the flag.
But whatever they call me, I
am your flag. And, as I
proudly state, The Flag of the
United Sta tes of America.
Somethin g has been
bothering . rne lately. I ·Was
wondering if I might talk it
over with you. It's about you
und me.
I remem ber sometime ago
(!think it was Memorial Day,
or was it the 4th of July) when
people li ned up on both sides
of the street to watch a
' parade. When your luther
sa w me coming alon g,
waving in the brene, he took
his hat off and held it against
~ left shoulder. His hand
was directly over his heart.
Remember ?
And you. I remember you!

Standing there - straight as
a sohlier ..You didn't have a
hat on, but you gave the
correct salute. They taught
you in school to place your
hand over y.our heart.
., Remember your little Sister?
.,·• Not to be outdone, she was
saluting the same as you. I
was proud, very proud, as I
came down that street. Oh,

Now - when I come down

your street, you just stand
there with your hands in your
pocket~. Occasionally, you
give me a small glance and
then look away. When I think
of au the places ,I've been '"
Norma ndy, Guada lcanai;
Iwo Jima ; Battle of the
Bulge1 Korea; and Vletnam;

' vlcemen there, standing at
attention, giving the military
, salute. Ladies as well as men,

'·

.
, civilians
as well as military
, ; plitd me re~pect ... reverence1
Now, if I sound a bit con' celled ... well .. . I have a right
• to. I represent the finest
' . country in the world - The
;; United States of America.
:: More than one aggressive
' . nation has tried to haul me
' down, only to feel the fury of
,, this freedom loving co untry~
Many of you had to go
. overseas to defend me. A lot
• . more blood has been shed
: since those patriotic parades

:: of long ago and I've had a few

,• stars added since you were a
:i boy, but I'm still the same ole
Hag.
Dad t.s gone now ... and the
hometown has a new look.
The last time I came down
your street, I noticed that
some of the oid landmarks
had given way to a number of
new buildings and homes.
.• Yessir, the old town sure has
changed. I guess I have too,
'cause I don 't feel as proud as
• I did back then.
:;
I see youngsters running
•' and shouting through the
' streets, coUege boys and girls
disrupting our campuses,
people selling hot dogs and
,• beer while . our National
' ; Anthem is played .. .' every' • thing from apathy to riots.
: , They don't seem to know- or
; care - who I am. Not too long
ago, I saw a man take hiShat
,, off when I came by ... he
. • looked around, didn't see
•• anY,bodY else with theirs off

By LASZLO K. DOMJAN
ALTON, Ill. (UPI) - An

unusual coalltion of railroads
and envjronmentalists hopes
Congress will refuse to vote
molley to ellmlnate a traffic
botUeneck on the Mlssisaippi
River.
How the dispute will be
sell!~ wUJ affect not only tbe
Midwestern. farmers and
industries dependent on river
transportation but also
consumers and taxpayers far
from the Mlsaisslppi Hiver
Valley.
The Army Corps of
EJ18ineers wants 1390 inlllion
to replace Locks and Dam 26
to ease the traffic congestion
at the present facility ,
completed 36 years ago . The
structures are 10 mUes north
of St. Louis.
'The railroada and environmentalists contend the
facility could be repaired at a
much lower cost and question
why taxpayers should
subsidize private water
transportation .
The Corps, backed by
bargeiine operators and other
interests that rely on river
traffic, argues that repairs
would cost about as much as

replacement. Furthermore,
as one Corps official put it,
"You'd still have 33-year~ld
structures." The barge
operators also reply that
railroads
also
get
government subsidies.
Because of the opposition,
even if Congress approves the
funding request ned year,

the project wiU start more
than three years behind
schedule.
"At 10 per cent yearly
inflation in the construction
industry, that's an extra 140
million a year for the taxpayers," said Ken Long,

spokesman for the St. Louis
District of the Corps of
EJ18ineers.
Barge operators say the
consumer In the long run is
paying more than necessary
for products shipped on ihe
river because of average
watts of eight hours for
barges to negotiate through
the narrow locks. 'The barge
industry estimates each
hour's delay costs $200.
The railroads have no
sympathy for the bargelines.
'They openly admit they fear
additional competition from
river ·transport if the locks
and dam are replaced .
Railr oa d executives
frequently point out that
railroads must maintain their
own tracks while federal
taxes pay for the Corps'
maintenance of riverways.

what's happened' I'm still the same ole
flag.
How ca n I be expected to
fly high and proud from
buildings and homes when
within them, there is no
thought, Jove, or respect for
me? Whatever happened to
patrioll.sm? Your patriotism?
Hnve you forgotten what I
stand for? Have you for gotten
all the battlefields where men
fought and died to keep this
nation free? When you salute
me, you salute them. Take a
·look at the Memorial Honor
Rolls sometime. Look at the
names of those who never
came hack. Some of thelli
were friends or relatives of
yours ... maybe even went to
school with you. That's what
you're saluting - NOT ME! ·
Well, it won't be long before Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr.
I come down your street
Mr . and Mrs . James
again. So, when you see me, Preston· of West Columbia
stand straight, and place visited Mrs. Pearl Norris
your hand over your heart: Sunday.
Do this because l represent
Mr. and Mrs.' Guy Shuler
you. You'll see me wave spent a week with Bill and
buck, my sa lute to you .. .
Sherry Dillion and family at
Hartselle, Alabama.
Mrs. Lois Bell, Mrs. Erma
Wilson visited Monday with
Raymond Bell at Oak Grove.
Chester Van Meter, Morning
Star, were dinner guests of

yes, there were some Ser- ·

I wonder -

replace~ent

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ervin,

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Hepler of Wampum, Pa.,
were weekend guests of Mrs.
Ferne B. Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hodges
of Columbus were weekend
guests of Mrs. June Wickersham and Jeff.
Mr. and Mrs. David
Gloeckner have purchased
the farm of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre at Fairview
and plan to move there soon.
Mr. and Mrs. Sayre have
purchased land from Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Hart at Racine
and will be moving there to a
mobile home.
Millie Ripley of Charleston,
Larry Fisher of Racine spent
Saturday night with Mrs.
Mabel Shielda.
, Herbert Shields is a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital after
suffering two Ugh! strokes.
Dale Wallace Hill has
returned home after assisting
in the care of his father , Dale
HIU Sr. at Moore Haven,. Fla.
We're glad to report Dale Sr.
l.s able to go back to his
employment after having
open heart surgery.
·Mr. and Mrs. Roger RouSh,
Charles Michael wer.e dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush were recent Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Otl.s Casto at ReedsvUJe.
Mr. and Mrs. Barney
Randolph, sons Barry and
Brian, friend Lowell of Indianapolis, Ind., were
weekend ~uests of Mr. and

Racine, Bashan Rd . Mrs. Bell
also took Mrs. Wilson to visit
her home she was reared ln.

She hadn 'I been there for
several years at Morning
Star, and did enjoy the trip.

•cell. More than 90 towboats

Bolo Toes

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

WEATHER-MASTER 400

+

'

MOORE'

AUTO P

It's 12W longer than a Chevy Caprice.

LIJ

•

Career contest Evening offun
announced by
planned at
t Middleport club Salem Center
The outstanding young
careerlat contest will be
lltaged by the Middleport
Buslneas and · Professional
Women's Club at a meeting
Monday night at the Mid·
dleport ·Columbia Gas Co.
office.
To compete for the honor
. women m\lsl be between .21
and 28 aa 0f ·July and must
have been employed in some
business or profession for at
least one fuU year on a full
time baais. She must be
Uvlng, working or continuing
her education in the area
served bY ihe local club and
must be ·outstanding In
community and-or church
work.
Anyone interested in
competing in the contest or
nominating a contestant
should contact either Mrs.
James Carpenter, 965-3845 or
Mrs. John Werner, 992-7855
Immediately. 'There is no cost
to the young careerist
selected since all expenses of
district compelitlon are paid
by the club.

A fall festival will be held
Saturday night at the Salem
Center Elementary &amp;hool
under sponsorship of the
PTA.
'There will be a variety of
games and an auction, a sale

Plans for the aMual fall
festival to be held Nov. 20 at
the Pomeroy ·Elementary
&amp;hool were made during a
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA
Monday night. .
Mrs. Lindil
Mayer,
· president, asked for volunleers to help with thecamival
and advised that they should
contact Mrs. James Souisby
U they are. willing to help.
Volunteers are still needed
for the ways .and . means
·committee.
To boost attendance Mrs.
Mayer askf\1 each parent to
bring another along next
month. Bob Morris, prin-

of surprise packages, a
country store, and refresh•
ments of hotdogs, sloppy joes,
bean soup, homemade
donuts, popcorn.and candied
apples.
A prince and princess
will be selected from among .
Michael Wright and Angela
Wright of the first grade,
Joey Reynolda and Michelle
Barr of the second grade;
RAVINE _ senior memGamble Grant and Missy bers of the Southern High
Longstreth, third grade; School Band and their
Greg Lathey and Sheryl parents were recognized
Neutzling, fourth grade; Carl during the band's half-time
Davies and Gina Lindaey. show at Friday night's game.
fifth grade, and Rocky . Prior to the introduction
Johnson iln&lt;l Christi lm- the seniors presented a drill
boden, sixth grade.
to "I Write the Songs". InThe public is Invited.
troduced were the following
seniors and their psrenls.

cipal, reported that good used
clothing is needed for some of
the pupils . .Members were
also reminded to continue
saving tbelr Campbell soup
labels and 'Post cereal box
tops.
Mrs. Vera Johnson's
Brownie Troop 1076 opened
the meeting with the pledge
to the Hag. Devotions were
given by the Rev. W. H.
Perrin of Trinity Church.
. P~rents were reminded that
1t IS still not too late to join the
PTA. Room count was won by
the third grade. Second grade
mothers served refres hments.

Pomeroy couj;li
given surprise

BreJ.ldi!l

·given Halloween party
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Manuel, and most original
costume, Jared Hill, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hill.
· in the age group of 8 to 14,
prettiest
masked, Cindy
Prizes were given. in two
Allen,
daughter
of Mr. and
different age groups to the
Mrs
.
Barry
.Allen
; most
youJ18esi dressed was Danny
Joe Milliron; son of Joann
Milliron and the. ugliest
costume was Roberta
Greene; daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Greene; prettiest
costume, Donnlta Manuel,
LETART FALLS - A
Halloween party was held at
the Community Hall here
Friday at 7:30p.m. sponsored
by Ohio Valley Grange 2612.

original costume, Trudy
Jones , daughter of Mrs.
Sandra Pattenon; moat
comical cqatumr, Scott
Wickline, oon of Mr. and Mra.
· William Wickline, and ulliN!
costume, Mike Babel, 10n of
' Mrs. Larry Laudennill.
Each winner was given a
silver dollar . One hundred
thirty childran attended as
did several parents who
assisted In serving cupcakes,
hot dogs, and Kool-Aid. A
treat was al.so given each
child. Parents enjoyed coffee.

hipp;wa·

BOOTS AND SHOES

CHRISTOPHER NITZ
Christopher Jay Nih ,
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Nltz, Pomeroy,
celebrated his third birthday Monday eveniDg at
the home of .hts grandparent! on Martin St. Ice
cream, cake, chips and
Kool-Aid were served to
Cyndra, Doy Ray, and
Bobby Nliz, Rusty, Brian
and Donnie Nit!, Debbie
Campbell, Ann and Nan
Nitz, Nora Nltz and Doy
and Betty Nltz.

Senior members of
band are honored

INSPECTION SET
'The Meigs Chapter, Order
o!DeMolay, will hold its semi
annual

inspection

und

election of officers at 7:30
p.m . Monday at the Mid'
dleporl, Masonic Temple. All
Master Masons are invited.

PIANO
INSTRUCTIONS
For Children
And Aduils.

horn, band member for eight
years.
For the half-time show, .the
band entered the field to
"Space Odyssey 2001" aud
then marched across the field

GRANGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Grange 2612
to "St. James Infirma ry'~, Letart Falls, will meet at the
leaving th e field play ing hall this evening ot7:30 p.m .
"Sta nd Up and Cheer." . Potluck refreshments.

Phone
June VanVranken

s·'9

at 992·2270

Value

.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

414 Spring Av e.
Pomeroy, Ohio
-

....1

.Lawrence ,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs;
Clarence Lawrence , Por-

tland, an · eight year band
member, plays the drums,
secretary of the band and an
officer of the Tri-M Club.
Chapman, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Lester of Bobbi
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert
Russell, Spring Ave.,

DAUGHTER BORN
RACINE - A daughter,
Michelle Marie, was born to
Airman and · Mrs. Paul
&amp;hultz, Rt. 2, Racine, on Oct.
31 at Holzer Medical Center.
:she weighed 7lba. 210 ounceJ!
and was 1910" long. Grandparents are William R.
Thoma and Mrs. Shirley
'&amp;hultz and Carl &amp;hultz, Jr.,
all of Rt. 2, Racine. Greatgrandparents are Mrs.
Weiser of Austria, and Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Schultz Sr., Rt.
2, Racine. Airman Schultz l.s
stationed at Sheppard AFB in
'l'exas. He will come home
Nov. 18 to see his new
daughter.

Pomeroy , were surpri'sed . Chapman, Syracuse, ~ plays
the flute , is head ma jorette,

Sunday With a visit from their
son-In-law and daughter, Mr ..
and Mrs. Paul (Betty) Ried,
Robert and Brenda Schultz,
Robin Kapp of Westerville,
and Geraldine Greer, Shirley
Sprouse, and Sandra Harris
and daughters, all of New

MEETING CALLED
The Veterans Memorial
Hospital Candystrlpers will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. in the
hospital cafeteria. Those who
· have conipleled 10 hours of
volunteer service will receive
their caps. Members are
· asked to take their mothers
and other frlenda to the
meeting since a jewelry party ·
will be held. Refreshments·
will be served and plans will
be made for Christmas activities.

president of the band of which ·
she has been a member eight
years, and is al.so president of
the Tri-M.
Heidi Ashley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ashley.
Letart Fails, plays trumpet,
in,band
for eight years and is
Haven, W. Va .., who came
serving
as historian of the
With a potluck dinner in- Tri-M Club.
cluding a decorated cake
Denise Roberts, daughter
featuring red roses and the
of
Mr. and Mrs . Richard
inscription "Happy !2nd McKee,
Portland, plays the
Anniversary' '.
bells,
a
member
of the band
Mr. and Mrs. Russell,
for
one
y.ear.
whose wedding anniversary
Anna Frank, daughter of
l.s Tuesday, were presented
Mr.
and Mrs. Hoiward Frank,
fitfts. 'The coUple has a son,
Racine,
plays clarinet and
John Henry, who lives· in
bells,
In
the band for eight
Glenrock, Wy. He was unable
years.
to attend the celebration due
Ailsa Harris, daughter of
to his work. 'They also have
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Barris,
six grandchildren and one
Mlpersvilie,
in the flag corpa,
great-grandaon .
plays trumpet and baritone

Cepacol
MOUTHWASH/GARGLE

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

140Z.
REG. •1.66

By Ameircan Greetings

.
ONLY

Box of 32
Reg. SJ.50

ONLY

33e

AMERICAN GREETING

The new
·FORD LTD
·is longer _

Comfort
for the
professional
wontan

..

'

Letart Falls youngsters

Volunteers needed to help
stage school fall festival

.

Tlll8l'LEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!) - Judge Alot ran the
five furlongs in 1:01
Wednesday to win the
fea tured ninth raee at
'Thistledown.
'The winner, ridden by Mike
Moran, paid $9.20, $5.20 and
$5.00. Miss Ironside was
Second and Leehyeem was
third.
'The I~ tenth race trifecla
of Sbotizon, Bell's Reject and
Live Free paid $$3.90 and the
9-1 dally double pf Majesty's
Ace and Quietus was worth
1242.80.

:'\a1uruli zcr sets

yOliTTl:ct ut case ull

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Helen Handley has
returned from Ironton wbere
she went for the funeral of her
aunt, Genevieve Furlong.

g. ,.

"'"'•nh•

hcctk IIIC you lead . '

Our complete line of hunting supplies and
equipment is here ready for selection. Made
by world·known manufacturers and in a
large range of prices.

::l
t;;:

AMMUNITION OF ALL KINDS

LAY -AWAY A ""'
WHITE
OR .
ELNA
SEWING
MACHINE

WESTERN - REMINGTON

Z

SHOTGUNS &amp; RIFLES

NOW

I , ELEGANT ANTIQUE
DIAr.!OND RINfl

r •,ln. f•U&lt;&gt;"" •·~~ uiY

SEE THESE

2. APIT IQ\11\PI AMOND

DINNE R AINCl
It lu .
"hit•
ould

FINE MACHINES

] , AN TIQUP: f" ll ,A GI.P.t.
, IJ I"! MIJ NU Jl.I NG

AT•.•

lfll~

Your Ford Dealer goes
to greater lengths•••
•••fory~u.

Marguerite's Shoes
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main
Pomeroy.O •
1

14 ~&lt;. ,~11~"' "'
-~·It .,ld .
THitt:E DfA~WrW

'FORD

Foil or Paper

TYLENOL

loNTIQUE IWIG
Thn~

hl o•.inl dhmnndr

lft l ~l t k t . ·

,whl l•

1&lt;&gt;1~ .

SUPf: ll DELICATI

' AN TIQ UF. f}IA~ONU

Eo~"'''"··· ~· '
ru
..ru "'~~n!lfll " '
It

~1 . H~""

'155
'13]91

'225
'115
'200

&amp;uld vn l 1.

GO£SSl£R's .
JEWELRY SlORE

Remington - Winchester - Ithaca
Harrison &amp; Richardson
Browning Gun Cleaning Kits -Gun
Oil- Recoil Pads- Game Bags·
Shell Vests- Gun Cases- Hunting
Accessories ~ Hunters Jackets &amp;
Caps - Hunting Pants &amp; Caps Ri·fle Sling Straps :- Steel Traps.

ONLY 86~
BAYER

CHILDREN'S
· ASPIRIN'
Reg ; 49c
36 Tablets ·

ONLY

79e

100 tablets

BRUT
LOTION
3/8 oz.
REG. 11.25

24~ ·

ONLY 69~

STATIONERY
By Stuart Hall
18 Sheets - 12 Envelopes

THERA GRAN
High potency vitamin for-mula . with
minerals. 30 free with 100.
·
Reg . $7.89

ONLY '4.69

G.E. HOT SHAVE CREAM
DISPENSER
Reg . $! 9.98
ONLY '12.98

ICY-HOT
ANALGESIC
BALM

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

3%

oz.

REG. 3.00
1

ONLY

POMEROY

We Issue Hunting Ucense

'I
.II ,

•129

VITAMIN CBY REXALL

LICENSED GUN DEAL[j:R

110 W. MAIN

ONLY

4 Rolls
Reg . $2.50

REG. 11.99

15th

on comfort,
and ride

da\' lon L.t in soi'l
c ush ioned co mf ort

HOLIDAY GIFT WRAP

RABBIT
SEASON
OPENS
NOV.

•

WHITE
CHRISTMAS!
.

Justin Bells

$3·297 .

~

1- The DeUySenlinel,Middleport-POOleroy, 0., Thursday, Nov.11,1976

n

Minneapolis group
were backed up for several representing shippers and
days in the highly publicized carriers, said railroad men
traffic jam.
"know the realities of the
Sedan said the Corps knew region's logistical problems
for several months the cell and their opposition to Lock
needed repairs, Instead of 26 1.s based on pure greed
waiting for the cell to through the destruction of
· ·
collapse, he said, It could competition."
have scheduled the work for
The Minnesota Agrithe winter, when traffic . Growth CouncU, which says
half of the grail) in that state
vohune is much lighter.
IN MIDDLEPORT
"Besides, the guldewall l.s shipped on the river, .
9,oo to 5:00 Monday lhru Saturday
cell is not part of the locks or stroqg ly
backs
the
dam/' Bedan said . "To say replace~Ttent
Council
that tbe whole loeb and dam
needs to be replaced because
of a bad guldawall ceil t.. to
say the shoe has to be thrown
away because of a broken
shoe lace."
Long dented the Corps was
negligent in not making repairs.
14
lt's simply not true/'
Long said. "Repairs on the
,entire facility have been
made on a continuing basis as
we are required to do. The
structure is old and it needs
repairs frequently."
'The Corps project would
replace the dam and · two
locks, one 350-feet long and
: !be other 6004eet, with a new
dam and a ioclt 1,200-feet long
two roUes dQwnstream from
the present site.
PLY WINTER
Locks and Dam 26 reached
its capacity of 46 rnUlion tons
a year in 1971. last year it
DEEP POWERFUL T
se,e k congressional carried 55 miillon tons. The
Winter tread ;,ith traction
new facility would increase
approval. ·
·
capacity
to
about
90
million
cleats to grip and go on mud,
'The Sierra Club opposes the
pro ject because it would tons.
ice or deep snow, and designed to
The present facility
increase the volume of river
receive metal traction studs.
becomes a . bottleneck
traffic .
11
because
its
locks
are
too
short
We don't want to turn the
SELF-CLEANING AND QUIET
B7B·t3
Mississippi into any more of to pass a standard 15-harge
Wide,
flat
tread
designed
polyester
cord
an industrial river than it tow In one locking operation. .
so that traction elements
blackwan
already is, " said David Breaking a tow into two parts
automatically
kick
out
snow
or
mud$1. 84._..;;,:~
Sedan of the ozark Chapter and locking each half
individually makes a twohelps keep tread open,
of the Sierra Club .
PRICE
"'this has happened in · hour procedure of what could
F.E ,T.
SIZE
ready for action.
Europe, where
some take 30 minutes.
1
"We would be delighted to
beautiful rivers have been
F7~14
'38.58
2.39
endorse
rebuilding
the
turned inlo nothing more than
present facility with no
1
1
highways for industry."
41.42
2.55
G78-14
expanslon
in
capacity,"
said
Sedan also said there is
"circumstantial evidence the a spokesman for the
Plus $4.00 for Whitewall
Corps has been slow to make Assoc iation of American
repairs at Locks and Dam 26 Railroads.
John W. Lambert of tbe
to make a better case for
Upper Mississippi
replacing it."
·He said the Corps distorted Waterways Association, a
992-2848
124 W. MAIN
the seriousness of the
situation wtlen it closed the
main Jock for a week in April
for repairs to a guidewail

'They argue that river commerce
charges
are
artificially low because of
this indirect government
subsidy.
Railroa~ lobbyists la st
summer succeeded In
attaching . to a Senate
appropriations ·bill for the
project a requirement that
river traffic at the lock and
dam for the first time must
pay a user's fee. Partly
because of the amendment
the measure was shelved 'alld
t.. to be reconsidered when
Congr""' meets in January.
Congressional action · IIIIIY
depend on the findings of a
Government Accounting
Office study expected to lle
released around Dec. 1. The
GAO l.s expected to indicate
, wllether the Co~ps· estimate
\hat repairs would cost about
the same as replacement t..
correct or the railroads 81'e
right in saying repairs could
be made at onetenth the
replacement cost.
'The dispute also set up an
odd alliance of 21 railroads
and the Sierra Club. Together
they challenged in federal l
court 'the procedures used by
the Corps to plan the project.
'The legal action has been
largely responsible for the
delay in . work on the
replacement by forcing tile
Corps to redraw tis plans and

r--------_, N
MAKE HERS
A

out of

"Altoo, m., 11111y aeem a
long way fnm M1nnei1ota, bat
t1 1.1 the
vein of our i
eCCIUIDf," hi .

on Mississippi River

Apple Grove

News Notes

President Russe~ Schwandt
said a switch to another form
·or transportaton "would push
our already high domestic

$}89

TUSSY
CREAM DEODORANT
2 0~
REG. 69'

47~

ONLY
J

I

'

�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Mi4dleix&gt;rt-PIII)eroy, 0., Thur8day, Nov. ll, 1976
~f=~~::::::::::::~;:~::::;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:::;:;:;;:~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::.~::::::::::-;::.o;;~;~;;;:;:;;;;;;~;;:;;:;:;:::;:::::.:~:~::::~:t:;~

;~;
~

·Generation Rap

~

t

By Bd•·n an~ Sue Boucl .

- - --.,---

~
I

She Sides With Stepfather
RAP:
My mother and stepfather are always arguing, and f'm
afraid they're headed lor divorce. I'd die if that happened, as I
love my stepdad very much, though J.muld never talk to my
mother. (They seem pretty miserable together.) She's the kind
of person that ill told ·her she was about to lose another great
guy because or her ways, she'd tell me "Shut up! " and slap

me.

-

CHRISTMAS

SAVE S100 . SAVE
seo
.(y')
·

+++

359 95

31 ·2063

OUI ST/\·90 lea lures two !ape momtors . lll· lo frl te r5. Pe rfecl
Lo udn ess" FM rnu 11 ng 111Puls and outpu ts lor 3 tape recorders

a. qenu 1ne

SAVE

RAP :
uMan's Man " burns me! So he doesn't want women in the
Air Force Academy, and thinks they should stay home where
they belong , being little housewives.
If such men would stop.Putting us down, tellinl( us we're in·
ferior, incapable, etc., maybe we wouldn' t be trying so hard to
prove to them that we 're often more capable than they are.
Women should do what they think they can do best. We don' t
RELONG anywhere, except where we please.· VERY UPSET

S180BO

517080

COMPLETE
STEREO
SYSTEM
PACKAGE I

COMPLETE
STEREO
SYSTEM
PACKAGE II

THE "DYNAMITE"
by D-...&amp;. • .: ·

n:::uw1n.

Brown
Also in
Silp·On

had way
tiny down
covered
all
the
the buttons
back. This
dress is a very heavy satin.
After it was washed, I ironed
It on the wrong side with a
wann but not hot Iron. MRS. J. H. R.
DEAR READERS - Mrs.
J.H.R.'s letter certainly
shows a lot of courage, but we
do not recommend that aU of
you with old wedding gowns
run out and wasb them. When
her dreu was made, satin
was different from loday's
aalln. It might wash, but
more Ukely a new satin dreaa
would noI. There might ' be
some fabrics thai would take
to genlle washing alter a
careful testing. :._ POLLY.
Hospital Insurance under
Medicare pays for X·rays
used for diagnosis or treat·
ment of an illness.

TRC-56 OR TRC-30A

95

539.80
•

• R ,.,fl"l'c 5 {A 9U 4M I M S tr• r r•n Rr•o tl' ""' '
• rwu Op imw _, /8 W10/nul Vr'""''' f"lliUI Sht•/1 Sl'"·'~ " '

H~, , r,r,.

S f A 9Q AM FM St.:r" u

• fw" MC / 0{10 Will" "'

I

rf-·~::L

·-r!;i''~i.

POCKET SIZE --~
CALCULATOR I"''
WITH
MEMORY
Reg 2d 9 5

SAVE 20%
REALIST!~

BLANK
8-TRACKS
40 MIN
Reg 1;99

·BLACK
WELLINGTON

·-·
'

1

59
44-840

Snan

ca lcu laii Oils a l o11ce On ly 5' ,xJx 1 Batler y
lllC iuded

...,..,
'"

.•.

'•• .

Reg . 119 95

SAVE 20
5

B-CHANNEl VHF-HI &amp; lO
CAR" / HOME SCANNER

• A s A!Jove, But

Au l h&lt;nli " '~

NEW!
MOTORIZED
DISAPPEARING
CB ANTENNA

'\. -~
~.

S UR FACE
MOUNT

.\'

, 5995

~. '\

12·1844

SAVE

15%

Pair

-

HORN TWEETER

,.,,

·'.

Acg

9 95
'

795

Reg.

119 95

40· 1228

13%
POCKET
A1\~ - FIM RADIO
Reg . 14.9 5

'1288

12·635

REALISTIC
CASSETTE
RECORDER

sss
12 - 140&lt;1

~·

I

·~

Reg

79 95

5995

.

WALKIE-TALKIE

BATTERY-AC
5-BANO R4DIO

29921·1156

3·99

.

~t•••vn;;, t ~

-- ;

c..

.,

RACINE CARPET SHOP

/

16 95
:::J/

22-127

...••

·-..

11

CB - Deters Thflft!

...

37%

PUSH ON/OFF
DIMMER
SWITCH
Reg.

4.99

w

.BEGINNER' S
MORSE CODE KEY

399
61 · 2699

12· 7t1

-

SAVE

RACINE, 0.

THANK YO.UI

PRIVATE TV LISTENEI

• Nobody Know s

You Have

949-2814

'

• 33" Whip Retra c ts Into Fender!

Reg . 69 .95

4' 995

'

SAVE 11%

21 ·970

SAVE20% .
SAVE s20

Reg.

.'

•

."

\

14-836

SAVE 25%
ANTENNA

toYourHouae

Cover s

r· t:~::: .

STANDARD 12VOLT
POWER
Reg
19
95
SUPPLY

.I.] ' .·.

Reg
14 9 5

Al~·o

Mobile

•

VH F_·LO Btmd From 30-50 MHz !

:

AUTO -SPEAKERS

Socl"al

were described
Hampton.
She toldby ofMrs.
the ••
dense stands of hickory,
walnut and the now-extinct· ~
American chestnut trees ~
which covered the hillsides. ~:
She described the two kinds ~
of coal mines in production at ·
. TBURSDAY
the time she lived in Ken·
LAUREL CLIFF Better
tucky being the . drift and Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
shaft mine.
night at the home of Mrs.
If the coal was not deep, Madel in Chaffin .
miners could dig a .tuMel into
Welt Construction
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
the side of a hill or mountain 7:30 p.m. Thursday with Mrs.
Cushion Insole
and find the layers of coal. Avanell Holliday, delegate to
The men rode lo work in the Ohio State Grange, giving
smaU cars pulled by ponies. her report .
Mined coal was brought to the
OHIO VALLEY Junior
In Middleport
outside In the same manner.
Grange
will meet 7:30 p,rn .
Open
Mrs. Hampton said a shaft
Thursday
· at Letart Falls
. thru Sal.
mtne was necessary if the
Community
Hall . New
coal was quite deep. In this
members welcome and wiU
be considered charte r
members; officers will be
elected. Children from five to
15 invited to join. For more
information call, Mrs .
Florence Smith, · Apple
Grove.
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at Thrift Shop, across from
Pomeroy Post Office; public
we1come.
CATHOUC Women's Club
Thursday. Mass at 7:30p.m.
Facttory\
Hostesses are Dorothy Rife,
Rhoda Hackett, Diane
Bartels and Paula Good.
Cuatomlztfd to your
PRECEPTOR Bela Beta
home at the job 1lte.
Sorority tea Thursday 8 p.m.
8atlafactlon ,juirantHd.
home of Roberta O'Brien.
Ann Rupe program chair·
Por l'lllll!ltlmate
man. Hosted by social
Now •••
committee.
OHIO Valley Grange 2612
Letart Falls, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. Potluck refreshments.

·- From Our

129~~

'"

Su UU·' S l &gt;l ii!S . l ll{ j Li&gt;&lt; . •JI II•P s M;i~ l:l!!
Un l aw ! u l "' HPqu or •• ,, P P rrm l C: huc~o.. \N1 !h l oJ r: tl

SAVE 20%
5Y4' OUAL·CONE

..

'.

Reg 149 .95

2~?a1~A.

Mrs. Lula Hampton of type of mine, men ~ad to get
Pomeroy , who lived in into an elevator bucket and
Kentucky when she was ride far below the surface of
young, spoke to Mrs. Mary the ground to work. Coal was
Hysell's llfth grade of brought to the top in the
Pomeroy Elementary school same kind of elevator.
Fdday on the topic of the
Mrs. Susan Oliver, a staff
natural resources of that member of the Retired Senior
state.
Volunteer Prog ram, acThe same hardwood forests companied Mrs. Hampton to
and fertile lands which led the school.
Daniel Boone and his men to
carve . Wilderness Road, by
way of Cwnberland Gap, :~:,~:::*".S~::x::.~~»'-*t:~.~'*'lt.~:·

SEAMLESS ALUMINUM
GUTTERING

• Scans and Lochs-On Active Polic8 , Fire. Weather.
VHF M arine and Emergen cy Commun ica tio ns From 148-174 MHzl

. Muh• h ! u~ u

.i

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK 'THE
VOTERS OF MEIGS COUNTY
FOR THEIR SUPPORT

.

-

·~

Most •ttJms al•o &lt;heotlabl•
i'll Radtc Shack Oealers .

THANKS

L.OQk f or th•s !l !ln

" ' your netRI'Iborh ood ,

FRIDAY
SQUARE Dance Friday nt
H~rrisonville Eleme ntary ·
School 8 to II p.m. Music by
String Dusters . Cake walks,
sandwiches and soft drinks.
Adults $1, children under 12
admitted free. Sponsored by·
Harrisonville Senior· Citizens
Club.
FELLOWSHIP meeti ng
now through Saturday at
Midway Church 7:30 p.m .
ni ghtl y. Different speaker
each evening. Public invited.
HOLIDAY Bazaar by
Chester Young Wives Club,
Friday and Saturday , 9:30
a.m . to 5:30p.m. at Masonic
Hall in Chester. Many
Christmas items and . bake
sale both days.
'PARTY for newly elected
candidates Frtday, 7 p.m. at
Democratic Headquarters ,
234 E. Main St., Pomeroy.
Refreshments, public invited.
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
th e American Revolution ,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the home
of Mrs. Patrick Lochary with
Mrs. A. R. Knight and Mrs.
Edis.on.· Hobstetter co·
hostesses. Mrs. Nan Moore to
give a program on colon ial
literature .
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
Trinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the churcli.
MARY SHRINE, Order of
th e White Shrine of
Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at
the Pomeroy Masoni c
Temple. Rehearsal will be
heJd.for ceremonial to be held
in December.
Racine
members to serve refreshments.
SATURDAY
CELEBRATION marking
Racine becoming bicert·
tennial community starting
1:30 p.m. Saturday i n front of
Southern High School,
Racine, and a program inside
the school at 2 with Judge
Darrell R. Hottle, common
pleas judge of Highland
County, speaking.
THANKSGIVING Dinner
Saturday at Modern Wood·
men Camp 7230 at hall in
Burlingham, 7:30p.m. Meal
and beverage will be
provided. Members to bring
covered dish. Door prizes for
adults. and jmliors. Short
bUsiness meeting following
dinner . AU members and
families are welcome.
RACINE PTO fall festival
Saturday. Soup supper at5: 30
and games at 6:30 p.m .
Everyone welcome.
SOUP SUPPER and bazaar
at St. Paul's United
Methodist Church ann ex,
Saturday, beginning at 4:30

"' "

""'
· ''lo

'"

DESSERT
TOPPING
~OOOHWN ~

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

'·

Cln.

GAL.

MANDARIN
ORANGES

.....:c·

JAMES E.- ROUSH

l · ll

VAN CAMP'S

FROZEN
SUPPERS

PORK and
BEANS

99¢

7 LB .
BOX

...GOOIJ lOR wtJ &amp; YOUR BUXET

CANS

GRAPEFRUIT

bag

3-0IAMOND BRAND

FURNITURE ·
POLISH

69¢

51b.

Hrg .
Lemon
Or Nutnrol

$} 00

3 NO. 2

PLEDGE
FLOR IDA SEEDLESS WHITE

oz$100

Cans

BANQUET

I.GE .

711Z.69¢

Cnn

PINEAPPLE
CRUSHED,

SLICED,
CHUNK
2· 20 oz.

GOLDEN RIPE

5 lb.

BANANAS
ROME BEAUTY
· 3 lb. bag
APPLES

WISK
LIQUID DETERGENT

No. 105
32 oz. size

3 oz. cello bag

W!C

Coupon Expires Nov. 13, 1976
Twin City r.~t........
COUPON

j
CO UP ON

BETTYCROCKER

CHARMS

BISQUICK
No. 125
40 oz. box

79~

CEREAL

W/C

No. 205
20 oz. box

$109

W/C

Coupon EXI&gt;ir&lt;&gt;&lt;
Twin

p.m.

. . .

..

---- -,-.1
.' . '
'
COUPON
,... 4
FALL Festival Saturday at
"' . . . . . . . . ·I
CO UPO N
Salisbury School. Begins at 5
BEm CROCKER
· :1
p.m. games at 6:30. Spon·
PAM
..
I ..
sored by PTO. Public Invited.
SOUP DINNER Saturday I • •
1: •
. ·P..
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Fire Station. Mellll
' :1 . :
No. 105
Includes soup, hamburgers,
. .I . .
W
/C
W/C
hot dogs, and' french fries.
No. 125
15. oz. box
Eat In or take home. Must
.. .·I ,.' ' 13 oz. can ·
provide own containers for
soup. Sponsored by Mid·
Coup on Ex pires Nov. n ; 1976
· ·
.
'
dleport Fire Department.
•
Twin Cit y Gateway
: .I, : ·
Coupon Exp.1res Nov. )3, 1976
Ladies,AuxUiary will sponsor · · · · · · · · · • · · · · . . . . . . . . . . . .·r . ·
.
Twm C1ty Gateway
.
a bake sale.
".]lk~l1
,
- ~--,.. ____.,,_
""""""""'~~!!"""' • · · · · · · · · · . ... . mUUU?-.~
SUNDAY
i'
~
.• ' . . . . . •
....... ... ....... ...... ....._ .•~
--"---~....
....
- - li
BLACK LUNG Assn. . . . .. . . . . . .
m .v.+AT. . . · · . · · . · ' · . · .· ·
. .. . . .. . · ~.
'
. . .
Sunday at noon at Jack's Club
'
intersection of SR 7 and 143.
BLUE BONNET
, I'
Three guest speakers. Open
'
. .)'
to public.
' ·
.-.:lL c.,_ --'-'11.. - - -

.

~'

..

:·

SPRAY ON COATING

$}09

... .' ' .. .... ... ' ..' ...... ' ~~·. · ~·.~··~·~·'ij'i' 'i'i""·:~·-~·~·~~·~=·~§··-·=-·~~·~~··

-

"- --.-.

-

...;l..

---

-

-·-

•

.......... .

Many disabled widows can
receiv e Soc ial Security
Checks at age 50 on their late
I'·
husbands' work record .

No. 125

16 oz. btl.

•

I' .

1: .

As of June 30, 1975 there
were 47.2 million Medicare
beneficiaries.

$ 19

Coupon Expires Nov. 13, 1976
.

Twin City Gateway

.1·

., .'. .

.• JI I'. .
•I

»4i

• '

....... .

~·~··~·~..~·~··~·~..~·~··~·~·~·~·~
·~:· ~
~~ w .,. · ~·~·~·~·~·~·~·e·~··~·~·~·~·~
a

tJ.

NQ. 75

.. : 1:
. ·I

..

MARGARINE

&gt;I
. I

Yl/~

.

.

.,

.W OO LITE

PI A TANDY CORPORATION COMMNY

39¢

B oz .

Homogenized MilkJUG

-

TO THE VOTERS OF MEIGS
COUNTY FOR YOUR RECENT
VOTE OF CONFIDENCE.

ELEANOR ROBSON·,
RECORDER

3· DI AMOND BRAND .

RICH WH.IP FROZEN

&gt;'[ :.

."

4

PKG . .

ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX

~.~· 99~0·10~5

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY ... STORES NOW OPEN LATE NIGHTS .'TIL CHRISTMAS!

I LB.

"FIVE ON SfAGE ," a concert group combining singing and .actlng in u program sure
to please lovers of the muslcalthe~~tre, will perfonn In Gallipolis Sunday , Nov. 14, 3 p.m. at
the Gallia Academy High School auditorium. The Tri.Coun ty Community Concert
Association is spoosarlng ll)e concert as part of its 1976-77 season . Members of the group
(not pictured in order ) are BeverlYMyers, soprlll\o; Ann Goodson , mezzo..soprano; Peter .
Schroeder, baritone; Michael Handy, tenor and Robert Wallace, accompanist.

BOOT SHOP

•••

8-CHANNEl VHF -HI
CAR" ( HOME SCANNER .

90 MIN .
Reg. 2.09

TOP ARTISTS!
MAJOR LABELS!

AM ·FM STEREO
S-TRACK PLAYER

01·

44·841

PRE -RECORDED
CASSETTES

. SAVE 20%

Ornw vP.U•I l)l.iln~ ,., ~,. ar,o

'W PAICE

fi~1r ~ ~\bUJJfs

I '

DAN'S

SPECIAL PURCHASE

R t.:q 1199 5

~"''~~

,t Vd •l.il llli • 0U i d • l ~ Jl y o•u ' IWd&lt;IJ.I \I &lt;•'"

11J002 1~23

pe rce nt s1gn c llang c ;mU rn01e' Fully
ildclressabl e memory le ts you carry on two

12· 1843

R~rl • o

BLANK REALISTIC
CASSETTES

Our handy EC ·380 pe rlorms sq uare root

FLU SH
MOUN T

AI Radio Shack
Th o•w IINl ' 1 rmJ•l ~ il&lt;(.il ~'t' n o.J n u !I'U d.l p.t&lt;lo cr par rn g

.199

60 MIN .
Rcq 1 59

L

Calendar

CHARGE IT

NO DEAlfRS PLEASE!

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FO OD STAMPS

'·.«~·.'.·,:

SAVE 5 20

BOMIN
Reg. 2.49

SAVE 25%

17.~~

" HARD COPY "
PRINTOUT
BATTERY·AC
CAlCULATOR

Fln ur / Si w lf s,,,;,,l..-r

S~sw,. u; Wrtlo 8 W(m/"' '" " ' 7w"" '"''
• R!lilh St •t L ob /4 C h;IIIYt!• Wr OI
E/lr/1r1c.tl Sly/'" M. lfl"" ' ' c C ,/l/r lllffH 1

SAVE 28%

SAVE 5 20

v,,,.,u

Rect" ~ "''

QUANTI.TY RIGHTS
RESERVED

Kentucky is speaker's topic

SAVES40

Enj oy your TRC·30A at home . a l lhe
• off ice and in be lween' Ou tstandi ng
. fe alures 1nc lude 23 ch annels. a ll
crysta ls up -front speaker illuminated
Si RF me te r and channe l se le c tor . AC ·
a nd DC power cables. dynamic m1ke
a nd mount. Drive home a barga in at
The Shac k ' 1

Pncc

6 19 80

Removing red clay
from cement porch

•~-------··

a

·. YOUR CHOICE

REALISTIC
MOBILE
OR B-ASE
CB RADIO

To 1a1 Ae 9u la r

Tolal Regu lar
Price ·

Polly's Pointers

DEAR POLLY - Now that
we wear so much double knit
clothing, there are frequent
pulled threads to cope with. 1
find putting a needle threader
through from the inside to
catch the pulled thread, and
then pulling it to the inside,
makes it scarcely noticeable.

a

21· 143

c,,,,rf,,,..

, POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - While we
were building our new home,
clay was tracked in on the
cement P.rch and stained it. I
have tried using some
household cleaners, but they
did not help. Please tell me
how to remove these stainS.
- NELLIE.
DEAR NEU.IE- Perhaps
some of the readers Uving In
areas where red clay ts
common can tell us how lhey
· remove such stains. This Is a
locali zed
and
very
speelalized problem. POLLY.

There· Is one. cautious
footnote to the Bengals '
p.layoff dreams. They've
never ~n able to win
playoff game. In 1970,
yo111g Cincinnati team was
sli)ltout IM by Baltimore. In
1973, Miami snared the
Bengals 3H6 and last year
Oakland won a 31-28 decision.

Reg . 159 .95

Sy .~ ft'lll .l Wol/1 10 W i!H it• • .mrl f 1~11 Mll/t, l i"l,.. lwt&lt;••lr•• .l ',
• Rt!II IIS/ IC Lolli 5-J C h,IIIJI"' Wrth $ I l 95 v .rlw·
D•:•IIIUIH/ fl!rJ)/o c/11 Stvlon

- MRS. B. G.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Mrs. F. M. how we solved
the problem of stains on my
older daughter's weddin g
,dress, so our younger
daughter could be married in
it. We appliqued cut-ou(s of
Alencon lace over the stains.
Tiny scissors enabled us to
cut out the designs of the re·
embroidered lace to make
these appliques the desired
shapes and sizes.- V. C.
DEAR POLLY - I was
interested in Mrs. F. M.'s
lett er a bout the wedding
dress. My daughter was
married in my 27-year-old
wedding dress that had spots
and stains on it. As crazy as
this sounds I put It through
the washer on the gentle
cycle, with regular soap suds
and, believe It or not, added a
bit of bleach. I pui it in the
dryer and it comes out
beautifully, even though It

wn lnu t veneer c ase '

SAVE

+++

'
By Polly Cramer

De ll a l1ne-tuning noise
blanker ANL
lll urrHnaled channe l
se lector and S/ RF
me ier. PA capab1 l1ty . 23
cha nn els . all crystals .
moun! an d power cable s
rnclu ded! Bac ked by ou r
16 yea rs of C.B
know- how and typ1 ca ll y
lowe r Rad10 Shack
pncr ng .

95

R eg

SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

•
•

21 · 153

REALISTIC R HIGH FIOELITV
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER

OPEN

I

Reg . 179.95

+++

9 AM TO 9 PM

that th!lse persona whose last
names begin with the letter A
through L attend the Wed·
nesday • clinic, and those
who.!e lasl names begin with
the letters Mthrough Z attend
oo Thul'llday. Those desiring
to get flu shots who are
without tra111portation to the
Center may caD !192-7886.

REALISTIC
PHONE-TYPE
MOBILE CB
RADIO

/

magne11c pllo n o 1npu 1 Ancl

MON. THRU SAT.

m.
Mrs. Thomas has asked

L

.

DEARHELEN AND SUE:
I taught Bible school this sununer to seventh graders. We
read some of our lessons out loud. I was extremelysurprised at
the simple words th~se young people were tripping over. Out of
10 kids, or1ly one read as if she recognized the words. I wonder
what other subjects they've been allowed to slough over in
schoo l.
One thing I noticed, however, was these pre-teens were well
versed on a subject I was quite dumb about until ! was so1,11e
six yea rs older· sex ..
I guess what they lack in reading ability, they make up
elsewhere! · MY 23 CENTS WORTH (I 'm entitled to a penny a
year )
DEAR23:
.; Why Johnny and Jane Can 't Read" is a continuing woi1fy
among parents· and teache1·s...
111e most obvious answer is, "Why shouid they, when the'y
can get it aU through television and other audi11-visual aids,
both in school and at home]:' .
We've become a.nation of lazy listeners, and that's a shame.
I wonder how m;my of us, young or old, could truthfully say
we've read 10 books this year] · HELENAND SUE

OEAI\ RAP :.
I'm wi th "Man' s Man" when he says women should not .be in
the traditionally ma.Je academies. They've got no business
training to lead men into battle when everyone knows we
aren't going to allow women to really fight. · AWOMAN

· Senior citizens
are
reminded by Mrs. EIWIOr
• · Thomu of the Meigs County
• Council 00 Aging that the
nine flu and VIctorian flu
;- Ylcclne 1!'IU be given at the
Senior Clllzena Center on
Nov. 17 andl8 beginning at 9
a.m. and continuing unW 2p,

=

TIMELY PRICE CUTS ON REGULAR STOCK TO EASE THE COST OF GIFT GIVING '

How can I make her see ] If she won't lis!en to her own hus·
band, do you thjnk she'll listento me I· M.F.T.A.
M.F.T.A.:
You're thinking, "What's hest for ME," but you should be
thinking, "What's best lor my parents. " If they're miserably
unhappy in a marriage that isn't right lor them then they're
better oil apart· even though you' d los~a loved stepdad. ·
Talk it over with him lirst: maybe y11u two can figure out a
way.to change things. Then when you approach your mother,
show her you want to help, not criticize.
But don 't expect a miracle. We kliow it's rough, living
Utrough two break-ups, but it's better than living on a battlegrowld.· HELENAND SUE

OPEN

_ at Sr. Center

PRE-

il~

49¢

i

Coupon Expires Nov . 13, 1976
City Gateway
. . .Twin
'
. . .
.

.. .

. .. . . ...

· · · • • • • · · • · · · · · · ..

•

•

•

•

0

•

�8- The DaUy Sentinel, Mi4dleix&gt;rt-PIII)eroy, 0., Thur8day, Nov. ll, 1976
~f=~~::::::::::::~;:~::::;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:::;:;:;;:~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::.~::::::::::-;::.o;;~;~;;;:;:;;;;;;~;;:;;:;:;:::;:::::.:~:~::::~:t:;~

;~;
~

·Generation Rap

~

t

By Bd•·n an~ Sue Boucl .

- - --.,---

~
I

She Sides With Stepfather
RAP:
My mother and stepfather are always arguing, and f'm
afraid they're headed lor divorce. I'd die if that happened, as I
love my stepdad very much, though J.muld never talk to my
mother. (They seem pretty miserable together.) She's the kind
of person that ill told ·her she was about to lose another great
guy because or her ways, she'd tell me "Shut up! " and slap

me.

-

CHRISTMAS

SAVE S100 . SAVE
seo
.(y')
·

+++

359 95

31 ·2063

OUI ST/\·90 lea lures two !ape momtors . lll· lo frl te r5. Pe rfecl
Lo udn ess" FM rnu 11 ng 111Puls and outpu ts lor 3 tape recorders

a. qenu 1ne

SAVE

RAP :
uMan's Man " burns me! So he doesn't want women in the
Air Force Academy, and thinks they should stay home where
they belong , being little housewives.
If such men would stop.Putting us down, tellinl( us we're in·
ferior, incapable, etc., maybe we wouldn' t be trying so hard to
prove to them that we 're often more capable than they are.
Women should do what they think they can do best. We don' t
RELONG anywhere, except where we please.· VERY UPSET

S180BO

517080

COMPLETE
STEREO
SYSTEM
PACKAGE I

COMPLETE
STEREO
SYSTEM
PACKAGE II

THE "DYNAMITE"
by D-...&amp;. • .: ·

n:::uw1n.

Brown
Also in
Silp·On

had way
tiny down
covered
all
the
the buttons
back. This
dress is a very heavy satin.
After it was washed, I ironed
It on the wrong side with a
wann but not hot Iron. MRS. J. H. R.
DEAR READERS - Mrs.
J.H.R.'s letter certainly
shows a lot of courage, but we
do not recommend that aU of
you with old wedding gowns
run out and wasb them. When
her dreu was made, satin
was different from loday's
aalln. It might wash, but
more Ukely a new satin dreaa
would noI. There might ' be
some fabrics thai would take
to genlle washing alter a
careful testing. :._ POLLY.
Hospital Insurance under
Medicare pays for X·rays
used for diagnosis or treat·
ment of an illness.

TRC-56 OR TRC-30A

95

539.80
•

• R ,.,fl"l'c 5 {A 9U 4M I M S tr• r r•n Rr•o tl' ""' '
• rwu Op imw _, /8 W10/nul Vr'""''' f"lliUI Sht•/1 Sl'"·'~ " '

H~, , r,r,.

S f A 9Q AM FM St.:r" u

• fw" MC / 0{10 Will" "'

I

rf-·~::L

·-r!;i''~i.

POCKET SIZE --~
CALCULATOR I"''
WITH
MEMORY
Reg 2d 9 5

SAVE 20%
REALIST!~

BLANK
8-TRACKS
40 MIN
Reg 1;99

·BLACK
WELLINGTON

·-·
'

1

59
44-840

Snan

ca lcu laii Oils a l o11ce On ly 5' ,xJx 1 Batler y
lllC iuded

...,..,
'"

.•.

'•• .

Reg . 119 95

SAVE 20
5

B-CHANNEl VHF-HI &amp; lO
CAR" / HOME SCANNER

• A s A!Jove, But

Au l h&lt;nli " '~

NEW!
MOTORIZED
DISAPPEARING
CB ANTENNA

'\. -~
~.

S UR FACE
MOUNT

.\'

, 5995

~. '\

12·1844

SAVE

15%

Pair

-

HORN TWEETER

,.,,

·'.

Acg

9 95
'

795

Reg.

119 95

40· 1228

13%
POCKET
A1\~ - FIM RADIO
Reg . 14.9 5

'1288

12·635

REALISTIC
CASSETTE
RECORDER

sss
12 - 140&lt;1

~·

I

·~

Reg

79 95

5995

.

WALKIE-TALKIE

BATTERY-AC
5-BANO R4DIO

29921·1156

3·99

.

~t•••vn;;, t ~

-- ;

c..

.,

RACINE CARPET SHOP

/

16 95
:::J/

22-127

...••

·-..

11

CB - Deters Thflft!

...

37%

PUSH ON/OFF
DIMMER
SWITCH
Reg.

4.99

w

.BEGINNER' S
MORSE CODE KEY

399
61 · 2699

12· 7t1

-

SAVE

RACINE, 0.

THANK YO.UI

PRIVATE TV LISTENEI

• Nobody Know s

You Have

949-2814

'

• 33" Whip Retra c ts Into Fender!

Reg . 69 .95

4' 995

'

SAVE 11%

21 ·970

SAVE20% .
SAVE s20

Reg.

.'

•

."

\

14-836

SAVE 25%
ANTENNA

toYourHouae

Cover s

r· t:~::: .

STANDARD 12VOLT
POWER
Reg
19
95
SUPPLY

.I.] ' .·.

Reg
14 9 5

Al~·o

Mobile

•

VH F_·LO Btmd From 30-50 MHz !

:

AUTO -SPEAKERS

Socl"al

were described
Hampton.
She toldby ofMrs.
the ••
dense stands of hickory,
walnut and the now-extinct· ~
American chestnut trees ~
which covered the hillsides. ~:
She described the two kinds ~
of coal mines in production at ·
. TBURSDAY
the time she lived in Ken·
LAUREL CLIFF Better
tucky being the . drift and Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
shaft mine.
night at the home of Mrs.
If the coal was not deep, Madel in Chaffin .
miners could dig a .tuMel into
Welt Construction
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
the side of a hill or mountain 7:30 p.m. Thursday with Mrs.
Cushion Insole
and find the layers of coal. Avanell Holliday, delegate to
The men rode lo work in the Ohio State Grange, giving
smaU cars pulled by ponies. her report .
Mined coal was brought to the
OHIO VALLEY Junior
In Middleport
outside In the same manner.
Grange
will meet 7:30 p,rn .
Open
Mrs. Hampton said a shaft
Thursday
· at Letart Falls
. thru Sal.
mtne was necessary if the
Community
Hall . New
coal was quite deep. In this
members welcome and wiU
be considered charte r
members; officers will be
elected. Children from five to
15 invited to join. For more
information call, Mrs .
Florence Smith, · Apple
Grove.
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at Thrift Shop, across from
Pomeroy Post Office; public
we1come.
CATHOUC Women's Club
Thursday. Mass at 7:30p.m.
Facttory\
Hostesses are Dorothy Rife,
Rhoda Hackett, Diane
Bartels and Paula Good.
Cuatomlztfd to your
PRECEPTOR Bela Beta
home at the job 1lte.
Sorority tea Thursday 8 p.m.
8atlafactlon ,juirantHd.
home of Roberta O'Brien.
Ann Rupe program chair·
Por l'lllll!ltlmate
man. Hosted by social
Now •••
committee.
OHIO Valley Grange 2612
Letart Falls, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. Potluck refreshments.

·- From Our

129~~

'"

Su UU·' S l &gt;l ii!S . l ll{ j Li&gt;&lt; . •JI II•P s M;i~ l:l!!
Un l aw ! u l "' HPqu or •• ,, P P rrm l C: huc~o.. \N1 !h l oJ r: tl

SAVE 20%
5Y4' OUAL·CONE

..

'.

Reg 149 .95

2~?a1~A.

Mrs. Lula Hampton of type of mine, men ~ad to get
Pomeroy , who lived in into an elevator bucket and
Kentucky when she was ride far below the surface of
young, spoke to Mrs. Mary the ground to work. Coal was
Hysell's llfth grade of brought to the top in the
Pomeroy Elementary school same kind of elevator.
Fdday on the topic of the
Mrs. Susan Oliver, a staff
natural resources of that member of the Retired Senior
state.
Volunteer Prog ram, acThe same hardwood forests companied Mrs. Hampton to
and fertile lands which led the school.
Daniel Boone and his men to
carve . Wilderness Road, by
way of Cwnberland Gap, :~:,~:::*".S~::x::.~~»'-*t:~.~'*'lt.~:·

SEAMLESS ALUMINUM
GUTTERING

• Scans and Lochs-On Active Polic8 , Fire. Weather.
VHF M arine and Emergen cy Commun ica tio ns From 148-174 MHzl

. Muh• h ! u~ u

.i

I WOULD LIKE TO THANK 'THE
VOTERS OF MEIGS COUNTY
FOR THEIR SUPPORT

.

-

·~

Most •ttJms al•o &lt;heotlabl•
i'll Radtc Shack Oealers .

THANKS

L.OQk f or th•s !l !ln

" ' your netRI'Iborh ood ,

FRIDAY
SQUARE Dance Friday nt
H~rrisonville Eleme ntary ·
School 8 to II p.m. Music by
String Dusters . Cake walks,
sandwiches and soft drinks.
Adults $1, children under 12
admitted free. Sponsored by·
Harrisonville Senior· Citizens
Club.
FELLOWSHIP meeti ng
now through Saturday at
Midway Church 7:30 p.m .
ni ghtl y. Different speaker
each evening. Public invited.
HOLIDAY Bazaar by
Chester Young Wives Club,
Friday and Saturday , 9:30
a.m . to 5:30p.m. at Masonic
Hall in Chester. Many
Christmas items and . bake
sale both days.
'PARTY for newly elected
candidates Frtday, 7 p.m. at
Democratic Headquarters ,
234 E. Main St., Pomeroy.
Refreshments, public invited.
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
th e American Revolution ,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the home
of Mrs. Patrick Lochary with
Mrs. A. R. Knight and Mrs.
Edis.on.· Hobstetter co·
hostesses. Mrs. Nan Moore to
give a program on colon ial
literature .
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
Trinity Church, 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the churcli.
MARY SHRINE, Order of
th e White Shrine of
Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at
the Pomeroy Masoni c
Temple. Rehearsal will be
heJd.for ceremonial to be held
in December.
Racine
members to serve refreshments.
SATURDAY
CELEBRATION marking
Racine becoming bicert·
tennial community starting
1:30 p.m. Saturday i n front of
Southern High School,
Racine, and a program inside
the school at 2 with Judge
Darrell R. Hottle, common
pleas judge of Highland
County, speaking.
THANKSGIVING Dinner
Saturday at Modern Wood·
men Camp 7230 at hall in
Burlingham, 7:30p.m. Meal
and beverage will be
provided. Members to bring
covered dish. Door prizes for
adults. and jmliors. Short
bUsiness meeting following
dinner . AU members and
families are welcome.
RACINE PTO fall festival
Saturday. Soup supper at5: 30
and games at 6:30 p.m .
Everyone welcome.
SOUP SUPPER and bazaar
at St. Paul's United
Methodist Church ann ex,
Saturday, beginning at 4:30

"' "

""'
· ''lo

'"

DESSERT
TOPPING
~OOOHWN ~

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

'·

Cln.

GAL.

MANDARIN
ORANGES

.....:c·

JAMES E.- ROUSH

l · ll

VAN CAMP'S

FROZEN
SUPPERS

PORK and
BEANS

99¢

7 LB .
BOX

...GOOIJ lOR wtJ &amp; YOUR BUXET

CANS

GRAPEFRUIT

bag

3-0IAMOND BRAND

FURNITURE ·
POLISH

69¢

51b.

Hrg .
Lemon
Or Nutnrol

$} 00

3 NO. 2

PLEDGE
FLOR IDA SEEDLESS WHITE

oz$100

Cans

BANQUET

I.GE .

711Z.69¢

Cnn

PINEAPPLE
CRUSHED,

SLICED,
CHUNK
2· 20 oz.

GOLDEN RIPE

5 lb.

BANANAS
ROME BEAUTY
· 3 lb. bag
APPLES

WISK
LIQUID DETERGENT

No. 105
32 oz. size

3 oz. cello bag

W!C

Coupon Expires Nov. 13, 1976
Twin City r.~t........
COUPON

j
CO UP ON

BETTYCROCKER

CHARMS

BISQUICK
No. 125
40 oz. box

79~

CEREAL

W/C

No. 205
20 oz. box

$109

W/C

Coupon EXI&gt;ir&lt;&gt;&lt;
Twin

p.m.

. . .

..

---- -,-.1
.' . '
'
COUPON
,... 4
FALL Festival Saturday at
"' . . . . . . . . ·I
CO UPO N
Salisbury School. Begins at 5
BEm CROCKER
· :1
p.m. games at 6:30. Spon·
PAM
..
I ..
sored by PTO. Public Invited.
SOUP DINNER Saturday I • •
1: •
. ·P..
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Fire Station. Mellll
' :1 . :
No. 105
Includes soup, hamburgers,
. .I . .
W
/C
W/C
hot dogs, and' french fries.
No. 125
15. oz. box
Eat In or take home. Must
.. .·I ,.' ' 13 oz. can ·
provide own containers for
soup. Sponsored by Mid·
Coup on Ex pires Nov. n ; 1976
· ·
.
'
dleport Fire Department.
•
Twin Cit y Gateway
: .I, : ·
Coupon Exp.1res Nov. )3, 1976
Ladies,AuxUiary will sponsor · · · · · · · · · • · · · · . . . . . . . . . . . .·r . ·
.
Twm C1ty Gateway
.
a bake sale.
".]lk~l1
,
- ~--,.. ____.,,_
""""""""'~~!!"""' • · · · · · · · · · . ... . mUUU?-.~
SUNDAY
i'
~
.• ' . . . . . •
....... ... ....... ...... ....._ .•~
--"---~....
....
- - li
BLACK LUNG Assn. . . . .. . . . . . .
m .v.+AT. . . · · . · · . · ' · . · .· ·
. .. . . .. . · ~.
'
. . .
Sunday at noon at Jack's Club
'
intersection of SR 7 and 143.
BLUE BONNET
, I'
Three guest speakers. Open
'
. .)'
to public.
' ·
.-.:lL c.,_ --'-'11.. - - -

.

~'

..

:·

SPRAY ON COATING

$}09

... .' ' .. .... ... ' ..' ...... ' ~~·. · ~·.~··~·~·'ij'i' 'i'i""·:~·-~·~·~~·~=·~§··-·=-·~~·~~··

-

"- --.-.

-

...;l..

---

-

-·-

•

.......... .

Many disabled widows can
receiv e Soc ial Security
Checks at age 50 on their late
I'·
husbands' work record .

No. 125

16 oz. btl.

•

I' .

1: .

As of June 30, 1975 there
were 47.2 million Medicare
beneficiaries.

$ 19

Coupon Expires Nov. 13, 1976
.

Twin City Gateway

.1·

., .'. .

.• JI I'. .
•I

»4i

• '

....... .

~·~··~·~..~·~··~·~..~·~··~·~·~·~·~
·~:· ~
~~ w .,. · ~·~·~·~·~·~·~·e·~··~·~·~·~·~
a

tJ.

NQ. 75

.. : 1:
. ·I

..

MARGARINE

&gt;I
. I

Yl/~

.

.

.,

.W OO LITE

PI A TANDY CORPORATION COMMNY

39¢

B oz .

Homogenized MilkJUG

-

TO THE VOTERS OF MEIGS
COUNTY FOR YOUR RECENT
VOTE OF CONFIDENCE.

ELEANOR ROBSON·,
RECORDER

3· DI AMOND BRAND .

RICH WH.IP FROZEN

&gt;'[ :.

."

4

PKG . .

ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX

~.~· 99~0·10~5

SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY ... STORES NOW OPEN LATE NIGHTS .'TIL CHRISTMAS!

I LB.

"FIVE ON SfAGE ," a concert group combining singing and .actlng in u program sure
to please lovers of the muslcalthe~~tre, will perfonn In Gallipolis Sunday , Nov. 14, 3 p.m. at
the Gallia Academy High School auditorium. The Tri.Coun ty Community Concert
Association is spoosarlng ll)e concert as part of its 1976-77 season . Members of the group
(not pictured in order ) are BeverlYMyers, soprlll\o; Ann Goodson , mezzo..soprano; Peter .
Schroeder, baritone; Michael Handy, tenor and Robert Wallace, accompanist.

BOOT SHOP

•••

8-CHANNEl VHF -HI
CAR" ( HOME SCANNER .

90 MIN .
Reg. 2.09

TOP ARTISTS!
MAJOR LABELS!

AM ·FM STEREO
S-TRACK PLAYER

01·

44·841

PRE -RECORDED
CASSETTES

. SAVE 20%

Ornw vP.U•I l)l.iln~ ,., ~,. ar,o

'W PAICE

fi~1r ~ ~\bUJJfs

I '

DAN'S

SPECIAL PURCHASE

R t.:q 1199 5

~"''~~

,t Vd •l.il llli • 0U i d • l ~ Jl y o•u ' IWd&lt;IJ.I \I &lt;•'"

11J002 1~23

pe rce nt s1gn c llang c ;mU rn01e' Fully
ildclressabl e memory le ts you carry on two

12· 1843

R~rl • o

BLANK REALISTIC
CASSETTES

Our handy EC ·380 pe rlorms sq uare root

FLU SH
MOUN T

AI Radio Shack
Th o•w IINl ' 1 rmJ•l ~ il&lt;(.il ~'t' n o.J n u !I'U d.l p.t&lt;lo cr par rn g

.199

60 MIN .
Rcq 1 59

L

Calendar

CHARGE IT

NO DEAlfRS PLEASE!

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FO OD STAMPS

'·.«~·.'.·,:

SAVE 5 20

BOMIN
Reg. 2.49

SAVE 25%

17.~~

" HARD COPY "
PRINTOUT
BATTERY·AC
CAlCULATOR

Fln ur / Si w lf s,,,;,,l..-r

S~sw,. u; Wrtlo 8 W(m/"' '" " ' 7w"" '"''
• R!lilh St •t L ob /4 C h;IIIYt!• Wr OI
E/lr/1r1c.tl Sly/'" M. lfl"" ' ' c C ,/l/r lllffH 1

SAVE 28%

SAVE 5 20

v,,,.,u

Rect" ~ "''

QUANTI.TY RIGHTS
RESERVED

Kentucky is speaker's topic

SAVES40

Enj oy your TRC·30A at home . a l lhe
• off ice and in be lween' Ou tstandi ng
. fe alures 1nc lude 23 ch annels. a ll
crysta ls up -front speaker illuminated
Si RF me te r and channe l se le c tor . AC ·
a nd DC power cables. dynamic m1ke
a nd mount. Drive home a barga in at
The Shac k ' 1

Pncc

6 19 80

Removing red clay
from cement porch

•~-------··

a

·. YOUR CHOICE

REALISTIC
MOBILE
OR B-ASE
CB RADIO

To 1a1 Ae 9u la r

Tolal Regu lar
Price ·

Polly's Pointers

DEAR POLLY - Now that
we wear so much double knit
clothing, there are frequent
pulled threads to cope with. 1
find putting a needle threader
through from the inside to
catch the pulled thread, and
then pulling it to the inside,
makes it scarcely noticeable.

a

21· 143

c,,,,rf,,,..

, POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - While we
were building our new home,
clay was tracked in on the
cement P.rch and stained it. I
have tried using some
household cleaners, but they
did not help. Please tell me
how to remove these stainS.
- NELLIE.
DEAR NEU.IE- Perhaps
some of the readers Uving In
areas where red clay ts
common can tell us how lhey
· remove such stains. This Is a
locali zed
and
very
speelalized problem. POLLY.

There· Is one. cautious
footnote to the Bengals '
p.layoff dreams. They've
never ~n able to win
playoff game. In 1970,
yo111g Cincinnati team was
sli)ltout IM by Baltimore. In
1973, Miami snared the
Bengals 3H6 and last year
Oakland won a 31-28 decision.

Reg . 159 .95

Sy .~ ft'lll .l Wol/1 10 W i!H it• • .mrl f 1~11 Mll/t, l i"l,.. lwt&lt;••lr•• .l ',
• Rt!II IIS/ IC Lolli 5-J C h,IIIJI"' Wrth $ I l 95 v .rlw·
D•:•IIIUIH/ fl!rJ)/o c/11 Stvlon

- MRS. B. G.
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Mrs. F. M. how we solved
the problem of stains on my
older daughter's weddin g
,dress, so our younger
daughter could be married in
it. We appliqued cut-ou(s of
Alencon lace over the stains.
Tiny scissors enabled us to
cut out the designs of the re·
embroidered lace to make
these appliques the desired
shapes and sizes.- V. C.
DEAR POLLY - I was
interested in Mrs. F. M.'s
lett er a bout the wedding
dress. My daughter was
married in my 27-year-old
wedding dress that had spots
and stains on it. As crazy as
this sounds I put It through
the washer on the gentle
cycle, with regular soap suds
and, believe It or not, added a
bit of bleach. I pui it in the
dryer and it comes out
beautifully, even though It

wn lnu t veneer c ase '

SAVE

+++

'
By Polly Cramer

De ll a l1ne-tuning noise
blanker ANL
lll urrHnaled channe l
se lector and S/ RF
me ier. PA capab1 l1ty . 23
cha nn els . all crystals .
moun! an d power cable s
rnclu ded! Bac ked by ou r
16 yea rs of C.B
know- how and typ1 ca ll y
lowe r Rad10 Shack
pncr ng .

95

R eg

SUNDAY 9 AM TO 6 PM

•
•

21 · 153

REALISTIC R HIGH FIOELITV
AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER

OPEN

I

Reg . 179.95

+++

9 AM TO 9 PM

that th!lse persona whose last
names begin with the letter A
through L attend the Wed·
nesday • clinic, and those
who.!e lasl names begin with
the letters Mthrough Z attend
oo Thul'llday. Those desiring
to get flu shots who are
without tra111portation to the
Center may caD !192-7886.

REALISTIC
PHONE-TYPE
MOBILE CB
RADIO

/

magne11c pllo n o 1npu 1 Ancl

MON. THRU SAT.

m.
Mrs. Thomas has asked

L

.

DEARHELEN AND SUE:
I taught Bible school this sununer to seventh graders. We
read some of our lessons out loud. I was extremelysurprised at
the simple words th~se young people were tripping over. Out of
10 kids, or1ly one read as if she recognized the words. I wonder
what other subjects they've been allowed to slough over in
schoo l.
One thing I noticed, however, was these pre-teens were well
versed on a subject I was quite dumb about until ! was so1,11e
six yea rs older· sex ..
I guess what they lack in reading ability, they make up
elsewhere! · MY 23 CENTS WORTH (I 'm entitled to a penny a
year )
DEAR23:
.; Why Johnny and Jane Can 't Read" is a continuing woi1fy
among parents· and teache1·s...
111e most obvious answer is, "Why shouid they, when the'y
can get it aU through television and other audi11-visual aids,
both in school and at home]:' .
We've become a.nation of lazy listeners, and that's a shame.
I wonder how m;my of us, young or old, could truthfully say
we've read 10 books this year] · HELENAND SUE

OEAI\ RAP :.
I'm wi th "Man' s Man" when he says women should not .be in
the traditionally ma.Je academies. They've got no business
training to lead men into battle when everyone knows we
aren't going to allow women to really fight. · AWOMAN

· Senior citizens
are
reminded by Mrs. EIWIOr
• · Thomu of the Meigs County
• Council 00 Aging that the
nine flu and VIctorian flu
;- Ylcclne 1!'IU be given at the
Senior Clllzena Center on
Nov. 17 andl8 beginning at 9
a.m. and continuing unW 2p,

=

TIMELY PRICE CUTS ON REGULAR STOCK TO EASE THE COST OF GIFT GIVING '

How can I make her see ] If she won't lis!en to her own hus·
band, do you thjnk she'll listento me I· M.F.T.A.
M.F.T.A.:
You're thinking, "What's hest for ME," but you should be
thinking, "What's best lor my parents. " If they're miserably
unhappy in a marriage that isn't right lor them then they're
better oil apart· even though you' d los~a loved stepdad. ·
Talk it over with him lirst: maybe y11u two can figure out a
way.to change things. Then when you approach your mother,
show her you want to help, not criticize.
But don 't expect a miracle. We kliow it's rough, living
Utrough two break-ups, but it's better than living on a battlegrowld.· HELENAND SUE

OPEN

_ at Sr. Center

PRE-

il~

49¢

i

Coupon Expires Nov . 13, 1976
City Gateway
. . .Twin
'
. . .
.

.. .

. .. . . ...

· · · • • • • · · • · · · · · · ..

•

•

•

•

0

•

�11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. ll , 1976

Television log for easy viewing

DICK TRACY

"
THURSDAY , NOVEMBER 11.1971
s »-News 6; Family Affa ir 8; Elec. Co. 20,331 Adam.

7.31).-Hollywood Squares 3; Ohio }late Lott•ry 61
Price Is Righi 8, Mac Neii-Lehrere lleoort 20,331
Wild Ki ngdom 10. N..hvllleontheRoad 13l':lolly IS.

~

12 13

6·tl0-News 3.4.6.8,10,13,15; ABC New s 6; Zoom 20:

8:tl0-D ick Van Dyke 3, 4,1 S, Welcome Back. Kotter
6, 13, Waltons 8, 10; VIsions 20; Ma•terploce Thea tre

Cons u mer Exper ience 33.

TOM RUE MOTOR$
1975LUV PICKUP
EXPERIENCED, young , single per·

so n

as

baby s itte r

housekeeper, separate hvmg
quarters expen ses . salary and
excellen t fnnge benefits. Col '
(~ ) 863 ·6088after6p

m

With 1opper, low mileage, f"ad lo ,

,
w-w tire~ .

Sl195

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

$3995

Local 1 owner car. green finish , green viny l roof, radial
w w tires, air conditioning , V-B, with automatic power
steering ~nd brakes.

1974 DATSUN
CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)

OLD furniture. Ice boxes. brou
wall tehtphones and
porh. or complee households
Write M. D. Miller , Rt . _. ,
Pomeroy . Oh1o Co ll 992-7760

benel tcml co ul d result

CASH potd lor a ll makes one
model s of mob ile homes
Phone a rea code 614·423-9531

LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Two per -

you

NOTICES
ATTN : tl

ALL HOUSEWIVU

VIRGO (Aug . 23 .~ Sepl . 22) Pa ls
put a lo t mo re stock m your
words today than you rea lize lt"s
b ecause lh ey k no w you r 8d 11 Ic e
1S soun d and based upo n 8 1(·
per1ence
L. IBRA (Sept. 23· 0el. 23) Do n't
lntter your 11me away toda y o n
mtnor 1ssues Pick a plu m a t re al
1mporta nce. Think. btg

A.ll Yard Sales , Rummage ,
Porch en d Basemen t Porch
end Basement Sales, etc
mu s t b• Pl ld in ed1111n c e .
Get vours In early by
s topping by o ur offi ce at
The Da llv s ent ine l. 111
Co urt St . or wr it ing Bo x
129, Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
w ith you r r emi ttanc e·.
,\..._...:__ _ _ _...:__ _....J

TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest P(o·
duct s. Top priCe fo r s tanding
sawtimber Coli Ken t Hanby ,
1·446-8570

1&lt;2-2331..
WANTED OLD upr1g ht pianos in
any cond 1t1on Will pay $10
ea ch Fi rst fl oor only Wnte QIV·
mg d1re ct1ons to W1t1 en P1 ono
Co
Bo" 188 Sardis, O h1o
-43946

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)

Dea lmgs lo d ay with partn e rs or l wont to thank the girl. who ever
she wa s. who too~ core of
as sooa les s ho uld be lortunale
R1 cky Wil son aher the cor
to r all co ncerned especi&amp;lly tf
wreck otluppen Plains Sotur·
yo u re 1nvol11ed wtth people you
day night and also anyo ne
feel are lucky
who he lped Do nd ld Eynon , Jr
SAGITTARIUS(Nov.23-Doc. 21) ~ondrno ther . Wilma Eynon
J o 1n l vent ur es a ft e r m ore
promi se to r you today lhan wha t
Wdl do odd 1obs , roof1ng , ptun·
you 'd do on yo u r own Co n can.~
ling gutter wo rk Phone 992·
Irate on Si tuatiOns whe re you THE RACIN E Fire Deportment w1ll
7409
s ha re an ln lerest
ho'le a gun shoot Satu rday at WILL DO bu1ldmg a nd remodel·
6 30 p m at the ir bu1l d1 ng m
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon . 18)
mg rool mg plumb1ng fu r·
Ba ! hon:;.:_
Brea ~ up your rout ine a bit at
no~;; e rv patr , gas o r oil general
this ttme Pursue a fun tnterest NOW oc ce pl tng p1ano st udent s,
repo1r Free e stimates and
with people you hke The cha nge
reas on able role s . Phone
beg inne rs mtermed1o tes ad ·
Charles Sfnclo1r (61.ol ) 985·4121
wtll do you a wo rld of good
vonce d students Coli
992 or 99'2 -2221
2270.

______

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Ftb. 19)

NEW HOURS a t Helen"s Beauty WILL DO bobys111ing, Monday
thru Fr~dcy Phone992·613.oi ~Solo n, Po meroy Tuesday thru
today whore wor k or career ts
Fnday . 8 30 tdl ? Saturday 8·30 Will DO HOUSE cleaning Call
concerned A good day to ap1,11 12 Call fa , appomtmenl ,
proac h tne boss for a ra1se If yo u
oher bpm 7422152.
992 -2890 Wa lk-ms we lcome
~--·
!eel you deserve It
Helen . Bel1ndoand Adell
There 15 opportuntty abo ut you

.

---

Through a fn end you may learn INTERVIEWS wdl be he ld Mndoy Bti'~@!iiiiiiiffi,.
Nov. 22 , 1976 startmg ot I I 00
of so rn elt11 ng t od ay tha t ' s
o m o clock in the off ice of the SMALL BUSINESS' tdeol for cou
somewha t specu lativ e yet not all
pi e Re a son lor selling , ieov·
Me 1gs County Comm iSS io ners.
th at far ou t Stu d y 11 ca ref ully. It
mg stole . Phon e 985 3306 .
Co urt Hou se , Pomeroy, O h1o
--~-m ay bo worth a lly e t
fo r orcl-utec ts who ore on the
appro ved list of State Ar ·
cl'utocts (Pub lic Wo rk s State of
Oh1o ) fo r the proposad multipurp os e fo ctl1ty fo r Me1gs MOBI~E home fo r s o le or rent 3
bedrooms , o l utihlles po1d
Co unty Plea se collier oppomf·
Phone 992 -7751
men! , 992 2895.
Nov. 12, 1976
8w35 EBER Liner, full~ furn ished .
Thi s ye a r you may form s ome
gas forced o~r furna ce , very
very bene ftcia t a llianc e s
cl ean
Con be seen at
Par lne rs co ul d play a he lpf ul
K~ngsbury Home Soles, 1100 E
ro le , so selec t associates 11ery
lt·Mom St, Pomeroy
wi sely
1975 TRAILER lo r sole 12x65 fur (Are you a Scorpto 7 Bermce
flls hed w1th olr condition ing .
Osol has wr men a spec1£JI A s tra ~
$8,000 Phone 992 ·3333
Graph Le tter for you For your
copy send 50 cents and a s elf~
DOUBLE WIDE mobile hqme , 24x ·
60 , m Syracuse on 190x5S lo t
addressed stamped envelope to
Total electric for lnformal10 n,
As tro -G ra ph, P 0 Box 489,
coll992 7.ol83
Radio C1ty Starton. New York.
O.llia County Gun Club,
NY 100 19 Be sure to ask lor
Buck Ridge, Olf R1 35.
Scorpio Volume 1 )

PISCES '(Fob. 20·Morch 20)

··

--

~Your

~Birthday

ANNUAL

TURKEi SHOOT
Stationary Trap
SUnday, Nov. 14

Otester

POM~!~!v~~!f!~ CO. ti'
P~ME.RQ_Y,OHIO
\!!:1
t97S MONTE CARLO. outomottc,
powe r 5teermg, powar brakes ,
01r e: ond1hon1ng. AM radio and
stereo, rally wheels , w1ll sell
reasonable Pho ne992-7036
1969 Novo e xtra sharp, new
pomt buckat saots, o1r shocks ,
mag s Phone 949-2.180
1975 FORD PIN TO Stot1on Wagon,
V-6, automatic transmiSSIOn
Also , 1964 Che"y Impala con ·
verttble, 283 cu. In engine,
standard tronsm1u10n See ol
- 873 South
__ ,_ Second,- M1dd leport
- .
1~72

CHEVY Von , V 8 outomollc
transmiSSIOn p s Phone 992·

7689 .
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA Hlp .
viny l roof, rodtol ltres , p.w
p s.
p.b .. Atr conditi on
1ng .t w , low mileage One
owner . Phone Fred Colburn .
Shade : Ohto {614 ) 696- IIOS

LOCUST POSTS , round or spht
Phone 9&lt;49-2n4 .

943·2254 .
COAL for sole , Open 6 days per
week ond evenings For further
mformatlon call (614) 367 7338.

APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (61&lt;) 669·318S

2704 .
197.4 Volkswagen , sunroof , rodto,
lo w mileage Good cond1110n .
gold Phone Bud W1lson , 992·

1283.
1974 Jeep Renegade . 10 000
m1les. e)( tro mea 1976 Mustang
Co bro II , 6,000 m1 les all power .
V·6 auto . o1r cond1t1oned
Phone 7-42 -3072 .

.1969LTD Coll992 6137.
1968 CATALINA. eMcellent cond1
ho n Phone 9.4'1-2319
1967 CAMARO, 283 Corvette
en gt ne , 350 hydro -mofl &lt;t
tronsm1SS10n 'Good shape as~
mg $800 Phone 992-7360 or
992 -3'114 4i'fter 5 p.m
1971 Che~Jrolet statiOn wagon 9
pauenger m good cond1flon 1
Phone 992 -5623.

General Ele ctric cloth'" dryer
like new Wh1te , CAll (614) 367

1:

.

6.95

Square Yird lnlltollod
David P1r10n1, OWner

CODNER'S

CAMPERS

Rlinbow Ridge
Buhan Area
Long: Bottom , Ohio
Showing
Swiss Colony ,
M1pie Leaf , Plavmor.
Cricket
Sales , rental.
service , supp lies Trave l
trailers , truck campers ,
camp ing trailers, truck
caps Spe c 1al Saturday
nights Open evenmgs or bV
appoin t ment , contact
Robert Codner
( 10 11 lmo pd .l

sizes.

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
f1ncy prints, accessories :

.J2

pet. off on

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES'
-- m M&lt;iln Stroel

ALLEYOOP
GOTl'A
FOllOW 11115 Mt:AT·
SALL ALL TH' WAY

18 FT Twihght camper . self ·
conto1ned. sleeps 6, has olf
condi!IOf'ler and furnace Call
992-7315
'

Phane "2-5776
5-rracuu, Ohio

INltl "TOWN!!

543•.

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
large lots wtlh concrete patios.
udewolks , ru nners and olf
street porkmg Phone 992-7.ol79
Tro1ler , adults only Co11992-7639
arm 3181'
FURNISHED two bedroom opt
adults only. No pels (¥\id·
dleporl . Phone 992 -3874
2 bedroom trailer , $28 per week. ,
oil utilities paid. Phone 992

332•
2 bedroom unfurnished opt. in
Middleport . Phone 992-3129 or

992-5.1:1&lt;
POMEROY · good qu1et location. 6
rms . breakfast room , bose·
ment . _gas furnace , garage ,
$90 month References please
Wr~te Box 72'1A , c·o The OA1Iy
Sent mel , Pomeroy. Ohio -45769.
TWO BEDROOM· tro1ler for rent ,
deposit requ lied . cAll m-7.o154 '
5 ROOMS and bath for rent . In
qu1re at 7% South Third , Mid·
dleporl
HOUSE for rent . 5 rooms and
both , unfurn1sh&amp;d . In Mid·
dleport . Phone992 3457.
FURNISHED
APT ,
newly
decorated, 3 rms. and both ,
automatic heat , adu lts ' on ly

Phone Mlddlopo''· 992-320().

1975 HONOA XLIOO, good cond1·
hon $300. 1976 Hondo Z50
mlnt -tra1l m new condi1ton ,
$300 Phone m -5606

WINCHESTER MODELI2 pump, 12

pm

SEAR 'S 55,000 BTU natural gas
heater with blower, $100
Phone 992·3760.
CH ILDREN - and you toot in
wonderful living color, that 1s 11
Qoo l,ty at reasonable pnces
The Photo Place , 109 High St
Pomeroy , Bob HoefliCh Phone
992-5292 for evening and
weekend appOin tments only
MA YT AG Porto Washer and
Dryer. O'o'ocodo gf'een, $ISO
Phone ( ~) 773·5230

GAUGE Winchester shotgun. 10
speed bike 2 gallon churn.
new fool locker, radio .
bathroom heaters , other mise

Co117•2·2018
CHRISTMAS AUCTION

Southeastern Ohio

Truss Raflir Co.
Located in Langsville
Box28·A
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

~----~~~L~I~T~T~L~E~~~~--~r~~~~~--S~O~FTLY

Ph Ul&lt;l 142·2409
We Deliver .
7 28 ·4 mas .

WAL, "tHAA'S 111'

KNIVES . schrode "Old Timer"
pocket and sheath knives .
Make nice gifts S.. our ossort·
ment at Gravely Troctor Sale1,
Pomeroy

Homelite
uoo

NEW 3 ts.droom total elec. home.
1.113 ocre1, rural water,
ocreotor ••plic •ystem, near
Langs... llle Call7.o12-2819

HOUSE . 5 1ooms and balh. d1lllod

weU, 35 A more or less in
c:ountry. Phone 247·2286.

TWO Hol1tein He1fen , one bred ,
one Holstlf!tn bull One Jersey
bull , S600 f1rm for QIL Pi 1one

WHY PAY rent when you con buv
a 6 room house with yard and
garden, carpet , gas and heat
on Vine St in Racme. Phone
2..47·2192.

CORN , any amount, up to 2 ,000
bu , piC~ing dolly. Dale l(outl,

caii98S-38:JI .

COUNTRY farm land with sedud· 59 acres. 6 room house both
ed woods, water and good oc·
portly corpet&amp;d, two out·
cess in Monroe Count-," W , Vo .
build ings, dug basement
$1 .000 down, coli (30&lt; ) 772·
one-th~rd
tillable, mine ral
3102 01 (304) 712·3221 .
rights located near Donvtlle
Reduced for quick sale
Commercial property opprox. 17
$23,500. Phone742-2766.
"acres, level land, located at

7. Phone {614) 667·6:104.

992-3129, or 992·5434.
HOUSE FOR SALE 2 bed1m• .. po'·
holly furn1shed
carpeted,
$7900 or see atlO l~nn ~~ , Just
off Vtne St , Middleport
HOUSE 6 Rooms and both . l1ttle
over acre In Mlnertville Phone

949-2563.

•

'1'12·5741.

NEW 3 Bedroom brl'ck home on 1
acre lot , fenc.d . Ploy yard , lui·
ly corpetd, built -in kitchen , at ·
toched garage located close
to Meigs High School Phone

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

GASOUNEALLEY

I he

poor

----------~

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service Phane 949·2487
or 949-2000. Racine Oh1o , Cutt
Brodfor1d

TEAFORD

barn and

D&amp;O TREE Tflmmmg, 20 years e:JC·
periente . Insured free
est1motes. Call 992·2384 or

bedrooms,

(614) 698-7257 Albony.

l'/2 baths, hol"water heat,
ga• fired. basement with
garage

and

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vke, oil makes , 992-228&lt;4. The
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
Authom:ed S1nger Sol•s and
Service. We sharpen Sc1uots

workshop .

Asking $20.000.
NEARLY

frame Located on a

lot. 2 BR could be 3. Dining
R .,

basement,

NEW

3

large lot. $34,000

garage , ,

MIDDLEPORT - Large 8
room old home. 2 baths, 4
bedrooms, all city utilities
and large lot. Want $8500.

river

space. Carpeting, copper
plumbing , garage and
large level lot. Only S23,000.

Is 1ust across the

frame

-

NEW

alum .

siding, carpeting , paneling,
forced air furnace. storm

windows &amp; doors. This
home

Is

In

excellent

condition. 3 BR, 1'12 baths,
formal
dining,
full
basemen ·t,

garage .

$18,500.00
SPORTSI\IAN LOOK - 13S
acres at 1123.00 per acre.
Good hunting, clo5t to
fishing , minerals, obout
$6,000 00 down balance like
ren1.

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HEHR\" E. CLELAND
BROKER

m.u,

S232

Systems Install~ by
inataller,
Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7&lt;42·2409.
l~eensad

heat .

6 15--- Engllsh 3, Farm Report 13
6:21).- Nol For Women Only 13.

6 :3()-Columbus Today 4, News 6; Sunrise Semes1er 8;
Overseas Mission 10.

6.45---Mornlng Reporl 3.
6 sQ-.Good Morning . Wesl VIrginia 13.
1:tl0-Today 3.4.1S; Good Morning, America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10
7·05---Bugs Bunny 8. Friends 10
1·3Q-.Schoolles 10.
s .oo-Lassle 6; Capt K.-ngaroo 8,10; Se•ame Sl. 33
8 3Q-.Big Vallev 6
9:oo-A .M. 3; Phil Donohue 4,13,1S. Lucy Show 8; Mike
DougiOS' IO
9.31)-(ro,..WIIs 3; One Llfelo·Live6 . Good Day 8.
10 .oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S. Price Is Right 8,10; Mike

A Wisconstn r e ader belo ngs
to a group that plays six hands
at a t1me r a ther tha n rubbe rs

rubber before lhc SIX hand s
are ove r .
The answer ts that when vou

,

(Do you have a questron
lor the exp~rts ? Wrtte " Ask
the Jacobys' care of thts

newspaper The Jaco bys w11/
answer md1v1dual questiOns
11 stamped, self-addre ssolj
envelopes are enclosed Tile
most mterestmg quest1ons
will be u s~ d m th rs column
and wtll re ce1ve coptes of
JACOBY M ODERN )

1 oo-Somerset J ; Rylm's Hope 6, 13 ; Concentration 8;

Young &amp; the Reslleso 10; Not For Women Only IS
1 3Q-.Days of Our Lives 3.&lt;.15, Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8.10
2 ()()-$20 .000 PvrAmlrl 1:1

3 "The -

YEAR

OLD

3

wl1h

closet

9 ROOMS - Carpeting,
modern kitchen with extra
nice stove, large utility for
washer-dryer or breakfast
nook. 2 car garage with
heal and garden. $11,000.
10
ACRES
Of
unimproved land for A·
frame cabins. A real sprlnq
for water, or pool,
RUTLAND- 2 bedrooms,
bath, natural gas heat. and
nice garage. Next to
school. $11,000.
' ; : ..-- ·.•: HOW TO

SELL
AND
NOT
E JERYONE HAS IT.
CALL 992-332S.

Happy
Fella"
I Formic acid
source
5 Do atelier
work
6 Total
(abbr)
7 HJre
8 Bullding
extension
9 Do a hair
job
II Neglects
( 2 wds.)
Coral
13
1siand
16 Quote
17 Saturate
18 Not
operating
19 Ballads

NOW I FACt; THE
HEREAFTER l'T-

-AN' &gt;0' WAS LUCKY AH WA:31
HEi&lt;E To GRAB Yo'- ~--'~

" I

Yesterday'• Answer
20 Flutter
32 Fencmg
21 Originate
foil
22 Salt tree
33 State
23 Lawman's
(Fr)
badge
34 Sudden
25 "With thiS
flight
rmg 35 McKinley's
wed"
wife
(2 wds.)
36 Measure
for wool
29 Brazilian
37 Song
City
syllable
31 Stringed
instrument 38 Leg

Camera 6; Treasure

Hunt 8,

MacNeil-Lehrer

Reporl 20,33; Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune
13; Pop Goes the Country IS .
s:oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Lawrence Welk 8, Wa•hlnglon Week In Review
20.33 .

8: 31).-Chlco &amp; Ihe Man 3,4, IS; Wall Str.. t Week 20.33.
9.(1()-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Movie "The Boy In lhe
Plastic Bubble" 6,13; Movie "Moydoy at 40,000
Feet" 8,10; Documentory Showca10 20.33 ,
10 oo-SErplco 3,4,1S; News 20. Poul Nuchlms 33.
n ,oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10.13.15, MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.

M

I

1.oo-Midnlght Special 3,4,1 S
1 41).-News 13
2,31).-News 3•
3·tl0-Movle " Kentucky" 3
4 jQ-.Movle "Big Business" 3.
6 oo-Movle "Fair Warning" 3.

11 Region
"-, I'm
Adam"
12 Run ;pto
ooWN
1 Malay ruler
Z Asian river

k-+--1--:-+-+-

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEt. LOW

One letler s1mply stands for another. In this sample A lJ
used fo r the three L's, X for the two O's, etc S tnglc letters,
apostrophes , the l e ngth and formati o n of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different. ·

B

WINNIE

WELL.L I CALLED
HOMt::! EVERYTHI NGS OKAY I

QBO

GOO/J! NOW WE CAN
KTP
HG
SIT DOWN AND FIG URE
OUT WHAT WE'RE:
NBRFDN
GOIN 1TODO!

CRYPTOQUOTES
YFTWIP
HDIZDSD
SZNRWD
RFBO

zo

J

JBZRF

C) 1976 Kin&amp; Fa•turn Syndicate , Inc

DOZER work and welding Con tact James Parsons , Rt. 1,

:C::R:':oc~l:;:n•~·~o:_:nc:C~o::'m::e~I,::A~oad~.-­

BARNEY

M081LE Home A~lr , Elec.,
plumbing and heating. Phone

992-5858

Ga1 and Oil Furnace Repair Sales
and Service, 2&lt;4 hourt. Phona

M~ 6~ANrMOTHER LEF'T HE~

IN THE DEFENSE PLANT,
WENT 1\J WORK FOR THE

TELEPHONE COMPAN'i .

1I)E NEED TO STUIX/ THE LIVES
OF GREAT WOMEN LIKE M'i
\f.AANDMOTHE .~ ... TALK TO tiOUR
GRANDMOTHER 1tlOA~ .

ASK HER Q.IIESTION5 ...

I ITj I I
IF 'fOU'Re TIF:Et:' OF

IGEOMAHI

tJ

-~ UNGOLEJ
V

I I I

·I I

I

TAKIN€&gt; TH IN06 L'I'INe.
J:70WN, JU6T DO 1 HI6!

No" lliTanp the circled Jetton
to fonn the Jurprln UUtwer, u
~~==~fo....::::=:==·=~=_::'"u~a~l~••leol
b7 lhe
oart.oon.
QZNBEIDY . -

T

FBYZPZE
YBGZOK
Ye1terday's Cryptoquote : BETIER TO BE DRIVEN OUT
FROM AMONG MEN THAN TO BE . Pl~UKEp OF
CHILDREN. - RICHARD HENRY DANA

CARPENTER
flooring , ceiling
~n\ling, Phont 992-2759.
'

50 acre form 5 room house with
both, own water systell't, on
hardtop rood , 2 locations to
drill oil wells. Pho,e 99'2·~

Dollors 6: Andy Williams 8; News 10; To tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons15; Ohio Journal20; Black
Perspective on the News 33.
1 3Q-.Porter Wagoner 3; Break the Bank A; Candid

11.3()-.Johnny Cars011 3,4,1S; SWAT 6,13;
ov e
"Forbidden Know ledge" B; Mary Hartmon 10;
ABC News 33
12;(1()-Movle "Marooned" 10; Jonakl 33.
12:&lt;1).-Get Down 4; Mod Squad 6; Wrestling 13

Is

742·2348

T.V. shop. Electronic T.V. Clink
S«vlce call , $5.95. Calor, B &amp; W
antenna systems stereos, ak,
572 Sou.th Third, Middleport
Phone 992-6306. ·Carry in and
•ov• money.

33.
7 ,00-TruthorCons 3; ToTellthP.TruthA ' Rn.wliMfnr

I I

m.

\l.l3-2165
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC. Now

Dinah 6

2 3Q-.Doctors 3.4.1S; One Lite to Live 13 . Guiding
Light 8,10.
3.oo-Another World 3,4,1S, All In the Famtl~ 8,10;
Crocketl 's Vlclory Garden 20
3: fs--General Hospllal 13
3.3Q-.Bewllched 6; Malch Game 8,10. Lilias Yoga 8.
You 20.·
.
4:tl0-MI•ter Carloon 3; ,.,arcus Welby, M.D. 4,
Somerset 15 , Howdy Doody 6, Mickey Mou•e Club
8. Sesame St 20,33 ; Movie "Once Upon a Time In
lhe Wesl " 10; Dlnoh 13.
4· 3Q-.My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6 Portrldgc
Family 8; Fllntslones IS .
s:oo--Big Valley 3; Merv Grtlfln 4; Brady ,Bunch 8;
Mlsler Rogers 2 20 ,33; Slar Trek 15
s ·3Q-.News 6. Family Alfalr 8, Elec. Co 20,33, Adam·
12 13.
6 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33
6 3Q-.NBC Newsl,4,1S , ABC News 13, Andy Grlfflll16;
CBS News 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 , VIlla Alegre

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WILL do roofing, construdion
plumbing and heating No jab
too -large or toq_ small. Phone

1

Douglas 13

10 15---General Hospllal 6
10 3Q-.Hollywood Squares 3,4, IS.
n ·(I()-Wheel of Forlune 3,1S; Weekday 4; Edge ol
NlgM 6; Gambll 8,10; Morning with D J 13.
11 .3Q-.Siumpen3,.4,15, Happy Days6 ,13; Love ol Life
8,10; Sesame 51 20,33
11 :55---Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 .(1()-News 3.6.8,10, Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; SO
Grand Slam IS
12 :3()-.Gong Show 3.1S; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10 12 · 55--NBC New• J.IS .

are to play a specified num.ber
of hands lhere IS a cut for deal
before the hrst hand IS played,
but then the deal passes in
rotat1on unlll t~c specthed
number of hands are completed

rU:::L~AB=N=E=R=LJ:==-r~;:--r~m:jjj;?,ii'Y:Zm;;;;;:;;;;p,;rn::-;;:if~~;pr;.:~[i:7E~M£\liO
f.J,AT'CHE"F'!LYr-ms DOGPATCH .

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. M~ern
Sanitation, 992 -3954 or

2&lt;28

bedrooms

box?

m.

SEPTIC

home and extra room , wl1h

l TTA!"''::~

" What sort of second raters
were playmg here'1". the
ma( ch happen e d to be
between !.he Um ted Stales and

30 Ni~lllbeforel
31 Actress
Remick
Chicago
Fair's
lamed
danseuse
_. (2 wds.)
39 One venerating

raid in'

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R Hat·
field , Back Hae Service
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.'

SYRACUSE- Nice corner
lot with 1 bedroom mobile
patio. Nat . gas
Asking $7500.

keep

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks
and Ia boys for htre , w1ll houb
fill dirt , to soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jet.
fers, day phone 992-7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or

bedroom one floor home, 2
ceramic
baths,
full
basement,
wood-burning
fireplace, 2 car garage,

bath . Needs paper &amp; paint
ASKING $14,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - l'12 story
frame, 3 BR. 2 baths.
dining R.. utility R., ,
carpeting,
paneling.
UnaHached office. Corner
lot. EXCELLENT AT
JUST 522.000.00.
FULL T,IME or SUMMER
HOME - 3 BR, bath, nice
kitchen, carpeted, paneled.
storage bldg., carport. The

son-in·
law

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 yean e)C·
perience Phone 992 2409.

pasture. Want $20,000
3'h

loG~din'

3825

Five room house that needs
everything
except

LARGE -

Yer
free-

~er ice·

Sweepers, toasters , irons, oil
small appliances. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

NEW LISTING - 18 acres
near Meigs Hlglr School .

It,

woman
live5
here?

ELWOOD , BOWERS REPAIR -

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0
Phoqo 992-3~' -

electric ity . Cellar with

road ONLY $8,900.00. {see,
this ).
POMEROY - 2 story

6 to 8 room house for sole In
PomerOy. Priced to sell Phone

REDUCE SAFE and fa1t with
Go8ese Tablets . and E-V.op
~?fer pills"". Nelson Drug.

·,

3102 01 {304) 772-3227.

MIDDLEPORT - 1'12

WARM MOANING gas h.ater,
85,().)) BTU, Just like new.
Phone 2~7 ·3805.

992-SW

1&lt;81.

PIGS For So le Phone 742 -2545

ONLY 1107.91

•

·-. ....

We reDalr the old and build
the new, · Paptrtng, paint·
ing, unellniJ window
repuuments,
glau,
roolil'l· hot mix , siding,
storm windows, door~,
remodel kttChens 1nd
1 bllh!, etc . Phone 949·2023.
1 ·No Sund1y Cllli Plene.
10-14 -1 mo . pd .

992-ms

SMAll farm for sale , 10•1. down,
owner fmonced . Monroe Coun·
ty , W Va . Phone (304} 772·

NEW 23 Channel C B., $129 95 or
terms Call 992-3965 .

One good used
chain saw . ·

on lobar by havmg your Grove·
ly Tractor repaired or , serviced
now . Grave ly Tractor Soles,
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone (614)

all elec., 1 acre , Middleport
dose to Rutland Phone 992·

FRIDAY , N')'IEMBER ll, 1976
6 oo-S unrl se Semest er 10.

new cut dea l if one stde wms a

The biddmg at table one in
an IMP team match is that
shown m the box
West dec1ded that South was
prepared fw a spade lead so
he decidtllflo lead some other
su1t Hts choice was between
clubs aed hearts. When he
finally settled for a heart,
South gratefully ran off lO
tricks This looked hke a real·
ly good score, since a club
lead would have set h1m four
tncks .
It wasn 't a good score , AI
the other table' West elected to
keep qu1et about h1s spades

Augu s t 6, 13.
3,4

oo-T omorrow

1 50-News 13

She wants to know 1f there 1s a

Pass
Openin g lea d - 3 ¥

hero
5 Blanched
10 Egyptian
deity
II With pluck
12 Somewhat
(3wds.)
14 Guggenheim
display
15 Cargo
weight
16 Expenditure
17 Par( of
RSVP
20 Fig baskets
23 Fountam
treat
24 Ethnic
corrunumty
in N.Y.C.
(2 wds)
26 Man or
Pines
21 Pull up 28 Duffer's
need
%9 Phv·siciJ•t.

Construction

GRAVELY SERVICE - So•e 2S Pel

~EW 3 bedrpom house , 2 both1 ,

J•

ACROSS

PHOTOGRAPHY

Call992 7481

3 bedrooms , IV2 baths, Iorge liv·
1ng room, dining room and k1l·
chen , fully carpeted . Phone

Pass

1 "Ramayana"

D&amp;D

Tuppers Plains on Oh1o , Route

3o

1 2 · ~ ~ Dan

1

by THOMAS .JOSEPH

.

HOMESITES for scle, I acre and
up M1ddleport , near Rutland

2.
3N T

Pass

33
·
12 :3Q-.Movle
" Bey. Borrow or Sloa I" 8.

~~tal

(614)915-4155
Chester, Ohio
10.17-1 mo (Pd)

J

OHIOO

-

USTER SE -

...
..,.,.' ·•
eiJ ~

4

KEN GROVER

lontp.;llo,Ohto ..,741
669·424!1 .......

Friday , Nov 12. 6 30 p m
Truckload of toys, gifts, all new
merchandise , 7
m. Con·
slgnments of use merchan ·
dise and furniture at the Aut·
lion House, Horton St., Mason,
W. Vo. {~) 773 -5471

FOR SALE

9

liiERf N""' YOU'RE
Ct&lt;AZIER'N rDU

Weddings

"""'" I loa 121

Soulh

l•

Pass

12 .oo-Movle " T he As sa s s lnatlof1 Bureau " 10; Janak!

~ ~~~

North East

2a

Schools

room over

One good used -Hotpoint
refrigerator.
1100
One gooa used G E.
refrlger1tor
S2SO
One good uud Ho,potnt
r~nge.
sso
New Co-Op Wlter solt!ner,
Reg . 1349 .
NOW 129.9
Oasis Humidifiers, m.odet

e•~~;w

Aerial
Commercial

TRALLER SALES

Sole.

~! Jac~~jtu-·

992-2975

ALLEY..

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE .

Rutland, Ohto 45775

BEE-LINE FASHIONS. Phooe 992·
3373

Pomeroy~

GRAVELY 8 H.P Demonstrator
with 30" mower and dual
wheels Used about 5 hours ,
new '!'t'Orranty Save 25 per
cent Gravely Tractor Sales ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phon• (614)

HAVE 10 GO

IN10 "TOWN,

West

and agam South played m
three notrump Thi s West
opened a spade and somehow
or other durmg the course of
the play let go of a small hea rt
so lh1s declarer wound up by
tak1ng all 13 tricks
For the benefit of those

champiOnship malch

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Revive the nr1&lt;o;n•l
of your rugs.
· your owrl home
b)' Von Schrader
dry.foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same day.
All work
eua11ntood.

New T V Shop 'Electronic TV
Cll n1c". Ser111ce call $5 95.
Pho ne 992·6306
•

WE'D LOVE TO SHOOT YOUR
3 AND .ol RM furnished and un·
furnished opts Phone 992·

WE WON'T

Y 'MEAN WE

33.

Great Britam m a world 's

Netlher vulne ra bl e

Greenhouse

Ph.67HI69
f:3D·5 :oo oaur
Tiiii.LOOO Frld,y_s

• A K98 64

SOUTH
A K8 4
.Q 5

10 or more

Hubbard's

Pl. Pieasont

t1 3

•

11 3()-Johnny Corson 3,4,15, Streets ot Son Franclsc:G
6, 13. Kolak ! ;.Mar y Hartman 10; ABC News33 .

readers who are about to ask

¥4
t K 10 8 6 5 4 2

and pink . $3.00 to $6.00 20

PHOTOGRAPHY

New ear corn for sole. Phone
7-42· 2359

1968 V.W. Vnn w· seats , excellent
condition. Also , electric base
gu1tar , amp $175. Phone (614)
667·6l.o1B , Coolville, Oh1o.

EAST

aiO 97
• Q 10

•A•QJ 65 2
¥ 985 3
t 9

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR '
YOUR HOME In pOtl end I
hanging baskets from 75c ,
ro $5.00. Also, 11y away
POtNSETTIAS now for
CttRISTMAS . 6000
to
Choose from . PERFECT
FOR GIFTS In r!d , wh it!

PROFESSIONAL

7766 o, 992-249S

PEARCE SIMPSON C.B. base sta
f10n Phone 247·2684 after 5

By Clarice Alleo
Vice president Sheila
Taylor presided at the
Novem~r meeting of the
Ladles' Auxiliary, Wed·
nesday evening at the fire
house. The meeting opened
with the Lord's Prayer,
MATCH , just off At 7
followed with roll call. The SHOOTING
B.y· pon Each Sunday , starting
secretary's report was given
12 noo n
by Ethel Orr and the BRIMSTONE MX , Sunday. I p m IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer.
wont to bu'l' Of sel l some thing ,
treasurer's report by Opal
Ram , shme , or snow. 2 m1les
ae looking for work . . . or
•Wickham. The community
out Rood S6, Cool ville Phone
whatever
you'll get results
{61&lt;) 667-3610.
:!. service committee reported
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad
on the serving of a meal at the HOW would yo u li ke to get $70
Coll992 -2156
worth of new clo thes free ?
•· home of Enna Cleland after
Brand nome. For mformot1on. GARAGE SALE , at Clifton, W. Va
; . the death of her mother. The
behmd post office Turn on hrst
coli 9.ol9·2803 or 949·2786 Offer
lone below post office. Follow
; ! good of the order conunlttee
exp1res No"'~ 26th.
s1gns 9 till 5 Thursday Fnday
:i discussed plallll lor the anand
Saturday
Clarence
,, nual Christmas party, to ~
Wams ley.
: •. held at the fire house on Dec.
YARD SALE. Saturday Nov 13 at
:: 12. It was noted that the new Lost : ladles leather b111fald in
Robert Hawk 's residence
fron t of Dutton s 1n M1ddleport
• ; cards have arrived and can
Hem lock Grove
Furniture,
Coli 9&lt;9-2SIO. --~-clothmg of ell kmds AdultS ond
: . be purchased from the
d11ldren"s, diShes . etc
•' members . Roll call was Lorge d og. poss1bly hunting dog
lound
1n
Hysell
Ru
n
Rood
oreo
BACK
PORCH Sale. each Wee~
; answered by Margaret
a nd Bailey Run . Please ldent1fy
Monday through Saturday 10
:; 'Christy, Inzy Newell, Clara
to cl aim , a nd phone 992·5378 o r
till 5. Take Rt 12.4 toRt 325,
9•9·2210
Conroy, Cleo DeTray, Betty
then to~e Rt. 325 to Danville .
Follow s1gns Cloth ing , d1she s,
• Newell, Karla Chevalier, LOSf o r STOLEN Reword fo r the
appliances , many miSc . items
:·~ Pam Hoffman, Erma
return of o brown suede coot
Phone 7-42·2-48 1
token
from
Meigs
Inn
Saturday
·~. peiand, Ethel Orr, Opal
night Please return 1! to the YARD SALE, Fndoy and Sotordoy,
Wlcltham, Sheila Taylor and
Meigs Inn .
J mde from Chester Bridge , Rt
~ -. Clarice Allen, also a guest Thank you , Jon I
2.ol8 across from Golf Coone
~. , J{rlstle Hofbnan.
Gas stove, 125. 3 storm wm ·
ONE ENGLISH Setter, mostly
dows . ventilator fan. wall
•'&gt; . Virgil Wood, Springfield,
wh1fe with bloc~ patch over eye
hwter, round lob bowl. baby
end one fema le Brittany
' spent Wednesday night wllh
dressmg table , bouncer, baby
Spon1
el
,
liver
and
white
m
col
'"' his mother, letha Wood.
boy and girl clothes. etc. Phone
o r lost in Kingsbury, Rt. 33
,, ... D. D. Cleland and Mrs.
98S-3335.
area . Phone Bud Wtlson . 992
Carpenter, Colwnbus, called
7283.
GARAGE Sole . Nov 11 and 12
.. , on Mrs. Clayton Allen and DOG LOST mole . black , wh1te
from 9 to 7:30 Go north thru
Chester , turn
left past
Denzel Cleland, Friday.
and brown. some blue spots
~1 rehouse , 1 mile Watch for
near
Tan
ners
Run
Address
on
Mrs. Opal Hollon S!li'Dt
signs Adult and children ·~
collar Jim Weese . Syracuse ,
several days with Mr. and
winter clothes
mo te r ntty
Ohio or phone 992-5089.
Mrs. Gerald Hollon and
clothes. baby 1tems and
miscellaneous Items Garage
children, Columbus.
heot!Hi. Proce!His for Chester
:f: Mr. and Mrs. Don Wllllams lui week.
United Methodist Church
:t end children, Columbus,
Hilda Weber, Columbus,
Building Fund .
• ~ were weekend guests of Mr. spent several days with Mr.
"&amp;.'and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
. : · Mr. and Mrs. JerryGrubba
Mr. and Mrs. Marion
:t' )lnd children, Columbus, White, Crestline, were recent PLEASURE HORSES or;.:! pon1es.
also wi II buy horses and
:' 'Were weekend guests of Mr. visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
ponies Phone (614) 698·3'290,
;;; and Mrs. Rl!ger Keller and Arthur Orr.
Ruth Reeves .
r
"" sons.
Harry Krider, Delaware,
AKC
REGISTERED
BOXER
PUPPIES.
Ray Smalley and daughter 0., visited hla cousin, Mrs.
Hod shots and wormed Phone
Ma rth~ . Lancaster, called on Mabel Van Meter Friday,
{61&lt;) 992-31&lt;2
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, their flrlt In many years.
BEAGLE Pupt , month to 10 wuks
Monday.
Also vialllng with them were
old Also, troln.d leggl .. ,
Mr. and Mra. Arthur her brothers, Raymond • moles and temol.s , r.asoi"!(lbty
DeTray visited with 'fr. and Krider, Columbus, and Eldon ' prlc.d. Phone VIrgil y..,, .
brough, 7~2-2521 ;.._ _ _ _
Mrs. Fred Dresch', Toledo, Kraueter, ~e .

Racine, Ohio

1

Y

-For sot! cna1r c slllons,
mattresses, podding. Ideal
lor campers. Variety of

7689
1910 CUTlASS, $1500 Al5o, 191S
Garage Equ ipment
cheop
busmen bu il ding 50 " 60, &amp;x·
cel lent condition , cement
drive , Rutland Corp , pnce
reduced Coli 7.ol2 -2602 Reason
lor sellmg ·poor health

.3

t AQJ
.10 7 3

MINE., euT IF "IOU
GO BUSliK' DOWH

late.

TRADERS DAY at Bob a nd Corby "s
Fo x Chostn g Cob1n o n Eagle
Ridge 2n d Saturday in eve ry
mo nth Anything dogs guns
a nd kn 1ves. Trade , bu y, sell or
2170
~e away Sob Clon~~----­
WHAT• Be tter Chri stmas g1ving SMALL FUEL 01l healer fo r sole or
trade Also will trade o
than wo nderful full color por
dunebuggy , sharp fo r o
tro1ts '? Quality at reaso nable
pleasu re boat. Also, hove o
pnce s . The Photo Place 109
1970 Ford Von , &amp;lllcellent condl ·
H1g h St., Po meroy , (Bob
t1on . Phone 949-2770.
Hoellich). 992 S292

UPHO

II

NORTH till

. AKJ7 6 2

1972 CHEVY Von, 11·8 ouiOIJlohc
transm iSSIOn , p .s Phone 992·

Hondo 125 $500 Phone Tonya
. Davis, after 6 p m 985 -350 1 1973 MERCURY Morqu1 , 26 COO
miles . excellent cond1t1on Lots
of edros for $299~ Phone 992 ·

WE! Gt'H ,. OH, OH~

NOTICE

POtY.M

CARPET Sfi)P

m 1les sissy bar, crash bars
pu ll bock handle bars, new tire
a nd seals, Se:rombler !1de
POTATOES and pumpkins C W
Proff1tt, Portland Oh1o Rhone

IT'l l SUPPORT 11\Y

WEST

38'11
1971 HONDA Cl450, 12.000

Have you Kurd about the
"Gun"?

BEN FRANKLIN C&lt;nt Iron wood or
cool burnmg slave. e xc ellent
cond111on ., Elec garage door
opener remote contro l, l1ke
new . Old sohd oo~ dm ing room
table wtth extr.a leaves e ll·
cellent c:ond1fiOn Phone 949·

SMITH (!IILSON
MOTORS, INC.

CERTAINL.Y I'M AL.. I'!IOHT! WHAT
DID YOU THINK~... cAN'T 1 EVEN
SIT DO WN WITHOUT 50ME l'tu5SIAN
SPY 5 NOO PIN6 ON MlH!

L · L.· L. E:T"S 5 EE IF

33.

9 oo-B, st Sellers l .&lt;.IS, Tony 'Randa ll 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-08; VIsions 33, Movie " Barefoot In lhe Park"
10
9 JQ-.Nancy Walker 6,13; Jeanne Wolf With lO .
IO·tlO-Gibbsvllle 3,&lt;,iS; Slreets of San Francisco 6:13:
Barnaby ,J ones 8: New.s 20.
i0.3Q-.Woman 20.33.
11 :oo-News 3,&lt;,6.8.10.13.1 5, MacNe iH.ehrer Report

can look
like chumps
'- .

.... ltZ·%176

COAl , limestone . and calCium
chloride end calCium brine for
949-2114
d ust control and spec1ol muung
salt for formers . Main Street , L_ _ _ _ _ _.,:l.;,l·..:•..:
·l:.;m:;;:o:.
. .J
Po meroy , Oh1o or phone m..

pipe• $650 Co\1949·2•80.

CAPTAIN EASY
'·'' !..WJI"·-!t ... FEEL.So LIKE
I ' VE TWISTED MY ANKLE !

llolllio . .

SIDI5somn

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

gouge . 30 inch borrell mckel
steel , $350 Contact Morvin
Keebough . days • 992-53&lt;42 or
evenings , 985·3913

Come early, Stay

Sl1llll

lii!IDOIS &amp; IIOOIS
IEI'IACOiliiT
IIIIIDOWS
lUll IIIII

RACINE

I

8 ,lQ-. Barney Mill er 6,13

NAT BRIDGE

-llttWIII&amp;Atllcl

11-11 ·1 ,.,.

$$CASH$$ for junked • autos
Phone 7.o12-2081 Frye s Truck &amp;
Auto Ports . Rutland
COINS CURRENCY to kens , old
poc;ket watches and cho lm ,
stl . ,. er and go ld We need 196-4
a nd older silver coins, Buy, 1ell ,
or trade ' Call Ro ge r Wamsle y,

,...... snc.s

Phone 992-2594
Middleport, 0.

2102door, local car, A speed transmission , 44,200 miles.
good tires , dark green finish , real economy .

beds,

Make 11 a pomt today to hobnob
w1th you r more alfluent and tn·
ltuen tlal lnends Som et hing

sons to whom you 've been
generous wtll be looking for
way s to reci proc ate today Wh at
they have In mind should please

52195

_

Illlwn

llllllllliln

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW '77
PLY MOUTHS

clean .

6·3Q-.NBC News 3,4,1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iff ith 6,
CBS News 8,10; Combat 9; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
lTV Utilization 33.
1:tlO-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell lhe Truth&lt; . Bow ling for
Dollan6; News 10. To Tell ihe Tru1h 13, My Three
sons lS; Any011e for Tennyson 20: Gtjplng On 33

HOW MANY
FLU SHOTS
HAVE I GOT
FER IODAY,
NUSS?

I

~Priii~..:=:.:===:.=~~~~:::::•~~::..:-:::....__:_,JI t

L'

abo••

xxJrn
(~wen

l'etten.,•,

I

lomorto••

J••hlo" PLAIT MINER GIGGLE DILUQI
-'n•wcr~ Ht ru11 from1Wttgier ad d•~e~ecl11o aiPrtdatfoll

oloii-THE "IIIQAATI" .

'l

I

�11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov. ll , 1976

Television log for easy viewing

DICK TRACY

"
THURSDAY , NOVEMBER 11.1971
s »-News 6; Family Affa ir 8; Elec. Co. 20,331 Adam.

7.31).-Hollywood Squares 3; Ohio }late Lott•ry 61
Price Is Righi 8, Mac Neii-Lehrere lleoort 20,331
Wild Ki ngdom 10. N..hvllleontheRoad 13l':lolly IS.

~

12 13

6·tl0-News 3.4.6.8,10,13,15; ABC New s 6; Zoom 20:

8:tl0-D ick Van Dyke 3, 4,1 S, Welcome Back. Kotter
6, 13, Waltons 8, 10; VIsions 20; Ma•terploce Thea tre

Cons u mer Exper ience 33.

TOM RUE MOTOR$
1975LUV PICKUP
EXPERIENCED, young , single per·

so n

as

baby s itte r

housekeeper, separate hvmg
quarters expen ses . salary and
excellen t fnnge benefits. Col '
(~ ) 863 ·6088after6p

m

With 1opper, low mileage, f"ad lo ,

,
w-w tire~ .

Sl195

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

$3995

Local 1 owner car. green finish , green viny l roof, radial
w w tires, air conditioning , V-B, with automatic power
steering ~nd brakes.

1974 DATSUN
CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 22)

OLD furniture. Ice boxes. brou
wall tehtphones and
porh. or complee households
Write M. D. Miller , Rt . _. ,
Pomeroy . Oh1o Co ll 992-7760

benel tcml co ul d result

CASH potd lor a ll makes one
model s of mob ile homes
Phone a rea code 614·423-9531

LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Two per -

you

NOTICES
ATTN : tl

ALL HOUSEWIVU

VIRGO (Aug . 23 .~ Sepl . 22) Pa ls
put a lo t mo re stock m your
words today than you rea lize lt"s
b ecause lh ey k no w you r 8d 11 Ic e
1S soun d and based upo n 8 1(·
per1ence
L. IBRA (Sept. 23· 0el. 23) Do n't
lntter your 11me away toda y o n
mtnor 1ssues Pick a plu m a t re al
1mporta nce. Think. btg

A.ll Yard Sales , Rummage ,
Porch en d Basemen t Porch
end Basement Sales, etc
mu s t b• Pl ld in ed1111n c e .
Get vours In early by
s topping by o ur offi ce at
The Da llv s ent ine l. 111
Co urt St . or wr it ing Bo x
129, Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
w ith you r r emi ttanc e·.
,\..._...:__ _ _ _...:__ _....J

TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest P(o·
duct s. Top priCe fo r s tanding
sawtimber Coli Ken t Hanby ,
1·446-8570

1&lt;2-2331..
WANTED OLD upr1g ht pianos in
any cond 1t1on Will pay $10
ea ch Fi rst fl oor only Wnte QIV·
mg d1re ct1ons to W1t1 en P1 ono
Co
Bo" 188 Sardis, O h1o
-43946

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22)

Dea lmgs lo d ay with partn e rs or l wont to thank the girl. who ever
she wa s. who too~ core of
as sooa les s ho uld be lortunale
R1 cky Wil son aher the cor
to r all co ncerned especi&amp;lly tf
wreck otluppen Plains Sotur·
yo u re 1nvol11ed wtth people you
day night and also anyo ne
feel are lucky
who he lped Do nd ld Eynon , Jr
SAGITTARIUS(Nov.23-Doc. 21) ~ondrno ther . Wilma Eynon
J o 1n l vent ur es a ft e r m ore
promi se to r you today lhan wha t
Wdl do odd 1obs , roof1ng , ptun·
you 'd do on yo u r own Co n can.~
ling gutter wo rk Phone 992·
Irate on Si tuatiOns whe re you THE RACIN E Fire Deportment w1ll
7409
s ha re an ln lerest
ho'le a gun shoot Satu rday at WILL DO bu1ldmg a nd remodel·
6 30 p m at the ir bu1l d1 ng m
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon . 18)
mg rool mg plumb1ng fu r·
Ba ! hon:;.:_
Brea ~ up your rout ine a bit at
no~;; e rv patr , gas o r oil general
this ttme Pursue a fun tnterest NOW oc ce pl tng p1ano st udent s,
repo1r Free e stimates and
with people you hke The cha nge
reas on able role s . Phone
beg inne rs mtermed1o tes ad ·
Charles Sfnclo1r (61.ol ) 985·4121
wtll do you a wo rld of good
vonce d students Coli
992 or 99'2 -2221
2270.

______

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Ftb. 19)

NEW HOURS a t Helen"s Beauty WILL DO bobys111ing, Monday
thru Fr~dcy Phone992·613.oi ~Solo n, Po meroy Tuesday thru
today whore wor k or career ts
Fnday . 8 30 tdl ? Saturday 8·30 Will DO HOUSE cleaning Call
concerned A good day to ap1,11 12 Call fa , appomtmenl ,
proac h tne boss for a ra1se If yo u
oher bpm 7422152.
992 -2890 Wa lk-ms we lcome
~--·
!eel you deserve It
Helen . Bel1ndoand Adell
There 15 opportuntty abo ut you

.

---

Through a fn end you may learn INTERVIEWS wdl be he ld Mndoy Bti'~@!iiiiiiiffi,.
Nov. 22 , 1976 startmg ot I I 00
of so rn elt11 ng t od ay tha t ' s
o m o clock in the off ice of the SMALL BUSINESS' tdeol for cou
somewha t specu lativ e yet not all
pi e Re a son lor selling , ieov·
Me 1gs County Comm iSS io ners.
th at far ou t Stu d y 11 ca ref ully. It
mg stole . Phon e 985 3306 .
Co urt Hou se , Pomeroy, O h1o
--~-m ay bo worth a lly e t
fo r orcl-utec ts who ore on the
appro ved list of State Ar ·
cl'utocts (Pub lic Wo rk s State of
Oh1o ) fo r the proposad multipurp os e fo ctl1ty fo r Me1gs MOBI~E home fo r s o le or rent 3
bedrooms , o l utihlles po1d
Co unty Plea se collier oppomf·
Phone 992 -7751
men! , 992 2895.
Nov. 12, 1976
8w35 EBER Liner, full~ furn ished .
Thi s ye a r you may form s ome
gas forced o~r furna ce , very
very bene ftcia t a llianc e s
cl ean
Con be seen at
Par lne rs co ul d play a he lpf ul
K~ngsbury Home Soles, 1100 E
ro le , so selec t associates 11ery
lt·Mom St, Pomeroy
wi sely
1975 TRAILER lo r sole 12x65 fur (Are you a Scorpto 7 Bermce
flls hed w1th olr condition ing .
Osol has wr men a spec1£JI A s tra ~
$8,000 Phone 992 ·3333
Graph Le tter for you For your
copy send 50 cents and a s elf~
DOUBLE WIDE mobile hqme , 24x ·
60 , m Syracuse on 190x5S lo t
addressed stamped envelope to
Total electric for lnformal10 n,
As tro -G ra ph, P 0 Box 489,
coll992 7.ol83
Radio C1ty Starton. New York.
O.llia County Gun Club,
NY 100 19 Be sure to ask lor
Buck Ridge, Olf R1 35.
Scorpio Volume 1 )

PISCES '(Fob. 20·Morch 20)

··

--

~Your

~Birthday

ANNUAL

TURKEi SHOOT
Stationary Trap
SUnday, Nov. 14

Otester

POM~!~!v~~!f!~ CO. ti'
P~ME.RQ_Y,OHIO
\!!:1
t97S MONTE CARLO. outomottc,
powe r 5teermg, powar brakes ,
01r e: ond1hon1ng. AM radio and
stereo, rally wheels , w1ll sell
reasonable Pho ne992-7036
1969 Novo e xtra sharp, new
pomt buckat saots, o1r shocks ,
mag s Phone 949-2.180
1975 FORD PIN TO Stot1on Wagon,
V-6, automatic transmiSSIOn
Also , 1964 Che"y Impala con ·
verttble, 283 cu. In engine,
standard tronsm1u10n See ol
- 873 South
__ ,_ Second,- M1dd leport
- .
1~72

CHEVY Von , V 8 outomollc
transmiSSIOn p s Phone 992·

7689 .
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA Hlp .
viny l roof, rodtol ltres , p.w
p s.
p.b .. Atr conditi on
1ng .t w , low mileage One
owner . Phone Fred Colburn .
Shade : Ohto {614 ) 696- IIOS

LOCUST POSTS , round or spht
Phone 9&lt;49-2n4 .

943·2254 .
COAL for sole , Open 6 days per
week ond evenings For further
mformatlon call (614) 367 7338.

APPLES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
WILKESVILLE, (61&lt;) 669·318S

2704 .
197.4 Volkswagen , sunroof , rodto,
lo w mileage Good cond1110n .
gold Phone Bud W1lson , 992·

1283.
1974 Jeep Renegade . 10 000
m1les. e)( tro mea 1976 Mustang
Co bro II , 6,000 m1 les all power .
V·6 auto . o1r cond1t1oned
Phone 7-42 -3072 .

.1969LTD Coll992 6137.
1968 CATALINA. eMcellent cond1
ho n Phone 9.4'1-2319
1967 CAMARO, 283 Corvette
en gt ne , 350 hydro -mofl &lt;t
tronsm1SS10n 'Good shape as~
mg $800 Phone 992-7360 or
992 -3'114 4i'fter 5 p.m
1971 Che~Jrolet statiOn wagon 9
pauenger m good cond1flon 1
Phone 992 -5623.

General Ele ctric cloth'" dryer
like new Wh1te , CAll (614) 367

1:

.

6.95

Square Yird lnlltollod
David P1r10n1, OWner

CODNER'S

CAMPERS

Rlinbow Ridge
Buhan Area
Long: Bottom , Ohio
Showing
Swiss Colony ,
M1pie Leaf , Plavmor.
Cricket
Sales , rental.
service , supp lies Trave l
trailers , truck campers ,
camp ing trailers, truck
caps Spe c 1al Saturday
nights Open evenmgs or bV
appoin t ment , contact
Robert Codner
( 10 11 lmo pd .l

sizes.

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
f1ncy prints, accessories :

.J2

pet. off on

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES'
-- m M&lt;iln Stroel

ALLEYOOP
GOTl'A
FOllOW 11115 Mt:AT·
SALL ALL TH' WAY

18 FT Twihght camper . self ·
conto1ned. sleeps 6, has olf
condi!IOf'ler and furnace Call
992-7315
'

Phane "2-5776
5-rracuu, Ohio

INltl "TOWN!!

543•.

COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
large lots wtlh concrete patios.
udewolks , ru nners and olf
street porkmg Phone 992-7.ol79
Tro1ler , adults only Co11992-7639
arm 3181'
FURNISHED two bedroom opt
adults only. No pels (¥\id·
dleporl . Phone 992 -3874
2 bedroom trailer , $28 per week. ,
oil utilities paid. Phone 992

332•
2 bedroom unfurnished opt. in
Middleport . Phone 992-3129 or

992-5.1:1&lt;
POMEROY · good qu1et location. 6
rms . breakfast room , bose·
ment . _gas furnace , garage ,
$90 month References please
Wr~te Box 72'1A , c·o The OA1Iy
Sent mel , Pomeroy. Ohio -45769.
TWO BEDROOM· tro1ler for rent ,
deposit requ lied . cAll m-7.o154 '
5 ROOMS and bath for rent . In
qu1re at 7% South Third , Mid·
dleporl
HOUSE for rent . 5 rooms and
both , unfurn1sh&amp;d . In Mid·
dleport . Phone992 3457.
FURNISHED
APT ,
newly
decorated, 3 rms. and both ,
automatic heat , adu lts ' on ly

Phone Mlddlopo''· 992-320().

1975 HONOA XLIOO, good cond1·
hon $300. 1976 Hondo Z50
mlnt -tra1l m new condi1ton ,
$300 Phone m -5606

WINCHESTER MODELI2 pump, 12

pm

SEAR 'S 55,000 BTU natural gas
heater with blower, $100
Phone 992·3760.
CH ILDREN - and you toot in
wonderful living color, that 1s 11
Qoo l,ty at reasonable pnces
The Photo Place , 109 High St
Pomeroy , Bob HoefliCh Phone
992-5292 for evening and
weekend appOin tments only
MA YT AG Porto Washer and
Dryer. O'o'ocodo gf'een, $ISO
Phone ( ~) 773·5230

GAUGE Winchester shotgun. 10
speed bike 2 gallon churn.
new fool locker, radio .
bathroom heaters , other mise

Co117•2·2018
CHRISTMAS AUCTION

Southeastern Ohio

Truss Raflir Co.
Located in Langsville
Box28·A
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

~----~~~L~I~T~T~L~E~~~~--~r~~~~~--S~O~FTLY

Ph Ul&lt;l 142·2409
We Deliver .
7 28 ·4 mas .

WAL, "tHAA'S 111'

KNIVES . schrode "Old Timer"
pocket and sheath knives .
Make nice gifts S.. our ossort·
ment at Gravely Troctor Sale1,
Pomeroy

Homelite
uoo

NEW 3 ts.droom total elec. home.
1.113 ocre1, rural water,
ocreotor ••plic •ystem, near
Langs... llle Call7.o12-2819

HOUSE . 5 1ooms and balh. d1lllod

weU, 35 A more or less in
c:ountry. Phone 247·2286.

TWO Hol1tein He1fen , one bred ,
one Holstlf!tn bull One Jersey
bull , S600 f1rm for QIL Pi 1one

WHY PAY rent when you con buv
a 6 room house with yard and
garden, carpet , gas and heat
on Vine St in Racme. Phone
2..47·2192.

CORN , any amount, up to 2 ,000
bu , piC~ing dolly. Dale l(outl,

caii98S-38:JI .

COUNTRY farm land with sedud· 59 acres. 6 room house both
ed woods, water and good oc·
portly corpet&amp;d, two out·
cess in Monroe Count-," W , Vo .
build ings, dug basement
$1 .000 down, coli (30&lt; ) 772·
one-th~rd
tillable, mine ral
3102 01 (304) 712·3221 .
rights located near Donvtlle
Reduced for quick sale
Commercial property opprox. 17
$23,500. Phone742-2766.
"acres, level land, located at

7. Phone {614) 667·6:104.

992-3129, or 992·5434.
HOUSE FOR SALE 2 bed1m• .. po'·
holly furn1shed
carpeted,
$7900 or see atlO l~nn ~~ , Just
off Vtne St , Middleport
HOUSE 6 Rooms and both . l1ttle
over acre In Mlnertville Phone

949-2563.

•

'1'12·5741.

NEW 3 Bedroom brl'ck home on 1
acre lot , fenc.d . Ploy yard , lui·
ly corpetd, built -in kitchen , at ·
toched garage located close
to Meigs High School Phone

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

GASOUNEALLEY

I he

poor

----------~

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service Phane 949·2487
or 949-2000. Racine Oh1o , Cutt
Brodfor1d

TEAFORD

barn and

D&amp;O TREE Tflmmmg, 20 years e:JC·
periente . Insured free
est1motes. Call 992·2384 or

bedrooms,

(614) 698-7257 Albony.

l'/2 baths, hol"water heat,
ga• fired. basement with
garage

and

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vke, oil makes , 992-228&lt;4. The
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
Authom:ed S1nger Sol•s and
Service. We sharpen Sc1uots

workshop .

Asking $20.000.
NEARLY

frame Located on a

lot. 2 BR could be 3. Dining
R .,

basement,

NEW

3

large lot. $34,000

garage , ,

MIDDLEPORT - Large 8
room old home. 2 baths, 4
bedrooms, all city utilities
and large lot. Want $8500.

river

space. Carpeting, copper
plumbing , garage and
large level lot. Only S23,000.

Is 1ust across the

frame

-

NEW

alum .

siding, carpeting , paneling,
forced air furnace. storm

windows &amp; doors. This
home

Is

In

excellent

condition. 3 BR, 1'12 baths,
formal
dining,
full
basemen ·t,

garage .

$18,500.00
SPORTSI\IAN LOOK - 13S
acres at 1123.00 per acre.
Good hunting, clo5t to
fishing , minerals, obout
$6,000 00 down balance like
ren1.

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HEHR\" E. CLELAND
BROKER

m.u,

S232

Systems Install~ by
inataller,
Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7&lt;42·2409.
l~eensad

heat .

6 15--- Engllsh 3, Farm Report 13
6:21).- Nol For Women Only 13.

6 :3()-Columbus Today 4, News 6; Sunrise Semes1er 8;
Overseas Mission 10.

6.45---Mornlng Reporl 3.
6 sQ-.Good Morning . Wesl VIrginia 13.
1:tl0-Today 3.4.1S; Good Morning, America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10
7·05---Bugs Bunny 8. Friends 10
1·3Q-.Schoolles 10.
s .oo-Lassle 6; Capt K.-ngaroo 8,10; Se•ame Sl. 33
8 3Q-.Big Vallev 6
9:oo-A .M. 3; Phil Donohue 4,13,1S. Lucy Show 8; Mike
DougiOS' IO
9.31)-(ro,..WIIs 3; One Llfelo·Live6 . Good Day 8.
10 .oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S. Price Is Right 8,10; Mike

A Wisconstn r e ader belo ngs
to a group that plays six hands
at a t1me r a ther tha n rubbe rs

rubber before lhc SIX hand s
are ove r .
The answer ts that when vou

,

(Do you have a questron
lor the exp~rts ? Wrtte " Ask
the Jacobys' care of thts

newspaper The Jaco bys w11/
answer md1v1dual questiOns
11 stamped, self-addre ssolj
envelopes are enclosed Tile
most mterestmg quest1ons
will be u s~ d m th rs column
and wtll re ce1ve coptes of
JACOBY M ODERN )

1 oo-Somerset J ; Rylm's Hope 6, 13 ; Concentration 8;

Young &amp; the Reslleso 10; Not For Women Only IS
1 3Q-.Days of Our Lives 3.&lt;.15, Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8.10
2 ()()-$20 .000 PvrAmlrl 1:1

3 "The -

YEAR

OLD

3

wl1h

closet

9 ROOMS - Carpeting,
modern kitchen with extra
nice stove, large utility for
washer-dryer or breakfast
nook. 2 car garage with
heal and garden. $11,000.
10
ACRES
Of
unimproved land for A·
frame cabins. A real sprlnq
for water, or pool,
RUTLAND- 2 bedrooms,
bath, natural gas heat. and
nice garage. Next to
school. $11,000.
' ; : ..-- ·.•: HOW TO

SELL
AND
NOT
E JERYONE HAS IT.
CALL 992-332S.

Happy
Fella"
I Formic acid
source
5 Do atelier
work
6 Total
(abbr)
7 HJre
8 Bullding
extension
9 Do a hair
job
II Neglects
( 2 wds.)
Coral
13
1siand
16 Quote
17 Saturate
18 Not
operating
19 Ballads

NOW I FACt; THE
HEREAFTER l'T-

-AN' &gt;0' WAS LUCKY AH WA:31
HEi&lt;E To GRAB Yo'- ~--'~

" I

Yesterday'• Answer
20 Flutter
32 Fencmg
21 Originate
foil
22 Salt tree
33 State
23 Lawman's
(Fr)
badge
34 Sudden
25 "With thiS
flight
rmg 35 McKinley's
wed"
wife
(2 wds.)
36 Measure
for wool
29 Brazilian
37 Song
City
syllable
31 Stringed
instrument 38 Leg

Camera 6; Treasure

Hunt 8,

MacNeil-Lehrer

Reporl 20,33; Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune
13; Pop Goes the Country IS .
s:oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Lawrence Welk 8, Wa•hlnglon Week In Review
20.33 .

8: 31).-Chlco &amp; Ihe Man 3,4, IS; Wall Str.. t Week 20.33.
9.(1()-Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Movie "The Boy In lhe
Plastic Bubble" 6,13; Movie "Moydoy at 40,000
Feet" 8,10; Documentory Showca10 20.33 ,
10 oo-SErplco 3,4,1S; News 20. Poul Nuchlms 33.
n ,oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10.13.15, MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33.

M

I

1.oo-Midnlght Special 3,4,1 S
1 41).-News 13
2,31).-News 3•
3·tl0-Movle " Kentucky" 3
4 jQ-.Movle "Big Business" 3.
6 oo-Movle "Fair Warning" 3.

11 Region
"-, I'm
Adam"
12 Run ;pto
ooWN
1 Malay ruler
Z Asian river

k-+--1--:-+-+-

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEt. LOW

One letler s1mply stands for another. In this sample A lJ
used fo r the three L's, X for the two O's, etc S tnglc letters,
apostrophes , the l e ngth and formati o n of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different. ·

B

WINNIE

WELL.L I CALLED
HOMt::! EVERYTHI NGS OKAY I

QBO

GOO/J! NOW WE CAN
KTP
HG
SIT DOWN AND FIG URE
OUT WHAT WE'RE:
NBRFDN
GOIN 1TODO!

CRYPTOQUOTES
YFTWIP
HDIZDSD
SZNRWD
RFBO

zo

J

JBZRF

C) 1976 Kin&amp; Fa•turn Syndicate , Inc

DOZER work and welding Con tact James Parsons , Rt. 1,

:C::R:':oc~l:;:n•~·~o:_:nc:C~o::'m::e~I,::A~oad~.-­

BARNEY

M081LE Home A~lr , Elec.,
plumbing and heating. Phone

992-5858

Ga1 and Oil Furnace Repair Sales
and Service, 2&lt;4 hourt. Phona

M~ 6~ANrMOTHER LEF'T HE~

IN THE DEFENSE PLANT,
WENT 1\J WORK FOR THE

TELEPHONE COMPAN'i .

1I)E NEED TO STUIX/ THE LIVES
OF GREAT WOMEN LIKE M'i
\f.AANDMOTHE .~ ... TALK TO tiOUR
GRANDMOTHER 1tlOA~ .

ASK HER Q.IIESTION5 ...

I ITj I I
IF 'fOU'Re TIF:Et:' OF

IGEOMAHI

tJ

-~ UNGOLEJ
V

I I I

·I I

I

TAKIN€&gt; TH IN06 L'I'INe.
J:70WN, JU6T DO 1 HI6!

No" lliTanp the circled Jetton
to fonn the Jurprln UUtwer, u
~~==~fo....::::=:==·=~=_::'"u~a~l~••leol
b7 lhe
oart.oon.
QZNBEIDY . -

T

FBYZPZE
YBGZOK
Ye1terday's Cryptoquote : BETIER TO BE DRIVEN OUT
FROM AMONG MEN THAN TO BE . Pl~UKEp OF
CHILDREN. - RICHARD HENRY DANA

CARPENTER
flooring , ceiling
~n\ling, Phont 992-2759.
'

50 acre form 5 room house with
both, own water systell't, on
hardtop rood , 2 locations to
drill oil wells. Pho,e 99'2·~

Dollors 6: Andy Williams 8; News 10; To tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons15; Ohio Journal20; Black
Perspective on the News 33.
1 3Q-.Porter Wagoner 3; Break the Bank A; Candid

11.3()-.Johnny Cars011 3,4,1S; SWAT 6,13;
ov e
"Forbidden Know ledge" B; Mary Hartmon 10;
ABC News 33
12;(1()-Movle "Marooned" 10; Jonakl 33.
12:&lt;1).-Get Down 4; Mod Squad 6; Wrestling 13

Is

742·2348

T.V. shop. Electronic T.V. Clink
S«vlce call , $5.95. Calor, B &amp; W
antenna systems stereos, ak,
572 Sou.th Third, Middleport
Phone 992-6306. ·Carry in and
•ov• money.

33.
7 ,00-TruthorCons 3; ToTellthP.TruthA ' Rn.wliMfnr

I I

m.

\l.l3-2165
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC. Now

Dinah 6

2 3Q-.Doctors 3.4.1S; One Lite to Live 13 . Guiding
Light 8,10.
3.oo-Another World 3,4,1S, All In the Famtl~ 8,10;
Crocketl 's Vlclory Garden 20
3: fs--General Hospllal 13
3.3Q-.Bewllched 6; Malch Game 8,10. Lilias Yoga 8.
You 20.·
.
4:tl0-MI•ter Carloon 3; ,.,arcus Welby, M.D. 4,
Somerset 15 , Howdy Doody 6, Mickey Mou•e Club
8. Sesame St 20,33 ; Movie "Once Upon a Time In
lhe Wesl " 10; Dlnoh 13.
4· 3Q-.My Three Sons 3; Emergency One 6 Portrldgc
Family 8; Fllntslones IS .
s:oo--Big Valley 3; Merv Grtlfln 4; Brady ,Bunch 8;
Mlsler Rogers 2 20 ,33; Slar Trek 15
s ·3Q-.News 6. Family Alfalr 8, Elec. Co 20,33, Adam·
12 13.
6 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20,33
6 3Q-.NBC Newsl,4,1S , ABC News 13, Andy Grlfflll16;
CBS News 8,10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20 , VIlla Alegre

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

WILL do roofing, construdion
plumbing and heating No jab
too -large or toq_ small. Phone

1

Douglas 13

10 15---General Hospllal 6
10 3Q-.Hollywood Squares 3,4, IS.
n ·(I()-Wheel of Forlune 3,1S; Weekday 4; Edge ol
NlgM 6; Gambll 8,10; Morning with D J 13.
11 .3Q-.Siumpen3,.4,15, Happy Days6 ,13; Love ol Life
8,10; Sesame 51 20,33
11 :55---Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12 .(1()-News 3.6.8,10, Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; SO
Grand Slam IS
12 :3()-.Gong Show 3.1S; All My Children 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10 12 · 55--NBC New• J.IS .

are to play a specified num.ber
of hands lhere IS a cut for deal
before the hrst hand IS played,
but then the deal passes in
rotat1on unlll t~c specthed
number of hands are completed

rU:::L~AB=N=E=R=LJ:==-r~;:--r~m:jjj;?,ii'Y:Zm;;;;;:;;;;p,;rn::-;;:if~~;pr;.:~[i:7E~M£\liO
f.J,AT'CHE"F'!LYr-ms DOGPATCH .

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. M~ern
Sanitation, 992 -3954 or

2&lt;28

bedrooms

box?

m.

SEPTIC

home and extra room , wl1h

l TTA!"''::~

" What sort of second raters
were playmg here'1". the
ma( ch happen e d to be
between !.he Um ted Stales and

30 Ni~lllbeforel
31 Actress
Remick
Chicago
Fair's
lamed
danseuse
_. (2 wds.)
39 One venerating

raid in'

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R Hat·
field , Back Hae Service
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.'

SYRACUSE- Nice corner
lot with 1 bedroom mobile
patio. Nat . gas
Asking $7500.

keep

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks
and Ia boys for htre , w1ll houb
fill dirt , to soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jet.
fers, day phone 992-7089 ,
night phone 992-3525 or

bedroom one floor home, 2
ceramic
baths,
full
basement,
wood-burning
fireplace, 2 car garage,

bath . Needs paper &amp; paint
ASKING $14,000.00
MIDDLEPORT - l'12 story
frame, 3 BR. 2 baths.
dining R.. utility R., ,
carpeting,
paneling.
UnaHached office. Corner
lot. EXCELLENT AT
JUST 522.000.00.
FULL T,IME or SUMMER
HOME - 3 BR, bath, nice
kitchen, carpeted, paneled.
storage bldg., carport. The

son-in·
law

REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and all types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 yean e)C·
perience Phone 992 2409.

pasture. Want $20,000
3'h

loG~din'

3825

Five room house that needs
everything
except

LARGE -

Yer
free-

~er ice·

Sweepers, toasters , irons, oil
small appliances. lawn mower ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

NEW LISTING - 18 acres
near Meigs Hlglr School .

It,

woman
live5
here?

ELWOOD , BOWERS REPAIR -

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0
Phoqo 992-3~' -

electric ity . Cellar with

road ONLY $8,900.00. {see,
this ).
POMEROY - 2 story

6 to 8 room house for sole In
PomerOy. Priced to sell Phone

REDUCE SAFE and fa1t with
Go8ese Tablets . and E-V.op
~?fer pills"". Nelson Drug.

·,

3102 01 {304) 772-3227.

MIDDLEPORT - 1'12

WARM MOANING gas h.ater,
85,().)) BTU, Just like new.
Phone 2~7 ·3805.

992-SW

1&lt;81.

PIGS For So le Phone 742 -2545

ONLY 1107.91

•

·-. ....

We reDalr the old and build
the new, · Paptrtng, paint·
ing, unellniJ window
repuuments,
glau,
roolil'l· hot mix , siding,
storm windows, door~,
remodel kttChens 1nd
1 bllh!, etc . Phone 949·2023.
1 ·No Sund1y Cllli Plene.
10-14 -1 mo . pd .

992-ms

SMAll farm for sale , 10•1. down,
owner fmonced . Monroe Coun·
ty , W Va . Phone (304} 772·

NEW 23 Channel C B., $129 95 or
terms Call 992-3965 .

One good used
chain saw . ·

on lobar by havmg your Grove·
ly Tractor repaired or , serviced
now . Grave ly Tractor Soles,
Pomeroy Oh1o Phone (614)

all elec., 1 acre , Middleport
dose to Rutland Phone 992·

FRIDAY , N')'IEMBER ll, 1976
6 oo-S unrl se Semest er 10.

new cut dea l if one stde wms a

The biddmg at table one in
an IMP team match is that
shown m the box
West dec1ded that South was
prepared fw a spade lead so
he decidtllflo lead some other
su1t Hts choice was between
clubs aed hearts. When he
finally settled for a heart,
South gratefully ran off lO
tricks This looked hke a real·
ly good score, since a club
lead would have set h1m four
tncks .
It wasn 't a good score , AI
the other table' West elected to
keep qu1et about h1s spades

Augu s t 6, 13.
3,4

oo-T omorrow

1 50-News 13

She wants to know 1f there 1s a

Pass
Openin g lea d - 3 ¥

hero
5 Blanched
10 Egyptian
deity
II With pluck
12 Somewhat
(3wds.)
14 Guggenheim
display
15 Cargo
weight
16 Expenditure
17 Par( of
RSVP
20 Fig baskets
23 Fountam
treat
24 Ethnic
corrunumty
in N.Y.C.
(2 wds)
26 Man or
Pines
21 Pull up 28 Duffer's
need
%9 Phv·siciJ•t.

Construction

GRAVELY SERVICE - So•e 2S Pel

~EW 3 bedrpom house , 2 both1 ,

J•

ACROSS

PHOTOGRAPHY

Call992 7481

3 bedrooms , IV2 baths, Iorge liv·
1ng room, dining room and k1l·
chen , fully carpeted . Phone

Pass

1 "Ramayana"

D&amp;D

Tuppers Plains on Oh1o , Route

3o

1 2 · ~ ~ Dan

1

by THOMAS .JOSEPH

.

HOMESITES for scle, I acre and
up M1ddleport , near Rutland

2.
3N T

Pass

33
·
12 :3Q-.Movle
" Bey. Borrow or Sloa I" 8.

~~tal

(614)915-4155
Chester, Ohio
10.17-1 mo (Pd)

J

OHIOO

-

USTER SE -

...
..,.,.' ·•
eiJ ~

4

KEN GROVER

lontp.;llo,Ohto ..,741
669·424!1 .......

Friday , Nov 12. 6 30 p m
Truckload of toys, gifts, all new
merchandise , 7
m. Con·
slgnments of use merchan ·
dise and furniture at the Aut·
lion House, Horton St., Mason,
W. Vo. {~) 773 -5471

FOR SALE

9

liiERf N""' YOU'RE
Ct&lt;AZIER'N rDU

Weddings

"""'" I loa 121

Soulh

l•

Pass

12 .oo-Movle " T he As sa s s lnatlof1 Bureau " 10; Janak!

~ ~~~

North East

2a

Schools

room over

One good used -Hotpoint
refrigerator.
1100
One gooa used G E.
refrlger1tor
S2SO
One good uud Ho,potnt
r~nge.
sso
New Co-Op Wlter solt!ner,
Reg . 1349 .
NOW 129.9
Oasis Humidifiers, m.odet

e•~~;w

Aerial
Commercial

TRALLER SALES

Sole.

~! Jac~~jtu-·

992-2975

ALLEY..

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE .

Rutland, Ohto 45775

BEE-LINE FASHIONS. Phooe 992·
3373

Pomeroy~

GRAVELY 8 H.P Demonstrator
with 30" mower and dual
wheels Used about 5 hours ,
new '!'t'Orranty Save 25 per
cent Gravely Tractor Sales ,
Pomeroy , Ohio. Phon• (614)

HAVE 10 GO

IN10 "TOWN,

West

and agam South played m
three notrump Thi s West
opened a spade and somehow
or other durmg the course of
the play let go of a small hea rt
so lh1s declarer wound up by
tak1ng all 13 tricks
For the benefit of those

champiOnship malch

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Revive the nr1&lt;o;n•l
of your rugs.
· your owrl home
b)' Von Schrader
dry.foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same day.
All work
eua11ntood.

New T V Shop 'Electronic TV
Cll n1c". Ser111ce call $5 95.
Pho ne 992·6306
•

WE'D LOVE TO SHOOT YOUR
3 AND .ol RM furnished and un·
furnished opts Phone 992·

WE WON'T

Y 'MEAN WE

33.

Great Britam m a world 's

Netlher vulne ra bl e

Greenhouse

Ph.67HI69
f:3D·5 :oo oaur
Tiiii.LOOO Frld,y_s

• A K98 64

SOUTH
A K8 4
.Q 5

10 or more

Hubbard's

Pl. Pieasont

t1 3

•

11 3()-Johnny Corson 3,4,15, Streets ot Son Franclsc:G
6, 13. Kolak ! ;.Mar y Hartman 10; ABC News33 .

readers who are about to ask

¥4
t K 10 8 6 5 4 2

and pink . $3.00 to $6.00 20

PHOTOGRAPHY

New ear corn for sole. Phone
7-42· 2359

1968 V.W. Vnn w· seats , excellent
condition. Also , electric base
gu1tar , amp $175. Phone (614)
667·6l.o1B , Coolville, Oh1o.

EAST

aiO 97
• Q 10

•A•QJ 65 2
¥ 985 3
t 9

FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR '
YOUR HOME In pOtl end I
hanging baskets from 75c ,
ro $5.00. Also, 11y away
POtNSETTIAS now for
CttRISTMAS . 6000
to
Choose from . PERFECT
FOR GIFTS In r!d , wh it!

PROFESSIONAL

7766 o, 992-249S

PEARCE SIMPSON C.B. base sta
f10n Phone 247·2684 after 5

By Clarice Alleo
Vice president Sheila
Taylor presided at the
Novem~r meeting of the
Ladles' Auxiliary, Wed·
nesday evening at the fire
house. The meeting opened
with the Lord's Prayer,
MATCH , just off At 7
followed with roll call. The SHOOTING
B.y· pon Each Sunday , starting
secretary's report was given
12 noo n
by Ethel Orr and the BRIMSTONE MX , Sunday. I p m IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer.
wont to bu'l' Of sel l some thing ,
treasurer's report by Opal
Ram , shme , or snow. 2 m1les
ae looking for work . . . or
•Wickham. The community
out Rood S6, Cool ville Phone
whatever
you'll get results
{61&lt;) 667-3610.
:!. service committee reported
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad
on the serving of a meal at the HOW would yo u li ke to get $70
Coll992 -2156
worth of new clo thes free ?
•· home of Enna Cleland after
Brand nome. For mformot1on. GARAGE SALE , at Clifton, W. Va
; . the death of her mother. The
behmd post office Turn on hrst
coli 9.ol9·2803 or 949·2786 Offer
lone below post office. Follow
; ! good of the order conunlttee
exp1res No"'~ 26th.
s1gns 9 till 5 Thursday Fnday
:i discussed plallll lor the anand
Saturday
Clarence
,, nual Christmas party, to ~
Wams ley.
: •. held at the fire house on Dec.
YARD SALE. Saturday Nov 13 at
:: 12. It was noted that the new Lost : ladles leather b111fald in
Robert Hawk 's residence
fron t of Dutton s 1n M1ddleport
• ; cards have arrived and can
Hem lock Grove
Furniture,
Coli 9&lt;9-2SIO. --~-clothmg of ell kmds AdultS ond
: . be purchased from the
d11ldren"s, diShes . etc
•' members . Roll call was Lorge d og. poss1bly hunting dog
lound
1n
Hysell
Ru
n
Rood
oreo
BACK
PORCH Sale. each Wee~
; answered by Margaret
a nd Bailey Run . Please ldent1fy
Monday through Saturday 10
:; 'Christy, Inzy Newell, Clara
to cl aim , a nd phone 992·5378 o r
till 5. Take Rt 12.4 toRt 325,
9•9·2210
Conroy, Cleo DeTray, Betty
then to~e Rt. 325 to Danville .
Follow s1gns Cloth ing , d1she s,
• Newell, Karla Chevalier, LOSf o r STOLEN Reword fo r the
appliances , many miSc . items
:·~ Pam Hoffman, Erma
return of o brown suede coot
Phone 7-42·2-48 1
token
from
Meigs
Inn
Saturday
·~. peiand, Ethel Orr, Opal
night Please return 1! to the YARD SALE, Fndoy and Sotordoy,
Wlcltham, Sheila Taylor and
Meigs Inn .
J mde from Chester Bridge , Rt
~ -. Clarice Allen, also a guest Thank you , Jon I
2.ol8 across from Golf Coone
~. , J{rlstle Hofbnan.
Gas stove, 125. 3 storm wm ·
ONE ENGLISH Setter, mostly
dows . ventilator fan. wall
•'&gt; . Virgil Wood, Springfield,
wh1fe with bloc~ patch over eye
hwter, round lob bowl. baby
end one fema le Brittany
' spent Wednesday night wllh
dressmg table , bouncer, baby
Spon1
el
,
liver
and
white
m
col
'"' his mother, letha Wood.
boy and girl clothes. etc. Phone
o r lost in Kingsbury, Rt. 33
,, ... D. D. Cleland and Mrs.
98S-3335.
area . Phone Bud Wtlson . 992
Carpenter, Colwnbus, called
7283.
GARAGE Sole . Nov 11 and 12
.. , on Mrs. Clayton Allen and DOG LOST mole . black , wh1te
from 9 to 7:30 Go north thru
Chester , turn
left past
Denzel Cleland, Friday.
and brown. some blue spots
~1 rehouse , 1 mile Watch for
near
Tan
ners
Run
Address
on
Mrs. Opal Hollon S!li'Dt
signs Adult and children ·~
collar Jim Weese . Syracuse ,
several days with Mr. and
winter clothes
mo te r ntty
Ohio or phone 992-5089.
Mrs. Gerald Hollon and
clothes. baby 1tems and
miscellaneous Items Garage
children, Columbus.
heot!Hi. Proce!His for Chester
:f: Mr. and Mrs. Don Wllllams lui week.
United Methodist Church
:t end children, Columbus,
Hilda Weber, Columbus,
Building Fund .
• ~ were weekend guests of Mr. spent several days with Mr.
"&amp;.'and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
. : · Mr. and Mrs. JerryGrubba
Mr. and Mrs. Marion
:t' )lnd children, Columbus, White, Crestline, were recent PLEASURE HORSES or;.:! pon1es.
also wi II buy horses and
:' 'Were weekend guests of Mr. visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
ponies Phone (614) 698·3'290,
;;; and Mrs. Rl!ger Keller and Arthur Orr.
Ruth Reeves .
r
"" sons.
Harry Krider, Delaware,
AKC
REGISTERED
BOXER
PUPPIES.
Ray Smalley and daughter 0., visited hla cousin, Mrs.
Hod shots and wormed Phone
Ma rth~ . Lancaster, called on Mabel Van Meter Friday,
{61&lt;) 992-31&lt;2
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, their flrlt In many years.
BEAGLE Pupt , month to 10 wuks
Monday.
Also vialllng with them were
old Also, troln.d leggl .. ,
Mr. and Mra. Arthur her brothers, Raymond • moles and temol.s , r.asoi"!(lbty
DeTray visited with 'fr. and Krider, Columbus, and Eldon ' prlc.d. Phone VIrgil y..,, .
brough, 7~2-2521 ;.._ _ _ _
Mrs. Fred Dresch', Toledo, Kraueter, ~e .

Racine, Ohio

1

Y

-For sot! cna1r c slllons,
mattresses, podding. Ideal
lor campers. Variety of

7689
1910 CUTlASS, $1500 Al5o, 191S
Garage Equ ipment
cheop
busmen bu il ding 50 " 60, &amp;x·
cel lent condition , cement
drive , Rutland Corp , pnce
reduced Coli 7.ol2 -2602 Reason
lor sellmg ·poor health

.3

t AQJ
.10 7 3

MINE., euT IF "IOU
GO BUSliK' DOWH

late.

TRADERS DAY at Bob a nd Corby "s
Fo x Chostn g Cob1n o n Eagle
Ridge 2n d Saturday in eve ry
mo nth Anything dogs guns
a nd kn 1ves. Trade , bu y, sell or
2170
~e away Sob Clon~~----­
WHAT• Be tter Chri stmas g1ving SMALL FUEL 01l healer fo r sole or
trade Also will trade o
than wo nderful full color por
dunebuggy , sharp fo r o
tro1ts '? Quality at reaso nable
pleasu re boat. Also, hove o
pnce s . The Photo Place 109
1970 Ford Von , &amp;lllcellent condl ·
H1g h St., Po meroy , (Bob
t1on . Phone 949-2770.
Hoellich). 992 S292

UPHO

II

NORTH till

. AKJ7 6 2

1972 CHEVY Von, 11·8 ouiOIJlohc
transm iSSIOn , p .s Phone 992·

Hondo 125 $500 Phone Tonya
. Davis, after 6 p m 985 -350 1 1973 MERCURY Morqu1 , 26 COO
miles . excellent cond1t1on Lots
of edros for $299~ Phone 992 ·

WE! Gt'H ,. OH, OH~

NOTICE

POtY.M

CARPET Sfi)P

m 1les sissy bar, crash bars
pu ll bock handle bars, new tire
a nd seals, Se:rombler !1de
POTATOES and pumpkins C W
Proff1tt, Portland Oh1o Rhone

IT'l l SUPPORT 11\Y

WEST

38'11
1971 HONDA Cl450, 12.000

Have you Kurd about the
"Gun"?

BEN FRANKLIN C&lt;nt Iron wood or
cool burnmg slave. e xc ellent
cond111on ., Elec garage door
opener remote contro l, l1ke
new . Old sohd oo~ dm ing room
table wtth extr.a leaves e ll·
cellent c:ond1fiOn Phone 949·

SMITH (!IILSON
MOTORS, INC.

CERTAINL.Y I'M AL.. I'!IOHT! WHAT
DID YOU THINK~... cAN'T 1 EVEN
SIT DO WN WITHOUT 50ME l'tu5SIAN
SPY 5 NOO PIN6 ON MlH!

L · L.· L. E:T"S 5 EE IF

33.

9 oo-B, st Sellers l .&lt;.IS, Tony 'Randa ll 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-08; VIsions 33, Movie " Barefoot In lhe Park"
10
9 JQ-.Nancy Walker 6,13; Jeanne Wolf With lO .
IO·tlO-Gibbsvllle 3,&lt;,iS; Slreets of San Francisco 6:13:
Barnaby ,J ones 8: New.s 20.
i0.3Q-.Woman 20.33.
11 :oo-News 3,&lt;,6.8.10.13.1 5, MacNe iH.ehrer Report

can look
like chumps
'- .

.... ltZ·%176

COAl , limestone . and calCium
chloride end calCium brine for
949-2114
d ust control and spec1ol muung
salt for formers . Main Street , L_ _ _ _ _ _.,:l.;,l·..:•..:
·l:.;m:;;:o:.
. .J
Po meroy , Oh1o or phone m..

pipe• $650 Co\1949·2•80.

CAPTAIN EASY
'·'' !..WJI"·-!t ... FEEL.So LIKE
I ' VE TWISTED MY ANKLE !

llolllio . .

SIDI5somn

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

gouge . 30 inch borrell mckel
steel , $350 Contact Morvin
Keebough . days • 992-53&lt;42 or
evenings , 985·3913

Come early, Stay

Sl1llll

lii!IDOIS &amp; IIOOIS
IEI'IACOiliiT
IIIIIDOWS
lUll IIIII

RACINE

I

8 ,lQ-. Barney Mill er 6,13

NAT BRIDGE

-llttWIII&amp;Atllcl

11-11 ·1 ,.,.

$$CASH$$ for junked • autos
Phone 7.o12-2081 Frye s Truck &amp;
Auto Ports . Rutland
COINS CURRENCY to kens , old
poc;ket watches and cho lm ,
stl . ,. er and go ld We need 196-4
a nd older silver coins, Buy, 1ell ,
or trade ' Call Ro ge r Wamsle y,

,...... snc.s

Phone 992-2594
Middleport, 0.

2102door, local car, A speed transmission , 44,200 miles.
good tires , dark green finish , real economy .

beds,

Make 11 a pomt today to hobnob
w1th you r more alfluent and tn·
ltuen tlal lnends Som et hing

sons to whom you 've been
generous wtll be looking for
way s to reci proc ate today Wh at
they have In mind should please

52195

_

Illlwn

llllllllliln

DAILY RENTALS
ON
NEW '77
PLY MOUTHS

clean .

6·3Q-.NBC News 3,4,1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iff ith 6,
CBS News 8,10; Combat 9; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
lTV Utilization 33.
1:tlO-Truth or Cons . 3; To Tell lhe Truth&lt; . Bow ling for
Dollan6; News 10. To Tell ihe Tru1h 13, My Three
sons lS; Any011e for Tennyson 20: Gtjplng On 33

HOW MANY
FLU SHOTS
HAVE I GOT
FER IODAY,
NUSS?

I

~Priii~..:=:.:===:.=~~~~:::::•~~::..:-:::....__:_,JI t

L'

abo••

xxJrn
(~wen

l'etten.,•,

I

lomorto••

J••hlo" PLAIT MINER GIGGLE DILUQI
-'n•wcr~ Ht ru11 from1Wttgier ad d•~e~ecl11o aiPrtdatfoll

oloii-THE "IIIQAATI" .

'l

I

�.
'

12-'TheDaUysentinel,Mlddleport-Porner~y,O., Thur!$y,Nov.

Rhodes. ~

bills
·die, this term

'i"""'"'---------------------------------------------------.

())LUMBUS (UP!)- Gov. Rhodes.
1
J!Ul)CS A. Rhodes' proposed
'But we will continue to
lax bll"enUves for expanding work on them next session,"
industries apparently have said Moyer. "This is
been laid to rest for this something the governor is
session of the Ohio General convinced Is needed , and we
A.~sem bly.
.
just ar,en 't gol!lg to give up oo
. 'TI1e legislature has set it. Testimony at ilie hearings
aside one more day, Dec. 14, convinced us even more of
for action this year and the the need for some type of
chairman of the House Ways assistance to lnduslrleo."
and Mean.'i Committee said
Moyer
hinted
the
Wednesday he is not going to administration's lndllllrlal
hold any more hearings oo assistance legislation In !he
Rhodes' bills.
112th session In January
~&lt;'fhe re won't be an~ tax
might diffe1· from the current
incentive bill,," said Rep. bills.
L:ecrge D. Tablack, DDtmp"We'r e talking about
l&gt;f'll. "Not one individual, different ideas, but we don't
eiU1er the sponsors or from have anything firmed up
th e adm inistration, has yet," he said.
shown svty desire to mOve
Tablack said he is willing to
forward on them. .
hold hearings on the
"It appears to me they 1the proposals again next year,
governor 's office) have although he Is not convinced
changed their priorities," the industries need lax ineentlves
chairman conll nu e\l. '~ lf to expand operations.
U1ey're not interested , we're
"Industry's not going to
certainly not interested in come flocking in here just
moving hclterskeltcr on any because you give them a Ulx
of these propo"" Is."
break, " said Tablack. "There
Tab1ack's committee has are other things, such as
h 1d three weeks of hearings location, markets and · 1
on U1e bill&lt;;, which offer transportation, which are
lirnlll'd tax abatement for just as important as Ulxes.
indtL'Itrles expanding to inner This legislation would he an
city nreas, modernizing their erosion of the state's Ulx
plunts or purchasing new dollars and would further
cepltnl equipment.
comp,licate discussions of
But the chairman (!allL&gt;d off next year's budget . Nobody's
tile last two schedul ed t&gt;evn able to show me that it 's
me&lt;:tings the week beloce the needed."
elcdinn alter on ly six of the
Rhodes convinced majority
19 committee mem bers Democrats to hold hearings
shQw(~ d

up,

He

never

in Tablack's committee at a

schet.luletl another meeting Sunday afternoon meeting
and snid he wiU allow time to with legislative leaders in his
rw1 out on the lllth tlcneral office early ia=&gt;t mooth.
1\sscmhly .
He threatened to call a
"We certainly rcF\I'el that special session of the legisla-

this sc. sion oi U1 e legislature ture if the bills were not
will huve adjourned without moved by the middle of
1akJng any nction on the Dctoher, and denied any pre·
bills," SRid Thomas J . Moyer, election politics oo his part.
P"&lt; ccutlve as~ i R l an l to No special session was ever
called.

Sister on stand
in nturder case
testified Wednesday, aft er jurors toured the area in Tar
Hollow SiBle Park where
Mrs. Arledge 's body was
found March 9, 1974.
County Corone r Donald
Berifn g tesiified Mrs.
Arledge, Hunt's neighbor,
died of a blood -blocked
windpipe. He said hi s
investigation showed no signs
of sexual activity by 'the
woman. She had been beaten
of the murder more thnn two .with a rock and a tree limb.
Poli ce
officers
who
years ago. He said "Her
testimony could be a very investigated at the murder
large hurdle and a scene also testified. ,
'i11e defense declined to
cletennining factor in the
make an· opening statement,
case."
• Six: pn;isccution witnesseS a.•king for the right to speak
,-------~ after the prosecution had
concluded.
The trial finally opened this ·
week alter, Hunt, 24, Chillieo·
the, had spent two years
confined by the court to
menUII institutions · !earning
universal sign language well
enough to participate in his
CHILLICOTHE , Ohio
(UP!) · ·- Delilah Seymour
will luke the stand today as a
prosecution witness against
her dl•af mute brother llohby
Hun t, acc used Of the
aggrnv!&gt;l.ed murder ol Ruth
Nm·lene Arledge.
Hoss Co unty Assistant
Proscmtion ttichard Ward
said Wednesday his witness
has a J"ir of blood-stained
trousers Hunt wore the night

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

'ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

'

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.

•

WOMEN'S.
SPORTSWEAR

GIRLS'
DRESSES

FRIDAY &amp; SA'TURDA Y
SPECIALS
MEN'S SHOES

SALE PRICES on
one group of
coordinated
skirts,
jackets,
blouses,
slacks
and vests. Sizes
from 7-8 to 17-18.

REG. 36.50 EARLY AMERICAN

TABLE LAMPS ·
SALE '22.50

Brushed denim,

1 GROUP REG. 113.69 NOW 16,85

WOMEN'S SHOES
1 GROUP REG. '10.99 NOW '5.50
l GROUP REG. 111.99 NOW 16.00

MISSES AND CHILDREN'S SHOES
I GROUP REG. 112.49 NOW '6.25
1 GROUP REG. '8.99 NOW 14.99

'

....

With the holidays just around the
corner, now's the time to trade in
your old set.

SALE
PRICES
MEN'S FASHION
JEANS

JACKETS
Now located on the 1st floor in the
men's department. A new selection of
wallets. key cases, credit ·.card holders, a
perfect Christmas gill for him, all' boxed
ready to give .

sizes 36 to SO. Regular
waist length styles and

longer

lengths.

Corduroys , nylons ,
cotton polyester blends, ·
denims, wool plaids and
leather looks. Includes
our entire stock.

Buy the lackets you
need for yourself and
family and save during

CINCINNATI - THE FEDERAL a:&gt;MM!JNICATIONS

this sale.

Sizes 3 to 7 and 8 to 20. A big selection.
Save Now.

Commisalo~ and the U. S. attorney's office in Toiedo have

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

MEN'S
SHIRT SALE

Visit the housewares department

WINCHESTER, TENN. - .AN EPJSa:&gt;PAL priest was
charged In a ltk!ount Indictment Thursday with staging and
photographing homosexual orgie~ at his Boys Farm•. The
Indictment charged the Rev. &lt;;Jadlus I. "Bud" Vermilye, 47,
with II feloqy ard .five misdemeanor counts. 1be divorced
father of five was released on '10,0011 bond. .
·
,
Three of the felooy counts against Vennllye charge the
priest with partlclpatlrn! In crimes against nature, District
Attorney General J. Wllliam Pope said, and the other eight
were for aiding and abetting crimes against nature. The
misdemeanor cowtbl Include four charges of contributing .to
the delinquency of a minor and the other for using a juvenile In
making an obscene filni.

An un.usually
fine .
selection of jackets iri

SALE! BOYS WINTER.
JACKETS

WESTMORELAND GLASSWARE

shirts and

SALE PRICE '22.99

knit

shirts and other hanging

fine quality glassware by

shirts., There's

New colors

·, ..,,., ~

a

big

selection In sizes. Small.
medium, large and extra
large. You'll really save
lng .this sa le :

CORNINGWARE '41.80
COOK .N,~ BAKE SET

-New Items.
8 piece Spice of Life Design

.

SALE PRICE '28.99
AT THE HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

SALE! CANNON "MON.TICELLO"

You'll find a fine group of wonderful
Fisher Price toys in Elberfeld's
Toyland on the lsi Floor. Stop inand
see the selection and buy, what you
need for Christmas on our lay-a-way
plan.

NO-IRON MUSLIN SHEETS
Famous Cannon quality - 50 per
cent polyester and 50 per cent
cotton . Solid co Iors,

16.99 FULL

· DOLLS • DOLLS
• DOLLS
•

.

SALE 1
5

SALE P-RICES
FISHER PRICE TOYS

BLEACHED QUILT LINING
SEAMLESS
-FULL 81 INCHES WIDE
REGULAR PRICE
$2.29 AYARD
88

•2.39 A YARD
90 INCH WIDTH....SALE '1.98

ELB

SI~E

FITTED OR RAT.. ..SALE '6.08 ,

16.79 TWIN SIZE FITTED OR FLAT ••• SALE '5.98

Step in Elbir'lelds 'toyland on the 1sl Floor
and see the excellent line of dolls. Dolls
you've seen advertised on TV. The one your
children want. Vogue, Rub· A· Dub, Shirley
Temple, Baby-that-away, Drowsy, Princess
Anne, New Baby Alive, 32 inch LDrie
Walker, and many, many, others .

FEL

IN

Fifteen Cents

Vol. 28, No. IH

'9.99 QUEEN SIZE FITTED OR FLAT. SALE 18.78
14.99

PR. PILLOW CASES ....... SALE 14.38 PR.
'5.49 PR. KING PILLOW CASES·. SALE 14.78 PR.

ME

y

rates pressed on utilities
'

It turns out she can't do
what Mr. Rockefeller did
AUSTIN, Tex. (UP!) - A woman who made an
obscene gesture .towar~ four undercover policemen .
felt If Vice President Nelson Rockefeller could do It so
could abe.
'
AJJ it turned out, however, she couldn't-sbe was
arrested 111 the spot. ·
"This Is aU just ridlculoUB," said Karen Irving, 20. "I
thought they were looking for a proatltute and 1 just
wanted to let them know I wasn't one."
Mrs. Irving said if It was legal for Rockefeller to do
it-it should be legal for everyone, and has decided to
fight the case. She and her attorney Jaliet Stockard
apJ.'e&amp;~ed in MWilcipal Court, oot the'four complalnm8
offwus falled.to·11ppe.. and .the c3se..\\'BB pos!poned
for a month.,
.
Ms. Stockard, clutching . ·a news magazine and
. several.newspaper photographs of Rockefeller' making
a slmjlar gesture toward demonsb-aUng students aaid
Mrs. Irving's arrest 'was an abuse of discretidn by
pollee.
,
.
"This lsn 't illegal," she said, pointing to the
Rockefeller plctw-es. "We're going to get thia case to
b-laland get a decision so that we can have some sort of
policy and police will know that they can't arrest
• people for this.
. ,"This sort of thing happens aU the lime, but mostly
Its to little people who do not have lhe lime or money to
hire a lawyer and fight it."
Mrs. Irving, a mother of!our, said she was mlking to
a man on ·a downtown street when one of the officers
waved at her. She responded with a raised fmger and
was arrested.
'

joined forces In il crackdown on · illegal Citizefl8 Band operators In Oljio, it was reported today.
FCC officers and U. S. marshals swept through several central
Ohio commtmities this week, confiscaUng illegal equipment
anddtingCBoperators who appou:enlly were violating federal
regulations on CB usage, the CinciMaU Enquirer reported in
today's ed!Uons.
..
'
The raids W!!fe the beginning of an accelerated program of
enforcement in the Buckeye State, the paper said. "We are
most Interested In overpowered lransm!tters and linear
ampllflers which have been causing interference to television,
radio and legal CB radio owners," Ed Adams, chief engineer
RACINE - The Southern
f~ the Ohio-Michigan FCC District, was quoted as saying.
Local Board of Education
"We are also very concerned with some of the profanity Thursday night Instructed its
and vulgarity that seems to he occurring" on CB ·radio clerk, Jane Wagner, io
throughout Ohio, Adams said.
·
readvertiae for bids on the
heating system for the adPALM SPRINGS, CALIF. - PRESIDENT FORD is dition planned (or Southern
· vacationing as though he were !~~ready out of office but also is Local blgh school.
keeping everyone guessing about hia post-election feeUngs and
In other bUBinesa, the boatd
ac\lv!Ues In the future. Since arriving In this desert spa, he has accepted a new Baldwin
heen abnost an invisible man and aides said he would hold to plano from the Glee Club
his private Ufe styletodaywitha sixth round of golf in as many activity fund and approved
days.
'
· ·
use of the blsh school by
· . EXcept for taking his wife, Betty, to a big dinner party in Racine villag'e Saturday,
his hmcr, Ford baa left his 1&lt;koom rented villa only to play at Nov. 13 for Ule..rlllcentennial
swanky golf courses In the area and baa virtually ignored the day celebration. The boand
press when seen iriefly atthestartof those ouUngs. Aides said also establlahed admbision
be hal been sl,eeplnc later and later, doing 90me light work prices to athletic games at
before and afler 'JioH, and spending evenings quietly with his $1.50 for adulbl and 75 cents
famlly and some old friends, particularly Bob Hope.
for students.
In an earlier meeting, the
WASHINGTON - BROADCAST STATIONS across the board aecepied a bid from
country are .receiving 7,000 tape-recorded messages urging lnterkal, Inc., Kalamazoo,
11Btener1 to do their Christmas mailing by deadUnes which the Mich., for gym blea&lt;bers to
Postal Service now sa)'ll are obsolete. The. Postal Service be installed next April. They
announeecl Wednesday that because of an expected
"acejltloaally high" Vlllume of Christmas mail it was urging
dtlzeltl to inaU Ou1stmas parcels by Dec. 3 ard I'liters ~d
. ~by De&lt;:. 10. Each date was a week earlier than It h&amp;d
e• ~
earner recosrunendecl.
·,
Rldlo statl&lt;ms aci'OII Ute country this week began
racelvJnalape recordlnp prepared for ' the Postal Service by
Prof. James Winebrenner
an eclvertlllng finn auggesting the mail be sent by the Dtic, 10
and Dec. 17 deadllnee, A Polllal strvlc:e spokesman said It i8 of Ohio University gave a
now aending letters asking the 7,000 radio slatloos to delete the report of progress on the
obllolete,dalel and have their amouncers insert the n.W dates. accomplishm~nts of
university student.! engaged
In designing a reatored
Pomeroy when the Pomero•'
Community
Action ' Com·
. GET 'EM DOWN.
mlttee
met
in
regular
aeasion
Nov, 2 election candidates earlier this week.
Clearing and colder who polled signs in Pomeroy Co-&lt;:halnnan Walter· Robb
tonfght, lows 17 to 22. Mostly have been given a five day reported that llep.t are being
sunny Saturday, highs In the IIEienalon to remove their taken lo reactivate the forupper :IOL Probability of , signa or forfeit a t26 deposit mer Meigs County Com·
precipitation 18 II per &amp;mt polled at Pomeroy Village munlty Improvement Cor·
todlty llld 10 per cent tonight · Hall, The five day extension poration as the appropriate
erplra Wedneaday.
and Saturday.
organlzation to apply for
. ~

This sale in cludes a11 o1 our
men ·s lei sure shirts ,
western

•

New bids wanted
.
.
on heat system.

CORNINGWARE '35.80
COOK'N lAKE SET
8 piece set in Blue Cornflower emblem.

and see the new selection of

Westmoreland -

members of a Panamanian ship that sank In the Pacific 1,400
miles northwest of Honolulu.
Ten of the 33-nlan crew frOm the lost vessel, the 486-fool
lumber freighter Carne1181l-1, were picked up from ilie Ice cold
water as two freighters sear&lt;bed for the survivors In total
darkness and In stormy conditions. The rescued crewmen
owed lbeir lives to the fact that they could cUng to a mass of
Doatlng IOI!S that had formed part of the ship's cargo.

MEN'S WINTER

Many of these fashion jeans
have jackets to match or
jackets and vests . .

NEW YORI( (UPI) - Prtce1 opeaed hliber Wday Ill qulettr8dlag on the New Yorll
Stocl&lt; Ell:cl)uge. 1be Dow Jone1 lllduolrtal average, wblch gained 7.st point• wiaUe
breaklu« • four-day loslllg slrellil 1bunday, wu off 0.09 to 8SUO lbortly Iller U.e
opeulllg bell.
.
'
Advanl)e led deellnea, 95 to a, amouc the !17 laouea croeslng the tape 111 the early
IOIDg. TUrnover aiDOUDied to about 230,000 ahuea,

«

knots tod8y hampered efforts to rescue surviving crew

SALE!

Cor duroy In flares and straight teQ

$11.19
512.09
$12.89
$13.69

.

HOI(OLULU- TWENTY-FOOl' WAVES and winds of 40

·SALE '42.88

58.89
$9.69
$10.39

'

.
By Ulllled Press Iuteraalloaal
· DAYTON, DIDO - PAUL TIPPS, OHIO Democratic
chalnnan, Thursday eUminated himself as a contender to
succeed Robert Strauss as chairman of the National
Democratic Party.
"I have just started to develop the Democratic party in
Ohio," said Tipps. "It is a unique opporllmity. I want to stay
here and conUnue to do that." Tipps said he did not want to
move his famlly to Washington.
,

-Horizontal slide-rule tuning dial
for easy tuning.
-AFC.Ior drift-free reception on FM
-2-step tone control for bass-treble
blending.
-4" PM dynamic speaker .

ROLFS WALLETS FOR MEN

Men's $10.95 Fashion Jeans
Men'sS11.95 Fashion Je.ans
Men's St2.95 Fashion Jeans
MMen 's 513.95 Fashion
Jeans
· Men 's $14.95 Fashion Jeans
Men's $15.95 Fashion Jeans
Men 's $16.95 Fashion Jeans

.

\

Elberlelds Mechanic Street Warehouse

Sizes 27 to dO waist measurement .
Choose your correct length. A big
selection .

Stock prices rally at opening today

a1 y . . . . . en tine

liJVews. • •in Briefsl Lifeline

To,.

solids and prints.

styles, cot ton polyester bl ends, brushed
.denim s, colton twills.

VETERANS DAY OBSERVED - Veterans Day wu ob.!erved Wednetday when a
firing squad asaembled in front of the I'Omeroy Court Ho~ made up of men from Feeney .
Bemett Post 128and Drew Webster I'Ost 39 of the Am..-lcan Legioo. The squad was wtder
command of Edgar Vanlnwagen. Ta)l8 were 'played by Page Smith and Velvet Swiaher of
Meigs 1118h School Marching Band.
·
·

·::g:=::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~:;:;::&lt;:;~;:;:;~;::~:::::~:::~::~:~:·:~:~·:::::!::~:~:::::~:~::~::::~::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

polyester knits
and corduroy in

thai margin was "arUficlal."
Caddell denied the election
was seen as "the lesser of two
evils." Both Carter and F&lt;rd
were
perceived
as
trustworthy
and
had
favorable ratings of more
than 60 per cent - more thaft
In 1972, 1968 or even 1960, he
aald. Few voters held sb-ong
negative views about either
candidate.
··
In 1960, the mid-Atlantic
states of New York, New
_Jersey, Penmylvanta, Maryland, West Virginia a.nd
(Continued on page 12}

''

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 5:00P.M.
MIDDLEPORT. 0 .

lfomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 12, 1976

better educated, upper
mlddleclasa voters, Carter
did better than any Democrat
since 1964. Caddell noted
"tremen~ous
population
movements" here.
- Among lndependenbl,
Carter held his "fair share,"
getting 46 to 47 per cent.
- Unemployment, stressed
by . Carter,
surpassed
inflation, . stressed by
President Ford, as a major
issue.
Commenting on Carter's
33-polnt drop in. the . poliS,
Caddell aaid he felt all along

•

e

-

COLOR TV

81 INCH WIDTH

LlnLE GENTS BOOTS

REG. s49,95 PANASONIC
AM

FOOTBALL'S
BIG GAMES ON

BOYS BOOTS

1 GROUP REG. 113.69 NOW '6.85

SALE.
PRICES

'•

·-1

SALE PRICES ON RCA &amp; G.E.
COLOR DELEVISIONS

GIRLS' SKIRTS

,.

\

I

In Our Furniture Dept. on the 3rd Floor

GOOD FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING

YOUTH BOOTS

\

. I

1

PRICES

j)tij)Uc' events.
PLAINS, Ga. (UPI} Caddell, 26, a veterap of but
Prealdent-elect Jimmy two preaidential campalg118,
Carter' I pollster believes gave rEIICII'Iers his analysis of
Carter won the election · by the campaljjn. He tald his
IIChlevlnl llle goal of 19th- ' ~gan!Jatlon sampled 400 to
century populists - a 1,200 voters In every lllate at
ooaUUon of bladal in large least once and Interviewed a
numbera, blije-coUar and total of about 300,00];
low.- income whites, and
"In the SouUt," he said, ·
"we were able to put together Instance, dropped by about 6
mlddleclau V!Mrs.
Patrick Caddell, the a coaUtion, essentially on~ per eent, especiaUy In large
poilU, said Thursday the envisioned by populist indusb-ial cities.
19'/t election demonstrated a leaders In Ute 19th century,
In other categories, Caddell
dramatic ahHt in the taking black voters in very said :
perCl!lltage of the nation's large nwnhers, blue-eollar
- In small town rural
total viM to Ute South and whites, lower lnccme whites areas, Carter got crucial
away from the Middle and voters in the middle gains, particularly In the
Atlantic states.
clasa, and loalng upper Midwest. His performance In
Carter, meanwhile, his six- Income votes," he said.
, these parts o! Ohio, Illinois ·
day vacalloo oH the Geocgia Caddell said the New Deal and Pennsylvania "was the
coast ended, planned to meet coaliUon essentlaUy held for , beat Of any Democrat of postprivately at biB home today Carter, although In aome World Wer II. "
·
with camp•ign director cases the margins were down
- In the suburbs, Carter
Hamilton : Jordan and from what they had been'in and Ford "broke about
b-anaitlon director Jack the last 20 years.
even," with the edge to Ford.
Watson Jr. He scheduled no
He said Catholics, for
- Amoog upper income,

I

. I

SALE

By WEBLEY G. PIPPERT

Short . and · long
le.ngths.
Nylon
permanent press
pastels and prints
on ·sale Friday
and
SattJrday.
Lingerie Dept. on
the 2nd Floor.

SALE PRICES

1 GROUP REG. 116.99 NOW 18.50
.1 GROUP REG. 114.99 NOW 17.50
1 GROUP REG. 114.69 NOW 17.35

GOWNS &amp;
ROBES .

SALE PRICES on our
complete stock of
girls
dresses .
Including cotton,
. dotted swiss and
corduroy . Sizes from 2
to 14.
·

uwn defense.

Two interpreters have also
heen selected by the court
to insur.e his understanding of
the proceeding and to help
should he be called to the
witness stand.

Power sh.i ft
South seen

'

~

By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPl} - The
6th U. S. Clrcuit Court of
Appeals ruled today that Ohio
companies ahd utilities will
not he allowed to use "any
new emission, process or air
quallty dam" In ihelr fight
against the Environmental
Protection ~encv's sulfur

f "'""
.
un~.., on community bet·
tennent proj~""'"·
Dr. Harold Browwn, cochairman, reported that
pla118 are being completed for
a commun it Y Ch r1stmas
program . Jim Thomu
·
sa id
efforts are continuing to get
all
c1v1c
minded 'org,nlzatlons
to
be
represented on the Com·
munlty, Actioo Comntlttee.
Charies swatzel represented
Dre•~ Webster Post 39,
Amerl can Leg 1on, at t he
meeting•

basis," the governor said.
"In our modern age,
electric power is a nece$8!ty,
and not a luxury," . said
Rhodes. "It Is Incumbent on
all Of us to Insure that' senior ·
citizens and poor people can
llght and heat their homes.
This private Industry
"1bere ls no reason a approach Is the best solution
similar plan cannot be to the problem.''
worked out oo a' lllatewide

. However, the 35 companies
_lind Qtllltles fighting the l!lPA
11ad a bigger 'v!otory earlier
In the week when the court
here temporarily halted
enforcement of the anti·
pollution regulaUons to allow
for more comment from the
companies.
.
The court reafflnned today
that the companies and
utilities must present their
case to the EPA by next Jan.
. 14, and Instructed the EPA
that within 60 days lifter Jan.
14 it must "prepare an
Middleport, 9 a.m. to 12 noon. appropriate response" and
Admission i8 '1.50 for adults, "amend the (antipollution)
75 cents for students and pre- regulaUons as necessary."
school chUdren will he ad·
The court added that Its
mltted to the game free.
temporary
ban
on
Plafl8 were made also . for enforcement will end 21 days
moving the cancer unit office after the EPA responds,
before Dec. 1 to the former "unless otherwise directed by
children's home building on this court."
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. • However, EPA officials
The nert meeting will he have said they fear more
Ile&lt;:.lht 7:30p.m. Attending legal fights could be
were Mrs. Rheha Hysell, forthcoming from the
director; Mrs. Jan Judge,
treasurer; Mrs. Jo Anne
Newsome, secrelary;
Wallace Hatfield, second vice
C
president, and Eugene Underwood, Ed King and Miss
•
Mary Boggs.

Alumni game at 2
Plans for the PomeroyMiddleport alumni football
game to he held at the
Pomeroy field on 'rhanksglving Day, 2 p.m., were
completed by the Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer
Society at the Middleport
office Tuesday.
Advance tickets will he aold
this Saturdsy at the Kroger
Store, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and at
the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy, and
the Citizens National Bank,

need In Ohio.
"Toledo EdiBon Co. was
Ohio's piooeer In this field,"
Rhodes said. "Working with
the City Co111cll of Toledo, it
has come up with a plan
which will result in
algniflcant savings for
elderly and poor people,

clean air round

dioxide air poliutioil cmtrol
r!!8ulations.
The decision was il victory
for the EPA, whose of!lclaia
had coo.tended that opening
up the dispute to "new dab!"
would put their lengthy fight
against sulfur dioxide
pollution In Ohio "hack at
gi'Oimd zero."

companies and utllltles,
which might further delay
actual enforcement.
Although the court today
refused to. allow the
companies and utilities to
submit "new data," It did
say, "Comments relating to
' clerical or computational
errors (In previous EPA
reports} shall he pennltted."
The court also asked the 35
companies ard utUlties to
"cmaolidate" the material to
he given the EPA "whenever
poaalble,"
At iuue In the case Ia how
strict the federal EPA will he
with Ohio Industry In
enforcing sulfur dioxide air
pollution controls,
as
mandated by Congl'tlllll' 1970
"Clean Air Act." 1
Much of the Buckeye
State's sulfur dioxide
pollutioq stems from
lndllllrl&amp;f burning of high
sulfur coal.
Federal EPA offlclall say
that Ohio 18 the only alate In
the nation without sulfut
dioxide regulations and complain that Industries and
utiiiUes In the state are
spending tlme and mooey In
the courts fighting the
regulations Instead of
working with the EPA.
After four public hearings
and months of planning,
Ohio's regulallons were'
A request for a recowtt on ftnaUy Imposed last Aug. 'll,
the votes cast In the Nov. 2 but because of ltpl delays,
election for the office of there has not yet heen any
county sheriff has been fUed e!lf&lt;rcement.
with the Meigs County Boand
of ·Elections by the In·
cumbent, Robert c. · Hartenbach, Republlcan.
According to the official
tally, Hartenbacli was
defeated In his bid for
reelection by . Democrat
James J. Proffitt by 15 votea.
According to new Oblo law, a
The
Heath
United
candidate losing by less than
ooe half of one percenJ of the Methotlist Churdl of Mid·
total vote cast, can.apply for dleport will have special
a recount wblch mUll be services Sunday, November
conducted by the boand of 14 at 10:30 a.m.
A ' new sound syat~m
electi0111 free of cost.
The recount hal been set ' presented to the church by
for 9 a.m. Wedneaday under the family of the late Jeanne
the supervlalbn of the Meigs , Morgu in memory of her will
Countf Boand of Elections be dedlcaled. Members of the
with all30 county jlreclncta to lamlly and relatives will
be recoWited by four clerks attend.
Another feature of the day
unde~ the supervision of the
board.
.
will be the preaentatlpn of the..,
worship aervlc:e by members'·
·
of the Senl~r High Church ..
School clau, Lee McComu 18
COFCTOMEET
their teacher and advllor.
The Pomeroy Chamber of The program will conal&amp;l of
Commerce will meet Monday !riel acldresaes on blbllcal
It noon at the Metga IM. lhemea. There will be special
Plans for the Cbrlatmaa mtulc by the youth group.
fli'OIIlotioo will be made. All 1be services are open to the
members are urged to attend. public,

Hartenba h
requestmg

Six marriages

recount

broken U.Jt or breaking down

Donald Leon Pooler and
Barbara Jane Pooler have
filed · for dissolution of
marriage In Common Pleas
Court.
An action for f972.43 was
flied by the Perfection Cobey
Co., Galion , against Dan
Smith, Rt. I, Racine. Everett
set and Veda Parker, RD,
U
Reedlville, fUed Bull to quiet
title against Earl Schultz and
RU'rLAND - The annual Marybelle Schultz, RD,
public turkey dinner of the Reedsville.
.
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Glenn 1. Cundiff, Jr·.,
Department will be held Syracuse, and Jane Cwldlff,
beginn'••
""'at 5 p.m. 1burada Y syracuse, flied for diaaoluUnn
at the Rutland Elementary of marriage, and an action
School cafeteria.
. for partition of real estate
Only advice tlcketa will he was filed by George Alfred
honored at the &amp;Mual· event Wolfe, Pomeroy, et al against
,. :50 for . Wilbur Bailey, ·: Rt. 2,
and these U.cketa at ••
adu"·
anA
''
50
f
,.. ~ . or cblldren , pomeroy et al.
are ava!Iabit at the New ,
Patty J. Harrison was
York Clothing House in . grantP.d a divorce from Fred
Pomeroy and Dultcm's Drugs B, Hanilon, and Doria J.
In Middleport. Also , tickets Zeigler from" Alfred B.·
may he purchased from any Zeigler. 1be marriagea of
member of the depa rtment or Mary K. Greer and Lowell E,
t•.. _..,_ Deadllne for the Greer and Geo""'a M. Smith
.. awuuary.
•- 12 noon and Paul L. '"'
purehaae of tlcketa ..
SmlUt were
·
oo N.ov. 11•
diaeolved.

Turkey dinner

reviewed ou

Weather

EPA wins

also employed Earl Adams
and Brooks Sayre as substitute bus drivers for the
1976-77 school year and approved the athletic activity
HEROIN FOR FREE
fund budget.
WASHINGTON
tUPI)A special meeting will he
A
report
prepared
for a
held Dec. 9at 7p.m. to review
government
dru1
abuse
heaUng bids and to review the
tentatively
financial condition of the agency
recommend•
a nation&amp;!
district, and meet in. regular
'
uelworli
of
cllnlca to
session Dec. 16 at 7:30 p.m.
distribute
heroin
to addicts
Attending were Jack
a1
an
e"]]trlment
In crime
Bostick, president; Robert
cootrol.
Sayre, Denny Evafl8, Dallas
A1ummary of the report
Hill and Roger Adams, boand
was
made avallablt ThiJn.
members; Bobby Ord,
day
by the Nati-t 111superintendent; Mrs.
tlllute
on Drug Ab1111e, the
Wagner, James Adams,
goverumenl't
principal
. Southern Local high school
dlul
abu.le
mearcb
and
principal; Larry Wolfe, Port·
treatment
ageacy.
,
land Elementary principal,
and James Wickline, Letart :::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::;::::;;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:,
Falls principal,
•

Pro,urm;:s of desrgn' proJeCt
'
by
professor

_.m

a:&gt;LUMBUS(UPI) - Gov. themselves, which is a
James A. Rhodes today urged healthy sign for Ohio.
Ohio
elecwlc
utility
"A lifeline rate plan
companies to hegln a lifeline administered principally by
plan to proN!de lower raies to the companies will benefit aU
Ohioans who need !IUCh rates. Obloans," 1!8id Rhodes. "II
"Mor~ than a year ago, I win pE· de lower rates to
asked the Public Utilities those ho need them, and jt
Commission to devise silch a will p event the &amp;reation of
plan but there was no another sUite boreaucracy,
action," said Rhodes. "Now wblch Is the last thing we
the utilities are doing It

• R tJand

m

~

Memorial gift

to church will
be tkdicated

, I'

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="783">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11252">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52495">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52494">
              <text>November 11, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
