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28 -The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SWlday,&amp;pt. 26,1978

:·

·-------------------------,
I,
I

! Dateline
I
I

1

Gallia

Beat • • •

I
I
I

Of the Bend
I

Division·honor
to Meigs band

"

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Hy Uoh llot•ilir h

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.
YOUR NEW G.E. APPUANCE &amp; T.V.

I

By H()bart Wilson Jr.

Gov . James Rhodes wiU be in Pomeroy for a $25 • plate
THE september issue of l;telmes, published monthly for breakfast Wednesday.
The Ohio Governor wm he making the appearance at the
employees of Columbus and So.uthern Ohio Electric Co.,
includes a picture-feature story of Gallipolis' Jack (Tex) Meigs Inn where the breakfast will be served at I a.m. with
IIarrison.
·
proceeds from the event to go to Merril Triplett, candidate for
state representative.
;
+++
APPEARING on pages 12 and 13, the articles reads :
Gov. Rhodes will be at the Meigs Inn unUI 9: IS at which
JACK "Tex" Harrison started playing the guitar at age lime he will meet the poiblic at Powell's &amp;lper-Valu store, W.
ten. He never learned to read music, but instead would listen to Second St., Pomeroy. Coffee and donuts will be served at
a song and then imitate it on his guitar.
Powell'sand the public will be asked for donations.
Residents interested In the $25 a plate breakfast can
TODAY Texis the lead singer of a country-western group
called "TexHarrison and the Valley Boys." He's come a long contact Leslie F. Fultz at 992-.5100 or David Ohlinger for
way from the days when each member of his family would sl ~ information or tickets.
around and play their musicallnstrumenls in the evening.
Now if you'd really like Ill live It up for '100 you can so to
. HE got the name Tex in school, when a friend said, "You .Ironton, with plane transportation Jli'Obllbly provided, and
know Tex, the only difference between you and Gene Autry is have dinner and play golf with the governor. Or, alB p.m. you
he can ride a horse."
can have dinner with the Governor at the Holiday lm. Athens
DURING the day, Harrison is a collectllr-investiga tor in County isn't Included in the Governor's swing so residents of
the River District, where his fellow employees call him there are being invited to participate In the local event.
IIStar."
"I LIKE the Electric Company and I'm proud Ill work
PLANS ARE BEING MAPE for the "Fall Fling" of the
here. I wouldn 't quit to play music, and I don't let It interfere Big Bend Minstrel Assn. to be spo11sored again this year by the
with my job."
.
Meigs Local Athletic Boosters. The show will probably be
HIS group has been together for eight years. They practice staged on the Saturday after Thanksgiving as has been the
ooce a week ior three hours and travel -in his remodeled tradition of several years. The boolters hope Ill develop the
Greyheund oos to their engagements, w.hich average abOut show as a location where people coming home for the holiday
four shows a mooth. Everything is done first class, Including weekend can see each other. Jim Soulsby who is active with
the group 's coordinated outfits (they have live separate ward- th e asSociation shows Is serving as new president of the
robes to use at different occasions).
boosters and will serve as coordlnatllr for arrangelllenls.
HARRISON sais they have played on live radio at a
Gallipolis discollilt store; at store openlrigs in Pomeroy, as far
THE SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL Band Is really an
away as Vlrgi!l ia, at the Nelson.ville Parade of Hllls, and the enthusiastic group these days. Previously the band has llld
Milton Opera House. They have also played at bean dinners, only ilome 40 members. This year the band has over 110
picnics, several shows for charity and even at the Grace members. It's a problem for the district's band boosters Ill
· Methodist Church where he worships on SWldays.
·
figure out the uniforms for so many new lllelllbers but it's a
.TWO years ago, the group made a record called "My happy problem to see so much participation. The band was
Shoes Keep Walkin' Back to You," which they sell after quite impressive at a recent young people's church event held .
performances. ''The most we ever sold after one.performance at the Meigs Junior High field in Middlepcrl.
was 61 t Tex said.
.
His group has also dooe backup with Roy Rogers, .Skeeter
INCIDElNTALLY, IF YOU NEED a good reference book
Davis, Grampa Jones and Ava Barber of the Law•ence Welk cootaining s~ch information as to who public officials are 011
Show. These appearances are mainly the result of the group's the village, township ahd county level and other dope such as
boOking agents In Zanesville and Ripley, West Virginia .
taxation figures , etc., see C. E. Blakeslee, executive dlrectiJr
. ''I've never had a lesson ,'' Tez said, ''and it's really an honor of the Meigs Regional Flaming Commission. The
to play with professionals."
conunission's armual report is out and contains a great del!l of
POLKAS, rock and country-western selections entertain reference information - just excellent, .in fact.
their audiences wherever they go.
"WE are the ooly group in the area with a pedal steel,"
THE NEXT TWO free cancer clinics fur Meigs area
Harrison prided. He is also the owner of a D-35 Martin, which women have been set for the aftemooos of Oct. 13 and Oct. 27.
he explained is the "Cadillac" of guitars.
. The clinics are free and wlless women take advantage ol them,
Tex enjoys on&lt;Hiour country pickin' s' ws and does the clinics, like many Meigs services, will be discootinued.
imitations ,ol Johnny Cash, Bill Anderson and vis Prsley. He Youcan get an appointment for either clinic by ca~ 992-3382
also likes Ray Prlce,GienCampbellandJohn Denver.
during the daytime or m-6832 In the evenqs or on the
"BELIEVE me, it's a lot of fun ... it gets in your blood. weekend. The clinics are held at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
You've gotta captivate the ·audience. Once you get the
audience involved, It's easy. I have had them laughing ... and
WE HAVE BEEN ADVISED that Homer R. Mumaw, a
crying," he said.
former resident, who died on Sept. 9 was a resident of
ASKED if he ever forgot the words Ill a song, Harrison Cleveland. The family sending information oo his death
corifided that once he saw a good-looking girl in the audience neglected to send present locale. Frankie Mumaw, Syracuse, a
walking roward him, and when he caught a glimpse of her first cousin, advised us of the address.
navel his mind went totally blank.
. HIS wife knew something had happened, so he had Ill tell
he r what had taken place'.
,
HARRISON and hla wife have a son and daughter in
college, but they've never taken much Interest in his hobby.
"SOME people like golf or bOwling, " he said, "!like music,
I
they've learned that it's my thing.
''MUSIC does something to you, I'Dplay my guitar for a
half-hour or 45 minute! just to unwind."
TEX feels country music has changed In the last IIve years
and now Ia harder to play.
"BLUE GRASS 1,9 corning on stronger," he confided, "but
By Frallk HW
the parade . This made
country-western is here Ill stay."
In
an
ea'
r
l!er
article
1 h8d several of her rellltives reach
TEX'S recognition in Galllpolilland surrounding areas has
written about the appearance for smelling salta. Seventy·
helped make his job as collectllr-investlgator a Ut~ easier.
of
Dan Rice's Circus In our six years later in 1128 there
· · "SEVENTY percent of the people I come In contact with
town
in 1852 for the benefit of were still 'at least ten people
know me as Tex.
the
erecting
of a new Galla in tllwn who saw the per·
JOHN Rodgers, liodgers, GaWpolls office manager, said,
Academy
on
4th Ave. As 1 , formance In 1852.
"Jack Ia a· very dedlc,ated employee. He can get more
stated,
this
cirCUB
traveled by
informaUon than Columbo on TV!"
For thole who may be
riverboat
but
alwaya
erected
TEX liBYa It takes a lot of money to become a star, but he's
lnteredted
:
cootent with his hometllwn pojJularity. "Lots of people ask me Q large tent on land nearby
The
inventor
of the very
for my autograph," he said, "and of course I never refuse." for their performance.
The bOat arrived at the first electric hair clippers
HIS real dream and goal !a to play two songs on the stage
park
front landing July 11, was born In Galllpolillln 1880.
of the Grand Ole Opry In Nashvllle.
.
1
1852.
The large tent was This man was Dr. George
'I DON'T even care if I have an audience," he said
erected
on the public square. Moore woo was born in a
smilln'.
Before
the
circus acts began, house at the comer of Fint
+++
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily a severe electrical storm took Ave. and Sycamore Street.
Tribune and weekly Gallla Times ... Golden R. Canaday place and the tent was blown His father hid ii store nest
named Ill bOard of Ohio Farm Bureau Coop and Federation down. No one was hurt but the door to the how. The old
Island VIew 1m now occupies
boarll ... Rowena Stormont reUres from Columbus &amp; SoUthern tent had to be re-erected and thiB
sight.
·
the
show
did
not
take
place
Ohio Electric Co. after 49 years service ... He!U'!etta O'Brien
Dr.
C.
D.
Wall
was
the
untU
late
in
the
eveni!lg.
captures women's IIUe in Tribune Handicap Golf Tournament
allendlng
pbyllcian.
Moore
Many
people
who
had
... BurglarsgetmGin A&amp; P entry .. . GAHS, Nelsonville battle
traveled for many miles to protected and perfected hla
to 7·7 tie In 1956 SEOAL grid opener.
see the circus did not ilay Invention w1t1t more than 40
after the tent blew down as patenll.
Maddox would fire Kissinger
The lint COIJipuling ICiles
·many were farmn and they
had to return home to do their was also innnte4 by a
COLUMBIA, S. C. (UPI) enemies."
chores.
Had the troupe been Galllpolls man JuiiUI PUrat.
Former Georgia Gov. Lester
Maddox, presidential
In 1181, RO)' F. WrflleJ,
able
to
perform during the
Maddox said Saturday nominee of the American
formerly
of Galllpolill '1188
day
the
ticket
sales
would
· Secrellry of State Henry independent Party, said It
Uving
In
Santa
Monico, Calif.
have
been
much
higher.
pue
Kilslnger "Is conditioning the would take him leu than five
He
had
an
income
of $250 per
people . of this COWltry to minutes if he were president to this freak storm the
day.
accept communism."
to !Ire Kluinger and replace building fund received only
Maddox told a news con· hlm with "somebody who $500.
The answer to last week's
A local lassie, Fannie
terence, "Mr. J{lsalnger has pull America lint."
question:.
Curtis,
rnde
the
elephant
.
In
been doing the will of our
William Alleh waa admitted to the bar In Gallla
County and praetleed law
here for a short while. He waa
· COIII!dered a bit on the wild
lide u a young lawyer. Ollce
wi1Ue he was ttlandlng In front
of a hotel on flnt Ave. a man
paMed by leading I spirited
horse whldl he had trouble
conlrollinl. Seeing thla, Allen
jumped upon the hone's back
and
rode off at 1811 pOop and
To help dtllvtr cttptndlble per- .
headed upriver. He rnde the
formance, thl1 Frigld•ire Ht 1vy
bbrse IeVen! millll and then
Outy wmer haa 1 heavy ..- -d uty motor and other
headed
ba~ jllll u fut.
components un d in
When
he
arrived bad! at the
FriQida!re Commerci al
Wnhen. 11 keeps the
hotel he rode througb the
ahOI&gt;f ond otroleh In knits
front doors and up to the bar
lo'KI•r with the gentte waatt action
and
calmly ordered •llaa of
of IHI Frigidaire Knitl cycle, MIPI
buttermilk.
ll:tep wrtnkfel otJt of permanenf
pl'ftllttme with 3 Ptrmtnent Pren
~ ll t·u was later governor Of
Wash cycles. T••m II up with the
vlnu and a ~blg ~ood diJ'I"llt•paollyot tne
Frigidaire Of)'tr. It lets you dry a
Som~ to tiUII about:
mvc,. aaan 11-lb. load s)lltonce.
and provides tender ce~ rot everyWhat
lith
century
llllng lrom doN..reo to donlrllo.
.._~ i
Galllpolla merdlant _..
oftenlhow bill el01e lrttnda a
· ~8,800 bill which he oWn«!!

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t-rt1111v 9:30tolp.m.- Saturday t:JOte Sp.m . .

Elbeif8id$Mili"'CP0ine

BY GREG BAILEY
Approximately ·125 per80llB
· attended the National
Hunting and Fishing Day
held at Royal Oak Park
Saturday. Although con·
dueled primarily for youth of
the county, adults also at·
•ded and participated.
Altboueh spear-headed by
the Ken Ams~ury Chapter of
the lzaak Walton League of
America, other sportsmen's
groupe joined the· "lites" to
pay tribute to the part the
American outdooraman has
played In the buDding of our
country.
Tom Karr played a big part
In the · organization of the
day's event which aaw all
kinds of outdoor 'demon·
lllrati0118, Among the most
'l'OPular exhibits were the
itulzleloading, archery, and
trap IIJool!n8 and rei~

showed everyone how to load
their own shells to make their
hunting
days
more
economical. To conclude the
day's festivities, game
protector Andy Lyles put his
bird dogs through their
paces, and Henry Wells then
let his beagles beat the brush
before everyone departed for
home.
Lyles started out the day by
giving all guests a firearm
safety talk as he s~owed a
collection of guns. Coon ctoP
were then the highlight of the
morning when they "treed"
after a trail had been dragged
around the Park. Before
breaking for lunch, the crowd
jumped onto a wagon and
were hauled to the largest
lake in the Park for a fishing
demonstration given by
Paddle Lambert, ·and a
trapping display by local
~·auoua.
.;, . ... . trapper Grant Young.
Ray Oliver, (lary Stsk, and
Free lunch was provided by
Henry Bahr tihowed the local businesses, and much
guests the technicaUUes of · tha~ goes to .the following
shooting the black powder establishments: ·Powell's
'II'IIJIOilll of yesteryear, and ~ Super Valu, Holaum Bakery,
Harry BaUey put on a fine RO BotWng Company, and
show on the "how to" of bbw Kroger's. Larry Well
bunting and target shooting. prepared the sloppy Joe
Guests then participating In menu, and the potato chips
both these arts.
and pop were served up by
John Jeffers, Eddie Young, numerous members. of the
(both lzaak Walton mem· various ·clubs, all working
bers) and CllH Ashley of the harmoniously together: It
Racine Gun Club demon· was a great day for the clubs,
slrated trap shooting and a great day for the residents
then the younger set really of the area, and a great day
enjoyed themselves as they for America - National
· tried their hands at it. After Hunting and Fishing Day!
they lhot trap, Russell Well The accompanying pictures
and Darrell Hawthorne were taken by Gary Slsk.

at y
. VOL XXVIII

NO. 113

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·

•

enttne

A bearing on charges however, after talking tlth
against the auperintendent at several local OCSEA of·
the GaWpolill State Institute flclaiB. that the local mem·
will be held 9 a.m. Thursday., bership doea not support the
In Dr. Timothy Moria's of· pos!Uon of Mr. Stewart." .
flee, Tower Building.
Meanwhlle, it was learned
Columbus.
today that local GSJ workers
Last week, Dr. Moritz, circulated peUUona over the
director of the Ohio Depart· weekend in support of Dr.
~~~e~~t of Mental Health and Nlehrn.
Mental Retardation, sent. Dr.
In loday's Columbuz
Nlelun 1 letter which In· Citizen-Journal, Sylvia
dicated the GSI superin· Brooks, a C.J staff writer
tendent of the past siz years wrote:
wu going to be dlsmillsed.
Dr. Bernard Nlehri1's
Dr. Moritz charged Dr. decilion to fight removal as
Nielun With a lack of ad· the superintendent · of
ministratlve ab!llty, GaWpolill ~tate Institute has
· engaging in partillan political raised lrlsues which hive
actl'rity and f~erlng poor embroiled the mental health
labor relattona.
and retardation staffs for two
Dr. Nlebm, In answer to yean.
.thole chargeslalt Thursday,
Whether Nlehrn's firing is
iald the chargea aplnst him justified (tbe courts wtll
were unjllll and not true, and probably decide that), Nlehrn
!bat under no circumstance~ had eehoed many staff
would he reslln, al)d that he members who are privately.
would make rebuttal to the complaining abOut Moritz's
charg11 on or before Sept. 30. administration. of the
Friday, Dr.
Niehm department.
critleiaed Karl Stewart,
Although m•ny serious
aeeutive director of the Ohio · issues confront tbe Ohio
Civil Service Employees Department of Mental Health
A"'l"'alloa, for comments be and Mental Retardation, the
made lasl Wednesday in Dlljor controversy centers
connection
with · his around Moritz and hill ad·
difl!'lnal.
mlnlatrative style.
Dr. Nlehrn lllld Stewart's
Moritz is criticized for
tttallmenl Implied the ()().. behning rashly, holding
SEA membenhlp In ill en- marathon staff msetlngs
11n1y - belllnd 111m Ia 1111 wbere be talks non-llop,
(lOIItloo tbll the supertn. I1Jinl off the handle, bandin8
llllllent be rtllloved.
Old Yerballnlulta and abule,
1be tNpel'lnlendent added, · mating lmpestuoua deelal0118
"It is my undentandinl, and doing little to give the

PRICE FIFTEEN Cfl'lTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1976

Progress made
in Ford talks
DETROIT

(UPI)

-

. Ulllled Aato Workers Vice
Presldeat Kea Baanoa baa

provided the moat opllmlatic oalleok In two
weeb !bat some progress
baa been made Ill talb 10
elld tH oatloawlde slrlte
·by l'lt,OOO worten aplllsl
SALISBVRY, Rhodesia
lbe Ford Motor Co.
(IJPI) - Rhodesian Prime
Bat lluuloa •ld Sunday
tlaat Procret• lias beea slow Minister Ian Smith said tllday
and cautioned a1alnat the partial rejection of
predlc!IJII an early ead to American majority rule
· lbe walbut - DOW Ia 118 (I'Oposais by black African
00 day. II already lias nauons may mean that "the
Communists are calling the
toll workers u• mUUon Ill
1011 wagea and lhrealeu tune In those parts."
Smith's remarks to
layoffs at mill)' of tbe
reporters
outside his office
companies lbat supply
came
one
day
aner the five
Ford.
·
·
presidents
of
southern
"It's goblg to talte DB a
Mrica
's
so-called
black
whne to pat this together,"
"front
line"
state!
turned
Bauuou said. "How loug, I
down a proposal to cmvene a
can't say rlgbt aow."
constitutional conference
inside Rhodesia to discuss the
transfer of power Ill majority
blacks.
Showers likely tonight.
This appeared Ill represent
Lows tonight In the lower 50s. parUal rejection of a six-point
Cloudy Tuesday, chaOO) o.f plan laid down last week by
showers, high ~- Chance Secretary of State Henry A.
of rain near 100 per cent Kissinger and accepted by
today, 70 pet cent tonight, 40 Smith's government Friday.
per cent Tuesday.
" It looks as though maybe

Weather

the CommWlists are calling
the ~ tune in those parts,"
Smith said. "We wilt have to
wait and see what the free
world is going Ill do abOut it
no•.''
R .. odes i an
Foreign
Minister P.K. Van Der Byl
said Silnday it was now up to
. the United States and South
Africa to patch up the
American • negotiated
agreement.
The five presidents said In
U!saka, Zambia SWldaY the
proposals "if accepted, would
be tantamount Ill legalizing
the coloniallst and racist
structure of power" and
r-eaff i rmed their
commitment Ill "the ca~~:~e of
liberation " and "the armed
struggle."
But their statement did not ·
reject the proposals and Bri·
tain, hopeful of salvaging the
plan, offered Ill organize a

coostltutional oonference oo
the future of Rhodesia.
The dispute appeared Ill
center on the locatioo and
makeup of a conference to set
up a transitional government
for Rhodesia, untU black
majority rule is establillhed
within two years.
The i&lt;ey proposaf iii Klilsii!·
~er's six-jloint plat\ caUed for

representatives of the an equal number of blacks
government to meet with and whites, charged with
bladl Rhodesian leaders Ill drifting a black majority
create
an
Interim rule constitution within two
government. Smith had said years. .
he hopad to have auch a
Sm1th, In a~ lhe
meetiDI this week.
• . . prinCiple of majority ~.
The interbn government said one positive aspect of hla
would have been ruled by a acceptance was that the new
council of state, made up of constitution would be drafted
(Continued on page 2)

Boy dies of skrill fracture
Three-year old Kevin Lee
Siders, son of Kermeth and
Joan Smith Siders, Rt. 2,
GaWpolill, was fatally Injured
in a t~affic accident at 6:45
p.m. Saturday at the junction
of Williams Hollow Rd. and
Rt. 218 in Clay Twp.
The Gallia County sheriH's
department said the chlld
was In the rear of a Jeep

operated by his mother. They
were leaving a field near the
family garden when the cblld
Jell unobserved from
the rear of the ve·
hlc!e aB his · mother re·
versed the Jeep to tum onto
the highway and ran over the
child. .
She pulled the child .out
from under the Jeep and

Hearing Thursday on
Niehm issue at GSI

00

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• ·20.3 cu. It. capacity
• 'Adjustable temperature
control.
.

•

day on Saturday

EITHER OF THESE SETS

$

HARRY LEE BAILEY, Izaak Walton member, demonstrates the bbw and arrow.

.

-

REG. *659.95

COLUMBUS . (UPI) Republican vice prelldentlal
nominee Robert Dole will
camaplcn in Oblo Tuelday
and Wednelday, the Ohio
Prerlldeot Ford Committee
amounced Sunday.
Dole wlll campaign in
Marietta, Calwnbul, Newark
and Springfield 011 Tuelday
and In Lebanon and
WUrnington on Wednesday.

PADDLE LAMBERT SHOWS a young man how to
casta fly rnd. Earlier he demonstrated how to cast.

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game ·tbll IIUOII. In an ez.
ce11ent lbow, the burl entered the field to ' 'Trooper
Sablte" featurtnc IOioUt June
woo lint pllree bonon'ln the Wamaley on the baritone.
Clau AAA divllion at Moving down fWd, the band
Salluday'l lla!!(k-rama In played " Mabocaoy "
Point Pleuant, W. Va.
featurlnl Laura Hoover oa
Memime, Saturday night the trombone lllClvlnl tbrougb
the band made ita flnl ap- illprec:laillllroatlnelnfronl
. pearance at a home football of the illndllnd then lo "Sky
High " IIIOYed ICI'OIII the field.
.
The majoretta, guD COill8
o;;:;;;~:;::::::::::::::;::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::~:::::~~:::~:::~=:~~
and flai corpe fOI'II*Ia tarce
EXTENDED Otm.OOit · dl•moad figure for a· routine
WedaeJday tllna111 to "Ml.dley Moue" with
Friday, lair Wedaesday bandlmen alao dancing and
ud '111anday; A cbuc:e of llnCing. Solollll for the exit
lbowen Friday. HJcM II move were Velvet Swilher
the . . ud lower 'Jh, lAws and Pqe Smith, ~­
liiOIIIy ID the ftl.
Ma)orettea thla year .re Kim
Kraueter, Cathy Blaeltnar,
WUdermuth and
Teresa
THREE RUNS MADE
Debbie
OsbOrne,
with Mill
The Pomeroy Emergency
Wright
as
fteld
commander.
Squad answered three calill
SW!day. At 5:15a.m., Sharon
Covert was talten to Holzer
Medical Center; at 1:50 a.m.
SPECIAL MEETING
VIrgil Hudson was talten to
SY~CUSE - Tbere w1II
Veterans Memorial Hoapltal be a apeclal meeting of the
and at 7:10p.m., Ben Moore Sutton Township Trustees
of near Harrisonville was Tuelday, Sept. 28, at I p.m. at
taken to Pleasant Valley the Syracuse Municipal
Hospital.
Building.
The Melp High Sd!ool
Band dlreeted by DwiCht .
Golnl and the band's field
director, Mlu Sulan Wrt,bt.

department stabWty.
Moritz is criticized for
exceslive attention to detall.
Niehrn's charge that Morlb
arbitrarily beUeves com·
plaints against his employes
by special Interest groups,
Without adequately checking
them out, had been made by
t4her employes long before
Niehrn was fired.
They all tell the same tale:
of dangUng, waiting for
answers which never come,
knowing they are out of favor
and wondering abOut their
fates.
On Moritz's lide, It Is dlf.
(ConUnued on page 12)

~~

I

l

SPEAK TO fiFrH GRADERS - Pat Lochary,
reUred Pomeroy Postmaster, left, and next to hlni Darrel ..
Taylor, ham radio operator, were guest speakers for the
fifth grade of Mrs. Mary Hysell's fifth grade at the
Pomeroy Elementary School Friday arternoon as the

class completed a study on commwllcatlons in their social
studies course. With Lochary and Taylor are Mrs. Hysell,
the teacher, welcoming Doug Lizon, director of the Meigs
County Retired Senior VolWlteer Pro!gram which
arranged the appearance ·or Lochary and :raylor. ·

summoned
a passing
motorist who ·called for the
Gallla County Emergency
Squad, The youngster was
dead on arrival at the Holzer
Medical Center. Dr. Donald
R. Warehime, Gallla County
Coroner, said death was
caused by a fractured slruU
and Internal injuries. It was
Galla's seven fatallty of 1978.
Kevin Lee Siders was born
Dec. 29, 1972. In addition to
hla parents, he ill survived by
three brothers, Jeff, Kenny
and Wayne, all at home; his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Worthy Siders, Gallipolis;
· Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Waugh,
Rio Grande; and Mrs .
Mondie Harrison, Swlckley,
Pa. He attended the First
Church of God Dll Garfield
Ave.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday from
the Church of God wltli Rev.
Chalmer Conley and Rev.
George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will follow In Mound
HW cemetery. CaJUng hours
will be held at the WaugbHalley-Wood Funeral Home
from ~ and 7-&amp; p.m. today.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was
issued to Lawrence Joseph
Seymour, 25, Middieort, and
M1ndi &amp;1Ban Davis, 23,
Middleport.

Southerners tum out to see F.o rd
MIAMI (IJPI) - Winding

up 1 three-day southern
campaign swing, Prelident
Ford announced today that if
elected he will launch a
crusade to raUy America
behind federalant!crlme and
anUterrorlam progr~~~~~S.
The Prealdent ·was In a
happy mood after a )50-mlle,

three-state motorcade
campaign trek Sunday during
which White House officials
said he , drew 113,000
supporters and spectators
alon8 the way.
In a prepared addrelll tbiB
mom~ to the conference of
the .National Association of

Chiefs of Pllllce, Ford said
that later this week he plans
Ill sign the Public Safety
Officers' Beneflll Act of 1978
which pays 550,000 \0 the
survivors of any public safety
officer who loses his or her
life In the line of duty.
"I serve notice today that a
top priority of the first 100
days
beginning
with
Inauguration day of the Ford
adrnlnstratlon next January
will be the rallying of
America behind federal
anticrime legislation," he
declared.
He also said that he would
recommend "strict controls

and more stringent penalties
to stamp out the threat of
political terrorism which is
totally allen to American
Ideals."
' 'The federal govenunent
shares direct responsibility
for organized crime, white·
collar crime and official
corruption," Ford said,
adding that the Justice
Department "has made great
strides In combating this kind
of crime."
He stressed . the need for
quick justice and for cracking
down on habitual offenders.
"I do not advocate vigilante
action ," he said. "But I do

advocate swift and certain
justiCe."
He began his Dixie caravan
In New Orleans Sunday
morning and made several
stopa In the Mississippi Gulf
area . before reaching
Alabama where on the final
stop at Moblle he won a warm
welcome from Gov. George
C. Walillce, a supporter of
Democrat Jimmy Carter,
and
picked up
the
endorsement of famed
Alabama football coach
"Bear" Bryant.
Wallace, sitting In a wheel·
chair oo the ,platform at
Bates Field beside the

podium where Ford spoke,

IIUide it clear to repprters
that he was not going to do
any heavy campaigning lor
the Democratic prealdenilll
nominee.
"I've already dooe my hard
campaigning in other
states," Wallace said.
Later, Ford's chief of staff
Richard
Cheney
told
reporters Wallace's
appearance at the rally was
"pollllcally slgn!flcant.
" It shows that Jimmy
Carter has a JI'Oblem in the
South," he said.
Oleney said GOP polling
shows the President "looking

good"
in
Illinois,
Pennaylvanla, Mlssiasippi
and Virlglnla, but with an
uphill struggle In the border
states of Tennessee and
Kentucky and through the
normally GOP farm belt.
Throughout the southern
·campaign trek, Ford
attacked Carter for his
defense poUcies, claiming
that Carter wanted Ill wt the
defenae bud&amp;et aa much as
bllUon. "'That would be
dlaastro111," Ford aald.
He said America ltu to ·
stay "No. 1 rnllltarlly" and
"you must do II the way I
want it."

'15

'

J,.

�:1- '!'be Dally Sentinel. Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday ,Sejl.

.

Carter cozies-up with Kennedy and Johnson
PORn.AND, Ore, (UP!)- outlook 10 the Ne1! Frmller
Jimmy Carter, llkenln&amp; hill and Great Society of
I!COIIOIIIk: pollcles to John Democnta Kennedy and
~·s and Lyndon John- JohMon.
lOll's, told a Iaber audience
Carter baaed ija ptepared
loellly the admlnlstr.tloo's remarks on U.S. CeDiua
domestic plans resemble Bureau fiSUfel, whlcb clurtnC
lboee "l!blcll bnlu&amp;hl on the thneeltfi1CI.reported that U
Great Deprallon and the mllllm more .Amerleanllen
most recent rece88ions.
belo1! the po¥erty liDe iD 197$,
,\ddre88ing a regtmal labor the largeat !Dcreaae iD the 17
. meeting, Carter said 26 yean that the bureau baa
m!Won Americans ••cannot been keeping the fiSUfes.
earn an adequate Income"
"Mr. Nlml and Mr. F~
Wider the Nixon and Fc:t"d have made these people
policies;. He credited the poorll" In the same ny u
Kennedy and Johnson Mr. Hoover In the 113111 - by
Democratic admlniatrationa denying them the clwice to
..tth cutting the percentage ol "l!oril:," Carter said. ''The
Americana living below the Republlcana pay np aervlce
poverty level by nearly half to work, but veto bllla that
before Richard. Nixon took "ould create jo!Je. They have
bec&lt;me the party not of Work,
olfice.
Carter linked Ford to but of ftlfare."
·
Republicans N!zon and
Carter aaJd the past t1!o
Herbert Hoover, whlle Republican admlniltrationa
comparing hill OIIVIl flacal have presided over 6 per cent

avenge amual ~ticro for
the put elsht years,
campand to 1 Z per cent
averase for the 16 yean ol
the Eisenho"t!er-KennedyJohnaon admlnlllraUons.
"And as their ~tlcro baa
robbed Ill ol - purdwlng
ponr, it hal meant that the.
avenge worker baa a loller
real wage ander Gerald Fc:t"d
than he had eliht yean ago
under Lyndllll Johnlon," said
Carter.
He termed Ford "a
prellident "l!ho IlleS numben
lnatead ol people "l!hen he
thiDks ol unemployment and
Inflation."
Carter apent the 1!eekend
iD Southern California,

Donna Young

is triwnphant
CALABASAS, Calif. {trPI)
- A triumphant · Donna
Caponi Yo111111 Won the richelt
prise in thi history of
plf - .-,ooo .,.
Sunday ..ttl! a fiVHtrike
'ridory m her bome courae iD
lbe pm,ooo LPGA Carlton.
Tbe 31-year.old blonde
veteran. 1l'bo Jut net won
the LPGA ev:•t at Portland,
Ore., eradilad the "ponr of
poalltn thlnldng," u she
proved her rating u favorite
..tth stead1 round ot IJ8.$.7272 for a 'IS-IIole total fA 282, cro
the short bot lllbl 6,1:16-yard
course at tbe Calabasas
Country Club.

"WIIIIl•'•

ctsar-8moklq Moeller-~"
DEAR HELEN:
Three things drive me batty about my llt-yeer~ motherIn-law: She lllllOkes almost a carton of clsan a day. She ta
ID!believably snoopy. And llhe lives nat door! (She doali't
read the paper so thla can be priDted.)
9le won't watch 'IV, just sita outside, amoklng thole vile
cigars and thro..tng them all over my garden. When n have
OIIIIPIRY. abe's rlsht In there~ queatlona; and abe newr
haaa good word for anyCIIe, rlsht to their facea • .
If "' go out, she insllta on a-log eucUy where. If
10111ething crosses her, she mutters to henelf loud I!IIOUgb ao

"' can hear.

Reds said

I beg my hlllband to move. He won't lilten. What can I do?
- MJSSERABLE MISSOURIAN
(Colltln11ed frGm pase I)
DEAR MISERABLE:
In ,~........ b Rhodellana
Since your husband refu8ea to move ( ba pl'9bably feels
...,.._.. Y
•
reapoc t 'hle for his elderly mother), and you can't change an :-=ti~ ~~!':
Cllddog'~ lricks, youdoD'thaveanydloice: aomlke the best of IClailqer prapoeall.
her, !pore the rest, and be grateful thla dgar..mJns champ
1be bladl: i*widellli· of
illl't eotbruned in foil" ~~pare bedrocm!- H. .
ARiola I!Ginlna MOIIIII+++
~*jut, Tu-ta and Zambia,
DEAR HELEN:
howe1er aaJd BritaiD- the
My husband and I nnt 1 divorce 011 mUtual grounda. We ane-t~me' colonial authority
aat nothing material fniD each other• U"ft've been married O'rer Rhodesia - shollld
mly a llhort time. T\IOugll neither olus"IIOI'It, n can't qualify convene the conatitutional
' for IAlgal Ald.
coofereriee and that only the
Severalhwldred dollan is out of the questlcro. I've~ "aalbentic and legltimlte
you can get a ~te.st divorce for around t'/5. But how· repreaentatives of the
, A.M.S.
people" be called, meaning
DEAR A:
the Sm1tb --'- should be
Many newapapen carry ada for "dCHt.youraelf" divorce nrb
'.,......
i•ance. Butcbeck..tthyOID'Belterilu~WaBureau before
In ided.London
Foreign
• you IIIIWI!r IUCh an·advertiler. ·
. Secretary Antllciny Ctolland
,AnyCIIII can obtaiD liiiC
ry dlvorc: funDI at the lllld Britain is pnpared to
clolurlboUae. '11M:trlcklainfllllngthemoutcarreclly.
organlie a collltitutional
Andmnember:DcHI-)'ounelfDIIIDiyou'reony-own. conference, but did not
•lfproblelna CDicerni!lll property, clllldrm, lepllty, "lrllateftr. mentlm erk.tlng the Snlllb
· .-ise later yoa may 1rillh you~~retalnedala"l!yer·-H.
gove1WMint.
•
·
Van der Byl stuck to
DEAR HELEN:
Smltb's view of the
My loulhand 111101!1 no CCII!Idence In me. He lllli*l I can't conference, and aald the
poadbly m-.ap deciliona and treata me u he does the black prealdenta "have
l dllkftn. He baa to be the king and n're ·bll aubjects. agreed tG ii and we haw
Oceallona1ly I flsbl bact, but end liPiD lean.
agreed to it. But iD typical
He bellevea everytllq 1111 family gys about Oll'ldda, evt11 African nadmallst fublon,
If tbere's no proof. 'l'beJ're IOOd kldl, aa:mdltc lo .,...han tbey han iiblnm tbelr total
andfrlendl. Wilen I try to ten him,heWIIII'tlilien. He pull me unreliability and
do1m, mabl me feell=xiW and ''IIDIII." I t.w I'm a IOOd untrutw01 dolo ][,"
iiiCither -at leut I think lam .•. llllllllmel.
'-n.efore, It II up to the
I admit I'm not pelfett and accept 1111 crltlcllm nll. Western po1!ers, America
lloe-.'t thll prove I'm trustworthy? - MY HUSBAND'S and South Africa iD
DAUGHTER
pilrticular, to aorllt out."
DEAR MHO:
in WubiDglcll, the State
IIJ CDIIIIntly caviDs in, )'011 ''prove" lnleriarity to I iDID Jl¥11UWiit lllld the - t e
who -"1 be king. My I.G.A.P. ("I'm Gu '•g Alliin sho"l!ed both aida had
Pei...,..lim")u,p,.rm1 '1 erfeeda Iii boaa01111pla, And accepted the bailie principles
tbe more 01'erbe..tag ha ' * - the harder It Ia for you to ol the plan and "the road to I
!nat out ollbe •. _ . dqbllr" mold.
nesotlated aolutlon II 001!
Whenyou.......tmally fl&amp;bt blct, I'll beUt'aooa c~ oPen."
adultlriel, nat rib tbelits'Hg ""'I'm sare you haft. lan'tlt
rn Pretoria, South Africa,
true tbet on tile lew t1me1 ,oum.n....,. y-lmaband, you do Prime Mlnlller Jobn Venter
ao kMwlng you'll end up a tearful '-a'? (Wbicb only llld the I uaata iitlt.anent
~ 1111 pocr apiDIGn ol you.)
1!U "very difficult to
Get thee to 1D AIBU- 'l'ralntil!l Claaa - or lind I underiitlnd" and qed the
IOOdbook on the aubject at y-llbraty. You're Ions overdue! Unted States llld BrltaiD ''ID
-H.
clear up the ooafmdon w1llcb
P.S. Your busband may even prefer ''the 11e1r you," croce mnr ullta aa soon as
he recofa 1 free llbock.
pollllble."

campalsning among
minorities. Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr, and Sen. John
Tunney, "l!ho II up for reelectim thla year, joined
Carter In Me:dcan·American
ll'tU and the noinlnee later

met "l!!th black Los Angeles them to register to vote.
An olllclal for the aparaely
mlntaters.
attended
Mnlcan
Carter addremd the
llUfprialngly lllll1l Odcano Independence . Day parade
crowdll iD Spanlab, shouting blamed the turnout on
"Viva, Mnlco" and urging acbaduling problema.

Miners will demand right
to strike on local issues

.Cannel News,
By the J)ay

DR. LAMB-

Mn. Hattie PonD and
daqlillr, Addle, Racine RD,

Many reasons for fatigue
.

IIJIAiwt-E....... M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I read
an altlde on man for
beJDI tired. Tbll article
mentloaed
foUc
acid
dafldt11e1. 'lb8t came lbe
· • e1.-t to baing my pnblam.
What II fallc add dafldt11e1T
" ·I DIVII" had t.n1 at lt. What
·are Ill aymptollll and
- T What can be dooe
about ItT
,
I am U and han ~ I 1NiP Ul pwa

.. lad t1b Dli ;

111, pctolilhllll

tblor14t, lllltewn and
, r..MI. IINP* r.r liabW
: :INik It . . . llld -

.. . . . . . . It a llmllwlll
a , _ . I - to 10 tlhiL
D&amp;Afl RIADIR - Y•

Jeutr lliiUid

I

I

H

lilt U

JIIUf lbe

It

Jiv\\m

·mtrNM' •11 • 11m. Bleb
t1iM t1t1r NICI lllail&amp; a ..... ....... line .. ., ... •If ...... tliiJ

=

...

'hlr

!}_

• lllliMt flllllt.)

...... • • , . w .... ,.. Jtllc

'

deficiency. It II buman
nat11re to read about
.mlthlq and wwclw If you
bave lt.
J'atlpe II caused by iiiiD3'
different thin11. It Ia a
common aymptom of
problaml ran1in1 from
emotional atraln and
depr loo, tG tallercalolll,
Clilcei'lllh bolt ol diiMIII
1l'lilcb 1 Wllll't ID'Idlon lilt
you denlap tbale too.
I do nate lbat you like
Dlupreaa wbldlll ordlrllrll1
used r.r J11C1111e 11'1111 bleb
blood J1 I a; It Mnill Ill
flhpl•lll•fnllllbebodJ.
Elcill IYmiJM!Im af ...
olten nllllta Iii a ol
fetlpe
·If JGI haft bleb blood
pruaan It lboialcl be
~11 iidDid If Ill nlaCed tG
1llial tGillt! pGJa. .,J doil't
1lllow ..... piD fall iiD be
bikini by 1111 lblll ,..
I tift LL1J 1• bit 1111
tnt tlllt I ..U I ' • af

N01! tG your q...Uon about many reapecta they art bard
folic acid. I am 8llldlng you
Tba Haith Leltlr a11111ber 41, Vllamln 11-IJ, J'ollc Acid,
~ "-II, tG give
you IIICIN IDfanDitlon llian
IIPIIle allon bere. Otbm
1l'bo , . . lbla Information
can llillla kJa&amp;, •mped aelf.
addmnd lllftl!ipe ..ttl! 110
cen11 for tt. Just 111111 your
1t1t1r to 1111 In can Ill lbla
INWIIpapar, P. 0. BOlt 1111,
Radio City Stlltlon, Ne"
York, NY 10018.
Folic acid hal actions
iillllllar to daliiln 11-U. 1111
Ill dlotlln till fannatlon af
eeUa, 'ftle nucleus ol
•ell cell needl either
fallc add or batb II and
fttandn 11-11 to film 1'ltal
_ . _... vtnadelc aclda.
Wllltout tltll till D mWion
- nd blood 01111 )'011 iillilt
bm llff/ry ndnlll CliiiOI ...
........ Tldl r.a- In -

,_..In1111

coli pndui1fol
•

le

'*illltbl pilL

'

lo separate el'en uaiDg good
clinical toola.
Other areas of the body that
under11o constant
reaeneratlon also abow
fal1are In development. 1be
linin&amp; of your 1nteat1na1 tract
Ia a good ••mple. Did you
il:no1! normally 1111 replaced
f!VI'Ity three days? When thla
function falla, dlurbaa and
«bet diJative cwnplalnta
occur. '!'be tongue II alao

.....

YOU CliiiiOI SDbatltute folie
1cld for 11-12 because II does
nat protect tbe iiplnal cord
from deseneratloa. Fati&amp;Ue
fnm folic aelit «WWcct11e1 II
moaJy related to the lilliilla.
Folie acid II faund iD follqe
loocll, apeclfleally apinac:b
and other leafy vecetablel. A
IIDII1 iiiiiOIIIII II found In
many of lbe C!IDID&amp;I dafiJ
Yltamln pnparatlonl. It Ia
nat tboqbt wile to take Ill

zgmle ....

blood lallc liCI4 ill" NnCJ II 'ILIUdl --

IC!I4 pr nnn In rt1J*1H to lib ... L+'g. •

·-baeiUieB-12
It
olilc1ira
• vltlmln

""· In delleteney and rtJUit In

aerloull oompltcatlona.

.,,

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - Wallr
na accidentally spilled Cll
the top of my ,_ed
televillon cabinet. II wu not
..tped up Immediately. Tbe
reauh 1n a bunCh fA wavy
.ridges. Other thin a complete
.-.air job, is there anytblng
to l!!lllell these ridges? MRS. L.K.B.
DEAR MRS. LJ(.B. - I
~elM .-er llu •pUt
w11ere 11 popped liP· You
mJclit try plaelq 1 ctollllbat
liu beell 1m111 out Gl HI
nter om tbese ridcea 141
lifteD tile v -, Cbeck
oftea, 10 It doea 1101 mate
Rite 1pa11. Wbea rldeea m
pllallle, lllnlllllre pe mJclil
be pat uder tile 1eoee p1eee1
(I matcb or tootllpkt could
be llled tG 11e1p apread II).
When pulled back Iiiio place,
'Wipe aff uceu ct11e. Y!l!l CID
1111 1 nllbiC pili or olber
•'mnar abJect to roll dnil flat, cover ~ ..,ued
1d
ta
paper ud "l!eiPt I on
place wllli a Ill of balvy
booka. Leave IIDUI pe 11
blcll

-•••1

F ...;._,;ew
NeWS N01es

iipeDI

an evenlnll 1l'ltb Miry

Circle ..-nly.
Mr. and )ln. 1M Harrla "'
SprtnsfltJd, Oblo iipeDI •
weekend db Mr. and Mra.
Homer Circle and Verna and
Wavte.
Mr. ud Mrl. JIIDII Circle
1!ete at the bome ol Miry
Circle .. SUnday.
Mr. and lin. Arthur B.
Jobalon called atlbe home vi
Mr. and Mrs. Douclu
Jobnaon ..-nly.
Mt. and lin. Arthur Orr vi
a.e.ter ..-nly caDed at tile
home of Mt. and Mra. Robert
1M and lamlly.

IlL ABNER

1iJ Orec Baney

damaged veneer
can uae 11.

"

1 keep an old blo1111
ban1iD11 &amp;I the balbiUCIII
door, ao when lam di ; , , I
can put the blquae 011 willie

eomblnl my hair or flnllblnc

..tth my mlkt&lt;UP· ftlllthe c1reu I bave put
ETHEL.
DEAR POLLY - .Lilt
net when I wu oo the bul, a
lady got on ~ did not have
the comet chaiile. 'lbla CID
happen to the mOlt canful
paopte. After II happened to
me couple of tim• I illlrted
keepln&amp; 1 pW bottlt iD my
. pune. It is llrp eooueh to
hold the naceaaary quarten,
10 no"l! when I have Ill)'
dim• and quarters they Ire
dropped Into the bottlt. Both
the bua driver and I m aaved
a kit of frl!llratlon. 'lbla alao
comes in handy "l!hen I 10 to
the lallll(\.l'llllt. - SAIWI.
DEAR POLLY - I have
found that "l!bite liquid lboe
polish is sreat for coveriD&amp;
lllllUdsM Cll '1lY roueh In·
lured .white waDi. '!'be bottle
..tth a sponge dabber W'1Hb
great, is quick and easy and
baa saved me a mill)',
piecemeal painting Job. I
have also used It Cll white
wood"l!ork that wu cblpped
or bave aome dirty spots. MRS. J.K.

*'· -

CINCINNATI (UPI) - A parllcm local grievance, or quickly before going to an
United Mine Workers to take it to artitraticro.
arbitrator."
·
Walker
.
8
8id
a
rlsht
to
Walk~r
said
the
coDunlttee, - drafllng the
Wlim's prellmlnary contract strike would anner the committee's preliminary
bargaiDIDII goals for nul millen' curtent · cunplalnt contract goals also Include
year,
has
decided that their grievances are "substantial" economic
aeldom ~~ettled fait enough. improvements, a shortened
~mnimously to prMS for a
limited right to strike by coal lfe alao suggested that sucll a 11rlevance procedure,
millen at
time on local right nuld actually .defuse iDcreued vacation and sick
many 1!ildcat strikes by leave, contract education
lasuel.
Tbe cmunittee's proposals forcing company iupervlaors financed by the coal
to aettle .the problem companiea and maternity
1!ere to be preaen~ this
immediately.
leave for the gro..tng number
"eek to a WIICII convention
"People
.have
an
that II divided aeverely over
ol "omen miners.
many ls,~ues. Officials impreasion "e're always
1be conunlttee baa ~~et no
expected less dissension, ready to strike," he said. dollar figure for !ncreaaed
h01!ever,
"hen
the "But that's not true. Mlnen· nges and beneftta. "We did
con•entlon adopta ita · go on strike Cllly u a laat not want to Ue the
resort. With I rliht to strike, negollators' hands on mmey
contract demands.
_..
1be rlsht to strike issue, they'll have to deal ..tlb us m · matters," Walker explained. tlaanalh1Y dry' "
Tbe IJiion, whole memben be a day or m. If thll doel
a
local
level.
I
lblnk
the
"ll'lllcllled to a recent 1illdcat
aol "l!ork, I tbiak a
strike by some 120,000 problems IIVOU!d be resolved no" averase about $55 a day ,n.eulaul
refiDiabel' ..tn be
miDers, "l!as amon.11 the
in the bitumiDous coal mines, -.eded. _ POI..LY.
vrill begin negotiatq .a new .
toqhest issues facinll un1on
contract
late nul year. The
· negotiators during 1977
.au. " .a.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
current
pact expires In
contract talks ..tth the
Peeve
is that so many
December, 1977.
titumlnoua coal Industry.
clothes, especially thole for
DEAR POLLY - 1boae
Coal companiea iDtend to
cblldren, ere made of beer needing
neiiV btl liltap!l can
resist any limitation d. their
B• Mn. Herbert a-li
label printa. Tbere are 10 easily make theiD ..tth onecurrent po1!et 1o obtain court
'
many It is getling Bickening. half !nell polyeBter t..tn tape.
IDJunctiona halting ~trikes
H~bert Sayre, Paul HW,.
ov~ local grievance issues. Don R. HW, Henry HW, Tom LOST: Four-montb-old - MRS. E.G.S. .
Make II double the leQRth YOII
DEAR POLLY - When need. Then alltch -.tes and
brown and white DIMY
Tbe companies no" are Hill, Roger HID, Clifford HID,
goat near Ft. Meigs or ·your ron-on !leodoranl II center of tape ..tth lonll ·
se hng an ~ted $400 George Albert HW, George
aroiUid
Wolf Pen area jn getting low.. keep the bottle ·lltitclles to make very finn
mllllcrl from the union iJI Donovan, Bernard Diddle
Harrisonville.
Please turned upside do1!R In the lltrapa. I am quilt pleued
numerous
law · suita were in Clndnnati recently
cabinet. You vrill be surpriled ..tth mine.- MRS. A.Y.
pbone 742-2'169. '
stemming
from
sucb from Thursday through
.
..,._ m•nv mnl'll timll YOU
strikes.
~~!_~~~ Clnelnnat'
Unicro olll.cials said the .,_. .........,. P .....
convention's collective ...!e~~:v~~':.
barplnlns canmlttee voted
unanimously last 1!ee1t to and Mra. Robert Bailey II
endorae 1 rillbl to st:rike Long
Bottom Sundar
provision. Although the celebrallnll the blltbd!lys ol
committee still has not Jean RoUib, Lewis Hudaoll
flnilized its report, that · and Robert Bailey. AUendlnll
dedllcm was not espected to 1!ere Joe, Edltll, Sid and Tim
be reveraed - elthei' by 1J1e Manuel, ~wla aad· Elva
COIIllllittee or by the full Hudaoa, Jean and Harry
convenlloo.
Roulb, Marv!D, Betty, Reci1:a
James . Walker,
a and Reglnna McGDlre,
COIIllllittee member and local · Bernice and Robert Bailey,
union preald.ertt in West Bobby and Oler1l Bailey,
Virginia,
..td · the Terri, Debbie and Terry .
COIIllllittee'a propoaa11!ould McGuire Jr., Lynn and
give local wion mem-'&gt;ers the Jeannie Arma.
rigbt to ~Ide by IJlljcrlly
Mn. Edllb ManDel vlllted
vote trhetber to strike over a ber uncle, Enmift SiepMnl.
at Long lLciUGm Weolne«&lt;ar.
Donnlta, Robin and Jo,ce,
Manuel attended family iillbt
and I poand·llbo_. for Ref,
ThisWtell's
and Mr.. . Don Waliter
Ohio College
Saturday even~n~.
FooiiNII SchHult
United PrHs lntar..tlonal
Don Manuel tlaltad Mllel
UCLA al 0111o Sl
CliUdreaa
at Ill. Alto llaiida)'
Ball St at Dayton (n)
eveniDS
and
eajoyed playinl
Bowling GrHn at Western
llllllic.
Mlch
Kent State vs. Air Force (at
Joyce Manuel vialtecl
Oeveland)
·
Mildred Hart Monda)'
Miami al Purdue
eveniDS at Racine.
Toledo to Ohio Unlv ,.
Wilda LI11'1011111P""ilnga
On at Southern Miss (ri)
Youngstown Stat Western Ill 1!eelt ..ttl! ber brother. Mr.
Tonn St at Central St·
and Mn. Harold Ll1!1011 and
Akron at lnd St. In)
.aon
at Lelart, W. Va.
Asllland at Baldwin-Wallace
Mr. and Mra. Robert
(n)
Musklngum at Denison
Lanon, cbl1dren Debbie and
Oipltal at Marlette In
Cathy, Mra. Huel LaGrove City at Mt. Union
Wittenberg at Ohio Wesleyan apent the w! !kand 11'1111 Mn.
Otterbein at Ohio Northern Lucy Davll at !llarleat&amp;l, w. UTI1..E OIIPIWf ANNIE
(n)
Va.
. LITTLE ORPHAJI Aiiiiii:-II:CRIT IIRYICI:
Hiram at Wooster
Mandy and Mlc:baellluAell
Kalamazoo at Kenyon
Oberlin at Carnegie-Mellon of Wolf Pen apent SundaJ ~$F
Earlham at Bluffton (nl
nliht rib Mr. and Mn.
Anderson ill Defiance
lluAell Roulb .... family.
Findlay at Wilmington
Washington &amp; Jetter,.., at
Case.Western Reserve
Allegheny at JOhn Carroll

any

Belpre 21-6winner over Marauders

Polly's Pointers
Home remedy for

.,
'

a

Although Meigs bad ft•e
Althoagh they held the !tnt downa to Belpre'• three
villting Belpre Golden in the first half, the vlllton
Eallleato Just ftve first doWnS outruahed the hostl 63-41 to
boat Melp came out on the compenaate for that defldt.
llhort end of a 21~ acore to Dan Bulflnllon rlllhed for 30
drop t.belr" second game ol Melp' yarda while Steve
aplnst one 1!ID Saturday Randolph ground out %7.
nl&amp;bt at Marauder Stadium
Whatever head coach
before opeiuna their l~gue Charlie Chancey laid to hlJI
acbedule ne1t Friday aaalnst boya at halftime mUll have
Jackaon at home.
been good medicine because
The game·was Meigs' home the Marauders came out fired
openerfortheseason, and the: up to t.ike the - d half
aelloul crowd ...., three and a kickoff and march 65 yards iD
half q111rtera of good, ·old· 10 play• to get on the
falhioned rugged football
before the visitors put the
gaillll on ice with a S2 yard
interception in the last
'
stanza. It was Belpre's third
1!ID against no loues this
season.
Big plays were the key to
Belpre's IIVIn as the the two
clube grollild il .out for nearly
two full quarters of acoreless
Coach Bob Lutz's Ironton
action belon the ·Golden Fighting Tigera were tabbed
Eagle's speedy Jeff · Maaon Sunday aa the teain to beat
taced unseen down the for the 1976 SEOAL football
sidelines and caught a Tom title as the four-time defendSizemore pass that went lor Ing champions were nameil to
56 yards and a Belpre touch- capture their fifth title.
down, ..tth Just :45 showing · Voting at Jolly Lanes in
on the clock. Scott Blake's Jaekaon 11 of 18 members of
kick for the extras waa good the SEO Sporla1!ritera &amp;
ancl Belpre was able to go into Broadcasters Association
ita lockers wllb a 7-G lead.
picked the undefeated Tlgen
to repeat while three othen
named the hard-luck Logan
Chieftalna, and thr!!!' more
College Football Results
felt the Gallipolis Blue Devils
By United Pres~ International
Eist
could take It an in '76.
Salurdav
However, the final results
Am· Inti 44 Norwi ch 14
Alleghny 14 Bthny W .Va . 9
In the annual prog·
Alfred 19 NY Tech 13
nosticatlona
showed
Bates .ti2 Union NY 19
"Jackson and Gallipolis to
Brown 3 Rhode Island 0
Crngle -Mlln ~ ~ Cse Wsn Res . 7
finish In a tie for third place
Central Mich . 22 Marshall 7
behind Ironton and Logan
Clarion 10 Geneva 1
Colgate 25 Cornell 20
lrith Athens taking fourth
Columb ia 38 Lafayette 31
place, Wellston sixth, Meigs
Delaware 59 No . Oak . 17
E. Strdsbg 27 W.Chstr 13
seventh, and Waverly to
Grove Clly 21 Thiel 7
occupy the basement of the
Harvard 24 Mass. 13
league,
Hofstra 14 Trenton St . 7
Ill. St. 19 Villanova 17
The eight league cities
Iowa 7 Penn St. 6
were represvnted by 16.
Kings Pt 27 Gettysbg 10
Lebanon ~al. 16 Oicknsf) 14
members Sunday with each
Maryland 42 Syracuse 28
scribe
and caster giving a
Middlebury 28 Colby 13
Mlllersvl 35 Kutztwn 27
brief review of the team In
Muhlf)brg 45 Jhns Hpkns 6
three non·league contests,
New. Hamp. 24 Dartmouth 13
pointing up the strength and
Nichols 37 Boston St . 1.tl
No . Carolina 34 Army 32
weakness
of the teams.
-Pittsburgh 21 Temple _7
Tom
Metters
of Athens,
Rutgers 17 Princeton 0
Tufts 13 wesleyan 12
league statistician, also
upsa la 24 susC)uehanna 111
conducted a poll among the
Westm 'r Pa. 6 Ind . Pa. 2 ·

~.=:n;::=

......,_tor
a~pecta
of

Marauders were on the move
again as they picked up !hree
quick first downs that took
them to the Belpre 35. Alter
Buffington picked up four,
Meigs fumbled on the next
play and although they
recovered the pigskin, two
straight passes fell In·
complete and Belpre took
over on the 31.
Meigs forced the Eagles to
punt it away and the ball
N)iied dead on . the Meigs 32
with about four minutes
showing on the clock, plenty

.

..

..

Grid Scores

"

Worcstr Tech 20 USCG 17
Vale 21 connecticut 10
South
Alcorn St. 23 N.C. Cent 17
Alabama 42 Vanderbilt 14
Ala . St . 23 Miles Coli. 6
Applchn St. 42 Wofford 0
Auburn 38 Tennesseee 28
-Bthne.(l&lt;.mn .41 Del. St . 7
Boston Coli. 27 Tulane 3
Bucknel l \6 DaVIdson 0
Cath U. 41 G'town DC 35
Crsn Nwmn 29 Lenr Rhyne 27
Centre 20 wash. &amp; Lee 0
Citadel 17 F urman 16
concord 9 Shepherd 7
Duke 21 Virginia 6
E.Car. 20 Wm . &amp; Mary 19
E.Ky. 21 e . Tennessee 10 .
Florida 34 Miss. St. 30
Grdnr -Wbb 23 Mars H ill 20
Georgia 20 So .Carolina 12
G'town (Ky.) 34 Marietta 3
Georgia Tech 24 Clemson 24
Guilfrd 24 Emry &amp; Hnry 14
Hmpdn -Sydny 21 Madison 14
Hmptn lnst . 18 J.C . Smith 16
Jcksn St. 13 Miss. Val . St. 12
Jacksnvl St . 24 Tenn .-Mrtn 3
Tenn .-Chatt. 28 Wsn Car. 1-4
Kentucky i4 W. Va . 10
L\lngstne 29 Md .-Esn Shre 14
Louisville 37 Drake 34

LSU 31 Rice 0

Miss. 28 S. Mississippi 0
NE La . 21 Tex .-Arlgtn 20
N.C. St . 31 Michigan Sf. 31
Richmond 43 VMI 0
S.C. St . 40 Howard 0
Tenn . Tech 24 Murray St. 7
Troy Sl. 14 Nicholls St . 9
wsn .Ky . 12 Austin Peay 7
w. Md . 21 B'water Va . 6
w. Lib. 20 w. Va . Wslyn 2
W.Va . St. 20 Fairmont 17
Midwest
Baylor 34 Illinois 19
Ball st . 27 Toledo 14
Baker 13 Cncrdia Kan . 0
Bethel Kan . 24 Kan . Wslyn 14
Cent . Mo. 18 Emporia St. 7
. u . of Chl25 St. Ambrose 24
C!ncinnati 17 M iami 0 . 0 .
Dayton 20 Ind . St. Ind . 14
Def iance 0 .' 28 Earlhm 24
Esn. Ill. 41 SW Mo . 0
Findlay 28 Bluffton 10
Ft. Hays 21 Mo. sou. 20
Iowa St. 47 Kent St . 7_ .
Kalamo!ZOO 33 Mt . Un 1on 32
M ichigan 70 Navy l4
Millon 7 Eureka 0
M inn . 21 w. M ichigan 10

Missouri 22 Ohio St. 21
Nebraska 6-4 TS:U 10
Notre Dame 48 Nrthwstrn o
Northwood 29 Hillsdale 21
Ohio No. 30 Ohio Wesleyan 8
Ohio U. 35 Idaho 0
Sa n OIE!go St . 27 Bwlng Gr-. 15
SIU -C'da le 21 W. Texas St. 17
Southern Cal 31- Purdue 13
SE Mo. 17 Evansvl Ill. 16
Wake Forest 13 Kan St. 0
Wartburg 35 Dubuque 0
Wsn . Ill. 35 Central St. 32
Wis. 36 Washington St. 26
Wittenbrg 21 Butler 18
wooster 21 Kenyon 7 •
: southwest
Cent. Ark. 10 NE Ok,a , Q
E. N .M . ~1 N.M . H Ilands 0
Henderson 28 Ark. lech o
Houston 2, Texas A&amp;M 10
Lamarr 21 N .M . St. 17
La. Tech 27 Ark . St. 13
McNeese 23 Esn Mich . 10
NW La . l7 Delta St . 7
Okla . 2,. Florida St . 9
S. HOIJS St. 22 E. TeX . St . 17
SMU 38 No .Texas St . 31
so. Ark . 41 Cent. MetMdst lJ
Texas A&amp; I 38 Ab . Christ. 10
TeKas Tech. 20 New Mexico 16
Tulsa 9 Arkansas J
washburn 21 Hardin!!l 14
Wsn N.M. 7 Westminster 3

.

. West

BYU 23 Arizona 16
Calif. 31 A'rlz ,. $1. 22
Colorado 33 Miami Fla . 3
Colo. St. 24 Wichita St . 3
Freso)St . 24 Montana St . 10
F . Lewis 17 So. Colo. 9
tdat'IO 51 . 27 Nev .•Reno 22
· Indiana 20 washington 13
Long Bch St . 37 No. Ill. 0
LA St . 10 Sacramento St. 0
Nev . -L. V . 33 Weber St. 16
Oregon 21 Utah 13
Or e. CoiL 21 Linfld 16
Pacific 2~ Hawai i 12
Pac . Luth 48 Cent . Wash. 6
Portland St. SO Montana 49
Puget Sound 37 Wlllamtte 7
San Fran St . 22 Cai.Poly-Pom

19
Santa Clara 4S Hayward 19
Stanford 28 San Jose St . 23
UCLA 40 Air For ce
· Wyoming 20 Utah St. 3

SPECIAL
SEPT. 27 THRU OCT.

3

HAMBURGER
FRENCH FRIES
SMALL DRINK

Bill Gray to head newsmen
Bill Gray, veteran sportS
director of WJEH and WJEHFM In Gallipolis Sunday waa
· elected president of the SEO
Sportswriters and Broadcasten . Association during
the aMual fall meeting at
Jolly Lanes In Jackson.
Pete Wllaon, sports writer
for the Jackson Publlsblng
Co., was elected vice
president and Odie O'DoMell
of the Gallipolis Tribune was
reelected
secretarytreasurer of the organization.
In other business the
associaUon Issued new press
passes for the 1976-77 scllool
year, heard reports on each
SEOAL football team prior to
making
their
annual

predictions on the outcome of
the tiUe chase, and accepted
one new voting member.
Williard Fitzpatrick,
formerly associated with
Radio Station WLMJ in
Jackson, is now operating his
OliVO area SJ!!!rtl program·
m1ng under the title of Media
Productions through Radio
StaUon WKOV in Wellston.
The addition to Media
Productions brings to 18 the
number of voting members
from the eight league cities.
Attending Sunday's
meeting were Tom Metiers,
Athens Messenger; John
McBride, WOUB, , Athens;
Bill Gray, WJEH, Gallipolis;
Odie O'Donnell, Gallipolis

COLUMBUS (UP!) "They beat us an4, we
deserved to get beat," said
Ohio State coach Woody
HayeJ~.

.

"This was a tremendo\18
victory," said Missouri's AI
Onofrio. "It had to be the
greatest football game
Missouri ever played."
·
Both, of course, wpre
talking about the Tigers
thrilling 22-21last~nd Win
over the previously-unbeaten
and second-ranked ·Buck·
eyes Sal\lrday.
·Missouri, which had
mauled Southern California
46-25 in its seaaon-&lt;~pener but
lost 31.j! the week before the
Ohio State game to Illinois,
trailed 21-7 at halftime and
appeared• on the verge of
being routed.
But, the guys from the
"Show-me State" weren't
conviDced: dominating the
second half against tho
fs-vored Buckeyes, cappln!! it
lrith a touclldown and a
..tnnlng two-point conversion
with only 12 seconds
remalnll1g.
Pete Woods, · a 6-4, 21~
pound junior quarterback
who, until last week, had
hoped to be redshirted this
seaaon, did a masterful job of
guiding the Tigers In his first
starting assignment.
Woods, start!nsln place of
Injured regular Steve Plsarkielricz, threw two yards to
little I:.eo IAlwls to make it 21-

more for his ability as a
pitcher oo the Tiger baseball
team. "He's strong. He ran
well and he passed well."
Hayes was somewhat
miffed over the holding caU
which gave Missouri its
second try _at ·the winning
conversion, hinting the
penalty could have been
agalnat the Tigers.
"It was a pickoff play,"
Hayes said,. "and it's almost
illegal. It's a tough play to
call."
The Buckeyes, after a slug·
gish start, put three touch·
doiVIlS on the board in less
than half of the second
quarter, relying on the bull·
like rush of powerful Pete
Jolmson and a couple of good
runs by tailback Jeff Logan.
But, Johnson, who scored
ali three OSU touchdoiVilS
and gained 103 of his 119
yards in the first· half,
·suffered sprains to both
ankles and sat out much of

on an attempted t11Vo1J9int
conver88ion pass and getting
another chance because of an
Ohio Staie holdlilg penalty,
dove into the end zone oo an
option play to hand the
Buckeyes their first loss In
three games.
. "He did a great job,"
Hayea said In praise of the
Missouri quarterback noted
't - - - - - - - - -!1&gt;

McClure's,
'

QAIRY ISLE
Middleport.

enpainl

Ohio

ltrOip&amp;c:tl

Jf··

lOUn HOIILJCH
'uiiiU.h8

-.u,.

tlf'l' ld/tor
••Wflt S.hml•r ._,_

IU ' Ceurt lt., 'ltotMroy, Otdq •u ...

lutlne" OHice ilthone
r•tort.l ...._,.ett1-11U.
. hccm4 ,.... , ..., .

" '·211•.
pold

ot

.......... ""'''''"'
....,.....,,.-..,.
c...,_.,.,

,.,.__.,. O+llo.

992·5248'

W..-d · Griffith
Inc., lo\·
thtelll •'141 Gelt.ther Dlw ., 1S1 n.lr.Aw• .. H•wYofti,N,Y.1H11.
l •
lviiMrl,tlol'l . rwt••: hHwe...4 illy
c.rrl•r whtre •nll•llllo 71 '•"" pw
...et. ly Motor loute wher11 cerrl•r
•r¥kt ,.., •••11•111!., 01'1• Morath, ·

n.u. •r tMIII" Ohio •IMI w. v... o,.;. 1
YHt, ,0,11: Sl1 mOfltht., 111.1•: Thrq

r'IIOI'IIhl, tr.ll, lllewMr11 U•M yHt:
II• •Dntflol UJ.Ii; Thr•• moftttla, 11.11. 1

hMcrlpiiOI'I price lnc.ivAt. ~V
,......Sentinel.

.41

.41

35 90
1-0 1-0

Meigs Individual

RUSHING

~

•

-,
..
•••
'·1"
., ...

··. ·l::

•

Oakland hangs m

"l
·. ·''!

..

By tKA MILLER
Detroit, Milwaukee at
,.,
UPISports Writer
Cleveland, and Oakland at
It's a slim chance for the Chica.go were rained out.
"J"
..,.,
Oakland A's, but that's still . Red Sol 8 Orioles 3:
••
more than any other secilndReggie Cleveland hild a
'&lt;·
piace team in baaeball has two-hit shutout until the
......
.0
going for it today.
bottom of the ninth when
·'
•,•.
The A's, winners of tbe Baltimore struck for four
.,
American League's Western hits and all three of its runs.
•'
Division title five years in a Rookie Ernie Whitt doubled
·/(
row, must sweep a three- home tiiVo runs during a
game series starting ton~hl three-run fifth for Boston,
against. the Kansas C1~y and a five-run eighth Inning
Royals 111 Oakland to retarn· was featured by a tw()orun,
even a hope lor a sixtll bases-loaded doobie by Cec!i
·. u
straight IItle.
Cooper and a tiiVo-run single
.••
Kansas City's magic by Jim Rice . Rice haa hit
number remained stalled at safely in 13 consecutive
three and its lead was games.
trimmed to 4~ games
Sunday by a 3-lloss to Texas
thai left Royals Manager
Whitey Herzog wondering If
his team ever woold be able
Bill
to apply the clincher.
"I've never seen a bunch
like this," said HerZog, who
.·'
has seen the Royals loae 18 of
their last 30 games. "We're
scared to win.
. 1258. Powell 51.
"Right now I wouldn't be
Middleport, Ohio
surprised if Oakland won all
'·'
three."
Lenny Randle drove in J elf
Burroughs twice, with a
sacrifice fly in the second
inning and a single in the
sixth, to lead Texas to its.
victory over Kansas City
Sunday. Burroughs had
started both ral!les with
·I
singles. The otller Tellas run
:'
came in the third Inning when
Jeff Sundberg doubled, advanced to third on an error
l!lld came ·home on a double
play.
largest~
Nelson Briles had a threeIUIII
. hit shutout for .eight innings
. !
but needed help ftotn Mike
Bacsik, Craig Skok and Steve
Hargan in the liinth when
Kansas aty scored its run.
Like a good Kigbbor,
l:n other games, Boston
State f.um is tbere.
ripped Baltimore, 1&gt;-3, and
Slllt fwm
llld c....ny
California defeated
HOme Otlict· 81~. IHII'IM p ?5-?0 , ,
Minnesota, 4-1. New York at

,.,"'

...

FLETCHER

...,

PH. 992-7155.

..

"See me for
Homeownen
Insurance from
State Farm- the ....
world\
.

~UU

A

f ~e

~

Go · .

A piece of the energy puzile.

.'

, l

Georgetown ( Kyl 34 Marietta

3

.

Free
Karate
Kalamazoo 33 Mt Union 32
Ohio Northern 30 Ohio Demonstrations and
Wesleyan 8
class. Starting 6!30
Olterbein 17 Adrian 8
Wittenberg 21 Butler ( lndl 18 p.m.
Tuesday
Wooster 21 Kenyon 7
evening
at
the Meigs
Hiram 55 Oberlin 0
Jr. High School.
Defiance 28 Earlham 24
Findlay 28 Bluffton 10
Middleport.
Public
Wilm ington 10 Manchester 9 · invited. Sponsored by ·
Carnegie-Mellon 21 Cosethe Ohio University
Western Reserve 7
Washington &amp; Jefferson 10
Krate Club.
John Carroll 7
Dayton 20 lnd Sl 14

lliE BUFfALO BRAVES
AN OFFICIAL NBA PRE-SEASON
BASKETBALL GAMEl
Tuesday, October 5, 1876, 8:30 p. m. Ohio
University Convocation Center, Athens.
Ohio. Tickets 5.00, 4.50, 4.00. reserved Seats
On!y are available at O. U. Memorial
Auditorium Box Office, Athens (594-3471) .
Mail orders send Self-Addressed Stamped
Envelope and Cl\eck, Cashier's Check or
Money Order Payable to CPB Basketball.
0. U. Memorial Auditorium. Box Office,
Athens, Ohio. 4~701.

.

~
~

. ,.,."•

Capital 22 Denison 0

vs .

(IM. (d,

Penal ties
Funbles. lost ·

'

.'

Ohio colleges

lliE CLEVELAND CAVS

MilOS-MASON AllfA.
CHISR.L. t.&amp;NNIH/&amp;.1.

Scrimmage plays

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Prolea1lonal baseball win
probably return here next year alter a lb:·year ableDCe,
according to Oeor1e Siller, presideat ol tbe lnte11111Uoaal
League. Siller loured tbe Fnnklln COUDiy Stadium,
formerly Jet Stadium and the home of a Pittsburgh Pirate
farm club, last week and said the oe" team 11'11l be playlns
in "undoubtedly tbe best ball parli In the wbole minor
league system."
Tbe main thing to be tied don It llno!Jng a team for
Ohio's captal dty. Tbe Columbus .Jell played their last
game here In 19'!0 and spetulatlon is that the next team
will come from PaiiVIueket, Man., Mempbll, Teua:, .
Richwood,. va., or from Charleston, w. Va., "~Ole
Charlie&amp; are the old· Jets.
Uf'rom the learue'i!l Ylewpoin.t/ 1 Sitler said, UWt
should have some deflnlte indication by aome time in 1
November The curreut dubs m111t state tlieir potiUODI by
Oct. 31, so I'd say a decision will have to be made by tbe
first week of November."

LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) Mitch Kupchak finally signed
with the Washington Bullets
Saturday for a reported
United Pri!ss lnternalional
Missouri 22 Ohio 5t 21
$100,000 annual salary on a
Cln 17 Miami 0
multiyear contract afte r
Ball St. 27 Toledo 14
turning
. down a more
San Diego · St 27 Bowling
lucrative
offer fr~m Italy.
Green IS
Iowa St 47 Kent St 7
Kupchak, the Bullets' first
Ohio Un iv. 35 Idaho 0
round-&lt;iraft choice, promptly
Akron 24 Youngstown St 3
Western Ill 35 Central St 32 began practicing with the ·
Musklflgum 31
Baldw in - team at Ft. Meade, Va.
Wallace 3

. A Presentation of C.e nter Program Board

DfYOfiD TO THf

TEAM STATISTICS
M B
Yards rushing
134 lSI
Yds passing
24 SS
Total y~rds
158 206
Passes comp.
2-8 2·1
Interceptions
2
0
Punts, ovg .
3-38 .6 S-33
First downs
10 S

TC Yds
the tllird quarter.
14
65
Randolph
11
Sl
''He was hurt," said Hayes, Buffington
8
24
"but, I probably should have R. Coats
8 --{,
Gum
left him in tllere. It was my Young
1
0
decision; not his . It didn't PASSING
A C
help us any."
7
2
Gum
But, Ohio State's OiggP.SI Young
1 0
problem remains the forward PASSES CAUGHT
pass - both ihrowing it and Stewart 2 for 24 y ards
SCORING
.
defe~ding against it
- Mason, 55 yard
Buckeye quarterback · Rod paBelpre
ss, Blake kick ; Size!Tlore, 5
Gerald hit only one of eight yd run . Blake kick ; Fisher, 32
attempts, for nine yards., and yd . intercept ion, Blake kick .
Meigs - Butl inglon. 2 yd.
had one picked off whicllled
to the second . Missouri run , run failed .
touchdown .
For th~ third. straight
game , the Buckeye pass
defense suffered, yiel din g
nine completions in 19
attempts and a pair of
touchdowns to Woods, who
came into the game with a
good-run, no-pass tag.

lHI DAILY JINriNrt

n.. Ohio Yell.,- PuiiiMehln• Cono,.-y,

Phone

Tribune; Ron Crump, Ironton
Tribune; Darrell Jones,
WJRO, Ironton: Pete Wilson,
Jackson Herald; Tom
Sollars, WLMJ; Jackson; Bill
lfartley, WIBO, Waverly;
George Cart, Wellston
Sentry;A!Eisnaugle, WKOV,
Wellston; Craig DUM, Logan
Daily News; Steve Kurtz,
WLGN, Logan; Bob Roberts,
WMPO,
Middleport
Pomeroy; Williard Fitz·
patrick, Media Productions,
Wellston; and Randy Keith, a
fonner member.
The next meeting of the
association will be held
· $unday , November 14, 1976 to
select the All.SEOAL football
team.

of time to push the ha UIn for
a score. But on the first play
from scrimmage, Belpre
again came up with a big play
as Mark Fisher cut in front of
the Meigs receiver and
snatched the haU and raced
34 yards to pay dirt. Again the
extra was good and Belpre
had it wrapped up.
Meigs still had aome slim
hopes as they got the kickoff
with 3:30 showing on the
clock, but on the first play
from scrimmage, Fisher
again made a big interception
and ran it to the four yard
line, but a penalty sent the
ball hack to the 24.
Once again Meigs held the
Eagiea from scoring, but
time ran out after one more
Meigs play.
Helped by the big plays,
Belpre had 206 total yards
compared to. 158 for Meigs,
and the speedy Mason had 84
rushing yards in addition to
that 55-yard pass to account
for most of those 206 yards
Doug Colvin racked up 48
yards ·In 13 carries.
Randolph again the leading
rusher for Meigs, ran for 65
yards in 14 tries, but Dan
Buffington was right up there
with him this week as he got
51 chunks of turf on 11
carries. Ron Coats carried
the ball eight times for 24
yards.
Meigs • passing game
wasn't up to par this week,
and that oculd have been the
story because although Allen
Stewart caugl)t the only two
completions for 24· yards.
Those two intercepUon.s \Vere
the demise of the Marauders.
Meigs was playlns lrithout
. the service of co·captaln
middle guard Slim Starcher
as he was recuperating from
an injury received In practice
last week.

Hayes calm .in defeat

•

99~

S.E.O.A.L . Football
Coaches:
1. Ironton (4)
2. Logan (I)
3. Gallipolis (I)
4. Wellston (I )
5. Athens
6. Jackson (1)
7. Meigs
6. Waverly

S.E.O. Sportsl\'riters
league's ei11ht head grid
coaches and they aJao picked Broadcasters:
Ironton to IIVIn It all ·..tth 1. Ironton (11)
Logan second lind Gallipolla · 2. Logan (3)
3. Jackson tie
third.
Following are the results of 3. G~lllpolis (3)
both pre-season 5. Alhens
prognostications with the 6. Wellston
number of first place votea in 7. Meigs
parenthesis.
6. Waverly

20 and t~. after misfiririg

teclllology;"

'i "

him. That big play r~sulted in
the aecond Belpre touchdoiiVR
1!hen quarterback Sizemore
mealted in from five yards
out juSt three plays later
Once again Blalte sp.Ht the
uprights to give the visitors a
14-6 margin. After the kickoff, Meigs quarterback
George Gum was Injured on
the second play from
&amp;crinunage and had to leave
the game.
Alter an exchange of aeries
of do1!Rs, Gum came back in
and il looked like the

Newsmen, coaches say Ironton
will repeat; Logan is second

IIORMAN.BONORED

BEVERLY IUWJ, Calif.
(UPIJ - Former utronaut
Frank
Borman,
now
president ol Eutem Altllnes,
11'011 the 11171 J .H. DoollUie
Anrd at the IJtll annaal
ljanquet of the Society ol
Ezpertmenl81 Tut Pllota.
1be ann! Jllllllld .,.. the
pnenl..tlo led lbe flnl air
lttlck C11 TokJo In World War

1coreboard. Buffington
bDiled bll "I!IY over from the
11!"0 1l'ltb 7:49 aho1l'inl In the
third quarter. Randolph's run
for the utra po!Dta wu
stopped abort to make the
acore read 7_., but Ml!lga "as
movlns the ball "l!eR.
Dave Blake's klckolf wu
returned to the Belpre 33, but
on the first play from
acrlmmage Muon found a
big hole In the left !lide of the
line and raced 115 yarda to the
Meiga 12 before the speedy
Rand~lph caught up ..tth

...

Baseball returning to Jets
Stadium in Colwnbus in 1977

The natural gas
shortage
· is costing more
than just higtier gas bills.
First of all, let's not kid ourselves th.•t lhe natural gas shortage
isn"t for real. It-is vel)! real. _
And yes, we ali krow that gas bills are going up.
But the gas shortage has a pri~e tha t doesn't show up .on our
gas bills. il's the cost of curt.Jilment - mlioning -·of natural gas.
in 1975, U.S. industry couldn't get ali the gas it needed . Companies
that could afford to, switched to alternate fuels - at a cost of nearly
tlim billion dollar&lt; mort than their gas bill would have been! And
who pays for that extra cost! Ali of us do. in the cost of the products
those firms make.
And when comp.~nies cut back or shut down because they can"t
afford lhe cost of going to alternate fuel s, there·s· an even higher
price to pay. lost job!;.
Higher product prices and higher unemploy ment .
They don't show up on the gas bill.
But they're a real cost of the gas shortage.

..

.

'•

..

j

�:1- '!'be Dally Sentinel. Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday ,Sejl.

.

Carter cozies-up with Kennedy and Johnson
PORn.AND, Ore, (UP!)- outlook 10 the Ne1! Frmller
Jimmy Carter, llkenln&amp; hill and Great Society of
I!COIIOIIIk: pollcles to John Democnta Kennedy and
~·s and Lyndon John- JohMon.
lOll's, told a Iaber audience
Carter baaed ija ptepared
loellly the admlnlstr.tloo's remarks on U.S. CeDiua
domestic plans resemble Bureau fiSUfel, whlcb clurtnC
lboee "l!blcll bnlu&amp;hl on the thneeltfi1CI.reported that U
Great Deprallon and the mllllm more .Amerleanllen
most recent rece88ions.
belo1! the po¥erty liDe iD 197$,
,\ddre88ing a regtmal labor the largeat !Dcreaae iD the 17
. meeting, Carter said 26 yean that the bureau baa
m!Won Americans ••cannot been keeping the fiSUfes.
earn an adequate Income"
"Mr. Nlml and Mr. F~
Wider the Nixon and Fc:t"d have made these people
policies;. He credited the poorll" In the same ny u
Kennedy and Johnson Mr. Hoover In the 113111 - by
Democratic admlniatrationa denying them the clwice to
..tth cutting the percentage ol "l!oril:," Carter said. ''The
Americana living below the Republlcana pay np aervlce
poverty level by nearly half to work, but veto bllla that
before Richard. Nixon took "ould create jo!Je. They have
bec&lt;me the party not of Work,
olfice.
Carter linked Ford to but of ftlfare."
·
Republicans N!zon and
Carter aaJd the past t1!o
Herbert Hoover, whlle Republican admlniltrationa
comparing hill OIIVIl flacal have presided over 6 per cent

avenge amual ~ticro for
the put elsht years,
campand to 1 Z per cent
averase for the 16 yean ol
the Eisenho"t!er-KennedyJohnaon admlnlllraUons.
"And as their ~tlcro baa
robbed Ill ol - purdwlng
ponr, it hal meant that the.
avenge worker baa a loller
real wage ander Gerald Fc:t"d
than he had eliht yean ago
under Lyndllll Johnlon," said
Carter.
He termed Ford "a
prellident "l!ho IlleS numben
lnatead ol people "l!hen he
thiDks ol unemployment and
Inflation."
Carter apent the 1!eekend
iD Southern California,

Donna Young

is triwnphant
CALABASAS, Calif. {trPI)
- A triumphant · Donna
Caponi Yo111111 Won the richelt
prise in thi history of
plf - .-,ooo .,.
Sunday ..ttl! a fiVHtrike
'ridory m her bome courae iD
lbe pm,ooo LPGA Carlton.
Tbe 31-year.old blonde
veteran. 1l'bo Jut net won
the LPGA ev:•t at Portland,
Ore., eradilad the "ponr of
poalltn thlnldng," u she
proved her rating u favorite
..tth stead1 round ot IJ8.$.7272 for a 'IS-IIole total fA 282, cro
the short bot lllbl 6,1:16-yard
course at tbe Calabasas
Country Club.

"WIIIIl•'•

ctsar-8moklq Moeller-~"
DEAR HELEN:
Three things drive me batty about my llt-yeer~ motherIn-law: She lllllOkes almost a carton of clsan a day. She ta
ID!believably snoopy. And llhe lives nat door! (She doali't
read the paper so thla can be priDted.)
9le won't watch 'IV, just sita outside, amoklng thole vile
cigars and thro..tng them all over my garden. When n have
OIIIIPIRY. abe's rlsht In there~ queatlona; and abe newr
haaa good word for anyCIIe, rlsht to their facea • .
If "' go out, she insllta on a-log eucUy where. If
10111ething crosses her, she mutters to henelf loud I!IIOUgb ao

"' can hear.

Reds said

I beg my hlllband to move. He won't lilten. What can I do?
- MJSSERABLE MISSOURIAN
(Colltln11ed frGm pase I)
DEAR MISERABLE:
In ,~........ b Rhodellana
Since your husband refu8ea to move ( ba pl'9bably feels
...,.._.. Y
•
reapoc t 'hle for his elderly mother), and you can't change an :-=ti~ ~~!':
Cllddog'~ lricks, youdoD'thaveanydloice: aomlke the best of IClailqer prapoeall.
her, !pore the rest, and be grateful thla dgar..mJns champ
1be bladl: i*widellli· of
illl't eotbruned in foil" ~~pare bedrocm!- H. .
ARiola I!Ginlna MOIIIII+++
~*jut, Tu-ta and Zambia,
DEAR HELEN:
howe1er aaJd BritaiD- the
My husband and I nnt 1 divorce 011 mUtual grounda. We ane-t~me' colonial authority
aat nothing material fniD each other• U"ft've been married O'rer Rhodesia - shollld
mly a llhort time. T\IOugll neither olus"IIOI'It, n can't qualify convene the conatitutional
' for IAlgal Ald.
coofereriee and that only the
Severalhwldred dollan is out of the questlcro. I've~ "aalbentic and legltimlte
you can get a ~te.st divorce for around t'/5. But how· repreaentatives of the
, A.M.S.
people" be called, meaning
DEAR A:
the Sm1tb --'- should be
Many newapapen carry ada for "dCHt.youraelf" divorce nrb
'.,......
i•ance. Butcbeck..tthyOID'Belterilu~WaBureau before
In ided.London
Foreign
• you IIIIWI!r IUCh an·advertiler. ·
. Secretary Antllciny Ctolland
,AnyCIIII can obtaiD liiiC
ry dlvorc: funDI at the lllld Britain is pnpared to
clolurlboUae. '11M:trlcklainfllllngthemoutcarreclly.
organlie a collltitutional
Andmnember:DcHI-)'ounelfDIIIDiyou'reony-own. conference, but did not
•lfproblelna CDicerni!lll property, clllldrm, lepllty, "lrllateftr. mentlm erk.tlng the Snlllb
· .-ise later yoa may 1rillh you~~retalnedala"l!yer·-H.
gove1WMint.
•
·
Van der Byl stuck to
DEAR HELEN:
Smltb's view of the
My loulhand 111101!1 no CCII!Idence In me. He lllli*l I can't conference, and aald the
poadbly m-.ap deciliona and treata me u he does the black prealdenta "have
l dllkftn. He baa to be the king and n're ·bll aubjects. agreed tG ii and we haw
Oceallona1ly I flsbl bact, but end liPiD lean.
agreed to it. But iD typical
He bellevea everytllq 1111 family gys about Oll'ldda, evt11 African nadmallst fublon,
If tbere's no proof. 'l'beJ're IOOd kldl, aa:mdltc lo .,...han tbey han iiblnm tbelr total
andfrlendl. Wilen I try to ten him,heWIIII'tlilien. He pull me unreliability and
do1m, mabl me feell=xiW and ''IIDIII." I t.w I'm a IOOd untrutw01 dolo ][,"
iiiCither -at leut I think lam .•. llllllllmel.
'-n.efore, It II up to the
I admit I'm not pelfett and accept 1111 crltlcllm nll. Western po1!ers, America
lloe-.'t thll prove I'm trustworthy? - MY HUSBAND'S and South Africa iD
DAUGHTER
pilrticular, to aorllt out."
DEAR MHO:
in WubiDglcll, the State
IIJ CDIIIIntly caviDs in, )'011 ''prove" lnleriarity to I iDID Jl¥11UWiit lllld the - t e
who -"1 be king. My I.G.A.P. ("I'm Gu '•g Alliin sho"l!ed both aida had
Pei...,..lim")u,p,.rm1 '1 erfeeda Iii boaa01111pla, And accepted the bailie principles
tbe more 01'erbe..tag ha ' * - the harder It Ia for you to ol the plan and "the road to I
!nat out ollbe •. _ . dqbllr" mold.
nesotlated aolutlon II 001!
Whenyou.......tmally fl&amp;bt blct, I'll beUt'aooa c~ oPen."
adultlriel, nat rib tbelits'Hg ""'I'm sare you haft. lan'tlt
rn Pretoria, South Africa,
true tbet on tile lew t1me1 ,oum.n....,. y-lmaband, you do Prime Mlnlller Jobn Venter
ao kMwlng you'll end up a tearful '-a'? (Wbicb only llld the I uaata iitlt.anent
~ 1111 pocr apiDIGn ol you.)
1!U "very difficult to
Get thee to 1D AIBU- 'l'ralntil!l Claaa - or lind I underiitlnd" and qed the
IOOdbook on the aubject at y-llbraty. You're Ions overdue! Unted States llld BrltaiD ''ID
-H.
clear up the ooafmdon w1llcb
P.S. Your busband may even prefer ''the 11e1r you," croce mnr ullta aa soon as
he recofa 1 free llbock.
pollllble."

campalsning among
minorities. Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr, and Sen. John
Tunney, "l!ho II up for reelectim thla year, joined
Carter In Me:dcan·American
ll'tU and the noinlnee later

met "l!!th black Los Angeles them to register to vote.
An olllclal for the aparaely
mlntaters.
attended
Mnlcan
Carter addremd the
llUfprialngly lllll1l Odcano Independence . Day parade
crowdll iD Spanlab, shouting blamed the turnout on
"Viva, Mnlco" and urging acbaduling problema.

Miners will demand right
to strike on local issues

.Cannel News,
By the J)ay

DR. LAMB-

Mn. Hattie PonD and
daqlillr, Addle, Racine RD,

Many reasons for fatigue
.

IIJIAiwt-E....... M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I read
an altlde on man for
beJDI tired. Tbll article
mentloaed
foUc
acid
dafldt11e1. 'lb8t came lbe
· • e1.-t to baing my pnblam.
What II fallc add dafldt11e1T
" ·I DIVII" had t.n1 at lt. What
·are Ill aymptollll and
- T What can be dooe
about ItT
,
I am U and han ~ I 1NiP Ul pwa

.. lad t1b Dli ;

111, pctolilhllll

tblor14t, lllltewn and
, r..MI. IINP* r.r liabW
: :INik It . . . llld -

.. . . . . . . It a llmllwlll
a , _ . I - to 10 tlhiL
D&amp;Afl RIADIR - Y•

Jeutr lliiUid

I

I

H

lilt U

JIIUf lbe

It

Jiv\\m

·mtrNM' •11 • 11m. Bleb
t1iM t1t1r NICI lllail&amp; a ..... ....... line .. ., ... •If ...... tliiJ

=

...

'hlr

!}_

• lllliMt flllllt.)

...... • • , . w .... ,.. Jtllc

'

deficiency. It II buman
nat11re to read about
.mlthlq and wwclw If you
bave lt.
J'atlpe II caused by iiiiD3'
different thin11. It Ia a
common aymptom of
problaml ran1in1 from
emotional atraln and
depr loo, tG tallercalolll,
Clilcei'lllh bolt ol diiMIII
1l'lilcb 1 Wllll't ID'Idlon lilt
you denlap tbale too.
I do nate lbat you like
Dlupreaa wbldlll ordlrllrll1
used r.r J11C1111e 11'1111 bleb
blood J1 I a; It Mnill Ill
flhpl•lll•fnllllbebodJ.
Elcill IYmiJM!Im af ...
olten nllllta Iii a ol
fetlpe
·If JGI haft bleb blood
pruaan It lboialcl be
~11 iidDid If Ill nlaCed tG
1llial tGillt! pGJa. .,J doil't
1lllow ..... piD fall iiD be
bikini by 1111 lblll ,..
I tift LL1J 1• bit 1111
tnt tlllt I ..U I ' • af

N01! tG your q...Uon about many reapecta they art bard
folic acid. I am 8llldlng you
Tba Haith Leltlr a11111ber 41, Vllamln 11-IJ, J'ollc Acid,
~ "-II, tG give
you IIICIN IDfanDitlon llian
IIPIIle allon bere. Otbm
1l'bo , . . lbla Information
can llillla kJa&amp;, •mped aelf.
addmnd lllftl!ipe ..ttl! 110
cen11 for tt. Just 111111 your
1t1t1r to 1111 In can Ill lbla
INWIIpapar, P. 0. BOlt 1111,
Radio City Stlltlon, Ne"
York, NY 10018.
Folic acid hal actions
iillllllar to daliiln 11-U. 1111
Ill dlotlln till fannatlon af
eeUa, 'ftle nucleus ol
•ell cell needl either
fallc add or batb II and
fttandn 11-11 to film 1'ltal
_ . _... vtnadelc aclda.
Wllltout tltll till D mWion
- nd blood 01111 )'011 iillilt
bm llff/ry ndnlll CliiiOI ...
........ Tldl r.a- In -

,_..In1111

coli pndui1fol
•

le

'*illltbl pilL

'

lo separate el'en uaiDg good
clinical toola.
Other areas of the body that
under11o constant
reaeneratlon also abow
fal1are In development. 1be
linin&amp; of your 1nteat1na1 tract
Ia a good ••mple. Did you
il:no1! normally 1111 replaced
f!VI'Ity three days? When thla
function falla, dlurbaa and
«bet diJative cwnplalnta
occur. '!'be tongue II alao

.....

YOU CliiiiOI SDbatltute folie
1cld for 11-12 because II does
nat protect tbe iiplnal cord
from deseneratloa. Fati&amp;Ue
fnm folic aelit «WWcct11e1 II
moaJy related to the lilliilla.
Folie acid II faund iD follqe
loocll, apeclfleally apinac:b
and other leafy vecetablel. A
IIDII1 iiiiiOIIIII II found In
many of lbe C!IDID&amp;I dafiJ
Yltamln pnparatlonl. It Ia
nat tboqbt wile to take Ill

zgmle ....

blood lallc liCI4 ill" NnCJ II 'ILIUdl --

IC!I4 pr nnn In rt1J*1H to lib ... L+'g. •

·-baeiUieB-12
It
olilc1ira
• vltlmln

""· In delleteney and rtJUit In

aerloull oompltcatlona.

.,,

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - Wallr
na accidentally spilled Cll
the top of my ,_ed
televillon cabinet. II wu not
..tped up Immediately. Tbe
reauh 1n a bunCh fA wavy
.ridges. Other thin a complete
.-.air job, is there anytblng
to l!!lllell these ridges? MRS. L.K.B.
DEAR MRS. LJ(.B. - I
~elM .-er llu •pUt
w11ere 11 popped liP· You
mJclit try plaelq 1 ctollllbat
liu beell 1m111 out Gl HI
nter om tbese ridcea 141
lifteD tile v -, Cbeck
oftea, 10 It doea 1101 mate
Rite 1pa11. Wbea rldeea m
pllallle, lllnlllllre pe mJclil
be pat uder tile 1eoee p1eee1
(I matcb or tootllpkt could
be llled tG 11e1p apread II).
When pulled back Iiiio place,
'Wipe aff uceu ct11e. Y!l!l CID
1111 1 nllbiC pili or olber
•'mnar abJect to roll dnil flat, cover ~ ..,ued
1d
ta
paper ud "l!eiPt I on
place wllli a Ill of balvy
booka. Leave IIDUI pe 11
blcll

-•••1

F ...;._,;ew
NeWS N01es

iipeDI

an evenlnll 1l'ltb Miry

Circle ..-nly.
Mr. and )ln. 1M Harrla "'
SprtnsfltJd, Oblo iipeDI •
weekend db Mr. and Mra.
Homer Circle and Verna and
Wavte.
Mr. ud Mrl. JIIDII Circle
1!ete at the bome ol Miry
Circle .. SUnday.
Mr. and lin. Arthur B.
Jobalon called atlbe home vi
Mr. and Mrs. Douclu
Jobnaon ..-nly.
Mt. and lin. Arthur Orr vi
a.e.ter ..-nly caDed at tile
home of Mt. and Mra. Robert
1M and lamlly.

IlL ABNER

1iJ Orec Baney

damaged veneer
can uae 11.

"

1 keep an old blo1111
ban1iD11 &amp;I the balbiUCIII
door, ao when lam di ; , , I
can put the blquae 011 willie

eomblnl my hair or flnllblnc

..tth my mlkt&lt;UP· ftlllthe c1reu I bave put
ETHEL.
DEAR POLLY - .Lilt
net when I wu oo the bul, a
lady got on ~ did not have
the comet chaiile. 'lbla CID
happen to the mOlt canful
paopte. After II happened to
me couple of tim• I illlrted
keepln&amp; 1 pW bottlt iD my
. pune. It is llrp eooueh to
hold the naceaaary quarten,
10 no"l! when I have Ill)'
dim• and quarters they Ire
dropped Into the bottlt. Both
the bua driver and I m aaved
a kit of frl!llratlon. 'lbla alao
comes in handy "l!hen I 10 to
the lallll(\.l'llllt. - SAIWI.
DEAR POLLY - I have
found that "l!bite liquid lboe
polish is sreat for coveriD&amp;
lllllUdsM Cll '1lY roueh In·
lured .white waDi. '!'be bottle
..tth a sponge dabber W'1Hb
great, is quick and easy and
baa saved me a mill)',
piecemeal painting Job. I
have also used It Cll white
wood"l!ork that wu cblpped
or bave aome dirty spots. MRS. J.K.

*'· -

CINCINNATI (UPI) - A parllcm local grievance, or quickly before going to an
United Mine Workers to take it to artitraticro.
arbitrator."
·
Walker
.
8
8id
a
rlsht
to
Walk~r
said
the
coDunlttee, - drafllng the
Wlim's prellmlnary contract strike would anner the committee's preliminary
bargaiDIDII goals for nul millen' curtent · cunplalnt contract goals also Include
year,
has
decided that their grievances are "substantial" economic
aeldom ~~ettled fait enough. improvements, a shortened
~mnimously to prMS for a
limited right to strike by coal lfe alao suggested that sucll a 11rlevance procedure,
millen at
time on local right nuld actually .defuse iDcreued vacation and sick
many 1!ildcat strikes by leave, contract education
lasuel.
Tbe cmunittee's proposals forcing company iupervlaors financed by the coal
to aettle .the problem companiea and maternity
1!ere to be preaen~ this
immediately.
leave for the gro..tng number
"eek to a WIICII convention
"People
.have
an
that II divided aeverely over
ol "omen miners.
many ls,~ues. Officials impreasion "e're always
1be conunlttee baa ~~et no
expected less dissension, ready to strike," he said. dollar figure for !ncreaaed
h01!ever,
"hen
the "But that's not true. Mlnen· nges and beneftta. "We did
con•entlon adopta ita · go on strike Cllly u a laat not want to Ue the
resort. With I rliht to strike, negollators' hands on mmey
contract demands.
_..
1be rlsht to strike issue, they'll have to deal ..tlb us m · matters," Walker explained. tlaanalh1Y dry' "
Tbe IJiion, whole memben be a day or m. If thll doel
a
local
level.
I
lblnk
the
"ll'lllcllled to a recent 1illdcat
aol "l!ork, I tbiak a
strike by some 120,000 problems IIVOU!d be resolved no" averase about $55 a day ,n.eulaul
refiDiabel' ..tn be
miDers, "l!as amon.11 the
in the bitumiDous coal mines, -.eded. _ POI..LY.
vrill begin negotiatq .a new .
toqhest issues facinll un1on
contract
late nul year. The
· negotiators during 1977
.au. " .a.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
current
pact expires In
contract talks ..tth the
Peeve
is that so many
December, 1977.
titumlnoua coal Industry.
clothes, especially thole for
DEAR POLLY - 1boae
Coal companiea iDtend to
cblldren, ere made of beer needing
neiiV btl liltap!l can
resist any limitation d. their
B• Mn. Herbert a-li
label printa. Tbere are 10 easily make theiD ..tth onecurrent po1!et 1o obtain court
'
many It is getling Bickening. half !nell polyeBter t..tn tape.
IDJunctiona halting ~trikes
H~bert Sayre, Paul HW,.
ov~ local grievance issues. Don R. HW, Henry HW, Tom LOST: Four-montb-old - MRS. E.G.S. .
Make II double the leQRth YOII
DEAR POLLY - When need. Then alltch -.tes and
brown and white DIMY
Tbe companies no" are Hill, Roger HID, Clifford HID,
goat near Ft. Meigs or ·your ron-on !leodoranl II center of tape ..tth lonll ·
se hng an ~ted $400 George Albert HW, George
aroiUid
Wolf Pen area jn getting low.. keep the bottle ·lltitclles to make very finn
mllllcrl from the union iJI Donovan, Bernard Diddle
Harrisonville.
Please turned upside do1!R In the lltrapa. I am quilt pleued
numerous
law · suita were in Clndnnati recently
cabinet. You vrill be surpriled ..tth mine.- MRS. A.Y.
pbone 742-2'169. '
stemming
from
sucb from Thursday through
.
..,._ m•nv mnl'll timll YOU
strikes.
~~!_~~~ Clnelnnat'
Unicro olll.cials said the .,_. .........,. P .....
convention's collective ...!e~~:v~~':.
barplnlns canmlttee voted
unanimously last 1!ee1t to and Mra. Robert Bailey II
endorae 1 rillbl to st:rike Long
Bottom Sundar
provision. Although the celebrallnll the blltbd!lys ol
committee still has not Jean RoUib, Lewis Hudaoll
flnilized its report, that · and Robert Bailey. AUendlnll
dedllcm was not espected to 1!ere Joe, Edltll, Sid and Tim
be reveraed - elthei' by 1J1e Manuel, ~wla aad· Elva
COIIllllittee or by the full Hudaoa, Jean and Harry
convenlloo.
Roulb, Marv!D, Betty, Reci1:a
James . Walker,
a and Reglnna McGDlre,
COIIllllittee member and local · Bernice and Robert Bailey,
union preald.ertt in West Bobby and Oler1l Bailey,
Virginia,
..td · the Terri, Debbie and Terry .
COIIllllittee'a propoaa11!ould McGuire Jr., Lynn and
give local wion mem-'&gt;ers the Jeannie Arma.
rigbt to ~Ide by IJlljcrlly
Mn. Edllb ManDel vlllted
vote trhetber to strike over a ber uncle, Enmift SiepMnl.
at Long lLciUGm Weolne«&lt;ar.
Donnlta, Robin and Jo,ce,
Manuel attended family iillbt
and I poand·llbo_. for Ref,
ThisWtell's
and Mr.. . Don Waliter
Ohio College
Saturday even~n~.
FooiiNII SchHult
United PrHs lntar..tlonal
Don Manuel tlaltad Mllel
UCLA al 0111o Sl
CliUdreaa
at Ill. Alto llaiida)'
Ball St at Dayton (n)
eveniDS
and
eajoyed playinl
Bowling GrHn at Western
llllllic.
Mlch
Kent State vs. Air Force (at
Joyce Manuel vialtecl
Oeveland)
·
Mildred Hart Monda)'
Miami al Purdue
eveniDS at Racine.
Toledo to Ohio Unlv ,.
Wilda LI11'1011111P""ilnga
On at Southern Miss (ri)
Youngstown Stat Western Ill 1!eelt ..ttl! ber brother. Mr.
Tonn St at Central St·
and Mn. Harold Ll1!1011 and
Akron at lnd St. In)
.aon
at Lelart, W. Va.
Asllland at Baldwin-Wallace
Mr. and Mra. Robert
(n)
Musklngum at Denison
Lanon, cbl1dren Debbie and
Oipltal at Marlette In
Cathy, Mra. Huel LaGrove City at Mt. Union
Wittenberg at Ohio Wesleyan apent the w! !kand 11'1111 Mn.
Otterbein at Ohio Northern Lucy Davll at !llarleat&amp;l, w. UTI1..E OIIPIWf ANNIE
(n)
Va.
. LITTLE ORPHAJI Aiiiiii:-II:CRIT IIRYICI:
Hiram at Wooster
Mandy and Mlc:baellluAell
Kalamazoo at Kenyon
Oberlin at Carnegie-Mellon of Wolf Pen apent SundaJ ~$F
Earlham at Bluffton (nl
nliht rib Mr. and Mn.
Anderson ill Defiance
lluAell Roulb .... family.
Findlay at Wilmington
Washington &amp; Jetter,.., at
Case.Western Reserve
Allegheny at JOhn Carroll

any

Belpre 21-6winner over Marauders

Polly's Pointers
Home remedy for

.,
'

a

Although Meigs bad ft•e
Althoagh they held the !tnt downa to Belpre'• three
villting Belpre Golden in the first half, the vlllton
Eallleato Just ftve first doWnS outruahed the hostl 63-41 to
boat Melp came out on the compenaate for that defldt.
llhort end of a 21~ acore to Dan Bulflnllon rlllhed for 30
drop t.belr" second game ol Melp' yarda while Steve
aplnst one 1!ID Saturday Randolph ground out %7.
nl&amp;bt at Marauder Stadium
Whatever head coach
before opeiuna their l~gue Charlie Chancey laid to hlJI
acbedule ne1t Friday aaalnst boya at halftime mUll have
Jackaon at home.
been good medicine because
The game·was Meigs' home the Marauders came out fired
openerfortheseason, and the: up to t.ike the - d half
aelloul crowd ...., three and a kickoff and march 65 yards iD
half q111rtera of good, ·old· 10 play• to get on the
falhioned rugged football
before the visitors put the
gaillll on ice with a S2 yard
interception in the last
'
stanza. It was Belpre's third
1!ID against no loues this
season.
Big plays were the key to
Belpre's IIVIn as the the two
clube grollild il .out for nearly
two full quarters of acoreless
Coach Bob Lutz's Ironton
action belon the ·Golden Fighting Tigera were tabbed
Eagle's speedy Jeff · Maaon Sunday aa the teain to beat
taced unseen down the for the 1976 SEOAL football
sidelines and caught a Tom title as the four-time defendSizemore pass that went lor Ing champions were nameil to
56 yards and a Belpre touch- capture their fifth title.
down, ..tth Just :45 showing · Voting at Jolly Lanes in
on the clock. Scott Blake's Jaekaon 11 of 18 members of
kick for the extras waa good the SEO Sporla1!ritera &amp;
ancl Belpre was able to go into Broadcasters Association
ita lockers wllb a 7-G lead.
picked the undefeated Tlgen
to repeat while three othen
named the hard-luck Logan
Chieftalna, and thr!!!' more
College Football Results
felt the Gallipolis Blue Devils
By United Pres~ International
Eist
could take It an in '76.
Salurdav
However, the final results
Am· Inti 44 Norwi ch 14
Alleghny 14 Bthny W .Va . 9
In the annual prog·
Alfred 19 NY Tech 13
nosticatlona
showed
Bates .ti2 Union NY 19
"Jackson and Gallipolis to
Brown 3 Rhode Island 0
Crngle -Mlln ~ ~ Cse Wsn Res . 7
finish In a tie for third place
Central Mich . 22 Marshall 7
behind Ironton and Logan
Clarion 10 Geneva 1
Colgate 25 Cornell 20
lrith Athens taking fourth
Columb ia 38 Lafayette 31
place, Wellston sixth, Meigs
Delaware 59 No . Oak . 17
E. Strdsbg 27 W.Chstr 13
seventh, and Waverly to
Grove Clly 21 Thiel 7
occupy the basement of the
Harvard 24 Mass. 13
league,
Hofstra 14 Trenton St . 7
Ill. St. 19 Villanova 17
The eight league cities
Iowa 7 Penn St. 6
were represvnted by 16.
Kings Pt 27 Gettysbg 10
Lebanon ~al. 16 Oicknsf) 14
members Sunday with each
Maryland 42 Syracuse 28
scribe
and caster giving a
Middlebury 28 Colby 13
Mlllersvl 35 Kutztwn 27
brief review of the team In
Muhlf)brg 45 Jhns Hpkns 6
three non·league contests,
New. Hamp. 24 Dartmouth 13
pointing up the strength and
Nichols 37 Boston St . 1.tl
No . Carolina 34 Army 32
weakness
of the teams.
-Pittsburgh 21 Temple _7
Tom
Metters
of Athens,
Rutgers 17 Princeton 0
Tufts 13 wesleyan 12
league statistician, also
upsa la 24 susC)uehanna 111
conducted a poll among the
Westm 'r Pa. 6 Ind . Pa. 2 ·

~.=:n;::=

......,_tor
a~pecta
of

Marauders were on the move
again as they picked up !hree
quick first downs that took
them to the Belpre 35. Alter
Buffington picked up four,
Meigs fumbled on the next
play and although they
recovered the pigskin, two
straight passes fell In·
complete and Belpre took
over on the 31.
Meigs forced the Eagles to
punt it away and the ball
N)iied dead on . the Meigs 32
with about four minutes
showing on the clock, plenty

.

..

..

Grid Scores

"

Worcstr Tech 20 USCG 17
Vale 21 connecticut 10
South
Alcorn St. 23 N.C. Cent 17
Alabama 42 Vanderbilt 14
Ala . St . 23 Miles Coli. 6
Applchn St. 42 Wofford 0
Auburn 38 Tennesseee 28
-Bthne.(l&lt;.mn .41 Del. St . 7
Boston Coli. 27 Tulane 3
Bucknel l \6 DaVIdson 0
Cath U. 41 G'town DC 35
Crsn Nwmn 29 Lenr Rhyne 27
Centre 20 wash. &amp; Lee 0
Citadel 17 F urman 16
concord 9 Shepherd 7
Duke 21 Virginia 6
E.Car. 20 Wm . &amp; Mary 19
E.Ky. 21 e . Tennessee 10 .
Florida 34 Miss. St. 30
Grdnr -Wbb 23 Mars H ill 20
Georgia 20 So .Carolina 12
G'town (Ky.) 34 Marietta 3
Georgia Tech 24 Clemson 24
Guilfrd 24 Emry &amp; Hnry 14
Hmpdn -Sydny 21 Madison 14
Hmptn lnst . 18 J.C . Smith 16
Jcksn St. 13 Miss. Val . St. 12
Jacksnvl St . 24 Tenn .-Mrtn 3
Tenn .-Chatt. 28 Wsn Car. 1-4
Kentucky i4 W. Va . 10
L\lngstne 29 Md .-Esn Shre 14
Louisville 37 Drake 34

LSU 31 Rice 0

Miss. 28 S. Mississippi 0
NE La . 21 Tex .-Arlgtn 20
N.C. St . 31 Michigan Sf. 31
Richmond 43 VMI 0
S.C. St . 40 Howard 0
Tenn . Tech 24 Murray St. 7
Troy Sl. 14 Nicholls St . 9
wsn .Ky . 12 Austin Peay 7
w. Md . 21 B'water Va . 6
w. Lib. 20 w. Va . Wslyn 2
W.Va . St. 20 Fairmont 17
Midwest
Baylor 34 Illinois 19
Ball st . 27 Toledo 14
Baker 13 Cncrdia Kan . 0
Bethel Kan . 24 Kan . Wslyn 14
Cent . Mo. 18 Emporia St. 7
. u . of Chl25 St. Ambrose 24
C!ncinnati 17 M iami 0 . 0 .
Dayton 20 Ind . St. Ind . 14
Def iance 0 .' 28 Earlhm 24
Esn. Ill. 41 SW Mo . 0
Findlay 28 Bluffton 10
Ft. Hays 21 Mo. sou. 20
Iowa St. 47 Kent St . 7_ .
Kalamo!ZOO 33 Mt . Un 1on 32
M ichigan 70 Navy l4
Millon 7 Eureka 0
M inn . 21 w. M ichigan 10

Missouri 22 Ohio St. 21
Nebraska 6-4 TS:U 10
Notre Dame 48 Nrthwstrn o
Northwood 29 Hillsdale 21
Ohio No. 30 Ohio Wesleyan 8
Ohio U. 35 Idaho 0
Sa n OIE!go St . 27 Bwlng Gr-. 15
SIU -C'da le 21 W. Texas St. 17
Southern Cal 31- Purdue 13
SE Mo. 17 Evansvl Ill. 16
Wake Forest 13 Kan St. 0
Wartburg 35 Dubuque 0
Wsn . Ill. 35 Central St. 32
Wis. 36 Washington St. 26
Wittenbrg 21 Butler 18
wooster 21 Kenyon 7 •
: southwest
Cent. Ark. 10 NE Ok,a , Q
E. N .M . ~1 N.M . H Ilands 0
Henderson 28 Ark. lech o
Houston 2, Texas A&amp;M 10
Lamarr 21 N .M . St. 17
La. Tech 27 Ark . St. 13
McNeese 23 Esn Mich . 10
NW La . l7 Delta St . 7
Okla . 2,. Florida St . 9
S. HOIJS St. 22 E. TeX . St . 17
SMU 38 No .Texas St . 31
so. Ark . 41 Cent. MetMdst lJ
Texas A&amp; I 38 Ab . Christ. 10
TeKas Tech. 20 New Mexico 16
Tulsa 9 Arkansas J
washburn 21 Hardin!!l 14
Wsn N.M. 7 Westminster 3

.

. West

BYU 23 Arizona 16
Calif. 31 A'rlz ,. $1. 22
Colorado 33 Miami Fla . 3
Colo. St. 24 Wichita St . 3
Freso)St . 24 Montana St . 10
F . Lewis 17 So. Colo. 9
tdat'IO 51 . 27 Nev .•Reno 22
· Indiana 20 washington 13
Long Bch St . 37 No. Ill. 0
LA St . 10 Sacramento St. 0
Nev . -L. V . 33 Weber St. 16
Oregon 21 Utah 13
Or e. CoiL 21 Linfld 16
Pacific 2~ Hawai i 12
Pac . Luth 48 Cent . Wash. 6
Portland St. SO Montana 49
Puget Sound 37 Wlllamtte 7
San Fran St . 22 Cai.Poly-Pom

19
Santa Clara 4S Hayward 19
Stanford 28 San Jose St . 23
UCLA 40 Air For ce
· Wyoming 20 Utah St. 3

SPECIAL
SEPT. 27 THRU OCT.

3

HAMBURGER
FRENCH FRIES
SMALL DRINK

Bill Gray to head newsmen
Bill Gray, veteran sportS
director of WJEH and WJEHFM In Gallipolis Sunday waa
· elected president of the SEO
Sportswriters and Broadcasten . Association during
the aMual fall meeting at
Jolly Lanes In Jackson.
Pete Wllaon, sports writer
for the Jackson Publlsblng
Co., was elected vice
president and Odie O'DoMell
of the Gallipolis Tribune was
reelected
secretarytreasurer of the organization.
In other business the
associaUon Issued new press
passes for the 1976-77 scllool
year, heard reports on each
SEOAL football team prior to
making
their
annual

predictions on the outcome of
the tiUe chase, and accepted
one new voting member.
Williard Fitzpatrick,
formerly associated with
Radio Station WLMJ in
Jackson, is now operating his
OliVO area SJ!!!rtl program·
m1ng under the title of Media
Productions through Radio
StaUon WKOV in Wellston.
The addition to Media
Productions brings to 18 the
number of voting members
from the eight league cities.
Attending Sunday's
meeting were Tom Metiers,
Athens Messenger; John
McBride, WOUB, , Athens;
Bill Gray, WJEH, Gallipolis;
Odie O'Donnell, Gallipolis

COLUMBUS (UP!) "They beat us an4, we
deserved to get beat," said
Ohio State coach Woody
HayeJ~.

.

"This was a tremendo\18
victory," said Missouri's AI
Onofrio. "It had to be the
greatest football game
Missouri ever played."
·
Both, of course, wpre
talking about the Tigers
thrilling 22-21last~nd Win
over the previously-unbeaten
and second-ranked ·Buck·
eyes Sal\lrday.
·Missouri, which had
mauled Southern California
46-25 in its seaaon-&lt;~pener but
lost 31.j! the week before the
Ohio State game to Illinois,
trailed 21-7 at halftime and
appeared• on the verge of
being routed.
But, the guys from the
"Show-me State" weren't
conviDced: dominating the
second half against tho
fs-vored Buckeyes, cappln!! it
lrith a touclldown and a
..tnnlng two-point conversion
with only 12 seconds
remalnll1g.
Pete Woods, · a 6-4, 21~
pound junior quarterback
who, until last week, had
hoped to be redshirted this
seaaon, did a masterful job of
guiding the Tigers In his first
starting assignment.
Woods, start!nsln place of
Injured regular Steve Plsarkielricz, threw two yards to
little I:.eo IAlwls to make it 21-

more for his ability as a
pitcher oo the Tiger baseball
team. "He's strong. He ran
well and he passed well."
Hayes was somewhat
miffed over the holding caU
which gave Missouri its
second try _at ·the winning
conversion, hinting the
penalty could have been
agalnat the Tigers.
"It was a pickoff play,"
Hayes said,. "and it's almost
illegal. It's a tough play to
call."
The Buckeyes, after a slug·
gish start, put three touch·
doiVIlS on the board in less
than half of the second
quarter, relying on the bull·
like rush of powerful Pete
Jolmson and a couple of good
runs by tailback Jeff Logan.
But, Johnson, who scored
ali three OSU touchdoiVilS
and gained 103 of his 119
yards in the first· half,
·suffered sprains to both
ankles and sat out much of

on an attempted t11Vo1J9int
conver88ion pass and getting
another chance because of an
Ohio Staie holdlilg penalty,
dove into the end zone oo an
option play to hand the
Buckeyes their first loss In
three games.
. "He did a great job,"
Hayea said In praise of the
Missouri quarterback noted
't - - - - - - - - -!1&gt;

McClure's,
'

QAIRY ISLE
Middleport.

enpainl

Ohio

ltrOip&amp;c:tl

Jf··

lOUn HOIILJCH
'uiiiU.h8

-.u,.

tlf'l' ld/tor
••Wflt S.hml•r ._,_

IU ' Ceurt lt., 'ltotMroy, Otdq •u ...

lutlne" OHice ilthone
r•tort.l ...._,.ett1-11U.
. hccm4 ,.... , ..., .

" '·211•.
pold

ot

.......... ""'''''"'
....,.....,,.-..,.
c...,_.,.,

,.,.__.,. O+llo.

992·5248'

W..-d · Griffith
Inc., lo\·
thtelll •'141 Gelt.ther Dlw ., 1S1 n.lr.Aw• .. H•wYofti,N,Y.1H11.
l •
lviiMrl,tlol'l . rwt••: hHwe...4 illy
c.rrl•r whtre •nll•llllo 71 '•"" pw
...et. ly Motor loute wher11 cerrl•r
•r¥kt ,.., •••11•111!., 01'1• Morath, ·

n.u. •r tMIII" Ohio •IMI w. v... o,.;. 1
YHt, ,0,11: Sl1 mOfltht., 111.1•: Thrq

r'IIOI'IIhl, tr.ll, lllewMr11 U•M yHt:
II• •Dntflol UJ.Ii; Thr•• moftttla, 11.11. 1

hMcrlpiiOI'I price lnc.ivAt. ~V
,......Sentinel.

.41

.41

35 90
1-0 1-0

Meigs Individual

RUSHING

~

•

-,
..
•••
'·1"
., ...

··. ·l::

•

Oakland hangs m

"l
·. ·''!

..

By tKA MILLER
Detroit, Milwaukee at
,.,
UPISports Writer
Cleveland, and Oakland at
It's a slim chance for the Chica.go were rained out.
"J"
..,.,
Oakland A's, but that's still . Red Sol 8 Orioles 3:
••
more than any other secilndReggie Cleveland hild a
'&lt;·
piace team in baaeball has two-hit shutout until the
......
.0
going for it today.
bottom of the ninth when
·'
•,•.
The A's, winners of tbe Baltimore struck for four
.,
American League's Western hits and all three of its runs.
•'
Division title five years in a Rookie Ernie Whitt doubled
·/(
row, must sweep a three- home tiiVo runs during a
game series starting ton~hl three-run fifth for Boston,
against. the Kansas C1~y and a five-run eighth Inning
Royals 111 Oakland to retarn· was featured by a tw()orun,
even a hope lor a sixtll bases-loaded doobie by Cec!i
·. u
straight IItle.
Cooper and a tiiVo-run single
.••
Kansas City's magic by Jim Rice . Rice haa hit
number remained stalled at safely in 13 consecutive
three and its lead was games.
trimmed to 4~ games
Sunday by a 3-lloss to Texas
thai left Royals Manager
Whitey Herzog wondering If
his team ever woold be able
Bill
to apply the clincher.
"I've never seen a bunch
like this," said HerZog, who
.·'
has seen the Royals loae 18 of
their last 30 games. "We're
scared to win.
. 1258. Powell 51.
"Right now I wouldn't be
Middleport, Ohio
surprised if Oakland won all
'·'
three."
Lenny Randle drove in J elf
Burroughs twice, with a
sacrifice fly in the second
inning and a single in the
sixth, to lead Texas to its.
victory over Kansas City
Sunday. Burroughs had
started both ral!les with
·I
singles. The otller Tellas run
:'
came in the third Inning when
Jeff Sundberg doubled, advanced to third on an error
l!lld came ·home on a double
play.
largest~
Nelson Briles had a threeIUIII
. hit shutout for .eight innings
. !
but needed help ftotn Mike
Bacsik, Craig Skok and Steve
Hargan in the liinth when
Kansas aty scored its run.
Like a good Kigbbor,
l:n other games, Boston
State f.um is tbere.
ripped Baltimore, 1&gt;-3, and
Slllt fwm
llld c....ny
California defeated
HOme Otlict· 81~. IHII'IM p ?5-?0 , ,
Minnesota, 4-1. New York at

,.,"'

...

FLETCHER

...,

PH. 992-7155.

..

"See me for
Homeownen
Insurance from
State Farm- the ....
world\
.

~UU

A

f ~e

~

Go · .

A piece of the energy puzile.

.'

, l

Georgetown ( Kyl 34 Marietta

3

.

Free
Karate
Kalamazoo 33 Mt Union 32
Ohio Northern 30 Ohio Demonstrations and
Wesleyan 8
class. Starting 6!30
Olterbein 17 Adrian 8
Wittenberg 21 Butler ( lndl 18 p.m.
Tuesday
Wooster 21 Kenyon 7
evening
at
the Meigs
Hiram 55 Oberlin 0
Jr. High School.
Defiance 28 Earlham 24
Findlay 28 Bluffton 10
Middleport.
Public
Wilm ington 10 Manchester 9 · invited. Sponsored by ·
Carnegie-Mellon 21 Cosethe Ohio University
Western Reserve 7
Washington &amp; Jefferson 10
Krate Club.
John Carroll 7
Dayton 20 lnd Sl 14

lliE BUFfALO BRAVES
AN OFFICIAL NBA PRE-SEASON
BASKETBALL GAMEl
Tuesday, October 5, 1876, 8:30 p. m. Ohio
University Convocation Center, Athens.
Ohio. Tickets 5.00, 4.50, 4.00. reserved Seats
On!y are available at O. U. Memorial
Auditorium Box Office, Athens (594-3471) .
Mail orders send Self-Addressed Stamped
Envelope and Cl\eck, Cashier's Check or
Money Order Payable to CPB Basketball.
0. U. Memorial Auditorium. Box Office,
Athens, Ohio. 4~701.

.

~
~

. ,.,."•

Capital 22 Denison 0

vs .

(IM. (d,

Penal ties
Funbles. lost ·

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Ohio colleges

lliE CLEVELAND CAVS

MilOS-MASON AllfA.
CHISR.L. t.&amp;NNIH/&amp;.1.

Scrimmage plays

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Prolea1lonal baseball win
probably return here next year alter a lb:·year ableDCe,
according to Oeor1e Siller, presideat ol tbe lnte11111Uoaal
League. Siller loured tbe Fnnklln COUDiy Stadium,
formerly Jet Stadium and the home of a Pittsburgh Pirate
farm club, last week and said the oe" team 11'11l be playlns
in "undoubtedly tbe best ball parli In the wbole minor
league system."
Tbe main thing to be tied don It llno!Jng a team for
Ohio's captal dty. Tbe Columbus .Jell played their last
game here In 19'!0 and spetulatlon is that the next team
will come from PaiiVIueket, Man., Mempbll, Teua:, .
Richwood,. va., or from Charleston, w. Va., "~Ole
Charlie&amp; are the old· Jets.
Uf'rom the learue'i!l Ylewpoin.t/ 1 Sitler said, UWt
should have some deflnlte indication by aome time in 1
November The curreut dubs m111t state tlieir potiUODI by
Oct. 31, so I'd say a decision will have to be made by tbe
first week of November."

LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) Mitch Kupchak finally signed
with the Washington Bullets
Saturday for a reported
United Pri!ss lnternalional
Missouri 22 Ohio 5t 21
$100,000 annual salary on a
Cln 17 Miami 0
multiyear contract afte r
Ball St. 27 Toledo 14
turning
. down a more
San Diego · St 27 Bowling
lucrative
offer fr~m Italy.
Green IS
Iowa St 47 Kent St 7
Kupchak, the Bullets' first
Ohio Un iv. 35 Idaho 0
round-&lt;iraft choice, promptly
Akron 24 Youngstown St 3
Western Ill 35 Central St 32 began practicing with the ·
Musklflgum 31
Baldw in - team at Ft. Meade, Va.
Wallace 3

. A Presentation of C.e nter Program Board

DfYOfiD TO THf

TEAM STATISTICS
M B
Yards rushing
134 lSI
Yds passing
24 SS
Total y~rds
158 206
Passes comp.
2-8 2·1
Interceptions
2
0
Punts, ovg .
3-38 .6 S-33
First downs
10 S

TC Yds
the tllird quarter.
14
65
Randolph
11
Sl
''He was hurt," said Hayes, Buffington
8
24
"but, I probably should have R. Coats
8 --{,
Gum
left him in tllere. It was my Young
1
0
decision; not his . It didn't PASSING
A C
help us any."
7
2
Gum
But, Ohio State's OiggP.SI Young
1 0
problem remains the forward PASSES CAUGHT
pass - both ihrowing it and Stewart 2 for 24 y ards
SCORING
.
defe~ding against it
- Mason, 55 yard
Buckeye quarterback · Rod paBelpre
ss, Blake kick ; Size!Tlore, 5
Gerald hit only one of eight yd run . Blake kick ; Fisher, 32
attempts, for nine yards., and yd . intercept ion, Blake kick .
Meigs - Butl inglon. 2 yd.
had one picked off whicllled
to the second . Missouri run , run failed .
touchdown .
For th~ third. straight
game , the Buckeye pass
defense suffered, yiel din g
nine completions in 19
attempts and a pair of
touchdowns to Woods, who
came into the game with a
good-run, no-pass tag.

lHI DAILY JINriNrt

n.. Ohio Yell.,- PuiiiMehln• Cono,.-y,

Phone

Tribune; Ron Crump, Ironton
Tribune; Darrell Jones,
WJRO, Ironton: Pete Wilson,
Jackson Herald; Tom
Sollars, WLMJ; Jackson; Bill
lfartley, WIBO, Waverly;
George Cart, Wellston
Sentry;A!Eisnaugle, WKOV,
Wellston; Craig DUM, Logan
Daily News; Steve Kurtz,
WLGN, Logan; Bob Roberts,
WMPO,
Middleport
Pomeroy; Williard Fitz·
patrick, Media Productions,
Wellston; and Randy Keith, a
fonner member.
The next meeting of the
association will be held
· $unday , November 14, 1976 to
select the All.SEOAL football
team.

of time to push the ha UIn for
a score. But on the first play
from scrimmage, Belpre
again came up with a big play
as Mark Fisher cut in front of
the Meigs receiver and
snatched the haU and raced
34 yards to pay dirt. Again the
extra was good and Belpre
had it wrapped up.
Meigs still had aome slim
hopes as they got the kickoff
with 3:30 showing on the
clock, but on the first play
from scrimmage, Fisher
again made a big interception
and ran it to the four yard
line, but a penalty sent the
ball hack to the 24.
Once again Meigs held the
Eagiea from scoring, but
time ran out after one more
Meigs play.
Helped by the big plays,
Belpre had 206 total yards
compared to. 158 for Meigs,
and the speedy Mason had 84
rushing yards in addition to
that 55-yard pass to account
for most of those 206 yards
Doug Colvin racked up 48
yards ·In 13 carries.
Randolph again the leading
rusher for Meigs, ran for 65
yards in 14 tries, but Dan
Buffington was right up there
with him this week as he got
51 chunks of turf on 11
carries. Ron Coats carried
the ball eight times for 24
yards.
Meigs • passing game
wasn't up to par this week,
and that oculd have been the
story because although Allen
Stewart caugl)t the only two
completions for 24· yards.
Those two intercepUon.s \Vere
the demise of the Marauders.
Meigs was playlns lrithout
. the service of co·captaln
middle guard Slim Starcher
as he was recuperating from
an injury received In practice
last week.

Hayes calm .in defeat

•

99~

S.E.O.A.L . Football
Coaches:
1. Ironton (4)
2. Logan (I)
3. Gallipolis (I)
4. Wellston (I )
5. Athens
6. Jackson (1)
7. Meigs
6. Waverly

S.E.O. Sportsl\'riters
league's ei11ht head grid
coaches and they aJao picked Broadcasters:
Ironton to IIVIn It all ·..tth 1. Ironton (11)
Logan second lind Gallipolla · 2. Logan (3)
3. Jackson tie
third.
Following are the results of 3. G~lllpolis (3)
both pre-season 5. Alhens
prognostications with the 6. Wellston
number of first place votea in 7. Meigs
parenthesis.
6. Waverly

20 and t~. after misfiririg

teclllology;"

'i "

him. That big play r~sulted in
the aecond Belpre touchdoiiVR
1!hen quarterback Sizemore
mealted in from five yards
out juSt three plays later
Once again Blalte sp.Ht the
uprights to give the visitors a
14-6 margin. After the kickoff, Meigs quarterback
George Gum was Injured on
the second play from
&amp;crinunage and had to leave
the game.
Alter an exchange of aeries
of do1!Rs, Gum came back in
and il looked like the

Newsmen, coaches say Ironton
will repeat; Logan is second

IIORMAN.BONORED

BEVERLY IUWJ, Calif.
(UPIJ - Former utronaut
Frank
Borman,
now
president ol Eutem Altllnes,
11'011 the 11171 J .H. DoollUie
Anrd at the IJtll annaal
ljanquet of the Society ol
Ezpertmenl81 Tut Pllota.
1be ann! Jllllllld .,.. the
pnenl..tlo led lbe flnl air
lttlck C11 TokJo In World War

1coreboard. Buffington
bDiled bll "I!IY over from the
11!"0 1l'ltb 7:49 aho1l'inl In the
third quarter. Randolph's run
for the utra po!Dta wu
stopped abort to make the
acore read 7_., but Ml!lga "as
movlns the ball "l!eR.
Dave Blake's klckolf wu
returned to the Belpre 33, but
on the first play from
acrlmmage Muon found a
big hole In the left !lide of the
line and raced 115 yarda to the
Meiga 12 before the speedy
Rand~lph caught up ..tth

...

Baseball returning to Jets
Stadium in Colwnbus in 1977

The natural gas
shortage
· is costing more
than just higtier gas bills.
First of all, let's not kid ourselves th.•t lhe natural gas shortage
isn"t for real. It-is vel)! real. _
And yes, we ali krow that gas bills are going up.
But the gas shortage has a pri~e tha t doesn't show up .on our
gas bills. il's the cost of curt.Jilment - mlioning -·of natural gas.
in 1975, U.S. industry couldn't get ali the gas it needed . Companies
that could afford to, switched to alternate fuels - at a cost of nearly
tlim billion dollar&lt; mort than their gas bill would have been! And
who pays for that extra cost! Ali of us do. in the cost of the products
those firms make.
And when comp.~nies cut back or shut down because they can"t
afford lhe cost of going to alternate fuel s, there·s· an even higher
price to pay. lost job!;.
Higher product prices and higher unemploy ment .
They don't show up on the gas bill.
But they're a real cost of the gas shortage.

..

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j

�4- '!be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday ,Se~ .

Jreaklng triple in the filth

lnninl and nven atrong
lnnln&amp;l It pitchlni bY Jobn
J)enny carried tbe cafdlnala
tD their VICtorY &lt;11flt the
Pirates. BnJCe Kllon llllfered Altnll.
hll ninth loll agalnll 14
vict«lea fer the Pirates.
Bravea 11, Padra t:
Congratu11tt New
Darrel Chaney's twCH'IIIl
Mother With
double was the big hit of a Bb:run elghth-innlnll rally for the
Braves. Adrian Devine was
or
the winner f~ Atlanta with
star rellewr Butch Metzger
the 1o11er for the Padres.
Mell !, Calli 1:
INA
Jerry Koosman, now
sttcngly in the running for the
cy YoWlS Award, railled hll
recOrd tD 21-9 for the Meta,
with the late rellef of Bob
Apodaca. Koosman had a nohitter unW the seventh when
the Cubs knocked him out
with four singles.
No. Second Ave.
Glanta 5, Alti'OI 1:
Ohio
Gary Th0018880D had four

Lonborg clinches it for Phils

Today's

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
Jim Lonborg pitched the
clinching victory for the
Philadelphia Phlllles' first
champiooshlp since 1950.
la!b,&lt;rg, who has been
trying to "make It back tD the
top" since he suffered a
severe injW"Y whUe skiing
during the winter of 1116'1,
pitched a four,-hltter and
raised hll .,ecord to 17-10
Sunday and the Phillies

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta £clltar

clinched the National
League's ~ern Dlvisioo
title with a 4-l victDry over the
Mmtreal Expoa in the first
game of a doubleheader. The
Phillles allo wm the rain·
shortened tleCOOd game, 2-1.
la!borg could haw used
!he occaslm to blow hll own
horn but instead gave the
credit to hll teanunates.
"It was great to pitch in the
came that clinched the cham-

hlll.and Chrll ~er drove In
two nn f~ the Glallll •
Gary Lavelle limed IU lllb
win aplnol Ill dlfull. J•
Crull bad lbne bill I« tbe .

pionship," . he
said. pme .... "
"Personally I had ooe It my
Ellewhere in the NL, the
better years and it an worked St. 1Aula Clrdinala defeated
out as we ended oo top. The the Pirates, 5-2, the Loll
team just played outstanding · Angeles Dodifltl beat the
ball behind me all year."
Reda, 2-1, the Atlanta BnVH
Greg Luzlnakl'1 three-tun, , topped the San Diego Padres,
sixth-inning h001er was the 1 J().l, the New York Meta
big blow for the Phillla.
clowned the Chicago CUb&amp;, 2''111at hMle run was aloog I, ard the San Franciaco
time ccrnlng," aald Luzlnakl. " Glant1 took the Houaton
" It sure was good to see it go Asti'OII, 5-1.
over the fence in such a key Cardl 5, l'lnllel Z:
Lou Brock's twiH'IIII, Ue-

Falcons Top Duval28-23
local (ollowers by cutting and Blessing
dropped
the and a pe11a1ty giying ~e hosts provided the main ground
darting his ' way down field, scrambling Duval quar- the ball near the Wahama ten, threat with74 yarda in only ten
Wahama moWlted a big 21 covering 44 yards in all and terback for a loss at his own 25 setting up the first of three carries.
point second quarter and then glviJII him his first touchdown giving the locals final ball one-yard quarterback oneaks
The White Fal~n defenalve
bung on to sw-vlve a big Duval reception of the season.
· possessl(\n.
for touchdowns.
unit wa•
led by Brett
secood hall to their third win Perhaps !he second biggest Mike Goldsberry covered . Wahama's big 21 point Holbrook who played an exof the season.
play of the game occurred the ball twice, running out the second quarter began when cepiional g1111e arnuaing 15
The White Falcons third when the Yellow jackets were clock, as the final gun sounded Kevin Roush broke off right tackles leading the locel
consecutive victory, after moWlling a threatening drive wlih the White Falcons tackle. reversed his field headhWlters. Greg ·Blessing
•, their seaaon opening loS!, was in the closing minutes of the startinR In the huddle whUe behind Tim Sayre's block, followed with ten big sacka
not decided until a 12 play baUgame. The hosts took over Yeliowjackets hopelessly springing him ror a fine 28 while Ted Swartz and Dwayne
Duval drive was halted inside ball possession on their own 13 looked on, out of time outs. yard scoring rWl. Smith again White supported the local
of a minute lei! in the game, yard line when a Mike
Wahama's first score mailed the P.A.T.
cau~e with eigbt apiece.
'preserving their ~23 victory. Goldsberry pass was pitched resultted when Tim Thompson In summary, the offensive Sophomore Ken Hanldnlon
The actual winning score, off with 5:41 remaining In the capped off ·a drive on I!Dit did provide a big 28 points turned in a very lmpreulve
although seemingly unlm- game. Ten straight running Wahama's
first
ball as Mike Goldsberry had performance totaling seven
portant at the time, came plays moved the ball out to the possession with a 12 yard run. another five passing evening tackles, all of wlllch were
when Wlhama scored. with 41 as the clock ticked down Jack Smith booted the P.A.T. connecting an 1 of 12 aerials recorded in tho second !WI of
only two seconds left in !he inside 1\VO minutes.
giving tile locals an early 7.0 for 83 yards and only one In- action.
first half. The score lifted At this point, a crucial third lead._ The big play of the ·tereepllon. Tim Davis added The White Falcons, under
Wahama'shalltlme lead to~ · do11n and five situation faced scoring drive was a fine 30 himself to the passing coach
Marcus
Rice's
7, adding only to. what seemed the hosts near mic;lfield. A yard scamper by quarterback statistics connecting on his guidance, have now won three
would be a runaway game in quick ten yard burst up the Goldsberry covering 55 yards only try for 44 yards and a consecutive encounlers upping
BIG GAINER- Jflf Mailun (43), Belpre'a 6-2, l.lb. b1C ground gainer (84 yards)
favor of the visiting Falcons. .middle had given them a first .after Kelvin Honaker had touchdown. Tim Sayre O!lCe their record to 3-1. They will
Saturday night at Marauder Stadium, Ia trailed by Rick George (32), and about to be tacllted
The play carne when do~~n inside Wahama territory given the locals fine field again proved to be the favorite host Ohio Southern Tornadoes
by 150 lb. junior Gregg Witte (85). Belpre, turning a series of unexpected breaks iniD scores,
Wahama was faced with a and intensified .the threat Of position when he blocked a target grabbing four aerials next FridaY, before they tall:e
defeated Meigs 21~.
fourth down and 17 situation; their drive. However, a costly Duval punt attempt.
for 75 yards an during the to the road once again. Kick·
on the Duval44 yard line, as holding penalty prevailed, Duval came right back with fi~st half. Ttm Thompson off time is scheduled for 7:30
time was running out In lbe taking away the ten yard gain a 55 yard scoring drive of its
first half. Tim Davis dropped in addition to the fifteen yard olin In six plays, capped off
back in pWlt formation and .Infraction assessment. This when Junior quarterback
I
·
calmly elected to dump a penalty turned back the Mark Mitchell plWlged over
OFFICE
to 5 !CLOSE
profession Is pride and short pau to senior receiver Yellow Jackets giving them from the one yard line. The
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -If season put him 00 base.
"I'm gratified tD be hitting cooslstency."
Tim Sayre. Behind some fine ahopelessly long situation . drive was helped by a 'll yard
AT NOON ON THURS.J-EAST ' COURT
Steve Garvey hits the ball
the
ball
thll
well,"
he
said.
Winning
pitcher
Doug
Rau
blocking,
Sayre
electrified
the
Two
plays
later.
Greg
scamper
by
senior
Mark
Ryan
aeven more times this seaaon
he
will
wlll
ha\le "ltmeansl'mgettingonbase aald catcher Kevin Pasley's
accl!lllpllahed what he set out and making thlnas happen. block at home in the Bb:th
to do-he wUf be the first los Two hun\lred hits was my helped save the game.
"Kevin Pasley did a super
Angeles Dodger tD get three goal at tbe beginning of the
year. It would mean alot to be job of blocking the plate tD cut
200 hit seaaons in a row.
. e first Dodger tD have three olf the tieing run in the Bb:th
"I just try tD go out every th
Inning'.. he said .
day and hit the ball the best I 200 hit seasons in a row."
318 id
It was the first time the
c;an," Garvey said Sunday
Garvey' '-tting
""
·
'
sa
Dodgers
bad beaten
. · Cin
. clnl!fter scoring a winning run in artificial turf woUld have
the fourth inning that put the made his goal a UtUe easier nail's rookie right bander,
i)odgers oo top of the Cincln- so he feell "It is a great Pat Zachry. in six decisions.
accomplishment to. get 200 . Pasley singled home in the
dBII Reds 2-1.
.
need. Then stitch aides and
• Garvey'~ 193rd hit of the hils" on Dodger Stadium's third, was sacrificed to
natural grass.
second by Rau ard came
•
But, he said, "If 1 only get home on Buckner's double.
199 hits, it's still been a lfe&amp;t
Doo Werner drove in the
year. The essence of any mngle Reds' run with a two,."
out double in the sixth.
BY RANDY CLARK

FRESH FUMERS

fOLIAGE·PlMlS

NEW YORK (UPI) - From the moment he first set foot on a
league field 10 yean ago, Rick Monday had a place In ·
Cooperatown all set aside fer him.
U he d)dn't make it into Baseball's Hall of Fame Itself, be
couldn't possibly miss winding up in the Hall's Ubrary where
they keep records and newspaper stories of those players with
any dlstinctloo whataoever.
In the 10 years be has been with the A's ard Cubs, Rick
Mooday has been a good ballplayer. Maybe not a great one, but
certainly a good one.
By JOE CAI!NICELU
on a six-yard run early in the led Minnesola to Its ooly S.IDII Z'l, Cblefl 17:
Hewcn't get too many votes for the Hall of Fame when be's . UPI Esecutlve Sporta Editor final quarter to put the ~ats touchdown and a botched
Rookie T·Ony Galbreath
through, but he does have a spot In the Ubrary already
It was a performance ahead. Steeler fumbles led w snap oo an extra point foiled. , scored on runs of 74 and nine
guaranteed him as !he first player ever selected in baseball's Dallas Cowboy fans h!lve John Smith's field goall of 42, Detroit's bid to Ue as the yards as New· Orleans beat
Vikings edged the Uoos. !{ansu City, giving Saints
first fre~H~gent draft in June of 1965.
come tD expect from Roger 40 and 26 yards.
No matter what etse he does thoogh between now and the Staubach and it was an effort
Roy Gerela 's D-yard field Chuck Foreman's flw-yard Coach Hank Slram a triumph
time he quits, Rick Mcnday always will be remembered as the New Englard Patriots goal. attempt with three run put Minnesota ahead 11).3 over the club he coached.for
"The Player Who Saved The Fllg'' for the rest of hllllfe, even hope to see for years to come seconds left went wide to the and Errol MaM was unable more than a dozen years.
LEGAL NOTICE
If he Uvea to be 200. ·· ·
from Steve Grogan.
right to give the Patriots their tD ·get off an attempt oo a Galbreath had 146 yards
"That's not a bad thing to be remembered for," says Rick
Staubach, masterful second win in three cames. tying extra point after Greg ru!hlrijj and Chucll Muncie,
The Public Utilities Cornrnission of Ohio has
"That," said Cowboy lAndry's one-yard TD paas to another rookie, gained Ill.
Monday.
despite a second-half
set lor public hearing Ctise No. 76·53S·E L·FAC
The date was last April 25. The C)lbs were playing the do~ that made ~ery Coach TOOl Land~, "is Olarley Sandflts.
IWDI M, G!lllll 11:
Dodgers in Dodger Stadium ard Mooday was standing in paasanadventure,ralliedthe what pro foolball is all about. Dolplllna ii, Jell 0:
John Cappelletti scored
to review the fuel procyrernent practices and
center field when two individuals, a father and his 11-year-&lt;lkl Cowboys three times and You saw it all today .... "
after
taking
James
Harris'
Bob Gri.ese threw a threepOlicies of the Colurnbus and Southern Ohio
soo, bolted out of the left-field bleacher area onto the playing finally setup Efren Herrera's
Francis, the big tight end yard TD paas til Jim Mandich pass 11 secoods Into the last
Electric Cornpany, the operation of its fuel
field carrying an American Dag.
game-winning, ~yard field who came into the NFL with and Garo Yepremlan kiclled quarter to spark Los ~eles
adjustrnent clause, and related rnatters. This
When they got tD center field they spread the flag oo the turf goal with three !JI!C(IIds left Grogan last season, says the three field goals ID lead over the Gtanta. New YOrk
hearing is scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m ..
and the man reached inside hll pocket for a cigarette lighter. that enabled Dallas to defeat 6-foot-S youngster has Miami over tile Jets. tOok a 10.01ead before Harris,
E.D.T. on October _18, 1976, at the offices of
On the Chicago bench, IIClflle It the Cubs players couldn't Baltlmore,J0.27,inabatUeof developed Into a borlallde Yepremian hit on klclls It 25, playing for the first time this
the Cornrnission, 180 East Broad Street, Colurnbelleve what !hey were acW8lly seeing.
unbeaten clubs.
NFL quarterbacll in just a 26 and 42 yards as the season, and Cappelletti
bus. Ohio. All interested parties will be given
,'Jbe father ard aon were kneeling over the flag, and when . Grogan, the Patriots' year.
Dolphins took advantage of hooked up on a 32-yard TD
an opportunity to be heard. Further informa·
Monday aaw the older man putting the lighter to it, he second-year quarterback
"This is all a matter of New York turnovers to win. play. The Rams intercepted
·
JnstlncUvely sprinted toward them. ·
.
~· for two lOuchdowns Grogan C&lt;mlng to maturity," The Jets have not scored a Craig Morton four times.
tion rnay be obtained by contacting the Com·
"lnmyownmlrid,ldidn'lknowwhallwasgolnttDdo, bowl and ran for another tD rallY Francis said. "He's at the lOuchdown in their last two Chargers 43, C.rdl Z4:
mission.
them over er what," said Mmday. "I was ~ more about the New England Patriots to point now wbere he can see games.
Dan Fouts threw three TD
the flag than I was about them. I thought theY couldn't bum it a stunning 30-27 upset of the different situaUooa and react Billa It, Blleeeeers 1:
passes and San Diego
exploded
for 'll points in the
If they didn't ha.ve it."
NFL champion Pittsburgh to them. This team is comillg
Joe Fergusoo threw a SS.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
So Mmday snatched the flag from the father and the soo, Sleelers.
second
period
to beat St.
of age .... "
yard TD ' pass to Bob
By Randall G. 'Applegate, Secretary
kept m going and handed It to me of the .Dodger Stadium
Staubacb, who had his
Continued on Page 5)' .
.Grogan aald there was a Ollllldler ard a l~yarder to
'
ballb(lys fer aafelteepiJII.
finest day as a .pro with a ~ touch of panic before he Reuben Gant tD lift Buffalo
'lbere were 25,181 in the park that day and when they . of-28 passing performance for threw the TD pass to past Tampa Bay. Dave Green
realized what had happened, they began booing the man and 341 yank, put the Cowboys Stingley.
had field goals of 39, 24 ard 19
the boy, who Wflte apprehended by the park police.
ilbead, %7-M, wilh 3:%'I left on . "My primary receiwr was yards f~ the Buc:s' first
Then they applauded Rick Mooday. The ~nist strucll up a-.,..rdTDpaasto Billy Joe Marlin
Briscoe ,"
be points in three NFL games.
''God Blea America" and everybody joined in. You never DuPrei! ..But Baltimcft, with explained. ''He ran across Faleoas 10, ae... t:
beardBOmanypeopleallslnglnginallyourllfe.
gutty Bert Jones at the and I saw oo1y the bacll of his
Haske! Stanback ran three
The man who tried to burn the flag ewntually got off with a COil trois, got a 24-yard field shirt and 'figured he wasn't yards for the oo1y TD of the
Now enjoy fine fix ens and extra savings at Country Cousins~ Clip the
figw'alive slap cn the wrist, a $60 fine and a year's probaticn. goal from Tcni Unhart with open~ says he was. Then I game with II minutes left and
coupons below and enjoy big city speed with country flavor and
Rick Monday has received tllousaniB of lettfltl and wires mly 28 seccnds left that tied saw Darryl ·cut down the Atlanta held on to defeat
economy. Inside seating and drive thru Window.
llince the epllode, not one of them negative. He hu been the pme and seemed certain sideline and l threw. I didn't previously unbeaten Chicago.
Cllllllllellded by President Ford, by Richard M. Nixoo and ·by to send it intD overUme.
have much more time. Nick Mike-Mayer, who
~ge WaUace among IXbfltl.
'
Then Staubach, starting at Soinehow.he caught the ball." missed four field goal
"Frallkly," he says, "all the accolades have been a lit his own 31, bit Drew Peanon
Olber glllleS &amp;mclay:
attempts, connected cn .a ~
embarrasling.ldon'tfeelldldaliythlngthatmilliooaofOillers fer 16 yards and then threW lWders U, OIJen U:
yanler in lbe final period ID
wouldn't have done. If what I did served as some sort d toward Golden Ridlards. The
ROokie Mike Rae, starting put the game out of reach·.
IIWBkenlng,lf it was an actioo that reminded some people 'Yes, pass was incomplete but · bis first NFL game for
we do care' then that makes me IIIOI'e proud. .
inter(erence was ruled injured Ken Stabler, threw
"What moves me most of all was a phone call I r'eceived against linebacker Derrel TD passes ·elf nine and 33
RIVERSIDE MmiCAL .
from a 15-year-old boy a day er two afterwards. We were in Luce and Dallas had lbe ball yards to (]jfl' Brancll and
SanDiegoandhecalledmefromLosADgeles. He said he,hll with 12 ""'"&gt;is left at the Oakland's defense made two
AdjiCI!rllfO
father and motbel' bad been in the ballpart and.bad seen what Colts' 3%. Another IJ.yard goal line stands ·to beat
Veltrams
t.ppened wllb the flag. The boy told me tbat111 older brother pass tD Pemm set up Dallas Houston. Skip Butler gaYe
Memorial
Hospil•l
d 1111 bad beell killed in Vietnam, and that when his' mother at the 14 and Herrera «:~eked HousloD a 6-0 lead with two
'
R.
A.
AVERION,
M.D.
and father heard all lhl* peq~Je singirc "Gqd Bless the p.me winner.
field ·goals befcre Rae, who
A. G. SOU, M.D.
America," they began crying.
Staubacb bas now hit 56&lt;lf- played in Canada the last
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
"Be told me bla father IIIII m«ber never had been able to 78 ~ for
yBnls in three years, bit Braoctl twice
C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.
ap eM the way !bey had felt befcre about his i:I'Otber's death three games·.
f~ IICOI'el. Oaklalll ltGpped
fice Hoursi 10-12 i .m.
In Vielnllm. He Aid,m the way ho!De they talked about how
Grogan tallied New HoUston twice oo tbe ooe to Mon.-S.t., 2-4 p.m. Mon..
irbat had balll""!rl with the flag on the field bad fer tbe first ~ from 8 ~ deficit PI
•e tbe win.
Fri.,
p.m. Mon., Wed ..
lime pul101111 meaning .in what lbeir soo bad done. 8Mr in wi1b t!~ir01!uarter TD puleS Vlkilop u, u.s 1:
PHONE 992:3331:
iniDd, tlil was C!ll!lng from a 15-fear~ boy. lie bad taken of 38 ymds t.o Russ Francis
SUb quarterback Bob IAle
'lbe lnlllali.e in calllrc me. It was a ~moving converaatillll and 5I yarda to Darryl
and lbave~fcqolten it. Idoo't think I ever will."
Stingley. Grogan then aoored · r"'"~----------~-big

·'

NOVELTY

Stauhach, Grogan stars at new high

•
, ,•

"rd.
200
h
•
- zt season
Garoey close to th l

'•'

."

.

.

..

-.

EAT OUT CHEAPI

J. C. Snead

Fs.Kaiser Sipe

GROUP

fi~

m

cookshot~"

..... 1.-

·Bengals' defense hot
CINciNNATI !UPI) -The
Clnclmwtl Benp1a usually
win wllb good paaslng. But
tbey wblpped wlnlelll Green
Bay
Sunday because of
bad paaalng -by lb~
Padien.
Ken Rlley started lbe
lflout:lace by lnterteptlag I

•7

'
all the way tD the end zone." who8e club is,now 0:3, could
Riley's 9C!CCIId lnterceptim · do notlUig but moan about
was euler. Dickey, down Z1-7 the~.
early in tbe final querter,
' 'We were clviDc a good
tried a bomb but undertlnw account of ounelYes," he
:: . .,,. 4 waited far it at the .said, fW'Illing the 741 lead.
Clncy 22 and returned it 27 ''Take away the mlltakes and
yards.

ln lhe

~

33-yard interception for

minutes of
at
It again, Ibis time wltb
reserve quart.erbacll c.los
brown dOOle the last-ditch

IIIOtber TD.

pal'ing

!)Uland relunlillllt ~ yalds
fllr a touchdawn. Tommy
ea-a IIDUbed It wilh a

And I« good

Dlelllln,

Riley baited • fourth Cpw1er
PaWn' deapentlon dri.e

wltb, !bat's right, an
IIUrception.
Said aafety Bernard
Jscklon of hll pa• 'llealing
defl!nsive backlleld buddlel,
''We are the olfenle."
RiJey got lbe game ball.
And redemption. In last
week's on~polnt loaa to
Baltimore he wu beaten on a
TD pall and alao h•mbled
- y Ill Interception to gift
the Colla anotber IICOI'e.
"I wu U'ylng tD redeem
myself," lbe eight-year
veteran aald after hll 32nd
and
33rd
career
, Interceptions. "I thought
about Baltlmare an last weet
but! dldn'tdarelblnkabout It
Cll the lleld today. I'd haw
IOlt8n killed lgaln."
Rlley'l llr'll lntertepiiCII
a.nday - the key play of
the p.me.
•
Green Bay had IJ'abbed a 70 first quarter lead on
~ LYJIII Dickey's
nifty uvea-yard "naked
reverse" . roOout that
eomplete1J fooled the
lllallll. But wben Dickey
trW Ill oornpWt a quick
1 (d'n
bl 1'11)'111 al
157+' will 10 mlmJ!eo WI

,..lo

the game, Green Bay -

"lllnew they bad to Urow It
and I was right there,"
Casanova
Aid
after
Intercepting Brown wllb I:12
left and ~ 33 yards tD
up tbe final margin to .7.
"It would have been
better," chuckled tbe former
I.SU star, haping f~ 1 llliJe
·drama, ''If we would have
been behind...
'!be Bengali allo got touchdolml oo Ken Andenon's two
yard paas to Bob 1'rumpy and
rookie Archie Grtflln'a Dineyard

nm.

1977 Zenith line - and
check our TV · uide offer!

FREE
52 WEEK
Subscription or Renewal to

TV GUIDE
with the purchase
of any
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Offer Ends

Oclllber 3rd, 1976

· ~~ FiXINS tO ~~

----------------~-~-.---·-----·--1

II ...

II

SAVE 28~

1.· TRIPLE MEAL

II Triple treat,

1

SAVE 30~

1 2 TRIPLE TREATS :1

fries, regular drink

•

'I
I lettuce and the cousins special
I Two pure beef patties, cheese,

.1

I sauce.

I ~ '110 With Coupon ~ ~ '130With Coupon •II
1 '~ Expires
I ~ Expires
1-----------------t------------~---1
I·
SAVE 30~
I
SAVE 26~
:1
I
2 DOUBLE
I
2 DOUBLE
.I
~~~~~·a~~u:o~nd.~l~~
atEESFBURGERS
I· . HAMBURGERS
I
I
Two pure beef patties with melted 1~wo pure beef Patties with our I,
cheese with fixens added.
I flxens added.
I
J~ •1 10 With Coupon I ~ '1 00 With Coupon I .
I ~ Expires
1 ~ lixplres
-1
~----------------~-----------1
SAVE 10
I
SAVE 25'
I
I
.
.I
: Stauhach
·SALAD BAR
I Big Beef Platter I
·10.15-76

.

10-15-76

Tile BRITTANY

H25301:

Country Frenctl

DR.A.J .ITAEHLt
DR. K.H.CHUNO
DR . VICTOR Y. LtANO

FOR PIIICEI CALL COI.I.ICT
rAIIEA COD( (tl4~

- 252·3181

~ going.

• Brilliant Chromacolor Picture Tube
t 100% Solid-State THan 3001/ Chassis
• Patented Power Sentry Voltage
Regulating System
• One-Knob VHF and UHF Channel
Selection
• Chromatic One-button Tuning

x-

Rlley
J llpaecl to jllll

INGELS
FURNITURE
-

:::tl-.~'b:=

992-2635

lftlri&amp;Ktac.Ndme

I,

:
:
:
:
:
,.
:
;
"

I

10-ts·i'•

while Miller Barber won
$8,225 for finishing fourth at
277. Don Massengale, Jack
Ewing and Lyn lott were
next at 279 and Andy North
was aU alone at 280. Five
othera wound up at 281,
including Lee Trevino and
Bill Casper.

·1 .
I ~ 39• WithCoupon
I

~

Expires 10-15-76

MIDDLEPORT

~ (eontillued from page 4
~ Loula in a battle of unbeaten

II A 1-3 lb. loo ~~tr cent fresh ground

beef steak with fries, hot bread

land salad b1r. Dining room only.

~~

'140WithCoupon

1 ~Expires

10-15-76

t-··-·;;;~·;.~----r---~AVE;;. --,

i 2 CHEESEBURGERS I riSh Filet Platter
I A pure beef p1ttie with melted I 2 pieces. of deep

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,

llllei.J..•·- l'id

,

: Snead won $35,000 and
: boosted his earnings to
: $191,807 for the year, good for

Come in lnd fix it the way you like
it. Dining room only.

veneers and

-~hr-'•lllndl,
'J

'I

•

Hlocl hlldwood
oolldo on lop and
ondo. Front and
baoeof
slmulaled Oak.

..... , l &amp;.. 'l'lllball

I

4

otyled conaole.
Caottrs. Oak

'•

· ~

• NAPA, Calif. (UPI)- J.C.
!klead didn't have ID look' far
IP find the right co.ach ard it
"on him the $175,ooo Kaiser
International Open.
For the past two weeks, Sue
Snead watched her husband,
)!!rough hundreds of hours of
P'actlce and thought she
illscovered what was wrong
l&gt;;ith his swing.
• "Sue told me she didn't
• what was wrong .with
)now
'IllY swing, but she did know it
.wasn't ·anywhere near as
limooth
as
(Tom)
· :,Weiskopf's," Snead
'llxplalned Sunday after
;:winding up hll best driving
:week . of the year and
;'parlaYing it into victory.
: "So I watched Weiskopf
•whom I admire an awful lot,"
~Snead said. "I tried putting
: my shoulders into my swing
: au the way, not stopping
• halfway through as I was
: doing and suddenly !lost my
: upshoot.''
: Snead, who outlasted
: Johnny Mlller tD win the
• Kaiser wilb a 72-hole score of
; 14-under.par 274, said his
;, driver had deserted him to
~ the point where he never was
;. sure where the ·ball was

•

. . 1111111*11• blm, then
, at tilt liltIn dW I CJimbled
I

~·

10·15-76

"This II the kind It dly l'w
been loolllrc !«," grinned
STRIKEOUTS.. .
Grilln, who bad IIVCI'IIed
NATIONAL J.EAGUE: SOl·
NY 233; Rl(hard, Hou 196;
mly fl yards nllilq hllllr'll ver.
Koosman. NY 189 ; Carlfon , Phil
two pro oullnp but wound up 17~ : Montefusco, SF i68.
_
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan,
Sunday's belt runner wllb 71
Cal· 302: Tanana, Cal 2-47;
yards In 2D cerrlea.
Blylevrn, Te• 210; Eckersley,
Packera' caech Bart Starr, Clev 180; Hunter. NY 168.

.:::.,h-:a;.c:~·

·:· "AI

it's 8 ~~ pme,"
Iml even without the inter-.
ceplions, Green Bay's
· puslnc was .stlll bad.
Dickey rompleted only fiw
of 2D and Brown went 0-3.
Quarterback sacks
plwnmeted Green Bay'• net
palling yarage to minus 3$, a
Bengals defensive record.
Holding the Packers 1D jull3&amp;
net !Dtal yards alao was a
Clncy record. .
.
Be~ls quarterback Ken
Anderaon had an olf-day,
bitting only 11 of 24 for 115
yards. But then he didn't
throw any interceptions
either, and on a day when
interceptions made the
difference,thatwugood
enOugh.

....
Come in and view the new

chHse with our fixens added.

.®
·:.l

~~

60' With Coupon
Expires

10-15:76

filet with
1slaw.
fries, hot brud and fresh colt
Dining room only.
fried

1. ~'140 With Coupon
.
.
I~~·

I ,

I
I

Expires: 10-U-76

----·----------·------~-----.
Open Sunday thru Thurlclay a,m, to p.m • .
10

10

Friday 1nd Slturday 10 a.m. to 12 p.m,
Loc1ttd at 691 West Mlln Ntxt to tht Jonesloys

\

.

~

HO~nq

.

..
"
•
:
:
:
:
-

clubs. Fouls hit Char Ue
Joiner on a SO.yard TD pass
and Dwight McDonald with
scoring passes of 44 and 18
yards. Jim Hart had two TD
throws for the Cards.
41en rt, Seabans Zl:
Plunkett threw three first~ half TD passes as San
• Francisco built a 241Joint
i; lead and then held off Seattle.
: The 49ers scored 17 points In
• the first 11 minutes oo a 50: yard punt return by Ralph
: Mt.&lt;lill, Plunkett's SS.yard
: TD pau to Gene Washington
• and a. 40-yard field goal by
•• Steve Mike-Mayer. Plunkett
.: . threw two more TD passes in
: the second period.
: Bruncoa 44, Bmm 13:
;;
Rick Upchurch returned
punts 73 and 36 yards for TDs
= to set a club record and Ignite
: Oenwr past Clevetand. The
: Broncos allo scored m a one• yard run bY Otla Armstrong,
: a U.yard fumble return by
; Calvin Jones and a 12-yard
- run by Jim Klick. Sieve
Ramsey a11o lhrew a 36-yard
IICGI'Ing paas to Haven MO&amp;es.
'•

o"

reason

eating crow?

• own .wor
.. d
no h IS

us•••

.

'
DENVER (UPI) -:- The Slpe a large helping ol hll ·
Denver Broncos served Brian own words Sunday and the
Cleveland Browns quarterback had to eat them.
After the Browns 31-14 loss
last week'to Pittsbui'gh, Slpe
uid, "Denver's goma pay
for this."

By United Press International
National League

East

l&lt; -Philadetphl
Pittsburgn
New York
St . Louis
Chicago
Montreal

W..
96
88
84

L.. Pel.
60 .61S
69 .561
71 .542

GB
8112
ll lf2

11 as .m 2s 1

71 86 .452 2S h
53 l 02 . 343 42 1h

.· west

W.. L. . Pet. GB

x·Cincinnati

.635 -

Los Angeles

99 57
89 61
Houston
77 so
san Francisco 72 86

.571

• ..,
IS.

The Broncos, having heard
of the q!!llrterback's off-th&amp;cuff remark, took the field
Sunday determined to let Slpe
and his teanimates know !hey
weren 'I pushovers.
And so they did, routing the
Browns 4H3, in a game
predicted to be as close as
last year's 16-15 Denver win.
. That game went to the wire
with Denver scoting on a Jim
Turner field goal with no time
remaining.

· ' Major League· Stindingi

10

.490 22 Vl
.456 28

·san D iego
69 87 .442 30
Atlanta
69 88 .439 30 1/ l
x-CHnched di'Yision title

'
-----

WORTH

200 EXTRA

Saturday's Results
Ph iladelphia 6 Montreal 5

"We wanted Slpe to know
lhat we have egos too;" said
Sf . Louis 3 Pittsburgh 0
New York 5 Chicago 2 ·
linebacker Tom Jackson, who .
Cine I 4 Los Angeles J
intercepted two of the backup
San Fran 10 Houston 0
quarterback's passes.
Atlanta 11 San Diego 8
In today·s compelrt1ve envi ron·
Sunday,'s Results
"We're nobody~s patsy and if
Phlla 4 Montreat 1, tst
ment you need a good reason
he didn't see that today, then
Phila 2 Montreal 1, 2nd
New York 2 Chicago 1
for swilching stores.
he's got a problem."
Atlanta 10 San Diego 4
We
lhink Top Value
Tbe
victory
was
St . Louis 5 Pittsburgh 2
Los Ang 2 Cii1Cinnatl 1
highlighted by two touchdown
Slamps and the grits
San Francisco 5 Houston 1
punt
returns
by
Rick
UpToday' s Probable Pitchers
they can be redeemed
!All Times EDTI
church, who said the game
fo
r, a re ·a very goo d
Montreal { LB~ndreU1 1·1 anti reminded him of hll high
Hannat1s 1.0) at New York
reason.
(Espinosa 4-4 anti Matlack 16· school days In Toledo, Ohio.
9), 2, 5:35p.m .
The 5-8, 170 powtd UpPhiladelphia tCartton 19-il) at
church
scored on returns of 73
St . LOUIS (Falcone 12-14) , 8:30
p.m.
and 47 yards, and set a club
Cincinnati {Gullett 10-3) at
Sa n Dleg9 {Strom 11 -16) , 10 record with 125 yard return
on four returns.
p.m .
Do Top Value Slamps rn·
Houston {Andujar 9-10) at Los
"I didn't get to run very
Angeles !Hooton 11 -14), 10 :30
cre ase lood prtce s? We
much in the preseason, but
p.m.
assure you . here and now.
(Only games scheduled)
I'm getting !he feeling now
Tuesdlly's Gamet
lhal lhey donl Some ol ou•
after practicing each week
Montreal at N .Y .. night
Chi at Pittsburgh. night
with our special teams,"
prices vary from day to day .
Phil !'I at St . Louis, nigh•
Upchurd!
asld.
San Fran at Atlanta, night
- as lh ey ,always have and
Houston at LOS Ang , night
· Bronco coach John Ralston
always will. As lhey do in
Clncl at San Diego. night
called Upchurch the "beat"
every slore We are deter·
Amel-lcan League
. punt returner in pro lootbaU,
East
·
m.ned !o stay com peltlive on
W .. L. . Pet. GB but the compliment was
9&lt; 61 .606 l&lt; -New York
price. as we always have. You
accepted modestly.
86 70 .SSI 8
Baltimore
"That's a great honor
wll l not pay extra for the bonus
79 7&lt; .516 1&lt; '
ClevelaQd
79 78 .SOl 16
coming
from
the
coach,"
Boston
ol Top Value Stamps
69 85 .448 24 11?
Detroit
Upchurch
~aid.
"It's
6S 90 .&lt;19 29
Milwau~ee
something I'd really like· to
wesl
W.. L .. Pet. G8 back up in the long run."
Kansas Citv
89 67 .571 -

TOP VALUE ·STAMPS

Big Value Bonus!

This coupon good for 200 Extra Top Value Stomps with
a purchase of $5,00 or rnore al Big Jim's Plaza, I/J7
Pearl Sl.. Middleport, Oh 'o.

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Increase!

1

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Minnesota
California •
Texas

nart~e g1 ft s you can getlree for

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Make The Move!

84 11 .542
81 76 .516 B'll
n 85 .459 l1 V2
12 85 .459 11112
Chicogo
6' 92 .&lt;10 2l
• -Clinched division title
Saturday•• Results
New York 10 Defrolt 6
Minnesota 6 California 0
Boston 1 ealllmore o
Cleveland 3 Milwaukee 1
Texas 1 Kansas Ci ty I)
Oakland 1 Chicago .4
SundJy's Results
M itw at Cleve. cncld ., rain
New York at Det, cncld ., rain
Oakland at Chi , ppd ., rain
Boston 8 Baltimore 3
California 4 Minnesota 1
Texas 3 Kansas City 1 .
Tadav's Probable Pif(hers

!All Times EDTI
Detroit (Fidrvch 16·9) at
Cleveland (Welts 1·8), 7:30p.m.
Kansas Cilv (Pattin 8-ll l at
Oakland (Torrez 14 .11), 11 p.m.
(Only games scheduled)

We want your bus1ness. We're
proving it wrth lhe extra bonus of
Top Value Stamp s . Make the
s wit ~ h today and start enjoying
ou r fine load. low prices and some
of Ihe wonde rful gtft s you get free
for Top Value Stamps.

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Stamps Pay Off?

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w&lt;th Top Value Slamps in 3 weeks
... more th an 17 books in jus I a
year.

Tueldlly's Gentes

cuv

Ken
at Oakland. night
Texas at Minnesota
Detroit at Cle"¥e. twilight
Mlnn at Baltlmre ~ 2. twJ ,night
New York at Boston , night
&lt;On l y games scheduled)

Here are 1ust a lew of the
thousa r"\d S ol h1Qh-q ua l1ty. b rand

•·

No. $tcond Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
,,

I

�4- '!be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday ,Se~ .

Jreaklng triple in the filth

lnninl and nven atrong
lnnln&amp;l It pitchlni bY Jobn
J)enny carried tbe cafdlnala
tD their VICtorY &lt;11flt the
Pirates. BnJCe Kllon llllfered Altnll.
hll ninth loll agalnll 14
vict«lea fer the Pirates.
Bravea 11, Padra t:
Congratu11tt New
Darrel Chaney's twCH'IIIl
Mother With
double was the big hit of a Bb:run elghth-innlnll rally for the
Braves. Adrian Devine was
or
the winner f~ Atlanta with
star rellewr Butch Metzger
the 1o11er for the Padres.
Mell !, Calli 1:
INA
Jerry Koosman, now
sttcngly in the running for the
cy YoWlS Award, railled hll
recOrd tD 21-9 for the Meta,
with the late rellef of Bob
Apodaca. Koosman had a nohitter unW the seventh when
the Cubs knocked him out
with four singles.
No. Second Ave.
Glanta 5, Alti'OI 1:
Ohio
Gary Th0018880D had four

Lonborg clinches it for Phils

Today's

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sporll Writer
Jim Lonborg pitched the
clinching victory for the
Philadelphia Phlllles' first
champiooshlp since 1950.
la!b,&lt;rg, who has been
trying to "make It back tD the
top" since he suffered a
severe injW"Y whUe skiing
during the winter of 1116'1,
pitched a four,-hltter and
raised hll .,ecord to 17-10
Sunday and the Phillies

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta £clltar

clinched the National
League's ~ern Dlvisioo
title with a 4-l victDry over the
Mmtreal Expoa in the first
game of a doubleheader. The
Phillles allo wm the rain·
shortened tleCOOd game, 2-1.
la!borg could haw used
!he occaslm to blow hll own
horn but instead gave the
credit to hll teanunates.
"It was great to pitch in the
came that clinched the cham-

hlll.and Chrll ~er drove In
two nn f~ the Glallll •
Gary Lavelle limed IU lllb
win aplnol Ill dlfull. J•
Crull bad lbne bill I« tbe .

pionship," . he
said. pme .... "
"Personally I had ooe It my
Ellewhere in the NL, the
better years and it an worked St. 1Aula Clrdinala defeated
out as we ended oo top. The the Pirates, 5-2, the Loll
team just played outstanding · Angeles Dodifltl beat the
ball behind me all year."
Reda, 2-1, the Atlanta BnVH
Greg Luzlnakl'1 three-tun, , topped the San Diego Padres,
sixth-inning h001er was the 1 J().l, the New York Meta
big blow for the Phillla.
clowned the Chicago CUb&amp;, 2''111at hMle run was aloog I, ard the San Franciaco
time ccrnlng," aald Luzlnakl. " Glant1 took the Houaton
" It sure was good to see it go Asti'OII, 5-1.
over the fence in such a key Cardl 5, l'lnllel Z:
Lou Brock's twiH'IIII, Ue-

Falcons Top Duval28-23
local (ollowers by cutting and Blessing
dropped
the and a pe11a1ty giying ~e hosts provided the main ground
darting his ' way down field, scrambling Duval quar- the ball near the Wahama ten, threat with74 yarda in only ten
Wahama moWlted a big 21 covering 44 yards in all and terback for a loss at his own 25 setting up the first of three carries.
point second quarter and then glviJII him his first touchdown giving the locals final ball one-yard quarterback oneaks
The White Fal~n defenalve
bung on to sw-vlve a big Duval reception of the season.
· possessl(\n.
for touchdowns.
unit wa•
led by Brett
secood hall to their third win Perhaps !he second biggest Mike Goldsberry covered . Wahama's big 21 point Holbrook who played an exof the season.
play of the game occurred the ball twice, running out the second quarter began when cepiional g1111e arnuaing 15
The White Falcons third when the Yellow jackets were clock, as the final gun sounded Kevin Roush broke off right tackles leading the locel
consecutive victory, after moWlling a threatening drive wlih the White Falcons tackle. reversed his field headhWlters. Greg ·Blessing
•, their seaaon opening loS!, was in the closing minutes of the startinR In the huddle whUe behind Tim Sayre's block, followed with ten big sacka
not decided until a 12 play baUgame. The hosts took over Yeliowjackets hopelessly springing him ror a fine 28 while Ted Swartz and Dwayne
Duval drive was halted inside ball possession on their own 13 looked on, out of time outs. yard scoring rWl. Smith again White supported the local
of a minute lei! in the game, yard line when a Mike
Wahama's first score mailed the P.A.T.
cau~e with eigbt apiece.
'preserving their ~23 victory. Goldsberry pass was pitched resultted when Tim Thompson In summary, the offensive Sophomore Ken Hanldnlon
The actual winning score, off with 5:41 remaining In the capped off ·a drive on I!Dit did provide a big 28 points turned in a very lmpreulve
although seemingly unlm- game. Ten straight running Wahama's
first
ball as Mike Goldsberry had performance totaling seven
portant at the time, came plays moved the ball out to the possession with a 12 yard run. another five passing evening tackles, all of wlllch were
when Wlhama scored. with 41 as the clock ticked down Jack Smith booted the P.A.T. connecting an 1 of 12 aerials recorded in tho second !WI of
only two seconds left in !he inside 1\VO minutes.
giving tile locals an early 7.0 for 83 yards and only one In- action.
first half. The score lifted At this point, a crucial third lead._ The big play of the ·tereepllon. Tim Davis added The White Falcons, under
Wahama'shalltlme lead to~ · do11n and five situation faced scoring drive was a fine 30 himself to the passing coach
Marcus
Rice's
7, adding only to. what seemed the hosts near mic;lfield. A yard scamper by quarterback statistics connecting on his guidance, have now won three
would be a runaway game in quick ten yard burst up the Goldsberry covering 55 yards only try for 44 yards and a consecutive encounlers upping
BIG GAINER- Jflf Mailun (43), Belpre'a 6-2, l.lb. b1C ground gainer (84 yards)
favor of the visiting Falcons. .middle had given them a first .after Kelvin Honaker had touchdown. Tim Sayre O!lCe their record to 3-1. They will
Saturday night at Marauder Stadium, Ia trailed by Rick George (32), and about to be tacllted
The play carne when do~~n inside Wahama territory given the locals fine field again proved to be the favorite host Ohio Southern Tornadoes
by 150 lb. junior Gregg Witte (85). Belpre, turning a series of unexpected breaks iniD scores,
Wahama was faced with a and intensified .the threat Of position when he blocked a target grabbing four aerials next FridaY, before they tall:e
defeated Meigs 21~.
fourth down and 17 situation; their drive. However, a costly Duval punt attempt.
for 75 yards an during the to the road once again. Kick·
on the Duval44 yard line, as holding penalty prevailed, Duval came right back with fi~st half. Ttm Thompson off time is scheduled for 7:30
time was running out In lbe taking away the ten yard gain a 55 yard scoring drive of its
first half. Tim Davis dropped in addition to the fifteen yard olin In six plays, capped off
back in pWlt formation and .Infraction assessment. This when Junior quarterback
I
·
calmly elected to dump a penalty turned back the Mark Mitchell plWlged over
OFFICE
to 5 !CLOSE
profession Is pride and short pau to senior receiver Yellow Jackets giving them from the one yard line. The
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -If season put him 00 base.
"I'm gratified tD be hitting cooslstency."
Tim Sayre. Behind some fine ahopelessly long situation . drive was helped by a 'll yard
AT NOON ON THURS.J-EAST ' COURT
Steve Garvey hits the ball
the
ball
thll
well,"
he
said.
Winning
pitcher
Doug
Rau
blocking,
Sayre
electrified
the
Two
plays
later.
Greg
scamper
by
senior
Mark
Ryan
aeven more times this seaaon
he
will
wlll
ha\le "ltmeansl'mgettingonbase aald catcher Kevin Pasley's
accl!lllpllahed what he set out and making thlnas happen. block at home in the Bb:th
to do-he wUf be the first los Two hun\lred hits was my helped save the game.
"Kevin Pasley did a super
Angeles Dodger tD get three goal at tbe beginning of the
year. It would mean alot to be job of blocking the plate tD cut
200 hit seaaons in a row.
. e first Dodger tD have three olf the tieing run in the Bb:th
"I just try tD go out every th
Inning'.. he said .
day and hit the ball the best I 200 hit seasons in a row."
318 id
It was the first time the
c;an," Garvey said Sunday
Garvey' '-tting
""
·
'
sa
Dodgers
bad beaten
. · Cin
. clnl!fter scoring a winning run in artificial turf woUld have
the fourth inning that put the made his goal a UtUe easier nail's rookie right bander,
i)odgers oo top of the Cincln- so he feell "It is a great Pat Zachry. in six decisions.
accomplishment to. get 200 . Pasley singled home in the
dBII Reds 2-1.
.
need. Then stitch aides and
• Garvey'~ 193rd hit of the hils" on Dodger Stadium's third, was sacrificed to
natural grass.
second by Rau ard came
•
But, he said, "If 1 only get home on Buckner's double.
199 hits, it's still been a lfe&amp;t
Doo Werner drove in the
year. The essence of any mngle Reds' run with a two,."
out double in the sixth.
BY RANDY CLARK

FRESH FUMERS

fOLIAGE·PlMlS

NEW YORK (UPI) - From the moment he first set foot on a
league field 10 yean ago, Rick Monday had a place In ·
Cooperatown all set aside fer him.
U he d)dn't make it into Baseball's Hall of Fame Itself, be
couldn't possibly miss winding up in the Hall's Ubrary where
they keep records and newspaper stories of those players with
any dlstinctloo whataoever.
In the 10 years be has been with the A's ard Cubs, Rick
Mooday has been a good ballplayer. Maybe not a great one, but
certainly a good one.
By JOE CAI!NICELU
on a six-yard run early in the led Minnesola to Its ooly S.IDII Z'l, Cblefl 17:
Hewcn't get too many votes for the Hall of Fame when be's . UPI Esecutlve Sporta Editor final quarter to put the ~ats touchdown and a botched
Rookie T·Ony Galbreath
through, but he does have a spot In the Ubrary already
It was a performance ahead. Steeler fumbles led w snap oo an extra point foiled. , scored on runs of 74 and nine
guaranteed him as !he first player ever selected in baseball's Dallas Cowboy fans h!lve John Smith's field goall of 42, Detroit's bid to Ue as the yards as New· Orleans beat
Vikings edged the Uoos. !{ansu City, giving Saints
first fre~H~gent draft in June of 1965.
come tD expect from Roger 40 and 26 yards.
No matter what etse he does thoogh between now and the Staubach and it was an effort
Roy Gerela 's D-yard field Chuck Foreman's flw-yard Coach Hank Slram a triumph
time he quits, Rick Mcnday always will be remembered as the New Englard Patriots goal. attempt with three run put Minnesota ahead 11).3 over the club he coached.for
"The Player Who Saved The Fllg'' for the rest of hllllfe, even hope to see for years to come seconds left went wide to the and Errol MaM was unable more than a dozen years.
LEGAL NOTICE
If he Uvea to be 200. ·· ·
from Steve Grogan.
right to give the Patriots their tD ·get off an attempt oo a Galbreath had 146 yards
"That's not a bad thing to be remembered for," says Rick
Staubach, masterful second win in three cames. tying extra point after Greg ru!hlrijj and Chucll Muncie,
The Public Utilities Cornrnission of Ohio has
"That," said Cowboy lAndry's one-yard TD paas to another rookie, gained Ill.
Monday.
despite a second-half
set lor public hearing Ctise No. 76·53S·E L·FAC
The date was last April 25. The C)lbs were playing the do~ that made ~ery Coach TOOl Land~, "is Olarley Sandflts.
IWDI M, G!lllll 11:
Dodgers in Dodger Stadium ard Mooday was standing in paasanadventure,ralliedthe what pro foolball is all about. Dolplllna ii, Jell 0:
John Cappelletti scored
to review the fuel procyrernent practices and
center field when two individuals, a father and his 11-year-&lt;lkl Cowboys three times and You saw it all today .... "
after
taking
James
Harris'
Bob Gri.ese threw a threepOlicies of the Colurnbus and Southern Ohio
soo, bolted out of the left-field bleacher area onto the playing finally setup Efren Herrera's
Francis, the big tight end yard TD paas til Jim Mandich pass 11 secoods Into the last
Electric Cornpany, the operation of its fuel
field carrying an American Dag.
game-winning, ~yard field who came into the NFL with and Garo Yepremlan kiclled quarter to spark Los ~eles
adjustrnent clause, and related rnatters. This
When they got tD center field they spread the flag oo the turf goal with three !JI!C(IIds left Grogan last season, says the three field goals ID lead over the Gtanta. New YOrk
hearing is scheduled to begin at 10:00 a.m ..
and the man reached inside hll pocket for a cigarette lighter. that enabled Dallas to defeat 6-foot-S youngster has Miami over tile Jets. tOok a 10.01ead before Harris,
E.D.T. on October _18, 1976, at the offices of
On the Chicago bench, IIClflle It the Cubs players couldn't Baltlmore,J0.27,inabatUeof developed Into a borlallde Yepremian hit on klclls It 25, playing for the first time this
the Cornrnission, 180 East Broad Street, Colurnbelleve what !hey were acW8lly seeing.
unbeaten clubs.
NFL quarterbacll in just a 26 and 42 yards as the season, and Cappelletti
bus. Ohio. All interested parties will be given
,'Jbe father ard aon were kneeling over the flag, and when . Grogan, the Patriots' year.
Dolphins took advantage of hooked up on a 32-yard TD
an opportunity to be heard. Further informa·
Monday aaw the older man putting the lighter to it, he second-year quarterback
"This is all a matter of New York turnovers to win. play. The Rams intercepted
·
JnstlncUvely sprinted toward them. ·
.
~· for two lOuchdowns Grogan C&lt;mlng to maturity," The Jets have not scored a Craig Morton four times.
tion rnay be obtained by contacting the Com·
"lnmyownmlrid,ldidn'lknowwhallwasgolnttDdo, bowl and ran for another tD rallY Francis said. "He's at the lOuchdown in their last two Chargers 43, C.rdl Z4:
mission.
them over er what," said Mmday. "I was ~ more about the New England Patriots to point now wbere he can see games.
Dan Fouts threw three TD
the flag than I was about them. I thought theY couldn't bum it a stunning 30-27 upset of the different situaUooa and react Billa It, Blleeeeers 1:
passes and San Diego
exploded
for 'll points in the
If they didn't ha.ve it."
NFL champion Pittsburgh to them. This team is comillg
Joe Fergusoo threw a SS.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
So Mmday snatched the flag from the father and the soo, Sleelers.
second
period
to beat St.
of age .... "
yard TD ' pass to Bob
By Randall G. 'Applegate, Secretary
kept m going and handed It to me of the .Dodger Stadium
Staubacb, who had his
Continued on Page 5)' .
.Grogan aald there was a Ollllldler ard a l~yarder to
'
ballb(lys fer aafelteepiJII.
finest day as a .pro with a ~ touch of panic before he Reuben Gant tD lift Buffalo
'lbere were 25,181 in the park that day and when they . of-28 passing performance for threw the TD pass to past Tampa Bay. Dave Green
realized what had happened, they began booing the man and 341 yank, put the Cowboys Stingley.
had field goals of 39, 24 ard 19
the boy, who Wflte apprehended by the park police.
ilbead, %7-M, wilh 3:%'I left on . "My primary receiwr was yards f~ the Buc:s' first
Then they applauded Rick Mooday. The ~nist strucll up a-.,..rdTDpaasto Billy Joe Marlin
Briscoe ,"
be points in three NFL games.
''God Blea America" and everybody joined in. You never DuPrei! ..But Baltimcft, with explained. ''He ran across Faleoas 10, ae... t:
beardBOmanypeopleallslnglnginallyourllfe.
gutty Bert Jones at the and I saw oo1y the bacll of his
Haske! Stanback ran three
The man who tried to burn the flag ewntually got off with a COil trois, got a 24-yard field shirt and 'figured he wasn't yards for the oo1y TD of the
Now enjoy fine fix ens and extra savings at Country Cousins~ Clip the
figw'alive slap cn the wrist, a $60 fine and a year's probaticn. goal from Tcni Unhart with open~ says he was. Then I game with II minutes left and
coupons below and enjoy big city speed with country flavor and
Rick Monday has received tllousaniB of lettfltl and wires mly 28 seccnds left that tied saw Darryl ·cut down the Atlanta held on to defeat
economy. Inside seating and drive thru Window.
llince the epllode, not one of them negative. He hu been the pme and seemed certain sideline and l threw. I didn't previously unbeaten Chicago.
Cllllllllellded by President Ford, by Richard M. Nixoo and ·by to send it intD overUme.
have much more time. Nick Mike-Mayer, who
~ge WaUace among IXbfltl.
'
Then Staubach, starting at Soinehow.he caught the ball." missed four field goal
"Frallkly," he says, "all the accolades have been a lit his own 31, bit Drew Peanon
Olber glllleS &amp;mclay:
attempts, connected cn .a ~
embarrasling.ldon'tfeelldldaliythlngthatmilliooaofOillers fer 16 yards and then threW lWders U, OIJen U:
yanler in lbe final period ID
wouldn't have done. If what I did served as some sort d toward Golden Ridlards. The
ROokie Mike Rae, starting put the game out of reach·.
IIWBkenlng,lf it was an actioo that reminded some people 'Yes, pass was incomplete but · bis first NFL game for
we do care' then that makes me IIIOI'e proud. .
inter(erence was ruled injured Ken Stabler, threw
"What moves me most of all was a phone call I r'eceived against linebacker Derrel TD passes ·elf nine and 33
RIVERSIDE MmiCAL .
from a 15-year-old boy a day er two afterwards. We were in Luce and Dallas had lbe ball yards to (]jfl' Brancll and
SanDiegoandhecalledmefromLosADgeles. He said he,hll with 12 ""'"&gt;is left at the Oakland's defense made two
AdjiCI!rllfO
father and motbel' bad been in the ballpart and.bad seen what Colts' 3%. Another IJ.yard goal line stands ·to beat
Veltrams
t.ppened wllb the flag. The boy told me tbat111 older brother pass tD Pemm set up Dallas Houston. Skip Butler gaYe
Memorial
Hospil•l
d 1111 bad beell killed in Vietnam, and that when his' mother at the 14 and Herrera «:~eked HousloD a 6-0 lead with two
'
R.
A.
AVERION,
M.D.
and father heard all lhl* peq~Je singirc "Gqd Bless the p.me winner.
field ·goals befcre Rae, who
A. G. SOU, M.D.
America," they began crying.
Staubacb bas now hit 56&lt;lf- played in Canada the last
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
"Be told me bla father IIIII m«ber never had been able to 78 ~ for
yBnls in three years, bit Braoctl twice
C. W. THOMPSON, M.D.
ap eM the way !bey had felt befcre about his i:I'Otber's death three games·.
f~ IICOI'el. Oaklalll ltGpped
fice Hoursi 10-12 i .m.
In Vielnllm. He Aid,m the way ho!De they talked about how
Grogan tallied New HoUston twice oo tbe ooe to Mon.-S.t., 2-4 p.m. Mon..
irbat had balll""!rl with the flag on the field bad fer tbe first ~ from 8 ~ deficit PI
•e tbe win.
Fri.,
p.m. Mon., Wed ..
lime pul101111 meaning .in what lbeir soo bad done. 8Mr in wi1b t!~ir01!uarter TD puleS Vlkilop u, u.s 1:
PHONE 992:3331:
iniDd, tlil was C!ll!lng from a 15-fear~ boy. lie bad taken of 38 ymds t.o Russ Francis
SUb quarterback Bob IAle
'lbe lnlllali.e in calllrc me. It was a ~moving converaatillll and 5I yarda to Darryl
and lbave~fcqolten it. Idoo't think I ever will."
Stingley. Grogan then aoored · r"'"~----------~-big

·'

NOVELTY

Stauhach, Grogan stars at new high

•
, ,•

"rd.
200
h
•
- zt season
Garoey close to th l

'•'

."

.

.

..

-.

EAT OUT CHEAPI

J. C. Snead

Fs.Kaiser Sipe

GROUP

fi~

m

cookshot~"

..... 1.-

·Bengals' defense hot
CINciNNATI !UPI) -The
Clnclmwtl Benp1a usually
win wllb good paaslng. But
tbey wblpped wlnlelll Green
Bay
Sunday because of
bad paaalng -by lb~
Padien.
Ken Rlley started lbe
lflout:lace by lnterteptlag I

•7

'
all the way tD the end zone." who8e club is,now 0:3, could
Riley's 9C!CCIId lnterceptim · do notlUig but moan about
was euler. Dickey, down Z1-7 the~.
early in tbe final querter,
' 'We were clviDc a good
tried a bomb but undertlnw account of ounelYes," he
:: . .,,. 4 waited far it at the .said, fW'Illing the 741 lead.
Clncy 22 and returned it 27 ''Take away the mlltakes and
yards.

ln lhe

~

33-yard interception for

minutes of
at
It again, Ibis time wltb
reserve quart.erbacll c.los
brown dOOle the last-ditch

IIIOtber TD.

pal'ing

!)Uland relunlillllt ~ yalds
fllr a touchdawn. Tommy
ea-a IIDUbed It wilh a

And I« good

Dlelllln,

Riley baited • fourth Cpw1er
PaWn' deapentlon dri.e

wltb, !bat's right, an
IIUrception.
Said aafety Bernard
Jscklon of hll pa• 'llealing
defl!nsive backlleld buddlel,
''We are the olfenle."
RiJey got lbe game ball.
And redemption. In last
week's on~polnt loaa to
Baltimore he wu beaten on a
TD pall and alao h•mbled
- y Ill Interception to gift
the Colla anotber IICOI'e.
"I wu U'ylng tD redeem
myself," lbe eight-year
veteran aald after hll 32nd
and
33rd
career
, Interceptions. "I thought
about Baltlmare an last weet
but! dldn'tdarelblnkabout It
Cll the lleld today. I'd haw
IOlt8n killed lgaln."
Rlley'l llr'll lntertepiiCII
a.nday - the key play of
the p.me.
•
Green Bay had IJ'abbed a 70 first quarter lead on
~ LYJIII Dickey's
nifty uvea-yard "naked
reverse" . roOout that
eomplete1J fooled the
lllallll. But wben Dickey
trW Ill oornpWt a quick
1 (d'n
bl 1'11)'111 al
157+' will 10 mlmJ!eo WI

,..lo

the game, Green Bay -

"lllnew they bad to Urow It
and I was right there,"
Casanova
Aid
after
Intercepting Brown wllb I:12
left and ~ 33 yards tD
up tbe final margin to .7.
"It would have been
better," chuckled tbe former
I.SU star, haping f~ 1 llliJe
·drama, ''If we would have
been behind...
'!be Bengali allo got touchdolml oo Ken Andenon's two
yard paas to Bob 1'rumpy and
rookie Archie Grtflln'a Dineyard

nm.

1977 Zenith line - and
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Oclllber 3rd, 1976

· ~~ FiXINS tO ~~

----------------~-~-.---·-----·--1

II ...

II

SAVE 28~

1.· TRIPLE MEAL

II Triple treat,

1

SAVE 30~

1 2 TRIPLE TREATS :1

fries, regular drink

•

'I
I lettuce and the cousins special
I Two pure beef patties, cheese,

.1

I sauce.

I ~ '110 With Coupon ~ ~ '130With Coupon •II
1 '~ Expires
I ~ Expires
1-----------------t------------~---1
I·
SAVE 30~
I
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:1
I
2 DOUBLE
I
2 DOUBLE
.I
~~~~~·a~~u:o~nd.~l~~
atEESFBURGERS
I· . HAMBURGERS
I
I
Two pure beef patties with melted 1~wo pure beef Patties with our I,
cheese with fixens added.
I flxens added.
I
J~ •1 10 With Coupon I ~ '1 00 With Coupon I .
I ~ Expires
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-1
~----------------~-----------1
SAVE 10
I
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I
I
.
.I
: Stauhach
·SALAD BAR
I Big Beef Platter I
·10.15-76

.

10-15-76

Tile BRITTANY

H25301:

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DR. K.H.CHUNO
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FOR PIIICEI CALL COI.I.ICT
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lftlri&amp;Ktac.Ndme

I,

:
:
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:
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;
"

I

10-ts·i'•

while Miller Barber won
$8,225 for finishing fourth at
277. Don Massengale, Jack
Ewing and Lyn lott were
next at 279 and Andy North
was aU alone at 280. Five
othera wound up at 281,
including Lee Trevino and
Bill Casper.

·1 .
I ~ 39• WithCoupon
I

~

Expires 10-15-76

MIDDLEPORT

~ (eontillued from page 4
~ Loula in a battle of unbeaten

II A 1-3 lb. loo ~~tr cent fresh ground

beef steak with fries, hot bread

land salad b1r. Dining room only.

~~

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t-··-·;;;~·;.~----r---~AVE;;. --,

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I A pure beef p1ttie with melted I 2 pieces. of deep

One or Two Day Full Denture
Service, Partials, Extractions,

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: Snead won $35,000 and
: boosted his earnings to
: $191,807 for the year, good for

Come in lnd fix it the way you like
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veneers and

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I

4

otyled conaole.
Caottrs. Oak

'•

· ~

• NAPA, Calif. (UPI)- J.C.
!klead didn't have ID look' far
IP find the right co.ach ard it
"on him the $175,ooo Kaiser
International Open.
For the past two weeks, Sue
Snead watched her husband,
)!!rough hundreds of hours of
P'actlce and thought she
illscovered what was wrong
l&gt;;ith his swing.
• "Sue told me she didn't
• what was wrong .with
)now
'IllY swing, but she did know it
.wasn't ·anywhere near as
limooth
as
(Tom)
· :,Weiskopf's," Snead
'llxplalned Sunday after
;:winding up hll best driving
:week . of the year and
;'parlaYing it into victory.
: "So I watched Weiskopf
•whom I admire an awful lot,"
~Snead said. "I tried putting
: my shoulders into my swing
: au the way, not stopping
• halfway through as I was
: doing and suddenly !lost my
: upshoot.''
: Snead, who outlasted
: Johnny Mlller tD win the
• Kaiser wilb a 72-hole score of
; 14-under.par 274, said his
;, driver had deserted him to
~ the point where he never was
;. sure where the ·ball was

•

. . 1111111*11• blm, then
, at tilt liltIn dW I CJimbled
I

~·

10·15-76

"This II the kind It dly l'w
been loolllrc !«," grinned
STRIKEOUTS.. .
Grilln, who bad IIVCI'IIed
NATIONAL J.EAGUE: SOl·
NY 233; Rl(hard, Hou 196;
mly fl yards nllilq hllllr'll ver.
Koosman. NY 189 ; Carlfon , Phil
two pro oullnp but wound up 17~ : Montefusco, SF i68.
_
AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan,
Sunday's belt runner wllb 71
Cal· 302: Tanana, Cal 2-47;
yards In 2D cerrlea.
Blylevrn, Te• 210; Eckersley,
Packera' caech Bart Starr, Clev 180; Hunter. NY 168.

.:::.,h-:a;.c:~·

·:· "AI

it's 8 ~~ pme,"
Iml even without the inter-.
ceplions, Green Bay's
· puslnc was .stlll bad.
Dickey rompleted only fiw
of 2D and Brown went 0-3.
Quarterback sacks
plwnmeted Green Bay'• net
palling yarage to minus 3$, a
Bengals defensive record.
Holding the Packers 1D jull3&amp;
net !Dtal yards alao was a
Clncy record. .
.
Be~ls quarterback Ken
Anderaon had an olf-day,
bitting only 11 of 24 for 115
yards. But then he didn't
throw any interceptions
either, and on a day when
interceptions made the
difference,thatwugood
enOugh.

....
Come in and view the new

chHse with our fixens added.

.®
·:.l

~~

60' With Coupon
Expires

10-15:76

filet with
1slaw.
fries, hot brud and fresh colt
Dining room only.
fried

1. ~'140 With Coupon
.
.
I~~·

I ,

I
I

Expires: 10-U-76

----·----------·------~-----.
Open Sunday thru Thurlclay a,m, to p.m • .
10

10

Friday 1nd Slturday 10 a.m. to 12 p.m,
Loc1ttd at 691 West Mlln Ntxt to tht Jonesloys

\

.

~

HO~nq

.

..
"
•
:
:
:
:
-

clubs. Fouls hit Char Ue
Joiner on a SO.yard TD pass
and Dwight McDonald with
scoring passes of 44 and 18
yards. Jim Hart had two TD
throws for the Cards.
41en rt, Seabans Zl:
Plunkett threw three first~ half TD passes as San
• Francisco built a 241Joint
i; lead and then held off Seattle.
: The 49ers scored 17 points In
• the first 11 minutes oo a 50: yard punt return by Ralph
: Mt.&lt;lill, Plunkett's SS.yard
: TD pau to Gene Washington
• and a. 40-yard field goal by
•• Steve Mike-Mayer. Plunkett
.: . threw two more TD passes in
: the second period.
: Bruncoa 44, Bmm 13:
;;
Rick Upchurch returned
punts 73 and 36 yards for TDs
= to set a club record and Ignite
: Oenwr past Clevetand. The
: Broncos allo scored m a one• yard run bY Otla Armstrong,
: a U.yard fumble return by
; Calvin Jones and a 12-yard
- run by Jim Klick. Sieve
Ramsey a11o lhrew a 36-yard
IICGI'Ing paas to Haven MO&amp;es.
'•

o"

reason

eating crow?

• own .wor
.. d
no h IS

us•••

.

'
DENVER (UPI) -:- The Slpe a large helping ol hll ·
Denver Broncos served Brian own words Sunday and the
Cleveland Browns quarterback had to eat them.
After the Browns 31-14 loss
last week'to Pittsbui'gh, Slpe
uid, "Denver's goma pay
for this."

By United Press International
National League

East

l&lt; -Philadetphl
Pittsburgn
New York
St . Louis
Chicago
Montreal

W..
96
88
84

L.. Pel.
60 .61S
69 .561
71 .542

GB
8112
ll lf2

11 as .m 2s 1

71 86 .452 2S h
53 l 02 . 343 42 1h

.· west

W.. L. . Pet. GB

x·Cincinnati

.635 -

Los Angeles

99 57
89 61
Houston
77 so
san Francisco 72 86

.571

• ..,
IS.

The Broncos, having heard
of the q!!llrterback's off-th&amp;cuff remark, took the field
Sunday determined to let Slpe
and his teanimates know !hey
weren 'I pushovers.
And so they did, routing the
Browns 4H3, in a game
predicted to be as close as
last year's 16-15 Denver win.
. That game went to the wire
with Denver scoting on a Jim
Turner field goal with no time
remaining.

· ' Major League· Stindingi

10

.490 22 Vl
.456 28

·san D iego
69 87 .442 30
Atlanta
69 88 .439 30 1/ l
x-CHnched di'Yision title

'
-----

WORTH

200 EXTRA

Saturday's Results
Ph iladelphia 6 Montreal 5

"We wanted Slpe to know
lhat we have egos too;" said
Sf . Louis 3 Pittsburgh 0
New York 5 Chicago 2 ·
linebacker Tom Jackson, who .
Cine I 4 Los Angeles J
intercepted two of the backup
San Fran 10 Houston 0
quarterback's passes.
Atlanta 11 San Diego 8
In today·s compelrt1ve envi ron·
Sunday,'s Results
"We're nobody~s patsy and if
Phlla 4 Montreat 1, tst
ment you need a good reason
he didn't see that today, then
Phila 2 Montreal 1, 2nd
New York 2 Chicago 1
for swilching stores.
he's got a problem."
Atlanta 10 San Diego 4
We
lhink Top Value
Tbe
victory
was
St . Louis 5 Pittsburgh 2
Los Ang 2 Cii1Cinnatl 1
highlighted by two touchdown
Slamps and the grits
San Francisco 5 Houston 1
punt
returns
by
Rick
UpToday' s Probable Pitchers
they can be redeemed
!All Times EDTI
church, who said the game
fo
r, a re ·a very goo d
Montreal { LB~ndreU1 1·1 anti reminded him of hll high
Hannat1s 1.0) at New York
reason.
(Espinosa 4-4 anti Matlack 16· school days In Toledo, Ohio.
9), 2, 5:35p.m .
The 5-8, 170 powtd UpPhiladelphia tCartton 19-il) at
church
scored on returns of 73
St . LOUIS (Falcone 12-14) , 8:30
p.m.
and 47 yards, and set a club
Cincinnati {Gullett 10-3) at
Sa n Dleg9 {Strom 11 -16) , 10 record with 125 yard return
on four returns.
p.m .
Do Top Value Slamps rn·
Houston {Andujar 9-10) at Los
"I didn't get to run very
Angeles !Hooton 11 -14), 10 :30
cre ase lood prtce s? We
much in the preseason, but
p.m.
assure you . here and now.
(Only games scheduled)
I'm getting !he feeling now
Tuesdlly's Gamet
lhal lhey donl Some ol ou•
after practicing each week
Montreal at N .Y .. night
Chi at Pittsburgh. night
with our special teams,"
prices vary from day to day .
Phil !'I at St . Louis, nigh•
Upchurd!
asld.
San Fran at Atlanta, night
- as lh ey ,always have and
Houston at LOS Ang , night
· Bronco coach John Ralston
always will. As lhey do in
Clncl at San Diego. night
called Upchurch the "beat"
every slore We are deter·
Amel-lcan League
. punt returner in pro lootbaU,
East
·
m.ned !o stay com peltlive on
W .. L. . Pet. GB but the compliment was
9&lt; 61 .606 l&lt; -New York
price. as we always have. You
accepted modestly.
86 70 .SSI 8
Baltimore
"That's a great honor
wll l not pay extra for the bonus
79 7&lt; .516 1&lt; '
ClevelaQd
79 78 .SOl 16
coming
from
the
coach,"
Boston
ol Top Value Stamps
69 85 .448 24 11?
Detroit
Upchurch
~aid.
"It's
6S 90 .&lt;19 29
Milwau~ee
something I'd really like· to
wesl
W.. L .. Pet. G8 back up in the long run."
Kansas Citv
89 67 .571 -

TOP VALUE ·STAMPS

Big Value Bonus!

This coupon good for 200 Extra Top Value Stomps with
a purchase of $5,00 or rnore al Big Jim's Plaza, I/J7
Pearl Sl.. Middleport, Oh 'o.

No Price
Increase!

1

Oakland
Minnesota
California •
Texas

nart~e g1 ft s you can getlree for

Top Value Stamps.

Make The Move!

84 11 .542
81 76 .516 B'll
n 85 .459 l1 V2
12 85 .459 11112
Chicogo
6' 92 .&lt;10 2l
• -Clinched division title
Saturday•• Results
New York 10 Defrolt 6
Minnesota 6 California 0
Boston 1 ealllmore o
Cleveland 3 Milwaukee 1
Texas 1 Kansas Ci ty I)
Oakland 1 Chicago .4
SundJy's Results
M itw at Cleve. cncld ., rain
New York at Det, cncld ., rain
Oakland at Chi , ppd ., rain
Boston 8 Baltimore 3
California 4 Minnesota 1
Texas 3 Kansas City 1 .
Tadav's Probable Pif(hers

!All Times EDTI
Detroit (Fidrvch 16·9) at
Cleveland (Welts 1·8), 7:30p.m.
Kansas Cilv (Pattin 8-ll l at
Oakland (Torrez 14 .11), 11 p.m.
(Only games scheduled)

We want your bus1ness. We're
proving it wrth lhe extra bonus of
Top Value Stamp s . Make the
s wit ~ h today and start enjoying
ou r fine load. low prices and some
of Ihe wonde rful gtft s you get free
for Top Value Stamps.

How Do Top Value
Stamps Pay Off?

41/l

Brighten Your Home
With A Beautiful

DRIED
FLOWER
Arrangement
FROM

'4''

In highly desirable. high qua lrly
gilts. Thousands of brand name
gil ts ... thin gs lha! you wanl and
need. Th&gt;ng s you can now gel
free lor Top Value Stamps.

Quality Guaranteed?

Books Fill Fast?

The very highest quality ... backed
bt Top Value's famous 2·Way
Golden Guarantee You can't gel
better gifts lot fewer stamps any·
where. And you musi be 100%
·satisfied.

You bet! ll. lor example, you spend
$.:JOa week al mercha nls tt1at give
Top Value Stam ps. you fil l a book
w&lt;th Top Value Slamps in 3 weeks
... more th an 17 books in jus I a
year.

Tueldlly's Gentes

cuv

Ken
at Oakland. night
Texas at Minnesota
Detroit at Cle"¥e. twilight
Mlnn at Baltlmre ~ 2. twJ ,night
New York at Boston , night
&lt;On l y games scheduled)

Here are 1ust a lew of the
thousa r"\d S ol h1Qh-q ua l1ty. b rand

•·

No. $tcond Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
,,

I

�•
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6- The Dally Sentinel, Middltport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday, Sepl.••• .,..

Riverview gardeners ~~~&amp;lcial '~$!.·

Katie's Korner

elect co-presidents

· By Katie Crow
MIDDLEPORT - The posbnan for Robert ll. Morris and
family who live at Rt. I, Middleport, Leading Creek, Is reaDy
having his problems.
It seems as tho1J8h Robert B. Morris, who IS principal at
Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary School, has lived at
Leading Creek lor sometime but recently a new family moved
In the area and ghess what - Ute man's name Is Jl,obert B.
Morris.
This would really make a mallman take up another
profession.
·
MR. AND MRS. THEO SMITH, Pomeroy, have returned
·home following a very nice 10 day vacation.
They toured the· Henry Ford Museum lr\ Detroit, Mich.,
traveled to Quebec, the back hills of Maine Into Boston then on
to Niagara FaUs.
'SPEAKING OF VACATIONS Robert Beegle and family of
Racine while on vacation this summer were fortunate when
they got to see the Delta Queen lock through a dam.
According to Bob they really got a line view of the boat as
did many others as they scrambled to see the Delta Quten.
HAVE TWO birth!lay people this week that we know of : .
.Bob Hoeflich who celebrated his birthdey Friday and Dave
Buskirk who celebrated his day on Saturday. ·
Best wishes and lllliY you have many more .
THE MIRACLE CIJMBING tomato plant planted by Paul
Chadwell in his mother-in~aw's garden, Pauline Greathouse of
Middleport, has reached a height of 12feet and nine Inches.
Pauline Is Interested In knowing if anyone in the county
has a plant as large or larger.
·
Would be Interesting to know.
THOSE WHO WORKED on Southern's yearbook are to be
complimented. It Is one of the most attractive yearbooks that I
have seen around in a long time.
To those who are responsible - a Job weU done.
CONGRATULATIONS to Irvin Karr who Is celebrating his
30th year with Karr &amp; Van.Zandt Motor Sales In Pomeroy.
Congratulations to a nice guy.

Two women receive
field se.rvice pins
.

'

REEDSVILLE - Mrs .
Gene Young and Mrs. Donald
Putmsn were elected copresldents of the Riverview
Garden Club during a recent
meeting here at the home of
Mrs. Frank Blse.
Other officers of the club
were retained for another
year. Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead will
tnsu!ll them at the November
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and Mrs. R.
E. Wllllamo, with Mrs.
Plibnan to be co-hostess.
Mrs. Whitehead announced
final plans are being made
for the dedication of a marker
in honor of Major James
Reed, a blcenteMial project,
near the entrance of the
Belleville IM:Its and Dam.
The garde.n club will do a
planting around the marker. ·
Programs for the coming
year were disc ussed in·
eluding plans to visit Francis Florist at Pomeroy for a
demons t r a t1 on on
terrariums. The club
members will dine at Crow's
for the October meeting.
AvlslttotheKingwood Center
at Cambridge In the spring
and an S.wailan luau are
also on the agenda.
Mrs. Pulman announced the

club has been Invited to do a
program for the Riverview
PTA. It wa.s pla!Uied to
present a fUm 1n keeping with
Arbor Day in April. Members
signed a card to be sent to
Mrs.. Balderson, confined to
the Camden Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg.
Mrs. David Chadwell, vice
preoident, conducted the
meeting and for devotions,
Mrs. Hannum read two
poems, "Why God Gave Us
Friends, " and "What Is
Good," followed with a
prayer. For roU caU members gave. highlights of their
summer vacations.
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle
had an article on "Bonfire
Colors for Your Yard, "
naming various trees and
shrubs to select for their
coloring effects. Mrs. Young
conducted games and the
winners were Mrs. Chadwell,
Mrs. Claremont Harris and
Mrs . Grossnickle . Door
prius went to Mrs. Thomas
Spencer and Mrs. Whltthead.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. B!ie and Mrs. Gene
Wilson to those named and
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery, Mrs.
Harlls Frank, Mrs. R. L.
Larkins, Mrs. Donald Myers
and Mrs. Denver Webei'.

Women hold meet
.A letter of thanks from the
Mis81onary Giving Society In
Kl!lltucky for gifts wa.s read
at the meeting of Group U of
the Women's Association,
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Cburd! held at
the home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Burkett. .
Mrs.
Faye

WaUace

by Mrs. Helen Sauer.
Members and ''Happy Bir·
thday" to Miss Kathryn
llyJell.

Athank offering was taken,
and it was noted that
donations are still being
received on tbe kitchen
renovstilin project. The Bible
study was on the Lordship of
Christ. A round-robin card
was signed for Harry Moore
on his birthday. Refresh.
menta were served.

presided with Mrs. 'Virginia
Owen serving as co-bostess
Field servtce pins were by the members in the for the meeting. Devotions
presented to Mrs. Alma opening of the meeting.
· were on the theme "Climbing
Mrs. Etta Will Introduced Up by Falling Do1in." Mrs.
Newton and Mrs. Bonnie
DaUey at the Wedliesday three of the delegates to , Kalhcyn Miller toot the leut
nlgbt meeting of the Buckeye Girls' State, Beverly coin offering and read, "Do It
American Legion Auxiliary WUcox, Cheryl Barnhart and ~ Unto the Lord", closing
'}}'-'
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128. Jeni Grate who were ac- · with prayer. A report on the
Membership w:as discussed companied to the meeting by recent aasoclation meeting
during the meeting preslded their mothers, Mrs. Maryln where Mrs. Richard Rupe
over by Mrs. Freda Clark. Wilcox, Mrs. Ruth Barnhart was guest speaker was given
Unit goal Is 147 al\d while and Mrs. Donna Grate. Each
TUPPERS PLAINS ...,
mauy·members have already of the slrls aave a resume of
illlltallation ofDeWifficel1 by
paid their dues those who her activities at Capital
Mrs. Floyd Stout. highlighted
blve not were urged to send University. The other three
a recent meeting of the Rose
them Immediately to Mrs. deleg'ates will be Invited to
Garden Club bere at the borne
SON BORN
Albert Roush so they can be the October meeting.
of Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
DEXTER- Mr. and Mrs.
~ent to Department b)i the fall
The doOr prize donated by
Installed were Mrs. Glen
conference Oct. 7 at Lan- Mrs. Gerrl Kesinger was won Terry Lee Gecqe, Rt. l, Stout , president ; Mrs.
euter. Correspondence by Patty Might. A steak ,Deller, announce the birth r#. Frederick Goebel, vice
amounclng the conference dinner for auxlllary mem· a son, JIIOIJ Lee 011 Sept. 16 at president ; Mrs. Doris
was read. Registration will bers, legionnaires and guests Holzer Medical Center. The Koenig, secretary ; Mrs .
begin ·at 9 a.m. with the was held prior to the meeting. Infant weighed s11: pounds &amp;bert Dorst, treasurer, and
meeting at 10 a.m. and ·=i~:~~:::~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~=:~:::::::::~::::::::::::::~~! and 15 ounces. · Maternal Mrs. James Stout, news
grandpa~!! are Mr. and
aeveral members from the
reporter.
Mrs.
James WUlla, Rt. 3,
unit will be attending.
Mrs. John Rice gave
Albany; paternal grand· devotiono and for roU call
Arrangements were made
pel'alta, Mr. and Mrs. Fred members named a shrub or
to aerve the bloodmobile In
a-ge,
Rutland. Maternal spring flowering bulb they
::~
. February. A gift was :x.
:
!
I"
'
6
"
;:::
·great-grandparents
are Mrs. plan to plant this fall. Bir·
presented to Mrs. Edith
Hue!
Drain,
Falrmoat,
W.
Spencer for selling the most
Mrs.
Richard
Rupe
and Va., and Mrs. Ida WUlla, ibday wiabes were extended
poppies. i\ roiiiMk'obln card
!Ari, presented a S!Qooatoo, W. Va. Patemal to Mrs. Leota Malar. Verae
wa.s signed for lifrs. Edn8 daugbter,
of the month wu read by
Wayland, a surgical patient program oo Africa at the great-grandparenl! are Mrs. Mrs. Barnhill, and timely
Thunday night meeting of Herman Jarrell, Salem
at Holzer Medical Center.
hlnlll were given by Mro.
Mrs. Lelah Weatherby, the Women's Asaoclatioo of Center and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Floyd Stout.
eblplaln, had prayer, and.the the Middleport First United Georae, Rt. 1, Bidwell.
A program on flower
pledge to the flag" was given Presbyterian Churd!.
The Rupe family spent a
· year In Africa. Mrs. Rupe
told of the rich inlneral
. depoltta, the climate, the
custonu1 of the people and tlie
rellgioo. !Ari dosed her talk
with The Lord's Prayer In the
language of Southern Africa.
They displayed a large
collection of African jewelry,
carvlngo, baskets and
A program of youth photographs.
.
Local Government 1977- Total
education on temperance
Mrs.
Lewis
Sauer,
$150,000.00
tbrough the uae of fllins In the president,
opened the
schools and the distribution of meeting with a stor)i and
Townships
30 Pet.
$45,000.00
leafletl was discussed at the spiritual song from Africa,
CorpOrations
30 Pet.
45,000.00
Wednesday meeting of the the country being studied this
County
40
Pet.
60,000.00
P0111eroy Women's Cbriltlan year by the association.
Temperance Union. Plans
Devotions by Mrs. Myron
Townships Pet. Total Money Per Year
call for the material to be Miller were two articles "A
uaed In the schools In Prayer ttuit Has Everything"
·January.
by Elaine st. Jolm, and
Bedford .
8.18
4,685.50
Meeting at the Pomeroy "Prayer of Confession" by
Chester
12.17
5,481.00
United Method lot Church, I he
We s t m I n I s t e r
Columbia
7.18
3.289.50
Mn. Allen Hampton opened Presbyterian Church of
Laban on
9.98
4,504.50
wltb the hymn, "Whet A Uncoln. Neb.
Letart
4.79
2.236.50
Fellowship." The Lord's
It ll'ils announced that
Olive
9.78
~,531.50
Prayer wu pven In unilon. workshop will be held In
Orange
7.73
3,609.00
Mn. ~ reported 01\ Ironton on Oct. 5 and that
Rutland
4,144.50
9.18
the Allplt meeting at. the Church Women United wiD
Salem
10.19
4;077 .00
home of Mrs. Ellie Rouali and obterve World Community on
Salisbury
s :99
2,713.50
corrupondence requesting a Nov. 5.
Scipio
7.99
contribuUon on a copying
Approximately 25 mem·
3,636.00
macldne wu read.
ben alld guelltl attended the
Sutton
6.79
3.091.50
It wu DOted the World meeting which was preceded
$45,000.00 30%
WC'}'IIeonventton wu held In with • potllick dinner. Gnce Corporations
Autralll, April 28 ' wu pnn by Mrs, Dwight
MiJ 3, that the Wallace.
Pomeroy
38.80 17,460.00
~ WC'I'U wu held
Middleport
39.01
17,554.50
.... •llnallatpl. 1, IIIII
FELLOWSBIPBELD
Racine
5.79
2,605.50
tile Die COIIftllt!ori will
Men's Fellqwlhlp of the
7.93
.
3,568.50
Rutland
beklli ~umbltl. Od. 7, I Laun1 Cliff Free Methodlat
Syracuse
8.47
3.811.50
•.
tbard! !IU held Thul'iday
'
100
Pc,.
$45,000.00
30%
1'lllalt of tile JII'OIII'IID wu nJcbt at the pai'loalge. The
uo,ooo.oo 40%
"New PtUI Ia • - - • " lArd's Prayer In untaon,
,. ~ 1'114 ''Tile PRim 11 read by Ernest
'-1 Alillb • ~" PonD, IIIII DnY• by the
Mt WU!lll' Nld .-. FloJdSIIaok INI'tiD tbe
HOWARD E. FRANK
1'le tile Dop". 41Yitloaal period. Bob
IM 'MRI If Mn. .,.,... Bartoa dtamlned tbe
Clll'k of Meigs County
-billlta~from DILUIMI wltb prayer and
Budget Commission
IIIII. Z. ._.... 11jlro1Jib 4.
alliiiiiDIIidl were served.

Third meet scheduled

"In God We Tru51" Is the
theme of the third annual
meeting of the West Ohio
Conference United Methodist
Women, to be held In Ada on
Saturday, Oct. 16.
· , Mrs. Clarence Radcliffe,
MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Club president, will Issue a
meehng, 7:00 p. m. Monday challenge as she convenes the
meeting atlO a.m. In the new
at Meigs Museum.
King-Hom Center of Ohio
"VOICES OF UBERTY"
rehearsal, Monday, 7:30p.m. Northern University.
'at the Pomeroy United . The principal speaker will
Methodist Church. Practice
Is now being held for the
ThanksgiVIng program to be
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
presented Thanksgiving Eve
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. at Trinity Church. Anyone Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weaver
.wanting to sing with the or New Haven announce the
group Is asked to contact birth olthelr second child and
Mrs. Harvey VanVranken. daughter, Heather Dawn ,
Aug. 8 at the Holzer Medical
MEIGS JUNIOR H!gll.,. Center. Heather weighed
Athletic Boosters Monday, seven pounds one ounce and
7' 30 p.m. In cafeteria at was 19\0inch~s long. Sh~ was
jwuor big~ in Middleport. All welcomed home by her
Interested persons urged to brother Jason. Maternal
attend.
grandparents are Mr. and
TUESDAY
Mrs. Lawrence Fowler of
.PAST MAT R 0 NS • Point Pleasant. Paternal
Pomeroy Chapter, Order of grandparents are M:r. and
. Eastern Star, Tuesday, &amp;:30 Mrs. Thomas Weavenf New
p.m. at. the home of Lucille Haven . Maternal greatSwackhamer,
grandmother is Mt'll. Fay
JUNIOR AND SENIOR Gardner of Rt. 2, Point
American Legion Auxiliary, Pleasant. Paternal greatDrew Webster Unit 39 grandmothers are Mrs.
covered dish dinner meeting Bessie Fergqson of West
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Paul Columbia and Mrs. Daisey
Caacl, guest speaker.
Weaver of New Haven.
.S i\ L I S B U R Y P T 0
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. In·
.\roductlon of teachers and
school personnel. Plea se
bring RC bottle caps.
FREE KARATE · demon·
straUons and ' class startiilg
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High School. PUblic
invited. Sponsored by Ohio
University Karate Club.
SALVATION ARMY anAs
an
independent
nounces another vi-corps
insuran ce agency, our
praise meeting lor 7 p.m.
pr imary function is to
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
prov ide policies which
location, 115 Buttern.ut Ave.
afford financial protection
Athens officers, Lt. and Mrs.
in case of loss.
But . we also have a vi tat
Daniel Griffin wiD conduct
interest in ioss prevention ,
and sjleak; special music;
as should our clients. We
public Invited. Envoy Ray
encourage care, . caution
Wining in charge of the work.
and safe ty ... preventive
·WEDNESADAY
measures which can kee p
WILDWOOD GARDEN
that car accident from
Club 8 p.m. Wednesday at
happen ing, that building
home of Ada Holter with
fire from starting , that
home bvrglary from be ing
~s;ng~e:!es~omas as com milled.
THURSDAY
Prev ention saves life,

Calendar

;;

.

Pll01'0Si,;D CONSTJTU1'ION AL AMEN'mfENT

To adopt new .Artitle XIX, Ohio Constitution

To adopt new Arlitle XX, Ohio Conolilulion

RELATIVI~ TO UMITINH TilE. nA'rF.S WHICH 1\IAY BE CHA RGED
TO RESIIll~NTIAL CONSUMimS FOil I&gt;'IXEO AMOUNTS OF GAS AND

ELECTIUCI'fY.

.

RELATIVg TO PROVtnJNG I&lt;' OH REI'ItESENTATJON OF RESIDEN·
TrAL UTII.ITY C(}NSUMERS IN UTILITY REGULATORY ACTIONS
AFFECTJN(; 'fiJEJR INTf&gt;IIESTS.
.
·

.

The proposed amendment would require:

The pro11Med anoend·ment would provide :

' l~ · That residential con~umrrs of gas be charged per cubic foot no more
than the average rat e charged by their utility to all users of gas.
This rate Nhall ni•PI Y for the first 30,1100 cubic feet of gas used each
month during the winter n)onths. .)n addition; those consumer~ may
be charged no more th an 50 % additional per cubic font for the next
20,000 cubic feet of gas used per month during the winter months.

ot

those rates which are described above are called lif~line
rates and shall not be increased by adding any ftiel or purchased gas
adjustments or other expense except when rates arc set or reset.

l. For

11 non-(orofit .membership eorporalion known as lhe Residential
Utility Consumer Action Group (HtTCAGl with certain powers and
dut ies, ind~ding ,ret~res~n.tntion of the inlere~ts of residential uUIIly
consumers IR var1ous uhhty pro ccechn~:s.

2. For certain controls on public utilities, th eir officers and employees,
and on HUCAH.
3, F.o r voluntary mc mhc r~hip in RUCAG. continr,ent upon pa)'ment of
an annual mt•mhcrs hip fee or at l c&lt;t.~t $!i ; for collection of membership
fee~ ; :~n~l for ~UCAt: to intervene inuti lily regulatory proceedings and
in JUchc1ai rev1rw of s uch proceed ing·s ; to force the initiation or com•
11let ion of utility regula lory l•rocl·ed ings; to conduct in rest igal ions;
and to rciJUire lhc )oroduction of information.

4. 'fhat TIUCAG must rcimhnrse a utilit y for rfasonablc accounlin.,. and
check-off expense,; for collecting mcm&amp;crshi1• fees, although reimbursement of e ~; 1ocn ses nuty be d.eferred until one yea1· aflcr the first election
and ins Iallation of l rus t ccs.
· ·
' a board of trustees . and for (he qualificatio11,
5. For ':lllCAG lo;hc run hy

OF 1976 MODELS

4. That any revenues lost to a public utility from the implementation of

, t'lcct10n, campaogn proredures, duties, and terms of offi ce of such board.
It also (lroYides for an initial board of trustees to rrpresent consum~rs
and for the operation of such board until the first election.

the lifeline rates be made up equitably fr om all other rates.

eSave from •30 to

'200

5, That any rate chatlgcs necessary to comply with this amendment be
implemented within 60 clays of the ef(cctive date of the amendment.

On ·these fine televisions
which must be sold to
make room for the
~77 models (coming moo).

(Proposed by Inltialive Petition)

r

RELIABILITY ...
No one makes a T.V. that lasts forever
Admiral trys ... careful inspection in
plant . . . Inspected again at our st•
reducing the chance that service will
needed . If service is needed you'll gE
promptly ... if it needs to be in the !
over a day we'll loan you a set at flO cha

Ad111iraL
m.~ .
tt•rt ,,,,

pol icy.

•

ARGUMENT
,AMENDMENT

'• "'I
.

'

PROPOSED

Issue 4 establishes needed rate reform,
known as "Lifeline," that will provide all
residential consumers with basic · monthly
amounts of gas and electricity at no more than
the. average rate charged by their utility to all
users. Lifeline also benefits needy residential
consumer~ without additional tax money and
without singling them out for public assistance.
. • ISSl!E
4
WILL
ENCOURAGE
.CONSERVATION BY REWARDING THOSE
WHO SAVE.
'' The more you conserve, the more money you
will save over the present rate structure. Energy
conservation, besides being a national priority,
' is key to holding down utility rates In the future.
Simple Lifeline rates will help residential
Consumers to be more aware of their
eonsumption and will promote energy efficiency
4mong large users. The conservation benefits
that Issue 4 brings will benefit all consumers In
he lorig run.
.
ISSUE . 4 UPDATES THE
RATE
STRUCTURES IN OHIO TO REFLECT
,CHANGING REALITIES.
The present method for setti(lg rates in 01 io
' 1~ outmoded . Today, we nc;&gt; longer need rate
structures to promote use of energy. Instead, we
·need-me structures to encourage conservation
· ~nd to make sure that residential consumers pay
' only for the energy that they use. Issue 4
' Incorporates these needed reforms Into Ohio's
r·a te-making process.
·
.,,' Committee For the Amendment : Robert P.
·' ~.eaver; Robert L Loltz. Edward A. Harter,
!;'auline · L. Brokaw, Brady E. Bancroft .
' .
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

Free Delivery
Middleport, 0.

102 W. Main Pomeroy

THE

~nsumptlon.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

992-2145

FOR

,
ISSUE 4 WILL LOWER RATES · FOR
AVERAGE RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS OF
~AS AND ~LECTRICITY IN OHIO.
"
With rapidly rising utility bills, it is essential
'that the residential consumers pay the highest
.flltes. With today ~ s utility rate structure, the
,mo.r e electricity or gas a customer uses, the less
he pays per unit of energy . This discriminates
' ~gains! . small' users and promotes wasteful

miiiiJft•rtt~IH 1'

DALE E. WARNER

Section 4{B), the lifeline rate shall apply lo the first tour
, monthly billing period . .
{I ll For all total eleclric dwelling units as defined In
Section 41Bl . the lifeline rale shall apply to the first two
hundred (400) kilowat1 hours of electricity used, during each

of local pemment money for the
calendar year 1977 is as follows:

~~
"'·· .

.

''
il)uulhink the only way to decorate
a r&lt;l&lt;·&gt;m os wilh cha irs and lamps and
tahlcs and drapes. we've go t a mes·
sage for you.

YES

.

•'•

(ii[J'' ,'

GBE~ TELEPHOI1E

••
•
•'

•

v

'

. I'

monlhl r billing period.
{iii The lifeline . rate shall apply lo the first thirty
lhousand 130.000 ) cubiC feet of gas used during each monthly '
billing period belween Oclober 15th and April 15th of each

NO

year .

.

I Bi The lifeline rale charged by any public utility shall

be set ~ot . to exceed the average revenue requlremment for
each ktlowatt hour of electric ity or cubic foot of gas sold to all
users by the utility.

ICI In the case of residentia l gas consumers, the lotal
charge per cubic loot tor the ne xt twenty thousand (20.000)
cubic feet of gas used after the lifeline amount during eCtch

monthly billing period between Oclober 151h and April 15th of
each year shall be no more than fifty {50) per cenl higher
than the lifeline rate.
I Dl In no case shall any lifeline rate be Increased by
adding to it any fuel or purchased ~as adjustment, Increased
cost or expense incurred by a util1ty except when rates are
set or reset .

( Ei Ally revenues losl to a publ ic ulillly from lhe direct
implementation of the lifelin~ rate shall be made up
equilably from all other rates.
Secllon 3 Each public utility whose rates are set by a
division or agency of the stale or local government shall file
with that division or agency revised rate schedules In
conformance with this amendment within thirty (30) days of

the effective dale of this amendment. The division or agency
of the state or local government shall implement any rate
changes necessary to comply wllh lhis amendment within
sixly (601 days of the effecllve dale of this amendment. All
other public ut ilities as are affected by this amendment·shall
Implement such rate changes as are required by this
amendment within si xly 1601 days of the ellecllve date of this
amendment.
Section 4. As

·It

AstraGraph

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·1'10¥. 22)

things as they truly are.

Possibili ties for material
accumulallon are very good
today , but you'll have to work

fiGr TIIIICIIJ, hpl. H, 1171
I
AIIIIS (M... 21-April 181

LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) Protect

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Concentrate to day on
situ allons that mean something
to you materially or careerwise.
Vou will do well in either camp.

•
:

•

given your
peraonol touch today should
IUrn ouiiiU.....Iully. However,

,E~terprlue

liy, tao.
lAORUI (April 110-Mtr :10) If

t.,.m, •paclelly If lhay can
gain odvantagea lor you
bQalnetswloe. ·
Q.MINI (Map 21-.IUM 201
Your Judgmenl Ia qulfe kHn
t~a~, portlculltrly in wel~hty

take charge.

'CAPRICORN tOec.

·

,AYour
VBirthday
Sept. 21, 1111
A friend of lo ng standing who Is
older than you either In age or
exper ience will prove a bboh

lhis year. He will be

other sources tor household

degree. Put your own capable
hands and mind to work also .

Inst rumental In furthering your
ambl1 1ons .

to acquire something you want.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. II)

LIIRA (hpt. 23-0cL 231 An
old friend who ' has been on

You may tlnd yourself In an
awkward position today where
you'll need a pal to bail you out

your m i nd lately would

appreciate hearing trom you.
·

22-~on.

It's possible you 'll have some
problems at wo rk today. Oo'n't .
be concerned . This cloud has a
silver llnlng.
.

11) Others will look out for your

salealoday. You might be able

o.,era volunteer to do thlng_s
for you today, by all means let

on today . They're not nearly as

difficu lt as your vivid
Imagination has 18d you to
believe .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22)
Check tho newepepere end

l.t your counterparts have a

hard lor any1hlng you gel.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Meet your problems head-

tt'le Interests of tttose you feel
responsible lor today . No one

will lry any shenanigans II you

Phone or write her a few lines.

I

(Proposed by lnitialire Petition)

I

A majority anirmath·e \'Ole is necessary for passage.

II

I

II

; 1

SHALL THE PROPOSED Al\IENDliiENT BE ADIOPTfJ1[)7

hundred (400) ktlowatt hours of electricity used during each

maHers. You're able to see

Bernice Bode Oaol

'
A lciephone message,
Exte nsion phones come in enough ~
Slyles and colors 10 delighllhe eye of.any · •
deeornt or.
·
· Call our husines.~ office. And order a
phon~ I hat has a lpt IQ "}y.J've~ when it'• •,
JUSI Silting I here. ••
t ''-

t:

I

I

I

thousand (2000) kiiowat1 hour:s of electricity u$ed during

each monthly billing period between October 15th and April
15th of each year. Between April 15th and October 15th of
each year, the .lifeline rate shall apply only to lhe first four

used in Article XIX :
IAl A residential consumer Is any natural person or
persons who live In one dwelling unit as a principal place of
residence and who are charged directly or Indirectly lor lh~
use of gas or electricity for healing or lighting or otherwise
lor the benefit oft hose persons while In lhat unll.
( Bl Atolal electric dwelling unit Is a dwelling unll which
Is heated from Oclober 151h to April 15th of . each year
principally lhrough the use of eleclrlclly and which was
either in use as a total electric dwelling unll as of the
effective dale ot lhls amendment or was not yet In use as of
the effective date of this amendment but was fully enclosed
as of that date and was never used as other than a total
·eleclrlc dwelling un it.
{C) Monthlv billlnq period Is lhat period of tim• fnr
which the . public utillly normally bills Its residential
consumers. For the purpose of determining the quantltlts of
electricity and gaslo which the lifeline rate shall apply, all
public utilities shall have twelve{121 monthly billing periods
In each calendar year, all of which shall be as equal In length
as Is reasonably possible . If any portion oll~e public utility'S
monthly billing ·period shall fall within the Qclober H'h lo
April 15th period specified in Section 2(AI (II) and (Ill), ll&gt;al
entire
monthly billing period shall belreated as IIIII of II wu
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF Included
within ll&gt;at period.
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
(D) A public ullllly Includes every corporation,
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS:
co·parlnership, person or asSO&lt;;Iallon. their
: Section 1. II Is herebx declared to be a proper publ ic company,
lessees, t rustees or receivers, who are:
purpose and the public policy of this state to Insure that the
Ill engaged in ll&gt;e business of supplying eleclrlclty for
residential ~llllty consumers of Ohio ore charged a light, heat or power purposes to consumers within this slale,
rMsonebte·rate, hereinafter referred to as the lifeline rate,
for the minimum amounts of electricity and gas necessary lo or 1111 engaged In the business of supplying artificial· or
f!lalntaln a minimum standard of living.
,..._
nalural gas tor llghllng , power or healing purposes to
Seotlon 2. Public utility rates set In Ohio lor con sumers of consumers within the state . ·
·
Qel end electricity ohall Insure that:
Section
5. If any provision of this Arflcle shall be
CAl Everyrosldtntlal consumer In Ohio shall be charged declared unconslltutlonal or Invalid, the other provisions
a lifeline rato lor lhe following quanlltles of gas and shall be declared unconstitutional or Invalid, the other
electricity:
provisions shall remain in effect notwithstanding.
(I) Except lor total electric dwelling units as defined In

=

·J

8. Penalties for violation of an y provision of the amendment.

NO

I

I

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

models to choose from

limb and property ... and
he lp s control insurance
costs aiid prem iums.
, When losses do occur ,
our 'pol lcyholder s can .count
on prot·ection and serv ice ih
time of need. But we still
say.prevention is the best

II

for. necessarr cx1~ ? n scs in the v~l'formnnce of their duties. Contplainta
wh1ch are non-frn·vlous shall be forwarded to the appropriate regula·
tory ar.ent·y whi ch m u~ t kee11 HUCAG informed of actions taken.
RUCAG's memhershii&gt; list must be available to menibers for use con·
sistent with the objectives of IWCAG described in this am~ndment.

YES

eMore thcin twenty

I

6. For tilling Yac~ncies on inJCAG's ho~rd of irustres ; for all meetings,
reports, financ1al data, ancl s!uclies of RUCAG to he open to the public;
and for removal of any memlier of the board by petilion of (h,e
members of RUCAG who votPd from his district in the ,last cl•clion.

7. That boanl members will be bonded and are entitled to reimbursement

A majority affirmath·e \'Ote is necessary for passage.

The Meigs County Budget ·.
Commission Apportionment

~

5

PROPOSJm CONSTITUTIONA:L AMENDMENT

3. That part

a

'

4

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

kilowatt hours of electricity per month no more per kilowatt hour than
the average rate charged by their utilit)' to all use r~ . Consumers with .
all electric homes that were s ubs tantially completed by the effective
date of thi8 amendment s hall be charged no more than this rate for
the first 2,000 kilowatt hours of ~!eclricily usrd per month during the
winter months.

Jwocwam

~

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

2. That residential consumers of electricity he chtirgcd for the first 400

~~ Rupes give .\[·

Program
discussed

·

ADMIRAL
Color Television

BEST ·
POLICY

arranging was given by Mrs.
Glen Stout. The door prize
was won by Mrs. Koenig, the
traveling prize by Mrs.
Massar. The club will
sponsor the flower booth at
Tuppers
Plains
. the
Elementary School carnival
on Oct. 2.

•

7-The Dilly Sertinel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday,Sep~. '!1, IV76

heritage house

IS THE

Everyone asked to attend to
help make plans for uniforms
for additional band members.

Women's unit.

be Mrs. DaiTeU S.aler, ol
Olney; Ill. In March, 1876,
Mrs. S.Sler was InstaUed
president of the North Cell·
tral Jurisdiction United
Methodist Women Core
thought this waa Just
PiaMing Group, after having I oMthA• shoe. It's not.
served as vice president and
professional service
president of the Southern
fro m Nurse-Mates
Illinois Conference United
the finest; llghlesl,
Method!~ Women.
ost com.fortable one
"Contemporary Sound.!!"
can buy. You were
by Gloria - a group from the right about style, though.
university, will be a feature It's every bit as pretty as
of the program .
thought It was. So ·
Appropriate lor this year Is ·~'' "'' make another mls·
the goal of 1976 pe~sons In take. Come In and see
attendance. Pastors and their IN1"rs1•·Mates at:
spouses have been en·
couraged to accompany the
local women to the meeting.
Bicentennial dress and
decorations will enliven the
Middleport
scene . The reservation
deadline Is Oct. I. Reser·
vation blanks are avaUable

PREVENTION

New o fkcers
are installed instead
~:p~~~
of on Tuesday.

from lbe pPIOr or oftk I I of
1be local United MICba t!'ll

needs today, 10 a lim ited

Don'l lei her good deed lade

from your memory.

PIICEI (Feb. 2D·Merch 20)

A thought for the day t
Amer!cao cartoonist 8111
Mauldln said, "I feel like 1
fuptlve from the .law ol '
averages."
• I.

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED

ISSUE 5 WILL PROVIDE ·EXPERTS TO
FIGHT UNNECESSARY RATE INCREASES:
It would create the Residential Utility
COnsumer Action Group ( RUCAG). a non-profit
organization which will employ attorneys and
utility experts to do research, draft laws. and
represent consumers of natural gas, electricity
and telephone .

corporation, company'
or ail!lclatlon,
their lessees, trustees
·
'
· Ill Telephone
engaged In the
business of transmitting messages to; from, 'through · or
within thels state ;
·· .
till Electric Light Companies engagfd In the bUflnlsl of
supplying electrlclly for light, heal or power· purpotts to
c:on!umers within this state ;

,

.

(II II Gas companies engaged In the buslntss of supplying
artltlclal or natural· gas for llghllflll, power .a.- ,hilling
purposes to consumers within this stale or engaged· In tht
business of supplying arllllclal or natural gill to gill
companies within this slate; or
(lvl Plpa-line companies engaged In the business of
lransporllng nalural or artltlclal gas~hrough pipes or tubing
either wholly or partly within thls' stale;
lCI The term "member" ' or "member of thi
The Public Utilities Comm ission of Ohio
corporation" shall mean any residential consumer who hao
contrlbuled a minimum of six {6) dollars to the Rtsldtntlal
( PUCOl claims It must "strike a balance"
Utility Consumer Action Group In lht ~orporatlon's
between the utility and the consumer . Today
preceedln?, fiscal year, except that for the first fiscal year,
when government bodies make important
"member' or "member of the corporation" shall mean any
residential consumer who has contrlbUfed 16 fo • the
decisions on the price and quality of utility
Residential Utility Action Group In that ilscal yeaTI
,
service, they are overwhelmed by the army of
IDJ The term " Member" or " Member of the Board oi
pro-utility forces. Residential utility consumers · Truslees" shall mean any residential consumer duly tlectid
need an advocat~: to match high-paid utility
to the Board of Trustees of lhe corporation ;
1
I El. The term "utility regulatory agency" or "agency"
experts, lobbyists and lawyers before the PUCO.
shall mean a state, or political subdivision lheroof, an !" ency
legislature, city councils, and courts.
or lnstrumentallly of the United Slates, a. public urv tor
ISSUE 5 WON'T ADD TO GOVERNMENT public utility commission or other similar body, wtil has
Iurlsdlctlon to affect or establish rates and charges tlor the
BUREAUCRACY
.
sale
or rental of utility services or to affect In a reescinably
.RUCAG won't be a government agency at
substantial way lhe quantity, quality or effect of such ~llllty
all, and it will be Independent. RUCAG will be ~ service ;
,
IFI
The
term
"
U.S.
Congresolonal
Dlstrlcl"
shall
mHn
funded by voluntary annual membership dues of
those
political
subdivisions
used
lor
the
election
of
memto.r1
$6. Consumers who choose membership will
ollhe House of.Represenlatlves of the United States ; and
control RUCAG through an elected board of
(Gi The term "campaign expenditure" shall I mtan
money.
goods. services or other benefit paid.' made, loaned,
directors.
given,
conferted
or promlsed;'in&lt;:ludlng but not llmlltd to tht
RUCAG'S VOLUNTARY FUNDING WILL use of office space,
telephones~ eqUipment, steff ser'viCet1
INSURE ITS ACCOUNTABILITY AND and provisions of meals, drinks, lodging, entertainment or
transportation. Thlo definition shall be constru.d as broadly .
INDEPENDENCE.
,
T.o aid collection of voluntary contributions. as possible lo Include anything for which a recipient Would or
could be expected to pay money, or the prom I'!' (whether br
a check-off provision will be included with
not legally enforceable) of any such thing, except 'that the
regular billing statements from utilities . term campa ign expenditure shall not Include the voluntary
Customers can conveniently contribute a small donation of a person's o.,.n lime to work on behllf of any
provided that no substantial pressure ~as been
amount and include It with their usual payment. candidate
brought lo bear on that person by any other person or
The utility will transfer contributions and a I1st · organization to coerce hlm·her Into volunteering.
Section 3. There Is hereby created a nof.for-proflt
of contributors
RUCAG. RUCAG will
membership
corporation to be known as the Resldentlai
reimburse the utility for administrative costs . Ullllty Consumer
Action Group, Inc. whose me.,ibers shall
RUCAG WILL PROTECT CONSUMERS cons!st olall resldenlial ullllty consumers who contributed a
WITHOUT INCREASING TAXES OR UTILITY minimum of six (6) dollars to the organlzallgn, during the
corporation's proceeding fiscal year, excepl that 1 for the first
BILLS.
fiscal year, lhe members shall consist of all lhqM! who hive
Membership Is totally voluntary. RlJCAG contri buted $6 to the organization during lhat fiscal year.
Section 4. Powers.
will be accountable to residential consumers who
IAI The Residential Ullllty Consumer Action Group shall
will on Iy contribute if R UCAG adequate! y havelhe
powers, responsibilities and dulles of,any other notrepresents their Interests. RUCAG Is the best lor·prollt corporallon chartered In the Stale of Ohio, Ia the
way to assure that the consumers voice Is heard extent that no confllcls exist between those powers,
and that we have fair utility rates for residential re•ponsl bllltles and dutlesand thlsartlcle. In the event of any
conflict, this Arllcle shall control.
·
consumers now and In the future .
IB) The Residential Utility Consumer Action Group ohall
Committee For the Amendment : Robert P. have all ' rights anci powers reasonably nectSNry to
Weaver, Robert L. Loltz, Edward A. Harter, effectively represent and protect the Interests of rtsldtnllal
consumers of . utlllly services. It has ·all the powers
Pauline L. Brokaw, Brady 'E. Bancroft .
specifically designated as well as those necessary and .
lncldentlal to providing such representation and protection.
FULL TEXT OF. THE PROPOSED AMEN.DMENT
, ICl The Residential Utility Consumer Action Groi'P may
'
such exempt stalus under the lnlernal Revtnue COde as
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF seek
the
members · decide could further the protection of
OHIO TH.AT ARTICLE XX OF THE 01110 CONSTITUTION consumer
Interests.
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS:
·
Dl
The
Residential Utility Consumer Acllon Group may
I
Section 1. II Is the policy and Intent of the people of the engage In any
legislative acllon necessary to carry out Its
SIale of Ohlb to:
purposes
Including;
but 110! limited to, Initiative and
(AI e,tabllsh with all necessary authority ·• not-for- refe rendum .
profit membership corporation to be called the Residential
I El The Resl denllal Ullllty Consumer AciiQn Group may
Utility Consumer Action Group, Inc. with the authority and
accept grants, contributions and approprlatloM 'and may
responsibility to ""ure adequale representation and
contract for services which It deems nectssary.
.
protection of residential utility consumers; and
Section 5. Hearings.
(81 Provide for ro• idenllal utility consumer membership
(AI Whenever lhll Residential Ullllly Con.Umtr Action
In the corporation and consumer responsibility tor the
Group believes that the result of any utility r.vulalory
actions of !he corporation .
proceeding may substantially afltct lha lnttrtsls ill
Section 2. As used In th is Arllcle, unless the context agency
residential utility consumers, It may Intervene as of right 11
otherwise requlrts:
a party or otherwise partlclpafe far the purpost of
• (AI The term "residential consumer" or "resldenllal
representing the Interests of residential utility contuinlf'lln ·
utility consumer" shall mean any natural person or persons such
proceeding. The Residential Utility Consumer Action
who live In 0111 clwtlllng unit, not aa transients, whO are
Group shall comply with ullllty regulator.y agency itatule!!
charged dlttclly or Indirectly for the use of gas, electricity' or
and rules of procedure ot general appllc:abllltv govwnlng (i)
telepllone lor ~ling, lighting or commun ication or
Intervention or participation In such procHdlng and 121 tht
otherwise for the benefit of those parsons while In that un it : conducl
of such proceedings.
'
181 The lerm ''regulated public ullllty," "utltlty",
IBJ In any utility proceeding or activity In which t..,
''public utility" dr "utility corporallon" means every

to

Centbuled

OD

Next Pllt

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6- The Dally Sentinel, Middltport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday, Sepl.••• .,..

Riverview gardeners ~~~&amp;lcial '~$!.·

Katie's Korner

elect co-presidents

· By Katie Crow
MIDDLEPORT - The posbnan for Robert ll. Morris and
family who live at Rt. I, Middleport, Leading Creek, Is reaDy
having his problems.
It seems as tho1J8h Robert B. Morris, who IS principal at
Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary School, has lived at
Leading Creek lor sometime but recently a new family moved
In the area and ghess what - Ute man's name Is Jl,obert B.
Morris.
This would really make a mallman take up another
profession.
·
MR. AND MRS. THEO SMITH, Pomeroy, have returned
·home following a very nice 10 day vacation.
They toured the· Henry Ford Museum lr\ Detroit, Mich.,
traveled to Quebec, the back hills of Maine Into Boston then on
to Niagara FaUs.
'SPEAKING OF VACATIONS Robert Beegle and family of
Racine while on vacation this summer were fortunate when
they got to see the Delta Queen lock through a dam.
According to Bob they really got a line view of the boat as
did many others as they scrambled to see the Delta Quten.
HAVE TWO birth!lay people this week that we know of : .
.Bob Hoeflich who celebrated his birthdey Friday and Dave
Buskirk who celebrated his day on Saturday. ·
Best wishes and lllliY you have many more .
THE MIRACLE CIJMBING tomato plant planted by Paul
Chadwell in his mother-in~aw's garden, Pauline Greathouse of
Middleport, has reached a height of 12feet and nine Inches.
Pauline Is Interested In knowing if anyone in the county
has a plant as large or larger.
·
Would be Interesting to know.
THOSE WHO WORKED on Southern's yearbook are to be
complimented. It Is one of the most attractive yearbooks that I
have seen around in a long time.
To those who are responsible - a Job weU done.
CONGRATULATIONS to Irvin Karr who Is celebrating his
30th year with Karr &amp; Van.Zandt Motor Sales In Pomeroy.
Congratulations to a nice guy.

Two women receive
field se.rvice pins
.

'

REEDSVILLE - Mrs .
Gene Young and Mrs. Donald
Putmsn were elected copresldents of the Riverview
Garden Club during a recent
meeting here at the home of
Mrs. Frank Blse.
Other officers of the club
were retained for another
year. Mrs. Walter Brown and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead will
tnsu!ll them at the November
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and Mrs. R.
E. Wllllamo, with Mrs.
Plibnan to be co-hostess.
Mrs. Whitehead announced
final plans are being made
for the dedication of a marker
in honor of Major James
Reed, a blcenteMial project,
near the entrance of the
Belleville IM:Its and Dam.
The garde.n club will do a
planting around the marker. ·
Programs for the coming
year were disc ussed in·
eluding plans to visit Francis Florist at Pomeroy for a
demons t r a t1 on on
terrariums. The club
members will dine at Crow's
for the October meeting.
AvlslttotheKingwood Center
at Cambridge In the spring
and an S.wailan luau are
also on the agenda.
Mrs. Pulman announced the

club has been Invited to do a
program for the Riverview
PTA. It wa.s pla!Uied to
present a fUm 1n keeping with
Arbor Day in April. Members
signed a card to be sent to
Mrs.. Balderson, confined to
the Camden Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg.
Mrs. David Chadwell, vice
preoident, conducted the
meeting and for devotions,
Mrs. Hannum read two
poems, "Why God Gave Us
Friends, " and "What Is
Good," followed with a
prayer. For roU caU members gave. highlights of their
summer vacations.
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle
had an article on "Bonfire
Colors for Your Yard, "
naming various trees and
shrubs to select for their
coloring effects. Mrs. Young
conducted games and the
winners were Mrs. Chadwell,
Mrs. Claremont Harris and
Mrs . Grossnickle . Door
prius went to Mrs. Thomas
Spencer and Mrs. Whltthead.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. B!ie and Mrs. Gene
Wilson to those named and
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery, Mrs.
Harlls Frank, Mrs. R. L.
Larkins, Mrs. Donald Myers
and Mrs. Denver Webei'.

Women hold meet
.A letter of thanks from the
Mis81onary Giving Society In
Kl!lltucky for gifts wa.s read
at the meeting of Group U of
the Women's Association,
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Cburd! held at
the home of Mrs. Elizabeth
Burkett. .
Mrs.
Faye

WaUace

by Mrs. Helen Sauer.
Members and ''Happy Bir·
thday" to Miss Kathryn
llyJell.

Athank offering was taken,
and it was noted that
donations are still being
received on tbe kitchen
renovstilin project. The Bible
study was on the Lordship of
Christ. A round-robin card
was signed for Harry Moore
on his birthday. Refresh.
menta were served.

presided with Mrs. 'Virginia
Owen serving as co-bostess
Field servtce pins were by the members in the for the meeting. Devotions
presented to Mrs. Alma opening of the meeting.
· were on the theme "Climbing
Mrs. Etta Will Introduced Up by Falling Do1in." Mrs.
Newton and Mrs. Bonnie
DaUey at the Wedliesday three of the delegates to , Kalhcyn Miller toot the leut
nlgbt meeting of the Buckeye Girls' State, Beverly coin offering and read, "Do It
American Legion Auxiliary WUcox, Cheryl Barnhart and ~ Unto the Lord", closing
'}}'-'
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128. Jeni Grate who were ac- · with prayer. A report on the
Membership w:as discussed companied to the meeting by recent aasoclation meeting
during the meeting preslded their mothers, Mrs. Maryln where Mrs. Richard Rupe
over by Mrs. Freda Clark. Wilcox, Mrs. Ruth Barnhart was guest speaker was given
Unit goal Is 147 al\d while and Mrs. Donna Grate. Each
TUPPERS PLAINS ...,
mauy·members have already of the slrls aave a resume of
illlltallation ofDeWifficel1 by
paid their dues those who her activities at Capital
Mrs. Floyd Stout. highlighted
blve not were urged to send University. The other three
a recent meeting of the Rose
them Immediately to Mrs. deleg'ates will be Invited to
Garden Club bere at the borne
SON BORN
Albert Roush so they can be the October meeting.
of Mrs. Carl Barnhill.
DEXTER- Mr. and Mrs.
~ent to Department b)i the fall
The doOr prize donated by
Installed were Mrs. Glen
conference Oct. 7 at Lan- Mrs. Gerrl Kesinger was won Terry Lee Gecqe, Rt. l, Stout , president ; Mrs.
euter. Correspondence by Patty Might. A steak ,Deller, announce the birth r#. Frederick Goebel, vice
amounclng the conference dinner for auxlllary mem· a son, JIIOIJ Lee 011 Sept. 16 at president ; Mrs. Doris
was read. Registration will bers, legionnaires and guests Holzer Medical Center. The Koenig, secretary ; Mrs .
begin ·at 9 a.m. with the was held prior to the meeting. Infant weighed s11: pounds &amp;bert Dorst, treasurer, and
meeting at 10 a.m. and ·=i~:~~:::~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~=:~:::::::::~::::::::::::::~~! and 15 ounces. · Maternal Mrs. James Stout, news
grandpa~!! are Mr. and
aeveral members from the
reporter.
Mrs.
James WUlla, Rt. 3,
unit will be attending.
Mrs. John Rice gave
Albany; paternal grand· devotiono and for roU call
Arrangements were made
pel'alta, Mr. and Mrs. Fred members named a shrub or
to aerve the bloodmobile In
a-ge,
Rutland. Maternal spring flowering bulb they
::~
. February. A gift was :x.
:
!
I"
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6
"
;:::
·great-grandparents
are Mrs. plan to plant this fall. Bir·
presented to Mrs. Edith
Hue!
Drain,
Falrmoat,
W.
Spencer for selling the most
Mrs.
Richard
Rupe
and Va., and Mrs. Ida WUlla, ibday wiabes were extended
poppies. i\ roiiiMk'obln card
!Ari, presented a S!Qooatoo, W. Va. Patemal to Mrs. Leota Malar. Verae
wa.s signed for lifrs. Edn8 daugbter,
of the month wu read by
Wayland, a surgical patient program oo Africa at the great-grandparenl! are Mrs. Mrs. Barnhill, and timely
Thunday night meeting of Herman Jarrell, Salem
at Holzer Medical Center.
hlnlll were given by Mro.
Mrs. Lelah Weatherby, the Women's Asaoclatioo of Center and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Floyd Stout.
eblplaln, had prayer, and.the the Middleport First United Georae, Rt. 1, Bidwell.
A program on flower
pledge to the flag" was given Presbyterian Churd!.
The Rupe family spent a
· year In Africa. Mrs. Rupe
told of the rich inlneral
. depoltta, the climate, the
custonu1 of the people and tlie
rellgioo. !Ari dosed her talk
with The Lord's Prayer In the
language of Southern Africa.
They displayed a large
collection of African jewelry,
carvlngo, baskets and
A program of youth photographs.
.
Local Government 1977- Total
education on temperance
Mrs.
Lewis
Sauer,
$150,000.00
tbrough the uae of fllins In the president,
opened the
schools and the distribution of meeting with a stor)i and
Townships
30 Pet.
$45,000.00
leafletl was discussed at the spiritual song from Africa,
CorpOrations
30 Pet.
45,000.00
Wednesday meeting of the the country being studied this
County
40
Pet.
60,000.00
P0111eroy Women's Cbriltlan year by the association.
Temperance Union. Plans
Devotions by Mrs. Myron
Townships Pet. Total Money Per Year
call for the material to be Miller were two articles "A
uaed In the schools In Prayer ttuit Has Everything"
·January.
by Elaine st. Jolm, and
Bedford .
8.18
4,685.50
Meeting at the Pomeroy "Prayer of Confession" by
Chester
12.17
5,481.00
United Method lot Church, I he
We s t m I n I s t e r
Columbia
7.18
3.289.50
Mn. Allen Hampton opened Presbyterian Church of
Laban on
9.98
4,504.50
wltb the hymn, "Whet A Uncoln. Neb.
Letart
4.79
2.236.50
Fellowship." The Lord's
It ll'ils announced that
Olive
9.78
~,531.50
Prayer wu pven In unilon. workshop will be held In
Orange
7.73
3,609.00
Mn. ~ reported 01\ Ironton on Oct. 5 and that
Rutland
4,144.50
9.18
the Allplt meeting at. the Church Women United wiD
Salem
10.19
4;077 .00
home of Mrs. Ellie Rouali and obterve World Community on
Salisbury
s :99
2,713.50
corrupondence requesting a Nov. 5.
Scipio
7.99
contribuUon on a copying
Approximately 25 mem·
3,636.00
macldne wu read.
ben alld guelltl attended the
Sutton
6.79
3.091.50
It wu DOted the World meeting which was preceded
$45,000.00 30%
WC'}'IIeonventton wu held In with • potllick dinner. Gnce Corporations
Autralll, April 28 ' wu pnn by Mrs, Dwight
MiJ 3, that the Wallace.
Pomeroy
38.80 17,460.00
~ WC'I'U wu held
Middleport
39.01
17,554.50
.... •llnallatpl. 1, IIIII
FELLOWSBIPBELD
Racine
5.79
2,605.50
tile Die COIIftllt!ori will
Men's Fellqwlhlp of the
7.93
.
3,568.50
Rutland
beklli ~umbltl. Od. 7, I Laun1 Cliff Free Methodlat
Syracuse
8.47
3.811.50
•.
tbard! !IU held Thul'iday
'
100
Pc,.
$45,000.00
30%
1'lllalt of tile JII'OIII'IID wu nJcbt at the pai'loalge. The
uo,ooo.oo 40%
"New PtUI Ia • - - • " lArd's Prayer In untaon,
,. ~ 1'114 ''Tile PRim 11 read by Ernest
'-1 Alillb • ~" PonD, IIIII DnY• by the
Mt WU!lll' Nld .-. FloJdSIIaok INI'tiD tbe
HOWARD E. FRANK
1'le tile Dop". 41Yitloaal period. Bob
IM 'MRI If Mn. .,.,... Bartoa dtamlned tbe
Clll'k of Meigs County
-billlta~from DILUIMI wltb prayer and
Budget Commission
IIIII. Z. ._.... 11jlro1Jib 4.
alliiiiiDIIidl were served.

Third meet scheduled

"In God We Tru51" Is the
theme of the third annual
meeting of the West Ohio
Conference United Methodist
Women, to be held In Ada on
Saturday, Oct. 16.
· , Mrs. Clarence Radcliffe,
MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Club president, will Issue a
meehng, 7:00 p. m. Monday challenge as she convenes the
meeting atlO a.m. In the new
at Meigs Museum.
King-Hom Center of Ohio
"VOICES OF UBERTY"
rehearsal, Monday, 7:30p.m. Northern University.
'at the Pomeroy United . The principal speaker will
Methodist Church. Practice
Is now being held for the
ThanksgiVIng program to be
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
presented Thanksgiving Eve
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. at Trinity Church. Anyone Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Weaver
.wanting to sing with the or New Haven announce the
group Is asked to contact birth olthelr second child and
Mrs. Harvey VanVranken. daughter, Heather Dawn ,
Aug. 8 at the Holzer Medical
MEIGS JUNIOR H!gll.,. Center. Heather weighed
Athletic Boosters Monday, seven pounds one ounce and
7' 30 p.m. In cafeteria at was 19\0inch~s long. Sh~ was
jwuor big~ in Middleport. All welcomed home by her
Interested persons urged to brother Jason. Maternal
attend.
grandparents are Mr. and
TUESDAY
Mrs. Lawrence Fowler of
.PAST MAT R 0 NS • Point Pleasant. Paternal
Pomeroy Chapter, Order of grandparents are M:r. and
. Eastern Star, Tuesday, &amp;:30 Mrs. Thomas Weavenf New
p.m. at. the home of Lucille Haven . Maternal greatSwackhamer,
grandmother is Mt'll. Fay
JUNIOR AND SENIOR Gardner of Rt. 2, Point
American Legion Auxiliary, Pleasant. Paternal greatDrew Webster Unit 39 grandmothers are Mrs.
covered dish dinner meeting Bessie Fergqson of West
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Paul Columbia and Mrs. Daisey
Caacl, guest speaker.
Weaver of New Haven.
.S i\ L I S B U R Y P T 0
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. In·
.\roductlon of teachers and
school personnel. Plea se
bring RC bottle caps.
FREE KARATE · demon·
straUons and ' class startiilg
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High School. PUblic
invited. Sponsored by Ohio
University Karate Club.
SALVATION ARMY anAs
an
independent
nounces another vi-corps
insuran ce agency, our
praise meeting lor 7 p.m.
pr imary function is to
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
prov ide policies which
location, 115 Buttern.ut Ave.
afford financial protection
Athens officers, Lt. and Mrs.
in case of loss.
But . we also have a vi tat
Daniel Griffin wiD conduct
interest in ioss prevention ,
and sjleak; special music;
as should our clients. We
public Invited. Envoy Ray
encourage care, . caution
Wining in charge of the work.
and safe ty ... preventive
·WEDNESADAY
measures which can kee p
WILDWOOD GARDEN
that car accident from
Club 8 p.m. Wednesday at
happen ing, that building
home of Ada Holter with
fire from starting , that
home bvrglary from be ing
~s;ng~e:!es~omas as com milled.
THURSDAY
Prev ention saves life,

Calendar

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Pll01'0Si,;D CONSTJTU1'ION AL AMEN'mfENT

To adopt new .Artitle XIX, Ohio Constitution

To adopt new Arlitle XX, Ohio Conolilulion

RELATIVI~ TO UMITINH TilE. nA'rF.S WHICH 1\IAY BE CHA RGED
TO RESIIll~NTIAL CONSUMimS FOil I&gt;'IXEO AMOUNTS OF GAS AND

ELECTIUCI'fY.

.

RELATIVg TO PROVtnJNG I&lt;' OH REI'ItESENTATJON OF RESIDEN·
TrAL UTII.ITY C(}NSUMERS IN UTILITY REGULATORY ACTIONS
AFFECTJN(; 'fiJEJR INTf&gt;IIESTS.
.
·

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The proposed amendment would require:

The pro11Med anoend·ment would provide :

' l~ · That residential con~umrrs of gas be charged per cubic foot no more
than the average rat e charged by their utility to all users of gas.
This rate Nhall ni•PI Y for the first 30,1100 cubic feet of gas used each
month during the winter n)onths. .)n addition; those consumer~ may
be charged no more th an 50 % additional per cubic font for the next
20,000 cubic feet of gas used per month during the winter months.

ot

those rates which are described above are called lif~line
rates and shall not be increased by adding any ftiel or purchased gas
adjustments or other expense except when rates arc set or reset.

l. For

11 non-(orofit .membership eorporalion known as lhe Residential
Utility Consumer Action Group (HtTCAGl with certain powers and
dut ies, ind~ding ,ret~res~n.tntion of the inlere~ts of residential uUIIly
consumers IR var1ous uhhty pro ccechn~:s.

2. For certain controls on public utilities, th eir officers and employees,
and on HUCAH.
3, F.o r voluntary mc mhc r~hip in RUCAG. continr,ent upon pa)'ment of
an annual mt•mhcrs hip fee or at l c&lt;t.~t $!i ; for collection of membership
fee~ ; :~n~l for ~UCAt: to intervene inuti lily regulatory proceedings and
in JUchc1ai rev1rw of s uch proceed ing·s ; to force the initiation or com•
11let ion of utility regula lory l•rocl·ed ings; to conduct in rest igal ions;
and to rciJUire lhc )oroduction of information.

4. 'fhat TIUCAG must rcimhnrse a utilit y for rfasonablc accounlin.,. and
check-off expense,; for collecting mcm&amp;crshi1• fees, although reimbursement of e ~; 1ocn ses nuty be d.eferred until one yea1· aflcr the first election
and ins Iallation of l rus t ccs.
· ·
' a board of trustees . and for (he qualificatio11,
5. For ':lllCAG lo;hc run hy

OF 1976 MODELS

4. That any revenues lost to a public utility from the implementation of

, t'lcct10n, campaogn proredures, duties, and terms of offi ce of such board.
It also (lroYides for an initial board of trustees to rrpresent consum~rs
and for the operation of such board until the first election.

the lifeline rates be made up equitably fr om all other rates.

eSave from •30 to

'200

5, That any rate chatlgcs necessary to comply with this amendment be
implemented within 60 clays of the ef(cctive date of the amendment.

On ·these fine televisions
which must be sold to
make room for the
~77 models (coming moo).

(Proposed by Inltialive Petition)

r

RELIABILITY ...
No one makes a T.V. that lasts forever
Admiral trys ... careful inspection in
plant . . . Inspected again at our st•
reducing the chance that service will
needed . If service is needed you'll gE
promptly ... if it needs to be in the !
over a day we'll loan you a set at flO cha

Ad111iraL
m.~ .
tt•rt ,,,,

pol icy.

•

ARGUMENT
,AMENDMENT

'• "'I
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PROPOSED

Issue 4 establishes needed rate reform,
known as "Lifeline," that will provide all
residential consumers with basic · monthly
amounts of gas and electricity at no more than
the. average rate charged by their utility to all
users. Lifeline also benefits needy residential
consumer~ without additional tax money and
without singling them out for public assistance.
. • ISSl!E
4
WILL
ENCOURAGE
.CONSERVATION BY REWARDING THOSE
WHO SAVE.
'' The more you conserve, the more money you
will save over the present rate structure. Energy
conservation, besides being a national priority,
' is key to holding down utility rates In the future.
Simple Lifeline rates will help residential
Consumers to be more aware of their
eonsumption and will promote energy efficiency
4mong large users. The conservation benefits
that Issue 4 brings will benefit all consumers In
he lorig run.
.
ISSUE . 4 UPDATES THE
RATE
STRUCTURES IN OHIO TO REFLECT
,CHANGING REALITIES.
The present method for setti(lg rates in 01 io
' 1~ outmoded . Today, we nc;&gt; longer need rate
structures to promote use of energy. Instead, we
·need-me structures to encourage conservation
· ~nd to make sure that residential consumers pay
' only for the energy that they use. Issue 4
' Incorporates these needed reforms Into Ohio's
r·a te-making process.
·
.,,' Committee For the Amendment : Robert P.
·' ~.eaver; Robert L Loltz. Edward A. Harter,
!;'auline · L. Brokaw, Brady E. Bancroft .
' .
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

Free Delivery
Middleport, 0.

102 W. Main Pomeroy

THE

~nsumptlon.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

992-2145

FOR

,
ISSUE 4 WILL LOWER RATES · FOR
AVERAGE RESIDENTIAL CONSUMERS OF
~AS AND ~LECTRICITY IN OHIO.
"
With rapidly rising utility bills, it is essential
'that the residential consumers pay the highest
.flltes. With today ~ s utility rate structure, the
,mo.r e electricity or gas a customer uses, the less
he pays per unit of energy . This discriminates
' ~gains! . small' users and promotes wasteful

miiiiJft•rtt~IH 1'

DALE E. WARNER

Section 4{B), the lifeline rate shall apply lo the first tour
, monthly billing period . .
{I ll For all total eleclric dwelling units as defined In
Section 41Bl . the lifeline rale shall apply to the first two
hundred (400) kilowat1 hours of electricity used, during each

of local pemment money for the
calendar year 1977 is as follows:

~~
"'·· .

.

''
il)uulhink the only way to decorate
a r&lt;l&lt;·&gt;m os wilh cha irs and lamps and
tahlcs and drapes. we've go t a mes·
sage for you.

YES

.

•'•

(ii[J'' ,'

GBE~ TELEPHOI1E

••
•
•'

•

v

'

. I'

monlhl r billing period.
{iii The lifeline . rate shall apply lo the first thirty
lhousand 130.000 ) cubiC feet of gas used during each monthly '
billing period belween Oclober 15th and April 15th of each

NO

year .

.

I Bi The lifeline rale charged by any public utility shall

be set ~ot . to exceed the average revenue requlremment for
each ktlowatt hour of electric ity or cubic foot of gas sold to all
users by the utility.

ICI In the case of residentia l gas consumers, the lotal
charge per cubic loot tor the ne xt twenty thousand (20.000)
cubic feet of gas used after the lifeline amount during eCtch

monthly billing period between Oclober 151h and April 15th of
each year shall be no more than fifty {50) per cenl higher
than the lifeline rate.
I Dl In no case shall any lifeline rate be Increased by
adding to it any fuel or purchased ~as adjustment, Increased
cost or expense incurred by a util1ty except when rates are
set or reset .

( Ei Ally revenues losl to a publ ic ulillly from lhe direct
implementation of the lifelin~ rate shall be made up
equilably from all other rates.
Secllon 3 Each public utility whose rates are set by a
division or agency of the stale or local government shall file
with that division or agency revised rate schedules In
conformance with this amendment within thirty (30) days of

the effective dale of this amendment. The division or agency
of the state or local government shall implement any rate
changes necessary to comply wllh lhis amendment within
sixly (601 days of the effecllve dale of this amendment. All
other public ut ilities as are affected by this amendment·shall
Implement such rate changes as are required by this
amendment within si xly 1601 days of the ellecllve date of this
amendment.
Section 4. As

·It

AstraGraph

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·1'10¥. 22)

things as they truly are.

Possibili ties for material
accumulallon are very good
today , but you'll have to work

fiGr TIIIICIIJ, hpl. H, 1171
I
AIIIIS (M... 21-April 181

LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) Protect

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Concentrate to day on
situ allons that mean something
to you materially or careerwise.
Vou will do well in either camp.

•
:

•

given your
peraonol touch today should
IUrn ouiiiU.....Iully. However,

,E~terprlue

liy, tao.
lAORUI (April 110-Mtr :10) If

t.,.m, •paclelly If lhay can
gain odvantagea lor you
bQalnetswloe. ·
Q.MINI (Map 21-.IUM 201
Your Judgmenl Ia qulfe kHn
t~a~, portlculltrly in wel~hty

take charge.

'CAPRICORN tOec.

·

,AYour
VBirthday
Sept. 21, 1111
A friend of lo ng standing who Is
older than you either In age or
exper ience will prove a bboh

lhis year. He will be

other sources tor household

degree. Put your own capable
hands and mind to work also .

Inst rumental In furthering your
ambl1 1ons .

to acquire something you want.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. II)

LIIRA (hpt. 23-0cL 231 An
old friend who ' has been on

You may tlnd yourself In an
awkward position today where
you'll need a pal to bail you out

your m i nd lately would

appreciate hearing trom you.
·

22-~on.

It's possible you 'll have some
problems at wo rk today. Oo'n't .
be concerned . This cloud has a
silver llnlng.
.

11) Others will look out for your

salealoday. You might be able

o.,era volunteer to do thlng_s
for you today, by all means let

on today . They're not nearly as

difficu lt as your vivid
Imagination has 18d you to
believe .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22)
Check tho newepepere end

l.t your counterparts have a

hard lor any1hlng you gel.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Meet your problems head-

tt'le Interests of tttose you feel
responsible lor today . No one

will lry any shenanigans II you

Phone or write her a few lines.

I

(Proposed by lnitialire Petition)

I

A majority anirmath·e \'Ole is necessary for passage.

II

I

II

; 1

SHALL THE PROPOSED Al\IENDliiENT BE ADIOPTfJ1[)7

hundred (400) ktlowatt hours of electricity used during each

maHers. You're able to see

Bernice Bode Oaol

'
A lciephone message,
Exte nsion phones come in enough ~
Slyles and colors 10 delighllhe eye of.any · •
deeornt or.
·
· Call our husines.~ office. And order a
phon~ I hat has a lpt IQ "}y.J've~ when it'• •,
JUSI Silting I here. ••
t ''-

t:

I

I

I

thousand (2000) kiiowat1 hour:s of electricity u$ed during

each monthly billing period between October 15th and April
15th of each year. Between April 15th and October 15th of
each year, the .lifeline rate shall apply only to lhe first four

used in Article XIX :
IAl A residential consumer Is any natural person or
persons who live In one dwelling unit as a principal place of
residence and who are charged directly or Indirectly lor lh~
use of gas or electricity for healing or lighting or otherwise
lor the benefit oft hose persons while In lhat unll.
( Bl Atolal electric dwelling unit Is a dwelling unll which
Is heated from Oclober 151h to April 15th of . each year
principally lhrough the use of eleclrlclly and which was
either in use as a total electric dwelling unll as of the
effective dale ot lhls amendment or was not yet In use as of
the effective date of this amendment but was fully enclosed
as of that date and was never used as other than a total
·eleclrlc dwelling un it.
{C) Monthlv billlnq period Is lhat period of tim• fnr
which the . public utillly normally bills Its residential
consumers. For the purpose of determining the quantltlts of
electricity and gaslo which the lifeline rate shall apply, all
public utilities shall have twelve{121 monthly billing periods
In each calendar year, all of which shall be as equal In length
as Is reasonably possible . If any portion oll~e public utility'S
monthly billing ·period shall fall within the Qclober H'h lo
April 15th period specified in Section 2(AI (II) and (Ill), ll&gt;al
entire
monthly billing period shall belreated as IIIII of II wu
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF Included
within ll&gt;at period.
OHIO THAT ARTICLE XIX OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
(D) A public ullllly Includes every corporation,
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS:
co·parlnership, person or asSO&lt;;Iallon. their
: Section 1. II Is herebx declared to be a proper publ ic company,
lessees, t rustees or receivers, who are:
purpose and the public policy of this state to Insure that the
Ill engaged in ll&gt;e business of supplying eleclrlclty for
residential ~llllty consumers of Ohio ore charged a light, heat or power purposes to consumers within this slale,
rMsonebte·rate, hereinafter referred to as the lifeline rate,
for the minimum amounts of electricity and gas necessary lo or 1111 engaged In the business of supplying artificial· or
f!lalntaln a minimum standard of living.
,..._
nalural gas tor llghllng , power or healing purposes to
Seotlon 2. Public utility rates set In Ohio lor con sumers of consumers within the state . ·
·
Qel end electricity ohall Insure that:
Section
5. If any provision of this Arflcle shall be
CAl Everyrosldtntlal consumer In Ohio shall be charged declared unconslltutlonal or Invalid, the other provisions
a lifeline rato lor lhe following quanlltles of gas and shall be declared unconstitutional or Invalid, the other
electricity:
provisions shall remain in effect notwithstanding.
(I) Except lor total electric dwelling units as defined In

=

·J

8. Penalties for violation of an y provision of the amendment.

NO

I

I

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

models to choose from

limb and property ... and
he lp s control insurance
costs aiid prem iums.
, When losses do occur ,
our 'pol lcyholder s can .count
on prot·ection and serv ice ih
time of need. But we still
say.prevention is the best

II

for. necessarr cx1~ ? n scs in the v~l'formnnce of their duties. Contplainta
wh1ch are non-frn·vlous shall be forwarded to the appropriate regula·
tory ar.ent·y whi ch m u~ t kee11 HUCAG informed of actions taken.
RUCAG's memhershii&gt; list must be available to menibers for use con·
sistent with the objectives of IWCAG described in this am~ndment.

YES

eMore thcin twenty

I

6. For tilling Yac~ncies on inJCAG's ho~rd of irustres ; for all meetings,
reports, financ1al data, ancl s!uclies of RUCAG to he open to the public;
and for removal of any memlier of the board by petilion of (h,e
members of RUCAG who votPd from his district in the ,last cl•clion.

7. That boanl members will be bonded and are entitled to reimbursement

A majority affirmath·e \'Ote is necessary for passage.

The Meigs County Budget ·.
Commission Apportionment

~

5

PROPOSJm CONSTITUTIONA:L AMENDMENT

3. That part

a

'

4

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

kilowatt hours of electricity per month no more per kilowatt hour than
the average rate charged by their utilit)' to all use r~ . Consumers with .
all electric homes that were s ubs tantially completed by the effective
date of thi8 amendment s hall be charged no more than this rate for
the first 2,000 kilowatt hours of ~!eclricily usrd per month during the
winter months.

Jwocwam

~

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION

2. That residential consumers of electricity he chtirgcd for the first 400

~~ Rupes give .\[·

Program
discussed

·

ADMIRAL
Color Television

BEST ·
POLICY

arranging was given by Mrs.
Glen Stout. The door prize
was won by Mrs. Koenig, the
traveling prize by Mrs.
Massar. The club will
sponsor the flower booth at
Tuppers
Plains
. the
Elementary School carnival
on Oct. 2.

•

7-The Dilly Sertinel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday,Sep~. '!1, IV76

heritage house

IS THE

Everyone asked to attend to
help make plans for uniforms
for additional band members.

Women's unit.

be Mrs. DaiTeU S.aler, ol
Olney; Ill. In March, 1876,
Mrs. S.Sler was InstaUed
president of the North Cell·
tral Jurisdiction United
Methodist Women Core
thought this waa Just
PiaMing Group, after having I oMthA• shoe. It's not.
served as vice president and
professional service
president of the Southern
fro m Nurse-Mates
Illinois Conference United
the finest; llghlesl,
Method!~ Women.
ost com.fortable one
"Contemporary Sound.!!"
can buy. You were
by Gloria - a group from the right about style, though.
university, will be a feature It's every bit as pretty as
of the program .
thought It was. So ·
Appropriate lor this year Is ·~'' "'' make another mls·
the goal of 1976 pe~sons In take. Come In and see
attendance. Pastors and their IN1"rs1•·Mates at:
spouses have been en·
couraged to accompany the
local women to the meeting.
Bicentennial dress and
decorations will enliven the
Middleport
scene . The reservation
deadline Is Oct. I. Reser·
vation blanks are avaUable

PREVENTION

New o fkcers
are installed instead
~:p~~~
of on Tuesday.

from lbe pPIOr or oftk I I of
1be local United MICba t!'ll

needs today, 10 a lim ited

Don'l lei her good deed lade

from your memory.

PIICEI (Feb. 2D·Merch 20)

A thought for the day t
Amer!cao cartoonist 8111
Mauldln said, "I feel like 1
fuptlve from the .law ol '
averages."
• I.

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED

ISSUE 5 WILL PROVIDE ·EXPERTS TO
FIGHT UNNECESSARY RATE INCREASES:
It would create the Residential Utility
COnsumer Action Group ( RUCAG). a non-profit
organization which will employ attorneys and
utility experts to do research, draft laws. and
represent consumers of natural gas, electricity
and telephone .

corporation, company'
or ail!lclatlon,
their lessees, trustees
·
'
· Ill Telephone
engaged In the
business of transmitting messages to; from, 'through · or
within thels state ;
·· .
till Electric Light Companies engagfd In the bUflnlsl of
supplying electrlclly for light, heal or power· purpotts to
c:on!umers within this state ;

,

.

(II II Gas companies engaged In the buslntss of supplying
artltlclal or natural· gas for llghllflll, power .a.- ,hilling
purposes to consumers within this stale or engaged· In tht
business of supplying arllllclal or natural gill to gill
companies within this slate; or
(lvl Plpa-line companies engaged In the business of
lransporllng nalural or artltlclal gas~hrough pipes or tubing
either wholly or partly within thls' stale;
lCI The term "member" ' or "member of thi
The Public Utilities Comm ission of Ohio
corporation" shall mean any residential consumer who hao
contrlbuled a minimum of six {6) dollars to the Rtsldtntlal
( PUCOl claims It must "strike a balance"
Utility Consumer Action Group In lht ~orporatlon's
between the utility and the consumer . Today
preceedln?, fiscal year, except that for the first fiscal year,
when government bodies make important
"member' or "member of the corporation" shall mean any
residential consumer who has contrlbUfed 16 fo • the
decisions on the price and quality of utility
Residential Utility Action Group In that ilscal yeaTI
,
service, they are overwhelmed by the army of
IDJ The term " Member" or " Member of the Board oi
pro-utility forces. Residential utility consumers · Truslees" shall mean any residential consumer duly tlectid
need an advocat~: to match high-paid utility
to the Board of Trustees of lhe corporation ;
1
I El. The term "utility regulatory agency" or "agency"
experts, lobbyists and lawyers before the PUCO.
shall mean a state, or political subdivision lheroof, an !" ency
legislature, city councils, and courts.
or lnstrumentallly of the United Slates, a. public urv tor
ISSUE 5 WON'T ADD TO GOVERNMENT public utility commission or other similar body, wtil has
Iurlsdlctlon to affect or establish rates and charges tlor the
BUREAUCRACY
.
sale
or rental of utility services or to affect In a reescinably
.RUCAG won't be a government agency at
substantial way lhe quantity, quality or effect of such ~llllty
all, and it will be Independent. RUCAG will be ~ service ;
,
IFI
The
term
"
U.S.
Congresolonal
Dlstrlcl"
shall
mHn
funded by voluntary annual membership dues of
those
political
subdivisions
used
lor
the
election
of
memto.r1
$6. Consumers who choose membership will
ollhe House of.Represenlatlves of the United States ; and
control RUCAG through an elected board of
(Gi The term "campaign expenditure" shall I mtan
money.
goods. services or other benefit paid.' made, loaned,
directors.
given,
conferted
or promlsed;'in&lt;:ludlng but not llmlltd to tht
RUCAG'S VOLUNTARY FUNDING WILL use of office space,
telephones~ eqUipment, steff ser'viCet1
INSURE ITS ACCOUNTABILITY AND and provisions of meals, drinks, lodging, entertainment or
transportation. Thlo definition shall be constru.d as broadly .
INDEPENDENCE.
,
T.o aid collection of voluntary contributions. as possible lo Include anything for which a recipient Would or
could be expected to pay money, or the prom I'!' (whether br
a check-off provision will be included with
not legally enforceable) of any such thing, except 'that the
regular billing statements from utilities . term campa ign expenditure shall not Include the voluntary
Customers can conveniently contribute a small donation of a person's o.,.n lime to work on behllf of any
provided that no substantial pressure ~as been
amount and include It with their usual payment. candidate
brought lo bear on that person by any other person or
The utility will transfer contributions and a I1st · organization to coerce hlm·her Into volunteering.
Section 3. There Is hereby created a nof.for-proflt
of contributors
RUCAG. RUCAG will
membership
corporation to be known as the Resldentlai
reimburse the utility for administrative costs . Ullllty Consumer
Action Group, Inc. whose me.,ibers shall
RUCAG WILL PROTECT CONSUMERS cons!st olall resldenlial ullllty consumers who contributed a
WITHOUT INCREASING TAXES OR UTILITY minimum of six (6) dollars to the organlzallgn, during the
corporation's proceeding fiscal year, excepl that 1 for the first
BILLS.
fiscal year, lhe members shall consist of all lhqM! who hive
Membership Is totally voluntary. RlJCAG contri buted $6 to the organization during lhat fiscal year.
Section 4. Powers.
will be accountable to residential consumers who
IAI The Residential Ullllty Consumer Action Group shall
will on Iy contribute if R UCAG adequate! y havelhe
powers, responsibilities and dulles of,any other notrepresents their Interests. RUCAG Is the best lor·prollt corporallon chartered In the Stale of Ohio, Ia the
way to assure that the consumers voice Is heard extent that no confllcls exist between those powers,
and that we have fair utility rates for residential re•ponsl bllltles and dutlesand thlsartlcle. In the event of any
conflict, this Arllcle shall control.
·
consumers now and In the future .
IB) The Residential Utility Consumer Action Group ohall
Committee For the Amendment : Robert P. have all ' rights anci powers reasonably nectSNry to
Weaver, Robert L. Loltz, Edward A. Harter, effectively represent and protect the Interests of rtsldtnllal
consumers of . utlllly services. It has ·all the powers
Pauline L. Brokaw, Brady 'E. Bancroft .
specifically designated as well as those necessary and .
lncldentlal to providing such representation and protection.
FULL TEXT OF. THE PROPOSED AMEN.DMENT
, ICl The Residential Utility Consumer Action Groi'P may
'
such exempt stalus under the lnlernal Revtnue COde as
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF seek
the
members · decide could further the protection of
OHIO TH.AT ARTICLE XX OF THE 01110 CONSTITUTION consumer
Interests.
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS:
·
Dl
The
Residential Utility Consumer Acllon Group may
I
Section 1. II Is the policy and Intent of the people of the engage In any
legislative acllon necessary to carry out Its
SIale of Ohlb to:
purposes
Including;
but 110! limited to, Initiative and
(AI e,tabllsh with all necessary authority ·• not-for- refe rendum .
profit membership corporation to be called the Residential
I El The Resl denllal Ullllty Consumer AciiQn Group may
Utility Consumer Action Group, Inc. with the authority and
accept grants, contributions and approprlatloM 'and may
responsibility to ""ure adequale representation and
contract for services which It deems nectssary.
.
protection of residential utility consumers; and
Section 5. Hearings.
(81 Provide for ro• idenllal utility consumer membership
(AI Whenever lhll Residential Ullllly Con.Umtr Action
In the corporation and consumer responsibility tor the
Group believes that the result of any utility r.vulalory
actions of !he corporation .
proceeding may substantially afltct lha lnttrtsls ill
Section 2. As used In th is Arllcle, unless the context agency
residential utility consumers, It may Intervene as of right 11
otherwise requlrts:
a party or otherwise partlclpafe far the purpost of
• (AI The term "residential consumer" or "resldenllal
representing the Interests of residential utility contuinlf'lln ·
utility consumer" shall mean any natural person or persons such
proceeding. The Residential Utility Consumer Action
who live In 0111 clwtlllng unit, not aa transients, whO are
Group shall comply with ullllty regulator.y agency itatule!!
charged dlttclly or Indirectly for the use of gas, electricity' or
and rules of procedure ot general appllc:abllltv govwnlng (i)
telepllone lor ~ling, lighting or commun ication or
Intervention or participation In such procHdlng and 121 tht
otherwise for the benefit of those parsons while In that un it : conducl
of such proceedings.
'
181 The lerm ''regulated public ullllty," "utltlty",
IBJ In any utility proceeding or activity In which t..,
''public utility" dr "utility corporallon" means every

to

Centbuled

OD

Next Pllt

'

Ji .
I'

�d- fhe D• y :sen ne r. adlepo

eroy 0 Monday
Continued from Prererl ng Page
Po~

Se~

F ed Shu

e wo h

0 N C esen A e

C n nna

Wea e

065 B a don Rd

C e e and

PROPOSED AMENDMENT 10 lHE OHIO CONSTIMION
( I Sl

It! I 111\1

If

X\ Sc

d

0

Nil I JIM I NJ Ml Nf

II

un 11 0

Cons

u on

l SI\ IISIII N( IHO(JilllllS lOR I H IRTATIVF

1\ S!li\11 \IIHO\ \101 S \11 I) II \IIIO S OI NUCf iAH

II l i\ I S \i\ll HII IIIII I \I 111111 S I f(IO!t 10 IIIF.Ill
(( :'\ S Hll
\ I l \ \ 1\SI N \ Nil I I( t I ll UIH S I ott Cmll l N
SA II \ 01 II
1\ S \1110 I I l IN Jl HI Jl OR DAMAC I ll BY TllEIIl
Ol t.H 1110 :'-: I
I \ IS II :\1 I

7

I I 0 OHEI lON~ I I I IN \I

UIENmtENT

n

TI C J OOSf~

II 1 ro

le XIV

le

I

HE! \TI\ E IQ SDIII1111Nr. 1111 PH()( F.IJURFS WU INITIA1lVE

\ ND In I En I NOUM

orpo a e

and

a yea oiishps

II e p1opo

2

for

c~r

nr ,rant

fa

I

en I en!

ltl pro

lc

1

I cs and

lltut on n y he m t a!ed by a
tors

2 Th

of

3

~

leas

f

1e o nyrc
r d ne Is he put

4

on to anv
3

5

f r J
th 1 r 1 o
r en

EHect veDa e and Repeal

n der so for non ron 11 an ce !h 1rov sons of
" lm nl 1on 1 ct o
II~ At orne) General or an)

(P o os d by In

A na o

affi rn a( e

at c Pc

o e s

e css

e Ia v or amen lrnent
1 I c 01 o I llot
ll c s mm ry for
o for the IJ llot
n t o s for pre r I on
nd
1o ng the Ia v or
o on tl c uallo at a c ral

on

fo

assage

bed

SIIAI I THE PHOPOSE D A~IENDMENT BE ADOPTED'

9202

Bloc voting--real or imagined?
By HELEN THOMAS

ARGUMENT
FOR
THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Ba lot T tie (p epared by Secretary of State)
PROPOSED
CONSITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT RELATIVE TO
PROCEDURES
FOR
ESTABLISH lNG
LEGISLATIVE HEARINGS AND APPROVAL
OF SAFETY FEATURES OF NUCLEAR
PLANTS
AND
RELATED
POWER
FACILIT ES
PRIOR
TO
THEIR
CONSTRUCTION OR EXPANS ON AND
PROCEDURES FOR COMPENSATION OF
PERSONS WHO ARE
INJURED OR
DAMAGED BY THEIR OPERATION OR
EXISTENCE
ISSUE 6 IS DESIGNED TO ASSURE THAT
FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS IN
OHIO ARE A SAFE
AND
SOUND
INVESTMENT OF RATEPAYERS MONEY
Each new nuc ear power pant env sons a b Ilion
dollar nvestment by I he ul I es of Cll o The
safety rei ab I ty and econom cs of the energy
sources on wh ch our slate economy runs are too
mportant to delegate solely to federal
author I es and ut I ty off c als and are of r ght a
matte of State nterest
ISSUE
6 WILL HELP END THE
CONFUSION ABOUT NUCLEAR POWER
SAFETY AND ECONOMICS
The leg slature by s mple majority vote w II
approve construct on of future nuclear power
plants after public hear ngs The hear ngs
prov dec I zen npul before accountab e elected
off c(a s Unreso ved problems of nuclear fuel
supply safety systems radioactive waste
management secur ty and econom cs w II
rece ve the scrut ny of experts test lying before
the state leg stature The leg stature must f nd
that safety systems are effective and methods
for hand! ng and d sposlng of radloact ve wastes
are safe
Issue 6 w II assure fhat nuclear power
fac I t es have nsurance or ndemnlflcat on- to
fully compensate viet ms of nuclear ace dents
AI ndustr es n Cll o are I able for hazards to the
pub! c utlllt es should be no different
lSSUE 6 WILL PROTECT THE PEOPLE
AND BUSINESSES OF OHIO By nsurlng that
demonstrated techn ques exlsl for the safe
management of nuclear power and that the
publ c rem a nsf nanclally protected against any
nuc ear power r sks Issue 6 entrusts our elected
representat ves to make sure that safety and
flnanc al accountab lily are lhtegral components
of our state energy po Icy
Comm ttee For lhe Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE
OH
BE
TO

IT RESOLVED BY Hili PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
0 THAT ARTICLE XV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
AMENDED BY THE A;DDITION OF A NEW SECTION
READ
Sect

oo
The

poop e o the S a e of Oh o des e by h s
amend men to exe se he u power vnted n them and n
th s state by the Canst tut on and law• of the un ted States n
the artaa of land use plann ng pub lc hea th safety and
we fa e at ng of nuc ear I 11 on power pants and other
nuc tilt' facl It ea and he 09 ula'l on of 1 I act v ties
nvo v ng ilnd e a ng to nuc ear f sslon power p anfs and

UPl While Houe Reporter

e the r gl t to ml at ve and

6

WASHINGTON (UP!

re ere
That o Ia m
b tl e G n
at c nd
arc repealed

(P oposed by In
A majonty affi n a

---=

5ary for passage

YES

=1--il--1

SHALL 1 liE I I OPOSEO AMENDMENT llE ADOPTED'

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED

ISSUE 7 WILL SIMPLIFY INITIATIVE
AND REFERENDUM BASED ON THE
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTIONAL REVISION COMMISSION
In ts 1975 report the prest g ous b part san
comm ss on
v ew ng the en! re body ol
canst tullonal language on the n t a ve and
referendum cone uded that the prov sons we e
confusing and n need of rev s on
INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM ARE
BASIC
TOOLS OF
CITIZEN
SELF
GOVERNMENT
They perm I c llzens to propose aws and
conslltullona
amendments
for
voter
cons deration or o overr de II conce ved aws
enacted by the leg slalure The 912 Cll o
Constllut on establ shed
n I at ve and
sale y
referendum as crucla y Important
valves
to assure state government s
~esponslve to the people Issue 7 would enable
c llzens to adopt u I ty reform measu es
promo! ng fair ales and sound ut I tv po c es
even when the eglslature fa Is to act
ISSUE 7 BRINGS OHIO INTO LINE WITH
'I'HE OTHER 22 STATES WITH INITIATIVE
LAWS
Cllio now has very str ngent procedura
requ rements The s gnature tota s requ red by
Issue 7 are h gh enough to keep fr volous
measures off the ba lol The Com miss on found
these processes have been used w th reslra nt
by Oh oans In the past and there seemed no
reason they should not cont nue to be ava lab e n
the future
ISSUE 7 IMPROVES THE LEGISLATIVE
INITIATIVE BY COMBINING THE BEST
FEATURES OF BOTH THE INDIRECT AND
DIRECT INITIATIVE PROCESSES
Petitioners collect 150 000 slgnalures then
the legislature may enact and perhaps mprove
upon the n tlated law If the leg s ature fa s to
act or enacts an unacceptable vers on
petitioners may ask thatthe or g nal proposal be
put directly on the ballot
Initiative and referendum are an establ shed
check and balance
bu II nto our Cll o
Constitution They are the purest form of
cjemocracy provld ng an essen! al comp ement

Wheat growers want
to cut '77 acreage

on)

c oe sn

-----

to the leg slat ve process and actually mprov ng
the leg s ature s performance and effect veness
These processes shou d be read ly ava able to
the c I zens
Comm ttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weave Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Pau ne L Brokaw Brady E Ban roft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE T RESOLVED BY THE
OHIO THAT ARTICLE II
SECTION a lb c d t If
NEW ART CLE I SECTION
THE OH 0 CONST TUTION

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
EXISTING SECTION
and
AND g BE REPEALED AND
AND NEW ARTICLE XIV OF
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS

ART CLE I

PreSident Ford and Junmy
Carter are both m hot pursmt
of ethn c and b oc voters But

On the farm front

h ch o II not be passed
s
n Ia I ons on tl e 1o ers of
rc ate 0 Ia al on of Cl:ll prOf erty

1J

BSc

WASHINGTON WINDOW

5 'l'ha no l
1 ro pose I b n t e I I ha&gt;e more tha one s b)ect
and no Ia appro d b the olcr. n a be ctoed by the Governor
he heath

04

WASHINGTON UP!
The National A880Ciation of
Wheat Growers IS renewmg
Ill appeal to farmers to
CCIISider cuttq acreage for
1977 and a spokesman says
he s
hopeful
that
producers will a least avrud
any mcrease and perhaps
make a relatively small ne
cut
A reduction n wheat
planting on the heels of this
year s record harvest would
be a most benefiC181 pr1ce
factor the allSOCUltion said
111 a newsletter to members
this week
Don't leave t up to your
neighbor Consider ser ously
an acreage reduction on your
own !ann the assoclat n
added
The push for an acreage
cut renewq appeals ISSUed
during the swnmer comes on
the heels of government
estimates indicating the 1976
wheat erop will reach a
record 1.239 billion bushels on
the baSIS of sept 1 conditions
Government analysts say
the crop will outrun potential
dotnest c and export demand
during the current 1976-77
market ng season The
e1cess supply Will be
stockpiled 111 a carryover
reserve wh ch stood at 665
million bushels when the
&amp;ealiOII began .June 1 and s
expected to reach about 946
million bushels when the year
ends next May 31
Jerry Rees execut ve v1ce
preSident of the NAWG said
111 an mterview here that any
planting cutbacks for 1977
probably will come mainly m
regl111s where farmers can
eas ly shift to alternate crops
lijle soybeans corn and
cotton
Prellmlnary repor from
areas where fanners can
choose between several crops
indicate that some SWIIchlng
will lake place because profit
prospects at the moment
are better lor corn soybeans
and colton than for wheat the
grower spokesman S81d
Rees said
en at ve
informal surveys by wheat
leaders indicate so far at

eas
that fanners 111
trad t10nal Great Plains
dryland wheat areas will no
cu plant ngs and may
actually lllCrease acreage for
1977 harvest
In parts of major whea
states like Kansas Oklahoma
and Texas Reese explamed
many
farmers
have
summer faUow land which
was not used thiS season and
IS due for normal otat on into
wheat for 1977 ThiS acreage
must be used to preven
possible damage from wmd
eros10n he sa1d
Also the off c a! no ed
fanners m the maJor whea
states haye fewer opportun ty
to sWitch o alternate crops
han producers n other
areas Rees sa d ha m he
NAWG survey of major
states
nd ca ons of
acreage-cutback plans came
only from growers 111 South
Dakota and New Mex co
The NA WG wh ch has been
pres:nng for an mcrease m
government supports lor
wheat because market p ces
have been runrung nearly $1 a
bushel below last year s
level has not ecomrnended
any spec f c level for a
voluntary acreage cu back
Rees sad
The g oup had urged
Agrtculture Secretary Ear
L Butz to requll'e an acreage
cutback for fanners who
wanted to qualify for 977
pr ce supports and disaster
payments That proposal
wh ch Butz rejected
probab y would
have
produced a net redac ton of
ahou 10 o 15 per cen n
wheat acreage
Rees
estunated
The grower spokesman
srud he believed that wheat
prod! ct on 111 1977 probably
could safely be cut to I 7
b Ilion to I 8 b Ilion bushels
abou 300 million to 400
million bushels below th s
year s crop A crop of that
size would fall short of
demand but the gap could be
covered eaSily from the b1g
carryover reserve which wtll
be on hand next sununer
Rees sa d

do they ex s

The quest1on s do
Ca hoi cs Jews I allans
Poles Germans Greeks
Czechs etc vote according
o the r ethn c t es or
relig ous bel els
From the looks of the
P es dent s appo ntment
schedule he m.m think so
And
from
Carte s
Democratic president al
campa gn sweep he also
appears to be considering the
poss bility of bloc voting
Then there are he blacks a
m no y group ha has
rad ona l y vo ed
Democ at c par cular y
s nee the days of Franklin D
Rooseve And then there IS
the so-called women s
vo e often VJewed as a
mmo ty power al hough n
eality lema es are in the
llla]OC ty

To take t one step further
the e a !ann vo e a labor
vote a buSiness vote
Clearly both candidate s
do cons der lha there are
some s rong ssues w lh
part cular groups Ca ter
sol c ed a meeting With the
Roman Cathol c b shops and
the1r discuss on on abort on
turned mto a cool ontat on
w th he b shops express ng
thell' disappo ntment
Then Ford sought a
mee ng With the b shops and
the Cathol c prelates sa d
hey we e encouraged
Later the b shops publicly
asse ed they were no
endorSing any cand date m
the p es den al election
Bo h Carter and Ford spoke
llefo e an !tal an Amer can
B cen enn al d nner last
week Fo d ater wen to the
Shrme of the Immaculate
Concep on o address a
H span c gathermg
He also mv ted a group of
in! uen al Jew sh leaders to
a Wh te House reception for a
ques on-and-answer ses:non
and pledged U S support of
Is ael In add lion both F...d
and Carter addressed the
B na Br th Convention m
Washmgton recently
Ne ertheless Fords cam
pa gn strategists say they are
no playmg politics tha way
tha the y are making an
across-the boa d
ap~l
fo r he r cand date In
add on Elly Pete son the
op woman of lhe Ford
campa gn IS stagmg a bl z
Peop e for Focd campmgn
which her colleagues claim
lwnps all the spec al m erest
groups loge her
Obv ous y there are ISSaes
tha affec certa n groups
IS

more than others
Pres den R chard M
NIXon m 1972 appeared to
st ess the ethruc t es In hiS
anti-buSIIlg speeches Several
rad o addresses from the
Wh te House n that
campa gn were auned at
ethnic groups
Both Carter and Ford have
been stressing the glories of
rev vlng ne ghborhood com
munl es recently Ford
praised the restocatlon of
Utile Italy in New York
The
Democratic
preSident al n&lt;mlnee faltered
a b t but recouped fast durmg
the prunary campa1g11 when
he spoke of ethnic punty
and black lnlriiSion 111 an
nterv ew

Reading
schedule
ATHENS
Appalach an
Reading Council has an
nounced ts schedu e for the
1976 77 year The f rst
meetmg will be held on
Wednesday Sept 29 at 7 30
p m at the Electnc Com
pany 00 South May St
Athens Ms Sharon Arthur
will conduct the worbhop
Teacher Made D agnost c
Tests Part c1pant.s should
bnng pencils paper and one
or more reading or content
area textbooks
These
matenals will be used to
construct MAZE CLOZE
and informs reading tests
Ms Arthur s former
pres dent of Appalach an
Read ng Council and a
member of the Oh o
Un vers ty faculty Athens
campus
Other ARC workshops will
be he d as follows Thursday
Nov 18 7 30 pm
Com
prehens on Teaching and
Test ng
Dr
Donald
Cleland and Saturday Feb
29 1977 9 30 a m Make It
Take It Readtng Games
Pam Re tz The second annua Reading Conference at
Ohio UruverSIIY will again be
held m April
All persons interested In
reading and the teaching of
reading are invited to join
Appalach an Read ing
Counc ARC IS affiliated
w th the Oh o Readmg
Assoc at on and the In
ternat ona Reading
Association Yearly dues of $3
may be sent to ARC Box
2:i4A Rt 1 Athens Ohio
45701 before Oct 1

�d- fhe D• y :sen ne r. adlepo

eroy 0 Monday
Continued from Prererl ng Page
Po~

Se~

F ed Shu

e wo h

0 N C esen A e

C n nna

Wea e

065 B a don Rd

C e e and

PROPOSED AMENDMENT 10 lHE OHIO CONSTIMION
( I Sl

It! I 111\1

If

X\ Sc

d

0

Nil I JIM I NJ Ml Nf

II

un 11 0

Cons

u on

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7

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and

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II e p1opo

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for

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lltut on n y he m t a!ed by a
tors

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~

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3

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f r J
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EHect veDa e and Repeal

n der so for non ron 11 an ce !h 1rov sons of
" lm nl 1on 1 ct o
II~ At orne) General or an)

(P o os d by In

A na o

affi rn a( e

at c Pc

o e s

e css

e Ia v or amen lrnent
1 I c 01 o I llot
ll c s mm ry for
o for the IJ llot
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o on tl c uallo at a c ral

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bed

SIIAI I THE PHOPOSE D A~IENDMENT BE ADOPTED'

9202

Bloc voting--real or imagined?
By HELEN THOMAS

ARGUMENT
FOR
THE
PROPOSED
AMENDMENT
Ba lot T tie (p epared by Secretary of State)
PROPOSED
CONSITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT RELATIVE TO
PROCEDURES
FOR
ESTABLISH lNG
LEGISLATIVE HEARINGS AND APPROVAL
OF SAFETY FEATURES OF NUCLEAR
PLANTS
AND
RELATED
POWER
FACILIT ES
PRIOR
TO
THEIR
CONSTRUCTION OR EXPANS ON AND
PROCEDURES FOR COMPENSATION OF
PERSONS WHO ARE
INJURED OR
DAMAGED BY THEIR OPERATION OR
EXISTENCE
ISSUE 6 IS DESIGNED TO ASSURE THAT
FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS IN
OHIO ARE A SAFE
AND
SOUND
INVESTMENT OF RATEPAYERS MONEY
Each new nuc ear power pant env sons a b Ilion
dollar nvestment by I he ul I es of Cll o The
safety rei ab I ty and econom cs of the energy
sources on wh ch our slate economy runs are too
mportant to delegate solely to federal
author I es and ut I ty off c als and are of r ght a
matte of State nterest
ISSUE
6 WILL HELP END THE
CONFUSION ABOUT NUCLEAR POWER
SAFETY AND ECONOMICS
The leg slature by s mple majority vote w II
approve construct on of future nuclear power
plants after public hear ngs The hear ngs
prov dec I zen npul before accountab e elected
off c(a s Unreso ved problems of nuclear fuel
supply safety systems radioactive waste
management secur ty and econom cs w II
rece ve the scrut ny of experts test lying before
the state leg stature The leg stature must f nd
that safety systems are effective and methods
for hand! ng and d sposlng of radloact ve wastes
are safe
Issue 6 w II assure fhat nuclear power
fac I t es have nsurance or ndemnlflcat on- to
fully compensate viet ms of nuclear ace dents
AI ndustr es n Cll o are I able for hazards to the
pub! c utlllt es should be no different
lSSUE 6 WILL PROTECT THE PEOPLE
AND BUSINESSES OF OHIO By nsurlng that
demonstrated techn ques exlsl for the safe
management of nuclear power and that the
publ c rem a nsf nanclally protected against any
nuc ear power r sks Issue 6 entrusts our elected
representat ves to make sure that safety and
flnanc al accountab lily are lhtegral components
of our state energy po Icy
Comm ttee For lhe Amendment Robert P
Weaver Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Pauline L Brokaw Brady E Bancroft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE
OH
BE
TO

IT RESOLVED BY Hili PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
0 THAT ARTICLE XV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
AMENDED BY THE A;DDITION OF A NEW SECTION
READ
Sect

oo
The

poop e o the S a e of Oh o des e by h s
amend men to exe se he u power vnted n them and n
th s state by the Canst tut on and law• of the un ted States n
the artaa of land use plann ng pub lc hea th safety and
we fa e at ng of nuc ear I 11 on power pants and other
nuc tilt' facl It ea and he 09 ula'l on of 1 I act v ties
nvo v ng ilnd e a ng to nuc ear f sslon power p anfs and

UPl While Houe Reporter

e the r gl t to ml at ve and

6

WASHINGTON (UP!

re ere
That o Ia m
b tl e G n
at c nd
arc repealed

(P oposed by In
A majonty affi n a

---=

5ary for passage

YES

=1--il--1

SHALL 1 liE I I OPOSEO AMENDMENT llE ADOPTED'

NO

ARGUMENT
AMENDMENT

FOR

THE

PROPOSED

ISSUE 7 WILL SIMPLIFY INITIATIVE
AND REFERENDUM BASED ON THE
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE OHIO
CONSTITUTIONAL REVISION COMMISSION
In ts 1975 report the prest g ous b part san
comm ss on
v ew ng the en! re body ol
canst tullonal language on the n t a ve and
referendum cone uded that the prov sons we e
confusing and n need of rev s on
INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM ARE
BASIC
TOOLS OF
CITIZEN
SELF
GOVERNMENT
They perm I c llzens to propose aws and
conslltullona
amendments
for
voter
cons deration or o overr de II conce ved aws
enacted by the leg slalure The 912 Cll o
Constllut on establ shed
n I at ve and
sale y
referendum as crucla y Important
valves
to assure state government s
~esponslve to the people Issue 7 would enable
c llzens to adopt u I ty reform measu es
promo! ng fair ales and sound ut I tv po c es
even when the eglslature fa Is to act
ISSUE 7 BRINGS OHIO INTO LINE WITH
'I'HE OTHER 22 STATES WITH INITIATIVE
LAWS
Cllio now has very str ngent procedura
requ rements The s gnature tota s requ red by
Issue 7 are h gh enough to keep fr volous
measures off the ba lol The Com miss on found
these processes have been used w th reslra nt
by Oh oans In the past and there seemed no
reason they should not cont nue to be ava lab e n
the future
ISSUE 7 IMPROVES THE LEGISLATIVE
INITIATIVE BY COMBINING THE BEST
FEATURES OF BOTH THE INDIRECT AND
DIRECT INITIATIVE PROCESSES
Petitioners collect 150 000 slgnalures then
the legislature may enact and perhaps mprove
upon the n tlated law If the leg s ature fa s to
act or enacts an unacceptable vers on
petitioners may ask thatthe or g nal proposal be
put directly on the ballot
Initiative and referendum are an establ shed
check and balance
bu II nto our Cll o
Constitution They are the purest form of
cjemocracy provld ng an essen! al comp ement

Wheat growers want
to cut '77 acreage

on)

c oe sn

-----

to the leg slat ve process and actually mprov ng
the leg s ature s performance and effect veness
These processes shou d be read ly ava able to
the c I zens
Comm ttee For the Amendment Robert P
Weave Robert L Lo tz Edward A Harter
Pau ne L Brokaw Brady E Ban roft
FULL TEXT OF THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE T RESOLVED BY THE
OHIO THAT ARTICLE II
SECTION a lb c d t If
NEW ART CLE I SECTION
THE OH 0 CONST TUTION

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
EXISTING SECTION
and
AND g BE REPEALED AND
AND NEW ARTICLE XIV OF
BE ENACTED AS FOLLOWS

ART CLE I

PreSident Ford and Junmy
Carter are both m hot pursmt
of ethn c and b oc voters But

On the farm front

h ch o II not be passed
s
n Ia I ons on tl e 1o ers of
rc ate 0 Ia al on of Cl:ll prOf erty

1J

BSc

WASHINGTON WINDOW

5 'l'ha no l
1 ro pose I b n t e I I ha&gt;e more tha one s b)ect
and no Ia appro d b the olcr. n a be ctoed by the Governor
he heath

04

WASHINGTON UP!
The National A880Ciation of
Wheat Growers IS renewmg
Ill appeal to farmers to
CCIISider cuttq acreage for
1977 and a spokesman says
he s
hopeful
that
producers will a least avrud
any mcrease and perhaps
make a relatively small ne
cut
A reduction n wheat
planting on the heels of this
year s record harvest would
be a most benefiC181 pr1ce
factor the allSOCUltion said
111 a newsletter to members
this week
Don't leave t up to your
neighbor Consider ser ously
an acreage reduction on your
own !ann the assoclat n
added
The push for an acreage
cut renewq appeals ISSUed
during the swnmer comes on
the heels of government
estimates indicating the 1976
wheat erop will reach a
record 1.239 billion bushels on
the baSIS of sept 1 conditions
Government analysts say
the crop will outrun potential
dotnest c and export demand
during the current 1976-77
market ng season The
e1cess supply Will be
stockpiled 111 a carryover
reserve wh ch stood at 665
million bushels when the
&amp;ealiOII began .June 1 and s
expected to reach about 946
million bushels when the year
ends next May 31
Jerry Rees execut ve v1ce
preSident of the NAWG said
111 an mterview here that any
planting cutbacks for 1977
probably will come mainly m
regl111s where farmers can
eas ly shift to alternate crops
lijle soybeans corn and
cotton
Prellmlnary repor from
areas where fanners can
choose between several crops
indicate that some SWIIchlng
will lake place because profit
prospects at the moment
are better lor corn soybeans
and colton than for wheat the
grower spokesman S81d
Rees said
en at ve
informal surveys by wheat
leaders indicate so far at

eas
that fanners 111
trad t10nal Great Plains
dryland wheat areas will no
cu plant ngs and may
actually lllCrease acreage for
1977 harvest
In parts of major whea
states like Kansas Oklahoma
and Texas Reese explamed
many
farmers
have
summer faUow land which
was not used thiS season and
IS due for normal otat on into
wheat for 1977 ThiS acreage
must be used to preven
possible damage from wmd
eros10n he sa1d
Also the off c a! no ed
fanners m the maJor whea
states haye fewer opportun ty
to sWitch o alternate crops
han producers n other
areas Rees sa d ha m he
NAWG survey of major
states
nd ca ons of
acreage-cutback plans came
only from growers 111 South
Dakota and New Mex co
The NA WG wh ch has been
pres:nng for an mcrease m
government supports lor
wheat because market p ces
have been runrung nearly $1 a
bushel below last year s
level has not ecomrnended
any spec f c level for a
voluntary acreage cu back
Rees sad
The g oup had urged
Agrtculture Secretary Ear
L Butz to requll'e an acreage
cutback for fanners who
wanted to qualify for 977
pr ce supports and disaster
payments That proposal
wh ch Butz rejected
probab y would
have
produced a net redac ton of
ahou 10 o 15 per cen n
wheat acreage
Rees
estunated
The grower spokesman
srud he believed that wheat
prod! ct on 111 1977 probably
could safely be cut to I 7
b Ilion to I 8 b Ilion bushels
abou 300 million to 400
million bushels below th s
year s crop A crop of that
size would fall short of
demand but the gap could be
covered eaSily from the b1g
carryover reserve which wtll
be on hand next sununer
Rees sa d

do they ex s

The quest1on s do
Ca hoi cs Jews I allans
Poles Germans Greeks
Czechs etc vote according
o the r ethn c t es or
relig ous bel els
From the looks of the
P es dent s appo ntment
schedule he m.m think so
And
from
Carte s
Democratic president al
campa gn sweep he also
appears to be considering the
poss bility of bloc voting
Then there are he blacks a
m no y group ha has
rad ona l y vo ed
Democ at c par cular y
s nee the days of Franklin D
Rooseve And then there IS
the so-called women s
vo e often VJewed as a
mmo ty power al hough n
eality lema es are in the
llla]OC ty

To take t one step further
the e a !ann vo e a labor
vote a buSiness vote
Clearly both candidate s
do cons der lha there are
some s rong ssues w lh
part cular groups Ca ter
sol c ed a meeting With the
Roman Cathol c b shops and
the1r discuss on on abort on
turned mto a cool ontat on
w th he b shops express ng
thell' disappo ntment
Then Ford sought a
mee ng With the b shops and
the Cathol c prelates sa d
hey we e encouraged
Later the b shops publicly
asse ed they were no
endorSing any cand date m
the p es den al election
Bo h Carter and Ford spoke
llefo e an !tal an Amer can
B cen enn al d nner last
week Fo d ater wen to the
Shrme of the Immaculate
Concep on o address a
H span c gathermg
He also mv ted a group of
in! uen al Jew sh leaders to
a Wh te House reception for a
ques on-and-answer ses:non
and pledged U S support of
Is ael In add lion both F...d
and Carter addressed the
B na Br th Convention m
Washmgton recently
Ne ertheless Fords cam
pa gn strategists say they are
no playmg politics tha way
tha the y are making an
across-the boa d
ap~l
fo r he r cand date In
add on Elly Pete son the
op woman of lhe Ford
campa gn IS stagmg a bl z
Peop e for Focd campmgn
which her colleagues claim
lwnps all the spec al m erest
groups loge her
Obv ous y there are ISSaes
tha affec certa n groups
IS

more than others
Pres den R chard M
NIXon m 1972 appeared to
st ess the ethruc t es In hiS
anti-buSIIlg speeches Several
rad o addresses from the
Wh te House n that
campa gn were auned at
ethnic groups
Both Carter and Ford have
been stressing the glories of
rev vlng ne ghborhood com
munl es recently Ford
praised the restocatlon of
Utile Italy in New York
The
Democratic
preSident al n&lt;mlnee faltered
a b t but recouped fast durmg
the prunary campa1g11 when
he spoke of ethnic punty
and black lnlriiSion 111 an
nterv ew

Reading
schedule
ATHENS
Appalach an
Reading Council has an
nounced ts schedu e for the
1976 77 year The f rst
meetmg will be held on
Wednesday Sept 29 at 7 30
p m at the Electnc Com
pany 00 South May St
Athens Ms Sharon Arthur
will conduct the worbhop
Teacher Made D agnost c
Tests Part c1pant.s should
bnng pencils paper and one
or more reading or content
area textbooks
These
matenals will be used to
construct MAZE CLOZE
and informs reading tests
Ms Arthur s former
pres dent of Appalach an
Read ng Council and a
member of the Oh o
Un vers ty faculty Athens
campus
Other ARC workshops will
be he d as follows Thursday
Nov 18 7 30 pm
Com
prehens on Teaching and
Test ng
Dr
Donald
Cleland and Saturday Feb
29 1977 9 30 a m Make It
Take It Readtng Games
Pam Re tz The second annua Reading Conference at
Ohio UruverSIIY will again be
held m April
All persons interested In
reading and the teaching of
reading are invited to join
Appalach an Read ing
Counc ARC IS affiliated
w th the Oh o Readmg
Assoc at on and the In
ternat ona Reading
Association Yearly dues of $3
may be sent to ARC Box
2:i4A Rt 1 Athens Ohio
45701 before Oct 1

�.,
10- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poomeroy, 0., Moodily, Sept. '/J, 19'16

~-

HUNT'S Pet Shop is, now reopen · ,

ing . loll of "ew merchond11e
at low price1 , Reopening

Standings

~•a .

Pts .

Name

S P .M .
Oa~
Before
Publication .
Cancell at ions.
correc .
nons accepted f irst daY of
publicati on .

Team One
Strit&lt;.ers
H&amp;R Fi restone

The Publisher

H igh individual game - Ed
voss 218 ; Henry Clatworthy
203 ; Ed Voss 199.
Hig h series Henry
Clatworthy SBO;E d Voss 566;

John Tyree 5AS .
H igh game - Eagles B'W .
H igh series _.. Eagles 24 19.

Early Wed. M ixed
Sept . I S, 1976
Sta nd lnvs

Tilt Racine Baptist Churcll ·
bus will be runn ing
Sundays on a route from

Racine through Apple
Grove. leaving Racine at

a.m. and · returning
passengers at noon . If rou
are interested in our bus

Pts .

Tenth Framers

20
20.
20
16
u

6

Nel son Drug Co .
High Individ ua l

RATES

5 cen ts per- word one
insertion .
,
Minimum Charge $1 .00 .
14 cen ts per word three
consecutive Insert ions .
26 cents per wotd sl~~;
consecuflowe Insert ions .
25 P er Cent Discount on
paid ads 'lnd ads pa id
w ithin 10 days ,

~ame

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed

Sept. 12.1976
Standings

Pts.
Team
22
Tom's ca rry Ou t
18
Town Kiln
10
Jack 's Dair"V Bar
M.,rk F lye
8
Cline·~ ConstrUct ion c;o.
8
6
Pomeroy Flower Shop
High .In d ividual game
Jerry Cline 218; Helen Phelps
186; Ed Voss UO; Lena
Howard 171 ; A. L. Phelps, Jr

50

for

BLINO AOS

Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement.

Noo.n saturda v,
Ph one today 992. 2T56.

- AdVertisement

NOTiCES
ATTN .o ll
ALL HOUSEWIVES

FOR BIDS-

Federal Land and Water
Conservation
Fund
Act

All Ya rd Sales. Rummage ,
Porch and Sesemtnt Por ch
and Basement Salt! s, et c.

Pro ject No . 39.00m and HUO

Com munlty
Otvelopment
Stock Grant Projec t No . B·15·

must be paid In e~vrmce .
Get yovr:s in early by
stopping by our office at
The Da lly Sentlntl , 111
Courl St. or w riting Box
729, Pomeroy , Oh io .fS769
with your remittance .

Dt•09 ·0022.

Mun ici pal Park Tenn is
Courts, - VIllage of Syracuse,

Oh iO.

Bids will be recelyed unti l
12 :00 Noon D. S. T . on Friday;
October nth. 1976. for the
co nstruciiQn of Mun ici pa l ,
Tenn is Courts far the Village
of Syracuse . Ohio , e t . which
t ime t he bids S:hall be opened
by the Clerk ot the V illage lind
publicly read by her at the

l----,.--'---- - -..J

1970 Chevelle Malibu JO,f , V-8.
au to,, tilt steering whe-41, light
green , vinyl tOp , new b rakes. , 2
new tires , gOod condition ,. high

~i:eage , $650:!_h~~~~ ·
WRECKED 1970 V.W. fqr sole.
motor and trans mission, good
condition for SI2S, 6 tires ond
ri ms, PAone Donald

Pooler ,

985·3897 .
197.. Suboru . ,. d oor. 17.000 miles ,
1 owner . Phone992·.:3890
:'?.:-::-

--

---

iisi.iiiiiiiiiiiii

Meigs
Property
Transfers
w.

.

to lhl• bid . In·
1,. Aley, Parce)s, Lebanon. oppllcible
vttatlon.
.

Jobn E. Halliday, Adm.,

J - Horton, dec. to Cbarlee

· The owner reserves the
right to waive lnforma!Jt les or
to reject any and all bids .
S uccessful bidder must
comply wlfh the Ohio Work men's Compensation Law and
also comply with all . ottler
state, federal and local ta )(es
and laws .
Successful biGder must

A. Latbey, Donna Joan ·
Lathey, parcela, Salem.
. • Ava J. Greenlll!l to Leslie
R. Facemyer, Karen L.
Fac:emyer, Int. In parcela,
Columbia, Scipio.
f~~c:::k~~r ~~~-e~~~~r~o ~~,~~
Ava J. Green!-, exec., contrac t and the prolect must
be fully completed .within 120
carl L. Greenlees, dec. to working
da vs thereafter,
Leslie R. Facemyer, Karen excepting only such delays as
L. Fa~er, lot. In parceiB, mav be occasioned by strikes,
unseasonable weather or acts
Columbia, Scipio.
of God .
June Wickersham, Comm.,
VILLAGE OF
Pearl Koehler, dec. to Randy
SYRACUSE , OHIO
s. Koebler, parceiB, Orqe.
By Herman London.
MAYOR
G-ordon Proffitt, Odeaia
Proffitt, Elmer L. Proffitt, (9 ). 27, (10) 4, II , 18, •tc
aka E. L. Proffitt, to
Columbua and Southern Oblo
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Electric Co., deed of
cue No. 21189
Est1te of Albert E . Rinehart,
correction, Lebanoa.

Volunteers

!Jre sought

i.

I EASt MEIGS

An OJ'o
l~tallon and tralnln•
njeetlng for .volunteer
r'•dl,ng tutors . will be
lwld at Eutern High
tiool, Route I, Reedavllle,
. Wednesday, Sept. 211, at
:30 p.m. 'lbe meettnc Ia open
au those Interested In
aulstlng elementary
-

Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that

Chloe s. R lnehart of Route 1,
Long Bottom , Ohio, has been
dUly appo inted Executrix of
the Estate of Albert E .
Rlnehert ,~ deceased , late of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to
file their claims with said
fiduciarY within three mOnths .
Dated this 22nd day of
September 1976.
Mannlnp 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Dlv lslori

(9)

27 (10 ) •·

The Alm••e

11 ,

992-327
:;_3:::·- - - - - - - - 2 Bedroom· frailer,

WE "EED
EAR CORN.

real ·nice,

odulhi only. Phone 992·3324,

fRAILER space for rent , one 3
mile• from Pomeroy, one in
OeJCier, S miles from No. 2
mine. Phone 992-5858.
.~.~~~~~~~-----

CAll US TODAY.

,

M2-2181•

2 Bedroom mobile home, Dexter.
Phone 992·5858.

2 Bedroom mobile home in Racine
oreo . Pt-.one 992·58S8.

7·2·3122.
6 Rooms ond ba th a nd po'f
utilities

in Middleport o11er
Spencer'$ Market . No more
'than 2 chiklren. Phone J.,f2 ·

25.&lt;•.

Oownsoovh

• &amp; s.ottlts

fer .

Jtc

$$CASH$$ for junked outo!t
Phone 7,.2·206l. Frye's Truck &amp;
Auto Parts , Rutland:

.Earn extr11 spending
money and valuable
prizes. Call (614) 9922156,

'"'

IUDII.
ln11111Mt

.....

,..Uttf 11 ..-::IIW'f

7•2·2J'!6 · 1975 MONTE CARLO., outomatk,

•AQH

M»RK
Fram 6"to 1a" wide and up
to 5 If. dotp wllll or without
pipe, lurnishtd. Under rood

Bill PUWNS

•••·2114

Pft6ne
h .m . t.Sp ,m,
Evtninti"'2 -7UO

1%8 JEEP Wagoneer, 6 cyl .. ~
wheel dri'lle. lock out hubs .
$195. Ha ro ld Brewer, long Bot·

Pomeroy, Ohio
"2-2471
9-12·1 mo. pd .

9,1,·1mo.

---~-....,..--

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Oa isel . 13 speed transminion ,
twin screw. Coll9o19 -2S..9.
-~--

1971 Ford Maverick , oii' , R.S., red
with block vinyl top. PhQne
9~9 . 280 1 , sharp .

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

------

COAl , limestone , and calcium
cfllo ride and calcium brine for
dust con trol ot~d special m i~eing
sol! for forme'rs. Moin Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992·

Stor Hgts. · Buv 1 acre
1971 HONDA Cl-•50. 12,000 MORNING
tract of land . Will arrange fo r
miles , sissv bar, cra!.h bars.
fir:'londng and Small doWn pay·
pull bock handle .bori , new ore
ment to build a home al your
and !!oeols. Scrambler side
choice . lee Cons tr uction ,
_p;pes. $650. Coll9•9~ .
Phone 992-3o1S.. or j6lol) ,.-46·
IN DASH 23 channel CB. om·fm9568 .
mpx radio , 3 track stereo. Call
992.3965 .
]UPPERS Ploins, new J bedroom
~u iJ t -in kitchens, tileQ
-KENNE BEC potatoes , 50 lb . $3.50
batt'ls, car~ted with olloched
or 100 lb . $6,00 , Bring conga rag e, 1 acre lot. $22 .900.
toiners . Phone 667-3737 or ' Phone(6 1.,. ) 667-63o.t.

=-::==-.:-=-,---..,.-,:-:--

- ·-- - -

·PIGS for sole . Phone 9o19-2857.

lroten. P~one 985-o1198.
~-

-

TWO mo•orboofs , one row boot
for sole or trade for gu ns or
equolvo!ue. Co ll 992-57.,fl .
GREEN beons , pick your own , Br·
ing conta iners. Andrew Gross.
letart Foils, 247-2852.
1973 Hondo 350, .,f cylioder . 2900 ,
miles . e.11tros. $795. Phone

9•9·21 Bl or 949·2631.
CHURCH bus. 195-t Che..,rolet .
$500. Con be seen at the Laurel
Clitf Free Methodist Church otf
the Rt . 7 by-poss, or phone

992·2212.
COllEOOR'S bottle,, !!oeo15 un broken. Call otter 6 p.m. {304)

n3-S65L

BENELLI mini-bike. Phone 9S5 ·

•3371.

Far further

information · coil

_I~ I ~.:J38
-..:.:c
· '-COLEMAN fuel oiJ,Iurnoce. 50,000

btu. Coli (304 )

Hoven .

TEAFORD

.

GRAIN fed beef , 85 cents per
pou nd , cut . wrapped . ond

New

88~·2971.

'

SWEET potatoes. red, white ond
yel low, $8 .00 p•r busllel ,
Ph one 985·3364 or 985 -3897 .

-

Phone Coolville
667-3166
or
667-3876

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor

110 Mechanic Pomero,, ·o.
. Phone 992-3375
12 ACRES .:. ·Remodeled J

For Free Estimate
9·10.1 mo .

~50

$46,000.

2 FAMILY -

rental ,

Home &amp;
bedrooms each,

~

gas heat, city water on nlce

street tn
119,000.

Middleport .
-

3 APARTMENTS - Brick
In Middleport on good
street near shopping and
center of town. Just 1~.000 .
2 LARGE GARDENS - 8
rooms, 4 Brs., new kitchen ,

gas F.A. furnace In lull
basement. Want S27.500.
115 ACRES -

On Shade
River. Fine lor camping
lots. New gas well with
Income and free gas. Old
house &amp; barn. good hill
pasture, fenced . Asking
$30,000.
POMEROY - 5 bedroom
big .old house, t• lly room ,
1'12 bath•:.:.;,.. \\ " FA
turn ,

~· petlng, ·

shrubb
.nd large shade
trees . 125,000.

NATURAL gos heatlny stove. wit~

-

2 PLACES - 3 bedroom
home, T.P. water, garage,
outbuilding. and 2 bedroom
Schult' mobile home on 1
nice acre of land. 15500.00
EACH.
SYRACUSE - Nice corner
lot with good old fashion 1
bedroom trailer. Pallo and
exira room. S5,500.
INVEST A LITTLE' ANO
GAl !f. A LOT.

The Daily Sentinel ·

P"

f11DcttouDJ literate. All

elfCirt!i Ill the

YOI...,

~.-

-~ --

~· to

Read
tuiGr Jll'llll'lllll an
~to that pi.Rigbt lo
Reellll adm!nlrtJrlllln Oblo
'lilt .. tile .... Dept. Ill

PLEASURE HORSES and ponies,

.~.

~

WANTED

HEAVY dUty log or coal gral e for
f ireplace . Measures 23 in . back
x '(linch front . Phon• 992·39CM.
----~

......... "'

tr

S!ORI
1111100115 I OOOIS
IEPIACI:'EIT
IIIIOIJI!$ ·
AlUIINUI

Phone {61•1 593·8906. ·

WILL trim or cut frees and shrub·
bery . Phone 949-2545 or 742·

3167 .

.....
.
_
=

buy

HOMES ITES for sole, I ocre ond
up. Middleport , neor Rutland.

7481.

lARRt~~~DER
~h. 9!.2·39!3

'

r

.

(

I•,j

• "·
...- -;,•.,.

4.10.1 mo.; ' ::•

'.
"~

~

MAIN
-- POMEROY, O.

.
1

_,P:.:•:.:.rc:
;ec.cnc:.:e:.:..'-'Phc:o:.:.nc:e..:.9.:.:9~:_·2:_4c:09.:.:.....2'--'·~.! .';

.•.

0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years

RACINE ...: 1 nice level lot,
50x177. 7 rooms, balh. N.G.
forced air furnace. •lmosl
new alum·. siding, excellonl
neighborhood .
57,900.00 .
JUST LI.STED - 2'/2 story
frame, S bedrooms, bath,
dining R., N.G. heat,
carpeting. porches ,
garage. 18,500.00.
JUST LISTED
3
bedrooms, bath, paneling,
utility, lots of storage, N.G.
heat . Walk . to shop,
58.500.00.
5 HILLY ACRES - ~ 3
bedrQOm hoU5e, balh, nice
kitchen,
N.G.
heat.
porches, storage bldg .
JUST 17,900.00.
:
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
'NOTED IN THIS AD CALL NOW.
NEEDED REAL ESTATE
- WE HAVE BUYERS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
, BROKER
SMALL 'form for sole , 1Q Y, down ,
owner finoncud , Monroe Coun·
ly , W. Va. Phone (30•1 772.
3102 or (304) 772·3227.

COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
ed woodt , woter and good 'access in Monro• County , W. Vo .
$1 ,000 dow~ . call (30-1) 7723102 or (304) 772-'J227.

50 Acre form , S room house , oul ·

ex· ~~

perience , I nsured free&gt;"' C:
estimates . Call 992-2384 or~ ..,

" '· ~~

{61•)698-7257Aibony.

ZO Capuchin
monkey
Trampled
2Z Incapable
of speech
Z3 Pained

rot '

26 Gang
!'I Equipment
28 Objective
female

EXCAVATING, dozer , ba ckhoe , ~ ... ''
and ditcher. Ctlorles R. Hot,~:;··"'
f ield , Bo ck Hoe Serviee :-"+~
Rutland, Ohlo . Phon• 7-42-2008., ~ ~~

, SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Moderll ' i :
Sanitation , 992-395A or
1 •
2..26.
'"';" :

m.

A c::AY-

. 1;~~~1~;;;~ ~=lOCO· ~

f

DOZER work ond welding . Con · ~: '
tact James Parsons, Rt. 1, ~.'
Racine , on Carmel Road .
.
~~

:~~589

•

I'M oi.AD I CALLED MD\'\ ...
PliT HER MINtl ATEA5E: ...
LET HER KNOW J'M ALL
RIGHT!

AR

·

ee

•

e

..

•
. •

I,

Close Sat''. At 5 p m

•

::.
• ..

• • • • • • • • •,

RUn.AN.D PU.........
;
IIU'I.I I V -

,

.

.

-~

. RUTLAND

•.

. :'
r

t

~E~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~f
rTHAT'S
, ENUFF TIRE
~~~GIN'

FER ONE

~.mv, TATER--NOW,

TARN LOOSE'

i

GOTTOGIT
INTH'HOUSE

•

·'ARNOLD8RATI .

It Property
owned

A~~awer

!'I Large;
sizable

•

l

!

'

33.

10:30-Biack Perspedlve on the News 20.
!9 Unblemllhed
19 Extracted
.22 Castle fllture 30European .11:oo-News 3,, ,6, 8,10,13,15; MacNeii·Lehrer Rtport
33.
finch
Z3 Friend of
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Death Sentence"
31 Do .
Aeneas
6, 13; Kolek 8; Mary Hartman, Mary ·Hartman 10;
business
:U Expensive
ABC News 33.
35 Garland
violin
12:oo-Movle "Rio Conches" '10: Janakl 33.
:r1 Face a
~ Landlord's
12 :3G-Cool Million 8.
pitcher
l :oo-:l'omorrow 3,4; News 13.
due
abeolu~Jy

8 Sexist
doctrine
{2 wds.)
9 Arabian
chief's

domain
10 Denounced

1:;-+-t-t-

t..;-++-

39 SoUr
ll.l.lU:...-..J...!....:::..;&gt;.;..J.....J40-Giossy
n Encllsh
river
OF COURSE1 1!71DN'T VOLUN1EEI&lt; niE IN
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
FOIZMATION "THAT I WA&amp; TRAVELING"
wrTH A (liXTEEN-'IEAR-OLD RUNAWAY.
AXYDLBAAXR
71/AT I\OULD HAVE
Is I.ONGFELLOW
WORRIED HER!
One teller simply slands for another. In !his sample A is
used for the lbree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letrers.
apostrophes, the length and lormalion of the wnrda are all
hints. Each day Ihe rode tellers are different. ·

LAR

•

•

Yesterday's

!

8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Monster Concert 20,33.
9:oo-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6, 13;
MASH 8,10; Evening at Pops J3; Menominee 20.
9:30-0ne Day At A Time 8,10.
lO:oo-Famlly 6,13; Switch 8,10: News 20: Olympiad

CRYPTOQUOTES

.

'

20,33.

I

r-----------------.r-----------------------

''---

I. - '·' ' •...
.

JACOBY MODERN.!

\

(rare)

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND •)
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL , ,;
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAlLED. LQi
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. il -"'
PULLINS. PHONE 992-247B o.i1

FRIO.AY' y·IL 8
.

"La-"
35 Provided
with a
hamnier,
saw, etc.
:r1 Film vamp
38 Place a
sigilon

WILL do roofing , co nttruc:tion ..;:.' ~
plumbing and heat ing, No job .. •
too Iorge or too small. Phone •t :
742·2348.
~

buildings. fruit treet, 2 lacS;,
.QR ~lGHT .
·,;.-;;
lions , made for o~~gos
we lls, own wetef system, on PROTECT . your swimming pool.\1\\ 1
Winterizing klt5, covilrs 'on ~"" ,
.good block&gt;ap road . Call Bill
!ifreeze, service for o~e,' or :\· ·
Clonch 992-5795.
1n ground pools. D.
'
6 room house, modern kitchen ,
ntr Sa les , Middleport ,
corpeting, in Harrisonville . con·
Phono 992·512•.
11enient to mlne1, $8 ,500 .

•

column

'

~-----~-r::-~--:--:--::""":'=-...,-:~:-::-~:::-:~~--:'~-, !9 Dispute
ITS NO PIOJIC Fl.IRT"IN6 ElLlT THATS THE SPIRJT
32 I love
WITH -lJRP!-OBESITY
THAT t'r'1.A[:::6 ~AND
33 ~~~l
AND CE'ATH EVEN AT
WHAT IT IS T~Y!!34 Debussy's

SEPTIC Syttems installed ' bY' ~
licensed Ins taller. Shepard..... :
Controctors. P~one 7ol2·2409, ~ ••

~·

will be used in this

and will recei ve copies of

.,

~Lassoed

-~-.

ponellng. Phol'!e 992-~759 ,

most interesting questions

city ·

'"-l r-::::::-_, 18 Interfered

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond~ j
~ock11oe work ; dump truc~s:.;;
and lo·boys lor hire ; will haul o;
f ill dlrt , to soil, limestone ond '"';" :'"
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef. •i .
fers , dey phone m -7069 .. ...
night phone 992-3525 or ~Y'\:

CARPENTER, flo oring , cejling,

if stamped, se,-addressed

envelopes are enclosed. "The

!Oregon

out of u
qurnd rops. 17 Be lnc'Orrect

•l:·,
{? :J~ ,:~:~~~~~J m&gt;Oii" ~~~~~§?1

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs, s'e r·
J
ViCe, Oil makes , 992-228-i . Th•~
I
Fabric
Shop , Pomero,r: .:..t ~~
Authorized Singer So les ond!cJ-.1; '
Ser'll ice. W'e sharpen Scissors. _ ,.

sm.

roo you have e question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " cere of this
newspeper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions

%Overhead
princess
s Embarrassed 3 Was master
11 Border on
Of the
house
12 Enuna
. (3 wds.)
Bovary's
. • - standsllll
tiUe
{2 wds.)
....,,..--.-..._ 13 Soncstress
,
Falana
SPutona
happy face
the~ 14 Type style
• Loathed
c;.TY" "" know 15 Girl's name
7 Oklahoma
'Thirst
city
1 quencher

7.-11

ond oil types of general repair . •.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex ·...·· ·

Starling with loday ' s
answer, we are going to
respond to a group of biddinc
questions that have corne in
over the past several months.
The lirst one is thiB: In the
sequence dealer one club,
partner one diamond , is the
diamond call forcing?
The answer is a dej:ided yes
in all systems.

DOWN

ACROSS
I N3111e
meaning

Swaepers , toasters, irons, Ou:';--~
small appliances . lawn mower , • ; ,
next to ·Stote Highway (;orag'e ~'"~ 1
oo Route 7. Phone (61~) 98S·~· ~
3825.
~ : ,,

.

3; One Life to Live 6; Good Day I 1.
and Son 3,,,15: Price Is Rl,hl 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13.
lO : l~al Hospital 6.
10:J()....(;elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15.
11 :oo-Whf&gt;el of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday '' Edge of
NlghU: Gamblll,lO: Morning Wllh D.J. 13.
11 :30--Hollywood Squern 3.... l.S: Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10.
1f:5~Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12:oo-News 3,6,8,10; Hot Stat 13: Bob Braun'' Fun
Factory 15 .
12 :;10--Gong Show 3; All My Children f,13; S..rch For
Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
1:oo-Somerset 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Concentration I ;
Young and the Restleso 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Days Of Our Llves3,,,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
the World Turn• 8, 10.
2:ClQ.420,000 Pyramid 13: Dlllahl 6.
2 :30--Doctors 3,,,15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
need. Then stitch -.see and
3:oo-Another World 3,4,,., '"' '" • ne ~amuy 1,10;
Consumer Survival Kit ·20.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:30--B.wltched 6; Match Game 8,10: Lilias, Yoga
and You 210.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon· 3; Marcus. Welby, M.D. •:
Somerset 15; 'Howdy Doody 6; Mickey MouM Club
I ; Sesame Street 20,33: Movie "Blue• for LOvers"
10; Dinah I 13.
4:30-My Throe Sons 3; Emergency Onel 6 Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15.
,S:OO:...Big Valley 3; M•rv Griffin •• Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rage._ 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30-N.WS 6; Family, Altair 8; Eledrlc Company
20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:oo-News 3,,.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6:Zoom 20;
Consumer Experience 33.
6:30--NBC News3, .. ,15: ABC News 13; Andy Grllflth6:
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Utlllzetlon 33.
·
7:()(1..-Truth or ConseqUf&gt;flces 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars .6: Let's Go .To The Races 8:
News 10; To Tell The Trutlo 13; Family Altair 15:
Cooking With a Continental Flavor 20: Amerlcen
Issues Forum 33. ·
7 :30--Hollywood Squarn 3;4; Let's Deal With It 6; .
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer 20,33: In the
Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Nashville on lht Road
15.
8:oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,,, IS; Happy Days 6,13;
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10 America's Last King
lO:~Sanford

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.....-, , '

REMODELING, Plumbing, heath~¢

••

Pass

9 :~ ross-Wits

~M'I6td'

•

Auct ioneer , Co~ ; :
plete Service, Phone 949·7487, ', ~
or 9.t9.2000. Rqcine, Ohio, CJ'At 1 · ~"

Brodford .

3•

James Jacoby
Oswald : " When you lind
yourself in a doubtful
contract, your best line of
play Is to place the defenders'
important cards where you
will be able tO make your
contract, and not to. just play
safe and get set gracefully."
Jim : " East took his ace of
clubs and returned the jack. A
duck' at trick one would have
insured defeat of the contract,
but East thouchl his partner
had led a singleton, not a
doubleton ."
Oswald : "South was in with
the king. He studied the hand
for some time and saw that he
just wasn't goinc to make his

t;;.;;;~

BRADFORD,

Pa,.

By Oswald &amp;

•· ' '

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR "'- .

_

CK'"

I•• ..

11:- VMDI:RI'f AJIDUfG

....-" I 1 ''•

NEW 3 bed room house, 2 bott'ls ,
oil elec ., l acre, Middleport,
dose to Rutland. Phone 992·

hon•s and

-•tors.

LI'I''I'LJ:

. _•

~litiS

Soallt
1•
2 N.T.

ORPHAN ANNIE&lt;

&gt;

5'DlK-SOffln

. TWO portable TN.'s, used owery MODERN country homo . 3•
-·
Experltncod limber
bedrooms, Iorge 2.-4l cere lot,·..
••
' little. Sn Leona Stew~rt;
ponlos. phono (614) 698-3290, workers, Sklddtr
T.P,·Cho•lor
wator,
central
air
,
.
~0~!~ ~!'-~lbe~ry 11D!~~. M•~
Ruth Reeves .
conditioning, 11?,000. Phone .;
limber cunon · FUEL Oil stove, 250 gallon tonk.
---,--- ·-·-14• ••
1v, 1t&lt;if &lt;&gt;ld German Shopho&lt;dt, · Ptl yml mtn. Complete
Phono247·2•114 . ....... ·•··-- ... _.
or (61•) 667·6127 oltor .
spayed and hod ohOU. NO CDYWitt IIIII ..11011. Cell
.. ., - . . , . t. .. '" '
............... loall
standing htl'f at Greol FARM ·~~"'"~~i~. 68~;;.--;;;;.;.;; ·.
papo11, SolO. Phono ~•·2181 or 9'12..1,hr N
7 p.m. 367- ' FEW
.
C!!:::~
Bend. C. B. Shahan.
'
9•9·2631 . . . . . ......
7425.
Jlr•lr(
Clllppllll
IIIII
ond both, FA lurnoco, full •
•rl ?Ill 'i&amp;ftS:IA
742-2~11
1a111a1, . . . tor "I a- it was j1111 • matter of iMAll pups to give away . Phone Logging Comp10y, aENE.lil - mini ·bike~CNI!i· 9,5- bosomont, ooll 992-2630 or
7•2·2180.
.b
.~htshlre, 0 .
·
3371.
9•9·2028.
IDdl'l Jaf 11 t' •
. time."
.
also .will

g ~~~~~~~~~
ITTU•:

Pass

NOrtlr Eall
1t
Pass
2•
Pass

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 9 •

Fllllotilll A.....
lllow•l•llllllls &amp;Attics

IN

StOCK . Buy , sell, trade. 478
RiChland, Athens, Qhio ol5701.

•• -J..

COUNTRY store with or wit.,out

~

•

Bloiin
Semces

lAJitit

~

c

•

acc,ssories~·

..

~·

West

l~lation

Slw.

·~·---~ --------,-.----~·

•

.•

FR EE I

.J~LE -·
Ualted Preu IDierllldoaal
Phone 7•2·3074.
Ono g'"'d ustd Gibson
at Tuppers Plalna
Today Ia Monday, Sept. 27,
copportone sldt-by.sldt I for an hour or more tile 271at day of 1976 wltll95 to
Phone 742-2796.
Make us an offer.
.
~I&gt;' each week.
follow.
Good
used
G. E.
I·•
,
The moon iB aPil'oachlng ' IF YOU t'lolt'e a service to offer ,
POMEROY, 0.
GEORGE Hobstetter Reol Eatot~
r4!lrlgerolor.
S200
want to buy or sell something ,
"'''Volldeer Iuton wiD work 118 flnt quarter.
Broker' .
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Onogoodustd HGmolltt EZ ' Roc ine-7 room frome houn, 3 e
oe looking for work , . . or _ , _
The
morning
stars
are
''lulder the direction of a grade
whotever . . . you 'll get results' HOUSEKEEPER wanted to li•o in .
Chlin Sow
1100
bedrooms and bath , .one- half
tMdler and the Rl8bt to Read Mercury, Jupiter and
fo ster with o Sentinel Want Ad .
Do
liv\&gt;t
houoowork
ond
core
Ont
·
good
used
Home)lte
• • •
basement, new furnoce , new
Saturn.
i.Dinctor.
Coli 992-~156 .
hot Water heater , utllltl.. , gas
lor 3 school children. Call 992· Super XL Chain
s2Gi
59•1.
.
elec.. ond waler , doublo.
I •
'Mon., Tues.. Wed.
YARD Sole, Sept. 271h thru Oct. I.
'lbe 1081 Of tbe national
LAFFADAY.
garage,
prkod
tasell,
SIO;soo.
.
a
8:00tll 5•.00
9 a.m. till 8 p.m . Household AAIBITious. p;rsons w
_
h
_
o_
w
a
n
-t
~
:
'
bLt'
IUgbt to Read effort 11
Phone f.,fi!J-2589. Hilton Wolle,
goods , appliances . Clothing,
eorn edro income in your 9.~
Real Estate Salesman.
•
WWIDI tha~ by ••• It
etc . 1 mile from Langsville on
5pare time. Training provided. l~
·
l
lli&amp;~~4~Hll=
~·~·~
·
~
~~"-'~~M~I:r:J.
6
room
houM
.
Coli
992·312~
or
•
I
Thursdly I fil12 ftOOn
County
Rood
10.
Follovw
signs
Phono
(614)
142·2383,
2:30
.
.
~
'II
~1
IJII'IIIIll/liiiiCbool chl1dna
fr9m store. Phon• 7.. 2-2681 .
6.30.
...
992
-5.&lt;3..
'
•
under lbe l(t Ill 11 wtll ..
......._.-...
- ., - "" ...
ACREAGE with or without house.

+83
.KQ&amp;4
Both vulnerable

l

....

HOCKING RIVER Troding Com·

pony. GUNS-OVER

• AJ2

~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ·~~

bedroom one floor plan .

garage and near 3 acres .

SOUTH
• K 10 8 7

••

PI. Pleasont
Ph. 675-m9
9:30·5:00 O.ily
1
Till8:000 Fridays
'"
•t.ti,V
L__.:.:::.:::.:::~.::::!..:-....J

Gas
F.A.
furnace,
lireplace. nice kitchen &amp;
basement. $29,500.
LOOKS LIKE NEW - 9
rooms. cook's delight
kitchen, cenlra l vacuum
cleaner . Family room ,

.~2

DIREI:T
FABRIC SALES ' '"' , •
''"lia Main Street ·

~

new . SW. Phone99nl26.
lon. $50. Phone992·7126.

fancy prlnh,

• J 10 4
.AJ!O!

.... 72

e
•

Coii99H•81 .

·POTATOES and pumpkins . C. W.
Proffitt , Portland , Ohio. Phqne
1&gt;13 · 22~ .

resd., polo buildings.

DITCH Digging . Phone (304) 773·
:&gt;839 or (304) 773-5788.

3891.

667·397..

ratters for commtrcial,

:tl086s '

.65 42
•Kn4

maHresses; p1ddlng. Ideal
lor campers. Variety of
sires.
Velvets, nylon prints,
harculons, vinyl solids, Ind.

Specializing In custom built

EAST

WEST

M&amp;G Tmss Raftefs ·For sofa; c:na1r cushions, r

Box28-A
RUtl1nd, Olllo 45175
Ph. (614) 742-2409
We Deliver
7·28·4 mos . ·

LOCUST POSTS , round or split.
Phone 9o~9 -2n.t .

tKQU
.H3

..~1MoTE'R,
UFA~IC

tom , 'Ohio 45743 .

-

.73

Wlnshltld Ro'*com1111t
Free Esflmllts
·
Jn Body Work
- ~~
Export Polntllll
1nsur1nct Work
Wtlcaint
.St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio
667-)127
7-:19·1 mo.

7:05-Buv_s BUMY. an4 Friends 10.
7 : ~Schoolles 10.
8: oo-Lassle 6; Caplaln Kangaroo 8, 10; S.Mme Slrttt
33.
.
8:30-Big Vallay 6.
9:oo-A.M. 31 Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy ShoW 1: Mike
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13.

contract If East held the ace
of diamonds. 'lberefore, In
accordance with the principle
mentioned above, South led a
diamOnd. West ducked. South
won with dummy's queen, led
a beari and stuck in the jack."
Jim: " Wett woo the kine
and led a trump. South won
and played a second diamond.
West won and led a second
trump. South won in dummy
to discard his low club on a
diamond. Cashed bis ace of
hearts, ruffed the deuce of
hearts !rith the ace of trumps,
overtook dummy's queen wilh
his king , played bis last trump
and was home wHh tbe
bacon.''

'l1

NORTH (D)

borts UP.to 12" pipe slzt.

power sll:er ing, po't\'er brak es,
oir condition in g, AM. rodio and
ster~. rolly wheels, will sell
reasonable . Phone 992·7036 .

B:»-520,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.

TRENatER

I

RIOfil'lll : Alumir'llim Sldlnt

~U1ck Riviera, good condi ·
lion, naw tires, $900. Phone

_______

For the Mason ·a rea,

Gutttr'

••e.,

13.
6:30--Teacher's Classroom •• News 6; SunriM
Semester 1: Concerns •nd Comments 10.
6:.-s--Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, Wnl VIrginia 13.
6:5S--Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:011-Today3,,,15, Good Morning, America 6,13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White ReportalO.

?O.ll.

Play doubtful bid to make

GuntR SE VI

e Aluminum

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1t7•
6 : ~Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 :1~Farrn Rtf)Ort 13.
6: ~Not For Women Only

WIN AT BRIDGE

9·2· 1 mo .

2 Bedroom trailer, $28 per week . SCHOOl sewing machine, Singer,
OLD furniture , ice boxes , bran
oil utilities pa id. Phone 992·
features buttonhole, blind
beds , wall telephones o~
ports, or complae households .
hem. sews on kni15 , $.48 cosh.
332•:c.·- - ' - - - -- - - Write M. D. Miller, Rt . .. . TRAILER jn Middleport, adults on Also. Singer Touch and Sew.
like new , $31 cosh. Phone 992·
~~eroy , Ohio. Coll992-n61J.
_ly. Phone992·5~•7 .
71BY.
CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
USED 24 inch fired brickline coal
or wood outomotic control fur ·
Phone area code 61"'· .. 23·9531 .
noce with bl ower, Six and nine
AVERAGE
$40
an
e'fening
or
TIMB£R . Pomeroy Fore5t Pro·
inch gal'fonized hot and cold a ir
afternoons
dem
onstrating
ducts ., Top price. for stondiilg
p;pe. Phone 985-:m8.
guaranteed toy s and gift s. No
sawtimber. Coli Kent Hanby ,
cash in'fe5fment, no delivery or SWEET potaotes . R. W. lewis, At.
1·....0·8570.
co lleCting. Computers do you
124, Rocine, Ohio. Phone 843CQIN$, 1929 and older currency ,
paperwork. Coil 9ol9·2803 or
::::::_
2•32.
gold and silver scrap, Will buy
Wl ·m7 Also booking partie'
or trde. Ho'fe a good telecllon
- 5 horsepower , 2 cy linder
of coins to sell or trade. ~lso,
Brooklure boo t motor , S25. 3 111
hove suppiiiH and metal
H.P. Turf Till rotary tyler , used
detecors. Roger Wamsley on
very littl•, $125. Ri'fol grind·O·
leading Creek and Rutland
motlc elec. meot grinder , like

Rood. Phone 7•2·2331 lor on of.

ME A !riDe I

MY DMRSAMIS .. PL6AS&amp;
$IT YOURG~LF IN COMFORT ON
MV HUMS~IO CARTI ... IT Wi~l.
.,x;BE MV PLEASURE-!

svracun,o .

112· 1116

COAl for sole, $22 per ton. Open
6 day~ per week ond evenings .
TWO TRAILERS f'or rent: one 3
bedroom unfurnished, one 2
bedroom furn ished . Phone

I ~W&lt;O N YO~ COIJL D CAL~
IT THAT. .. l 'M PRAVt'-1 &amp; FO~
~OMEONE! TO GIVe

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

1970

-

}970 Torino jSQ V-8, 62,(XX) actual
miles, 4 dr ,, excellent condition
Village Hall, Stole Rou le l2j, THE RACINE Fire Deportment will
w it ~ snow tires. Pho11e 992·
Village of Syracuse, Oh io.
ho'fe o gun shoot Saturday a t
· Bids may be ma iled to the · b :30 p.m. at their build ing in
3996. _ _
Village Of Syracuse, Ohia
Boshon.
1964 Chevrolet Impala S.F. real
45719. Attention :.. Mr . Herman
190; Mar le rie Wils~n 169.
gOQd condition, S..OO. Phone
FULLER Brush Products. the F. I. P.
High series - Jerry Cli ne London , Mayor .
Informat i on for bidd ers ,
992·5671 .
539; Helen Phelps 495 ; A. L.
cor pet !.weeper . Now on
Phelps, Jr . SJ.ol ; Marlene form of bid , form of contr4ct ,
special , regular $2,f .95 now 1968 Buick Wildcat , automat ic .
W ilson 488; Darrell Dugan ptans , specltlcatlpns, and
$19.95 . Offer expires Oct. 7,
power ·steering and pow~r
forms
of
b
id
bond,
perform
.
511 ; Mary Voss 463.
1976. Pflone 992·3.410. ""
brakes . good condtion . Good
Team high ge me - Tom 's ance and payment bond , and
o t her · documents ma,y be PETE and Gene's Garage js now In
Carry Out 695. ·
tires . Coli 992·3580.
Team high series - Tom 's examined and are Obtainable
operation. Mechan ic ond body 1973 FORD Bronco, automatic
at the V illage Hall , Syracuse,
Carry Out 2014.
work . North Second Street in
j
302, white spoke wheels. Call
Oh io, ~pon the payment of the .
Middleport . Formerly Bran·
sum . of ,us.oo., which Is not
9 9 213
non's Garage. Phone 992-S..SO
refundable .
All bids must be in pla in
or coli ofter 5 p.m. 992·7135.
• .
St!! led envetopes marked on
, the outside " Sid for Municipal
Tenn is Courts , V i lla(le of
FUfi:NISHEO , 2 bedrm. apartment,
Syracuse, Oh io." Each bidder
odults only , in Middleport ..
must have on the outside of the
Phone 992·387ol .
bid envelope his name and
actdress, and each b id must be Will 00 odd jobs, roofing , pain · 3 AND .,f RM. furn ished ond un accompanied ~Y a bid bond or
ting , hauling, tree work. and
fiJ rn ished opts. Phone 992certified check In amount of 10
mowing.
Phone
992·7.409.
~3• .
percent of the total b id. The
bid bond Shall be condit ioned
COUNTRY Mobile Home Por.k, Rt.
that If the bid Is accepted a
John Ellu, cathy Ellu to contract
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy.
will be entered intO
large 'on wit k conc rete patios,
Jack L. Frederick, Gloria K. and its performence properl y
sidewa lks . runners and off
.
.Frederick, 1.1&amp; ~•• RuUand. secured
st r~t parking. PhoneWl-7479.
If the bid embraces both MOBILE home for sole or rent . 3
Jobn
Arbaqb, Ethel labor and material such Items
bedrooms, ol ut ilities pcrtd.
Phone 992-nSI .
., ONE bedroom oportments ot
Arbaugll to Kevin L. Styer, shall beaeparately stated w ith
.
.
· VILLAGE .MANOR in M iddleport
the price thereof.
·
Melinda L. Styer, Lot, Olive.
lor S104 monthi~ plu5 elec. or
No b idder may withdraw his SxAS mob_1le home , JU$t remodel·
llarolci Circle, Lora R. b i d fOr a period of sixty days ed. Pmed very reosoooble. $130 including electric . t OWER
the date of bid open i ng . . Phone 80·2683.
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
Circle to Ohio Power Co.; from
This protec t Is federally , ~Cameron m~bJir h-;;;;~12~e~
Convenient
shopping on
Eue., Suttoa. ·
· assisted . Contracts to be ~ 3 bedroom , ' excellent condi- Third o'n d Millto Streets
in Mid ·
awarded
under
th
is
Invitation
Robert R. Hirden, Dorothy for bids w ill be subject to
tion. Phone 247 -270.C .
dleport. Brand new high quoli ·
t y apartm e nts . See
the ·
J. Harden to Oblo Power Co., Presidential Executive Order
manager at Apt. 16, or coli
No . 11H6 reQuir i ng af . 1969 12x63 Vindole. underpinned 1
Eue., Suttoa.
10x26 5crNn porch , central oir.
ve action tor equal
992-772 1.
Okey Paynter to Paul R. rJrmati
Mov be seen ot B~S Scutt-. Se·
employmtnt
opportunity .
Paynter, Glen W. Paynter, ' Contractors are further ad- cond Ave., Middleport. Or AVA:ILASLE ot Ri~terside Apart·
menrs, I bedroom apart·
vised that ttie January 27, 1972
phone 992 · ~822 .
Karl 0. Paynter,' 54 A., Equal
ments, $100 per month; 2
Employment
O'P •
portunltv ElCecutlve Order of ~====
bedroom apartments , $ 133 per
month. One price·for all. Phone
Holley Stlreber to Robert the Governor of Ohio Is also

lebanon.

to10" hiRIIftl bllilcftl, 7Sc

1968 Rambler 2 dr . tu . Coli m - 1%9 Dodge Swinger, ~0 . · 4
speed, 9o19-2oiA3 or 949·U32.
3659 .
-·· ,._,._.,.....,......_
1971 AMC Hornet. Phone WS- 1970 GMC Astra 95, 318 Detroit

3597 , $650 . Good co nd ition.

S•"lc:e

.to sua .

~

POMEROY,
OHIO
. - .

.........
..-

Wt hiVI 0111 frltn hOUit
h•ll of Plorld• folio,,
pl•nts. Over Jt warletlll n
111. Frtm 4.u It I" IHfl 1 6"

POM:~~~E~?~~~CO. ~if:'

OFFICE HOURS

Winter
thru

heu.n, Mond•r
Sllurdoy 10 to 1.

1972 NOVA 2 'DOOR
SlitS
Local I owner car, good tires, clean Interior, 6 c,l ., std.
trans .

8 !30 a .m . to 5 :00 p.m .
Darly , 8: 30 a.m . to 12: 00

CHURCH

Open for P:111 1

'

word

..min i mum .
Each add l tlonal word 3
cen t s:

RACINE BAPTIST

Sill Porter 222 ; Helen Phelps
'208; · Bill Port~r 205 ; Pal
· Ct~ rson 178 ; Sob Couch 204 ;
Max ine Duga n 175.
High series - Bi ll Porter
630; Helen Phe lps 515; Larry
Dugan 534 : Carolyn Bachner
511 ; A. L. ~h e lp s J r . 533; Pat
Carson 503.
Team high game - Zide's
Sport Shop 702 .
'Team h1gh series - Zide's
Sport Shop 1968.

1 2.00

NOTICE

· · 1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU
·.
$21t5
2door.locall owner with less than 33,000 mllis, 350 V-8.
engine, automatic, power steering and braktl. Like
new W· W tires: Factory air, radio, white over dark
gr...,.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

service. please feel tree lo
contact 949-2231 or 247·2101 .

Business Services

Pomeroy
MotQr Co.

lt74 CHEVY NOVA4 DOQR
$2795
Local low mllf&lt;!lle car, V-8 onglne, automatic power
SIHrlng end brakes, radio, tires show little wear, gold ·
finish . Sharp and nice. ,
.

For Want Ad Service

8:15

Smith Nelson Motors
Zlde's Sport Sh p
Oi ler's f':ou r
Young's Su pet m ark et

~TY

rt~erves

the right to edit or rejtct
any a d s deem ed ob.
iectlona l . The pu blisher
will not be responsib le for
more than one Incorrect
insertion .

YOUR ATTENTION
PLEASE

Pomeroy Cement Block Co . ··
Computer Services
·•

2 SIGNS

REGULATIONS

837 ·mtl.

16

Eagles

Team

INFORMATION
DEADLINE$

LO ANS ovo1ldi:Jie for ony purpose ,
S20,000 and up. Sales f orce and
management •orvices also for
hir• . Phone Mr . Pau stian , (513)

Pomeroy Bowling L•nu
Tri-Co . Lugue
Sept. l4 , 1916

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,1976
5:oo-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin • : Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:»-News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
.
6:oo-NtWI 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
EducatiOn In Transition 33 .6 : ~NBC News 3,~, 15;
A~ .13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8, 10;
H
" Lodge 20.
7 : ~rulhorCons ..3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
DOllars 6; Buck Owens 8; N.ws 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Family Affair 15; American Indian Ar.
. lists 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7:30--Thal Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Bobby VInton
- -i; -MiJppet Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeil-Lehrer
20,33; Price Is Righi 10; Candid · Camera 13;
Frltndl of Man 15.
8:oo-LIIIIe House on the Prairie 3,4,15; Captain &amp;
Tennille 6, 13; Rhonda 8, 10; Adams ChronicleS

WAN't ADS

•peciQII all weekend. Just 2'/r
mil111s trom Ches ter on Route

BOWLING

Television log for easy··viewing

e Sentinel Classifieds.
For Fast Results ·Use Th.
...

START

J.

IRGNRY
CO

GlOB

CO
G

G

OLCKMIMO,

EML

YROTBFOR. - RNMGYN

ICFNRKGF

Yesterday's
Cryptoqaote:TIIOUGH
SOME MEN
Fou.ow,
AND
SOME COMMAND,
ALL· MUST
ARE · MADE
OF
CLAY. - HENRY
WNGFEU.OW

w.

......-------.

l:lUi~I\I\.TH§~~~~D?

\TAFOHM ~

(J

IenG l ()

I

Now orrance tht dn:W 1 ~
to form the •Qrllrile ..,...,, •
llliJtiU&lt;I bJ the ........ - -

I I I l"
(MIIII-Idllml "[X I I(.u.wen
ae ..., aIWt
Jumbles• VIRUS ICING. jAGGED ~EA
s.oourdo7'•
Whal lh hun(r·punfJ m•• ,.w hil 1111 ••• ·•
\ A.uwera JUST A •QA1ND"'
·- -

~E,MMliE,A LOT MORE!
THE~ ~L'L~ ST~SS MAHRS

AND SOCIAL GRACES...

WE SPENT 1liE liiHOLE

FIRST~ ..liST
LEAANIN6 11011.1 10 5IT !

!' .

�.,
10- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poomeroy, 0., Moodily, Sept. '/J, 19'16

~-

HUNT'S Pet Shop is, now reopen · ,

ing . loll of "ew merchond11e
at low price1 , Reopening

Standings

~•a .

Pts .

Name

S P .M .
Oa~
Before
Publication .
Cancell at ions.
correc .
nons accepted f irst daY of
publicati on .

Team One
Strit&lt;.ers
H&amp;R Fi restone

The Publisher

H igh individual game - Ed
voss 218 ; Henry Clatworthy
203 ; Ed Voss 199.
Hig h series Henry
Clatworthy SBO;E d Voss 566;

John Tyree 5AS .
H igh game - Eagles B'W .
H igh series _.. Eagles 24 19.

Early Wed. M ixed
Sept . I S, 1976
Sta nd lnvs

Tilt Racine Baptist Churcll ·
bus will be runn ing
Sundays on a route from

Racine through Apple
Grove. leaving Racine at

a.m. and · returning
passengers at noon . If rou
are interested in our bus

Pts .

Tenth Framers

20
20.
20
16
u

6

Nel son Drug Co .
High Individ ua l

RATES

5 cen ts per- word one
insertion .
,
Minimum Charge $1 .00 .
14 cen ts per word three
consecutive Insert ions .
26 cents per wotd sl~~;
consecuflowe Insert ions .
25 P er Cent Discount on
paid ads 'lnd ads pa id
w ithin 10 days ,

~ame

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed

Sept. 12.1976
Standings

Pts.
Team
22
Tom's ca rry Ou t
18
Town Kiln
10
Jack 's Dair"V Bar
M.,rk F lye
8
Cline·~ ConstrUct ion c;o.
8
6
Pomeroy Flower Shop
High .In d ividual game
Jerry Cline 218; Helen Phelps
186; Ed Voss UO; Lena
Howard 171 ; A. L. Phelps, Jr

50

for

BLINO AOS

Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement.

Noo.n saturda v,
Ph one today 992. 2T56.

- AdVertisement

NOTiCES
ATTN .o ll
ALL HOUSEWIVES

FOR BIDS-

Federal Land and Water
Conservation
Fund
Act

All Ya rd Sales. Rummage ,
Porch and Sesemtnt Por ch
and Basement Salt! s, et c.

Pro ject No . 39.00m and HUO

Com munlty
Otvelopment
Stock Grant Projec t No . B·15·

must be paid In e~vrmce .
Get yovr:s in early by
stopping by our office at
The Da lly Sentlntl , 111
Courl St. or w riting Box
729, Pomeroy , Oh io .fS769
with your remittance .

Dt•09 ·0022.

Mun ici pal Park Tenn is
Courts, - VIllage of Syracuse,

Oh iO.

Bids will be recelyed unti l
12 :00 Noon D. S. T . on Friday;
October nth. 1976. for the
co nstruciiQn of Mun ici pa l ,
Tenn is Courts far the Village
of Syracuse . Ohio , e t . which
t ime t he bids S:hall be opened
by the Clerk ot the V illage lind
publicly read by her at the

l----,.--'---- - -..J

1970 Chevelle Malibu JO,f , V-8.
au to,, tilt steering whe-41, light
green , vinyl tOp , new b rakes. , 2
new tires , gOod condition ,. high

~i:eage , $650:!_h~~~~ ·
WRECKED 1970 V.W. fqr sole.
motor and trans mission, good
condition for SI2S, 6 tires ond
ri ms, PAone Donald

Pooler ,

985·3897 .
197.. Suboru . ,. d oor. 17.000 miles ,
1 owner . Phone992·.:3890
:'?.:-::-

--

---

iisi.iiiiiiiiiiiii

Meigs
Property
Transfers
w.

.

to lhl• bid . In·
1,. Aley, Parce)s, Lebanon. oppllcible
vttatlon.
.

Jobn E. Halliday, Adm.,

J - Horton, dec. to Cbarlee

· The owner reserves the
right to waive lnforma!Jt les or
to reject any and all bids .
S uccessful bidder must
comply wlfh the Ohio Work men's Compensation Law and
also comply with all . ottler
state, federal and local ta )(es
and laws .
Successful biGder must

A. Latbey, Donna Joan ·
Lathey, parcela, Salem.
. • Ava J. Greenlll!l to Leslie
R. Facemyer, Karen L.
Fac:emyer, Int. In parcela,
Columbia, Scipio.
f~~c:::k~~r ~~~-e~~~~r~o ~~,~~
Ava J. Green!-, exec., contrac t and the prolect must
be fully completed .within 120
carl L. Greenlees, dec. to working
da vs thereafter,
Leslie R. Facemyer, Karen excepting only such delays as
L. Fa~er, lot. In parceiB, mav be occasioned by strikes,
unseasonable weather or acts
Columbia, Scipio.
of God .
June Wickersham, Comm.,
VILLAGE OF
Pearl Koehler, dec. to Randy
SYRACUSE , OHIO
s. Koebler, parceiB, Orqe.
By Herman London.
MAYOR
G-ordon Proffitt, Odeaia
Proffitt, Elmer L. Proffitt, (9 ). 27, (10) 4, II , 18, •tc
aka E. L. Proffitt, to
Columbua and Southern Oblo
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Electric Co., deed of
cue No. 21189
Est1te of Albert E . Rinehart,
correction, Lebanoa.

Volunteers

!Jre sought

i.

I EASt MEIGS

An OJ'o
l~tallon and tralnln•
njeetlng for .volunteer
r'•dl,ng tutors . will be
lwld at Eutern High
tiool, Route I, Reedavllle,
. Wednesday, Sept. 211, at
:30 p.m. 'lbe meettnc Ia open
au those Interested In
aulstlng elementary
-

Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that

Chloe s. R lnehart of Route 1,
Long Bottom , Ohio, has been
dUly appo inted Executrix of
the Estate of Albert E .
Rlnehert ,~ deceased , late of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to
file their claims with said
fiduciarY within three mOnths .
Dated this 22nd day of
September 1976.
Mannlnp 0 . Webster
Judge
Court of Common Pleas,
Probate Dlv lslori

(9)

27 (10 ) •·

The Alm••e

11 ,

992-327
:;_3:::·- - - - - - - - 2 Bedroom· frailer,

WE "EED
EAR CORN.

real ·nice,

odulhi only. Phone 992·3324,

fRAILER space for rent , one 3
mile• from Pomeroy, one in
OeJCier, S miles from No. 2
mine. Phone 992-5858.
.~.~~~~~~~-----

CAll US TODAY.

,

M2-2181•

2 Bedroom mobile home, Dexter.
Phone 992·5858.

2 Bedroom mobile home in Racine
oreo . Pt-.one 992·58S8.

7·2·3122.
6 Rooms ond ba th a nd po'f
utilities

in Middleport o11er
Spencer'$ Market . No more
'than 2 chiklren. Phone J.,f2 ·

25.&lt;•.

Oownsoovh

• &amp; s.ottlts

fer .

Jtc

$$CASH$$ for junked outo!t
Phone 7,.2·206l. Frye's Truck &amp;
Auto Parts , Rutland:

.Earn extr11 spending
money and valuable
prizes. Call (614) 9922156,

'"'

IUDII.
ln11111Mt

.....

,..Uttf 11 ..-::IIW'f

7•2·2J'!6 · 1975 MONTE CARLO., outomatk,

•AQH

M»RK
Fram 6"to 1a" wide and up
to 5 If. dotp wllll or without
pipe, lurnishtd. Under rood

Bill PUWNS

•••·2114

Pft6ne
h .m . t.Sp ,m,
Evtninti"'2 -7UO

1%8 JEEP Wagoneer, 6 cyl .. ~
wheel dri'lle. lock out hubs .
$195. Ha ro ld Brewer, long Bot·

Pomeroy, Ohio
"2-2471
9-12·1 mo. pd .

9,1,·1mo.

---~-....,..--

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Oa isel . 13 speed transminion ,
twin screw. Coll9o19 -2S..9.
-~--

1971 Ford Maverick , oii' , R.S., red
with block vinyl top. PhQne
9~9 . 280 1 , sharp .

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

------

COAl , limestone , and calcium
cfllo ride and calcium brine for
dust con trol ot~d special m i~eing
sol! for forme'rs. Moin Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio or phone 992·

Stor Hgts. · Buv 1 acre
1971 HONDA Cl-•50. 12,000 MORNING
tract of land . Will arrange fo r
miles , sissv bar, cra!.h bars.
fir:'londng and Small doWn pay·
pull bock handle .bori , new ore
ment to build a home al your
and !!oeols. Scrambler side
choice . lee Cons tr uction ,
_p;pes. $650. Coll9•9~ .
Phone 992-3o1S.. or j6lol) ,.-46·
IN DASH 23 channel CB. om·fm9568 .
mpx radio , 3 track stereo. Call
992.3965 .
]UPPERS Ploins, new J bedroom
~u iJ t -in kitchens, tileQ
-KENNE BEC potatoes , 50 lb . $3.50
batt'ls, car~ted with olloched
or 100 lb . $6,00 , Bring conga rag e, 1 acre lot. $22 .900.
toiners . Phone 667-3737 or ' Phone(6 1.,. ) 667-63o.t.

=-::==-.:-=-,---..,.-,:-:--

- ·-- - -

·PIGS for sole . Phone 9o19-2857.

lroten. P~one 985-o1198.
~-

-

TWO mo•orboofs , one row boot
for sole or trade for gu ns or
equolvo!ue. Co ll 992-57.,fl .
GREEN beons , pick your own , Br·
ing conta iners. Andrew Gross.
letart Foils, 247-2852.
1973 Hondo 350, .,f cylioder . 2900 ,
miles . e.11tros. $795. Phone

9•9·21 Bl or 949·2631.
CHURCH bus. 195-t Che..,rolet .
$500. Con be seen at the Laurel
Clitf Free Methodist Church otf
the Rt . 7 by-poss, or phone

992·2212.
COllEOOR'S bottle,, !!oeo15 un broken. Call otter 6 p.m. {304)

n3-S65L

BENELLI mini-bike. Phone 9S5 ·

•3371.

Far further

information · coil

_I~ I ~.:J38
-..:.:c
· '-COLEMAN fuel oiJ,Iurnoce. 50,000

btu. Coli (304 )

Hoven .

TEAFORD

.

GRAIN fed beef , 85 cents per
pou nd , cut . wrapped . ond

New

88~·2971.

'

SWEET potatoes. red, white ond
yel low, $8 .00 p•r busllel ,
Ph one 985·3364 or 985 -3897 .

-

Phone Coolville
667-3166
or
667-3876

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor

110 Mechanic Pomero,, ·o.
. Phone 992-3375
12 ACRES .:. ·Remodeled J

For Free Estimate
9·10.1 mo .

~50

$46,000.

2 FAMILY -

rental ,

Home &amp;
bedrooms each,

~

gas heat, city water on nlce

street tn
119,000.

Middleport .
-

3 APARTMENTS - Brick
In Middleport on good
street near shopping and
center of town. Just 1~.000 .
2 LARGE GARDENS - 8
rooms, 4 Brs., new kitchen ,

gas F.A. furnace In lull
basement. Want S27.500.
115 ACRES -

On Shade
River. Fine lor camping
lots. New gas well with
Income and free gas. Old
house &amp; barn. good hill
pasture, fenced . Asking
$30,000.
POMEROY - 5 bedroom
big .old house, t• lly room ,
1'12 bath•:.:.;,.. \\ " FA
turn ,

~· petlng, ·

shrubb
.nd large shade
trees . 125,000.

NATURAL gos heatlny stove. wit~

-

2 PLACES - 3 bedroom
home, T.P. water, garage,
outbuilding. and 2 bedroom
Schult' mobile home on 1
nice acre of land. 15500.00
EACH.
SYRACUSE - Nice corner
lot with good old fashion 1
bedroom trailer. Pallo and
exira room. S5,500.
INVEST A LITTLE' ANO
GAl !f. A LOT.

The Daily Sentinel ·

P"

f11DcttouDJ literate. All

elfCirt!i Ill the

YOI...,

~.-

-~ --

~· to

Read
tuiGr Jll'llll'lllll an
~to that pi.Rigbt lo
Reellll adm!nlrtJrlllln Oblo
'lilt .. tile .... Dept. Ill

PLEASURE HORSES and ponies,

.~.

~

WANTED

HEAVY dUty log or coal gral e for
f ireplace . Measures 23 in . back
x '(linch front . Phon• 992·39CM.
----~

......... "'

tr

S!ORI
1111100115 I OOOIS
IEPIACI:'EIT
IIIIOIJI!$ ·
AlUIINUI

Phone {61•1 593·8906. ·

WILL trim or cut frees and shrub·
bery . Phone 949-2545 or 742·

3167 .

.....
.
_
=

buy

HOMES ITES for sole, I ocre ond
up. Middleport , neor Rutland.

7481.

lARRt~~~DER
~h. 9!.2·39!3

'

r

.

(

I•,j

• "·
...- -;,•.,.

4.10.1 mo.; ' ::•

'.
"~

~

MAIN
-- POMEROY, O.

.
1

_,P:.:•:.:.rc:
;ec.cnc:.:e:.:..'-'Phc:o:.:.nc:e..:.9.:.:9~:_·2:_4c:09.:.:.....2'--'·~.! .';

.•.

0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 years

RACINE ...: 1 nice level lot,
50x177. 7 rooms, balh. N.G.
forced air furnace. •lmosl
new alum·. siding, excellonl
neighborhood .
57,900.00 .
JUST LI.STED - 2'/2 story
frame, S bedrooms, bath,
dining R., N.G. heat,
carpeting. porches ,
garage. 18,500.00.
JUST LISTED
3
bedrooms, bath, paneling,
utility, lots of storage, N.G.
heat . Walk . to shop,
58.500.00.
5 HILLY ACRES - ~ 3
bedrQOm hoU5e, balh, nice
kitchen,
N.G.
heat.
porches, storage bldg .
JUST 17,900.00.
:
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
'NOTED IN THIS AD CALL NOW.
NEEDED REAL ESTATE
- WE HAVE BUYERS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
, BROKER
SMALL 'form for sole , 1Q Y, down ,
owner finoncud , Monroe Coun·
ly , W. Va. Phone (30•1 772.
3102 or (304) 772·3227.

COUNTRY farmland with seclud·
ed woodt , woter and good 'access in Monro• County , W. Vo .
$1 ,000 dow~ . call (30-1) 7723102 or (304) 772-'J227.

50 Acre form , S room house , oul ·

ex· ~~

perience , I nsured free&gt;"' C:
estimates . Call 992-2384 or~ ..,

" '· ~~

{61•)698-7257Aibony.

ZO Capuchin
monkey
Trampled
2Z Incapable
of speech
Z3 Pained

rot '

26 Gang
!'I Equipment
28 Objective
female

EXCAVATING, dozer , ba ckhoe , ~ ... ''
and ditcher. Ctlorles R. Hot,~:;··"'
f ield , Bo ck Hoe Serviee :-"+~
Rutland, Ohlo . Phon• 7-42-2008., ~ ~~

, SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Moderll ' i :
Sanitation , 992-395A or
1 •
2..26.
'"';" :

m.

A c::AY-

. 1;~~~1~;;;~ ~=lOCO· ~

f

DOZER work ond welding . Con · ~: '
tact James Parsons, Rt. 1, ~.'
Racine , on Carmel Road .
.
~~

:~~589

•

I'M oi.AD I CALLED MD\'\ ...
PliT HER MINtl ATEA5E: ...
LET HER KNOW J'M ALL
RIGHT!

AR

·

ee

•

e

..

•
. •

I,

Close Sat''. At 5 p m

•

::.
• ..

• • • • • • • • •,

RUn.AN.D PU.........
;
IIU'I.I I V -

,

.

.

-~

. RUTLAND

•.

. :'
r

t

~E~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~f
rTHAT'S
, ENUFF TIRE
~~~GIN'

FER ONE

~.mv, TATER--NOW,

TARN LOOSE'

i

GOTTOGIT
INTH'HOUSE

•

·'ARNOLD8RATI .

It Property
owned

A~~awer

!'I Large;
sizable

•

l

!

'

33.

10:30-Biack Perspedlve on the News 20.
!9 Unblemllhed
19 Extracted
.22 Castle fllture 30European .11:oo-News 3,, ,6, 8,10,13,15; MacNeii·Lehrer Rtport
33.
finch
Z3 Friend of
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "Death Sentence"
31 Do .
Aeneas
6, 13; Kolek 8; Mary Hartman, Mary ·Hartman 10;
business
:U Expensive
ABC News 33.
35 Garland
violin
12:oo-Movle "Rio Conches" '10: Janakl 33.
:r1 Face a
~ Landlord's
12 :3G-Cool Million 8.
pitcher
l :oo-:l'omorrow 3,4; News 13.
due
abeolu~Jy

8 Sexist
doctrine
{2 wds.)
9 Arabian
chief's

domain
10 Denounced

1:;-+-t-t-

t..;-++-

39 SoUr
ll.l.lU:...-..J...!....:::..;&gt;.;..J.....J40-Giossy
n Encllsh
river
OF COURSE1 1!71DN'T VOLUN1EEI&lt; niE IN
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
FOIZMATION "THAT I WA&amp; TRAVELING"
wrTH A (liXTEEN-'IEAR-OLD RUNAWAY.
AXYDLBAAXR
71/AT I\OULD HAVE
Is I.ONGFELLOW
WORRIED HER!
One teller simply slands for another. In !his sample A is
used for the lbree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letrers.
apostrophes, the length and lormalion of the wnrda are all
hints. Each day Ihe rode tellers are different. ·

LAR

•

•

Yesterday's

!

8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Monster Concert 20,33.
9:oo-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Rich Man, Poor Man 6, 13;
MASH 8,10; Evening at Pops J3; Menominee 20.
9:30-0ne Day At A Time 8,10.
lO:oo-Famlly 6,13; Switch 8,10: News 20: Olympiad

CRYPTOQUOTES

.

'

20,33.

I

r-----------------.r-----------------------

''---

I. - '·' ' •...
.

JACOBY MODERN.!

\

(rare)

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND •)
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL , ,;
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAlLED. LQi
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. il -"'
PULLINS. PHONE 992-247B o.i1

FRIO.AY' y·IL 8
.

"La-"
35 Provided
with a
hamnier,
saw, etc.
:r1 Film vamp
38 Place a
sigilon

WILL do roofing , co nttruc:tion ..;:.' ~
plumbing and heat ing, No job .. •
too Iorge or too small. Phone •t :
742·2348.
~

buildings. fruit treet, 2 lacS;,
.QR ~lGHT .
·,;.-;;
lions , made for o~~gos
we lls, own wetef system, on PROTECT . your swimming pool.\1\\ 1
Winterizing klt5, covilrs 'on ~"" ,
.good block&gt;ap road . Call Bill
!ifreeze, service for o~e,' or :\· ·
Clonch 992-5795.
1n ground pools. D.
'
6 room house, modern kitchen ,
ntr Sa les , Middleport ,
corpeting, in Harrisonville . con·
Phono 992·512•.
11enient to mlne1, $8 ,500 .

•

column

'

~-----~-r::-~--:--:--::""":'=-...,-:~:-::-~:::-:~~--:'~-, !9 Dispute
ITS NO PIOJIC Fl.IRT"IN6 ElLlT THATS THE SPIRJT
32 I love
WITH -lJRP!-OBESITY
THAT t'r'1.A[:::6 ~AND
33 ~~~l
AND CE'ATH EVEN AT
WHAT IT IS T~Y!!34 Debussy's

SEPTIC Syttems installed ' bY' ~
licensed Ins taller. Shepard..... :
Controctors. P~one 7ol2·2409, ~ ••

~·

will be used in this

and will recei ve copies of

.,

~Lassoed

-~-.

ponellng. Phol'!e 992-~759 ,

most interesting questions

city ·

'"-l r-::::::-_, 18 Interfered

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond~ j
~ock11oe work ; dump truc~s:.;;
and lo·boys lor hire ; will haul o;
f ill dlrt , to soil, limestone ond '"';" :'"
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef. •i .
fers , dey phone m -7069 .. ...
night phone 992-3525 or ~Y'\:

CARPENTER, flo oring , cejling,

if stamped, se,-addressed

envelopes are enclosed. "The

!Oregon

out of u
qurnd rops. 17 Be lnc'Orrect

•l:·,
{? :J~ ,:~:~~~~~J m&gt;Oii" ~~~~~§?1

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs, s'e r·
J
ViCe, Oil makes , 992-228-i . Th•~
I
Fabric
Shop , Pomero,r: .:..t ~~
Authorized Singer So les ond!cJ-.1; '
Ser'll ice. W'e sharpen Scissors. _ ,.

sm.

roo you have e question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the Jacobys " cere of this
newspeper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions

%Overhead
princess
s Embarrassed 3 Was master
11 Border on
Of the
house
12 Enuna
. (3 wds.)
Bovary's
. • - standsllll
tiUe
{2 wds.)
....,,..--.-..._ 13 Soncstress
,
Falana
SPutona
happy face
the~ 14 Type style
• Loathed
c;.TY" "" know 15 Girl's name
7 Oklahoma
'Thirst
city
1 quencher

7.-11

ond oil types of general repair . •.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex ·...·· ·

Starling with loday ' s
answer, we are going to
respond to a group of biddinc
questions that have corne in
over the past several months.
The lirst one is thiB: In the
sequence dealer one club,
partner one diamond , is the
diamond call forcing?
The answer is a dej:ided yes
in all systems.

DOWN

ACROSS
I N3111e
meaning

Swaepers , toasters, irons, Ou:';--~
small appliances . lawn mower , • ; ,
next to ·Stote Highway (;orag'e ~'"~ 1
oo Route 7. Phone (61~) 98S·~· ~
3825.
~ : ,,

.

3; One Life to Live 6; Good Day I 1.
and Son 3,,,15: Price Is Rl,hl 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13.
lO : l~al Hospital 6.
10:J()....(;elebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15.
11 :oo-Whf&gt;el of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday '' Edge of
NlghU: Gamblll,lO: Morning Wllh D.J. 13.
11 :30--Hollywood Squern 3.... l.S: Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10.
1f:5~Take Kerr 8; Ms. Flxll 10.
12:oo-News 3,6,8,10; Hot Stat 13: Bob Braun'' Fun
Factory 15 .
12 :;10--Gong Show 3; All My Children f,13; S..rch For
Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55-NBC News 3, 15.
1:oo-Somerset 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Concentration I ;
Young and the Restleso 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Days Of Our Llves3,,,15; Family Feud 6,13: As
the World Turn• 8, 10.
2:ClQ.420,000 Pyramid 13: Dlllahl 6.
2 :30--Doctors 3,,,15; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
need. Then stitch -.see and
3:oo-Another World 3,4,,., '"' '" • ne ~amuy 1,10;
Consumer Survival Kit ·20.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
3:30--B.wltched 6; Match Game 8,10: Lilias, Yoga
and You 210.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon· 3; Marcus. Welby, M.D. •:
Somerset 15; 'Howdy Doody 6; Mickey MouM Club
I ; Sesame Street 20,33: Movie "Blue• for LOvers"
10; Dinah I 13.
4:30-My Throe Sons 3; Emergency Onel 6 Partridge
Family 8; Fllntstones 15.
,S:OO:...Big Valley 3; M•rv Griffin •• Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rage._ 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30-N.WS 6; Family, Altair 8; Eledrlc Company
20,33; Adam -12 13.
6:oo-News 3,,.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6:Zoom 20;
Consumer Experience 33.
6:30--NBC News3, .. ,15: ABC News 13; Andy Grllflth6:
CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; lTV
Utlllzetlon 33.
·
7:()(1..-Truth or ConseqUf&gt;flces 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars .6: Let's Go .To The Races 8:
News 10; To Tell The Trutlo 13; Family Altair 15:
Cooking With a Continental Flavor 20: Amerlcen
Issues Forum 33. ·
7 :30--Hollywood Squarn 3;4; Let's Deal With It 6; .
Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-Lehrer 20,33: In the
Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Nashville on lht Road
15.
8:oo-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,,, IS; Happy Days 6,13;
Tony Orlando &amp; Dawn 8,10 America's Last King
lO:~Sanford

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.....-, , '

REMODELING, Plumbing, heath~¢

••

Pass

9 :~ ross-Wits

~M'I6td'

•

Auct ioneer , Co~ ; :
plete Service, Phone 949·7487, ', ~
or 9.t9.2000. Rqcine, Ohio, CJ'At 1 · ~"

Brodford .

3•

James Jacoby
Oswald : " When you lind
yourself in a doubtful
contract, your best line of
play Is to place the defenders'
important cards where you
will be able tO make your
contract, and not to. just play
safe and get set gracefully."
Jim : " East took his ace of
clubs and returned the jack. A
duck' at trick one would have
insured defeat of the contract,
but East thouchl his partner
had led a singleton, not a
doubleton ."
Oswald : "South was in with
the king. He studied the hand
for some time and saw that he
just wasn't goinc to make his

t;;.;;;~

BRADFORD,

Pa,.

By Oswald &amp;

•· ' '

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR "'- .

_

CK'"

I•• ..

11:- VMDI:RI'f AJIDUfG

....-" I 1 ''•

NEW 3 bed room house, 2 bott'ls ,
oil elec ., l acre, Middleport,
dose to Rutland. Phone 992·

hon•s and

-•tors.

LI'I''I'LJ:

. _•

~litiS

Soallt
1•
2 N.T.

ORPHAN ANNIE&lt;

&gt;

5'DlK-SOffln

. TWO portable TN.'s, used owery MODERN country homo . 3•
-·
Experltncod limber
bedrooms, Iorge 2.-4l cere lot,·..
••
' little. Sn Leona Stew~rt;
ponlos. phono (614) 698-3290, workers, Sklddtr
T.P,·Cho•lor
wator,
central
air
,
.
~0~!~ ~!'-~lbe~ry 11D!~~. M•~
Ruth Reeves .
conditioning, 11?,000. Phone .;
limber cunon · FUEL Oil stove, 250 gallon tonk.
---,--- ·-·-14• ••
1v, 1t&lt;if &lt;&gt;ld German Shopho&lt;dt, · Ptl yml mtn. Complete
Phono247·2•114 . ....... ·•··-- ... _.
or (61•) 667·6127 oltor .
spayed and hod ohOU. NO CDYWitt IIIII ..11011. Cell
.. ., - . . , . t. .. '" '
............... loall
standing htl'f at Greol FARM ·~~"'"~~i~. 68~;;.--;;;;.;.;; ·.
papo11, SolO. Phono ~•·2181 or 9'12..1,hr N
7 p.m. 367- ' FEW
.
C!!:::~
Bend. C. B. Shahan.
'
9•9·2631 . . . . . ......
7425.
Jlr•lr(
Clllppllll
IIIII
ond both, FA lurnoco, full •
•rl ?Ill 'i&amp;ftS:IA
742-2~11
1a111a1, . . . tor "I a- it was j1111 • matter of iMAll pups to give away . Phone Logging Comp10y, aENE.lil - mini ·bike~CNI!i· 9,5- bosomont, ooll 992-2630 or
7•2·2180.
.b
.~htshlre, 0 .
·
3371.
9•9·2028.
IDdl'l Jaf 11 t' •
. time."
.
also .will

g ~~~~~~~~~
ITTU•:

Pass

NOrtlr Eall
1t
Pass
2•
Pass

Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead - 9 •

Fllllotilll A.....
lllow•l•llllllls &amp;Attics

IN

StOCK . Buy , sell, trade. 478
RiChland, Athens, Qhio ol5701.

•• -J..

COUNTRY store with or wit.,out

~

•

Bloiin
Semces

lAJitit

~

c

•

acc,ssories~·

..

~·

West

l~lation

Slw.

·~·---~ --------,-.----~·

•

.•

FR EE I

.J~LE -·
Ualted Preu IDierllldoaal
Phone 7•2·3074.
Ono g'"'d ustd Gibson
at Tuppers Plalna
Today Ia Monday, Sept. 27,
copportone sldt-by.sldt I for an hour or more tile 271at day of 1976 wltll95 to
Phone 742-2796.
Make us an offer.
.
~I&gt;' each week.
follow.
Good
used
G. E.
I·•
,
The moon iB aPil'oachlng ' IF YOU t'lolt'e a service to offer ,
POMEROY, 0.
GEORGE Hobstetter Reol Eatot~
r4!lrlgerolor.
S200
want to buy or sell something ,
"'''Volldeer Iuton wiD work 118 flnt quarter.
Broker' .
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Onogoodustd HGmolltt EZ ' Roc ine-7 room frome houn, 3 e
oe looking for work , . . or _ , _
The
morning
stars
are
''lulder the direction of a grade
whotever . . . you 'll get results' HOUSEKEEPER wanted to li•o in .
Chlin Sow
1100
bedrooms and bath , .one- half
tMdler and the Rl8bt to Read Mercury, Jupiter and
fo ster with o Sentinel Want Ad .
Do
liv\&gt;t
houoowork
ond
core
Ont
·
good
used
Home)lte
• • •
basement, new furnoce , new
Saturn.
i.Dinctor.
Coli 992-~156 .
hot Water heater , utllltl.. , gas
lor 3 school children. Call 992· Super XL Chain
s2Gi
59•1.
.
elec.. ond waler , doublo.
I •
'Mon., Tues.. Wed.
YARD Sole, Sept. 271h thru Oct. I.
'lbe 1081 Of tbe national
LAFFADAY.
garage,
prkod
tasell,
SIO;soo.
.
a
8:00tll 5•.00
9 a.m. till 8 p.m . Household AAIBITious. p;rsons w
_
h
_
o_
w
a
n
-t
~
:
'
bLt'
IUgbt to Read effort 11
Phone f.,fi!J-2589. Hilton Wolle,
goods , appliances . Clothing,
eorn edro income in your 9.~
Real Estate Salesman.
•
WWIDI tha~ by ••• It
etc . 1 mile from Langsville on
5pare time. Training provided. l~
·
l
lli&amp;~~4~Hll=
~·~·~
·
~
~~"-'~~M~I:r:J.
6
room
houM
.
Coli
992·312~
or
•
I
Thursdly I fil12 ftOOn
County
Rood
10.
Follovw
signs
Phono
(614)
142·2383,
2:30
.
.
~
'II
~1
IJII'IIIIll/liiiiCbool chl1dna
fr9m store. Phon• 7.. 2-2681 .
6.30.
...
992
-5.&lt;3..
'
•
under lbe l(t Ill 11 wtll ..
......._.-...
- ., - "" ...
ACREAGE with or without house.

+83
.KQ&amp;4
Both vulnerable

l

....

HOCKING RIVER Troding Com·

pony. GUNS-OVER

• AJ2

~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ·~~

bedroom one floor plan .

garage and near 3 acres .

SOUTH
• K 10 8 7

••

PI. Pleasont
Ph. 675-m9
9:30·5:00 O.ily
1
Till8:000 Fridays
'"
•t.ti,V
L__.:.:::.:::.:::~.::::!..:-....J

Gas
F.A.
furnace,
lireplace. nice kitchen &amp;
basement. $29,500.
LOOKS LIKE NEW - 9
rooms. cook's delight
kitchen, cenlra l vacuum
cleaner . Family room ,

.~2

DIREI:T
FABRIC SALES ' '"' , •
''"lia Main Street ·

~

new . SW. Phone99nl26.
lon. $50. Phone992·7126.

fancy prlnh,

• J 10 4
.AJ!O!

.... 72

e
•

Coii99H•81 .

·POTATOES and pumpkins . C. W.
Proffitt , Portland , Ohio. Phqne
1&gt;13 · 22~ .

resd., polo buildings.

DITCH Digging . Phone (304) 773·
:&gt;839 or (304) 773-5788.

3891.

667·397..

ratters for commtrcial,

:tl086s '

.65 42
•Kn4

maHresses; p1ddlng. Ideal
lor campers. Variety of
sires.
Velvets, nylon prints,
harculons, vinyl solids, Ind.

Specializing In custom built

EAST

WEST

M&amp;G Tmss Raftefs ·For sofa; c:na1r cushions, r

Box28-A
RUtl1nd, Olllo 45175
Ph. (614) 742-2409
We Deliver
7·28·4 mos . ·

LOCUST POSTS , round or split.
Phone 9o~9 -2n.t .

tKQU
.H3

..~1MoTE'R,
UFA~IC

tom , 'Ohio 45743 .

-

.73

Wlnshltld Ro'*com1111t
Free Esflmllts
·
Jn Body Work
- ~~
Export Polntllll
1nsur1nct Work
Wtlcaint
.St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio
667-)127
7-:19·1 mo.

7:05-Buv_s BUMY. an4 Friends 10.
7 : ~Schoolles 10.
8: oo-Lassle 6; Caplaln Kangaroo 8, 10; S.Mme Slrttt
33.
.
8:30-Big Vallay 6.
9:oo-A.M. 31 Phil Donahue 4, 15; Lucy ShoW 1: Mike
Douglas 10; Phil Donahue 13.

contract If East held the ace
of diamonds. 'lberefore, In
accordance with the principle
mentioned above, South led a
diamOnd. West ducked. South
won with dummy's queen, led
a beari and stuck in the jack."
Jim: " Wett woo the kine
and led a trump. South won
and played a second diamond.
West won and led a second
trump. South won in dummy
to discard his low club on a
diamond. Cashed bis ace of
hearts, ruffed the deuce of
hearts !rith the ace of trumps,
overtook dummy's queen wilh
his king , played bis last trump
and was home wHh tbe
bacon.''

'l1

NORTH (D)

borts UP.to 12" pipe slzt.

power sll:er ing, po't\'er brak es,
oir condition in g, AM. rodio and
ster~. rolly wheels, will sell
reasonable . Phone 992·7036 .

B:»-520,000 Question 8; Phyllis 10.

TRENatER

I

RIOfil'lll : Alumir'llim Sldlnt

~U1ck Riviera, good condi ·
lion, naw tires, $900. Phone

_______

For the Mason ·a rea,

Gutttr'

••e.,

13.
6:30--Teacher's Classroom •• News 6; SunriM
Semester 1: Concerns •nd Comments 10.
6:.-s--Mornlng Report 3.
6:50-Good Morning, Wnl VIrginia 13.
6:5S--Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:011-Today3,,,15, Good Morning, America 6,13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White ReportalO.

?O.ll.

Play doubtful bid to make

GuntR SE VI

e Aluminum

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1t7•
6 : ~Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 :1~Farrn Rtf)Ort 13.
6: ~Not For Women Only

WIN AT BRIDGE

9·2· 1 mo .

2 Bedroom trailer, $28 per week . SCHOOl sewing machine, Singer,
OLD furniture , ice boxes , bran
oil utilities pa id. Phone 992·
features buttonhole, blind
beds , wall telephones o~
ports, or complae households .
hem. sews on kni15 , $.48 cosh.
332•:c.·- - ' - - - -- - - Write M. D. Miller, Rt . .. . TRAILER jn Middleport, adults on Also. Singer Touch and Sew.
like new , $31 cosh. Phone 992·
~~eroy , Ohio. Coll992-n61J.
_ly. Phone992·5~•7 .
71BY.
CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
USED 24 inch fired brickline coal
or wood outomotic control fur ·
Phone area code 61"'· .. 23·9531 .
noce with bl ower, Six and nine
AVERAGE
$40
an
e'fening
or
TIMB£R . Pomeroy Fore5t Pro·
inch gal'fonized hot and cold a ir
afternoons
dem
onstrating
ducts ., Top price. for stondiilg
p;pe. Phone 985-:m8.
guaranteed toy s and gift s. No
sawtimber. Coli Kent Hanby ,
cash in'fe5fment, no delivery or SWEET potaotes . R. W. lewis, At.
1·....0·8570.
co lleCting. Computers do you
124, Rocine, Ohio. Phone 843CQIN$, 1929 and older currency ,
paperwork. Coil 9ol9·2803 or
::::::_
2•32.
gold and silver scrap, Will buy
Wl ·m7 Also booking partie'
or trde. Ho'fe a good telecllon
- 5 horsepower , 2 cy linder
of coins to sell or trade. ~lso,
Brooklure boo t motor , S25. 3 111
hove suppiiiH and metal
H.P. Turf Till rotary tyler , used
detecors. Roger Wamsley on
very littl•, $125. Ri'fol grind·O·
leading Creek and Rutland
motlc elec. meot grinder , like

Rood. Phone 7•2·2331 lor on of.

ME A !riDe I

MY DMRSAMIS .. PL6AS&amp;
$IT YOURG~LF IN COMFORT ON
MV HUMS~IO CARTI ... IT Wi~l.
.,x;BE MV PLEASURE-!

svracun,o .

112· 1116

COAl for sole, $22 per ton. Open
6 day~ per week ond evenings .
TWO TRAILERS f'or rent: one 3
bedroom unfurnished, one 2
bedroom furn ished . Phone

I ~W&lt;O N YO~ COIJL D CAL~
IT THAT. .. l 'M PRAVt'-1 &amp; FO~
~OMEONE! TO GIVe

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

1970

-

}970 Torino jSQ V-8, 62,(XX) actual
miles, 4 dr ,, excellent condition
Village Hall, Stole Rou le l2j, THE RACINE Fire Deportment will
w it ~ snow tires. Pho11e 992·
Village of Syracuse, Oh io.
ho'fe o gun shoot Saturday a t
· Bids may be ma iled to the · b :30 p.m. at their build ing in
3996. _ _
Village Of Syracuse, Ohia
Boshon.
1964 Chevrolet Impala S.F. real
45719. Attention :.. Mr . Herman
190; Mar le rie Wils~n 169.
gOQd condition, S..OO. Phone
FULLER Brush Products. the F. I. P.
High series - Jerry Cli ne London , Mayor .
Informat i on for bidd ers ,
992·5671 .
539; Helen Phelps 495 ; A. L.
cor pet !.weeper . Now on
Phelps, Jr . SJ.ol ; Marlene form of bid , form of contr4ct ,
special , regular $2,f .95 now 1968 Buick Wildcat , automat ic .
W ilson 488; Darrell Dugan ptans , specltlcatlpns, and
$19.95 . Offer expires Oct. 7,
power ·steering and pow~r
forms
of
b
id
bond,
perform
.
511 ; Mary Voss 463.
1976. Pflone 992·3.410. ""
brakes . good condtion . Good
Team high ge me - Tom 's ance and payment bond , and
o t her · documents ma,y be PETE and Gene's Garage js now In
Carry Out 695. ·
tires . Coli 992·3580.
Team high series - Tom 's examined and are Obtainable
operation. Mechan ic ond body 1973 FORD Bronco, automatic
at the V illage Hall , Syracuse,
Carry Out 2014.
work . North Second Street in
j
302, white spoke wheels. Call
Oh io, ~pon the payment of the .
Middleport . Formerly Bran·
sum . of ,us.oo., which Is not
9 9 213
non's Garage. Phone 992-S..SO
refundable .
All bids must be in pla in
or coli ofter 5 p.m. 992·7135.
• .
St!! led envetopes marked on
, the outside " Sid for Municipal
Tenn is Courts , V i lla(le of
FUfi:NISHEO , 2 bedrm. apartment,
Syracuse, Oh io." Each bidder
odults only , in Middleport ..
must have on the outside of the
Phone 992·387ol .
bid envelope his name and
actdress, and each b id must be Will 00 odd jobs, roofing , pain · 3 AND .,f RM. furn ished ond un accompanied ~Y a bid bond or
ting , hauling, tree work. and
fiJ rn ished opts. Phone 992certified check In amount of 10
mowing.
Phone
992·7.409.
~3• .
percent of the total b id. The
bid bond Shall be condit ioned
COUNTRY Mobile Home Por.k, Rt.
that If the bid Is accepted a
John Ellu, cathy Ellu to contract
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy.
will be entered intO
large 'on wit k conc rete patios,
Jack L. Frederick, Gloria K. and its performence properl y
sidewa lks . runners and off
.
.Frederick, 1.1&amp; ~•• RuUand. secured
st r~t parking. PhoneWl-7479.
If the bid embraces both MOBILE home for sole or rent . 3
Jobn
Arbaqb, Ethel labor and material such Items
bedrooms, ol ut ilities pcrtd.
Phone 992-nSI .
., ONE bedroom oportments ot
Arbaugll to Kevin L. Styer, shall beaeparately stated w ith
.
.
· VILLAGE .MANOR in M iddleport
the price thereof.
·
Melinda L. Styer, Lot, Olive.
lor S104 monthi~ plu5 elec. or
No b idder may withdraw his SxAS mob_1le home , JU$t remodel·
llarolci Circle, Lora R. b i d fOr a period of sixty days ed. Pmed very reosoooble. $130 including electric . t OWER
the date of bid open i ng . . Phone 80·2683.
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
Circle to Ohio Power Co.; from
This protec t Is federally , ~Cameron m~bJir h-;;;;~12~e~
Convenient
shopping on
Eue., Suttoa. ·
· assisted . Contracts to be ~ 3 bedroom , ' excellent condi- Third o'n d Millto Streets
in Mid ·
awarded
under
th
is
Invitation
Robert R. Hirden, Dorothy for bids w ill be subject to
tion. Phone 247 -270.C .
dleport. Brand new high quoli ·
t y apartm e nts . See
the ·
J. Harden to Oblo Power Co., Presidential Executive Order
manager at Apt. 16, or coli
No . 11H6 reQuir i ng af . 1969 12x63 Vindole. underpinned 1
Eue., Suttoa.
10x26 5crNn porch , central oir.
ve action tor equal
992-772 1.
Okey Paynter to Paul R. rJrmati
Mov be seen ot B~S Scutt-. Se·
employmtnt
opportunity .
Paynter, Glen W. Paynter, ' Contractors are further ad- cond Ave., Middleport. Or AVA:ILASLE ot Ri~terside Apart·
menrs, I bedroom apart·
vised that ttie January 27, 1972
phone 992 · ~822 .
Karl 0. Paynter,' 54 A., Equal
ments, $100 per month; 2
Employment
O'P •
portunltv ElCecutlve Order of ~====
bedroom apartments , $ 133 per
month. One price·for all. Phone
Holley Stlreber to Robert the Governor of Ohio Is also

lebanon.

to10" hiRIIftl bllilcftl, 7Sc

1968 Rambler 2 dr . tu . Coli m - 1%9 Dodge Swinger, ~0 . · 4
speed, 9o19-2oiA3 or 949·U32.
3659 .
-·· ,._,._.,.....,......_
1971 AMC Hornet. Phone WS- 1970 GMC Astra 95, 318 Detroit

3597 , $650 . Good co nd ition.

S•"lc:e

.to sua .

~

POMEROY,
OHIO
. - .

.........
..-

Wt hiVI 0111 frltn hOUit
h•ll of Plorld• folio,,
pl•nts. Over Jt warletlll n
111. Frtm 4.u It I" IHfl 1 6"

POM:~~~E~?~~~CO. ~if:'

OFFICE HOURS

Winter
thru

heu.n, Mond•r
Sllurdoy 10 to 1.

1972 NOVA 2 'DOOR
SlitS
Local I owner car, good tires, clean Interior, 6 c,l ., std.
trans .

8 !30 a .m . to 5 :00 p.m .
Darly , 8: 30 a.m . to 12: 00

CHURCH

Open for P:111 1

'

word

..min i mum .
Each add l tlonal word 3
cen t s:

RACINE BAPTIST

Sill Porter 222 ; Helen Phelps
'208; · Bill Port~r 205 ; Pal
· Ct~ rson 178 ; Sob Couch 204 ;
Max ine Duga n 175.
High series - Bi ll Porter
630; Helen Phe lps 515; Larry
Dugan 534 : Carolyn Bachner
511 ; A. L. ~h e lp s J r . 533; Pat
Carson 503.
Team high game - Zide's
Sport Shop 702 .
'Team h1gh series - Zide's
Sport Shop 1968.

1 2.00

NOTICE

· · 1974 CHEVELLE MALIBU
·.
$21t5
2door.locall owner with less than 33,000 mllis, 350 V-8.
engine, automatic, power steering and braktl. Like
new W· W tires: Factory air, radio, white over dark
gr...,.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

service. please feel tree lo
contact 949-2231 or 247·2101 .

Business Services

Pomeroy
MotQr Co.

lt74 CHEVY NOVA4 DOQR
$2795
Local low mllf&lt;!lle car, V-8 onglne, automatic power
SIHrlng end brakes, radio, tires show little wear, gold ·
finish . Sharp and nice. ,
.

For Want Ad Service

8:15

Smith Nelson Motors
Zlde's Sport Sh p
Oi ler's f':ou r
Young's Su pet m ark et

~TY

rt~erves

the right to edit or rejtct
any a d s deem ed ob.
iectlona l . The pu blisher
will not be responsib le for
more than one Incorrect
insertion .

YOUR ATTENTION
PLEASE

Pomeroy Cement Block Co . ··
Computer Services
·•

2 SIGNS

REGULATIONS

837 ·mtl.

16

Eagles

Team

INFORMATION
DEADLINE$

LO ANS ovo1ldi:Jie for ony purpose ,
S20,000 and up. Sales f orce and
management •orvices also for
hir• . Phone Mr . Pau stian , (513)

Pomeroy Bowling L•nu
Tri-Co . Lugue
Sept. l4 , 1916

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,1976
5:oo-Big Valley 3; Merv Griffin • : Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:»-News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Adam·
12 13.
.
6:oo-NtWI 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
EducatiOn In Transition 33 .6 : ~NBC News 3,~, 15;
A~ .13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8, 10;
H
" Lodge 20.
7 : ~rulhorCons ..3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
DOllars 6; Buck Owens 8; N.ws 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; Family Affair 15; American Indian Ar.
. lists 20; Know Your Schools 33.
7:30--Thal Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Bobby VInton
- -i; -MiJppet Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeil-Lehrer
20,33; Price Is Righi 10; Candid · Camera 13;
Frltndl of Man 15.
8:oo-LIIIIe House on the Prairie 3,4,15; Captain &amp;
Tennille 6, 13; Rhonda 8, 10; Adams ChronicleS

WAN't ADS

•peciQII all weekend. Just 2'/r
mil111s trom Ches ter on Route

BOWLING

Television log for easy··viewing

e Sentinel Classifieds.
For Fast Results ·Use Th.
...

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Yesterday's
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SOME MEN
Fou.ow,
AND
SOME COMMAND,
ALL· MUST
ARE · MADE
OF
CLAY. - HENRY
WNGFEU.OW

w.

......-------.

l:lUi~I\I\.TH§~~~~D?

\TAFOHM ~

(J

IenG l ()

I

Now orrance tht dn:W 1 ~
to form the •Qrllrile ..,...,, •
llliJtiU&lt;I bJ the ........ - -

I I I l"
(MIIII-Idllml "[X I I(.u.wen
ae ..., aIWt
Jumbles• VIRUS ICING. jAGGED ~EA
s.oourdo7'•
Whal lh hun(r·punfJ m•• ,.w hil 1111 ••• ·•
\ A.uwera JUST A •QA1ND"'
·- -

~E,MMliE,A LOT MORE!
THE~ ~L'L~ ST~SS MAHRS

AND SOCIAL GRACES...

WE SPENT 1liE liiHOLE

FIRST~ ..liST
LEAANIN6 11011.1 10 5IT !

!' .

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday, Sept. 'll, 1976
·;:;:::x::::::::1::::::.::::::::::~:::::::.:;:.:;:.:;:.:;x-:r.v.:t»;·~»&gt;.;

veteraa;M•m•!.!=it~~~,~!n•td

SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
--' Samantha Hall, Cheahire·,
Sharon Crouch, Racine;
H b rt J t T
It
.o a
un or emp e on,
Porn. eroy ·, .James Yea&amp;er,
Middleport,· Freeman
WiUlama, Minersville; Ira
C
R tl d Maxine
remea!ll, u an ;
Bromley, Middleport·, l,ela
Robinson, ltactne.
SATURDAY
DIS·
~~:b~~:.s John ~~~~:~.
Samantha Hall, Ra'ndy
Smith, Rev. George Oller,

, ., .. ,

"

!News • • •in Brie~~!
'J'

covert,
Pomeroy; Martha ilobiMon,
Pomeroy·, Darlene Duncan,
Sy,.cuse; Dea1te Kuhn,
,.__.., eta
WI...,"-......... re; renee ~...
Radnt· Sara Diddle Middleport:
'
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Warren Baker, Freeman
WIUWna, Timothy Sklorlnko,
Nonnan Curtll, Harry MeFarland, Sadie Tunaell.

v·

-·u•

'

MEIGS TH£ATRE
aDSED FOR

VACATION

WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

warned.

Special

.

"Going Bare" Ia 11ood Idea ''OIII,y for the vel'f few fiiiCbmlnded indiYiWals, who can live with.the pall'dblllty Gf 1o1111,11
everytb~ they've ~ In 1 llfellme of practic:lll; plaa a
good chunk of their lutln eaminga," W. Fred Muw~D wu
quoted as sayinl in thla week's lime of the AmaicaD lfedkiel
News. The new8p!lpel', publilbed weetJ,y by the Amsican
Medical Asloclation, recently published 1 tUVey lndlca4ing
thai 35 per cent of ph)'Jiclan reapondenll 1nft llllnliiDI of
dropping malpractice coverage while 13 pel' ca~l said they Ire
aln!ady without the insurance.
NFL Standlnt5

By .united Prrn lnternatioftll

Americ.ln Conferenc•
East
W. l. T. Pet. PF
Balt imore
2 I 0 .667 81
Miami
2 1 0 .667 60
New. Eng land 2 l 0 .66773
Suffalo
1 2 0 .333 38
NY Jets
c:ni~.IIQ -~ 20

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pan Fried Chicken
Home Made Noodles
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy ·
.
.
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk
Plus tax

$295

THE MEIGS INN
992·3629

Pomeroy, 0.

Farmen"nk
POMEROY, OHIO

Sl
68
52
IOO

Los AngelesW. 2L· · P~:j:~ ~~~
San Francisc 2 I 0 .667 7S ·s.t
Atlantl
1 2 .0 .333 3• 54

W. L. T. Pet. PF PA
2 1 o .667 72 .,2
2 1 o .66! 46 l7
I 2 0 33386 75 '
Cle;~eland
1 2 o ·333 65 9'2

West
.
; L. T. Pd. PF PA
san Diego
3 0 o 1 000 9&amp; ·;o
Oakland
3 o o 1'000 69 , 2
Denver
2 1 o :6.117 97 33
KlnWIS City 0 J 0 000 SA Bl
Tampa sav o 3 o :o~ ., 9 57 •
Netlona l content 11 ce
EISt
fl. I. t. pet . ll!f ll!l•
3 o 01.00011 .tO
Dalles
· Washington 2 o o 1.1100 50 2•
St. Louis
2 1 0 667 ll 67
.•PII110Citlphl
,'&gt;# ,.. . •
1 I o, :sao 21 U '

~"

....,,

0 1

NewOrtuns 1 2 0 .333 42 II
Seattle

~ 3 0 .000 52 91

. Sundey s Rnvns
C1nC1 2:8 Grttn 81';' 1
.

••

1111 llllllr "

HOCSYLYIAM. ROSE
KINGPOIIT - Mn.
S!!tlngporaMt. d...'!.OS::turJ!•
Ko....
.... .. -Y
evenlftt ai St. Joseph
"'--'Ill.
Par•ll'llklrg,
,._.
She enG·
1,': a briel IIIMU. " 11
Va.n, .!.". ~"C;Ihounh.._ CGUol!'!·,.~
... ...
..~ ~
Fro'* and · ah Richardt.
She also pr..,_ In
dNIII bv one brolhtr, Carl.

tho""':/.!~:!".!=~~
Churcti.' . s..;·-~ been a

resident ol Hockklngportlhe
past 311 years.
She Is survived by her
husbtnd, Roy; a 1011. Ray ;
two da~M, Mrs. Laura
Bell Sny
and fks. Betty
S.ms. both of Hoekl~l ;

:-..r.:::J:';· ~%.R~~.~~~:

Mrs. Gtlah Phllllpa, Soenctr,
W. Va. ; Mrs. Wilma Wright,

1 ....,,.
·
.....,......._ ... w. ..__
'"'-ltl 1.,_1111111 - • .... w -- - ·
OES. He btlon~~
to rxJ I II. ?'
a.'"• I X I. 111&amp;1111 I I..,
~
"
lkllworth CGUncll , Rotyl in
fa.,...
11 ..... Ill nnlr, I ..., ta:Qs
Arch Me10111 Chapt.riO, and
n 71 t••. 11 ..-.
1111&amp;
, .,IPJ
""Ia Vallay Commandlry 22••,
• -H.; was a member ot o..; ..., • II 1111111'11..... " R ..,_ w.blt.r Pott ~
- . _,..,
•--1·. . -""' wl I 1• ,._IIIII
- · ' ,, I' ..S. 111111.....
loalon.
·
• .,.... •
fllld te lllll:r • I&amp;
!lurvlvlftt are hit wife,
Bl lila hUI:~ t.r 1111 ·&lt;'dlt X ' Ill Iiiii ntlaltl
""th, Ml Alto · a ·- Ron
_
_.,... •
Midd...,.;t ; a ~ug,;t;;!,
f
PIll 111111 wllllill,.. qw=1•• .._ . n 1ne
Sheila Mllltr o1 Gambltr; -II 11111111111 PI¥ IN
aaa, - Ill Iiiii ....
three stepchildren, Mrs, P~~t• 11 111 Ssl 11111111 lllldprl'l 0 _ . . • ..,
Su11n Poole. Wesler villa; ...,. U.. ID llllllllllaL
1111&amp;, ..r "11 b' 1 4II·
~!w.~·~~~~:nd
Aild."'-uNIIIIIO""In,
. . _11. . _
Pullin, Middleport ; saven IIIII ..._.. to Pit Ioiii oC
11010 IORO (UPI) _
grandchildren, his molhtr, lttttra not aDini'ld bf
Ntn. Blaine Cowan EINnor · _._, - - .....
l'"ll aDI 1m MJ
o 1 •
W. Ve,: three brothars, Bill: ::::.""':..:"';':!...
.- . .!.." , lllr 1llb 1 • tilt I o ) 1
ol Raymond Cltv, W, Va.; ..., - - "'" ..,.. It . . j111t Ill 1
James or Hughosfon, w. Va,, eompetinc:e In till olftc:e ''Menu- Uti '"lttd"
and Fred, R..S Housa. w, va., · IP m....
.,
~nd 1fo sls~ersMMn. Eugene Oat nptriDtiBdtnt :::ont dmlop•tat
~~~.,·. :O~h ot ..".:c.. ':.re~~ fr'*ilt.d bf
.His ather. Blaine Cowan, fiU4nlpll to Itt ID waa to
JnJY.U.ar
him In dNIII,
1 pr1111aD, r arltd to llrliiC
BALD DOll ... A
at7: :'t~"; ~ 1 :l,.~= ~!,'*!~-to 1111 a.tral a I hwt!nl will Ill !IIIII
Funeral Home whtratunaral .,.._ · - 11ft n••llt II at &amp;lit
OUt If
servlctswlll btheldat1 p. m. liUIDIDIIII 1 polllltllllau II r ........... • • f
Wednesday with tho R•v, · fedln1 flmdl.
· 1 1 , .... tleatwlllllt 7:•
Clarence Merlin olflclatrng,
Wbat I t -... ._.n- 11 • "•·
Burial will be In Hopewell
,
-. - ·
..••
Cemetery at MI. Alto. Marllll abiiPtJ to "' 1111 will lit . . . . . . . tl . .
Frltn&lt;;la may call at the tUfttodaa,lablorltllll-1111 =I v, W. VL 'hlz'l will
funeral home anytime after 7 allilll) to pldl 10011 piapll IIIIP 1 ltl ...... 'l'2lt J1111111C
tonight.
• .... del-l... -.o&amp;:..,....., _ ,. .___..
- - · · - ....... ..,_,
• ..--

It-..,

.u

Mn:

;=

Minnesota .10 Detroit 9
ButriiO 1_. llmPt Bl't 9 New

En&lt;j 30 P i ll•burg~ 27

M11M1 16 New York Jets o
Atlanta 10 Chicago 0
~ew Or INns 27 Kin Cit';' 17
Oakllncl 1_. HOUSIOn llJ
Dallas JO 8eltlmore 27
Denver "Cltvel~nd 13
los Ang 2.. NY G11nt1 10
San Diego AJ St. LOUiS 2A S.n
, Fran375eatfle21

-y

!Only g,smnsclle&lt;lulecll

eou.,..

Wells lndlcatai the commtalon wu informed al 1
llittlln&amp; lui Tburaday with
Warren Phellpa, auperfn,
tenendent of the Guldin&amp;
Hand School in GaUpolla, thai
It would COlt !be comilllonerl

tho

=· -. ==
rru••

Alhant.

tho

VOL. XXVIII- NO. 114

F1ElD DIRECTOR - Pretty Susan Wri&amp;ht, daughter
of Mr. and Mn. George Wright, Union Ave., Pomeroy, is
the field director of the Me~ High Scbool band lhls fall.
SUsan Ia hqldlng the first place trophy which she won
Saturday in Polnl Ple~nl where she won lint place
among lhe Class B field conunanders, The Meigs Band,
directed by Dwight Goins, was fin! place ·winner in that
division, and received a large trophy. Miss Wright is
wearing a new uniform which Is similar to some new 15
uniforms purchased tor penoruiel fronting the band this
·fan. She Is a junior at Meigs High School.

IDYS' RMNR SHillS

Regular boys sizes I to 11- 1ont sllevts •
western styles - printed cotton fl1nne1.

r::::::::::~::::~~;:,&lt;;:::m:::~::::::::::w:::::::;::::;::: ;:::::,~:::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,~:::::1-::~:::~:::::::::::::::;

liNews • • •zn

ELBERFELD$ IN

..,to f4. oo

•

.You can make
something very nice
happen on
Christmas morning.
.

•

t25l2 Brief reg. S26. 95 Now only $l2.95°

Save'fiOonda
U:•ii"Sbetda Bras
t1l2 Undercup lining
reg. $6.95 Now only $5. 95"
!115'1 Stretch Straps
rea. $6.50 Now only $5.50"
41179 Cotton Straps
reg. SS .95 Now only M. 95•
t239 3/4 Lonaline Bra
reg. sa.95 Now only $7.95
!1259 Lonalirie Bra
. reg. sa.95 Now only $7.95
'210 Extra Lona-Lonaline
reg. $9.95 Now only SIUS'

Sale ends
October 11, 1976

hiW!

t665 Seamless NlyPadded

reg. $7.95 Now only 16.45

t61S Seamless tricot bra Nowln.I)Cup

reg. $6.95 Now only $5.45
t655 Seamless fiberfill
rea. S7. 95 Now only 16.45
t966 Soft sider tricot bra
reg. S4. 95 each Now 2 lor 18.40"
t961 Soft sider fiberfill/tricot bra
rea, $5.95 each Now 2 for $10:46
j962 Soft side fully padded tricot bra
rea. S5.95 each Now 2 for 110.40
t35 Cotton reg. S3.95 each Now 2 for 56.90"
tl6 Cotton stretch straps
re1. S4.95 each Now 2 for 18.40
t56 Plavtex Padded Stretch.bra
rea. 56.50 Now only $5.50

5Mtplonlhese
FNeStilk'ldlladdela$
.... Tricot bra rq, S7.SO Now only 16.51
. 1m Fiberfill rea. 57.95 Now only 16.95

A jUrJ of four women and
elghl men Monday found
J?ean and Larry Ashburn, Rl.
I, Langsville, guilty of
poaession of and receiving of
stolen property taken from
the Edwin Davia Bus Sales In
Danvtue on Nov. 22, 1875.
The jUrJ, which valued the
tools found In !be poa~esslon
of the defendants over $150,
wu out one hour and 10
minutes.
Sentence wUI be bnposed
today. The two men were
remanded to the cuslody of
the Metga County Sheriff.
Warren Black wu the first
to take the stand In the trial.
Black Ia employe of Edwin
Davia Bus Sales,
Cbarlu Knlahl, autatani
ptoleCIItor, silowed 1 list of
tooka alle&amp;ed taken from the
Davis Company, which
Black ldenUfled, lncludln&amp; a
bo:~ full of tools, Black
Identified !be tool box u Ilia
· and IOYII'al tooii.ID the box.
Two lmobl from an antique
piano he owna taken to work
to repair were also Identified.
Black valued the tools at
appro:limately ,1,800. He also
Identified an electric drill and .
IICI'eW drl- and other ltema.
Caraon Crow, defense
OOWIIel, uted II there were
any valuable papers In the
tool box. Black said tbere
were and that the papen
were not In the box when It

·

t%714-2794 in white or beiae
rea. S12.95 Now only 110.95

· fll862 Free Spirit Brief
rea. S7.SO Now only 116:50'
fl2166 Free Spirit Averaae Leg
rea. sa.95 Now only 17.95•
t2122 Double Diamond Averaae Lea
rea. S13.95 NowolllyS1t.95~
t2830 Double Diamond Girdle
rea. 512.95 Now o.ily ...... t
t21l4 Double Diamond Lon1 Leg
rea. S14.95 Now on1y tn.ts• t
t217ft Double Di~mond Waist C011trol
rea. 516.95 Now on1y tM.ts•t
("0 cups lnd 00 cups 11.111 marl! XL • Xltl $1.55 marl!)
lOOO. &amp; XXXXL ll.CXImore)

('XL &amp; XXL 11.45 rilcn)

ELBERFELD$ IN .
. t

•

entjne

at y

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1976

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Salaries of the superintendenl of the Meigs Local
School District, Charles L.
Dowler, and his assistant,
Dan Morris, were Increased
by a unanimous vote when
the MelBA Local Board of
Education met in special
session Monday night.
The board met ln.executive '
session to dlsCU3S the in-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.

creases for the two ad- paid, In one lnatance, tbe
ministrators before giving rai.se broughl the salary of a
the increases. It was pointed principal to a higher amoWit
out thai recent pay increases than Morris is receiving.
given teachers and principals
The board lncreaatd
as a resull of the leachers Dowler's salary from SZI,OOO ·
strike in the district had ·. a year lo $25,100 and Morris'
Increased prlnclpals and from Sl8,400jo $21,5110. II wu
teachers in some cases to staled that the salary Innear what the auistanl crease for Morm was placed
superintendent is now being at the $21,5110 figure to place

EROY
f

was returned to Meigs
County.
Crow asked Black if he
could say the tool box was
poaillvely his, and lilack
replied that he could not
identify the box as po.slllvely
his. AI this polnl Crow said he
had no further questions.
The next penon to lake the
stand was Jim Crisp, deputy
for the Sheriff of Vinton
County, ·who was ~;~~~ployed
by the Meigs CoWIIY Sheriff's
Department althe time 9f the
breaking and entering,
Crisp, queslloned by
Knight, said he flrst saw the
tool chest at the home of C.
Johii110n in Newark, Ohio. He
sajd' Jolmson brought the
chest to Crisp,
Crisp all1o said lhal he saw
the lwo drills, sockets, and
other items al the home of
Eugene Knlghl In Columbus.
He stated that neither man
offered aDy resistance and
the tools were given to him by
Jolwon al Melga Mine No. 1.
He took the tools to ·Ilia
~~~c~fflc~hen to the
In other testimony Monday

afternoon according · to
Charles Knigbt il was
brought oat that Larry Ashbum was asleep, or Inlo:licated, most of lhe time
while the incident took place,
and was presumed lo be ln
the car all of the tbne. ·

him S«&lt;I · above the high salary increases and the 1,586.66, , 15,866.66.
Barr, Margaret, 8,736.
school principal, which bed additional pay fo~ sup- 8 736
contracts • Barr,
· Mlc~ael , 9,072. 954,.
been the pollcy. The salary of Plemental
, ,
followlilg
the
strike
for
th~
10.026.
·
Dowler wu set at tz;,lOO to
197&amp;:77
scbool
year
follow
Bartels,
E
..
1M341,
t2,936,
carry out the policy of paying
'
(
fl
·
.,,
.....
In
order
abase
Bartfey,
J
..
8,o400,
8,-400.
the superintendent $3,800
o--• ·
' •• ap-' · Bentley
·
12 558 795'
annually over the salary supplementary where
13,353. • John, ' '
.
Bentley, Joy, 11 ,&lt;124, 795,
given
the
assistant pllcable, and 197&amp;:77 salary
tolall:
12,219.
superintendent.
Arnott. J., $1U24, $1,113,
Birch, R., 11,180, 12,180.
Salariea of each of the $12,537.
. Birch, S., 9,130, 9,130.80.
district's teachers with the
Bailey. M., 14,280,
Blaellnar, E., 10,080, 10,080.
Blaettnar, J.. 13.440;
. 1,493.33. 14,933.33.

Gro un db reaking ceremonies set
.

SYRACUSE~ _ Groundd
"" b
numerous ogs are own.u Y
breaking ceremonies for the one resident Is posing a
new swtnuntng pool here will problem and causing great

be held Sunday at 3:30p.m. it
was decided at a pre·
col)lt~ion meeting Mon·
day nl&amp;ht of vlllqe council
with Roger Hornsby, Coolville, contractor.
According to Hornsby •
construction will gel un·
d~!~sMd~~ ~;.!k the

concern, council learned.
Persons in violation of the
.ordinance against dogs
running loose will be subject
to prosecution. · The Meigs .
County dog warden has been
advised of the problem.
Robert Winget!, president

C

ill

first' grade al Syracuse
OUrt w' see
Elementary School to do the
groundbreakln&amp;.
curfew violators
In olher business, council
discussed whether or not to
The . parents or legal
hold trick or treat or a
~UArdian of a child under 18
community party. Council · years
of age In violation of a
welcomes suggestions from
resldentl and will make a 9:30p.m. curlew wiD be cited
decision. al the next regular to Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's Court, Pollee Chief
meeting. ·
Milton Varian . announced
Numerous complaints were
today.
.;
aired in regard to the poor
Syracuse
village council
recepllon by Cable TV. placed a 9:30p.m.
curfew on
Citizens have been complaining the past eight weeks. aU minors in the village efCouncil all1o discussed dogs fective Oct. 11o Nov. 1, 1976
exdudlng the nigh! of Ihe
rwmin&amp; loose in the village; Syracuese
Grade School
Halloween party when the
curfew wU1110und ai 10 p.m.
AU persons under the age of
18 unless accompanied by at
least one parent or le&amp;al
guardian, must be off !he
streets afler the curfew
Varian warned.

Ashhurns guilty

he SpitrPanlslilers.

(t

QUINCY, IIJ... - FOUR BOMBS, possibly dynamite,
damaged a S!JlaU bridge and ripped through an industrial plant
Monday night while Republican vice presidential candidate
Robert Dole made a campaign appearance in this MIBslssippl
River town.
Secret Service agents assigned to Dole monitored the
Investigation rut lOCjll pollee said there was "no evidence at
the Ume" the blasts were connected with the Kansas senator
who was acl'088 town from the explosions.
EAST LIVERPOOL, OffiO - STRIKING TEACHERS In
the East liverpool School system today rejected tbe latest
contract propo1111l from the East liverpool Board of Education.
"The offer that the board made the teachers was far under
(Continued on pa~e 10)

§ate'.l'OCII

Nowmn•m

Brzefs~

·~
By United Pren Internatl t·
ona
• BEIRUT, LEBANON - SYRIAN TANKS AND artillery
today launched what Christian and Palestinian sources
described ,as a. major military thrust In the mountains northeast of Beirut, apparently ~ing the long-e~pected bfttle for
central U!banon.
,
·'
.. . ·
Palestlnlah mUitary spokesmen said Syrian forces,
massed at Sofar and Dahr El Raider 15 miles southeast of
Beirut, pushed north at dawn toward the supply line to
Palestinlan forces at Aintoura and Metein in lhe mountains
east of !he capital. Christian forces pressing down on the
Palestinian front from lhe northwest joined in the attack and
both sides said "fierce battles" were Wider way.
"It's started," said a Christian source: "The battle for the
mountains has begun:"

'''

Playtex styles.

00

nRST SALES - Mn. Sheila Henes •Ill the flral two Ucketa to the annual Metga
County Homes Tour of Ohio Eta Phi Olapler Of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority of Jolin Mllllllel',
mana&amp;er of the Meigllnn. The to1r wiD be on Sunday, Oct, 10, with eight homes on the tour.
Relrelllunentl to thole maldn&amp;the tour will be •ned at the home of Dr. and Mn. r-Ia
Telle, Uncoln Hill Road, Pomeroy. Mn. Rttwsla the chairman of the 110rority's ways and
means COI!Imiltee with the tour one of se"'ral projects to be carried out during the club
year. Hours of the tour wiD be 1to5p.m.

.

Work fl1nntls in neck sizes 14111 to 17 1nd
extr1 largt sizes 11 to 20. Clloose your
favorite pattern lnd color.

U)

it wu indicated at the Sept.
13 meeting that au dlalricts In
Meigs County, If the commissioners did not appropriate money for the
mentally retarded, would
lose aU federal ustatance for
the lpeclal " educallon
ptO&amp;ram.
In other business Bill
Smith, trustee of Rutland
Township, met wth the
commlsatoners and uked If
the county would allisl in
placing &amp;ravel on Happy
Honow Road, to which the
commlsstonen agreed.
Attending were Henry
WeUa, Waren 0\lra, Bernard ·
Glllo:ey, commtllioner Wesley
Buehl, engineer, and Martha
Charilbers, clerk.

Dowler, Morris salaries increased

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Sae

vised thai the commissioners
could be taken to court If they
do not appropriate money to
educate the mentally
retarded aa required bl' law
according to Bary Cohen of
Ohio Legal Rights Service.
Wells pointed out thai the•
COWIIy does no! have the ·
· money to send the students tO
Gallipolis, He all1o stressed
that money in a conlinlency"
Fund Is ear marked. Welts
all1o said the state has indicatai it d0t8 not approve
cl8S8l'ooms in the upper level
of the former children's
home , which the . commlsslooers were willln8 to
look al for that putpose with a
view to finance the program
locally.

e.t

Be sure to stop In the
men's
and
boys
department - 1st floor
- see our excellent
selection of flannel
shirts - sport flannels In
sizes small, medium, .
large and extra l11rge.

.....,,

tho

for tuition, which
doea not Include tranaportaUon and money for an
adminlalrator.
Transportation would coat
approximately Sl5,000 and
•16,000 for an adminllt!'lltor,
The figures he quoted (or
tuition, tranaportaUiln and
edmlnlltrator were for the
school year 19711:77. It' boiled
down to a COli of S2,188.811 per
student.
Well.!1 stated that he had
Informed Probate Judge
Mannin&amp; Webeter, chatnnan
of the board of Mental
Relardation, of the decision
of the comrnl.satoners.
At a meeting held at the
county superintendent's
office n Sept. 13 It was ad·

MEN'S R.ANNEL SHIRTS

.

She was born April 4, 18P4
at Moraan. W. Va., Yo the Iale
John t:. and Minerva S.yre
WhHion, Sha was also
precedH In dllith by her
husblnd, James E. Davis, ·
several brolhtrs and on.

GUY LAWRENCE COWAN
Guv Lawrence Cowan, ..,,
of Mf. Alto, w. Va., tormerlf.
ot Pomeroy and Mlddlepor ,
was deed on arrival Sunclly
at lha Jackson General
HON&gt;Ital In Ripley, W. Ve.
Mr. Cowan w11 a bOiler
operator at the Keiser
Aluminum
Corp.
at
Ra..,.wood. Ht balonved to
Hopewell Baptist Church
at Moun¢ Alto. Ht was a past
master of Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM. and a past patron
ol POmeroy Chapter 116.

~.382.13

ELIERFELDS IN POMIROY

LULA WHEATON DAVIS
PORTLAND - Mrs.• Lull .
Wheaton Dl¥11, 12. Portland,
di..S Sunday evening at

GaiiiH

I

Henry wena, prealdent of
the boi!rd of Metp County
CGmmi..ionm 11id Monday
Metp County camot afford
lo edaeate the mentally
rtlarded by lelldlng them to
GaWa

::fh~~- J~~~~v~:ror;t; P':f.eded
grandchlidren. 10 gr01lgrandchildren and several
nieces and nepNwl,
Funeral WVICII will bt
hlld Tuesday al2 p. m. at
White Funeral Home In
Coolville with "'" Rev. Ray
Modellll
._.!11 ott lclallng, Burial
w .... 1n 5tewert Cemetery
at HOCkingport. Friends may
call at the funeral homo at
any lime.

W~lo~!!'_...t-~•=t

/

.Price tag on trai.Ding
in Gallia prohibitive

ii

tho

G~!'!iiD .. .,

10

.

SurvMna are on. lister,
INs. flqrl McCloud, Port·tand, and Mrs. Lena
Wallace, Florldt, and several
nieces and nephaws.
"
Funeral serviCII will be 10 ·
a. .m, Wednesday at
Ewl"l Funtn~l Home with
Central
ev. Freel and Norris
W. L. T. Pd. PF PA the
2 0 I .133 .0 . 21 olflclaftng. Burial will be In
2 1 0 .667 29 2S
Rawns- cemetery.
01 32 00 . 1100333 2361 1330 Friends may call at tho
funeral home anytime
West
Tuesday.
1

PA

CinCinnati
Hous.ton
PifiSburgh

When you take part in our Dress-A-Doll or DeSign-fl.-Toy programs
somethin9 nice does happen Christmas morning : a girl or boy has a
happier Christmas. Your doU or your toy are gifts tMt wouldn't be there
if you didn't ca~e.
·
'
Pkk up a dol now. It's free.
A doll, 19" taU, with moveable llrlllS and legs, and eyes that sleep, is
wolti ng fDf you. Come in, take one home with you. Design and sew an
outfit for the doll, then return it to us. It will be'judged, prlies will be
awarded winrters, and all the dolts will be displayed in our lobby for
the public to admire and enjoy. Ali dolls will be Christmes gifts for n«dy
..:hildre n in the area.
Atoy wlft make aome IItie b oy happy.
We have three styles of wooden trucks for you to choose from. 1\s·
semble and paint the toy and return it to us for judging and display.
Uke- the dolls. a charitabl,e organization will distribute the toys as
Christmlls gifts.
Drei5·A·Do1i .. • Oeslgn·A-Toy •.. warm ways to say "Merry Christmas.'"

Minnesota
Chicago

H

I

Area Deaths
· l &lt;c ~?!!..~&gt; -:~;:-;..,-:;:
.

.,

-UIIIelll'rfllb. . .u..l
»&gt;
WASHINGTON- rl' LS ADJOURNMENT WEEil !Gr
em--.
h--'- Wlloitletn delava, IIIIIIIWillben f8c:e 1
... hw1Yfivedayawilhv«eenpecta101l,...ald,~ . 'Nen¢11
overrldellllda move in the Hollie to-ICIIt!ftP'l'bw,
Tbe
-rHouae,jolningtheSenateinlhedrlveforllllllldjoai-IGf
the 94th Conp'al by OcL 2, lelulla 1111111-•s'" FrldiJ I
_.,~•- to
o- • ...._ .,.......,_ a """"
vote 00 "'"'u""
tlpe1 • ..,.. """""" .-w, .........,.,,
because of Ilia convlc!llan for laldng brtbel willie he wuthe
Orange county (CaUf,) tu 111
r.
Holzer Hedlcal Ctllter
Rep. ()larlell WIUIDa, R.C.Uf,, cnfied the npuWCII
(Birtiii,Sepl.%4)
reiOiutionwhlch,lfpuaedCIIIIIilqlllmajarltfvale,WIIUidbe
Mr. arid Mn. Michael the,lirstsuchactlooilncelM'IwhmAdamCiaytGaPonllwu
Hop80n, 110n, Point Pleasant; thrown out of the Houae for mllule Gf committee 1\anda, Wore
Betty McKnight.
.
Mr. and Mta. Earl Spurlock, the Hilllhaw matter al week'a end the nou. plamed to lab
SUNOA Y ADMISSIONS Cro
Cl
'
·
Lucille Dill, Racine; Jamea liOn,
wn ty; Mr. and ::~:Jhe rr~lgn :n:~~~~· which UUII tU
Hill, Albany ; Marion Hayea, MVinrs. Earl Ben nell, aon,
011' or e I
year·-_.,. . I.
ton; Mr. and Mn. Robert
~~:~:;J ; ~~ir ~:~: Dunlap, son, Patriot.
OAKLAND, CAUF.- PATRICIA HEAfts'r's aeven-yar
Mr. (~:-·:..f.~hester sentence on blnli robbery chlrpl may llltll her Into •
reluctant grand jury witne1111linlt Symbi-UIJeratlan
~urton,dda:!"er, Oak Hill; Army members WIWam and EmllyHania,ICCOI'dq to bet
Gr. an
Sba~ P, lawyers. AIJohnlon,oneofthe newlj&amp;per llelr'a' atlamefl,
rueser, 1011 •
•
said of the sentence: "It has llbaRn bet COitldeilce In the
(Btrlbs,~21)
judicial aystem, with which she jlaa been cooperaiing.''
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Miss Hearst, 22, wu ezpected to be a lellkff wilMa
MWlSel', liOn, POmeroy; Mr. before the Alameda Cou!IJ' Grand JUrJ today wben It bePI
and Mrs Don ld M""'-•••• ' ""-- ,._ _, _ _. .... "-"""~In bet ""'-•
.
a
WWIO,
rece1.u............... Cll u"'""" ....... - · ·dau&amp;hler, Jackson, ·
from a Berkeley, Callf., a!JKUnenl In J'ebnlmy m4. lllaa
Hears!, daughter of San F'rancilco i!:umlner Auldenl
Randolph A u--~ - · ~__, ......... by U S "'"""""
· """"'• ~--"""' n-z
· · ..-.-.~
In 1961, Syria broke away CourtJudgeWIWamH.Orrickforberrole In an SLA~at
from the United Arab a San Franclaco branch ba~ 10 weeb alter she was kidnaped.
Republlc In a revolt led by
CHICAGO - DOCrORS WHO ARE "GOING BARE," or
army officers.
practiCing without costly ~cal malpractice IDiurance, are
rlsldng ccmplete financial ruin, a111111qe111111t CCIIIIII1aDt hu

mE INN PLACE
Tuesday Ni!(ht

~------- - ---------------- ---

PAIR SENTENCED

Weather

Clear and cool toni&amp;hl, lows
The Aabbara brolben
to
upper 40s.. Mostly SUIUly
were sentenced to oot lm
and
warmer Wednesday,
tbaa Ollfl1191' more lba live
to upper 60s.
highs
yean In a proper alate
lnltilutlon (acconllag to Probablllly of rain 20 per cent
IHir IIHI, by ·Common today, near zero per cent
Plea• J1qe JobD C Bacoa toolght and Wednesday.
tbla mornlnl, Judge Bacoa ·
remallded the two II the
CLOTIIING OFFERED
euatody of tbe aherlfl.
Free clothing day will be
Clli'IOII Crow, altoraey for held at the Salvation Anny
the doft11e, fUed a req11t1t headquarters In Pomeroy
for an appeal whleb was Tbunday, Sepl. 30 from 10
&amp;raated. The defendalltl a,m, to noon. All area
were ~land lndJtent aid · residents in need of clothing
Crow waa appointed tlleir are welcome.
altoraey. Dean Amburn Ia
zt yeara old. Larry 1.11 ~.
atarrttd, aad the father of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
lour children
T h e Mi d d I e p o r I
Emergency Squad answered
:;:;::::;::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::;:::;:::::::;:;:;:::·· a call to 45 Elm St., at 10:12
p.m. for Mary Crui.k3hanks, a
The jUrJ was retired by medical patient, who wu
Judie John C. Bacon at3:20 taken to Veterans Memp.m, The ju&lt;ige told the jury mortal Hoapital where she
that one of ltl.finding:J must was admitted.
~re w~:~=: ~~~r'~r ~~~: · ::::::::::· ·: ·::·:·::;:,:::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
than •150.
Th
d
1b r ou • h
Se~•·· •n the jnrv were
•
• '""' •
_,
s 1 urs
d ay
fair ---~,
Beulah Cornell, Dan Arnold, and
" "'Jl'rlday
ay, 11111 a chuce
...... --y
of
steven Eblin, Wilma Reiber, abowen Saturday. Highs
Roger Gaul, Max Davis, wUI be In the upper 80s to
Kenny Imboden, Shirley the 7011 and lows will be In
Slason, William WIU, Norma
,._ th 1
Wilcox, Ro&amp;er Tony and the upper ... to e ower .
Howard Larkins.
::::;~t:::;;:;::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::
!

Sown,

Oavnt,~u,280,

,.,,280.

Bowen, J.. '12.9341, 12,936.

Brannan, C., 12,096, 12,096.

.

Brauer, R., 14.280, 14.280.
Brewington,

) .,

12,096,

12,097.
of council, in the absence of were Eber Pickens, Troy council members, Mary
Carpenter, B., 12,036,
·
·
Mayor He.rman ' London, Zwilling, Jimmy Joe Hema- Chancey, clerk, Hornsby and 12,0341.
easel. T.• 8,736, 8.736.
presided. Others attending ley and Kathryn Crow, Pollee Chief MOton Varian.
Chancey c .• u,280, 3,971 .66,
t8,251.66.
Chaney D., 12,936, 12,936.
Chaney, K.. 9,912. 318,
10,230.

Objection.s raised to loss

Chaney, L., 9,408, 9;..oe.

Childs, T., 8,736, 8,7341.
""eotOI)'lan, R., 12.096, 12.096.
Corder; c ., 12,096, 12,096.

of Cancer Society office
By Bob Hoefilch
Can Meig:J CoWIIy afford to
let go of another service?
That is the question posed
by officials of the Meig:J Unit
of !he American Cancer
· Society in regard to a strong
proposal that the Melg:J Unit
be combined with the Gallla
County Chapter, with the
office to be In Gallia coWity.
The executive secyetary of
the Gallia Unit resigned
recently and a replacement
.for her has been named. The
executive secretary of the
MelBA Unit, Sharon Bailey,
resigned effective Friday. A
replacement has been named
but It will . be some time
before the, replacement can

begin work.
Local cancer unit officials
prolest the propoaed combining of the two units not
only on the buls thai Meig:J
CoWity has already lost too
many other services - the
airport, unemployment offlee, the local luberculosls
and health unit, the children's
home - but on the basis that
the local unit now has a
"highly involved" board
wflfch IS expected to carry out
an e:J:ceUent pro&amp;ram In the
future. Also, It Is polntai out
thai an office for the two
co11iltiea In Gallia County
would mate handling patient
services very dlfflcull due to
the travel and long distance

Classes extended
The closing date of schools Dowler said the first makeup
in the Meigs Local District day will be on Thunday,
next spring has been ex- April 7, but schoota will be
tended due to the teachers' closed following day, AprU 8
(Good Friday) as the earlier
strike.
$Chool
calendar Indicates.
According
to , the
Schools
were scheduled to
agreement between the board
close
May
XI. However, the
of education and teachers,
studentl wUI be required to closln&amp; will now lake place on
make up five days of lost lbne June 3 with MondaYr MaY 30,
Memoridal Day to lle a
during the school year.
Dlst. Supt. Charles L. holiday.

telephone calla involved. Loal
of !be local chapter office
would be detrimental to
continued succeaa of any
aMual fund drive oHiclal.!1
are convinced.
Last year the local chapter
spenl $1,800 in services for 18
patients,
Including
·medication, tranaportatioo,
referrals to hospitals and
organizations, loan equipment to paUenta, and publlc
infonnation and education, It
wu puinted out that the local
unit bu Increased about 450
percent In publlc information
and education alone in the
past year,
A meetin&amp; of the local unit
boardbubeen caUedforf:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy
and the pubUc Ia asked to
altend and express feell{lg
towards the . suggested
removal of the local 9fflce
:which Ia the Hughes building,
S. Tblrd Ave,, Middleport.
Present for the meeting
will be Warren Parrish,
regional director of the
American Cancer Society. It
wu pointed out that unless
strong oppoaltion Is voiced
the office probably will be
removed from MelBA County.

Corder, J., 12,096, 12.096.
Cox, Gladys, 12,936, 12,936.
Crow , James, 8,736, -:117.'!1J.
9, 133.50.
Crow, Pamela , 9,5341 9,534.

Crow, Sam. 11.~24, 516.75,
11,940.
. '
Dais, Helen 12,096, 12;096.
Diehl, Ida, . 12,936, ,12,936.
Diehl, James, 14,290, 6,~26.
20.706.
Oi xo~ , Don, 12,180, 1,431,
13,611.
Downey , R., 9,912, 9,912.

Downie, C., 12,936, t2,936.
Eblin, K.. t2.096, 1.2,096.
English, E., 8,778, 8,778.

Enslen. J.. 9,912. 9.912.
Evans, C., 8,736, 8,7341.
Fells, Melvin , 8,-400, 8,400.
Fick. K.. 11,802, 1t,802.
Finch, E., U,280, 14,280.
Fisher. B., 14,280, 14,280.
Flesher, G.. 12,190, 95:1,
13,134.

Frecker, c .• 11 ,046, 11,046.

Garst, C., 9,744, 9,744.

Gaul . B.. 11 ,76o, 11,760.

Gerlach,· M., 10,290, 10,290.

Gibbs, M., 13,860, 13.860.

Gibbs, W. , 12,936, 12,936.

Goell, M., 12,096, 12.096.
Goins, D., 13,440, 3,781.66,
17,221.66.
Goins. K., 10,080, 1,120,
11,200.

Hanning, .0 .• 13.020, 1,953,
(Continued on page iO)

Rhodes in
Pomeroy ·
on Monday

Meigs County resldonta are
invited to attend a S25 a plale
breakfast Wednesday
momln&amp; when Gov. James
Rbodes will be in Pomeroy.
The governor wiD be at the
Women."
Meigs lM at 8 a.m. Proceeda
Over at the souvenler from the event will go to
stand, the lop seller by far Is Merrll Triplett, candidate for
a $5 belt buckle with the Wllon state r~entative ,
The governor will be at
crest,
the
MelBA fM untU 9:15 a.m.
·" They're really going,"
Following
the breakfast be
said the coni:esslonaire. "The
will
meet
the . public at
backlea are real good ones ~
really heavy. They're even Powell's Super Vatu store, W.
oui.selllng our k baseban Second Street, Pomeroy.
Cof(ee and Donuts wW be
caps."
served
at Powell's and the
Little statues of coal
public
will be asked for
miners alsO were available
donations.
for SlO each.
This Is the .
time the
At another st.an&lt;t, lhe best governor has been In Meigl
seller Is a $3 union CoWII}i for approxlml1tely 10
yean.
necklace.
Those Interested In at"Miners are buying them to
take back home to their tendln&amp; the breaklut are to ..
contact Leslie Fulb al ll2s
wives," said the operat«.
Among
polit ica l 5100 or David Ohlinger for
Information or tickets.
(Continued on page 21

Miners will be heard
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Gleanings from the United
Mine Workers of America
convention : .
The 2,000 miners who came
out of the coal fields to be
· delegates aren't reluctant to
stand up and be heard on the
convention floor.
They also don 1 like to be
put off.
Unhappy lhat a certain
committee's report wasn't ·
ready, a delegate prompUy
went io a floor microphone
and loudly suggested, ·"I'd
like to see this con,unittee
work all night if they have

to.''
A committee member
quickly responded.
"I'm telling you straightup, right off the shoulder,

•

we've been working as bard
as humanly possible," be shot
back.
Al!ded a second beleagured
committeeman, " We ' re

going through 200 pieces of
paper and it's hard to follow,
you'd better belleve II ."
Another committee
chaliman pr~aced his report
by recognizing a myriad of
con ventioo officials.
Catcall.!1 of "Get on wllh it,"
shortened Ilia Introduction
The biggest seller at tile
convention hook stand Is tbe
S8.60 "Hen In flarlan," which
describes the stormy mlnln&amp;
history of Hattan County, Ky.
"Blood Letting In Appala·
chia," at S8.95 a copy, also
was sold out. TiLles stm
available included "Hillbilly

ttraf

'I

.,

"'

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